alexsarll: (crest)
Been playing Space Crusade again, after a gap of a couple of decades. Back then, I imagine people thought it would lose its appeal once I worked up the courage to talk to girls. More fool them.

Align is a tricky one to classify; not quite a play, nor a lecture. Call it a performance, it's probably as close as we'll get. Taking place, perfectly, mere yards from the actual Bridewell, it is a story of London's sacred geography which never gets too swivel-eyed, is far more 'wouldn't that be interesting?' than making foolhardy statements about what is or isn't true - and yet feels none the less mystical for all that. Rather than hang around afterwards, I feel driven to strike out along the Strand Ley about which we've just been hearing, and it's all delightfully numinous until I hit the smell of a freshers' event at the LSE. I doubt the bacchanals of our ancestors were any more fragrant, but I can edit that detail out of my daydreams.
Also tricky to classify: Neil Gaiman reading his new book Fortunately, The Milk, with Chris Riddell illustrating it live. Already a little multimedia, but then you have it being acted out and sung and generally turned into something quite its own creature through the assistance of TV Smith, Tom Robinson, Mitch Benn, Lenny Henry, Tori Amos' daughter, Andrew O'Neill, and Faith from 'Jimmy's End' (who is much less haunted when she's playing a pirate queen, so that's handy).

Lots of gigs by the people whose gigs I see a lot - to whose ranks the Soft Close-Ups were temporarily restored when [livejournal.com profile] augstone was briefly allowed back in the country. Neither show was quite as melancholy as the Sunday afternoon show a few months back, but still, when on a wet Wednesday night they played their adaptation of that Housman poem about death (tautology, I know), any plans I had for a straight edge gig crumbled. Good suppors at both shows, too - Parenthesisdotdotdot, aka Tim from Baxendale dressed as the chap from Dr Caligari, and Marcus Reeves, who is essentially my friend [livejournal.com profile] dr_shatterhand playing Marc Almond. At the latter show they also had me returning to the wheels of steel for the first time in some years. I always did prefer playing quieter sets. Read more... )

Other shows have been further from my usual orbit:
Martin Newell playing his annual show in a converted Colchester church in the shadow of the appropriately-named Jumbo water tower, bearing a curious resemblance to William Hartnell as a Teddy Boy pirate. He's a charmingly shambolic raconteur, an occasional ranter, and a mostly mediocre poet, but once he's singing, oh, the songs.
A violinist plays Bach in another church, this time right on the border of the City. I conclude that Bach may be the music to whose condition art is said to aspire.
A distinctly white trio, playing the hipster pub sat incongruously opposite the East London Mosque, play a nameless and heavily highlife-influenced jam. Against all odds, it works.
In a bar inexplicably decorated with biscuits stuck to bricks, a jazz band have one singer who thinks Seasick Steve is a role model rather than a terrible warning about the gullibility of authenticity bores. But the other singer sounds far more like Billie Holiday than any modern Briton has a right to.
(And because you can't win them all, there was also the act who appeared to be Jack Whitehall fronting Reef)
alexsarll: (Default)
Spent Thursday evening sat in friends' garden until gone 10 and a fair amount of Friday reading in the park, then yesterday there again for a pleasingly languid picnic interrupted by one attempt at skipping, which I'm sure didn't used to feel so terrifying, but then that was about 20 years ago when my legs weren't so long and easily caught. Also my first ice cream of the year, except it turns out there age hasn't changed so much, and I still get the sauce down my front. Other weekend activities: Nuisance, which in amongst the beloved and the half-forgotten and the not-really-Britpop-but-it's-ace-so-who's-counting*, once again managed to redefine 'going too far' with an airing for Kula Shaker's 'Mystical Machine Gun'. Just as the Beatles' 'All You Need Is Love' is justified by its use in the final episode of The Prisoner without in any way being redeemed, so with 'Mystical Machine Gun' and Phonogram. Not that even 'Mystical Machine Gun' is as bad as 'All You Need Is Love', obviously. Nothing is.
Still, good night otherwise. Also, one of the Monarch's bouncers talks like a Mexican Darth Vader. Brilliant.
Then on Saturday, one of my occasional forays into DJing, this time at a masked ball. Turns out I'm no worse on the decks than usual without my peripheral vision, but it's amazing how badly even a little mask affects other stuff like dancing, stairs &c. How Doctor Doom copes I shall never know. I was what I believe the professionals call 'back to back' with [livejournal.com profile] augstone. But not like that. You can probably guess who picked what.
No more music, thank you and goodnight )

Otherwise - the final Ashes to Ashes. Which reminded me a little of A Matter of Life and Death - never a bad thing - but even more so of another wartime film I once saw whose name I can never remember, where a group of people who have all had near misses on the way to the docks are on a cruise liner.spoilers, obviously ) Wonderful.

On the other hand - Doctor Who. I had assumed that with Russell T Davies' departure we would also see the back of the hopeless Chris Chibnall, but no, apparently he has incriminating polaroids of Moffat too, so he doesn't just get to do one episode, he gets two! Reintroducing the Earth Reptiles! As soon as we see that he's called his Welsh village Cwmtaff, it's clear that the cluelessness and laziness we expect of Who's answer to Jeph Loeb are unimpaired, and so the episode lurches predictably from unoriginal and unconvincing jeopardy to cackhanded Issue of the Week speeches (as has been noted elsewhere - if you're doing a Middle East analogy, it might be better not to cast giant lizards as the Jews). And the redesign - ugh! So boringly human. I am of course blaming Chibnall for that, whereas all credit for the city visual at the end goes to the design team, and any good bits - the Doctor's conversation with the boy, for instance - are clearly attributable to Moffat on the final script polish. Seriously, though - eight minutes to cover an entire village with a surveillance network? That felt improbable, and since it accomplished nothing, it wasn't even an improbability which served a plot purpose. It was filler of the worst sort; you might as well just have had a chicken ride a unicycle around the church for three minutes singing 'Copacabana', that would at least have been novel.
(Who fans might also be interested to know that Radio 7 are airing a new series of Eighth Doctor stories - afraid this is the second, but I only barely caught the first myself)

*Although the ex-Menswear guest DJ did push it when he played Dolly Parton.
alexsarll: (Default)
For the first time in, I think, three years, I'm DJing in London tomorrow night, at Don't Stop Moving. Which does have a Myspace and website too but they've not been updated in years, so for Facebook refuseniks, the basics are thus:
It's [livejournal.com profile] angelv's pop night. This means I will not be playing, well, today's Current Music for starters. Or any from recent posts. I will almost certainly play Girls Aloud, and Pulp, and beyond that I have various scrawled ideas with question marks next to most of them so your guess is as good as mine. Well, it probably isn't unless you know me very well, but still.
The night runs from 8-1 at not the real Camden Head but the former Liberties, on Camden High Street. It costs not very much to get in, two quid possibly? It is dead good. I am on early if you particularly wish to catch/avoid my set. It will be fun!

In other news: Alan Moore is apparently taking inspiration from "the excellent Charlie Brooker" in League of Extraordinary Gentlemen: Century. Just when you think he couldn't be any cooler...
alexsarll: (bernard)
I was honestly more stressed yesterday by the closure of Fopp and how close the day was when it wasn't chucking down than I was by yet more failed terrorists. Twats.

Green Feet was jolly good fun. I do wish comedy comperes wouldn't feel obliged to do all that 'practice clapping' nonsense, though; it just makes me want to not clap anyone at all, which would be unfair when all the acts were at least briefly amusing. Single finest observation was one by the last chap, a comical looking geezer with conventionally confused politics who was nonetheless correct in noting "Voting at general elections is just about deciding how loudly you're going to be shouting "CVNT!" at the TV".
I was on later than anticipated, but I think by playing to a handful of drunk people who wanted to dance I had one of my more satisfactory outings, and still managed to get a couple of environmental tracks in:
Shoulda saved those bottles, shoulda saved those cans, should oughta listened to that drastic man )
Plus, I seized my last chance to smoke while DJing; satisfactory at the time, but now I feel like my sinuses are about to fall out.

I see that Gordon Brown is asserting his socialist credentials by finding a job for the odious Digby Jones, friend of the long hours culture, foe of new bank holidays, and generally as much the stereotype of the oppressive mill owner as one could ever hope to meet. Well, Gordon, you've managed to disillusion me even faster than Tony did, which I suppose could be construed as an achievement of sorts.

The story's not actually as cool as the headline, but still -"First genome transplant turns one species into another".

edit: The new Smashing Pumpkins single sounds like the Manics, and not in a good way.
alexsarll: (Default)
It occurs to me that this may be my last chance to plug Green Feet, a comedy night-cum-club near Angel at which I shall be DJing on Friday night. Do come!

I suppose I'm meant to have something to say about today's transfer of power, aren't I? Sorry, but it was only the third most interesting installation of a new PM I've seen on the BBC this week. It was so previewed, and is already so reviewed, that it feels sealed under glass. I remember watching Thatcher fall from the school library, I remember Blair's first giddy victory and the week or so of stupidly believing things had changed which followed. I remember feeling a part of a historical moment, and feeling something more than that too. Today? Nothing. I'm watching the end of a story I'd already seen spoilered and pastiched.
Still, we've got foxes on the roof out the back of the House Beautiful again - now that does seem worth noting. And my copy of John Crowley's fourth Aegypt book has at last materialised, meaning I get to finish reading a series I began when I was, what, 11? 12? About when Major came to power, come to think of it. Less than 50 pages in and already it's had enough wisdom and perfect prose for most writers to make quite a creditable career. As Michael Chabon says on the back "There are some people - and I'm one of them - for whom life consists only in passing time between novels by John Crowley". There's enough in the world to occupy me, it's just in the shadows and side-streets, is all.

Neither islamic 'honour' killings nor islamic terrorism have anything to do with each other (or indeed islam), claims Muslim Council of Britain. This in the face of clear evidence, of course - but then I guess monotheists have a natural knack for ignoring that. Meanwhile, the headline "Gay bullying in schools 'common'" should perhaps have used the word 'homophobic' instead; as is, it gives quite the wrong impression, albeit perhaps a happier one.
alexsarll: (manny)
Now, of all the monsters I wasn't expecting to see brought back...
I think I liked 'Gridlock', though it wasn't at all what I was expecting; it felt like a 2000AD story given a happy ending (of sorts) by the Doctor's intervention. Possibly one of RTD's best stories? Also: sob.

It's not easy on the nerves DJing at someone else's, successful-with-the-general-public night; far more pressure than at one's own doomed follies. Still, I was on early, for the slow between band sets, so I think it went OK if only because I would have really had to make a hash of things for it to register.
You follow me in or you don't; either way it's alright )
And then Luxembourg, roaring into their new incarnation to general public acclaim. It's great to have them back.

Have been doing a lot of London wandering these past couple of days, thinking. Mostly warm and hapy thoughts inspired by the city - but the good thoughts all seem to be as vast and resistant to order as London herself. It's only the bad ones that coalesce into coherence. Like - the new Brunswick is a soul-less pseudo-metropolitan horror if ever I saw one. Like - those slides at the Tate really didn't use the space as well as they might (though the exclusive Long Blondes track upstairs is pretty good).

*I was actually trying to play Leonard Cohen, and didn't notice one of the tracks had been crossed out.

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