Bristol Archive Records Blog

Archive for the ‘News’ Category

CHUTES – The Chris Damico Story

Monday, December 20th, 2010

The club opened in July 1976 & closed a few weeks before the Be Stiff Tour gig at the Exhibition Centre on the 6th October 1977.

I have no reference material for 1976 but I’m sure that we opened with such a bang that live music was an afterthought. Once the initial impact had worn off and there was no longer a line out front as a ‘dance’ club, we started booking live music on Tuesdays, Wednesdays & Thursdays.

Of the bands mentioned in www.bristolarchiverecords.com my 1977 calendar shows The Cortinas played (9th March and 19th July), Gen X (27th June), Chelsea (30th July), The Only Ones (8th June and 28th July) and Uncle Po (22nd June). There was also Rat Bites from Hell Reunion (22nd August).

I booked the Cortinas at the request of our very persuasive bar girls. Their rational was that they were so cute and they were getting London gigs, very unusual at the time for a Bristol band. I took a chance despite not having heard any of their or having a reliable reference source.

The drummer, Dan Swan was very young & I insisted his Dad was there to avoid any liquor license hassles that might occur. It was a good idea because on the first night that they played, a very polite Police Inspector was good enough to point out that there was huge Black Mariah parked just around the corner “just in case!”.

Since this was our first venture into the world where mosh & gob were terms of endearment, I thought it prudent to address the exuberants.

I requested that they all take notice that their bevies were served in glasses not plastic cups. (This was a long standing sore point between the club owners and me.) I said at the first sound of breaking glass, I would pull the plug and they’d have to find a new playpen.

I had used the same message with the local Hells Angels Chapter who had managed to get themselves banned from every respectable place within miles. I explained that if one got barred, they were all barred. Once they were on their ‘best behaviour’ they became a solid line of support against any trouble occurring.

But back to The Cortinas…At the sound of “1234” the thrashing started. The Head bouncer, Mr. John Quirk, came to me with a confused look on his face…. ‘If our usual crowd was carrying on like this then I would have waded in within a second??’

After about three tracks I was again summoned to the door to see Inspector Rozzer. He obviously had some confederates amongst the rabble who must have reported a ‘Riot Going On’ inside the building.

I took great pleasure in yelling at this guy (due to the volume, not out of any disrespect, mind you) that everything was well in hand and if he and the posse round the corner would like some tea then I would be able to accommodate them irrespective of the chaos going on behind me.

I would have to say by the look on his face he would have to start attending church more often. He knew his world was obviously coming to an end and it probably forced him to move to Belgium.

When Gen X played Billy Idol was the front man and above the club was a photographer’s studio. We would allow the bands to use this area as a dressing room. It had a large mirror with the lights all around the edge just like in the movies but the problem was the walls were all pure white so when I went up to pay the band I couldn’t help notice the four foot black letters spelling Gen X on the wall.

When I brought this to Mr. Idol’s attention he lamely told me that “the groupies” had done it! I explained that if his dog had taken a shit in the middle of the room, it was HIS dog and he would have to clean it up. I told them they could come back the next day and re-paint the wall or I would deduct the costs from their fee at the end of the night.

I’m glad to say that the incident with Gen X was the only problem I ever had with any of the bands and acts that played at the club.

In mid August 1977 I contacted Stiff Records to try to book Elvis Costello for Chutes. Paul Conroy became my contact and promised me first refusal on the 5 band ‘Be Stiff Tour’. Knowing that the gig would be way too big for the ‘Chutes’ (capacity 150) I approached the Exhibition Centre down on the water front.

Whoever I spoke with, either the owner or manager at the time was very resistant to having live music in the building. It took weeks to convince him that concert goers wouldn’t hurt his lovely building. I think he may have also had reservations because of a glitch with a Stranglers gig where they cancelled at the last minute.

A couple of guys, Pete & Steve (sorry no last names in my notes) were operating under the name SAP or something like that out of Ashley Rd, St Pauls and wanted to promote reggae shows at the Exhibition Centre. Pete, Steve and I knew that the Granary & Colston Hall were punk & reggae shy but there was definitely a market but it would swamp The Dugout or Chutes. The Exhibition Centre would fill the bill nicely.

In the end I was able to convince Mr. Exhibition Centre via Chris, his secretary who was enamoured with my American/New York accent and he helped me conspire to get my foot in the door.

I needed the SAP guys to supply the security and we shared the expense of scaffolding construction and rental for the Be Stiff gig and their reggae show which was promoted very soon afterwards.

There is a back-story here. Chutes was a partnership between a local group of ‘businessmen’ and a dog food and flour conglomerate. The local guys had owned more than one business in Bristol but Chutes was the only one they shared. It had been a full-blown poncey disco prior to promoting rock bands with a huge white grand piano shaped DJ ‘booth’ on the dance floor which we took great pleasure in demolishing on our opening night.

As it happens, the local businessmen were having major repairs done to their other locations, but making the bills out to the Chutes, Park Street address – where of course there was no work was being done. We were therefore a “money pit” on their books, even though there were lines in the street to get in and we were two deep at the bar.

One night someone from the Big Boys main office dropped in for a surprise visit and as we had a strict “no ties” policy (they had to be checked at the coat booth, along with suit jackets, to keep out the travelling businessmen that would troll Park St.), he was barred from entering and Adrian, my co-manager, was summoned to the door.

This guy could not believe his eyes. He was there to discuss the poor financial showing that was being reported back in town but saw that something didn’t jibe. He wanted to shut it down on the spot, but was persuaded to wait to verify that some ‘mistakes’ had been made within the main office figures.

Needless to say they pulled the plug the next day and the local douche bags wanted their money back for the Be Stiff tour deposit, which I had been promoting with the club’s prestige and funding. Since the promotion was well underway, I was able to buy them off and proceeded with the show, but from that day forward Chutes was no more.

I was reminded of this during this research as I came across an edition of the Bristol Evening Post (16th September 1977) where Adrian and I ran a goodbye advert to our patrons.

I am proud of my time at the club and we were getting reviews of bands appearing regularly in the NME and the Melody Maker. I think they had all just signed on West Country reporters.

Towards the end of the clubs run I had been in touch with an extremely paranoid Malcolm McClaren in an effort to promote S.P.O.T. S. or ‘Sex Pistols on Tour Secretly’. They needed to call themselves this after misbehaving around the UK on a grand scale.

He was so freaked out he said he wanted to stop using the phone and communicate BY MAIL! It was all I could do to get him to understand that if he thought his phone was tapped, he sure as shit was going to have his mail read. As you can imagine that gig did not materialize!

At the end of the Be Stiff gig, I was ‘settling up’ with Jake Rivera and Dave Robinson and they gave me the impression that they were very enthusiastic about having “another Roundhouse” in the West Country. Alas that was never to be as I was summarily “invited” to leave the United Kingdom very soon thereafter.

But that’s another story!

 (Chris Damico – December 2010)

 

Big Pete and The Ratbites From Hell      pic by  John Spink

 

Reuben Archer – Lautrec

Monday, December 20th, 2010

A brief account of starting a band in the West Country by Reuben Archer.

In the 60s I attended Kingston Art School, and for a few years knocked around Richmond and Kingston with Eric Clapton, Dave Brock and Keith Relf. My father was head of the school and was always against me wanting to start a band. I was there to work, and so it wasn’t until much later in my life that I picked up a guitar and decided whatever the odds, rock and roll was for me.

 In fact when my father and other tutors decided Eric wasn’t ever going to knuckle down and work, he just wanted to play his guitar, they ended up by asking him to leave the school. Keith subsequently went on to form the Yardbirds, and Dave formed Hawkwind, so for me, any temptation to go in that direction was subsequently removed.

In 1973 I moved to Shepton Mallet from London. We bought a De-commissioned Georgian pub in Stony Stratton and commenced turning it into a house. It was whilst living there that I bought two electric guitars, a Gibson SG copy for myself, and a Fender Strat copy for my Stepson  Laurence. I could play a bit and immediately started to teach Laurence my limited repertoire of chords.

Within a couple of weeks Laurence had mastered all that and much more, and within 3 months was playing fluently. We looked around for other local musicians and found a bass player who I can only remember as Gibb, and a young Welsh Drummer whose name also escapes me.We played in a local pub on the Fosseway called the Cross Keys, and it soon became a regular gig of ours. The band was named Shady Business and the landlord was only too pleased to find that whenever we played, the venue was always packed.If Shady Business had any claim to fame, it was probably being asked to play at the Pilton Festival, which was staged on Mike Eavis’s farm. A few years later this little festival turned into one of the biggest events on the music calendar, Glastonberry.

Over the next year the band evolved, and a new drummer joined called Andy Peyton, along with Bassist Simon Ridler, the son of Evercreech’s  Vicar evolved. This line up was renamed Thriller.

Thriller played several Pub venues and others like Street’s Hall and Yeovil’s Johnson Hall. We then hired the Showering, Shepton Mallet Centre to play a live show for the purpose of recording the set with a mobile unit. The show sold out within a week, and four tracks were successfully recorded.A local solicitor who had connections in the music biz attended and as a result signed the band for management, later taking us up to Manchester to Revolution Studios to record. Revolution had connections with the successful Strawberry Studios where Sad Cafe recorded.

The Revolution session turned out well with the most successful tracks  being ‘Midnight At The Moulin Rouge’ and ‘Red Light Ruby’ both written as a concept idea for an album based on Toulouse Lautrec, as we had now decided to re launch the band calling it LAUTREC.

At this time Laurence had enrolled at Yeovil Art School, however after a few months it was plain to see that his heart wasn’t in it,  He just wanted to play guitar, so I found him a job at a music shop in Street. The manager of the store was a consummate Jazz player and during the time Laurence worked there he taught the young guitarist every chord and scale in the book.

When I had made the move from London to The West Country, it had been to take up a new Job, designing and building the new Geology Gallery at Bristol Museum and Art Gallery. That was completed in about two and a half years, and with no more exciting projects in the offing, I moved to Westland Helicopters as a graphic designer, as it was nearer to Wincanton where we had subsequently moved. 

It was at this point that Laurence asked me if I thought we could really make it in the music biz’ I told him of course we could. We would play Bristol Granary, Colston Hall, and then Hammersmith Odeon and The Rainbow.  Brave words indeed, but they weren’t in vain because with the exception of the Rainbow, we would go on to play all the other venues and many more both in the UK and abroad.

Lautrec had a new line up featuring Simon Riddler, Laurence and myself and Steve Holbrook on keyboards, and Clive Deamer on drums, both hailing from the Frome area. Clive Deamer went on much later to play for Portishead and also The Robert Plant Band. He is a very busy session drummer and in high demand.

Having already mentioned the Bristol Granary, I would like to add that if it hadn’t been for Les, and I must apologise as I never knew his surname, we probably would never have achieved the profile that we did.

I always thought Les, a middle aged tall man, always dapper in suit and tie, looked a little out of place for a rock club owner, but he ran the Granary in a strict business like fashion, and was always fair.Les gave us many opportunities to play his club, and consequently, we built up a great following.At this point Lautrec was waiting on a decision from Island Records, who were interested in signing the band, and as a result of their interest we embarked on a tour of UK city halls, with Saxon, who were about to break with their first major album.

It was during this tour that Laurence and I realised we needed to alter direction somewhat if we were going to appeal to the Heavy Rock fraternity. Unfortunately for us at this point Island declined to sign the band, as on his return from Jamaica, Chris Blackwell, owner of the label decided to drop the rock bands he already had from his roster, and had no wish to sign another.

At the end of the Saxon tour, Lautrec sought new management, finding John Glover of Fat Cat management and the Street Tunes Label. The band went into Rock City Studios at Shepperton to record two songs, ‘Mean Gasolene’ and ‘Shoot Out The Lights’, which incidentally are now two of the rarest records of the so called NWOBHM period fetching up to £1000 apiece.

At this point Lautrec were offered the support slot for the next Saxon Tour, and on accepting found that for personal reasons Clive Deamer the drummer, could not participate. With one week to go before the first date, and as a result of a tip from Trevor of Otto’s drum store in Hotwells, the band recruited Bristol based drummer Steve Jones as a replacement, and successfully completed the tour.  Saxon hit the charts with Wheels of Steal, taking a break on the tour to record the song for Top Of The Pops.

During this period Lautrec also made a TV appearance on BBC RPM show with a live performance of ‘Midnight At The Moulin Rouge’ and ‘Shoot Out The Lights’. During the recording all the BBC staff were made to wear ear defenders, as up until then, they had never recorded such a loud band.

It was some time after all this that I decided to accept an offer from Saxons management to join a new so called supergroup called Lionheart, formed around the guitarist Dennis Stratton, formerly of Iron Maiden. They wanted a vocalist and songwriter, and they thought I would fit the bill.We toured the UK in our own right, supported Whitesnake on two tours, and recorded demos for EMI. I penned several songs one of which being ‘Dangerous Games’, which was later re-recorded for a Lionheart Album. After around six months I left the band, feeling that Lionheart was not for me.

Shortly after this, I was approached by Jimmy Bain ex Rainbow, and then of Wild Horses. He needed a vocalist to complete the new Wild Horses Line Up. As it turned out, he also needed a drummer and guitarist, as Brian Robertson had left along with drummer Clive Edwards.

Laurence was having little luck with Lautrec at the time and had all but given up on the band. Don’t forget at this point Punk was becoming established, and Heavy Rock was taking a back seat with the emergence of hundreds of New Wave bands. It was becoming really hard work trying to break a Hard Rock Band.I asked him to join Wild Horses along with Lionheart’s ex drummer Frank Noon, and we commenced rehearsing and recording for EMI immediately. After two residencies at London’s Marquee Club, where Phil Lynott would often get up to jam with us, we realised things were going nowhere.

Horses were managed by Morrison O’Donnell, who also managed Thin Lizzy, they should have cracked the situation for the band, but were beginning to have reservations about Jimmy. After several months of nothing happening, Laurence, Frank and myself decided enough was enough and quit to form our own new band.It was at this time that we did an interview for the music journal Sounds and also Kerrang Magazine.

The Journalist asked me what our plans were and I mentioned that we were forming a new band. What’s it called she asked? I was stumped. Thinking fast I thought of Wild Horses, and the fact that we couldn’t get out of that situation fast enough. So, what do wild horses do ?….they Stampede!!And straight away I told her the new band was called STAMPEDE, and that’s how things started for us.Still based in Bristol although spending more and more time in London, trying to find representation, Stampede went into Bristol’s Cave studio to record new material. Personally I loved that little studio and the two guys who ran it. They did everything they could for us, it was like nothing was too much trouble.

Cave was an eight track studio, so you had to be pretty careful about how you went about things. Overdubbing was hard, because of the limited amount of tracks available, and you really had to plan things out before going for takes. At the end of the sessions we had five tracks ‘Missing You’, ‘Days Of Wine And Roses’, ‘Moving On’, ‘Hurricane Town’ and ‘Photographs’. There were others, but these were the tracks that eventually got us signed to Polydor.

During this time we had also been talking to a guy called Roy Ward with a view to him managing us. He looked after Ginger Baker, and we often rehearsed in his studio in Acton, London.Finally I was recommended to Ronnie Fowler, who for years had been right hand man to Don Arden. Don had wound up Jet Records, and Ronnie had decided to go on his own and find a band to manage and promote.

