Aural Sculptors - The Stranglers Live 1976 to the Present


Welcome to Aural Sculptors, a blog aimed at bringing the music of The Stranglers to as wide an audience as possible. Whilst all of the various members of the band that have passed through the ranks since 1974 are accomplished studio musicians, it is on stage where the band have for me had their biggest impact.

As a collector of their live recordings for many years I want to share some of the better quality material with other fans. By selecting the higher quality recordings I hope to present The Stranglers in the best possible light for the benefit of those less familiar with their material than the hardcore fan.

Needless to say, this site will steer well clear of any officially released material. As well as live gigs, I will post demos, radio interviews and anything else that I feel may be of interest.

In addition, occasionally I will post material by other bands, related or otherwise, that mean a lot to me.

Your comments and/or contributions are most welcome. Please email me at adrianandrews@myyahoo.com.


Showing posts with label Newtown Neurotics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Newtown Neurotics. Show all posts

Friday, 27 March 2026

Newtown Neurotics Winter Gardens Blackpool 6th August 2011

 

So, following on from my Top 30 post featuring 'Beggars Can Be Choosers' here is an audio to complement it. Newtown Neurotics bootlegs are anything but plentiful and the couple of recordings I have of the band playing in 1983 have already been posted on here (you can locate them from the band list that appears on the side bar on the right hand side of the site). However, this gig from 2011 perfectly fits the bill as in that year they decided to play their debut album in full. I wasn't at this Rebellion gig in Blackpool, but I did see them play a home turf gig at the hallowed Square in Harlow.

Look carefully.... they're in there somewhere!

Simon didn't play this gig, but Adam Smith did.


Newtown Neurotics Winter Gardens, Blackpool
6th August 2011
(photos: GutterPunk Wed Development)



This one is down to Peter I think... so a big thank you to him!


Whilst I cannot offer another 'Beggars Can Be Choosers' era gig, here's a contemporary live review that appeared in NME on 20th August 1983 (and written by the same journalist that didn't have a good thing to say about the album). Not the best of gigs it seems... regardless of the reviewer.



Top 30 Punk Albums #9 Beggars Can Be Choosers - Newtown Neurotics


On New Year's Eve 1977, after seeing the Ramones at London's Roundhouse, Steve Drewett was inspired to form a punk band. The resulting three-piece took the name of Newtown Neurotics, derived from a life time in their home town of Harlow in Essex, one of a number of post-war new towns that were to introduce people to a new way of living.

The band's debut album was preceded by a handful of brilliant, thoughtful punk rock singles, each of which now commands a high price if you want to get your hands on them. 'Beggars Can Be Choosers' arrived in the Autumn of 1983 which was a rough time in the UK. Margaret Thatcher had been returned for a second term of government on the back of the Falklands conflict, protests continued at Greenham Common as American cruise missiles were staged in the UK, unemployment topped 3 million, the charts were shite and unknown at the time, the Miner's Strike was less than six months away. Happy days they were not.

The Neurotics became somewhat associated with the 'UK 82' punk scene, but their presence was something of an anomaly. Many of the bands involved in that scene did not take themselves very seriously... the Test Tubes, Anti-Nowhere League, the Adicts, I could go on (that's not to say tha the Neurotics were dour though!). Their songs too, if not incompatible were coming at common subjects from considerably different directions, the Neurotics' 'No Respect' or 'Agony' were countered with the Test Tubes 'One Night Stand' and the League's 'Woman'... whilst in the background The Adicts were running girlfriends over with steamrollers! The biggest difference though was the fact that the Newtown Neurotics were overtly political... their anthem, 'Kick Out The Tories' does rather give the game away on that count.

New Musical Express (24th September 1983)

Despite the grim day to day situation in which the songs that make up the songs on 'Beggars' were written, those songs are unapologetically positive in a 'Don't let the bastards grind you down' kind of vein. 'Wake Up' which opens the album sets the positivity stake firmly in the ground.

'You religiously say oh, it's not worth trying
But Christ almighty, do you need enlightening!
I'm not talking about a type of career
I'm talking about just enjoying being here
Make the most of your life every day
And every opportunity that comes your way

Don't sit around; you've got to wake up and live
Don't piss around; you've got to wake up and live.'

Likewise, 'Get Up And Fight' triggered something in me. It wasn't that I was living the life of the song's subject, just getting out of my head... I was 14/15 at the time, but the sentiment of the song resoundingly struck a chord, especially the reference to political apathy in the face of the warheads that were at that time being transported across the country to airbases (this was the era of the 'Protect and Survive' leaflets and 'Threads' on TV!)

