Showing posts with label Womble 4. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Womble 4. Show all posts

Thursday, 12 November 2015

Flying Lotus at Glastonbury 2015- new book extract

Nearly at the end of the new Glasto book! Just editing to do. (Just!)  And a title to decide upon.

In advance of that though, here's a brief snippet, hot off the press, about Flying Lotus' Sunday night set...     



I reached West Holts at exactly the moment Flying Loftus’ set kicked off. I couldn’t have timed it better. It all looked very futuristic. A massive square arch was set up on the stage, lit up with the coolest blue (or was it red? I can’t remember and I never made a note, but it was cool.) Behind this arch and behind some sort of opaque screen, Flying Lotus entered and started ripping it up from the word go. It was well, hard to describe. 

Jazz? Dark? Experimental? Hip hop?

All of this and more. 

Wildly different and not what you’d expect from a headliner. Good on Glasto for putting someone different and quite risky in such a slot. It was loud as well; very loud. This was good. From the start he brought onto the stage with him the legendary bass player, Thundercat. 

Bonus points.

I sat towards the back of the field on one of the benches and wallowed in the music. It was a matter of getting lost in it, letting it swirl around the dark Glastonbury night sky, and to let it flow. There were a few people sitting on the benches near me, some of whom clearly knew exactly who Flying Lotus was and were, like me, loving every second. Some others however, I think had simply sat down for a rest, to clear their heads, to let things wear off a bit and seemed mystified and baffled about what was happening on the stage.

As for me, I had no idea what any of the songs were. I recognised the start of the set as “Theme” and I thought he followed that with “It Was a Good Day” (the Ice Cube song.) I really should have picked up on the rest of the set that I saw because I’d heard enough of his stuff before. I had his “You’re Dead” and “Cosmogramma” albums and played them more than a few times. It didn’t matter because live he was a revelation. A lot sharper, if that makes sense. Like a blurred photograph being pulled into focus. Or more like that moment when you’re at the opticians and they try all those different lenses in the glasses and then, suddenly, they slot that one lens in and blam! It all becomes crystal clear. That’s exactly what it was like.

That sharpness, that diamond-like edge to the songs made all the difference. Half-formed memories of hearing the tracks on CD had me thinking “oh yes, this is…oh, what is it called…?” but it was moving too quickly and I was too tired to get a handle on it. Besides, I didn’t want to spend my time there racking my brains, I simply wanted to hear the music. Because that’s all it’s about isn’t it? The music.

I looked around the field. It was a shame because it wasn’t much over half full. I’d have bet that The Who, The Chemical Brothers and FFS were a much bigger draw than Flying Lotus. I sort of felt sorry for people who were missing out on this because they were stood at the Pyramid watching The Who go through all their tired old moves.  On the other hand, if they’d made a decision to go and see The Who, then I’d guess they wouldn’t really appreciate Flying Lotus.

But I had a decision to make myself, twenty five minutes into Flying Lotus’ set. 

Was I going to stay or was I going to peg it back to the Park Stage to watch Ryan Adams? I had painted myself into a bit of corner here. 

A dilemma.   



My previous three books about Glasto are all available here-

either as Kindle e books or in paperback:


Monday, 31 August 2015

Womble 4!!! Sneak preview!!!

Because it's only a month before ticket sale day for Glasto 2016 and I'm halfway or so through writing my new Glasto book, I thought it might be worthwhile posting a bit of it on here, just in advance. This excerpt is unedited and a touch raw and maybe it won't even reach the final cut. But for now, here's the beginning of Chapter 4... 

The Glasto line-up had just been announced... 





Chapter 4  

I switched my phone off that morning in work. 

It would have been too tempting to keep peeking at it, although I was distracted so much that I did go on the earliest lunch possible. 

As I headed out down the lift and down the 13 floors to the outside world, I wondered what exactly was I doing getting so excited about which bands were playing Glasto? 

Why did it matter if some relatively obscure band from Salford were playing? 

A band from 1977 with a chequered history to say the least? 

A band that I loved and a band that I’d been into longer than I’d been married, had kids, had a mortgage, longer than I’d been working for. 

A band I’d been into for nearly forty years. 

A band that is a bit of a cult and undoubtedly an influence to many other artists, but a band that’s far from being a household name. (In our house they are of course, but that’s only because I’ve been going on and on about them for the past quarter of a century.)

 I’d bet that of all the people I’ve ever worked with, only a handful of them have ever even heard of The Fall. Even amongst my closest, non-work friends, who are into music as much as I am, there’s not much, if any love for The Fall. 

Bafflement, if anything. 

I’ve even given up trying to convince my best mate Andy, of the sheer majesty that The Fall are in full flow. Thirty-odd years of pressing Fall mix tapes - and latterly mix CDs - into his hands and exhorting him to “listen to this, it’s really great” and failing, have made me give it up as a lost cause. 

And I’m running out of formats as well.

What made The Fall playing Glasto so significant, so important that I was acting like some spotty, teenage fanboy? I was 53 for goodness’ sake. I was now a grandfather. I should have been past all that and have moved onto more age-appropriate activities, like gardening or crown green bowling. I don’t even have a shed.

But I do have stacks and stacks of Fall CDs.  Studio albums. Compilations. DVDs. Books. 

And fuck loads of live CDRs. 

Probably not even got time to listen to them all. However, it’s better than any old shed.

I have to accept it. 

The Fall will always be there.

As I got out of the lift and into the street, I took my phone out of my pocket. I’d be able to get a signal. I switched it on and looked at the line-up again. Maybe I’d imagined that The Fall were playing. Maybe it was all, in a soap opera sort of a way, “just a dream.” 

But no! They were there on that Glasto line up page. 

The Fall.

At the same time I was looking at the line up, my phone started buzzing and buzzing. Twitter notifications. Buzz buzz buzz. It was like holding a fistful of bees.



My previous three books about Glasto are all available here-
either as Kindle e books or in paperback: