alexsarll: (Default)
Recently took delivery of Saint Etienne's delayed new compilation, London Conversations, and have been thinking about how unlikely a band they are. Their danceable cover of hairy old Neil Young's 'Only Love Can Break Your Heart' hit in 1990, the same year as Candy Flip's not dissimilar take on one of the few non-dreadful Beatles songs, 'Strawberry Fields Forever'. Would anyone have expected either of the acts behind these apparent novelties to go on to spend 20 years as one of Britain's most cherished, most quietly trailblazing cult bands? I can't think of such a deceptive start since Bowie first came to mass attention with 'The Laughing Gnome'.
And then a detour in my musings when, last night, [livejournal.com profile] cappuccino_kid took me to see Black Box Recorder. Because don't those two bands almost form a subgenre all their own? Two male survivors, who aren't fronting the bands but who definitely need to be on stage, not backroom boys. One frontwoman called Sarah, thought a bit flat by some but recognised by indie boys of a certain stripe as an aspect of the goddess; her stage persona is all about the innocence, maybe with a little tang of experience, but you know she's no puppet. And the songs all inhabit a world of England past. The difference being, Black Box Recorder are the England you hoped was past but fear might not be (behind the stage last night, a Union Jack emblazoned with ROCK AND ROLL NOT DOLE), where Saint Etienne are the past you hope is still there just below the surface (watching the 'Hobart Paving' video, I remember that King's Cross, and I miss it).
Support was Madam acoustic; I swear she looks younger than she used to when [livejournal.com profile] hospitalsoup was in her band, five years or more ago.

Interesting that today should bring further confirmation of Stephen Fry's status as a national treasure, as I was already planning to write a little about him, having yesterday read Simon Gray's Fat Chance. Some of you may remember that in 1995, Stephen Fry, then in a play called Cell Mates, disappeared, and was briefly feared to have killed himself before turning up on the Continent (very Black Box Recorder, come to think of it). Simon Gray was the author and director of that play, and aside from having previously loved his Smoking Diaries, I was intrigued by the possibility of A Book Which Didn't Like Stephen Fry. I mean, don't get me wrong, I think he's great, but just as I enjoy Lawrence Miles' anti-Steven Moffat agenda re: Doctor Who, I tend to find devil's advocates fun. Come on, if you'd lived in the ages of faith, wouldn't you have wanted to read The Three Impostors* even if you believed, just for naughtiness' sake? So Gray was royally let down by Fry, and the front cover quote is "Makes Mommie Dearest read like a Mother's Day card" - Mark Lawson, The Guardian. Well, that should have been my first warning. Granted, Smug Slug does sometimes restrict himself to stating the bleeding obvious, but more often he misses the point entirely, and Gray himself notes that "The Guardian, ever vigilant in its defence of truth and the decencies, published an article quoting the unfavourable reviews, neglecting to mention that the Guardian's own reviewer had written both warmly and intelligently about the play." And if there is a villain here it is the media, and the media's delight in reporting what the media is saying without ever deigning to return to primary sources - something of which we see even more these days simply because there's more media and more pages and airtime to fill, with results I'm sure I need hardly list and decry again. Gray does accuse Fry of certain crimes - a tendency to play himself, for instance, whether he is meant to be playing someone else, or just honestly being himself. Well, that's hardly news, and nor is it delivered in terms significantly more damning than Gray uses of himself in The Smoking Diaries. Fry comes across more as a sad figure than a mad one, and more mad than bad - and since he's come out as a manic depressive, none of this really does much to contradict his own acknowledgment of his situation. Part of me's disappointed that there is no anti-Fry book, but mostly I just think 'bless'. And posthumously bless cantankerous old Gray, too. Though the real hero of the tale, would you believe, is Rik Mayall.

*Which reminds me, [livejournal.com profile] sbp - any joy locating my copy of the Arthur Machen novel of the same name?
alexsarll: (seal)
The best thing about a Moffat two parter is that after a first part which was brilliant, you get a second part that's even better. Spoilers! )
I'm sure by now we all know about Lawrence Miles' interesting if infuriating blog, and Paul Cornell's has been about for a while (as if getting mainstream coverage for Gordon Brown vs the Skrull Empire weren't enough, turns out he's adapted Iain M Banks' The State of the Art for radio. With Anthony Sher as the Ship and Nina Sosanya as Sma, no less). But I was happy to discover this week that the other big beast of the Who books* finally has one too - Lance Parkin. In part because he's writing a Tenth Doctor book. As in, just the Doctor. There's not a lot up yet, but he does link to an interview in which I made the sad discovery that one of my favourite Who writers wanted to kill off one of my favourite companions.

Shaun Tan's The Arrival is not a comic per se; it's a wordless picture book. The wordlessness perfectly suited to the story of an immigrant's experience in a New World whose language he does not know, a city of wonders as strangely familiar as the lurking horrors from which he fled in the old country. It has some of the most haunting artwork I have seen in a long time, and some of the most heart-rending. I imagine it would be a particularly good purchase for any child which parents fear may have been exposed to Mail headlines about immigrants eating house prices, but it deserves an audience far beyond that.

I love White Mischief, so I'm glad it's popular, but dear heavens it gets hot in there with those crowds, especially if one is making an effort to dress up (which the vast majority did, splendidly so - at one point I thought "What the Hell is that girl wearing?" before processing that she was in jeans and a teen top, ie what would outside be considered normal). Some fine acts, though - I particularly liked the Brel-singing acrobat and the sword-swallowing, and if Tough Love and Ebony Bones had just played shorter sets, they would have absolutely killed.
And for all my irritation at last night's multi-clash, I at least got to say hello and cheerio to some of the Poptimism lot on my way home.

*Kate Orman I would have counted for her Virgin work, but once she went to BBC books and started co-writing with that guy, they no longer grabbed me in the same way. And Daniel O'Mahony was excellent, but he only wrote two.

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