'There are people out there, who make me see red
They're making careers from getting out their heads
Competing to be the wreak of the year
Cultivating porridge between their ears
They take, they take and they give nothing back
To a world that may one day break their backs
There are people fighting in every way
To protect the freedoms you enjoy every day
Your opinions have a familiar ring
Nothing I do or say will change anything
You say politics are boring, boring and grey
But would you rather see 'Cruise' brighten everyone's day?'

Later on in the album, the classic 'Does Anyone Know Where The March Is?' lightens the tone a little, being a tale of a 'band with a message' wanting to participate in a demo, only to get stuck in traffic. The band not wishing to waste the moment play from the back of a flat-bed lorry to bemused shoppers.

A potentially lethal encounter with a night club bouncer follows with 'Life In Their Hands'. Throughout the 1980's clubs and music venues employed door security personnel (commonly known as 'bouncers' in the UK). Back then a lack of training and regulation at that time meant that these characters were feared and a night out at a gig could turn nasty very quicky (I caught the tail end of this... I remember witnessing some horrible violence meted out on a coupe of occasions by unregulated security at the Astoria in London). The same topic was addressed in Action Pact's 'London Bouncers'. Since that time and as a consequence of some high profile cases where people died, legislation was introduced which has vastly improved the situation.

The album closes with the Newtown Neurotics very own kitchen sink drama, albeit one borrowed from The Members. 'Living With Unemployment' was an anthem for the times as it recounted the boredom, frustration and loneliness encountered by the long term unemployed. This song often closed the band's live set.

Alternative artwork for the 2022 PNV release of 'Beggars Can Be Choosers'

Listening to this album through today, took me back to that time. Luckily, I was not unemployed or written off by my teachers, I was however taking on board the issues of the day and the things that were going on around me and continue to do so today, no matter how frustrating or demoralising that may be.

'Beggars Can Be Choosers' means the world to be, but it is not an opinion that was universally held as indicated by this shitty review that appeared in New Musical Express on 15th October 1983.


Ignore the doubters and take a look at the Newtown Neurotics. The documentary about the band entitled 'Kick Out' has recently been made available on YouTube.


Thursday, 12 February 2026

Newtown Neurotics Wasted Festival Blackpool 12th August 2006

 

From early in the reformation (of the Neurotics, not the Protestant Reformation... they have been around for a long time, but that is pushing it!) here are the Neurotics. This post is prompted by the delivery this afternoon of new Newtown Neurotics material on vinyl (see earlier post). I don't need a more substantial excuse than that to be honest.

Thanks to Peter for this one.... always appreciated!

The keen eyed amongst you may have noted an error in the artwork. It is stated that it took place in Morecambe, but in fact the then 'Wasted' had decamped to the Wintergardens in Blackpool by this point.

FLAC: https://we.tl/t-Fpxzm6F6PV

Artwork: https://we.tl/t-UPaPHw1tpX



Newtown Neurotics 12" E.P. With Safety Pin Magazine Issue 29

 

It is a standing joke in our house. As soon as the postman is spotted in the street I am on high alert. Should they come anywhere close to our door I am like a terrier without the bark! I have always loved receiving post but don't seem to get a great through the door these days (not even bills in this paperless age!).

Occasionally, something arrives bearing my name. Today was one such day, when this gem was delivered. Issue 29 of 'Safety Pin' magazine, for which the draw was the Newtown Neurotics and specifically  a four track 12" E.P. of material recorded during the sessions that resulted in the 'Cognitive Dissidents' album. This is not a soon to be dented flexi, or even a 7", but a brilliantly packaged, heavy weight 12" vinyl record complete with lyric sheet!

Now to locate the turntable (last seen peeking through a pile of calico works-in-progress, the handiwork of a 3rd year fashion student.... sorry Gunta!)

Available here.

Sunday, 5 October 2025

Steve Drewett's (Newtown Neurotics) 70th* Birthday Celebration Phoenix Live Harlow 4th October 2025


The Newtown Neurotics
Phoenix Live, Halow
4th October 2025

* Actually, it was closer to Steve's 71st, but let's not quibble over technicalities.

It was a great surprise and indeed an honour to be invited to Steve Drewett's 70th birthay celebration bash that took place last night. For anyone who doesn't know, Steve was a founding member of the Newtown Neurotics a key fixture of Harlow's vibrant music scene of the late '70's and early '80's and purveyors of songs with sharp social commentary and political common sense for the last 45 years.


This was an opportunity to bring together under one roof some of the talent that exists in Harlow Town, that is otherwise little known beyond the borders of Essex.

Steve's long time gigging compadre, Attila The Stockbroker', was MC for the evening (of course!) bringing Steve's daughter Rosa to the stage first for a solo version of 'All Across The Universe' by some Liverpool band. She was followed by Murray Torkildsen who gave us a great little set with his guitar. More Harlow musical talent of the singer/songwriter ilk came in the form of Paul Howard and Jo Clack who gave an appreciative audience an Irish tinged set, very much in a Van Morrison vein. Pointing out that this night fell on the 89th anniversary of 'The Battle of Cable Street' they performed a rousing version of The Men They Couldn't Hang's 'Ghosts of Cable Street'.

Murray Torkildsen

Then it was Steve's slot with the Neurotics. The set was short but career spanning, from first, 'Hypercrite' to last 'Climate Emergency', with the likes of 'Licensing Hours', 'The Mess' and 'Stand With You' in between.

'Licensing Hours' - The Newtown Neurotics
Phoenix Live, Halow
4th October 2025

Leigh Heggarty who was also in attendance was invited up on stage to play 'This Fragile Life', which he did with aplomb aplenty. Apparently though, the guitar lead at hand was only about a metre long which meant that he was rather confined to the corner of the stage for the duration of the song. He guys managed to strike a couple of rock 'n' roll poses nevertheless to bring the song to a close!



Simon was clearly impressed!

As mentioned earlier 4th October was the anniversary of 'The Battle Of Cable Street', and event in 1936 when a march through the East End of London by Oswald Mosley's British Union of Fascists was halted by anti-fascist crowds.

What better timing for a rendition of 'Mindless Violence'/'Andy Is A Corporatist' to sign off with. And sadly as relevant today as it was when it was first recorded.

'Mindless Violence'/'Andy Is A Corporatist' - The Newtown Neurotics/Attila The Stockbroker
Phoenix Live, Halow
4th October 2025

... 'and we're gone'.

A huge thanks then to Steve for the invite, it was great to share this milestone with you.

Monday, 15 July 2024

Newtown Neurotics, Mark Thomas and Attila The Stockbroker Dublin Castle Camden 14th July 2024 - A Review

 


This gig appeared on the radar late, but it had to be done. Three separate acts that I have been seeing for 36 years (Mark Thomas) to 39 years (Attila and the Neurotics). What these people did and said had a big hand in shaping my political views and here they were together just two weeks after the Neurotics' battle cry of 'Kick Out The Tories' had been realised. Better still this was an afternoon gig that would be done and dusted by six giving ample time to get back home for the inevitable viewing discomfort of an England Euros final game against Spain, undoubtedly the best team in the tournament!... Spain that is.


Like a slow residency, these Attila compared gigs have been occurring for some time now, every quarter if I recall correctly. Attila is nothing if not prolific, you do not get a greatest hits, dredging up 40 plus year old material from 'Ranting At The Nation', well perhaps one or two, but most of the material is bang up to date, 'Farageland' being an example, a commentary on the opinions of the odious politician set to the rhythm of The Clash's 'Garageland'. Importantly, Attila's newer material is sometimes very personal and intimate (biologically) as he candidly details the trials and tribulations faced by his knob during treatment of bladder cancer... important because talking about male health in such a way may just save someone down the line.

The first of the two full acts of the afternoon comes from comedian and activist, Mark Thomas. I saw Mark just a few weeks ago in Bishops Stortford. His show then was uncompromising, but here today, playing to an appreciative audience of like minded people he was in his element, hammering his points home in a vicious but hilarious manner (Sunak with hammer did feature in his set!). Hard to believe but Mark Thomas in full flow makes Jonathan Pie come across as laid back!


After a short interval, in which people either went to the main bar for beer or checked the screens in the pub to get the latest progress of the Men's Wimbledon Singles final which was then under way, and a couple more poems from Attila and it was time for the Newtown Neurotics.

Unusually, they kicked off proceedings 'Living With Unemployment' more often as not one of the songs that close the band's set. 'The Mess' followed, a tragic tale that shouts about the importance of education from the rooftops. Next up were a volley of songs that go back to the Neurotics' year zero with 'Fools', 'Hypocrite' and 'When The Oil Runs Out'.

'Fools'
Dublin Castle 14th July 2024.

