A  week later we were booked to play the awfully nice Ben and Jerry's  festival on Clapham common. It was a familiar line-up. Not at all  dissimilar from the Kent Turkey 
     Just under a week later Eamon and I took an early flight to Germany Cologne Germany 
     That  night we slept in a really creepy hotel. The staircase seemed to go on  upwards forever and when we got to the top we found our room was a  four-bed dorm with no TV and just a sink in the corner. It was quaint  but the beds were comfy and the breakfast in the morning was a typically  satisfying German affair of bread, ham, cheese and coffee.
     The  next morning we set off for Haldern where again both bands were booked  to perform. Our ex-pat chums from Incendiary magazine had told us many  great things about this festival on a pig farm. Mostly that it's muddy  and everyone gets horrifically drunk. Luckily for us it was a glorious  day, not a splash of mud in sight. I was pleased to find that we were  playing in the famous Spiegel tent, a regular feature at the Brighton   festival but surprisingly somewhere that I'd never had the chance to  play in before. We were on relatively early but there was still a good  crowd gathered to watch us. We had a great show, it was stiflingly hot  but it sounded good for us and the audience were moshing  enthusiastically. We'd been given a caravan as our dressing room  complete with a couple of bunks so after the show (and a spot of  Frisbee) I took the opportunity to have a nap. 
I  awoke to the sound of The View finishing their set and then headed out  to see what was going on around the site. Caught a bit of The Magic  Numbers then got down the front to see Spiritualized Acoustic Mainlines.  The band fronted by Jason Pierce with a string section, keyboardist and  trio of gospel singers had blown me away a few weeks back in Glasgow  but somehow it didn't work here. It was dark, everyone was talking and  there were a few sound troubles. It was a shame. 
     ESP  weren't on till the early hours so there was a lot of time to kill. I  watched some of The Maccabees drank some more beer and then eventually  watched ESP who were great. After the show we gathered around a campfire  with those Magic Numbers and got merrily sozzled. I managed to insult  some French Canadians by assuming they were German but in my defence  their English speaking accent wasn't an accent I'd ever heard before.  They were nice guys though and I think they forgave me.
     The  next morning I was up and in the hotel restaurant just in time to catch  breakfast. There was no rest for the ESP gang who had to drive off for  another gig in Berlin Europe . I realised that the mass of water I'd noticed as I drunkenly fell into the hotel the previous night was actually the Rhine .  German and Dutch cargo barges chugged slowly up the water whilst the  occasional weekend speed boater whizzed past. It was another hot day and  unfortunately Eamon and I had nothing to do until our 8pm   flight. I went back up to the room where Eamon was slumbering.  Eventually he woke up and we pondered upon what the hell we should do  with all this time. Go to Düsseldorf? No, too far. Go to the cinema?  What cinema? We were stranded, we didn't really know where we were and  we had a lot of time to kill. Eamon was hungry so we found a restaurant a  short walk down the river that soon filled with upper middle class  Germans on weekend family outings. Eamon had a steak and I had mineral  water. The meal seemed to waste quite a bit of time. After that we went  back to the hotel and drank a few beers. The runner turned up a few  hours later and we bought him a coffee. These people deserve a medal,  they spend their entire weekend driving back and forth from airports,  hotels and the festival site and usually don't get paid or get to see  any music. On the way to the airport he told us how Mike Scott of the  Waterboys had spat phlegm onto his dashboard. Charming!
     After another two weeks that included going to a wedding, rehearsing with my other band and generally bumbling around Brighton , Brakes hit London Reading East London   is a Vampire. It was Eamon's birthday so after sound-check we went for a  curry. Fellow Brightonian support band Doll and the Kicks got  proceedings going back at the club and we returned halfway through their  set. It was a Monday night and the crowd were subdued. We took the  stage and it started well despite sounding horrific on stage. I'd  noticed during the support band that the lighting engineer was being  somewhat overly creative with his tools and was making the stage look  more like a giant fruit machine. I asked our tour manager to politely  ask him to calm it down a bit but he was having none of it. Not only  that but he was dropping all lights at the end of every song leaving us  blind and unable to ready ourselves for the next song. This was  incredibly annoying and after a while we all started shouting at him.  The gig sort of fell apart from there onwards. We struggled through it.  Afterwards we all quickly went our separate ways and tried to forget  about it. 
     The  next day we were booked to play the legendary Water Rats in Kings  Cross. Brakes hadn't played here before and I was thoroughly looking  forward to it. After sound-check I went for dinner and then returned to  find the venue filling up fast. By the time we were due to take the  stage it was rammed and I had to push my way through the audience to get  up there. The gig went brilliantly; we blasted through the set,  sweating profusely all the way. We totally redeemed ourselves from the  night before. Eventually we left the stage but the audience weren't  going to let us get away without doing an encore. We went back on and  did Spring Chicken and then Jackson 
     Later  that week we did a few radio sessions to promote the single. Edith  Bowman had been kind enough to give us her support again and had made us  single of the week on her daytime Radio 1 show. As a show of thanks we  all went to the Reading London 
     The  next day I felt terrible and we had a gig to do. We had the second slot  on the Radio 1 stage after Dogs and before The Noisettes. It was a  scorching day and I took refuge from the heat in the shade of Dinosaur  Jr's massive tour bus. Dogs had a faithful audience who bounced and sang  along faithfully despite it being so early in the day. We took the  stage and the sound was all over the shop. Maybe I was hung-over but it  never quite sounded right for me. I was distracted and made loads of  mistakes but apparently it sounded good and the crowd enjoyed it.
     I  spent the rest of the day basking in the heat of the sun and drinking  more cider. Caught a bit of Metronomy, saw some of The Shins and of  course rocked out to Dinosaur Jr who were a delight. We were staying in  Wakefiled that night to make sure we were near the Leeds  site for the next day so at about 10pm   we set off into the night and up the M1. We pulled into the Wakefield  M1 Travelodge sometime in the wee hours and got out heads down.
     I  was glad I hadn't got stinking drunk the night before when I woke and I  actually felt pretty good for day two of the Carling weekender. We  pulled onto the Leeds  site just after 10am  and got familiarised with the area. The Leeds  site is a lot more interesting than the Reading Thames   valley. The gig that day was much better than the day before and we  left the stage feeling good. We grabbed some delicious lunch in the  artist catering tent and then got back on the road for the long drive  down to Brighton .
     Come the next Saturday we were hurtling down the M4 on route for the Macs festival near Carmarthen  south Wales Cardiff 
     In the morning we left the hotel at 6am  and drove to Cardiff Jersey . We were headed for the Jersey Live festival, which was now in its 5th year. Jersey   looked beautiful from the air as we came in to land, all dramatic  cliffs and sandy beaches. We were driven from the airport to our hotel: -  The Metropolis Hotel that seemed to cater mainly for the later in life.  It wasn't dissimilar from Fawlty  Towers 
    After  a few hours of doing nothing we got driven up into the countryside in  the middle of the island to the festival site. We were on quite early so  there was only a scattering of people in the audience. Most people were  lounging in the sunshine drinking beer which is probably what I'd have  been doing had I been attending.
  We had a good gig and afterwards we hung about for a bit and watched a  few of the other bands. Had to check out SFA who delivered their usual  ultra relaxed performance of hits from their almost 12 year career. At  the end of Receptacle for the Respectable the three members of the band  with guitars did their usual party trick of crossing necks to form some  sort of triumphant rock trident. Then the P.A went down and their show  was temporarily halted. I went backstage to shelter form the sun and by  the time I'd got back the problem had been solved and they were back on  stage.
     The  next morning the local radio reported that it was the guitar neck  crossing that had blown the P.A. The same station also told us that the  festival (which featured musical genres such as funk rock, punk rock and  pop funk) had gone ahead smoothly and there had only been 12 arrests.  There seemed to be this attitude on the island that a music festival  would breed violence and disorder. Plus the local police were really  taking the piss and had made the organisers pay an astronomical fee for  their protection; otherwise they wouldn't have let it gone ahead. There  were police and security everywhere at this thing. I think I only saw 2  coppers at Glastonbury 
     I  made a quick exit and went back to the hotel to slumber in front of the  telly. The next morning I woke early, unable to lie in from going to  bed too early. Around lunch time Joe and I went to the airport to get  our flight to Gatwick. The others were getting a later flight to Cardiff Glasgow Glasgow 
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment