Saturday, 29 May 2021

A Midsummer Night’s Dream: Matt Molloy & Friends - Over the Moor to Maggie/Fred Finn’s/The Hunter’s House (15 November 1992)



Any fans of Celtic music would have been getting their money’s worth had they been listening to this edition of John Peel’s Music.  We’ve already been able to savour the brilliance of the Celtic sampled Ceilidh mix of Sul-E-Stomp by Astralasia and the Suns of Arqa.  Now, courtesy of Matt Molloy the former Planxty and current flautist with The Chieftains, we get a five minute medley of three traditional Celtic tunes recorded during a session at Molloy’s pub in Westport, County Mayo.

Of the three tunes, Over the Moor to Maggie goes by a number of different titles including Over the Moor to Peggy (I hope he didn’t get them mixed up), Peggy’s Wedding (presumably because she lived closer) and The Rakes of Abbeyfale, which made me smile as I spent several happy weeks delivering basic IT classes in Abbeyfeale during 2010.
In answer to the question, “Fred Finn’s what?”, the answer appears to be either Fred Finn’s Reel or Fred Finn’s Polka.  It possibly takes its name after the Sligo-born fiddle player who formed a long-standing duo with the flautist, Peter Horan.
The Hunter’s House, composed by Ed Reavy, is a tune written for post-hunt revels, at which, amongst the jigs and the reels, the Master of the Hunt could show off what they had bagged. Though, I hope they treated it first, you’d have to dance pretty fast to ignore the smell of dead pheasant.

Although played as a continuous suite of music, I reckon that the tunes can be heard from:
0:00 - Over the Moor to Maggie
2:27 - Fred Finn’s
4:03 - The Hunter’s House.

Should you also be minded to try and play any of the tunes yourself, tunearch.org provides the sheet music for The Hunter’s HouseFred Finn’s and Over the Moor to Maggie.  So, to quote the punk fanzine, Sideburns, now form a band.

Video courtesy of Various Artists - Topic


Sunday, 23 May 2021

A Midsummer Night’s Dream: The Hanson Brothers - My Girlfriend’s a Robot (15 November 1992)

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It looks as though The Monkeywrench may have rivals for this blog’s coveted Best Side Project in a Peel Show Playlist award.

When he played this track from The Hanson Brothers’s Gross Misconduct LP, Peel mentioned that they appeared to be related to the Canadian art-punk group, Nomeansno.  At any rate, he strongly suspected that the band names listed in the album sleeve notes of Tommy Hanson, Johnny Hanson, Robbie Hanson and Kenny Hanson were not genuine.  By his own admission, Peel was no cinephile so he may not have seen the cult 1977 ice-hockey comedy, Slap Shot which features the characters of the Hanson brothers who help a struggling ice hockey team regain its edge by bringing in more violent play.  Certainly, the various members of Nomeansno, D.O.A and Show Business Giants showed great commitment to the project by adopting the ice-hockey clothes and Buddy Holly specs of the original characters, though bassist Rob Wright adopted an ice-hockey goalkeeper with mask look.

When it comes to side-projects, it’s always worth taking the time to listen to something from the 
members’source material so as to see how the diversion compares to the day job.  So it was that I spent yesterday morning doing some work while listening Nomeansno’s 0 + 2 = 1 album, released a year before Gross Misconduct.  Both albums share a mordant sense of humour and jaded, cynical view of the world, but the contrast comes in the intensity of the music.  They both rock out, but I discovered, admittedly within a very narrow sample, that Nomeansno channel the bile of Henry Rollins and his brand of “The world’s a violent place. Get over it and go fuck yourself” nihilism, The Hanson Brothers channel The Ramones brand of “The world’s a fucked up place. Get on top of it before it gets on top of you” self-reliance.  The Hanson Brothers used the Ramones as a form of release.  They played gigs of Ramones covers for several years before deciding to go one better and write Ramones  records themselves, albeit with a visual Canadian twist, hence the leather jackets over the ice hockey shirts.  It was something that they would return to numerous times over the next 20 years, with 4 albums released up to 2008, and the band playing live into the mid 2010s.