A sure fire highlight of the set was a rendition of the classic 'This Fragile Life', a deeply poignant and horrifyingly still relevant song that stems from Steve's observation in the early 1980's of an elderly resident of the Potter Street area of Harlow who succumbed to hypothermia, alone at home in winter in front of an empty grate. Steve added to the on going relevance of the song with reference to his age. The message is clear, we will all (hopefully) grow old and the hardships of a life in later years lived in poverty is the reality for millions.... unless we as a nation address the inequalities that lead to poverty in the 2000's.

Late set included two songs from the 'new' album 'Cognitive Dissidents', 'Climate Emergency' and a new challenge to the far right in the form of 'Stand With You'. 




For the finale, of course it could only be 'Kick Out The Tories'. Here the set list got it right, stating 'We've Kicked Out The Tories'.

I filmed it, but I think that this version may have a couple of glitches.

'Kick Out The Tories'
Dublin Castle 14th July 2024.

So here too is the video for the recent revamped version of the track.



I always leave a Neurotics gig uplifted. At times when it seems that everyone is out for themselves, to be in a hall in the company of other pissed off but positive people is a tonic.... unlike the football that followed... next time eh!



Saturday, 13 July 2024

Newtown Neurotics, Mark Thomas and Attila The Stockbroker Dublin Castle Camden 14th July 2024

 


The perfect warm up for a big footballing night. If it all goes tits up on the pitch at least I will have enjoyed an uplifting post election afternoon in great, like-minded company!

Thursday, 7 September 2023

The Newtown Neurotics 'Kick Out' Film Premier 100 Club London 5th September 2023

 


Finally, it happened, the much awaited, COVID battered documentary about the Newtown Neurotics. I have followed the band for 40 years, they made me think about all manner of things when politics was starting to loom large on my teenage horizon, be it national political commentary... 'Let's Kick Out The Tories', 'Get Up And Fight' or politics of a more personal nature... 'The Mess', 'Agony' and 'Wake Up'. Intelligent punk from the front line of Harlow Town. So, this premiere had been in the diary for an age. 

In many ways it is almost poetic that the film's release was delayed by a couple of years. In the interval the band saw fit to record an album of new material, but perhaps more importantly the period between the planned screening in Leytonstone in 2020 and last night's event spanned some of the most bizarre events in British political history... yet more confirmation that the Neurotics knew... don't argue!

From arrival in London, specifically, The Blue Posts in Newman Street, through to entering the hallowed depths of the 100 Club there was a wonderful atmosphere, a sense of solidarity... 300 or so people crammed into an Oxford Street basement with aligned values at a time when elements of the press inform the public that a woke generation are about to destroy everything we stand for as a nation. 

The film is brilliant, all credit to Luke Baker for this extraordinary achievement. There was a comment from someone in the film, sorry I forget who, that said that Harlow was just waiting for punk to happen. Whilst unfortunately I was not witness to the development of the 'Stortbeat' scene (being 1) too young and 2) in a different part of the country), I think that the real achievement of punk lies in a local and  independent meeting of minds and bands, venues etc etc. As was evident in the pub and later in the 100 Club the bonds and friendships formed way back then endure to this day. You cannot ask for better than that!

These days I limit my filming of gigs, it annoys people (although I can honestly say that if ever I do record something it is never impinges on other punters view of the stage!) and I get it. However, occasionally, the event warrants it and this was one such case. Last weekend Gunta and I saw Steve play a solo gig at The Hare pub in Harlow. That afternoon he discussed the inspiration behind the song 'This Fragile Life', a Harlow resident revealed to be a lady named Maggie Reynolds who died in poverty in the early 1980's. Last night, the song, as important in my mind as 'Kick Out The Tories' or 'Living With Unemployment' had a 'Repercussions' makeover with the introduction of brass (not to forget a second guitarist by the name of Leigh!).

'This Fragile Life'

All in all, a brilliant night of positive affirmation that things can get better! 

'KICK OUT!'


Monday, 28 August 2023

Steve Drewett The Hare Harlow 27th August 2023

 


This gig popped up on a social media feed couple of weeks ago and I promised myself that I would go along. Pre-gig, there was something of a discussion on the merits of lunchtime gigs... and the fact that on a Sunday lunch time it was possible to get a fix of punk rock and still be back home in time for the Antiques Roadshow... old punks never die, but they do slow up a bit!

