Monday, 31 March 2025

Panic Forgives Me For Trying To Choose


It seems like only five minutes ago that I was posting about Mick Harvey's album, Five Ways To Say Goodbye, but it was last February

A year on and Mick has just released Golden Mirrors: The Uncovered Sessions Vol. 1, a collaboration with Amanda Acevedo and a follow up to their 2023 album Phantasmagoria In Blue.

As the title suggests, Golden Mirrors: The Uncovered Sessions Vol. 1 is the first in a series of albums covering songs by other writers that Mick and Amanda have a shared interest in. The debut volume reworks 11 songs by Jackson C. Frank and includes the above single/video The Night Of The Blues.

Mick is renowned for his approach to cover versions, shining new light on artists not least his extensive translation and reworking of Serge Gainsbourg's catalogue. I've not heard of Jackson C. Frank before now and even a brief search has revealed a tragic story of childhood trauma, mental health issues, homelessness, and a untimely death the day after his 56th birthday.

Just one album - self-titled, produced by Paul Simon, 1965 - was released in Jackson's lifetime, with a collection of complete recordings in 2015. Here is a version of The Night Of The Blues from the latter.

Sunday, 30 March 2025

More Altered Perceptions


Side 2 of an 80s mixtape recorded 26th November 1999.

Another compilation that's taken me ages to return to, Side 1 making an appearance here in November 2023. Better late than never...!

In 1987, Get It On by T. Rex was re-released with a new remix by Tony Visconti. I don't remember why exactly, as the (rather excellent) Best Of The 20th Century Boy compilation had already been out for a couple of years and there was no jeans ad tie-in as far as I recall. There were two 12" singles with new extended versions: the Dawn Mix on yellow vinyl and the Dusk Mix on blue vinyl; I've got both, there's not a lot of difference between the two.

Propaganda's second single was Duel, a gorgeous slice of Germanic pop. On the flip side was its roughneck relation, Jewel, Claudia Brücken's sweet voice replaced by Susanne Freytag's shouty vocals. Similarly, their album A Secret Wish was mirrored with a remix companion, Wishful Thinking. It's a bit hit-and-mix, but the remix of Duel/Jewel is superb, creating a sublime duet between Susanne and Claudia.

Love Like Blood is arguably Killing Joke's defining song and originally came out in two extended 12" single formats. Not content with that, producer Zeus B. Held had a go at the song, providing the flip side to his other remix of 1986 single Adorations. This one adds a few contemporary remix touches, including some crowd noises for some reason, to firmly root the song in the mid-1980s.

I do have the 12" single of More by Doctor & The Medics, which features a remix by an up-and-coming artist called William Orbit. Unfortunately, I don't have a MP3 rip and couldn't find an alternative on t'internet. So, I've grabbed the intro from the video version and spliced it with a slight edit of the album version and Hey Presto! a DIY extended version to fill the void. Derivative it may be, but I like this song.

Derivative is not a word that could be used to describe Peek-A-Boo by Siouxsie & The Banshees. When I first heard it in 1988, I was thrilled by this change of direction for the band. Unfortunately, the rest of the album is less experimental and more familiar, but the impact of this song hasn't diminished. Peek-A-Boo was released on 7", 12" (two of 'em) and CD single. The eight minute Silver Dollar Mix which appeared on the limited edition 12" single is in fact an edit; the full length version appeared in the USA and runs for another two minutes.

Whilst Siouxsie and co were trying to push themselves in a new direction, by 1988 Iggy Pop had pretty much gone full hair metal. I like the album Instinct but it's dumb rock, even by Iggy's standards, though unapologetically so. I first heard this remix of Cold Metal on the Sounds Blasts! 1 EP, a freebie 7" single with music paper Sounds that also featured The Blue Aeroplanes (yay!), Fishbone (mmmm) and the Dan Reed Network (meh). 

Closing out this compilation is my favourite version of Two Tribes by Frankie Goes To Hollywood, the Carnage remix by Trevor Horn and Stephen Lipson following the standard ZTT format of instrumental first half and vocal second half. However, they also chuck in a few vocal snippets from Nash, Peds and Mark taken from throwaway B-side 'interviews', which add a bit of colour. 