My Girlfriend’s a Robot is a literal interpretation of how a relationship has to adapt in order to survive when you discover that your lover is wires and circuits rather than flesh and blood.  As the lyrics show, whatever gets lost in terms of romantic feeling (I took her apart cause she broke my heart) is made up for in terms of the domestic benefits that can be gained. However, true love finds a way eventually, and by the end the happy couple are re-entwined and looking to settle down, especially given that She’s got her outlets and I’ve got mine. Don’t you just love a happy ending?  Sublime stuff.

Video courtesy of gilpow

All lyrics are copyright of their authors.

Sunday, 16 May 2021

A Midsummer Night’s Dream: B.R.O.T.H.E.R Movement - GhettoGeddon [Hip Hop Mix] (15 November 1992)



There seems to be a bit of confusion as to the name of this group.  Peel referred to them as B.R.O.T.H.E.R when cueing up GhettoGeddon on this programme, but they have also been referred to as B.R.O.T.H.E.R Movement or B.R.O.T.H.E.R Congress. I am going by the name that was applied to the sleeve of the record.

B.R.O.T.H.E.R - short for Black Rhyme Organisation To Help Equal Rights - was formed in 1989 by members of the UK ragga-rap group, Gatecrash, who in combination with politicians like Bernie Grant, brought together a number of hip-hop, rap and reggae artists to record an anti-apartheid single called Beyond the 16th Parallel, the proceeds of which went to The African National Congress. Despite being put together with the intention to, as the publicity notes stated, enable people to hear a true black person’s view rather than a white person’s interpretation of a black person’s view, the movement took another 3 years before putting out another record.  
GhettoGeddon, like its predecessor, donated its royalties to a secondary source, in this instance Garth Crooks’s sickle cell anemia relief charity.  Its focus was on issues that, depressingly, continue to resonate nearly 30 years after the record was put out: gun violence, knife crime, black-on-black violence, inner-city deprivation, the uselessness of the police and the dangers presented by blue-on-black incidents.   There’s a particularly ingenious line on what the 999 emergency telephone line means if you’re a young black man phoning the police.

The proposed solutions range from the laudable (education) to the, from a white perspective, alarming (joining the Nation of Islam*).  It’s impeccably performed and played with a funk-toned backing track which does a great job of dialling up the sense of urban dread that the various players including GunshotStanding OvationKatch 22Son of Noise and others conjure up.
Peel was happy to play the record, not least because it contained a number of artists from what had been his favourite UK hip-hop label, Kold Sweat.  However, storm clouds were forming as he reported that he had passed over several recent Kold Sweat releases because they had started to veer into issuing material that seemed to be far more sexist than they had previously done.  He had even contacted the label to tell them how unimpressed he was by this.

*If I’ve misinterpreted this please correct me in the comments box and I will amend.
Video courtesy of UndergroundUnitedDE

Monday, 10 May 2021

A Midsummer Night’s Dream: Johnny Staton and the Feathers - At the Altar (15 November 1992)




Never get tired of stuff like that said Peel after playing this slice of 1957 vintage doo-wop.  At the Altar was a new discovery for him thanks to a blandly named but recently released compilation album from Ace Records.  I don’t think it’s as good as Sonny Til and the Orioles version of Crying in the Chapel, but the mid-section, where Staton makes clear his devotion and need to fulfil his promise to his fiancée, seems to foretell my beloved A Thousand Stars, a track which would have still held relevance to me in 1992.  I also like the way that amid all the lush romanticism of this track, it still manages to slip in a surprisingly prosaic line about going somewhere exotic for their honeymoon.

Video courtesy of the doowopMan1961.

Wednesday, 5 May 2021

A Midsummer Night’s Dream: Astralasia & Suns of Arqa - Sul-E-Stomp [Ceilidh Mix] (15 November 1992)



Give ‘em a jig!

I can’t tell you what a relief it is to come from a show I was critical of and pick up on a new show which features a copper-bottomed classic banger.  Forget all talk about meditative sound or records which evoke spring cleaning, this mix of Sul-E-Stomp thrilled me from the top of my head to the soles of my feet, feet which want to burst into joyous, euphoric dancing every time I hear this track.

The basis for Sul-E-Stomp comes from Scully’s Reel, originally recorded by the World Music collective, Suns of Arqa for their 1980 debut album, Revenge of the Mozabites.  Sped up and given a James Brown backbeat by Astralasia, a Magic Mushroom Band side project which has now now gone on to outlast its mothership, the listener is taken on a breakneck journey which whisks us from rural Ireland to Detroit and Goa/Ibiza especially during the monumental battle that takes place between synthesizers and power-chording guitars that starts from 3:05 and builds in intensity up to 4:52.  It sounds like two giants living on neighbouring stars having a fight and it made the hairs on my neck stand up.

Through late 1992, Peel had been playing a lot of Celtic music from a CD called Music at Matt Malloy’s, so to hear that genre amped up and turbocharged in the way that Astralasia do here would have been very appealing to him.  For me, it was nothing less than a re-affirmation of why I do this blog and the wonderful treats that John Peel could pass on to those who stuck with him.  It’s the very epitome of his “Don’t like that record?  Well, hang on a minute, what do you think of this one?” credo.

Video courtesy of h3lme



Sunday, 2 May 2021

A Midsummer Night’s Dream: John Peel’s Music - BFBS (Sunday 8 November 1992)

I know I usually save this until the end of the housekeeping notes about the various John Peel programmes which provide selections for this blog, but the most striking thing about this Peel show was just how many tracks I initially slated for inclusion on my metaphorical mixtape, only to reject them when it came to revisiting them.  I don’t think I’ve ever changed my mind on quite so many tracks from a Peel playlist before.  Those who lost their appeal (in every sense of the phrase) included:

Pavement - Frontwards - My notes tell me that I heard the last minute of this track from their Watery, Domestic EP, so it had to give it a chance in case the majority of the song was worth keeping.  But over all it was fairly desultory stuff and for the second time in a fortnight, I proved to be immune to something from Pavement’s latest EP.

Bourbonese Qualk - Knee Jerk Reaction - This was a borderline miss as it had meditative qualities amid its motorik beats and deconstructed techno sound that I found quite appealing.  It would have made for a decent split single with Disemboweled Corpse for its ability to pull some kind of order out of musical chaos.  But it lost out because it ultimately wasn’t anywhere near as memorable for me as Cesspool of Sorrow had been.  Nevertheless, Peel had some kind words to say about the Knee Jerk Reaction EP and Bourbonese Qualk’s move into dance music, especially when comparing it to some of their previous releases which he summarised as a lot of burbling and squirting; electronic stuff of a, by and large, unlistenable nature.

Rat Patrol - Use and Forget - Despite taking their name from a 1960s American TV series, Rat Patrol were a Dutch punk band hailing from Groningen.  Peel had made a first visit to Groningen during his Grand Tour of Europe the previous month and had loved it, describing it as the kind of place where his eldest son, William, would like to go to university.

Sonic Youth - Ca Plane Pour Moi - I appreciate this will make me sound like an old stick in the mud but I hate Ca Plane Pour Moi, a 1978 hit for Plastic Bertrand so much, that simply hearing the original makes me want to break out a Barclay James Harvest anthology in retaliation.  I think my liking of Sonic Youth was what initially inspired me to include their cover of it, which can be found on an album of contemporary bands covering New wave era tracks called Freedom of Choice.  However despite their best efforts, they were still, in my opinion, attempting to put glitter on diarrhoea.

Big Black - Crack Up - I think this made it onto the list originally because every time I hear Peel play Big Black, I optimistically hope that he will be playing something which has the mesmerising wallop of a track like Kerosene, only for such optimism to be misplaced.  Peel appears to have included this track due to having read a possibly inaccurate report that Steve Albini was going to scale back his production work on other artists’ material.  This led Peel to hope that Albini would strap on his guitar and start playing again.

Bimbo Shrineheads - Separating Your Face From My Windshield - Peel confessed that he would have played this track regardless of its quality, due to its unforgettable title.  You might be expecting something death-metalish but instead it’s closer to Goth-folk.  I was initially taken by it but ultimately the rather brittle-sounding production put me off.

 Drop Nineteens - My Aquarium - Eminently forgettable sub-grunge, albeit given a twist with the boy/girl shared vocals, which might have distracted me from the ironing when I first heard it but failed to stand up to a repeat listen

The Attack - Anymore Than I Do - From 1967.  The Attack were one of those bands grouped together  with The Creation or The Idle Race as one of the great “lost mainstream” bands in that it scarcely seems credible that they never had a big hit.  However, a listen to this single shows that this may have been because they sounded a little bit off the shelf in comparison to the more idiosyncratic and bespoke sounds of bands that their disciples consider them to be superior to such as  The Who or Small Faces, while they found themselves being outflanked by the likes of The Move, whose eclecticism  managed to combine the best of both the UK Mod-Soul scene with the American West Coast Sound.  When he was working for  Radio London, Peel used to loop the opening riff of this track as the musical bed for trailers.  That riff was most likely played by Davy O’List, who would go on to play guitar for one of Peel’s favourite groups across 1967/68, The Nice.

