New Music Website

April 3, 2011 by  
Filed under Music, News and Views

Regular visitors to our Music category will in future have a website completely dedicated to concerts, CD reviews, interviews, news and more. It’s called ’3SONGSBONN’ and will be taking over the bulk of music information.

Please check out the new site at 3SONGSBONN for all the latest news and reviews.

Just added is a review of the beautiful and talented Ana Popovic in Koblenz recently: Ana Popovic at Cafe Hahn

An interview with German guitar star Henrik Freischlader follows soon.

Of course English-Network will continue to bring you news and views so those of you who want less music – you got it – and those who wanted MORE music – you got it too!

Popularity: 11% [?]

Closure of BBC Radio Worldservice

March 28, 2011 by  
Filed under News and Views

“This is the BBC…” but not on your radio. As of 27 March the station which transmitted on 648 kHz MW will be available via satellite, cable and online only. Without ‘Witness’ and news updates, breakfasts will never be the same.

Here the official BBC announcement:

The BBC is ceasing its 648 kHz transmissions of World Service English language radio on 27 March, 2011.
We have had to make some difficult decisions about the distribution of BBC World Service radio around the world, as a result of the Spending Review settlement that BBC World Service received at the end of 2010.

Closure of the 648 kHz service and medium wave frequencies to Russia, continues the process of withdrawing from direct broadcasts to Europe in response to a declining number of direct listeners.
However BBC World Service continues to be available in Europe by satellite, cable and online.

In the UK it is available on dedicated channels across the whole of the UK on DAB, online and on all digital TV platforms. This is in addition to overnight transmissions of BBC World Service on Radio 4 frequencies.

Popularity: 11% [?]

Henrik Freischlader – Blues for Gary

March 21, 2011 by  
Filed under Music, News and Views

It’s shortly after 6pm and I’ve just put Henrik Freischlader firmly on the spot.  Henrik got started in the Blues World after being inspired by Gary Moore.  We’d just spoken of  Moore’s tragic passing and I asked who would the present generation of music fans look to for similar inspiration, “besides yourself of course”.  He immediately blanched at the suggestion “Oh no, not me” he laughed emphatically.

Fast forward a little over three hours and Freischlader is at the end of a blinding show with his band.  On stageright he plugs in his cherry Gibson Les Paul on the back of which are the words ‘To Hendrik – with love Gary Moore’.  He dedicates the next number to the late genial Irish guitar God.  A blindingly evocative rendition of  Roy Buchanans ‘The Messiah’ follows that, like the guitar, has ‘Gary Moore’ veneered into its very core.  Outside of setting fire to the headstock and sending it via runners to Athens I don’t know how much plainer it can be that Henrik Freischlader is a torch carrier for the Jimi, Rory, Gary school of Rock Blues.

If you’re not from Germany you might be saying now ‘Henrik who?’ So it’s maybe good that the cover of Freischladers new CD makes much of a guest spot by Joe Bonamassa from a marketing perpective.  ‘Jolting Joes’ presence might well make a difference to sales of the CD  but it wouldn’t make a jot of difference to the actual music on it because the  musicianship from Henrik and band is top notc,h as it is on the Harmonie stage tonight.

Henrik  Freischlader

Top Notch - Henrik Freischlader

Last years show here got a tentative thumbs up from me due to the sound quality.  This years show gets five stars on all fronts from the moment Freischlader switches on his guitar, steps up to play, and nothing comes out.  “What’s that then?” He exclaims.  “I know it was working just now when I soundchecked – So ein Ding!”.  You just can’t help but like the mans affable approach.  It’s all started by the flick of another switch and the Fender Strat roars into life.  “We have to finish very early, so I’ll leave out the talking and just play!” he announces to loud cheers.  “Or I could just keep on playing” to even louder cheers.

The new CD title track ‘Still Frame Replay’ is an early favourite, along with ‘The Bridge’ and Peter Green’s ‘She’s Gone’.  Etta James is a big influence on Freischlader and a soulful version of her ‘Rather Go Blind’ continues the quieter vain. As does ‘I’ve got it Good’  before getting back to Rocking with ‘Right Way’ and ‘Longer Days’ from the new disc, the latter in particular shows the band is as tight as a camels you know what in a sandstorm.  The main set finishes with a lengthy but mesmerising interplay between Freischlader’s guitar and Moritz Fuhrhop’s Hammond organ.  Top marks to the whole band in fact – This is early days on the tour but every man jack of them is bang on the beat.This being Sunday there’s only time for one encore before the 9.30pm (!) curfew.  It’s been a great show, but as the song says ‘You ain’t seen nuthin yet!’ and we were in for a musical treat.

First up was a new Hendrix cover.  Well, not so new if you’re familiar with Aynsley Lister in fact because it’s a frantic version of  Jimi’s ‘Cross Town Traffic’ played with such enthusiasm that ‘ooh ooh’s and Ah Aah’s soon echo from every corner of the crowded hall.  Then it was time for silence, a red guitar, a dedication and the lighting of a musical torch as the first gentle notes of ‘Messiah’ wafted into the hot humid air.  Henrik Freischlader – A man with a cap, a plan, and whether he likes it or not – a mission.

Tight as it gets - The HF Band in Bonn

Popularity: 13% [?]

Nature Photo Exhibition in Cologne

March 13, 2011 by  
Filed under News and Views

The good news about train drivers being on strike is you might have time to see the ‘European Nature Photographer of the Year’ exhibition at Cologne Central Station. The winning and highly praised entrants in all eight categories are currently on display in the centre food hall.

Presented by the ‘Gesellschaft Tier Fotografen’ the competition was in eight categories:
Birds
Mammals
Other Animals
Plants and Funghi
Landscape
Under Water
Man & Nature
Studio Nature

There were over 11.000 photos entered in the competition but although it’s open to Amateurs and professionals alike, I suspect an amateur would be up against it to get a winning entry – a glance at the camera specs of the photos presented showed almost total Nikon/Canon high end equipment. Amongst the D3′s and EOS-1′s there was the odd D70 and D90 shot though so keep your eyes peeled for squirrels in the local park and have that camera with you at all times.

Cologne Central Station 11.03 - 21.03.2011

The exhibition is on tour at Central Rail stations as follows:

Frankfurt: 07.02 – 16.02
Heidelberg: 25.02 – 07.03
Cologne: 11.03 – 21.03
Erfurt: 08.04 – 18.04
Berlin: 22.04 – 02.05
Kiel: 05.05 – 15.05
Weimar: 20.05 – 30.05
Dresden-Neustadt: 17.06 – 27.06

Popularity: 9% [?]

Folk Club – Pipes, drums and much more!

March 6, 2011 by  
Filed under Music, News and Views

Thirteen and not out – as cricket afficianados might describe the Bonn Folk Club this March.

In fact the club has gone from strength to strength and despite the pull of Karneval ‘Sitzungen’ throughout the City, this months ‘Pipes & Drums’ meet had a large and enthusiastic audience for John & Barry to keep under control.

The best way to keep people from rioting (or at least making a noise at the bar!) is of course to get their attention.  John certainly did that with a sprightly ‘LADIES & GENTLEMEN!’

Whose volume proved how superfluous a microphone can be in the right hands – or in this case, lungs.

A fresh and folkified version of ‘Motherless Child’ got the evening off of it’s musical starting blocks and the Mance Lipscomb classic ‘Silver City’ aided by Paolo on blues harp got it well round the first bend.  A good time to add that this is also a track from John’s 2000 cd ‘Blues to make your ice water’ which is rather a nice cd for blues fans everywhere and as far as I know isn’t available anywhere – which is a shame.*

'Walk on' from Chicago - Ulli

Anyway, time only to say that you owe me a pint now for the plug John, and we’re into the straight with Barry joining in on knee slaps for ‘If I had a hammer’.  They certainly had everyone clapping along enthusiastically.  Was Paulo’s harp and Barry’s knees the ‘pipe and drum’ for the evening though?

Still no sign of either instrument when Ulli Langenscheidt took the stage.  Despite the ever growing request for floorspots at the Club John Harrison is determined to keep the ‘Walk-on’ tradition of British Folk Clubs alive, and how can you tell someone to come back next month when they are a walk-in from Chicago?  Ulli repaid her short notice addition to the bill with three excellent self-penned numbersThe third of which, ‘Live your dreams’? was my favourite, but all were delivered with a clean and light vocal style – I wasn’t surprised when speaking to her later that a CD is in the pipeline.  As a former Bonn resident, She was over here to visit friends, so we can only hope she visits them regularly from now on!

Eva Martinez Salgado and daughter Ana were next up and saved the day carrying as they did a Pipe (Galician) and a drum.  This is the kind of music that proves the validity of John’s ‘no amps’ rule. It’s always a pleasure to hear traditional instruments and without electricity we actually can hear the instruments themselves.  The same is true for Thomas Kanmacher who’s Uilean Pipes are a hypnotic pleasure to both hear and watch.  I notice numerous heads crane forward to look closefully at his fingers coaxing sweet notes out of what looks just like a roomy leather handbag with a pipe sticking out.  So hypnotic was his music that the request to ‘tell a short story’ at evenings end was enthusiastically recieved even when ten minutes later it was still ‘in the telling’.  Thomas knows not just the notes on his Uileans but also their history and the history of the music they play.  A man you don’t meet every day indeed – which was fortunate,since there was no time left for the song of that name which customarily closes the evening.

Proud Merries - with songs & smiles

So here I am at the finishing line of my review and I’ve missed out on so many ‘baton carriers’ along the way.  Lothar Heinrich with some gentle acoustic standards, Claudia’s lovely vocals alongside Werner on guitar, The proud merries with their own compositions,

Andreas who got everyone tapping their feet alongside his own to ‘Honky Tonk Women’ and “ooh, oohing!” to ‘Death of a Clown’.  There was also ‘Clare to Here’, a track from my folk hero Ralph McTell sung by Thomas Steffens, with a better Irish accent than that used by Ralph himself and beating even Thomas’s Scottish ‘Donald where’s yer trousers’ Glaswegian from last year.

Well, you’ll have guessed from my pot pourri of a review that this was really a ‘pot pourri’ of a show.  Not surprisingly it’s getting harder every month to get a spot to play or a seat to sit in.  My advice  – come early, but come along!

MORE PHOTOS
HERE

*Note: I have since discovered that the John Harrison CD is available here

Popularity: 13% [?]

Rockin all over the Harmonie – Sunny Skies

February 28, 2011 by  
Filed under Music, News and Views

We Brits love a bit of tradition.  Queens speech on Xmas Day and all that.  Maybe that’s why I always look forward to Sunny Skies playing the Harmonie.  The first show of the year for the band, and a chance for the many fans to hear what’s caught their musical attention in the preceding year.   February 2011was no different, as Rope Schmitz took his merry men and women  onstage for the bands 39th year.  The songs may have changed along the way, but the bands aim of playing good music with a smile hasn’t changed a jot.

Rope was concerned that my previous reports suggested his musical heart was still in SanFrancisco, or somewhere else evocative of the 60’s.  In fact, he actually enjoys the heavier sound of the modern Sunny Skies set-up.  A good thing too on this evenings performance, especially in part two where 70’s & 80’s rock ruled.  The gauntlet was set down from the start as vocalist Alex took the stage to the  hard rocking riff of Deep Purples ‘Perfect Strangers’.  Things lightened up a little when Nadine bounded on and fairly bounced from one stage side to the other like she was on springs.  Was all this talk of not being well she gave me before the show really true?  Heaven help the floorboards when she’s fully fit.

Sunny Skies onstage

Let's Rock! - Sunny Skies

Highlight of Nadine’s set was one of the new numbers: Beth Ditto’s  ‘Heavy Cross’ which proved perfectly suited to her style, slotting in well with Natasha Bedingfields brooding ‘Incompatible’ and Alanis Morrisette’s ‘Ironic’.

Alex Krienke was clearly back to his barnstorming best after last years time-out in hosptal.  Looking as unlike Freddie Mercury as anyone could possibly look, he still delivers Queens ‘Hammer to Fall’ with Freddies swagger and bravado.

For longtime Skies fans there were the bands classic covers – ‘Son of a preacher man’, ‘Miami 2017’ – and of course (could there be a Skies show without it?) ‘Little help from my friends’ The Harmonie stage has been extended this year and while it looked spacious for quartets like Oli Brown and Aynsley Lister it still looked like the queue for a bus in Oxford Street rush hour at times this evening.  One of those times was of course ‘Son of a preacher man’ and whenever the full horn section was onstage you wondered whether Tobias Flerus would be able to open the slide on his trombone without anyone having to leave the stage.

It seemed oddly prophetic that the first part ended with older band classics.  Like closing a chapter before the hard rock of part two got underway.  Outside of Alex’s wonderful Freddie Mercury tribute ‘Too much love will kill you’ and Martin’s Gary Moore tribute with an emotion charged ‘Still got the Blues’solo the mood was all out rock.  More Deep Purple with ‘Black Night’ and ‘Smoke on the Water’ as well as a new rock anthem in the shape of UFO’s ‘Only you can rock me’ – announced David Coverdale-like with “Here’s one for ya”. Status Quo’s ‘Rocking all over the world’ sounded almost poppy by comparison.  Coming up to it’s 40th year of existence, the list of hard rock gems leaves no doubt where the heart of Sunny Skies lies musically.

Sunny Skies Martin and Nadine

Let's hear you at the back!

I rather missed the acoustic duo set with Martin and Alex playing ‘Stairway to heaven’ and ‘Dead or Alive’.  If you missed playing them too guys, my colleague John Harrison at Bonn Folk Club will happily add you to a future bill – just say the word!

A packed out Harmonie says the band is doing it right with the current choice of material, so it’s not just Rope and myself that like to rock!     As long as they continue to mix rock classics with modern gems like ‘Ironic’ and ‘Heavy Cross’ the Harmonie shows of Sunny Skies will continue to be a tradition to savour every year.  Give me The Queen at Christmas, and the band that covers Freddie Mercury’s Queen so well every year as an early concert treat each year, and consider me happy.  Long may one reign, and the other rock!

Popularity: 12% [?]

Bonafide will fill your head with rock

February 23, 2011 by  
Filed under Music, News and Views

So who are Bonafide? “They’re top of the Swedish charts this week” the Tourmanager told me enthusiastically as I surveyed the back of a cd in the Harmonie foyer.  Ah, but which chart? I enquired.  Certainly these Swedes are not the new Abba – as my post gig ringing ears reminded me. As it turned out we were talking Heavy Metal, a scene I lost sight of around the fall of the wall – the Pink Floyd version that is.

“If it’s too loud, you’re too old” as a certain record shop Manager reminded me.  I would have agreed with that in 1980 when I joined all the other ‘headbangers’ shouting “Turn it up!” as Sammy Hagar blasted through his heavy metal anthem ‘Red’ at Portsmouth Guildhall.  Now though it’s 2011, and I’m at an age where leather is for sofas rather than jackets;  and heads need hats (preferably warm ones) rather than banging.  Sad I know.

Rockin all over the... stage. Bonafide

But still, straight into Swedens Hard Rock chart (and mid-price LP Chart) at number one deserves respect – and these lads are billed as Swedens ACDC.   Two very good reasons to shake out the dandruff, arm myself with industrial strength earplugs, a vintage 70’s ‘air guitar’, and prepare to rock.

Which brings a surprise – guitar solos, or lack thereof.  This actually has repercussions as the music is fast and furious and – as Shakespeare would have observed had he been a Metalhead – “Tis here, tis gone!” Lkewise, following a barnstorming version of   The Who classic ‘Can’t Explain’ the band are also ‘here and gone’ by 10pm.

There was plenty for hardrock fans to enjoy in the meantime though.  A major strength of Bonafide is that, like all the best Hard Rock/Metal outfits, they have an ear for a good rock tune, which is refreshing amongst the metalheads who see only speed and volume and forget that stalwart of all classic rock songs – THE STICK IN THE HEAD RIFF!   Prime examples being their homage to the UK’s Humble Pie in ‘Don’t need no Doctor’ and their own headbanging anthem ‘Fill your head with rock’.  Or ‘Nice Boys don’t play rock n roll’ with a Motörheady style chorus and Lemmy-like vocal.  There was even a short nod to the roots of it all with a grunged up  version of Jimmy Reed’s ‘Big Bossman’ which gave the classic a fresh coat of paint (a coat of grunge?!).

'Don't need no Doctor - just Rock n Roll' Pontus Snibb

As the saying goes “Live long enough, see everything” but in this case “hear everything” could equally apply.  I’ve heard everything on offer here before,  but  for those youngsters (under 40) who never got to see Bon Scott and the original wave of Heavy Metal and also missed the NWOBHM (New Wave of British Heavy Metal) These guys will be very welcome, and rightly so.  Vocalist Pontus Snibb, a long haired version of Han Solo, jokingly said he loved Bonn as the home of ‘Bonn’ Scott and Jason ‘Bonn’ham  so the band themselves are still in spitting distance of the originals.  But in the event that one day – rather like Welsh – Heavy Metal is in danger of being forgotten, Bonafide will ensure the kids are alright for at least another generation that wants to rock hard.

Thanks to Mr Music for arranging the show at Bonn Harmonie.

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Popularity: 14% [?]

Dana Fuchs – ‘Mama Music’ takes over

February 11, 2011 by  
Filed under Music, News and Views

According to Dana Fuchs’ bio she was in a black Baptist Church when she received the advice from a ‘beautiful black woman’ to “Let Mama Music take over”.  On Wednesday I was on the recieving end of that advice as a beautiful white woman truly did let the music take her over – and she took the whole audience over too with a mesmerizing vocal tour de force.

After numerous Blues based shows in barely two weeks I really feared this was going to be where for many the money would run out.  Germany playing Italy didn’t help calm my fears either.  Obviously word had got out though. Following Dana’s excellent Harmonie set on Rockpalast last year, and her short but oh so sweet slot ahead of Joe Cocker at Museumsplatz, there was a sizeable crowd packed into the Harmonie and buzzing with anticipation.

Looking good, sounding great - Dana Fuchs

The flashing twirling lights tell us this is a Rock show, and it’s central figure makes it clear from the word go that tonight she will be taking no prisoners.  ‘Love to Beg’ starts Dana’s new CD and also starts her set.  She may be a fox by name but the lady is a lion by nature.  She constantly stalks from one stage side to the other.  Stopping between songs to wave a shaggy mane of hair from big brown eyes.  She kneels down, sits down, even lays down onstage.  Never for long though.  Seemingly always restless as she roars out tales of love – be it love found, love lost or just misplaced.  Much of the evenings show is made up of new tracks.  No complaints about that though as the new CD is a real corker that might disappoint blues purists, but Thomas Ruf has pulled off a major coup in getting Dana’s signature on a contract and the songs on her first RUF release make for a powerful package.

The full tilt rock of ‘Nothings what I cry for’ and ‘Faster than we can’ – the latter already a Fuchs classic in my opinion.  They rock on the CD, but believe me they really ROCK onstage this evening.

There are some delightfully quirky numbers on offer too:  ‘Keep on Rollin’ is a ‘Streets of Laredo’ sort of ballad with a latenight barroom rythm perfectly timed by new drummer Tom Curiano.  ‘Superman’ which Dana sings as if she should be holding a mike in one hand and a Jack Daniels in the other is another Fuchs/Diamond classic.  “Superman left us at the voting booth” great stuff.

Bassist Walter Laituperissa is on hand to add a sobre melodic counterpoint to the hardrock sound of the band and although I would think it takes a while to adjust to playing beside the Force of Nature that is Dana Fuchs after touring so often with the famously laid back Snowy White, he stands like a rock to do the job at hand – one of those musicians worth their weight of adaptable gold.  Not forgetting Jon Diamond on guitar of course.   Diamond was recovering from food poisoning but put in some delicately crafted solos on his Telecaster. The song/music writing partnership of Fuchs/Diamond has already produced some gems and one of the best is in the set tonight in the form of ‘What You See’, a Stadium Rocker AC/DC style if ever there was one.

A favourite musician of Dana’s is Otis Redding and a long time favourite song is ‘Loving you too long’. “Finally” Dana admitted onstage, “I had the courage to record it”. It makes a break from the rock and proves not just a great vehicle for Dana’s vocal abilities but also for John Diamonds Telecaster as he lays down a magical solo. I can imagine Cocker singing this – but not better than Dana Fuchs does.

Any doubts about the power Dana has in her voice were dispelled when her microphone transmitter gave up trying to stay with it’s energetic owner and crashed to the floor “Sch**ss Technik!” as someone called out.  Unphased she sang ‘sans microphone’ and still carried her voice up to the balcony.  With everything plugged in and working the band could rip the roof off of a tank – as with the rocket fuelled encore ‘Helter Skelter’.

My ‘Rock n Roll Church of Love’ is how Dana Fuchs describes her concerts.  It’s not about selling us Buddha, Jesus or Scientology though.  To Dana it’s not WHO you believe in that counts, but that you believe in something.  It’s a creed that has helped her survive the suicide of a sister and the terminal illness of a brother.  The former was inspiration for sister Donna on one of Dana’s finest moments to date, the hauntingly melodic ‘Songbird’ which was played this evening and dedicated as always to a sister who shared Dana’s dream of singing to the world.   On tonights evidence the World will be eating out of Dana’s hands very soon.

‘Talent will Out’ as they say.  Just sit back and let ‘Mama Music’ take over.

All eyes on the Singer

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Popularity: 14% [?]

Oli Brown -Mannish Boy

February 9, 2011 by  
Filed under Music, News and Views

‘Best Male Vocalist’, ‘Best Young Artist’.  That was Oli Brown at last years British Blues Awards.  At a time when we lost a Blues guitar hero it was good to hear new Blues again.  But is Oli Brown just a ‘Young Pretender’ to the Blues guitar hero throne?   On Tuesday at the Harmonie he let his guitar do the talking.

There’s a fine book by American writer/musician *Carl Gustafson that discusses how a ‘Bluesman’ should dress. 

“I like to think there’s a cryptic tailor who has a backroom in a basement speakeasy who can only be found by a true Bluesman.  The tailor is old and just happens to owe a favour to the Bluesman’s father, and thats the only way you can get one of his suits…”

Oli Brown goes one better, his father Graham is the tailor.  The modern young Bluesman pulls together a smattering of gangster (pinstripes) and a touch of the gypsy (curly hair) and he dispenses with the dark glasses in favour of twinkling eyes and a ready smile.  He updates the classic footwear with two tone sneakers, and he eagerly throws in hip hop (maybe Muddy would have too if it had existed?).  It’s a mix of old and new that just might make Oli Brown the biggest English Blues legend since Eric Clapton in thirty years time.

Right now though it’s 2011, and Oli is back for his second solo show at the Harmonie in as many years with a completely new band. 

Former drummer Simon Dring won the best drummer award at the British Blues Festival last year so he isn’t a man easily replaced. Oli has done a pretty good job finding Wayne Proctor for the task though.  Proctor already has experience behind Brit heroes Ian Parker and Aynsley Lister.  He’s a man with a big, beefy sound that puts added bite into the beat.  New bassman Gaz Wrackham has also worked with many of Britains best.  His long hair suggests a rocker and his playing does too – I hear a couple of people in the audience remark that the sound is loud this evening.

A bit of taped rain kicks off the show with, you guessed it, ‘I can’t stand the rain’ but things only really get going when the beat of ‘Evil Soul’ kicks in – a perfect live song if ever there was one.  It certainly fits in perfectly with the hard rocking sound of the new band.   Very noticable tonight was Oli Browns easy way of talking to the audience.  Rather than stick to ‘Guten Tag’ and ‘Danke Schön’ as many a Brit/American over here is wont to do, he used his linguistic limitations to advantage.  A short sip of beer and a ‘Prost!’ from him became a running joke for the evening.  Every time he sipped bottled water someone would shout out ‘Prost!’.  The best Bluesmen know how to communicate with their audience, BB King has it off to a fine art.  It has to come from the heart to work and Oli Brown has it.

Whilst part one of the show offered up some excellent music,  part two really kicked into a higher gear.  It started innocently enough with just Oli and the melancholy ‘Complicated’ but then he announced “Now we’re going to play some mean Blues” kicked into the Muddy Waters classic ‘Hoochie Coochie Man” and from then on we never looked back.  As always, there was a ‘walkabout’ with guitar, and there was quite a crowd to squeeze through.  In search of a few photos I did my own ‘walkabout’ later on and have to say that wherever I went – back of hall, balcony, stage left and right, the sound was excellent.  Punchy bass and drums with crystal clear vocals.   Never better than on a storming ‘Black Betty’.  Back to crowd control – and Oli was in great form conducting the audience in variously pitched renditions of “Let me love you baby”.