As with my previous post, I've tracked down the videos for each song, or TV performances where these aren't available. The clip for Jewel by Propaganda is a real treat. The others run the range from so so serious (Killing Joke) to stunning (Siouxsie) to silly (Doctor & The Medics) to... well, you've just got to see Iggy Pop's video to wonder how many cans of hairspray the film crew got through for this one.

And then there's Two Tribes, possibly one of the greatest videos ever made. If a band tried to do that today, the pustulous orange turd would probably buy MTV, install himself as CEO and shut it down. That's if the barrel chested bareback rider hadn't already dealt with them permanently.
 
1) 
Get It On (Dusk Mix) (Tony Visconti 87 Remix): T. Rex (1987)
2) Jewelled (Remix By Robert Kraushaar & Paul Morley): Propaganda (1985)
3) Love Like Blood (The '86 Remix By Zeus B. Held): Killing Joke (1986)
4) More (Full Video Version By Doctor & The Medics & Graham Meek): Doctor & The Medics (1987)
5) Peek-A-Boo (Silver Dollar Mix By Mike Hedges) (Edit): Siouxsie & The Banshees (1988)
6) Cold Metal (Rock Version By Andy Wallace): Iggy Pop (1988)
7) Two Tribes (Carnage) (Remix By Trevor Horn & Stephen Lipson): Frankie Goes To Hollywood (1984)

Side Two (46:06) (KF) (Mega)
Side One here

 
 
 
 
 
 

Saturday, 29 March 2025

Previous Stuff

In June 2023, I posted the second disc of three CD-Rs of ripped albums gifted by my friend John in early 2010. Appropriately titled Stuff, the bundle contained a fair bit of stuff - artists and albums - that I wasn't familiar with.

Today's belated return visit focuses on disc !, and again I've collated a 9-track selection, sequenced in the order that the albums were presented on the CD-R.  Seven of the songs date from 2009, one from 2008 and one from 2010, which must have been freshly released when I received John's gift.

Editors appear here twice, not because I thought they're way better than anything else here, although In This Light And On This Evening is a very good album. The second track is the opener of a bonus mini-album, Cuttings II, which was included in the CD-R bundle of bootlegs.

John had previously shared music by David Kitt, which I like most of the time, depending on my mood/frame of the mind at the time. I love the instrumentation and structure but find - perhaps unfairly - that Kitt's voice can sound annoyingly indifferent at times. I like this song very much, though.

Both Editors and Doves were bands I was familiar with, yet hadn't heard any of their albums in full. I'd really liked the slew of remixes that accompanied the latter's Kingdom Of Rust and the album itself didn't disappoint either.

Likewise, Fever Ray. An astonishing solo debut from Karin Dreijer, and the beginning of an enduring fascination with their work. The same can be said for Laura Marling's debut, another artist that made an immediate impact and has grown with each album.

The Filthy Dukes album was a revelation. Based on a few tracks and remixes, I'd fully expected a collection of four-to-the-floor club bangers. Nonsense In The Dark proved to be much more complex and genre-challenging. Poison The Ivy, for example, features frYars aka Benjamin Garrett and sounds like a cover of a lost Joy Division song.

Although The Trials Of Van Occupanther will probably remain my favourite Midlake album, they proved with 2010 follow up The Courage Of Others that the parting of ways with Tim Smith wasn't the end of the road. 

Of course, around the same time Midlake also provided the musical bedrock for an artist who had been in a band and gone solo. So, 2010 saw the release of The Courage Of Others as well as Queen Of Denmark by John Grant. Whatever happened to him?!

Like the Filthy Dukes pastiche of Joy Division, The Pains Of Being Pure At Heart's self-titled first album sounded like it could have been released on Sarah Records back in the 1980s. However, this music was purely 21st Century NYC, not Eighties Bristol.

Come Saturday seemed like an obvious pick, knowing that I was going to post the selection today, though it's also a fair representation of the album as a whole.

When I posted disc 2 back in 2023, I doctored a negative image of John's self-produced sleeve for the headline photo. This time, I've taken it outside for a very welcome dose of springtime sunshine. 

I've just noticed that disc 3 includes a Christmas-themed album amongst the picks. I may not leave it until December - or another two years - before presenting the third and final part of this collection!
 