Ronnie secured the deal for Stampede with Polydor Records and the first record we released was a four track EP of the songs recorded at Cave studios. There followed several singles and when Stampede played Reading Rock Festival in 82’ Polydor employed the Rolling Stones Mobile Studio to record our live set. They also recorded the Mildenhall Festival performance and released the album as the ‘STAMPEDE, THE LIVE BOOTLEG’. Four months prior to this I was running with Maiden’s Bruce Dickinson, when I fell and broke my hip and thigh.

Banged up in hospital I spent the time writing lyrics for the next album, and managed to get out in time for the Reading appearance, which I did using the mic stand in place of my hospital issue crutch.

When we originally formed Stampede, the line up consisted of myself vocals, Laurence on guitar, Frank Noon on drums and Alan Nelson, from Franks old band Wildfire on keyboards. We needed a bass player, and recruited a French guy called Francoise Maureau. Francoise just didn’t gell and the language problem was a nightmare, so we advertised auditions in the national music papers.There followed daily sessions which lasted for several weeks, until we finally narrowed the list down.

One of the listed players called me to find out if the band had made its decision and told us he was playing a gig in his hometown of Bristol that very weekend. The gig turned out to be open air in a street behind Kingsdown Parade in Bristol, where I actually lived at that time.  Laurence and I made the trip back from London to catch Stormtrooper with Colin Boggy Bond on bass.It was plain even then to see that Boggy was heavily influenced by Rush and Geddy Lee, he played a Rickenbacker bass, and Taurus pedals. He not only played great, but looked every bit the part, and a little later on over a few pints of cider, we asked him to join Stampede.

The line up was complete and we immediately began intensive rehearsals at the Ritz rehearsal facility in Putney, London.

This meant that Colin would have to move to London on pretty much a permanent basis and it wasn’t long before we all found ourselves renting apartments in a huge Victorian house rented by Frank Noon in Isleworth Middlesex.

The Grove was a haven for rock musicians and at one time amongst the residents were Rocky Newton, Lionheart and later of the Michael Schenker and Robin McAuley Group. Bernie Torme, Electric Gypsies, John Lockton, Wild Horses, myself, Stampede and Joe Elliott, Def Leppard.

I was already well familiar with Joe and Leppard because Lautrec had supported them at Bristol’s Colston Hall. It was there that Rick, their drummer had found all his bass drum pedal straps frayed. I drove him down to Otto’s to get some new ones. Trevor the owner told him to go next door to the Army surplus store and buy a length of webbing, That way he could just cut off lengths as he went along…much cheaper and stronger.

Over the next couple of years we became good friends with the band, and of course an even stronger connection was that Frank Noon had been their first drummer before they made it big.

It was a similar situation with UFO. I had taken Laurence to Colston Hall to see them when we were first forming Lautrec. I remember thinking that this is the kind of band we should be. Hard melodic rock . I still love that band to this day and they became good friends and of course Laurence went on to do several tours with them and record two albums.

At first with Stampede, I became a little miffed at the similarities drawn by rock journalists of Phil Mogg and myself. The fact was at that time, on stage we did look quite similar, and sang in the same kind of vocal range.  Plus Stampede songs were melodic and although not by design did fall into the UFO category.

However as far as I was concerned UFO had been on the road since the late 60s and despite lineup changes had survived, making great music. If we were likened to them in any way so what? I personally took it as a compliment. Of course the other comparison came from Laurence’s guitar work. He always had been a Schenker fan.

It wasn’t surprising then that years later he would gig and record with UFO.

Shortly before Stampede’s Reading appearance there were two drastic changes to the line up. Drummer Frank Noon left to join up with Bernie Torme and the decision was made to dispense with the keyboards. Colin Bond introduced a young guy from Bristol called Eddie Parsons who turned out to be exactly the power house drummer the band needed.

As a four piece Stampede functioned far better as a unit and after two weeks of intensive rehearsals the Reading appearance went off without a hitch, earning the band some really great press reports, as well as achieving a good live recording in the can for a later release.

What we didn’t know at the time was that Polydor would put this recording out as the band’s first album. Consequently when we did get to record a full studio album we found it impossible to recreate that wonderful live feel and in comparison we always felt that the following studio album lacked urgency and energy.

Stampede followed all this up with a couple of tours with Gary Moore, played some gigs on the continent and commenced writing a new album. During the following months it became clear that Polydor was not really a label geared for handling a rock band, they wanted singles and more singles, and couldn’t understand why a band like us needed support for touring. Most of their energy went into other acts on their roster like Bryan Ferry.

With changes going on in Polydor’s A&R department along with all the internal politics, Stampede became disillusioned with the contract. I decided to call the whole thing a day and anyway was due to go back into hospital to have the metal pins removed from my hip and thigh.

During my operation I contracted an infection and on coming out became really ill. In fact if I hadn’t received immediate medical attention I would have actually died. At times like this one’s confidence can be reduced to an all time low, and as a result I decided to finish with the music biz’ completely.For the next eighteen years I built up my design business and in 2000 was talked into starting a local band called The Boogeymen. This ran for five years during which we recorded two albums. In 2004 my wife and I both being into the blues formed our own band the Archer Marriott band, playing gigs throughout the Midlands and North of England.