Given the circumstances, I’d probably have ended up going off the one track I wanted to include but couldn’t hear, which was a cover of the Cheap Trick song, Auf Weidersehn as performed by Cell.

The programme featured several records by several future mainstream chart acts including  Hotstepper Returns by Ini Kamoze  Was he really singing “Noel Edmonds in the morning”, Peel wondered.  Also getting a spin was the latest single by Chumbawamba with its chorus refrain of “Someone always telling you how to behave”  When you’re a child it’s your parents, and when you’re a parent it’s your children.  It’s most irritating.  I have terrible rows with our William, who’s 16, because temperamentally we’re very much alike. And we have huge rows, 2 or 3 times a week and we usually end up weeping and making up and being best pals again, until something else comes up.

He apologised for sounding slightly manic at the start of the programme, which was nothing to do with a row with William, but rather due to the stress of driving into London.  It’s a terrible place! If I didn’t have to work here, I’d never come here.

Had I been listening to this show at the time it went out, I would have been saddened to hear the news that Milk, whose excellent track Claws was a big favourite of mine in the early days of this blog, had split up.  However, as one Milk was poured away, fresh Milk was delivered in the form of an American band of the same name.  Peel played a track from their Making the Most of Limited Hearing EP called Hunting Like Animals.

A letter from Hamburg asked him to play something by the cultiest of cult comediansTed Chippington and he was happy to oblige.

But the most surprising track on the playlist - even to Peel himself - was the version of Arthur McBride as  recorded by Bob Dylan on his new album, Good As I Been To You.  Over the previous couple of years, Peel had been handing on, unheard, new Dylan albums to a friend in his village.  He had only listened to the album, the day that the programme was recorded, so that he could counter Andy Kershaw’s inevitable praise for it.  However, he was genuinely surprised by how much he had enjoyed the album, appreciating both the stripped down production/arrangements and the tracklisting, which was predominantly made up of covers and which featured, what Peel perceived to be a bit of a Lonnie Donegan influence due to the presence of several tracks which he had recorded such as Frankie and Johnny and Froggy Went a’Courtin

I didn’t include it because I couldn’t get on with Dylan’s vocal, which provided a great example of what Peter Baynham once described on The Saturday Night Armistice as him ...going up to the microphone and just going “HNNNNNNNUUUUUNNN” Honestly, it’s like he’s singing out of the centre of his nose!

Of particular interest around the playing of this Dylan track though, was Peel relating the effects of what he described in the précis of a potential autobiography submitted earlier in 1992 and subsequently printed 13 years later in the postscript to Margrave of the Marshes as a piss-taking review of a Dylan concert..

5, 6, 7 years ago, I did a review for The Observer, of a Bob Dylan concert at Wembley.  And I disliked it intensely.  I couldn’t bear the kind of attitude, the complete lack of communication with the audience, the arrogance of it all - of course when Mark E. Smith does pretty much the same thing, I think it’s wonderful, so I have to recognise there’s a bit an inconsistency here.  But I found it most irritating.  I spent most of my time, because I had to keep getting up as I was so cross, they had made some rather nice chocolate brownies, which they used to sell from a stall there.  So most of my review was about the brownies rather than Bob Dylan and I was a bit ungenerous about him.  It was quite interesting because as copies of that edition of the Observer started going in British libraries around the world, I got more hate mail about that than I’ve ever received in my entire life.  You couldn’t believe how venomous some of the letters were.  The further around the world that copy of the Observer went, the more hysterical the mail became - and the funnier too, because a lot of them were couched were in fairly fractured English....

Being an enigma at 20 is fun, being an enigma at 30 shows a lack of imagination and being an enigma at Dylan’s age is just plain daft. From the moment the living legend took to the stage, it was evident that here was business he wanted to accomplish with the minimum of effort. (From Peel’s review of the Dylan concert. Published in the Observer on 18 October 1987)

A load of other tracks that I didn’t like.