London Second Trip

In October 1987 my brother and I headed off on a sally to London and attended a flurry of gigs in a similar vein to Mr Heaton Hibs comment on London First trip. We travelled down by train on Saturday 24th October and swiftly dropped the bags at our lodgings, the Calvados Hotel in Victoria. We then scarpered off to take part in an Anti-Apartheid rally with 75,000 other participants. On arrival at the final destination of the march at Hyde Park, where Rolling Stones once played a famous free concert in 1969. There were various speakers but also a short enjoyable set from the Bhundu Boys.

That evening we headed up to Harlesden, an Irish enclave in North West London. There was some fine Guinness on tap in the pubs, one had about 20 pints already half pulled in preparation for the incoming orders. Our terminus was the Mean Fiddler, a honky tonk venue run by Vince Power, who went on run the Leeds/Reading festivals. It was opened in 1982 taking over from a dubious drinking club run by boxer Terry Downes, the venue subsequently closed in 2002.

It is was a fabulous venue with very laid-back country music booming out. We saw Townes Van Zandt there who was significantly inebriated but was enjoyable nonetheless and played to 11.25pm. He was support to the Dave Kelly Band, but we had to leave before then to catch the last tube which managed to get us to within a mile walk of the digs.

We had a gig free day on the Sunday. On the Monday afternoon we had a double bill of movies watching The Untouchables and then Rivers Edge featuring Dennis Hopper and a very young Keanu Reeves. We headed into Camden later that day to visit Camden Dingwalls. The venue first opened in June 1973 and was home to Blondie’s first ever UK gig and remains a venue to this day, in fact I was in the bar there for a cheeky beer about a year ago and it is significantly more gentrified nowadays.

It was a £1.50 entrance fee and was a bit of a battered venue in those days. I recall purchasing a scooby snack of some fine cheese salad butties. The first band were Brilliant Corners who were pure pop music and they were superb. I recall them playing ‘Brian Rix’ and the excellent ‘Delilah Sands’, I still own the 12-inch version. They were supporting the Happy Mondays who weren’t great and I was never really a fan, but 12 months later they were huge…

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Brilliant Corners. Image credit danicanto.com

The original plan for the Tuesday was to see Michelle Shocked but it was a Mexican Restaurant gig so we hunted down an alternative gig. After visiting the Forbidden Planet comic store, we travelled over to Angel Tube station. We visited a couple of hostelries on what was a windswept night and then headed over to City University on Northampton Square. The venue was on the second floor of the University, full of long corridors. The first band was Raw Herbs who were somewhat appropriately very studenty but enjoyable. Corn Dollies were on second, Janice Long reportedly a fan, who had to cut their set to 30 minutes to meet the 11pm curfew. Both were East London bands.

The City University venue is nearby the Lexington, a venue twice in recent times I have tried to attend, both without success, but I am nothing but perseverant so I will get there eventually.

By our last day in London on the Wednesday we were proper jaded. We bought tickets for our farewell gig from a ticket outlet in Camden at lunchtime and then went to view Blue Velvet, a surreal David Lynch movie. A stock take at the digs revealed we had £15.50 in the coffers thus funds were running perilously low. Off to Kentish Tube we weaved heading into the Town and Country Club at 10pm to see the Bhundu Boys again. The venue had that name between 1985 and 1993 and is now badged the O2 Forum.

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Bhundu Boys. Image Credit blogspot.com

I do recall a bloke at the bar offering to buy us a round, thinking back now he probably thought I was a waif and stray who he may be able to take advantage of. More fool him as I gratefully accepted the beers and strode back off to the sprung dancefloor.

It was an excellent venue with winding steps leading up to packed balconies with a responsive audience dancing and swaying away to the Zimbabwean vibes. I managed to get within four rows of the front and they were excellent with the lead singer tipping his hat after every tune. We had earlier won on the bandit so we could rather decadently buy a Chinese each, some fags for my brother and have £3 left in our pocket!

London First Trip – Venues 1 and 2

I have a love/hate relationship with our capital city. It is a cultural hub and there are many places of interest and I do revel in sometimes playing the dumb northerner from north of Watford! The converse side is that the place can be overpoweringly busy and more than a tad mucky.

For a couple of years at the start of 80’s we used to undertake a house swap with a family in Upminster, which is the last Eastern stop on the District line (the green one) and this involved many trips into the metropolis and coincided with West Ham winning the cup in 1980. I recall one day going to the viewing platform in the Houses of Parliament for Question Time (allowed in those days), followed by a visit to one of the first McDonalds and then onto Wembley to watch England beat the reigning World Champions Argentina 3-1, twas an eventful day!

My first unaccompanied trip down was with my brother in April 1985 where at the age of 17 I attended the fifth and sixth gigs of my lifetime. We took advantage of the British Rail Apex tickets available at that point in time costing us a princely £25 each. As it was half-term we managed to purloin some digs in a halls of residence near Warren Street tube station, which were basic but cheap and centrally located.

On arrival, we scoured the NME and Time Out for available gigs and identified one at the Sir George Robey on Seven Sisters Road in Finsbury Park which was located opposite the Rainbow Theatre. Couple of useless facts I have since garnered is that the fictional pub The Harry Lauder in Nick Hornby’s Fever Pitch is based on the Robey and it is also the pub visited towards the end of Trainspotting. The venue was renamed the Powerhaus and closed in 2004 and was subsequently demolished in 2015.

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The Sir George Robey in 1988. Image Credit Paul Walling

The band in question were called Bill Posters Will Be Banned who turned out be a comedic musical combo containing former members of the Bonzo Dog Doo Dah Band. I cannot recall a lot of detail though remember them being periodically amusing and have stronger memories of the drinking holes visited before.

The other gig the following night was at the Putney Half Moon where apparently the Rolling Stones, The Who and Kate Bush have graced the stage and the place remains a live venue to this day. The first band on was Surfing Dave. I was chatting to their bassist Les Atkins prior to the gig and extolling him for some inexplicable reason to reference when on stage that there were Preston lads in attendance and that the town contained the biggest bus station in Europe. To his eternal credit he affably did so. The lead singer was an absolute spit of Sergeant Bilko. Their best tracks were ‘I Got a Surfing T-Shirt’ and ‘Exchange and Mart’.

The headline act was The Hank Wangford Band which besides Hank also included Bobby Valentino and Cissy Footwear. They were a Country and Western group who we had picked up from airplay on the Andy Kershaw show. They were enjoyable and standout track was ‘Jogging with Jesus’. We had a chat with them afterwards and they remain on the live circuit to this day under the latest moniker Hank Wangford and the Lost Cowboys. The night took a turn for the worse however as we missed the last tube resulting in an exceptionally long trog back to the lodgings, finally arriving at 3.30am. We missed breakfast the following morning!    

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Hank Wangford Band. Image Credit hankwangford.co.uk

https://www.halfmoon.co.uk/