This set of Songs and Stories was ideally placed in the schedule since on 5th September the film 'Kick Out', The Story Of The Newtown Neurotics finally gets its premiere. The original timelines for the film, like so much else was royally scuppered by COVID-19 such that the launch that was to take place at The Red Lion Ballroom, Leytonstone, if I remember correctly, was cancelled. Flick through the calendar some 3 years and the band have managed to get a much more prestigious venue for the occasion, the 100 Club no less.

As Steve explained in his introduction, making a documentary (or should that be rockumentary!) is no small feat. A band with a career as long as that of the Newtown Neurotics will have interacted with thousands of people from different periods of the band's existence, all with a story to tell. So the art in putting something like this together lies in the sorting process, what to keep in and what to leave on the cutting room floor. Another challenge brings in our 'friend' COVID again. Since the aborted launch, the band released another album of new material, their first for 34 years! So, to release the film in the form that it was back in 2020 would do the band a disservice. As an aside, The Stranglers will have the same problem if and when the lawyers finally get to a settlement that will allow it to see the light of day... only changes there are somewhat bigger than the release of a new album. Anyway, back to The Hare. This lunchtime gig gave Steve the opportunity to relate stuff that didn't make it into the film as well as adventures beyond the Newtown Neurotics.

Steve related the band's modest beginnings, starting with gig at Standon Village Hall, somewhat less iconic than the 100 Club. He went on to detail origins to 'Kick Out The Tories' were revealed to have started life as a dreadful Christmas kind of jingle thrown together for a Christmas Eve gig at the Triad Centre in Bishops Stortford (which was located just a 5 minute walk from my front door)... dreadful it may have been, but it was punk rock! Surprisingly it was also divulged that the song, the band's anthem if they can be considered to have one, was intended to be a one off song penned for the purposes of a TUC gig. Whilst it is regrettable that the song has had a direct relevance for the biggest chunk of the band's career, I am glad that the song wasn't cast aside after that one gig!

Flyer courtesy of Steve Drewett.


'Hyporcrite'
(and apologies for the camera orientation)

One of the highlights of the Neurotics' pre-1988 (the year the band split... before they reformed!) was undoubtedly a tour of East Germany with Attila The Stockbroker and Billy Bragg, a kind of socialist revue package for the DDR! It was here that the band played to their biggest audience (estimated to be in the order of 8,000 with a further few thousand outside having been unable to get in) at Berlin's Palace of the Republic, a venue more prestigious than Standon Village Hall and the 100 Club!

Palace of the Republic
Berlin

After stories of touring behind the wall, things became rather more personal as Steve recounted his inspiration for writing 'This Fragile Life', one of the band's finest songs. There was an old lady who resided in the Potter Street area of Harlow, a woman down on her luck and struggling to subsist. She would regularly take a bus to a job that involved collecting potatoes (surely quite a laborious task for one not so young). After some time, the lady was found dead and alone in her house having succumbed to hyperthermia (as has been the fate of many elderly people here in the UK during this current cost of living crisis that we are enduring). The memory was clearly still raw, even after the passage of forty years or more as the writer became rather choked. That such a situation can and does exist in the UK, the 5th biggest economy in the world let us not forget, is a disgrace.

As I recall, the first set would up with 'Living With Unemployment', a reworking of The Members' 'Solitary Confinement' for 1980's jobseekers everywhere. It was interesting to learn the late Nicky Tesco's take on Steve's efforts... 'Why don't they write their own fucking material!' JC Carroll on the other hand loved it.

'Living With Unemployment'


Also in the first set was the rarely played 'If Only', a track that appeared on the reflective 'Is Your Washroom Breeding Bolsheviks?' album. I almost saw this many moon's ago in my first week at Brunel University when Steve played a solo gig at Uxbridge Labour Club in 1988. However, being a group of students completely lacking a sense of direction or an ounce of common sense for that matter we failed to find the venue and spent a fruitless evening traipsing the damp autumnal streets of Uxbridge... 'Does anyone know where the gig is?' we should have asked!

Punk poet Cherry B returned to the stage at the end of the interval for another couple of poems before Steve continued his musical journey. 

Cherry B
(didn't get the title but it's a poem about Nigel Farage)

Unfortunately, we had to leave shortly into the second set so we missed tales of North Korea and Brazil. There was only time for one more song, 'Thinking About You' from the short lived 'The Indestructible Beat, the band that Steve formed after the Neurotics. I did get to see them once though at a Cable Street Beat benefit in Camden.


So, all in all a great way to spend an Sunday afternoon and an excellent taster for the 'Kick Out' film premier next week.

Wednesday, 23 November 2022

The Newtown Neurotics and Attila the Stockbroker The Lexington London 22nd November 2022

 

I am not sure that even the Neurotics imagined that they would be back on tour in 2022, but here we were on the last night of that tour in London Town.... a last night in Harlow would have been more poetic but for some inexplicable reason the magnificent Square was demolished several years ago now and now stands as a vacant plot! However, the Lexington offered a splendid intimate environment for tonight's entertainment. 

With Attila opening up for his Neurotic mates, it is business as usual, an evening spent with 'his punk rock family' in his words. Whilst there is new material to be heard tonight from both the Neurotics ('Cognitive Dissidents', the new album is out now) and Attila (new material at least for me), tonight is not one of those nights where the band are on the front line as was often the case in the past. There were no impressionable skinheads in Skrewdriver T-shirts taunting the band at the front of the stage or their older mates saluting the stage. This really did feel like a group of musicians and fans coming together to celebrate 40 plus years of intelligent music, the sole intention of which was to 'agitate, educate and organise'. Preaching to the converted it may well have been, but everyone needs an affirmation of values every now and again, and right now seems to be a fine time when I increasingly reluctantly watch the news!

Attila had a new vibe.... dub-ranting verse, which is as you would imagine is a amalgamation of poetry with a reggae backing. It worked really well. I was reminded of an old Attila rant 'The Iron Men of Rap' when the lyric along the lines of 'My only hoes are in the garden centre' hit me. Brilliant stuff!

As I recall, the Neurotics took the stage at about 9 pm (a good early start for me as a middle aged punk out in London on a work night!) and got he evening of to a good start with a trio of songs from the debut album 'Beggars Can Be Choosers'. We were warmed up with 'Wake Up', 'The Mess' and 'Get Up and Fight' before the first new material was offered, two singles in fact, 'Climate Emergency' and 'Liar Liar'. 


Then it was back to the early days of the band with the two earliest singles 'When The Oil Runs Out'.... very apposite in the winter of '22, and 'Hypercrite' (which could have been dedicated to FIFA boss Gianni Infantino in reference to his speech on the eve of this World Cup... maybe it is just me but having FIFA's top brass officials moralise to me sticks in the craw a little!). These songs were the bread around the 'Repercussions' filling of 'Fighting Times' and 'This Fragile Life', again songs that bolster the belief that we are not alone in our disdain of the current political climate (and actual climate!) whether here or internationally. These songs are also the reason why I sounded like Paul Robeson with COVID this morning!

'Stand With You' is a new anti-fascist anthem and one that resonates very strongly with me having been to Sachsenhausen concentration camp in the last month and being utterly shocked at the attitudes of some of the residents of the Oranienburg suburb that surrounds the camp. 

And then we are on the home stretch, with a real treat of The Neurotics sharing the stage once again with Attila for a rousing rendition of 'Andy Is A Corporatist' which hammered home the key message of the previous song.

'Andy Is A Corporatist'
The Newtown Neurotics and Attila The Stockbroker
The Lexington, London 22nd November 2022.

They left us with 'Kick Out The Tories' and 'I Get On Your Nerves'..... they did nothing of the sort of course. And with that I headed back to Angel tube station for the journey back to Bishops Stortford with the slight comfort in the knowledge that if I am angry with the world at least I am not alone.

Saturday, 27 August 2022

Reflections on Rebellion Festival 4th to7th August 2022 Blackpool UK

 


Well, again it was a long time coming wasn’t it! It is the Glastonbury of punk (but without the flags and granola breakfasts!!). The biggest celebration of all things punk and new wave in the world that under the normal rules draws people in from all corners of that world on an annual basis. Of course in these Covid times things were by necessity a bit different as a two summers had passed without this gathering. Many tickets were sold indeed and this caused some changes to the normal order of things.
All shades of punk are covered here and it is great to see the new bands playing cheek by jowl with the bands that inspired them to form a band in the first place. A founding principle of punk that has never changed.

For the dedicated, the £200 face value of the ticket (I wasn’t confident enough to go for the slightly cheaper early bird tickets!) is a bargain. If you were only to see 20 bands (out of the 200+ bands scheduled over the four days) it works out to be £10 per band (I know, I know…. I did get a B at maths ‘O’ level). Double the band count and you are seeing bands that command £20-£40 ticket prices for a fiver.

