The name of local artist/ musician Kevin House had popped up on this blog recently when I previewed his intended attendance at the Lou Reed night, which was a bit namedroppy of me. It furthermore also proved a false move, in that he didn't make the show, so I edited him back out of the piece.
House's attendance is essential to my writing about the Sleaford Mods, however. As we chatted, I first filled him in on a funny story from the Lou Reed night that he'd missed. I posted video of Aram and company doing "Street Hassle" and commented in my review that there was one poor shmuck -- you can hear him at about 3:51 -- who got fooled by the interlude in the middle of "Street Hassle," starting to applaud when the band went silent, which they only fully were for about a second, but obviously, he just didn't know the song. Just one guy, so when he claps, you can hear him -- everyone else knew, without having been told, to just ride out the interlude, and now that guy's sole tentative clap has been recorded for posterity (sorry, dude).
The funny thing about this was: as I also mentioned to Kevin, after the Lou night, I sought out audience recordings of Lou on that final European tour of 2012, and I *found* one circluating online, presumably with Aram in the band. Allegedly, this is the date in France, though there are a couple of discrepancies (the recording is missing "White Light/ White Heat" -- maybe the recording failed for that song? -- and has two additional encores that are not included in the setlist, suggesting maybe the person who wrote it left early). And if you listen to the live version of "Street Hassle" on that set, it's not just one shmuck who doesn't know the song and applauds in the interlude between movements, but rather, hundreds upon hundreds of shmucks, in an actual Lou Reed audience (!!!). Maybe they were just there for "Sweet Jane"?
My takeaway ended up being that the audience at the VIFF Centre the other night was in fact cooler (that one guy aside) than the audience at an actual European Lou Reed show. Way to go, VIFFsters!
Kevin laughed at my story and told his own, involving Lou Reed backstage at the Hal Wilner Neil Young thing, where Lou did one song: "Helpless" (which Kevin's story involves). Elvis Costello popped up, too. But these are Kevin's stories, and he's a very engaging raconteur, so I'll leave it to my readers to ask him to tell them sometime? (But only if you run into him in person and are having a conversation; please don't rush to bug him on social media or something, or he might get annoyed with me for directing you towards him. This is especially directed at FOMO queen Judith Beeman, who, I promise, I will give a full report to at some point, just remind me!).
Anyhow, that's not the reason I'm mentioning House. He made a superb philosophical observation that played a role in my evening at the first of two Sleaford Mods shows last night. He may have read me saying somewhere that I hadn't been totally sold on the band after the Commodore show a couple of years ago. Having been completely blown away by Gustaf (clip here), I mostly squinted at Jason and wondered, why the heck is something so deeply British, drawing on an idiom that you basically have to be British to understand, so popular in North America? I did not understand, and to be totally honest, I still don't. It ain't because Jason pops up in Peaky fooking Blinders. "I basically spent the entire night squinting at Jason trying to figure it out", I told Kevin, "and kinda emerged more confused than before."
"Well, you know what Tarkovsky says about film?"
"Nope" (Tarkovsky said quite a few things about film, of course, but my internal "Things Tarkovsky has said about film" file is pretty much empty except dimly recalling that somewhere in Sculpting in Time, he says something about how visual metaphors should be organic to the film, drawn from the mise-en-scène, not forced into it from without. But I was pretty sure that that vague paraphrase was not the quote that House was referring to). "What did he say?"
"He said that you can try to understand a film, but you miss out on the experience of it."
It was absolutely positively germane, a wise approach to the Sleaford Mods: go and EXPERIENCE them; attempts to understand are folly and will just detract from your enjoyment. Perfect advice! It was also the perfect summation of my intentions last night, which were to give up squinting and dance, though at some point, "Tied Up in Nottz" aside, I also gave up on any attempts to dance, and just stared in awe at Jason Williams. He's very very very fucking compelling. More on him presently.
Bev Davies and I both enjoyed Dazy, the opener, especially when he layered some psychedelic guitar over his music, which I'm betting reminded Davies of things in the Brian Jonestown Massacre orbit, even if Dazy's music is a bit more pop than that. He joked on mic at one point that usually, as a guy who tours with a laptop and and a guitar, when he opens for bands, he gets ribbed for his minimal setup and feels quite self conscious about it, but with the Mods, it's the opposite: "They're like, 'Who does he think he is, he brought a guitar! He's really overdoing it". (This reminds me of something Lydia told me when I interviewed Gustaf for Germany, about how they loved touring with the Mods because of their utterly minimal supply of gear).
I didn't make other notes about Dazy, but I loved closing my eyes during his set, as the more aggressive lighting used created some really cool flashing patterns behind my eyelids, which went well with dancing (you don't need to see to dance, if you stay more or less in your spot). Mind you, I thought his Nirvana cover at the end just didn't come close to hearing Kurt do that song. Bev and I both saw Nirvana, at separate shows, and both saw that song, "Sliver"; I saw them in October of 1991 (there is probably a shitty bootleg out there that owes to my tape recording of the show), while she saw them I think in 1994, maybe at this show. "Sliver" was played both nights, though note: this was during the period when she wasn't taking photos, so no photos by her exist of that night. I'm guessing Dazy wasn't even born back then?
Notre: none of Bev's photos from last night will be used here, but will be reserved for a music blog Bev shoots for, the Portable Infinite, I believe. All photos on this post are mine, sorry! You may also want to seek out Backstage Rider, which is the Instagram page of one Mikala, a friend of Bev's who was right up front with Bev and I and took some photos of her own (though I don't know what she plans to post). Mikala told me that the Mods were much, much, much better last night than they had been at the Commodore when they were last in town, which is when I'd seen them, so it may not have just been my different approach that contributed to my different experience?
Actually, I guess these two photographs are technically Bev Davies shots, or collaborations, since I held my camera up in selfie mode and asked Bev to press the button. The trouble is, she's looking both times at her finger, not the camera!!!
Bev Davies, myself and Mikala, collaborative selfies between bev davies and myself
Anyhow, we were right up front, which made for a great video for "TCR", the song I happened to shoot, though it wasn't one I knew. My photos are nowhere as good as Bev's will be -- my Samsung isn't as good as my Huawei used to be for taking photos, especially in red light. These are the best I got, starting with one of Bev at work. These are all in sequence, going through the night:
But that said, I don't have much to offer of intelligent insight into the performance or the songs. Jason at one point apologized to us up front for spitting all over us, referring not to his occasional gobs (which were directed at the stage, not the audience) but the spray-spittle, which was really fun to watch when the strobe lights were going for "UK GRIM". I'm not sure I've seen spray spittle by strobe before. "I don't have anything, at least I don't think I do," he reassured us. He was very polite and sincere-seeming between songs, even though the songs themselves tend to the (delightfully) rude and cyncial and steeped in ironic distance.
I don't know the band's songs well enough to attempt a setlist but it was pretty similar to, or the same as, the one from Los Angeles a couple of weeks ago. There were no written setlists visible on the stage, though I guess Andrew's laptop obviates the need for one. Their set lasted an hour and a half, had no encore, and had Jason tirelessly jumping around, delivering an impossible amount of lyrics with no technological support of any kind. It's rather freak-of-nature-ish of him, really, that he can do what he does and do it flawlessly, while jumping around inexhaustably on the balls of his feet.
A note about dancing: Andrew Fearn dances like he's an audience member, or trying to provide a model for how audience members should dance. It's very enjoyable to watch, but it really doesn't come across as performance, per se: it comes across as Some Guy Dancing Onstage. Which, naturally, is what it is, but it's not dancing in a "look-at-me-I'm-performing-too" kinda way, it's more like, "I've started the track, my work is done, and now I'm going to just enjoy myself": unpretentious, celebratory, and enthusiastic, but nothing that he does, ever, would usptage Jason Williamson. Fearn is a good dancer, but it's very much "dancing in the background", you know?
Williamson does not dance like that. Williamson's roster of movements is bizarre and fascinating, his way of posing with the mic, elbows slightly raised, sometimes miming that he's humping it; balancing his water bottle on his head (even the way he drops it is compelling); waving his hand above his head, flicking sweat from the side of his nose, bouncing around on the balls of his feet (Fearn is more of a heel guy), fussing with his right thigh, and doing an odd little mince with his hands near his crotch that I think of as his "riding-a-pony-while-you-have-to-pee" routine. At one point he took the piss out of his own celebrity a bit by flinging his sweatrag over his shoulder and doing a sort of fashion-show catwalk freeze-frame which was bloody hilarious to behold (I think that was during "Mork n Mindy"). And of course, he did this while words, squawks, and various other noises emerged from him ceaselessly (note: in the photo above, where he's got his bum down, he was cooling it on the fan; apparently Andrew's was malfunctioning. The next shot is of him bouncing up from that squat). If Fearn dances in Everyman mode, there is nothing Everyman of Jason Williamson's performance. Does he have a background in theatre or something? Did he always dance like that, or did he deliberately develop this idiosyncratic roster of poses and such for the stage? Does he practice these moves, or do they just come naturally to him?
None of this is to do justice to the variety and intensity of his facial expressions, which are also very, very entertaining. I had figured, in the name of Experience Vs. Understanding, that I would close my eyes and dance, but at some point I realized that Jason Williamson is among the most compelling live performers I've seen, and decided that the best way to appreciate the Sleaford Mods is to watch Williamson perform, ideally from right the fuck up front.
So that's a word to the wise, if you're going tonight. I'd be there again tonight if it wasn't for this Dead Bob show. Has Usinger posted my article yet, or sent me a draft? Nope, but he's been in Japan, and last I heard was recovering from a karaoke hangover.
"Karaoke Hangover" sounds like a potential Sleaford Mods song title, actually. As does "Nothing Everyman". Be my guest, people.
What else? I was glad the band did "Kebab Spider" and "Jobseeker" and "UK GRIM" especially, and a ton of stuff off the new album, which I am growing to adore (Williamson invited us to cheer the guest vocalists even though they were only recordings). I thought given how warm it got that they missed out on the opportunity to play "Air Conditioning", but I guess that's my one quibble. My mouth got dry enough that I also coveted Jason's water, and considered holding up a glass for him to fill every time he supped from his bottle, but I did not. I also considered trying to STEAL his water bottle from where he dropped it, but not as a souvenir: I would have done it for the water! (Pass some of that stuff down to the audience tonight, if you're reading this, man; they'll appreciate it).
Jason snapped a photo of the audience at the end of the night, wherein (if I appear) you will see me holding my fucking camera up in reply, shooting video of the last song, which was "Tweet Tweet Tweet" (but the vid isn't very good so I won't bother posting it). The band did not emerge to sign stuff and the Pearl security didn't give us a very long time to wait. But maybe that will be different tonight?
Afterwards, Bev and I went to Burger King and had a long chat about many things, most of which I now forget, save that she was very proud that Vincent (her cat, half brother to mine, Nicholas) caught his first mouse. He still has some animal in him! I remember exactly that feeling when Tybalt did his own bit of mousing at my wife's parents' place.
Nicholas has done his own mousing in our neighbour's apartment, too, but he mostly wanted to play with the mice when he caught them, in a surprisingly gentle way, given how savagely he will claw me in the name of play.
Oh, and Bev told what parts of the mouse her cat-of-yore, Grinder, would not eat: the bum, tail, and rear feet. I am glad I got to hang out with Grinder a bit. Nicholas and Vincent are beautiful animals -- All Cats Are Beautiful, as the saying goes -- but Grinder had a gravitas, a dignity that was singular among the cats I have known.































































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