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Thursday, 10th of August, 2000
This is a continuation of (10:54 am)
This is a continuation of the last entry, because I’d written too much for blogger’s blog-entry window! On Monday the 31st of July, FourPlay began our daily regime (we sustained it for three days!) of practising in the “morning”. Morning of course means starting about 11am - we are musicians you know. Our rehearsals on these next three days involved the working together of a new cover (woo-hoo!) - a Suede song from their first album called The Drowners - as well as just practising some of the repertoire. I had intended to meet Mark there but we failed to cross paths, but later on I was at Tottenham Court Rd easyEverything and got an email from him whilst internetting. It turned out he was at Kensington High St (I knew I should’ve gone there) and we arranged to meet up. Tuesday the 1st of August involved rehearsal again in the morning, followed by the requisite wandering around shops, and then in the evening Tim & I went to Sally’s place in Camden Town for Amanda’s farewell. Had lovely dinner at Wagamamas (yet another…) and then drinks at a pub called Dingwalls. I found out that the legendary drum’n'bass collective/label Metalheadz had a Sunday night club there and resolved to go there the next Sunday. [Sadly wasn’t to happen, but I hoped…] Wednesday the 2nd was slightly more eventful. We rehearsed in the morning… Then I took the tube to Old Street, in search of a record store I hadn’t been to before (!) called Smallfish. Old Street does weird things with its name as it trundles along, so I went backwards and forwards about three times before I found the shop, but it was well worth it. They have a fantastic selection of stuff, much of it a little overpriced (welcome to London), but very impressive all the same. I found a t-shirt of 555 Recordings of Leeds, my current favourite record label, and snapped it up along with a couple of 7″s. Smallfish rival Rough Trade for best record store in London… That evening Tim & I met our friends Anna and Jo (who I know independently but who went to school together) and Anna took us to a wonderful Thai version of Wagamamas on Wardour St, called Busaba. Superb! We then took Anna and Jo to the Blue Room, a cafe down the road that we frequented last year with Kirra and Danae. Thursday the 3rd of August was our follow-up gig at Bartok. I made my way to Camden Town, wandering around the shops there as usual, and eventually made it to Bartok. We were hoping for perhaps a bit of a more sizeable sound setup this time, but lo and behold, exactly the same. However, our sound engineer did a fantastic job, and other than not being able to hear our vocals (not a big problem as everyone had lost their voices to the dreaded lurgy anyway), all was fine. Great audience again (heaps of Australians again)… Friday the 4th, another day of excitement, jam-packed. We were playing an afternoon gig at Canary Wharf, a “self-contained estate” on the Isle of Dogs. We thus got to take the new tube line, the Jubilee Line (it was still under construction when we were here last year). Why were we going into town anyway? On Saturday the 5th Veren went off to France. Glen took us all out to lunch in Notting Hill; at Victoria’s suggestion we went to Pharmacy, a restaurant/bar based on an installation I’d seen a year or two before at the Tate Gallery, by controversial English artist Damien Hirst. Odd. But the food was divine. Big thanks to Glen! Sunday the 6th was another market day - this time Camden Markets. I’d arranged to ring Sally and meet her, and everybody ended up going. We did a fairly thorough exporation… First I stopped by at Mega City Comics, because I’d found a number of Grant Morrison Doom Patrols at the Comic & Book Exchange. I knew Mega City had a whole lot of them (they’re out of print and unlikely to be collected), so I went in with a purpose, and ended up getting about 20 backissues. The very early ones were very tempting, but at about £4 a pop AUD$10+), it was a bit much. Still, I’ve got most of ‘em now! I had planned to go to the drum’n'bass club Metalheadz that night. However, I was exhausted, having been on my feet all day, and would’ve had to wait two hours before it started, which I couldn’t face, so I just went and did some internet… wrote a fair chunk of blog, which I’m finishing now.Monday the 7th of August, and Tim, Lara, Jordan and I were off gallivanting for a few days. First, some jobs had to be done, however! We put all our clothes in at the laundry down the road, and then I took an enormous pile of comics and books (mostly mine, some Tim’s), off to the post