This year a collection of friends congregated in Blackpool from Bishops Stortford, Manchester, Sutton, Milton Keynes, South London, Ipswich and Derby to enjoy rather salubrious accommodation just a couple of streets walk away from the Winter Gardens. With the exception of Mo, this particular congregation are in their ‘50’s and ‘60’s (sorry Phil!) so whilst Rebellion represents a bit of a blip in terms of the normal sleeping habits and alcohol intake things rarely get out of hand these days. The only real difference is that I was going to bed at 3 am… the time that I would normally be getting up for a nocturnal piss!


Going back to the magnitude of the festival this year, to a man and woman I think we struggled with formulating viewing plans from such a congested running order. Bless him, Nick Pryde was so organized that he had prepared a spreadsheet of the running order supplemented with ‘revision notes’….. this one sticks in my mind….. The Newtown Neurotics…. ‘’80’s political, v. good’! Seriously though the running order was so crowded that it was impossible for me to see half the bands that I would have had the billing worked for my particular good or bad taste in music. However, that is my only gripe about a festival that was otherwise extremely well run and organized. 

Perhaps it was the introduction of the separate R Fest with a stage on the promenade that threw a spanner in my best laid plans. Although not far from the indoor stages, the trek to the R Festival stage took about 15 minutes by the time you had worked your way to the front of the stage. The concern then was that if a headliner was appearing in an indoor venue that was at capacity you were rather stuck.

As I recall, the first band that I saw over the weekend was a Swiss outfit that went by the name of Fluffy Machine who were OK. I then moved on to my first ‘must see’ band, The Circle Jerks. This band had been on my radar for 38 years or more, ever since someone taped for me a ‘Rodney On The ROQ’ compilation album which featured a host of Californian bands championed and featured on Rodney Bingenheimer’s L.A. radio show of the same name. Keith Morris of The Circle Jerks is another legendary figure in the Californian punk rock seen having served with Black Flag, The Circle Jerks and more recently Off!. They did not disappoint, delivering a blistering set of US hardcore classics that hopefully would set the tone for the weekend ahead.


Next up was Mr Jobson and Co. late stand ins for Bad Religion who pulled out at the 11th hour. This was to be the first of three sets by The Skids that I was to see in 48 hours. At times Rebellion seemed like a Skids’ convention! But I wasn’t complaining in the least. They delivered a greatest hits set, the songs being interspersed with Jobbo’s anecdotes…. Something of a raconteur is Richard, his talents are not limited to cutting the rug! Aside from the hits, the new material from the excellent ‘World On Fire’ gave way to covers ‘Complete Control’ and ‘Pretty Vacant’. The Skids have released an album of punk covers under the title of ‘Songs From A Haunted Ballroom’.


And that was it for Day 1. My best laid plans to take in Misty in Roots and Hawkwind came to nothing on this occasion…. next time?

Our pitfall at Rebellion is in part to our inability to navigate beyond the Brew Room pub without falling across its threshold…. it is something to do with the holiday spirit and good company I think.


I did extract myself from the pub to make it into see the Newtown Neurotics, a band that I have been listening to since 1983 and seeing live since 1985. Whilst it is always great to hear the likes of ‘The Mess’ and ‘Living With Unemployment’ it is refreshing to know that the band are not resting on their laurels as they have a new album soon to be available called  ‘Cognitive Dissidents’ on Cadiz Records and a new single ‘Climate Emergency ‘ that got an airing on the day. I am sure that the new album will also have something to say about the old foe as things are bad and on the verge of getting worse I fear…. Like 1979 again but without the decent music!


Following on from that and 10 minutes of Attila’s poetry from the Literary Stage it was over to the promenade for me for the rest of the afternoon and most of the evening.

So how’s this for a line up of consecutive bands!

From The Jam
The Skids
The Undertones
The Stranglers

What was it I said about 1979… well here the good music was to be found!

From The Jam I was particularly looking forward to. This will for evermore be the closest that I will ever get to seeing The Jam. Many years ago I missed the early incarnation of FTJ at the Junction in Cambridge when Rick Buckler was on board. The following year having enjoyed a modicum of success they played the Corn Exchange and with my dislike of the venue, I elected not to go. I had a ticket to see them more recently in Bury St Edmunds but missed it as I lost track of reschedule after reschedule!

Despite the current health problems endured by both Russell and Bruce they played a blinder, more than enough to moisten the eye of a Jam fan what missed out first time around!


As I stood in the sun listening to ‘Going Underground’ that closed their set the line 

‘You choose your leaders and place your trust
As their lies wash you down and their promises rust
You'll see kidney machines replaced by rockets and guns
And the public wants what the public gets
But I don't get what this society wants’

Hit me hard. A strong resonance 42 years down the line as 0.42% of the electorate stand ready to foist Margaret Thatcher’s stunt double upon us! 