In 2008 Rock Candy Records re-released our last Polydor album Hurricane Town. Following this pretty much all our back catalogue was re-released in the UK, Europe, Japan and the USA.

As a result of this I called up Laurence and Colin and we staged a reunion gig at London’s Embassy Club. The gig was well received by the press and public, so we decided to keep things going and record a brand new album. The new record is called ‘’A Sudden Impulse’’ and comes out in April 2011, on The Rock Candy Label, with two single releases prior to that on the Internet.

We will be touring to promote the album and one of those dates will be a Bristol venue.

During the summer of 2010, Stampede played the Back Bar in Weston Super Mare. The gig was packed and amongst the audience were the original members of Lautrec. We had a great night and will be back there in April 2011.

In retrospect I couldn’t conclude this potted band history without saying that Laurence and I owe a lot to the West Country and especially Bristol. We started our musical journey there and made many great friends in the process. I lived in the town itself for five years, and still love going back there.

Stampede info can be found on myspace:  stampedeofficial. Facebook stampederock and Reuben Archer. A new stampederock.com site will be up and running in January 2011.

 (Reuben Archer Dec 2010)

 

NEWSLETTER – DECEMBER 2010

Saturday, December 18th, 2010

Sugar Shack Records Ltd

Firstly can I wish you and your family a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year.

You will no doubt be fully aware of the economic position we currently find ourselves in the UK.

The music industry is in a complete mess with physical product sales decreasing month on month and download sales increasing very slightly but not at a rate which will save the industry or the companies who trade within it.

I had to make a difficult decision in 2010 to cease trading as Sugar Shack Records Ltd on the advice of my Accountants MWM.

Where are we now?

As you should be aware Bristol Archive Records is a subsidiary label of Sugar Shack and with effect from the 1st October 2010 we continue business as usual with the new name Sugar Shack Records. The Archive label is by far the bigger party now with an average of six digital releases per month.

In 2010 The Archive has released three compilation CDs and two Vinyl albums however across the board sales including digital, have been bitterly disappointing.

The Future?

My commitment to Bristol music remains as strong as ever and my passion to ensure that artists from the past should be remembered and not forgotten is as important today as it was on the launch of www.bristolarchiverecords.com . Sugar Shack however will not release many new records in 2011.

I’m excited about The Bristol Reggae Explosion 1978-1983 on CD and Vinyl to be released in Feb 2011 and we follow this with a Talisman album in April. Pre sales look more positive and the initial press looks like we should get good reviews.

One of the major positives is the amount of traffic the website obtains and this is reflected in the search engine positions when tracking Bristol Archive Records – clearly people are interested.

I could not run the label without the support of the small team that works with me to provide the mastering, artwork, design, websites and sourcing of material. Thanks a million to all the team and thank you to you the artist for allowing your material to be made available through the Archive and Sugar Shack.

I wish I could report a healthier picture and I wish we were selling more music.

Please contact me directly if you wish to receive an accurate of account of your individual sales.

 In time as the Archive gets bigger I believe things will improve but for now let’s drink a toast to the New Year 2011.

Yours sincerely

M DARBY

On behalf of the team

www.bristolarchiverecords.com   /    www.sugarshackrecords.co.uk

 

Bristol Underground Sounds – JASHWHA MOSES

Tuesday, December 7th, 2010

Bristol Archive Records are thrilled to announce a distribution deal with Bristol Underground Sounds.

The first release will be the incredible JASHWHA MOSES album ‘NO WAR’ released in March 2011

Available on all digital platforms worldwide and with a single yet to be agreed, this is the RETURN of Jashwha.

Jashwha was born in Clarindon, Jamaica over 50 years ago and his previous releases included ‘Africa Is Our Land’ in 1978 and ‘Pretty Girl’ in 1979. His single ‘Africa’ was produced by Dennis Bovell who has worked with such artists as Bob Marley, Dennis Brown to Shabba Ranks.

These tunes can be found on the Feb 2011 release ‘The Bristol Reggae Explosion 1978-1983′ on Vinyl, CD and Digital download

THE VOICE OF JAHGGAE HAS ARRIVED!

Check  http://mickyfin.com/ for release details and cuts from the related film clips

The RPM story – random notes and rambling memories

Friday, November 19th, 2010

 

So……..It all began one day when I was working in the newsroom at Radio Bristol. I`d been a reporter there for about a year – lots of early morning news shifts interviewing local county councillors interspersed with the occasional opportunity to be a trainee DJ – which in those days was what I thought I wanted to be.  So one of my colleagues tells me that he met a guy in the BBC bar last night who`d just moved down from Newcastle to be a producer in regional TV with the idea of doing a new show. He was looking for presenters and the show was going to be about local bands, real ale, architecture, theatre, cinema etc and have Auberon Waugh (a right-wing comic journalist who lived in Somerset now long dead) doing funny pieces about that week`s news. Why that unusual combination? Because they were the things that the producer David Pritchard was most interested in, and this was going to be his show. (In those days the BBC was much more about individual producers` passions – there were no anxious executives looking over the creatives shoulders). “You ought to get in touch”, said this mate of mine.

