Skip to main content

The Nightingales

Sneaky Pete's, Edinburgh, Monday May 23rd 2011
The Nightingales are what happens to 1970s-sired latch-key kids if you
leave them alone with a CD of Captain Beefheart's Trout Mask Replica, a
DVD of The Wheeltappers and Shunters Social Club and the Bumper Book of
Existentialism For Boys. After more than thirty years in the saddle,
with only occasional sojourns into solo careers and Svengali-ing
long-lost girl band We've Got A Fuzzbox and We're Gonna Use It for
distraction, one-time John Peel stalwarts live experience is an intense
and relentless chug of skewed meat n' two veg avant-garage-punk laced
with vocalist and wordsmith Robert Lloyd's very English absurdist
world-view of how (post) modern life is rubbish. Think Pere Ubu if
they'd grown up in the shadows of Birmingham's Bull Ring rather than
the Flats in Cleveland.

Since reforming in 2004, The Nightingales have pretty much picked up
where they left off, with three albums and another pending to showcase
Lloyd's dry anthropological observations set to a wonderfully trad,
ferociously luddite backing. Just how they ended up recording 2009's
Insult To Injury album and the forthcoming The Lost Plot opus with
legendary Krautrock madman Hans Joachim-Irmler of Faust is anybody's
guess, but the liaison certainly hasn't hippified their more caustic
edges in any way. Which should keep comic Stewart Lee happy when he
hosts a week of events on London’s South Bank shortly which features a
top quality double bill of The 'Gales with Vic Godard and the Subway
Sect.

The band's current line-up is led by Lloyd, still looking as much like
Malcolm Hardee's stockier twin as he did in 1981, and guitarist Alan
Apperley, whose scuzzed-up Bo Diddleyesque wig-outs would give Wilko
Johnson a run for his money, and whose involvement with Lloyd dates
back to a joint tenure in Birmingham's first punk band the Prefects
(who Frank Skinner unsuccessfully auditioned for, fact fans).
Charcoal-coloured de-mob suits remain de rigeur, both for the elder
statesmen and for the newbies, bassist and Faust Studio ex-pat Andreas
Schmid, Fliss Kitson stomping away on tom-tom and cow-bell friendly
drum-kit, and Matt Wood, who appears to be Syd Barrett’s elfin
twelve-year old love child, but who plays guitar like a demon.

Sloping quietly onstage mere minutes after an oddly nervous comedy set
by support act and long-term fellow traveller and foil Ted Chippington,
there's pretty much no let up from the opening launch into Ace of
Hearts, with each song seguing into each other with barely a pause for
breath. Not that Lloyd looks like he's likely to break into a sweat,
even if he does throw a few shapes on a blistering and taboo-busting
cover of Gary Glitter's 1972 Glam Rock smasheroonie I Didn't Know I
Loved You (Till I Saw You Rock n' Roll).

He may be one of Britain's greatest unsung lyricists, but at various
points Lloyd folds his arms like a testy geography teacher or else
stands in the corner like a naughty schoolboy. Pretty much the only
words he utters outside of the songs is to tell one over-refreshed
punter during Only My Opinion – a re-worded take on lost a capella
classic Well Done, Underdog, and the nearest thing here to a greatest
hit - to “shut the fuck up, by the way!”

The band, meanwhile, roar away like billy-o, a well-oiled rock n' roll
disguise for Lloyd's music-hall barkering on gloriously titled ditties
Workshy Wunderkind and Wot, No Blog?, which sees Apperley and Wood
twanging away in wonderfully contrary directions. Kitson, meanwhile,
pounds away with such ferocity that at one point her kit all but
collapses into her until a plucky local hero leaps up to straighten
things out. A closing Dick The Do-Gooder brings proceedings to an
earthly climax, then Lloyd and co skulk off towards the bar, no fuss,
no questions asked. Even after all these years, it's the Nightingale
way.

The List, May 2011

ends

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Losing Touch With My Mind - Psychedelia in Britain 1986-1990

DISC 1 1. THE STONE ROSES   -  Don’t Stop 2. SPACEMEN 3   -  Losing Touch With My Mind (Demo) 3. THE MODERN ART   -  Mind Train 4. 14 ICED BEARS   -  Mother Sleep 5. RED CHAIR FADEAWAY  -  Myra 6. BIFF BANG POW!   -  Five Minutes In The Life Of Greenwood Goulding 7. THE STAIRS  -  I Remember A Day 8. THE PRISONERS  -  In From The Cold 9. THE TELESCOPES   -  Everso 10. THE SEERS   -  Psych Out 11. MAGIC MUSHROOM BAND  -  You Can Be My L-S-D 12. THE HONEY SMUGGLERS  - Smokey Ice-Cream 13. THE MOONFLOWERS  -  We Dig Your Earth 14. THE SUGAR BATTLE   -  Colliding Minds 15. GOL GAPPAS   -  Albert Parker 16. PAUL ROLAND  -  In The Opium Den 17. THE THANES  -  Days Go Slowly By 18. THEE HYPNOTICS   -  Justice In Freedom (12" Version) ...

Edinburgh Rocks – The Capital's Music Scene in the 1950s and Early 1960s

Edinburgh has always been a vintage city. Yet, for youngsters growing up in the shadow of World War Two as well as a pervading air of tight-lipped Calvinism, they were dreich times indeed. The founding of the Edinburgh International Festival in 1947 and the subsequent Fringe it spawned may have livened up the city for a couple of weeks in August as long as you were fans of theatre, opera and classical music, but the pubs still shut early, and on Sundays weren't open at all. But Edinburgh too has always had a flipside beyond such official channels, and, in a twitch-hipped expression of the sort of cultural duality Robert Louis Stevenson recognised in his novel, Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde, a vibrant dance-hall scene grew up across the city. Audiences flocked to emporiums such as the Cavendish in Tollcross, the Eldorado in Leith, The Plaza in Morningside and, most glamorous of all due to its revolving stage, the Palais in Fountainbridge. Here the likes of Joe Loss and Ted Heath broug...

Carla Lane – The Liver Birds, Mersey Beat and Counter Cultural Performance Poetry

Last week's sad passing of TV sit-com writer Carla Lane aged 87 marks another nail in the coffin of what many regard as a golden era of TV comedy. It was an era rooted in overly-bright living room sets where everyday plays for today were acted out in front of a live audience in a way that happens differently today. If Lane had been starting out now, chances are that the middlebrow melancholy of Butterflies, in which over four series between 1978 and 1983, Wendy Craig's suburban housewife Ria flirted with the idea of committing adultery with successful businessman Leonard, would have been filmed without a laughter track and billed as a dramady. Lane's finest half-hour highlighted a confused, quietly desperate and utterly British response to the new freedoms afforded women over the previous decade as they trickled down the class system in the most genteel of ways. This may have been drawn from Lane's own not-quite free-spirited quest for adventure as she moved through h...