Back then to the narrative…. The Skids ran through another set (that I thought might have included more recent material amongst the well known tracks) similar to the Bad Religion stand in set, but it was none the less enjoyable for that.


More health casualties were evident when The Undertones took to the stage when a Billy Doherty stand in was occupying the drum stool, Billy having been laid low. His deputy did a fine job however and the Derry men delivered an anticipated set full of smiles and the exuberance of youth not often seen from a band of 60 year olds (Paul excepted!).


This just left the Stranglers for the R Festival stage and here I have to say that I rationed myself to the first five songs due to a need to get back to the Wintergardens for the Ruts DC acoustic set. On balance, I see The Stranglers many more times that any other band in a given year and so on this occasion a compromise had to be made.


So I found myself in Spanish hall for Ruts DC amongst a sea of bodies! By my reckoning there were about 500-600 people in the hall for an acoustic set at 10.30 at night. Impressive stuff and affirmation, if any were needed as to the affection that the punk fraternity have for Segs, Ruffy and Leigh!


The Skids closed the evening for me by which time I was getting the impression that Richard Jobson Doppelgangers had infiltrated the Wintergardens for the weekend, so ubiquitous was the man!

And so closed Day 2 bandwise.

Saturday’s musical adventure commenced with 999, never to be missed for me! This was the second time around in a couple of weeks after the long pandemic musical drought. Auturo explained from the outset that Nick had been hospitalized the day before with a heart issue but had managed to be signed off in time to play the gig…. The show must go on eh Nick! They were great as usual, mush appreciated in the Empress ballroom. 


Post 999 I thinks that the need for food had to be addressed. I did return to the Empress Ballroom for a couple of quick rounds with Stinky and the Rejects before returning to Spanish Hall for a second dose of Nick Cash. Nick was followed by Henry Cluney. At this point in the day’s proceedings it is entirely possible, nay, likely that I was not my usual sharp witted self! I do recall that Henry berated me for coming in at the wrong time with my Oooh-oooh-oooh’s during ‘Gate 49. Apologies Henry!


Owen's comment 'Like looking in a mirror' was noted!


Reading through the list of bands that I saw, it is becoming ever more apparent that I was done musically very early on each night! What a lightweight, although I recall bollocks was talked each night into the wee hours back at the house.

Sunday becomes even weirder as I saw just four bands I think!! 

I’ll always be in the running to see Conflict. I was a bit late coming to the Conflict/anarcho party and I did not get to see Conflict until 1986 at The Richmond Hotel in Brighton. At the time ‘The Ungovernable Force’ had just come out and I was rather terrified by them. By the time I saw them at ‘The Gathering Of The 5000’ gig at Brixton there was a very heavy scene around Conflict, some serious shite with the Metropolitan Police. Colin would hate to hear this but whilst the message is still there it is not delivered with the same menace as 36 years ago. Perhaps it’s something to do with social media. Information sharing through a whizzy Facebook page is a long way from receiving badly photocopied flyers through the post. On the last few occasions that I have seen Conflict play I have to admit that I struggle to hear what they are playing. Stuart (the drummer) said that they have slowed down over the years so I guess it’s all down to multiple lost frequencies in my hearing range…. I blame Jean Jacques Burnel!

And so back to the Empress Ballroom for the last time for the UK Subs and Ruts DC. The Subs, were just… well…the Subs. It’s good to see Charlie Harper back in his natural habitat after this two year hiatus!


Ruts DC have the work ethic akin to that of the Stakhanovite’s of the old Soviet Union. If they are not touring or on stage at one festival or another they appear to be in the studio recording new material! Also they never baulk at the idea of playing new material whenever and wherever the opportunity arises. Lesser bands may save new material for a lower key gig or a better known Ruts DC audience. No…. let’s knock these new tunes out to 3,000 people! Tonight there were no less than three new songs being showcased tonight ‘Faces In The Sky’, ‘Counterculture’ and ‘Born Innocent’ and I am happy to report that they sound just fine!


Having seen Stiff Little Fingers very recently I decided to take on the sea air for the last in the company of Squeeze…. Or at least part of Squeeze, Chris Difford being yet another medical casualty knocked out for the weekend. Nevertheless, Glen Tilbrook and the musicians surrounding him pulled the gig off brilliantly as the band played a fantastic greatest hits set to round off my weekend.



See you next year Blackpool!