Looking back on the show there was nothing new here as such.  No new songs or audience repartee.  They were all there a year ago.  The difference is that, like the outfit itself, everything seemed a little smarter, a little more mature in its presentation.  Looking at the pictures I see a man with a boyish smile where last year I saw a boy with a mans confidence.

A ‘Mannish Boy’ for sure.

* From: ‘Ain’t just Blues, It’s Showtime’ – Carl Gustafson- Sarkett Press, 2010
(Oli gained early experience of the Blues travelling with Gustafson).

Brown, Proctor and Rackham let it rock

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Popularity: 12% [?]

No Frills, Just Rock – Aynsley Lister

February 4, 2011 by  
Filed under Music, News and Views

Mark Twain’s famous mis-quote “Rumours of my death have been greatly exaggerated” came to mind as Aynsley laughed over a magazines ‘cut n past’ error that claimed he passed away in 2001, but “still offers private guitar tuition”.  In fact both man and career seem in the best of health, as his show at the Harmonie this week proved.

Aynsley Listers  latest CD, ‘Tower Sessions”, is possibly his best to date, despite an odd mix of using a live audience as a springboard for the band whilst excluding their actual presence from the final mix.  But how does the show measure up live and raw?

Aynsley Lister Band

I remember Aynsley’s last visit to Bonn which began with the acoustic ‘Airplane Blues’,  but much of Thursdays concert was  based around the ‘Tower Sessions’ material.  This time around he hit the ground running with the powerhouse driving rock of ‘Sugar Low’which had the near capacity crowd grooving from the word go.  ‘Soundman’ was also an early favourite – but favourites are hard to pick when each number is a winner.  There’s something of Hugh Grant in Aynsley’s face at times, and when I focus my camera on him from the front stage I get a feeling he’s a bit self-conscious about the whole star thing.  Like he’s thinking “Hey, it’s the music that matters, not me”  That thought is reiterated when he leans into the speaker to get the last ounce of reverb, or in moments when he tweaks the knobs on his amp.  Every note is a new discovery to be enjoyed just as much by the guitarist as by the audience.

When I ask bass player Midas later about the setlist she laughs and  tells me they just shout out what song is next.  I can quite believe it.  Midas herself has been in the band a few years now, but keyboardman Dan Healey has only been onboard since last years ‘Tower Sessions’, whilst drummer Tim Brown is an even newer addition.  They gel together well though, and Brown is very much a showman on drums rolling the sticks around.  He even gets centre stage metaphorically speaking to sing ‘Superstition’.

I know that Aynsley has a very dedicated and knowledgable fanbase in the UK who are itching to hear about new material.  We had a couple of ‘newish’ tracks in ‘the Status Quo styled ‘Sugar’ and the gentle ballad ‘Feeling Good’ but otherwise it was classic Lister – ‘Whats it all about’, ‘Hurricane’, ‘Crosstown Traffic’ ‘Early Morning Dew’ – with my favourite Lister lyric “There’s a man, with a squeegie in his hand” (how many other songs mention a squeegie?).  No gig would be complete without ‘Purple Rain’ of course, and it’s sustained chord solo reminiscent of Gary Moore’s effort on ‘Parisienne Walkways’.

If I’m pedantic I admit I missed an acoustic spot, and particularly the quirky rythm of ‘Crazy’ but I guess you can’t fit everything in, and the title ‘Time is running out on me’ says all that needs to be said on that score.   No smoke bombs, no elaborate light show, no long introductions, as the T-shirts in the foyer say – ‘JUST ROCK!’

FOOTNOTE: As mentioned, Aynsley’s fans are a well clued up bunch and have pointed out an inaccuracy in my review -  ‘Tower Sessions’  was originally recorded before a live audience, partly because so many people loved Aynsley’s version of ‘Purple Rain’.  The song didn’t exist on any records and because Aynsley thought he could only do it justice in a live setting, the band recorded it and other songs before a live audience.  By the recording date however the band had changed and hadn’t been together long enough to do the material real justice, so he returned to the studio with them after the band had settled down to do the album again;   but had no time to re-organize an audience.

Hope that cleared that up, and full marks to Mr Lister for deciding that ‘good’ wasn’t good enough – in the end they made a great record, as said before, probably the best AL disc to date.

Popularity: 10% [?]

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