Categories
Uncategorized

Is there a major international football competition on the way…?

So I’m watching this charity celebrity football match on ITV. You might think that there’s little entertainment value to be gleaned from watching a bunch of ageing ex-pros and assorted D-Listers hobbling around the pitch as they might on a Sunday afternoon down the park, but it’s been worth it so far for the commentary alone. There’s something utterly hilarious and surreal about hearing the likes of:

“…And England are looking bright now as David Gray makes a run from right back…”

And my personal favourite so far:

“…the ‘Rest of the World’ have the ball as Diego Maradona passes to Craig Doyle…”

Categories
Uncategorized

Enough With The Fucking Da Vinci Code Already

I know there’s a film coming out, but for the love of god, no more! As if that silly “trebles all round at Random House” court case wasn’t bad enough (funny how it just happened to coincide with the start of pre-publicity for the film, wasn’t it), Channels 4 and 5’s entire output for the last two weeks has been nothing but promotional material masquerading as factual documentaries about “unlocking the code” (presumably a neat way to fulfil your public service obligations while pumping out populist trash, and/or collecting large cheques from the film company at the same time), and you can barely move in this town for other advertising of the more direct kind (and yes, Eurostar people, I’m talking to you. It clearly says jointhequest.com. Do I get a medal?)

Look. There’s no international conspiracy. I mean really… And even if there was, what does that actually mean? That the catholic church was “founded on a lie”? That’d be the same catholic church with the paedophile priests and the dubious position on condoms/AIDS in the developing world, would it? Hardly an institution that is universally lauded for its uncontroversial ethical stance.

The only “code” or “conspiracy” that I’d be remotely interested in solving would be the mystery of how the hell a plodding, inept, fifth-rate writer like Brown (or as he might have it “the renowned author Dan Brown”) managed to persuade millions of people around the world to read his shoddy book.

Anyone?

Categories
Uncategorized

Does This Count?

Chatting to his mates
pre-Hard-Fi, Brixton, Nandos
Billy Bragg (support).

Er, yeah, so Sal and I saw Hard-Fi at the Brixton Academy last night, in what was the first of their 5 night, ahem “sold out“, residency. [Well, I suppose that “5 nights sort of sold out apart from the “production” hold tickets that we’ve been sporadically releasing ever since the original batch of tickets went on sale (tickets available on the door)…” wouldn’t have fitted quite as snappily onto the top of the venue.]

Hard-Fi, Brixton Academy

After spotting Mr Bragg at the table next to us in the People’s Republic of Nandos over the road, we finished our spicy chicken and made our way inside just in time to catch him on-stage, alone except for a couple of guitars and their accompanying feedback.

I suspect, judging from my entirely uninterrupted view of the stage throughout the evening, and from observing the fellow gig goers who wedged themselves onto the Victoria line with us afterwards, that Hard-Fi’s target demographic might be slightly on the younger side, so it’s unsurprising that the reception for a greying socialist like Bragg was somewhat on the muted side. It’s highly likely that a large majority of those in attendance weren’t even born when he was farting around with Paul Weller trying to convince people to vote Labour back in the 80s (back in the days when we actually had a Labour party–oh it all seems so long ago now). Still, he told us that racism and the BNP are bad things, and we all clapped in agreement. Oh and he played “A New England”, complete with Kirsty MacColl-esque extra verse, which pleased me immensely.

Hard-Fi started up rather flatly, actually, as they’d taken the unusual decision to hold back all their “hits” till the end, and stuff the first half of the set full with their less catchy album tracks and a handful of new songs. Of course that meant that the last 30 minutes were fantastically full of the kind of generic anthemic indie pop that I like so much, it’s just a shame that we all had to wade through the slight let-down that was first half to get there.

Personal highlights:

– Introducing “Feltham is Singing Out”, Richard Archer asked us if we’d ever been in trouble with “the law”. Looking around, all I could see was middle class indie kids. I suspect that the closest anyone in the room had come to “trouble with the law” would be forgetting to set the video for The Bill.

– Richard also had a full on “you’re a better crowd than that Shelbyville lot” moment, when he asked us if we could prove to be louder and more enthusiastic than the “arrogant” Manchester crowd who think they’re the best. He decided we were better, in the end, but I bet he says that to all the audiences…

Categories
Uncategorized

These Little Town Blues…

As I gently hinted by my bumper haiku selection earlier this week, we spent last weekend in New York, sleeping on the floor of Sal’s cousin’s apartment in the Upper West Side.

