Wickerman Festivals 6 and 7

Wickerman Festival 6 took place in July 2007 with the usual suspects in attendance. The bill that year obviously contained the ever-present Dangleberries. The ska influence was well represented with Scottish band Big Hand providing a rousing energetic set and legends The Beat were in attendance led admirably by Rankin Roger and Junior Rankin.

Cider Spiders provided a New York inspired set in the vein of the Strokes and The Law were representing the fair city of Dundee. Neck was a Celtic punk band from the London suburb of Holloway and in the same ballpark were the Peatbog Fairies. John Langan from Glasgow played as a solo artist before he went onto to form the John Langan Band. Also, on the bill were Modus, The Targets and Xcerts from Aberdeen.    

The electronic element was covered with Somerset’s Eat Static and dance legends The Orb. Reggae collective Easy Star All Stars were on the bill who interestingly once recorded their interpretation of Pink Floyd’s ‘Dark Side of the Moon’ amusingly titled ‘Dub Side of the Moon’!  

Former Public Image Ltd bassist Jah Wobble and his English Roots Band also played alongside Hayseed Dixie from Nashville whose name is a linguistic tangent on AC/DC’s name and their first album was titled ‘A Hillbilly Tribute to AC/DC’ who unfortunately despite all that back story were pretty limp live. Huey Morgan and his Fun Lovin Criminals also provided an energetic set.

The Wickerman has over the years had a lot of old punk bands playing, many of them are very frayed and have seen better days, thus when a band who can still kill it on stage arrives, you take serious notice. One that met that criterion was Edinburgh’s the Rezillos who were absolutely superb with their prime single ‘Top of the Pops’ being the highlight.

I recall at this particular festival we all imbibed too much on the Friday and things became a tad hazy resulting in a tidy hangover the next day which slightly tarnished the Proclaimers headline set as they were in stellar form with ‘Cap in Hand’, ‘500 Miles’ and ‘Letter to America’ being rapturously received. The Proclaimer boys had digs at the Selkirk Arms, located 10 steps from Dewhurst Towers! 

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Wickerman Main Stage. Image Credit BBC.

The festival site was about 8 miles down a winding dark country road from the Towers located halfway between Kirkcudbright and Dalbeattie. There was shortage of local taxi firms which necessitated us having an uneasy alliance with Allens Taxis run by the larger-than-life character Mr Allen who we utilised for all the 14 Wickers we attended.  

He could at times be an obstinate chap. One time we were in a full minibus returning from the site and he received a call requesting a taxi and much to our chagrin he shamefully told the customer he was unavailable as he was in Lockerbie which was a mere 50 miles away!

Wickerman 7 saw KT Tunstall in town, there was some funk from the Cuban Brothers and the Kazoo Funk Orchestra and also Dodgy who were ‘Staying out for the summer’! Also, on the bill were Twisted Nerve, Colin Storrie, Rodan, Robin Cairns, Underground Heroes, AKA Ska, Parka, Underling and Beecake.

Annie Nightingale performed a DJ set and Lancashire Hotpots provided some light relief, and ‘Indie Disco’ was fun to hear. The Manc legends the Fall played on the main stage and rolled out my fave track ‘Mr Pharmacist’.   

Additionally, on the roster were Orphan Boy, De Salvo, Bass Syndicate, Peaking Goddess Collective and The Ads.

There was a decent set from Edinburgh’s Broken Records and some rousing punk from the old stalwarts Sham 69. The highlight of this particular weekend was the last act who played after the Wickerman burning on the Saturday night. This was namely Gary Numan who I though beforehand would be a tad one-dimensional, but he was terrific and created a real cacophony on the main stage post-midnight for all the ‘Numanoids’ in attendance!

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Gary Numan. Image Credit ukfestivalguides.com

Wickerman Festivals 2 and 3

Despite the first Wickerman festival being sparsely attended it survived through to a second year in 2003. For some reason and for this edition only it was a three-day festival from Friday through Sunday. I cannot recall why but Uncle George and I only attended Day 1 and the Dewhurst boys attended Day 2 also. Thus, none of us have attended all days of the festival but we have attended all the festivals.

This year was the last of the innocent ones before it became more professional thus lighting was a tad dim resulting in a perilous Casualty threatening walk over the tent ropes back to the taxi point. The organisation was also sometimes slightly shambolic in a charming way. It was the first event also too have two stages.  

We were incorrectly advised beforehand that we could take in our own beer to the site but were blocked at the entrance wall so had to sup a couple of quick cans and had no choice but to lose the remaining stash – lesson learned there!

We saw Ozric Tentacles, Second Nature, Anti-Product and AlterNative. The highlight being a stellar set from the Beat featuring Rankin and Rankin Jnr and it was the last time I saw them with Papa Sax still on stage. The DJ excelled himself again with his selection of killer tunes in the Scooter Tent.  

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The Beat. Image Credit Nostalgiacentral.com

The Dewhurst’s have always had a strong affiliation with South West Scotland since their dad attended school in the Dumfries area. This resulted in the family pooling together to purchase a property in the centre of Kirkcudbright which subsequently become known as Dewhurst Towers.

So, from 2004 onwards this became the new residence when we attended the festivals allowing hot showers and a valuable communal gather in the mornings with lashings of Yorkshire Tea! The house was opportunely placed being about 10 yards from the Selkirk Arms pub.

I think the 2004 festival remains my favourite one due in the main to an excellent roster. There were a couple of tribute bands, Counterfeit Clash and Straw Dogs covering Stiff Little Finger tracks who remain my fave punk band. The latter band were excellent and refreshingly loud!

I witnessed the Alpacinos, Scarlet Blue and a cracking set from The Selector with Pauline Black in full flow.  I saw the Core, Kantaro, and Aerogramme, a Scottish post-rock outfit from Glasgow who recorded on Mogwai’s Chemical Underground label.

Castle Douglas’s finest bagpipe combo the Dangleberries were in attendance again and I also saw Last Years Men, Anti-Product, The Sundowns and a decent set from the evergreen Levellers. On the second stage we saw a terrific young indie band called Cherry Falls who looked like they had real potential. However, undertaking a google search displays they had no recordings beyond 2005 so they appear to be another lost gem of a band.

The headliners on the Friday were the Buzzcocks who produced a decent set. The main band after the burning on the Saturday at 12.30am were Spiritualized who were fabulous. They were so uncompromising with Jason Pierce sitting side on and with virtually no crowd interaction which I admired. They suited the stage time on a cold summer’s morning, and they are worthy of inclusion in the list of top 5 Wickerman performances.

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Spiritualised. Image Credit Wikipedia