 

Next day – trying not to look too keen – I did and we arranged an audition in the Points West studio. It was just me standing there in front of a camera with Pritch (who was quite a bit older than me and a fat bugger even then) telling me to “talk about anything I wanted to.”  I thought it advisable to stick to music. Until then my every waking moment had been listening to, playing or reading about music, but only as a hobby; I never thought I could make any money out of it. Pritch was new in town so couldn`t have seen many local groups yet and so I mentioned a few of the more outlandishly named combos (The Gl*xo Babies sounded particularly cool I thought, though I can now admit that I`d never actually heard them play) and tried to sound as though I knew what I was on about. Pritch seemed happy enough and promised to let me know after he`d seen more people.

 

Weeks went by with no news. I didn`t want to ask, in case it was a “No” but made myself a promise that if I got the job I`d buy myself a leather suit from Paradise Garage – a shop selling Johnson clothes I`d just discovered in the bus station underpass (I`m sorry about the leather thing ok, but all those years of Jim Morrison and The Doors had left a scar). More weeks went by. One day I thought “This is crazy”, confronted Pritch in the canteen and asked him whether I`d got the job or not. “Of course,” he said “Didn`t I tell you?” This was a typically exasperating response from a man who I went on to have an abrasive, but creatively challenging, relationship with for the next 6 years –indeed we`re still friends to this day despite his unreasonable fondness for The Stranglers.


 

 

The show was scheduled to start in a few weeks time, but things didn`t go well. Pritch selected a co-host (who I`m afraid I can only remember was called Debbie something) and when a friend of mine saw us together he asked if this new programme was going to be called “The Ugly Show” – and he wasn`t talking about Debbie. Worse, I discovered that Pritch intended to call the programme “The Rectangular Picture Machine”, a truly naff name by anyone`s standards, and much, much worse still had chosen music by The Electric Light Orchestra as the theme tune. God help us.

 

On my totally uninformed recommendation The Gl*xo Babies had been recorded (again in the Points West studio) but I have a dim memory that we`d also recorded a session with the insensitively named “Spics” who featured lead singer Mike Crawford even then in full proto Rock God attitude and we decided to run them first. When the first show was broadcast I was living near The Coronation Tap and as the credits rolled went there to drink as much cider as they would sell me. This was a truly horrible programme, I was convinced. Getting involved had been a career disaster and I was doomed to be a laughing stock for the rest of my life. Worse, someone recognised me in the pub as being “That bloke off the telly”, a phrase I was to get used to but never liked. Next day the TV reviewer in the Bath Evening Chronicle said I was the sort of presenter who would leave an oily stain wherever I sat. Thanks Pritch.

 

I really only continued with the show because I`d signed a contract I couldn`t escape from, and the fact that the tiny production team were good people who were fun to be around and the crazy workload didn`t give us much time to get precious. The team finally settled down to being just me, Pritch, two directors called Steve Pool and Alan Lewens, and two programme assistants, Lisa and Phillipa – that was all we had to make runs of twenty shows at a time so we were shooting and editing items every week for the next programme.

 

We only really managed to make the show by beating the BBC system

- because through some loophole we could “borrow” a London film crew for free (and everything outside had to be shot on film in those days there was no lightweight video) we used to make up local excuses for getting interviews with national and even international names. Debbie Harry, I remember, had an auntie in Totterdown, Pink Floyd`s David Gilmore had been to school in Bedminster. Honest.

 

And I suppose the show gradually got better. We made a lot of programmes I`d eventually look back on with some pride. The audience took us to their hearts. Auberon Waugh (or Bron as we got to know him) became increasingly edgy despite an almost total inability to read autocue. His scripts were so contentious that they all had to be cleared by lawyers at the very last minute – hugely predating Have I Got News For You. All the local bands were queuing up for a bit of TV exposure they hoped would get them a record deal (stupid really – all of my experience has taught me you should play music for your own enjoyment not in the hope of getting famous or rich – it hardly ever works). I`d spend most nights down at venues like the Bristol Bridge, The Granary, Trinity Hall, the Bier Kellar at The Hawthorns Hotel (where I interviewed The Clash once) etc trying to find the next big thing. Automatic Dlamini, Talisman, The Electric Guitars, The Cortinas, Juan Foot `n the Grave, The Crazy Trains all competed for a chance to shine. So did a group from Bath called Graduate, all done up neat and tidy in suits. The two singers were called Curt and Roland who later ditched the others in the band and changed their name to Tears for Fears, named after Roland`s obsession with Primal Therapy that he and I discussed during the recording. I spent many, many nights watching local bands in draughty halls – most of the time on my own and being taken the piss out of by whoever was on stage (if I`d been stupid enough to let them see I was there). Best joke; “That Andy Batten-Foster must be clever to get that cat to stay on his head”.

 

Personal highlights from those days include getting to know XTC`s Andy Partridge (who I still consider a musical genius) who made us a very funny, affectionate and typically quirky little film about his home town Swindon, and, of course, the infamous Stranglers night at The Granary.