office. So, once we’d gotten our delightfully warm dry washing back, and packed it all up, we were off! Oh what fun; even though the bastards at the car hire place had refused to remove the back seats from the 7-seater we’d hired, so it was very hard to fit everything in, we somehow managed. We listened to funky CDs via my CD-to-tape converter thingy, and went off to Bath, where we found our way to a little Bed & Breakfast. We wandered around Bath and had some lunch/dinner, and then went back via a Safeways to get some nibbly supplies. Immediately I sat on my bed I decided I had to lie down. I was feeling extremely uncomfortable (I’d slept very badly the night before too - my bed in that hotel room had been truly appallingly bad, but still…) and even though at 8:30pm I desparately needed to, I couldn’t really sleep, just tossed and turned and felt crap. I didn’t feel nauseous, but everything was irritating, little sounds and all; I must’ve been totally exhausted and just not coping. I stayed there basically until about 8:30 the next morning, having slept pretty badly, when we got up to have breakfast and check out. Poor Petey. So, the morning of the 8th of August, and on discussion we decided just to drive somewhere. Back in the driver’s seat, I felt somewhat better, and improved as we went along. We knew we were going to Oxford, but not how we were getting there. It was really liberating and a lot of fun to just drive, look at stuff, and not worry about missing soundchecks or anything. We went into Salisbury and from there to the nearby Old Sarum castle - an extremely old site. My interest in ancient history being negligible, I admired the view and then went back to the car, unwilling to pay the £2 entry. Next stop was for supplies in some little town - cheeses, turkey, nice breads, avocado, corn chips, lettuce, cherry tomatoes. In the cute little town of Pewsey we found the ideal and idyllic spot for a picnic, in the shade in green grass next to the river Avon (more of a glorified trickle at this point). I couldn’t help thinking of Pooh and Piglet floating down the river in an upturned umbrella (with the original E.H. Shepherd drawings of course, none of this Disney crap). Delightful and hilarious. Eventually a woman drove past and said “You know you’re sitting on somebody’s private lawn?” but by then we’d finished anyway. Following lunch, Tim decided that we really had to veer via the Uffington White Horse, a horse cut into a chalk hill in the countryside some 3,500 years ago. As amazing as this sight was, we were as impressed just by the incredibly view of flat English countryside for miles into the distance. It was a beautiful sunny day, and altogether fabulous fun. That brings us to… Today! I thought we’d never make it! After a little more wandering about, we went back to the car, and gradually found our way back to London. We had dinner at, lo and behold!, Wagamamas (in Kensington High St, for variation), and now I’ve been at the Kensington easyEverything for a few hours, updating this blog. Finally done! Hopefully it won’t be as long until the next update, but who knows when I’ll have time? I’ll try, I promise.
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Monday, 7th of August, 2000
Well! Finally! Many of you (4:08 am)
Well! Finally! Many of you are no doubt wiping sweat from your brows after more than two weeks of non-updated blogness from me. I must apologize deeply, but it’s been a busy time and blogging requires a certain frame of mind to be done well. I finished the last entry before our fist gig at Paradiso in Amsterdam, on the 19th of July. That night and the next we played an hour-long set each night. The room was impressive, as I described before. Both nights we had quite talkative crowds, but they seemed to enjoy themselves thoroughly all the same. Both nights the gigs started considerably later than we expected - on the second night I think it was 12:30 or even 1am! On Friday the 21st, we all woke up very late again. I had my last wander around, and sometime in the middle of the afternoon I got an SMS (mobile short message) from Tim saying that Jordan’s backpack had been stolen! He’d been making a phone call in the hotel lobby, and it was taken from basically right under his nose. Luckily he had the FourPlay folder with all the info with him, and also all the cash we had, so all he lost was his mobile and camera - still a big pain, since we’d been communicating so much with SMS messaging. That evening we went and saw the very silly new Jackie Chan movie, Shanghai Moon, basically Jackie does Western… Suitably funny and mindless with some good Hong Kong style action. Next day, Saturday the 22nd, we were off to Rotterdam! We had plenty of time, but woke up very late of course. Lara and I then engaged in a last-minute dash for a birthday present for Tim *grin* The venue we played at was called Rotown. It turned out to be an extremely cool place. A great bar with lovely food, it turned into a venue later in the evening, with the back area being closed off. We’ve been hampered by some difficult stage sounds on the tour, but the sound was fine here, and the audience was totally into it. There were heaps of people - it seems to be the place to go if you’re an indie music fan in Rotterdam - and they really enjoyed our stuff. Now, the 23rd of July is Tim’s birthday… Lara and I had found a great book on Yiddish Theatre in Amsterdam that we knew he’d like, as well as some little things, and we decided we had to give it to him after the gig, since it was well after midnight. As well as being Tim’s birthday, it’s Katie’s birthday, and since it was late enough (after 9am) in Sydney, I decided to ring her. She was still in bed, but didn’t mind being woken up, and it was really lovely to talk for a bit. Next day, 23rd of July, we got back on the train, and were off to Gent, in northern Belgium, to play at the Festival. We found our way to the Ibis Hotel, and then wandered around town for a while, as our gigs weren’t until later. Next day, more wandering around the festival. Gent is a truly beautiful city, and is extremely active during the enormous festival. After soundcheck we had a free dinner, but La went to get changed first. The rain was coming and going, and there were a fair few people about. The band before us played countless encores, but eventually it was our turn. Miraculously, it stopped raining just in time for us to go on stage! The crowd was really quite immense, and cleared enjoyed our set… We played two encores, and afterwards sold some 58 CDs, signing them and chatting in various languages (talking to fans in (very bad) French - there’s an experience!) while the rain began again… A fantastic evening. On the 25th of July we had to go back to Amsterdam, as we were flying from there the next day. Tim & I decided to go back via Antwerp, as I’d loved it last year. I wanted to visit Bries, an amazing underground comics shop, and opposite it, Stereophonic Records, who specialise in exactly my kind of experimental electronica and drum’n'bass and stuff. Next day, the 26th of July, was a day of travel. We’d used up our London-Heathrow stopovers on the tickets we got (stupid rules about hubs and things, I dunno), and had to fly in to Birmingham, and then catch the train to London. We were fortunate to accidentally make use of a special that day that meant our tickets were only £6.99 each to London (usually probably £25 or more). So, two more hours of travel later and we were in London, taking the tube one stop to Bayswater again. This time we’ve been staying in the Princes Square Hotel, a (rather small) step above the last place, and about two blocks away from it - slighty closer to the tube stations. We had a very yummy Chinese dinner on Queensway. Bayswater is a beautiful area, and it’s been a highlight of staying in London just to be there. Thursday the 27th was our first gig back at Bartok, in Chalk Farm, where we’d played last year. In the morning I wandered into Soho again (of course!) and then to Chalk Farm. At Mega City Comics I got the much-delayed final issue of Alan Moore’s League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, which I read in the car trip the next day. I can’t express how much of a genius Alan Moore is. You just have to go and read something by him, that’s all there is to it. At 4pm we had our soundcheck, although it ended up being rather later than that. We had some… difficulties with sound, involving no foldback, tiny speakers, and a tiny desk. The sound engineers, whose fault it was not at all, ended up using every bit of equipment they had. Singing was very difficult as we could hardly hear ourselves. Kinda silly. Nevertheless, there were quite a lot of people there (lots of Australians, as usual) who had a great time, bought CDs afterwards, etc, and didn’t mind the sound, which was no doubt considerably better than we felt. By the second half even I couldn’t whinge ;) On the 28th, it was immediately on the road again (ho-ho) for us, driving all the way up to Holyhead in north-west Wales. We left early early, taking the tube to Victoria to pick up the hire-car, and then of course I took the driving seat (any opportunity…) It was quite a lovely drive up there; we stopped in Shrewsbury for lunch, the town where I was born, and decided that it was really quite a good choice of birthplace, although I couldn’t live there, being too much of a city gent. Lovely place though. That night we were put up in a bed & breakfast in town. There being a TV in the room, Tim & I had to watch, even though it never occurs to us to watch it when we’re at home ;) [Did I mention the inordinate amounts of MTV and suchlike crap we watched in Europe? There is so much rubbish in the charts, I can’t begin to say… Don’t knock Britney Spears though! (*ahem*) Oops, I did it a£$%£$% Bleedin’ ‘eck! And that fucking Melanie C song…! And that’s just the listenable ones. I ended up liking them as a reaction against the vomitous R&B hip-hop that makes up most of the charts, or the lifeless club-house pap]. Saturday the 29th, and everyone else was going to drive around Wales for a couple of days, getting back to London on Sunday night. I was feeling restless, however, and not into looking at the (admittedly extremely beautiful) countryside. So I got Jordan to drive me to the train station after a lovely breakfast (but I did ask for no baked beans! Ugh! Hard to clean them off the eggs and bacon…) I sat waiting on Platform 2 for the train, and then it turned out that it was leaving from Platform 1. Dashed over there, and found a decent seat, and then couldn’t find my mobile phone! The doors had closed, and I had to reach through the open window to open the door, climb off the train and ask the man on the platform to hold the train as I’d lost my phone. “Well it’s about to go” he said, and refused to hold it. I ran back to Platform 2 and the people I’d been sitting with handed me my phone. I still missed my train though. The next one was leaving about 20 minutes later, but wasn’t direct… As it happened, what with delays and changing trains, I didn’t get into London until about 8pm. I think all the trains were delayed, as there was some kind of trackwork going on (typical), so it’s possible I didn’t waste any more time than I would have had wasted for me otherwise anyway! I bought myself a lovely Chinese take-away from the place we’d eaten at before, and ate it in the twilight in Kensington Gardens, and then wandered down to the Kensington High St easyEverything (where I am now in fact!) I immediately felt that it was the right thing to come back; I was really glad to be back in London. So, on Sunday the 30th I rang Mark when I woke up in the morning, and we met at Notting Hill Gate and explored London. We went everywhere, including Rough Trade in Covent Garden, Berwick St Soho, various Music & Video Exchanges and so on. We incited each other into spending far more money than we should have, on comics, CDs, records, books… At 3:45 we went to St Paul’s Cathedral and watched some of the Evensong. It’s an immense and impressive building, which I hadn’t seen properly before, from the outside or in. Now, this blog entry is too long… At this point I paused for breath for a few days, so I’ll put the rest in the next entry!
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Utility Fog, Peter's show on FBi Radio in Sydney. Peter has a LiveGerbil, too! Friend me if you know me, but don't expect many posts there. rss2, rss or atom feeds. Tasty! Via those feeds, Stumblings is syndicated over @ LiveJournal if you want to add it to your friends list - but please come over here to leave comments (I don't check 'em there!) Sidebar all too much? Check out all reviews separately in the: Reading archives | Listening archives Last 5 comments: Testing, testing 23.05.2008 (09:09 pm) Do The Test 26.03.2008 (06:56 pm) Sorry 14.02.2008 (03:23 pm) 10 years ago... 18.12.2007 (03:59 pm) 10 years ago... 18.12.2007 (03:58 pm) Jump to: Current/recommended reading Current/recommended listening — bugger all here, but these days you can read some of my reviews at the cyclic defrost blog and in cyclic defrost itself (abridged, with free typos/grammatical mistakes added!)... Recently played tracks (via last.fm) Other weblogs of note: angelog poison to the mind the null device virulent memes (which is no more) charlie stross's diary chris lawson et al's talking squid Roger Langridge's hotel fred crooked timber greensblog larvatus prodeo (etc) My Amazon.co.uk wishlist Peter's recently played tracks (via last.fm) No recent tracks Reading:Note, my earlier book reviews, and this applies somewhat to the music reviews too, were formatted as a long stream of commentary, and thus need a lot of rewriting to fit into separate entries. So there are very few previous book review entries as yet. For now check the static Reviews Archive for a bunch of earlier reviews. Listening:Monthly archives:
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