A blog to record my immediate post-gig thoughts. Don't expect professional criticism. I'm just a punter with a sense of humour.
Saturday, 22 December 2018
Blue Rose Code, Alexander Wilson Suite, Paisley Town Hall. Fri 21st Dec 2018
While a few of my friends nipped along to the Barrowland to sample some old school Big Country and The Skids, I instead plumped for something quieter at Paisley Town Hall. I was a bit surprised to get parked so easily close to the venue until I discovered the gig wasn't in the main hall but instead upstairs in one of the smaller rooms.
It wasn't the kind of gig to take pictures so I'll do my best to describe it.
The ambience in the Alexander Wilson Suite was cosy but refined. Seats in rows of six on either side of the long room provided a capacity for around two hundred people. Most were taken up by a mainly mature audience with only a few empty ones near the back. The cold night was kept at bay by grilled radiators inset in the walls distributing warm air to the room. Dangling from the ornate ceiling, massive brass chandeliers conjured an image of mutant-legged spiders holding up dim, electric candles, some of which weren't lit, casting a soft glow on the audience below. Two spotlights, one on either side of the slightly raised stage, were accompanied by a couple of coloured uplighters, providing a pink tinge on the back wall and, as the musicians moved forward or back, creating bluey shadows, which stretched and shrank behind them.
Guitarist Lyle Watt was tonight's support act playing around twenty minutes of his instrumental compositions. He's a highly talented plucker, good enough for me to pop to the merch table to purchase his CD EP.
When it was time for Ross Wilson, aka Blue Rose Code, to take the stage he kept it simple, with just him and two band members on stage, the aforementioned Lyle on guitar and someone called Andy on keyboards. All three were bearded and in jumpers, Ross wearing a ribbed brown affair with a round neckline. Ross's hair was short and shaved, the others long but tied back.
Ross played acoustic guitar too and the sound generated by the band was beautiful and clear. The musicianship from all three was exquisite and tight and my only complaint would be that some of Ross' chat between songs was too conversational and a bit unclear at times. Talk into the mike, mate.
Unusually for a Paisley crowd on a Friday night, the audience was respectful and quiet, with only a few making excuses to visit the bar or toilet. At the end, the band got a standing ovation.
For those of you not versed in BRC's music, I would describe it as music to encapsulate the spirit of waking from a cosy night's sleep on a sunny Sunday morning with a view outside of a Scottish beach, the Atlantic waves gently lap against the shore. In the press, it's been described as 'Caledonia Soul'. It's certainly more than just folk music.
Even if I didn't end up rocking 'Into the Valley' tonight 'In a Big Country', I got to enjoy a cultured evening of beautiful, lyrical Scottish music. Cheers, Ross.
(He was much better tonight than the last time I saw him, at Saint Lukes).
Saturday, 15 December 2018
Paul McCartney, 'Freshen Up' Tour, SSE Hydro Glasgow. Fri 14th Dec 2018
Icon.
Legend.
Amazing gig.
When you're Paul McCartney, you can get the most talented musicians to play in your band. They need to be the best to match your ability. Tick.
When you're Paul McCartney, you can get Natalie Portman and Johnny Depp to perform sign language to the lyrics of one of your songs (on video). Tick.
When you're Paul McCartney, you can get a room full of proper stars to dance on video to another one of your songs. Tick.
When you're Paul McCartney, your Japanese fans will fly all the way to Glasgow to see you perform (and sit in the best seats). Saiko.Tick.
Because you're Paul McCartney, you can play the bass, the piano, the electric guitar, the acoustic guitar, the mandolin and the lute and play them brilliantly for nearly three hours without even needing to sip a bottled water. At seventy-six, you've been doing it so long, you know how it's done. And you can remember your lyrics without needing a crib sheet. Tick.
When you're Paul McCartney, you can surprise the shit out of the audience with a loud explosion with fire, smoke and pyros during "Live and Let Die". Boom.
I loved this gig.
The audience was multigenerational, from eight to eighty, and everyone enjoyed it. We felt included. The whole of the downstairs stood and danced for the entire show, a lot of them bringing signs they'd made for Paul to read out. He played forty songs and hardly broke a sweat.
On a personal level, It was fun to see the Paisley Grammar School choir accompanying him on "Wonderful Christmastime".
I wouldn't have called myself a Macca fan before tonight but this gig made my top 3 for 2018, pushing Steve Martin down to four (the others being Billy Joel at MSG and Queen at Glasgow Green).
Age is no barrier when you're Paul McCartney.
Setlist
A Hard Day's Night (The Beatles song)
Junior's Farm (Wings song)
Can't Buy Me Love (The Beatles song)
Letting Go (Wings song)
Who Cares
Got to Get You Into My Life (The Beatles song)
Come On to Me
Let Me Roll It (Wings song) (followed by "Foxy Lady" jam)
I've Got a Feeling (The Beatles song)
Let 'Em In (Wings song)
My Valentine
Nineteen Hundred and Eighty-Five (Wings song)
Maybe I'm Amazed
We Can Work It Out (The Beatles song)
In Spite of All the Danger (The Quarrymen song)
From Me to You (The Beatles song)
Dance Tonight
Love Me Do (The Beatles song)
Blackbird (The Beatles song)
Here Today
Queenie Eye
Lady Madonna (The Beatles song)
Eleanor Rigby (The Beatles song)
Fuh You
Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite! (The Beatles song)
Something (The Beatles song)
Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da (The Beatles song)
Band on the Run (Wings song)
Back in the U.S.S.R. (The Beatles song)
Let It Be (The Beatles song)
Live and Let Die (Wings song)
Hey Jude (The Beatles song)
Encore:
Wonderful Christmastime (with Paisley Grammar School Choir)
Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band (Reprise) (The Beatles song)
Helter Skelter (The Beatles song)
Golden Slumbers (The Beatles song)
Carry That Weight (The Beatles song)
The End (The Beatles song)
Friday, 14 December 2018
Fish, O2 Academy, Glasgow. Thurs 13th Dec 2018
The audience was predominantly male, bald, fat and bespectacled, much like Fish (and myself).
Nowadays, the pot-bellied rocker uses a lyric folder to remember all the words he wrote all those years ago and his voice is past its best but he's still a great frontman, with the banter and presence of a seasoned barroom stool sitter. The crowd was rowdy but he shut down the calls for 'Grendel' and 'Gies a bun' with humour and aplomb, not letting them get the better of him. He had tales to tell and wasn't going to be interrupted.
This tour was sold as playing Clutching At Straws in its entirety for the first time, plus tracks from the new album 'Weltschmerz' due next year. Breaking up the classic album worked well, mixing in the old with the new. This was my first listen to his new stuff and it sounded a bit like his old stuff, just with different lyrics. Not a lot of variation - there was slow, there was angry, there was waltz, yes, waltz. This tour's gimmick was to ask the audience to dance with each other for 15 seconds during a song called the Trondheim Waltz, grabbing a stranger and whirling round in three time. I cringed as lots of men in black T-shirts obeyed their master and danced with each other. Not me.
The show wasn't a sell-out. The balcony was empty but downstairs was fairly packed. As usual, someone got on my goat, this time a tall, drunk and expressive gentleman who pushed in front of me with his pint then stood blocking my view. Fortunately, he wanted to get closer to the front so he lasted only a couple of songs before moving forward again. Later, a weeble wobbled in front of me as he struggled to bear his own weight, resorting to shifting from side to side blocking me when on his right. A few loud thunder claps from me near his ear, which to be fair was right in front of me, was all the persuasion he needed to shift over.
As a live artist, Fish is nearing his 'use by' date. His back is gubbed, his knees are gone and his voice has minimal range. The backing singer carried a lot of the tunes but I still enjoyed it, especially the encore with Tux On and Incommunicado. It just wasn't anywhere near as special as a Marillion Christmas gig at the Playhouse or Barrowland.
Support was from Doris Brendel and her band. She also sang backing vocals with Fish. Her voice isn't the best either. I probably won't be seeking out her albums.
Setlist
Slàinte Mhath (Marillion song)
Man With A Stick
Hotel Hobbies (Marillion song)
Warm Wet Circles (Marillion song)
That Time of the Night (The Short Straw) (Marillion song)
Little Man What Now
Torch Song (Marillion song)
White Russian (Marillion song)
Just for the Record (Marillion song)
C Song
Going Under (Marillion song)
Sugar Mice (Marillion song)
Waverley Steps
The Last Straw (Marillion song)
Encore:
Tux On (Marillion song)
Incommunicado (Marillion song)
Friday, 12 October 2018
Warwick Johnson - Sonic Acoustic Attack Tour @ Audio, Glasgow, Fri 12th Oct, 2018
Warwick Johnson played for two and a half hours, playing a mix of Black Star Riders, Almighty, Thin Lizzy and various covers giving great value for money on a £15 ticket (plus booking fee). The craic was golden from both the stage and the audience.

Sunday, 30 September 2018
Kylie, 'Golden Tour', SSE Hydro, Glasgow Sun 30th Sept, 2018.
I normally bitch about the punters around me but not tonight. Everyone was lovely. Even after the interval, when the young people thought they would make their way to the front only to encounter the dividing barrier - for a golden circle that was less than packed - they didn't make a fuss and edged back again.
Ms. Minogue was on top form. With another chart-topping album under her cowgirl belt, she wowed us with hit after hit, taking us from 50's America, through the rebellious sixties, onto the disco floors of 70's Studio 54 and then right up to now.
The choreography was classy without being too showy, the huge screens were used superbly to convey desert vistas, pool hall bars, shadowy forests and display specially shot videos to complement the stage performance; the lighting was amazing and the staging used the walkway and front stage to good effect, bringing her closer to everyone. When the show finished, the noise from the crowd was the loudest I've ever heard at the Hydro.
What a night. She's a special girl.
Setlist
Act I: Desert Sunrise
Golden
Get Outta My Way
Better the Devil You Know
Act II: The High and Dry
Blue Velvet (Tony Bennett song)
(Interlude)
Confide in Me
I Believe in You
Where the Wild Roses Grow (Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds cover) (Snippet)
In Your Eyes
A Lifetime to Repair
Act III: Nothing Behind Me, Everything Ahead of Me
Shelby '68
Radio On
Wow
Can't Get You Out of My Head (Contains elements of "The Chain" by Fleetwood Mac)
Act IV: At the Biker Rally
Slow (Contains elements of "Being Boiled" by The Human League)
Kids (Robbie Williams cover)
The One
Stop Me From Falling
Act V: At the Picnic after the Biker Rally
Wouldn't Change a Thing
I'll Still Be Loving You
Especially for You (Jason Donovan cover)
Lost Without You
All the Lovers
Act VI: Studio 54
New York City / Raining Glitter / On a Night Like This
The Loco-Motion (Carole King cover) (Contains elements of "Bad Girls" by Donna Summer)
Spinning Around
Encore:
Love at First Sight
Dancing
Friday, 20 July 2018
Martin Metcalfe & The Fornicators @ The Bungalow, Paisley. Fri 20th July 2018
I loved Goodbye Mr. Mackenzie when I was a youth, travelling across Scotland to go to their gigs. I was at Tower Records in Argyll Street when they launched 'Hammer and Tongs' getting my cassette tape insert signed by all the band. I even attended their last ever gig at the Garage in Glasgow, hoping Shirley might return but she didn't.
I didn't know their main man, Martin Metcalfe, was still gigging until I saw the advert for tonight's gig on FB. Snapping up two tickets for what turned out to be a less than sold out performance (with a bit of confusion in advance over whether a Paypal receipt counted as a ticket - I didn't know the Bungalow didn't send out confirmations), I went along to my first ever gig at this particular venue.
It is small. Intimate might be a nicer description. From the back of the room to the stage is maybe ten feet (and still some plonkers stood right in front of us - serves me right for wanting something to lean on).
The support act, 'In the Plughole', came on at 8.30pm and played some neat punk tunes for about 45mins. The big bloke singing had a great earthy voice and sweated like a fountain. His obesity had me worried he might suffer a coronary. Enjoyable though - the tunes, not the fear of a heart attack.
When I saw Martin walking about near the merch table, I didn't recognise him with his long beard, bald head and sunglasses. Dressed all in black, he could have just been some tall, trendy punter. Then I heard him speak, his East coast brogue still strong, and it clicked who he was.
Playing a semi-acoustic set, Martin and his three Fornicators began at the beginning with the first Mackenzie album. Hearing him sing sent me back in time. My body remained planted in the present, jiggling and singing along, but my mind went back to 1989, listening to those tapes and later CDs, the lyrics coming back like it was yesterday.
They played lots from the first two albums plus an Angelfish track, the title song from the "New Town Killers" soundtrack, which Martin co-write with director and Skids lead singer Richard Jobson, and a cover of Walk on the Wildside, finishing on a rousing 'Amsterdam', all in giving us almost ninety minutes of fresh memories.
The crowd, no more than two-score-and-ten in number and probably mostly around that in age, were suitably appreciative, with only a little jeering over Martin's frequent mentioning of Glasgow instead of Paisley.
A good night.
The one thing I didn't understand was why the venue didn't turn off the flat screen tv that was beside the stage. My eyes were often drawn to the BBC News channel with its live subtitles distracting me from the performance. I didn't need to see the latest Trump fiasco, the Novachok victim tributes or the Open highlights. It was a gig. Give some respect to the band. Seeing the clock was handy though.
(photos not great as I had to zoom between the four heads in front).
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