 

This night deserves a paragraph or two of its own. Pritch and Steve had somehow got to know Hugh Cornwell and Jet Black (Steve used to drink cider with Hugh in some place outside Bath that was more like someone’s tiny sitting room than a proper pub) and I think invited them to perform on RPM only because they expected to be turned down. When the opposite unexpectedly happened, they agreed and we suddenly had to take the idea seriously, a certain level of panic set in. We`d never done anything this big so didn`t know which venue to choose. The BBC`s rules about making profits out of events were much stricter in those days so we immediately realised it would have to be a free show – and that brought up a whole bunch of new concerns about security and safety.

 

It`s almost impossible now to imagine how big The Stranglers were in those days so as soon as we announced we were doing it at the Granary both us and the venue were completely overwhelmed by demand for tickets. However much planning we did (and I can only remember it was a lot) came to nothing because when the big night finally arrived it descended almost immediately into total chaos. About three times more punters turned up than had tickets. A lot of them were really hard-core punks and demanded to be let in. We`d built camera platforms so we could get pictures over the heads of the audience but these began to tilt and sway dangerously as soon as the band hit the stage and the crowd began to surge back and forth. We honestly thought either a cameraman would fall into the heaving masses, which would almost certainly rip him apart in their frenzy, or a falling platform would kill some of the crowd. Either way we were in big trouble. Neither disaster actually happened, of course, or I`d probably be writing this from a prison cell, and the funny thing was that backstage after the gig The Stranglers were completely calm. Every show was like this to them.

 

Pritch and I only ever had two really big and enduring disagreements during the making of RPM – and one of these was about The Stranglers. As I`ve already said, I think his affection for their music is unreasonable, and yet virtually every week he`d want to include one of their songs in the show – usually Duchess – and every week I`d try and argue him out of it. At one point he became so furious that words failed him and instead he threw a telephone at me (and remember these were the days of big, heavy

desk telephones made with metal in them.)

 

My protests never worked; he and Steve responded by making a film with Hugh and Jet about Men In Black (this was long before the feature film and incorporated the band`s Waltz in Black which Pritch went on to use as the theme tune for all his later films with Keith Floyd, who was also discovered as an “act” during RPM).


 

 

The other big disagreement was over The Parole Brothers. These were a local blues and R and B band fronted by Keith Warmington (who played – indeed still plays – an amplified harmonica or “harp” very much after the Chicago style) while the guitarist was Steve Payne – known as the Prince of Darkness. At the time they were by far the most popular group playing on the Bristol circuit and so, not unreasonably, pushed hard for a spot on RPM. I maintained they were completely wrong for the show because the music they played was traditional rather than original and that – despite their obvious popularity – RPM was about showcasing new bands with new ideas and new songs. Every time I came across one of the band – particularly Keith – the debate became rather heated and so Pritch agreed to come along to one of their shows to make a final decision. By the end of the evening I began to feel that the argument was slipping away from me – Pritch was dancing on top of table, blind drunk and singing along to Sweet Home Chicago.

 

RPM lasted six years. We must have made a couple of hundred shows in all and when it finally came to an end I was working at Radio One as something more like a proper DJ – although funnily enough I never really felt comfortable once I`d got there. I ended up as an executive producer on shows like 999 and Top Gear (I`ll have to tell you all about Jeremy Clarkson some other time). RPM had “found” Floyd who Pritch went on to make a genuine TV celebrity out of, one five minute film about the death of Eddie Cochran in Chippenham was expanded into the first of a long run of full length music documentaries that Alan Lewens made for BBC 2`s Arena, and even now I occasionally, but less and less regularly get recognised as that bloke off the telly.

 

And, thank god, I never did buy that leather suit.

Andy Batten-Foster  November 2010 

Colston Hall Deal

Friday, November 19th, 2010

Colston Hall raises the profile of Bristol’s music history in unique partnership with record label

Colston Hall is helping to raise the profile of music that has shaped the history of Bristol through a new partnership with a Bristol record label.

 

Bristol Archive Records provides a unique history of Bristol’s diverse music scene from 1977 by digitally re-mastering and re-releasing often forgotten songs from bands like The Cortinas and Talisman. Colston Hall has joined forces with the label to help promote new releases and to sell records in the Hall’s foyer.

 

Label owner Mike Darby is dedicated to chronicling the music from Bristol’s early days of punk, reggae and rock by taking the original vinyl, 1/4 inch tape, dat’s and cassettes and re-mastering the music to make sure it doesn’t disappear with the permission and support of the bands and the original labels.

 

Mike said: ‘We are thrilled to be working with Colston Hall to promote many of these forgotten works as for years the Hall’s varied programme of events has been a focal point for the Bristol music community. The relationship will give the people of Bristol a chance to hear some of the great bands of Bristol by buying their records and hopefully some of these great bands will reform and perform at Colston Hall.’

 

Graeme Howell, Director of Colston Hall, said: ‘As a high profile music venue it is very exciting to help make it possible for a new generation of Bristolians to learn about their musical heritage as well as making Bristol Archive Records’ great work visible to a wider audience.’

 

A selection of Bristol Archive Records catalogue is on sale from Colston Hall from Thursday 25 November.