You know, as you do.

Of course, we’ve both been there before, and so didn’t need to bother with all that touristy stuff, although we did find time to saunter over the Brooklyn Bridge on Friday morning and have lunch in the heart of up and coming DUMBO (that’s “Down Under the Manhattan Bridge Overpass”, apparently–they do love their acronyms over there).

One thing I noticed this time was that contrary to what Homer Simpson might tell you (and I was reminded of the wonderful dream sequence in that very episode when we passed Flushing Meadows in the cab from JFK…) the New Yorkers that we encountered proved to be a remarkably friendly bunch: struggling to buy subway tickets, for example, several people went out of their way to help us (even though, in fact, our failure to operate the machines was not due to us being the dumb turistics, but rather because it would only accept a credit card if you input your ZIP code–fine if you live in the US and it’s 5 digits, but rather harder to do on a numeric keypad if you come from the UK…)

On the Friday night, Sal’s cousin had got us free tickets to an off-Broadway clown show that her company over there was connected with, called Slava’s Snow Show. It’s rather difficult to describe–one of our group went with “90 minutes of your life you’ll never get back”, but I can’t quite see them sticking that on the posters. I felt it was rather like watching an obscure European film in a language you don’t understand, and without the subtitles, but with no apparent plot (oh, and the characters don’t talk).

Well. It was, um, interesting, anyway. The first half of the show ended with what was effectively a giant cobweb being fed out over the top of the audience, and by the end it turned into something resembling a Flaming Lips gig, as they unleashed giant bouncy balls in the direction of the viewing public. If you could think of the perfect follow up to this kind of evening, then perhaps accidentally stumbling into a Vegetarian restaurant that, ahem, didn’t server alcohol, wouldn’t have been it.

We also went to the baseball, which was of course fantastic fun. I’d previously been to games at Wrigley Field and Fenway Park, and the experience of going to see the Yankees was much the same–any actual sport taking place seems to be largely peripheral to proceedings: all the fans really care about is the statistics, and to the casual observer the event is mostly about drinking beer and eating dodgy hot dogs. The Yankees won, apparently, although I couldn’t tell you the score, a fat guy in front of us caught the ball, there was an actual fight in the stairway next to us (hmm, maybe the locals are only friendly to visitors…), and at the end of the game they actually play New York, New York, which is rather surreal.

Watching the Yankees

Discussing my Saturday afternoon activities with people at work the other day, someone asked me if I understood the rules. “They bring beer to your seat”, I said. “Who cares about the rules?”

Categories
Uncategorized

Bumper Sleb Spotting

Is that Robert Fisk?
Arriving. Heathrow. T3?
Yes, it looks like him…

West Fifty Eighth Street,
near the park. Sal grabs me, points:
It’s Willem Dafoe!

Our friend, thinks he saw
Yoko, but we were not there.
We don’t believe him

Times Square. They’re filming.
Action Sequence, top of bus.
Familiar guy. Who?

Categories
Uncategorized

Comment Spammers of the World Unite

Hmm. For the first time in ooh, nearly two years some comment spam has been getting through the to the site. I’m deleteing them as they come up, but annoyingly this has started just as I’m about to go away for the weekend (to New York, actually, thanks fer asking), so I expect that a deluge of the stuff will be waiting for me to delete on Tuesday.

I’m not sure if this means that my fiendish device of requiring you to preview your comments before you can post them has finally been defeated by the script kiddies, or whether someone is actually typing this stuff in manually, but it’s very annoying. That’s not going to stop me deleting them, though…

What really bothers me is that I don’t even understand what most of these spammers are selling: “Tamiflu” I get, and “V14gr4”, well, yeah, ok, but “Soma”? Wasn’t that the drug out of A Brave New World? Is it real? What does it do? And “xanax”? “Ambien”? I’m sure they’re making this stuff up.

I’m clearly out of touch…

Categories
Uncategorized

Quick Haiku

I almost forgot…

On the Camden Crawl
the bloke from Magic Numbers
walking towards us

Categories
Uncategorized

The Camden Crawl: Indie Russian Roulette

On Thursday, we joined a few thousand other indie kids in Camden for this year’s the Camden Crawl. It’s a great idea: £20 buys you a wrist band that admits you to a bunch of different venues across the Camden area over the course of the evening, allowing you to plan your very own mini festival.

