Friday, 27 March 2026

Nights At The Circus, Twenty Years Ago

And now for something a little different...

On Saturday 25th March 2006, Mrs. K and I saw Nights At The Circus at the Bristol Old Vic and I reviewed it the following day for my old blog. I thought it would be fun to share it with you.

"Nights At The Circus" by Angela Carter
Adapted by Tom Morris & Emma Rice

It's 1899 and Europe eagerly anticipates the coming of the new century, none more so than vaudeville, and especially sensational trapeze artist Fevvers. As the name suggests, Fevvers has wings, but are they real or just another illusion to mask the harsh reality of circus life? Cynical New York Times journalist Walser is determined to prove the latter and finds himself on a inexorable journey toward discovery, liberation... and love.

I'm a belated fan of Angela Carter and have so far read only three novels: Shadow Dance, The Magic Toyshop, both from the late 1960s, and 1977's The Passion of New Eve. All of these feature Carter's characteristic approach of investigating - and challenging - sexual identity and so I expected much the same from this adaptation of her 1984 novel. Tom Morris and Emma Rice have inevitably pruned Carter's original work for the stage, occasionally at the expense of narrative cohesion and characterisation. However, Kneehigh Theatre's energetic - and often cheeky - production guarantees that the end result makes up for any potential criticisms that this somehow "isn't Angela Carter".

The play gets off to a cracking start as a female singer in top hat-and-tails drag (ex-Casualty star Adjoa Andoh) sings a Dietrich-esque ditty called "Die, Century, Die". As she departs, the spotlight is immediately thrown on Gísli Örn Garðarsson's world-weary reporter Walser, who has secreted himself in the front row of the stalls. As he continues to make wisecracks, a gesturing arm poking through the stage curtain accuses, admonishes then invites him onto the stage. Walser is then overwhelmed by the chorus (played to camp comic effect by Carl Grose, Amanda Lawrence, Andy Williams and Ed Woodall), parading around the stage in their gowns and ill-fitting Y-fronts. Walser's subsequent - and forcible - eviction by the chorus via the stalls is interrupted by Fevvers' (Natalia Tena) appearance on the trapeze. Immediately, both characters and audience are captivated by the sight of the winged performer singing "I'm Only A Bird In A Gilded Cage". From this point on, Walser is inexorably drawn towards Fevvers, though his path is obstructed by humiliation and danger.

The production tackles a number of challenging aspects of the narrative in highly inventive ways, not least the Siberian circus sequences, with wild tigers conveyed by flame-filled buckets and scraping handsaws. The minimal sets are also effective, with backdrops solely consisting of curtains and frequently exposing the usually hidden backstage area. In many ways, this helps to create the illusion of a working circus, with lots of activity on the periphery whilst the 'main performance' is taking place. A musician (Stu Barker) sitting sidestage throughout also provides a great foil for the hapless Walser, who becomes increasingly frustrated by his fellow's inability to notice to the series of bizarre events occurring before their eyes. As expected in Carter's work - and indeed, circus stories in general - the dark underbelly is revealed, most horrifically through Ed Woodall's performance as Boffo The Clown. Up to this point, the audience have automatically applauded each musical performance. However, in a jaw-dropping number, Boffo waxes lyrical about his wife-beating, as he enacts this abuse upon his frail, bruised partner (played to great effect by Amanda Lawrence). Another sinister turn is provided by Andy Williams as The Colonel, a man possessing "diamonds that could make you shit" and an avid collector of wings, who has become obsessed with Fevvers' own unique enhancements. Yet, humour is ever present to balance this, particualrly in Fevvers' guardian Lizzie - in typical gender-challenging fashion played by Carl Grose - whose loathing of the opposite sex manifests itself in her habitually pissing into men's socks.

The play does suffer from being overly long, particularly in the first half, but the actors make every effort to keep things moving at an attention-grabbing pace. My only other criticism would be that the necessary filleting of the original novel has removed some of the guts of the lead characters. Although the performances by Natalia Tena and Gisli Orn Gardasson as Fevvers and Walser respectively are strong, it feels that there's not enough substance in the script to elevate their characters from likeable to people that the audience can truly empathise with. However, this is a small niggle at what is otherwise an imaginative and entertaining production. An added bonus is that it will make you want to seek out Angela Carter's original work, which can only be a good thing.


Wow. Hard to believe that was twenty years ago. Reading the review brought a flood of vivid memories. Mrs. K and I rarely go to the theatre these days, but we were so fortunate to live in Bristol at the time, with so many theatres and so many great productions within walking distance of our home.



Now, not forgetting that this is supposed to be a music blog, I have two related songs and videos for you. 

Nights At The Circus is the opening and title track of the 2007 debut album by Bishi. I didn't discover her music until 2021, thanks to a guest vocal on Richard Norris' single Water, but I've been a fan ever since. And yes, Bishi's song and album title was inspired by Angela Carter's novel. Great video, too.

A Bird In A Gilded Cage was written in 1900 by Harry Von Tilzer and Arthur J. Lamb and has been covered dozens of times since, including by a 6-year old Molly Ringwald on her Molly Sings album in 1975 ("She's little Molly, but she sings big"!)

I couldn't find Molly's rendition online, so instead I've gone for a glorious technicolour version by Barbara Cook, performed on a 1965 episode of US entertainment series The Bell Telephone Hour.

And, to close, I should add that I've read considerably more of Angela Carter's novels in the past two decades!

 

Thursday, 26 March 2026

Waxing Lyrical

Three mailshots from Soulwax, Follytechnic Music Library and Leo Zero, all containing the musical equivalent of a volcanic eruption (I should hasten to add, in respect of impact, not catastrophic devastation).

First up is a standalone single from the brothers Dewaele, spending a magical mystery tour in Abbey Road Studios 1, 2 & 3 to come up with this absolute banger. Beats, vocals, keyboard stabs, squelchy bits, you name it, it's got it, delivering seven minutes and twenty five seconds of club- and ear-friendly pop goodness. 

It's incredible to think that the first release from Follytechnic Music Library was barely three years ago. FML1 was an album of Hot Chocolate edits, so it seems fitting that the latest, FML39, features another sweet thing, namely Blancmange.

A dozen skillful edits from their 1980s period, mostly singles, of which I've plumped for the most obvious, Living On The Ceiling.

Every FML is a labour of love and a delight to the ears. Individual releases are name your price, or you can buy the full discography (currently at 46 items) for a tenner. You will not regret it.

Leo Zero has been a longtime hero of mine when it comes to edits and mash-ups, and he's been on a creative streak with the former in the past 12 months, with a slew of new releases.

The past few days have seen nine more added to the catalogue, covering a diverse range of artists from Sade to The Seeds, Christopher Cross to The Clash and, perhaps the most unexpected of all, Dinosaur Jr.

I was tempted to feature the latter but instead I've gone for Beverley Knight's cover of I Wanna Be Your Lover by Prince, performed for BBC Radio 2's Piano Room back in 2019.

Leo has turned that stripped down, three-minute version into a nine-minute dancefloor behemoth. I love it.

And a belated happy birthday to Beverley, born 22nd March 1973. What a legend!

 

Wednesday, 25 March 2026

Don’t Get Why It's So Hard To Find Some Peace And Quiet

Courtney Barnett is one of those artists who I'm predisposed to like, but I haven't obsessively bought everything that they have released. 

I think I would have been flicking through a music magazine - Mojo or Uncut, most likely - in late 2014/early 2015 when I saw a picture of Courtney and was immediately captivated by her eyes. I then read the article and I was even more intrigued.

Pedestrian At Best was my first listen, followed by Depreston and Kim's Caravan, all three appearing on Courtney's debut album sometimes i sit and think, and sometimes i just sit. I was won over.

Fast forward a decade to October 2025, and Stay In Your Lane, the first sniff of a new song from Courtney's fourth album (sixth, if you count a collaboration with Kurt Vile and a soundtrack) entitled Creature Of Habit.

Site Unseen (a duet with Waxahatchee) followed in January, with 'visualisers' for two more songs last month then a fifth song, One Thing At A Time dropping on Tuesday. 

Site Unseen is the best of the three videos, albeit essentially a fun promo for Juliana and Nicola GIraffe aka Giraffe Studios. Album opener Stay In Your Lane is my favourite song. I love Courtney's solo to close One Thing At A Time, but I'm less convinced that, at 4:42, it's a single and the video is a bit of a naff distraction, if I'm honest.

 
Some of the Aussie inflections and edges which made Courtney's vocals stand out have been smoothed out since those songs I first heard in 2015, but I still can't help but smile when I hear that voice and guitar. I wouldn't always describe it as 'in perfect harmony' - and I'm glad it's not - but a singer and musician who are quite happily co-habiting. 

I'm looking forward to hearing Creature Of Habit in full this weekend. You can find it on Courtney's website, on Bandcamp or a clutch of other retailers.

Tuesday, 24 March 2026

Giant Disco Night (45:33) At My House In Miami

Six of the best from Pilooski aka Cédric Marszewski, remixing or re-editing to create an irresistible groove. 

Long overdue for a Dubhed selection, so consider this an appetiser for the main course, which will hopefully arrive in 2026 (!)

I was pretty sure that I'd shared the edit of GIANT by The The before, but I can't see that I have, and whilst I've posted Pilooski's previous work with/on Jarvis Cocker, this one's a first, as are the rest of today's picks.

1) GIANT (Pilooski Edit): The The (2007)
2) You're In My Eyes (Discosong) (Pilooski Remix): Jarvis Cocker (2009)
3) The Night (Pilooski Re-Edit): Frankie Valli & The Four Seasons (2009)
4) 45:33 (Pilooski Remix): LCD Soundsystem (2009)
5) House Of The Truth (Pilooski Dub Version): Alexi Taylor (2022)
6) Miami (Pilooski Instrumental Dub): Baxter Dury (2023)

 
 
 
 
 

Monday, 23 March 2026

I Want To Sing To Regret, I Just Can't Pay Its Debt

Cate Le Bon and five-piece band, performing for KEXP on 27th January.

The set features four songs from Cate's seventh album Michelangelo Dying, released four months previously in September 2025.

A timely reminder that I haven't bought the album or listened to it in its entirety yet, and these four songs only serve to demonstrate that I need to get my act together.

Joining Cate are 
Euan Hinshelwood (Emmy The Great, John Grant) on guitar and saxophone
Stephen Black (Sweet Baboo, Euros Childs) on guitar and synth
Paul Jones (Catatonia, Y Cyrff) on keyboards
Toko Yasuda (Enon, Blonde Redhead) on bass guitar
Dylan Hadley (White Fence, Cass McCombs) on drums

Elements of Durutti Column, Cocteau Twins, Martha & The Muffins, Pink Industry and yet the songs feel very much now and very much Cate Le Bon. Lovely to hear host Cheryl Walters' post-set catch up with Cate, too.

What a legend. 

1) About Time
2) Is It Worth It (Happy Birthday)?
3) Ride
4) Heaven Is No Feeling


Sunday, 22 March 2026

Universal Language

Transglobal Underground have been speaking truth to the times we live for more than three decades and what better example that music is a universal language than in the grooves of their tunes?

I've selected ten songs from their extensive catalogue, spanning 1991 to 2025, a mixture of singles, album tracks, remixes, deep cuts and obscurities that only hint at their rich and varied history. 

There is a very deep well to draw from and though I can't quite believe that it's taken me over five years to debut a Transgllobal Underground selection, there is plenty more to come.

1) The Elephant (The Balaphon-A-Bing Bong Immigrant Mix By Transglobal Underground): Dodgy (1994)
2) Jatayu (Album Version): Transglobal Underground ft. T.U.U.P. (1994)
3) Kese Kese (Where's The Sarangi Mix By Transglobal Underground): DJ Cheb I Sabbah ft. Mala Ganguly & Shafqat Ali Khan (1999)
4) International Times (Apis Bull Mix By TGU): Transglobal Underground ft. Neil Sparkes & Queen La Cuica (1995)
5) City In Peril (Dub Colossus Mushroom Mix By Count Dubulah): Transglobal Underground (2020)
6) Temple Head (Burundi Beat Mix By Aki Nawaz & Paul Tipler): Transglobal Underground (1991)
7) Slowfinger (Album Version): Transglobal Underground (1993)
8) Baby It's Cold Inside (Transglobal Underground Remix): The Cold Head (2025)
9) Bujdosó (Transglobal Underground Remix): Anima Sound System (1999)
10) The Green Spider (Single Version): Transglobal Underground (2019)

1991: Temple Head EP: 6
1993: Dream Of 100 Nations: 7
1994: International Times: 2
1994: So Let Me Go Far EP: 1
1995: International Times EP: 4
1999: Bujdosó EP: 9
1999: Shri Durga EP: 3
2019: The Colours Started To Sing Again EP: 10
2020: Walls Have Ears EP: 5
2025: Torture Chamber EP: 8

Universal Language (57:31) (GD) (M)

Saturday, 21 March 2026

Anson Men

Poor Strangelove. I should have loved them, really.

They were from my birthplace Bristol. They made epic indie music that reached beyond the boundaries of the small gig circuit and on a par with their contemporaries. Yet... Patrick Duff and his band of merry men got (excuse the pun) duff treatment from me back in the early to mid 1990s.

Today's post focuses on their support slot for American Music Club at The Anson Rooms (aka the University of Bristol Student Union) in Clifton, the posh part of Bristol, both literally and metaphorically elevated above the city and it's surround.

The date was Friday 21st October 1994 and I was there, purely and simply, to see American Music Club. My (soon to be) ex-girlfriend wasn't. I wrote about my experience of their performance last May and had this to say:

[My] college ex was a fan of Strangelove, especially Patrick Duff, 
so for her this would have been the appeal of the gig over the headliners.

Sadly, not my first time seeing Strangelove - 
I would have seen them at least once 
at the Bristol Community Festival at Ashton Court - 
but I can't remember much, other than they were 'good'.

At the time of the gig, my girlfriend and I were still a couple, though it must have been one of the last things we did together as I was temporarily living in Derby before the year was out. 

Maybe it was our souring relationship and her interest in the floppy fringed frontman of Strangelove that made me disinclined to like the band. Yes, I could (and probably still can) be that petty.

Not a lot of personal memories of their set that night then, or previous Ashton Court Festivals, which is less surprising as they were frequently spent oiled up and under the influence and in the company of like minded friends.

Which makes recreating a setlist both a challenge and an opportunity to give Strangelove another (fair) hearing, thirty-odd years later.

The details of their set at The Anson Rooms in 1994 has not been captured online, so I've created a composite 12-song setlist, drawn from three contemporaneous performances: the Marquee Club in London on 8th June 1994, followed by the Astoria on 19th August 1994, with a Black Session @ 'La Maison La Radio' in Paris on 28th October 1994, a week after their Bristol gig.

Three quarters of this imaginary set is drawn from Strangelove's debut album, Time For The Rest Of Your Life, albeit out of sequence apart from the opening song. The remaining three songs include their 1992 debut Visionary, Hysteria Unknown and Wolf's Story Part I, which didn't a physical release until 1996, when Parts I to III appeared on CD2 of the Beautiful Alone single.

I've never heard the Strangelove album before now and of the smattering of songs already in my collection, none feature here, so the playback of this selection was as fresh to me as it will be to you, listening to it for the first time today.

The verdict? Strangelove got the shitty end of the stick from me back in 1994 and in 2026, I've really enjoyed their music. Time for the rest of my life, perhaps, but I will make more time to listen to Strangelove and catch up with what Patrick Duff has been up to since.

1) Sixer
2) Hopeful
3) Visionary
4) Wolf’s Story Part I
5) Quiet Day
6) World Outside
7) Hysteria Unknown
8) Time For The Rest Of Your Life
9) Low Life
10) The Return Of The Real Me
11) Is There A Place?
12) Sand

1992: Visionary EP: 3
1993: Hysteria Unknown EP: 7
1994: Time For The Rest Of Your Life: 1, 2, 5, 6, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12
1996: Beautiful Alone EP: 4

Anson Men (58:13) (GD) (M)


If you want to recreate the whole evening (musically speaking, no relationship breakdowns please!), then you can find my recreation of American Music Club's set here.

Friday, 20 March 2026

Chest Pains, Musical Gains

A colleague at work pointed me to Angine De Poitrine and said that I might like them. They were right.

The duo from Saguenay, Québec, Canada take mysterious to a level that Daft Punk could only dream and join Robyn Hitchcock and Strawberry Switchblade in that select group that make polka dots cool.

The band name literally translates as Angina Pectoris and the blurb on Bandcamp explains more, but not much more:

By awakening the notes that sleep deep in the cracks between the piano keys, 
these two incongruous beings with large papier-mâché faces 
will make you feel an auditory stimulus comparable 
to the delicious and throbbing tightness 
that precedes a heart attack.

I thankfully can't speak from personal experience of the latter, but the sound that 'brothers' Khn De Poitrine (microtonal guitars) and Klek De Poitrine (percussion) make is incredibly infectious and incredibly groovy.

From a deceptively simple set up, the music takes in a tour of genres, one moment prog rock, the next big beat, the next psychedelia in extremis, yet never sounding like a mish-mash or an idea in search of a song. 

I've only heard a handful of their songs so far but, given that the Canadian dollar to UK sterling exchange rate (plus 20% digital discography discount) means that I can buy both albums - efficiently titled Vol. I and Vol. II - for around a tenner, it's worth taking the plunge.

Heading up the post is a 4-song set that Angine De Poitrine recorded for KEXP last December, during the Les Trans Musicales in Rennes, France. As such, the channel dispenses with the usual set-and-interview format to give space for just shy of 28 minutes of music.

The set comprises the first three songs from Vol. II, in reverse chronological order naturally, closing with their debut single (and opener of Vol. I).

1) Sarniezz
2) Mata Zyklek
3) Fabienk
4) Sherpa

As an added incentive, if you need it, I've added the closing song from Vol. I.

Angine De Poitrine are touring to promote Vol. II, including a date a Strange Brew in Bristol in May, though sadly long sold out by the time I had been introduced to their music. Maybe I'll head to Bristol anyway, stand outside and peer through the window, whilst the music poursa out into the street...