 

ENDS

 

Notes to editors

 

  1. Bristol Archive Records has so far released 198 digital releases and the following CDs and vinyl can be purchased from the Colston Hall box office or online from www.bristolarchiverecords.com:

 

ARC090V    THE PIGS    ’1977′     Vinyl album

 

ARC155V    THE CORTINAS    ‘MK1′     Vinyl album

 

ARC160CD    VARIOUS ARTISTS    ‘AVON CALLING 2′    CD Album

 

ARC118CD    VARIOUS ARTISTS    ‘THE BEST OF FRIED EGG RECORDS – (BRISTOL 1979-1980)    CD Album

 

ARC154CD    VARIOUS ARTISTS    ‘THE BRISTOL PUNK EXPLOSION 1977-1983′    CD Album

 

ARC001CD    VARIOUS ARTISTS    ‘WESTERN STARS – THE BANDS THAT BUILT BRISTOL’    CD Album

 

 

  1. For all press enquiries and images please contact Sarah Hodson on 0117 922 4667 or email [email protected]

  2. Run by Bristol City Council, Colston Hall – www.colstonhall.org – is Bristol’s largest concert hall, with a capacity of 1840-2075 (seated) / 1938 standing and a programme of events that encompasses international artists from the pop/rock, classical, leftfield and contemporary music scene. The organisation is also a partner in the inspirational Bristol Youth Music Action Zone, REMIX.

 

TALISMAN – ALBUM (RELEASE DATE SET FOR 2011)

Sunday, November 14th, 2010

 

TALISMAN

 ‘DOLE AGE’

Released on 25th April 2011 

CD, DOWNLOAD and

LIMITED EDITION VINYL ALBUM

11 STUNNING TRACKS 7 PREVIOUSLY UNRELEASED IN ANY FORMAT, 5 DIFFERENT TRACKS ON THE VINYL ALBUM (INCLUDING THE 12” MIXES)

Hot on the heels of the critically acclaimed “The Bristol Reggae Explosion 1978-1983” Bristol Archive Records return to the City’s rich reggae heritage with another album full of lost gems. This time it’s the criminally neglected Talisman who benefit from a long overdue and well deserved release.

 

Originally formed in 1977 as Revelation Rockers, a name they soon changed, by the early 1980s, Talisman were consummate performers not only vying with Black Roots for the  title of Bristol’s number one reggae act, but also one of the  country’s most popular live bands. They toured the UK building up a loyal following and leaving memories of gigs that are still discussed to this day. The band’s prowess earned them support slots with acts as diverse as Burning Spear, The Clash and The Rolling Stones and they were more than capable of playing in such esteemed company.

 

Despite their undisputed talent a major record deal never materialised and until now the only way to hear Talisman has been to track down their two difficult to find singles from 1981, or their two later LPs, “Takin’ The Strain” from 1984 and “Jam Rock” From 1990. Now after nearly thirty years Bristol Archive Records have lovingly compiled a CD of the band at their peak in 1981. Not only does the CD contain the band’s two original 7” singles, but also seven carefully selected live cuts from classic shows at Glastonbury and Bath University.

 

This is the first time on CD for this material and is also the first proper release of any kind for the live tracks, though either gig was surely strong enough to have produced a proper live release at the time. If only the finance had been there, at least there was the foresight to properly record the shows for posterity.

 

Being a reggae release vinyl hasn’t been forgotten. The limited edition LP is effectively a completely different release featuring the full extended 12” mixes of both singles in their entirety as well as the previously unreleased “Nitty Gritty”.

 

As with the label’s previous foray into the local reggae scene, which incidentally also features tracks from Talisman, this release allows a new generation to hear some great music and strongly makes the case that there was a lot more to the UK reggae scene than Aswad, Steel Pulse and Misty In Roots, Bristol was rocking just as hard as London or Birmingham and Talisman were a large part of the reason why!

TITLE: “DOLE AGE”

LABEL / DISTRIBUTION: Bristol Archive Records / Shellshock

CAT NO: ARC199CD and ARC199V

FORMAT: Limited Edition Vinyl plus CD and Download

WEBSITE:  www.bristolarchiverecords.com

PRESS CONTACT: Mike Darby 01179855092             Email: [email protected]

New Cortinas album out Nov 15th

Thursday, November 4th, 2010

 

             

 


or

Sign in to turn on 1-Click ordering.

 
 
 

Punk Rock Anthology
 
See larger image
 

 
 
 

Punk Rock Anthology

Cortinas Audio CD


Price: £7.99 & this item Delivered FREE in the UK with Super Saver Delivery. See details and conditions
  Pre-order Price Guarantee. Learn more.
  o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o
This title will be released on November 15, 2010.
Pre-order now!
Dispatched from and sold by Amazon.co.uk. Gift-wrap available.

You can buy now from www.amazon.co.uk

Talisman included in this documentary

Thursday, November 4th, 2010

Talisman with their track ‘Dole Age’ are included in this 1981 documentary on children in St. Pauls and the problems they encounter in going to school

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=youtube_gdata_player&v=G44qG1f41GI

 

Check it out

Rise Records, Bristol

Tuesday, October 19th, 2010
The entire Bristol Archive Records catalogue is now on sale at RISE RECORDS, THE TRIANGLE, BRISTOL, BS8 as from today featuring all the compilation albums plus the Vinyl from The Cortinas and The Pigs
 
Sugar Shack Records are delighted to have have entered into an exclusive arrangement with Lawrence and Andy from Rise Records:
 
We will have our own section within the store, check it out if you are Bristol based