Being as out of touch as I am these days, I knew before we even booked tickets that I would hardly know any of the bands (with the exception, it turned out, of the three “secret” headliners, Supergrass, The Futureheads, and Dirty Pretty Things), but that hardly mattered, and even though the queues outside a few venues deterred us from a couple of our choices, we had fun simply picking bands at random and taking a punt: we enjoyed The Maccabees, at the Camden Lock, and a young Scottish chap called Paolo Nutini at an awfully crowded G-Lounge (Londonist: “Very pleasant, indeed – you get the impression he’ll be massive within months, but also that it’ll be OK to like him. For a while.”), and were rather disappointed by Larrikin Love at the Electric Ballroom, and the utterly awful V Formation at Koko.

We opted for The Futureheads for our headliner, rightly assuming that we would easily get into the massive Koko for that, which was probably preferable to queueing outside The Dublin Castle and failing to see Supergrass. After the main band had finished, a woman Djed for a while in the booth just below where we were standing. Apparently DJing in the 21st century involves plugging your laptop into the sound system and hitting “Enter” at the right moment to change tracks, (you’d think you could just program in a playlist and wouldn’t even need to turn up…) but when she had finished doing that, she was replaced by a familiar looking chap, that I briefly couldn’t place. Oh yeah, we realised, as a small crowd assembled to take cameraphone photos, it was Mani, off of the Stone Roses. At one point he even turned around to us, and asked Sal if she had a light. Mani, off of the Stone Roses, asked Sal for a light… Cool…

Categories
Uncategorized

Cornwall

No sign of Rick Steins (we turned on our favourite food-related Saturday morning TV show, Saturday Kitchen, while getting ready to leave the hotel only for chubby ginger imp Worrall-Thompson to tell us he was in Louisiana–who’d have thunk it?), but Sal and I still managed to have a lovely Easter weekend down in Cornwall.

Showing our typical cavalier disregard for the impact on the environment of excessive, unnecessary air travel, we headed down there on Thursday night, starting our journey by heading 34 miles in the wrong direction and hopping on a plane. Now, if there’s anyone out there who is still labouring under the misapprehension that flying in the early 21st century retains any of the glamour that it might have had in the early days, I challenge you to maintain that opinion after flying somewhere with Ryanair. For us, this pleasurable experience begin with travelling to lovely Stansted, a journey that set the pair of us back a cool fifty quid for the privilege of being wedged in to the cesspool of filth that is the laughably titled Stansted “Express”. Once you’ve made it on to the plane, and fought through the unholy scrum to find yourself a seat, you get the pleasure of staring at some garish yellow upholstery for the next hour or so, and reading and rereading the safety card that is plastered onto the back of the seat in front of you. Ryanair being the sort of airline that likes to cut costs wherever it can (they now charge extra if you want to take any luggage with you, justifying this by explaining that they think passengers should “only pay for the services they use”), I assume that this is a cost saving exercise–although passengers might occasionally accidentally leave with a paper safety card, it’s rather harder to mistakenly remove the seat in front of you on your way out. I can only assume that in the event of the pressure in the cabin dropping, a stewardess pops round to sell you an oxygen mask at two Euro a pop, and in the event of a crash landing on water, life jackets at three. Well, you should only pay for the services you use, of course.

Actually, as we came in to land, I wondered if I might find out whether this was true, as just at the point when it felt like we were about to touch down, we were suddenly, disconcertingly, climbing again. Thankfully, after we’d done a big loop around the area, we landed safely at the second time of asking. As I was getting off the plane, the bloke in front of me spotted the pilot emerging from the cockpit:
“Take a wrong turning there did you mate?” he asked.
“No, just air traffic control asked us to go around again”, came the sarcastic reply from a clearly not amused pilot. “Have you seen this weather?”

30 minutes, and one collected hire car later, we arrived in Newquay. The directions from our hotel told us to drive to their car park at the back, so this we duly did, heading down a very narrow and bumpy passageway and into what appeared to be their car park, but as we got out of the car we realised that we couldn’t actually work out how to get around to the hotel.

“Can I help you?” asked an awfully posh voice from a middle-aged lady poking her head out of a nearby building.
“Er, we’re staying at the hotel,” Sal said, “but we can’t work out how to get in…”
“Which one?”