Thursday, 19 March 2026

On Our Way To Somewhere In Particular

Echobelly was one of those bands that I had more of an interest in what they had to say, rather than what they had to sing, back in the days of Brtipop. And by "they" I mean Sonya Aurora Madan, who was the go-to for the music press when they wanted an interview or cover shot.

The only other band members I can name from memory are co-founder Glenn Johansson and Debbie Smith, who joined in 1994, due to her previous association with Curve.

Here Comes The Big Rush was a single from Echobelly's third album Lustra, which entered the UK chart on 2nd November 1997 at #56, dropped 30 places the following week, and disappeared altogether the week after.

I bought the CD single (part 2 of 2) secondhand in 1998, on the back of the inclusion of the remix by Midfield General aka Damian Harris on Block Bustin' Beats, a 2CD compilation released in December 1997. a "40 track full-on big beat mix" by Dave Turner.

The CD featured the album version, plus 2 remixes each from Midfield General (vocal & dub) and Dave Angel (vocal & instrumental). The latter obviously not to be confused with his namesake character on The Fast Show.

There is only one YT post featuring the Dave Angel vocal mix, which I'm guessing is ripped from a DJ mix, as it features about 4 mins of it, before switching to the Midfield General vocal, then cutting out as abruptly as it arrived. This will give you a flavour but, suffice to say, the instrumental is my pick of the two.

If you're familiar with Midfield General, then you'll know what to expect, i.e. heavy, dark beats, but works well in both the dub and vocal variations.

I hadn't realised that Sonya had been seriously ill following their second album and there was some doubt as to whether Echobelly's hiatus would become a permanent split, not least due to legal and band hassles also going on at the time.

As it happens, it was another four years before their fourth album and there have been a further two albums since, plus one compilation of B-sides and rarities in 2020.

Sonya and Glenn are still touring as Echobelly and you can catch them on 2nd July at Tunbridge Wells Forum, promising "plenty of 'great things' from their Britpop heyday, plus new material".



Save your point of view
For the manic charm that he puts you through
When he wears your pearls, your ruby dress
And he looks so good with his sunken chest
There's a certain charm 

To the pretty boy that is on my arm
He's my double friend, a boy and a girl
When he says,
Paint my face, lick your mouth
Fake a yawn and we'll go out and glow
We're on our way to somewhere in particular
I'll take you somewhere, where you haven't been
And I'll show you a good time, like you've never seen

Here comes the big rush
There's a special ring
To his Cuban heels and his six-pack swing
His mother's clothes are his new disguise
And his good advice when he says:
Vanity's a virtue, lets no one in to hurt you
I'll take you somewhere, where you haven't been
And I'll show you a good time, like you've never seen
Here comes the big rush
You're one of the boys
Pump that pipe dream, sell you something

New, new, new
We're on our way to somewhere in particular
I'll take you somewhere, where you haven't been
And I'll show you a good time, like you've never seen

Here comes the big rush
You're one of the boys
Pump that pipe dream, sell you something
Pump that pipe dream, sell you something
New new


Wednesday, 18 March 2026

(C)lone Wolf

Mesh have been on the go since the 1990s, they're originally from my home town, my mum knows one of the band members, they've released a ton of albums, their music should be right up my street....

...and yet, I know next to nothing about them and i don't have a single song by them in my music collection.

YouTube thrust their new video Lone Wolf right at the top of their home page and I decided to have listen. Lone Wolf is the second of five tracks on their EP This World; you will also find it on the 25-track deluxe edition of new album The Truth Doesn't Matter, out on 27th March.

Lone Wolf is a decent song, very much in the vein of Depeche Mode's recent retrofuture approach with Memento Mori...and yet, it just doesn't grab me in the same way. Maybe it'll take a few more listens.

What proved to be a major distraction on my first listen was the video itself. There's no mention in the credits, but this is an AI-generated video which lifts Viggo Mortensen's character from 2008 film The Road and repurposes him as a seemingly homeless person, the titular Lone Wolf. 

That is, until the final frames, which see him heading towards a cabin in the woods, walking side by side with a white wolf. That's your Happy Days/"jumping the shark" moment, as the scene is reminiscent of those airbrushed T-shirts or posters, the latter often with bas-relief faux velvet, that filled Athena in the 1980s.

I've no idea what Viggo Mortensen thinks of all this, but I quickly shifted to listening to Lone Wolf on their Bandcamp page instead.

If there are any Mesh fans reading this, any recommendations for a good introduction to the band, or a suggested playlist? Preferably without an accompanying AI-generated video!