Now unfortunately, our hotel being called the “Quies” hotel, answering this question lead me to commit my first faux-pas of the weekend, but once she had told me that it was supposed to be pronounced Kway-ez (“…we don’t want to insinuate anything”), and had pointed out that we had actually stopped one car park too short of our destination, we managed to find our way into the hotel.

Leaving our room (equipped with an entirely unnecessary four poster bed) to check out Newquay, we found it to be mostly closed. I can’t say I was entirely impressed, as we wandered the deserted town centre, passing sparsely populated and uninviting hotel bars on the way (not to mention a large van bearing the logo of a Blues Brothers tribute band). Needless to say, we didn’t stay out for long.

The following morning, after an artery busting full English, we headed for the beach. Despite it being a typically grey English spring day, a number of people seemed to be getting an early start on the Easter weekend and were already out in what they might laughably refer to as “the surf” (and if that’s what it’s like in the cold spring, I can’t imagine how busy the place must be in the summer). We had a pleasant enough wander on the beach, though, although Sal got rather more than she bargained for when she answered her phone as we were stepping over a rock pool, consequently stopped looking quite where she was going, and quickly acquired two very wet shoes and lower legs.

When we returned to the car, we discovered that Newquay’s gulls had been busy, and the top of our black hire car was now largely covered in big white splodges. Perhaps it was time to move on…

And so we made our way down the coast to St Ives, where we were staying for the rest of the weekend (on the way stopping to join a lengthy queue at the Philp’s Bakery shop in Hayle for some fine pasties, which we wolfed down in the car park, leaving a large pile of dripped meat sauce for the gulls to pick over later).

In contrast to Newquay, St Ives is thoroughly lovely. We had some fantastic seafood, spent many pleasant hours wandering the quiet winding streets, and got horrendously drunk in an impossibly busy bar on the waterfront. We also spent a very sunny Easter Sunday sitting in the Porthminster Beach Café, eating gorgeous fish, drinking some excellent wine, and acquiring a mild sunstroke of the kind I’d previously thought it impossible to get in the UK.

Although I’d thoroughly recommend a trip to St Ives, I’m afraid I can’t say the same for the world of tat that you’ll find at Land’s End, where we ventured on Saturday morning. The landscape that surrounds it is pretty impressive, but it is unfortunately scarred by a shabby hotel and a bunch of tacky and entirely unnecessary “attractions” of the kind that make you ashamed to be British, and wonder what the tourists must think.

To my eternal amusement, the sign post at Land’s End has been “operated” since 1957, and anyone not wishing to be relieved of ten quid for the privilege of having a small photograph of themselves taken with said signpost is kindly asked to stay out of the official photograph area. I was pleased to see that no one was taking them up on that very good value offer on the day we were there. As we were leaving the area we were temporarily waylaid by a time-share salesman who tried to offer us free tickets to the Eden Project if we agreed to attend a lengthy sales pitch at their resort, and after we’d politely declined he asked us what we thought of Land’s End. Given that we’d been wandering around for the last 20 minutes slagging the place off, I felt it was only right that, in the politest way possible, we, um, told him…

In the event, we didn’t even go to the Eden Project, preferring to spend our remaining spare time on Monday at the excellent Lost Gardens of Heligan. It occurred to me, as we sat in the cafeteria eating our bowls of soup, that spending some of our annual leave visiting a garden centre might perhaps be considered a slightly uncomfortable step into middle age too far, but, in an effort to pretend that we’re still young, we managed to make sure our lunchtime conversation touched on topics such as the price of (non medicinal) drugs… The gardens are great, though.

Categories
Uncategorized

Ha, Ha, Ha, Ha, Ha

So, I’m browsing through the ticketweb gig listings, as I’m wont to do from time to time, and I come across this.

“Oh Look!” I think to myself, “Southport’s finest indie pop combo must have a new album on the way–I’ll just click on that link to see what they’ve been up to…”

Except I don’t think that Ticketweb’s link (www.gomez.org.uk) is quite pointing to the right Gomez…

Perhaps they meant www.gomez.CO.uk?

[In other news, I’m not sure what these jokers at the ticket agency think they’re doing, but they appear to still be selling tickets for those Hard-Fi gigs in May. Don’t they know that the shows sold out in 15 minutes, leaving the band “forced” to add extra dates?]