1) Learning How To Say Goodbye: David Kitt (2009)
2) Compulsion (Album Version): Doves (2009)
3) Papillon (Album Version): Editors (2009)
4) This House Is Full Of Noise: Editors (2009)
5) When I Grow Up (Album Version): Fever Ray (2009)
6) Poison The Ivy: Filthy Dukes ft. frYars (2009)
7) My Manic And I: Laura Marling (2008)
8) Bring Down: Midlake ft. Stephanie Dosen (2010)
9) Come Saturday: The Pains Of Being Pure At Heart (2009)
 
2008: Alas I Cannot Swim: 7
2009: Fever Ray: 5
2009: In This Light And On This Evening: 3
2009: In This Light And On This Evening / Cuttings II (limited edition 2x CD): 4
2009: Kingdom Of Rust: 2
2009: Nonsense In The Dark: 6
2009: The Nightsaver: 1
2009: The Pains Of Being Pure At Heart: 9
2010: The Courage Of Others: 8
 
Stuff (Disc 1) (40:40) (KF) (Mega)
Stuff (Disc 2) can be found here

Friday, 28 March 2025

It's A Glamorous World


My new music purchases have been relatively modest so far this year, but here's a 10-song selection of 2025 bangers.

I'm running late this morning, so expect some expanded sleeve notes over the weekend. 
 
In the meantime, happy listening!

1) High With You (Night Version): Hifi Sean & David McAlmont
2) The Ballad Of Josey Wales: 100 Poems
3) The Man Behind The Counter (Timmy Stewart's York Street Collision Mix): The Vendetta Suite
4) A Pact (Skyscraper HiFi Remix B By Jon Dasilva & Jonas Nilsson): The Woodentops
5) The Ouija Board (MAN2.0's Kill Us For The Sport Remix By Mark Bailey): Legoheads
6) Let Yourself Go (Richard Norris Main Mix): Una Camille & Dr No
7) I'm In Love... (Justin Robertson's Deadstock 33s Remix): Andy Bell ft. Dot Allison & Michael Rother
8) Toronto Street (The Vendetta Suite's Hope Street Diversion Mix By Gary Irwin): Timmy Stewart
9) Beneath The Waves: 10:40
10) Breaker City (Jezebell's Nice 'n' Slow Remix By Jesse Fahnestock & Darren Bell): Parvale

It's A Glamorous World (1:01:53) (KF) (Mega)

Thursday, 27 March 2025

James, Billy And Derek (Not Eric)


A trio of cover versions that will likely have caused purist fans of the originals to choke on their cornflakes and fire off angry missives to Terry Wogan c/o the BBC.

Personally, I love 'em.

1) Sex Machine: The Flying Lizards (Cover of '(Get Up I Feel Like Being A) Sex Machine' by James Brown) (1984)
2) It's Still Rock 'n' Roll To Me: Laptop (Cover of Billy Joel) (1999)
3) Layla (Derek Sings Derek): Fortran 5 ft. Derek Nimmo (Cover of Derek & The Dominos) (1993)

 
 

Wednesday, 26 March 2025

Shelleyan Organ

The Domino label is reissuing Pete Shelley's solo albums, Homosapien (1981) and XL-1 (1983), on vinyl and CD in June.  

Both are based on the expanded editions available since the mid-late 1990s, with bonus B-sides and/or dub mixes. The double vinyl formats keep the original 10-track album on the first two sides and the packaging for both looks rather lovely.

It's good to see Pete Shelley's work, especially his solo songs, getting a timely reappraisal in what will have been his 70th year. Whilst some of the songs, produced by Martin Rushent, haven't dated as well as others, the music itself has lost none of the lyrical and melodic shine forty odd years later.

Domino has posted a video from each album (though bizarrely, with links to John Cale's website and social media - cut and paste job, anyone?), neither of which I saw on TV at the time.

A swift trawl of YT has uncovered a couple more promos from 1986 album Heaven & The Sea, which I hope will also receive the reissue treatment sometime soon. I've also found a TV appearance and a live performance, both featuring the legendary Barry Adamson on bass.

1) Homosapien (1981)
2) Telephone Operator (1983)
3) Waiting For Love (1986)
4) On Your Own (1986)
5) Never Again (Music Convoy, German TV) (1984)
6) If You Ask Me (I Won't Say No) (Live) (1984)

I've also resurrected the link to a post from September 2021. Actually about the passing of Sir Clive Sinclair, it inevitably mentioned the ZX81 and ZX Spectrum, and from there naturally dovetailed into Pete Shelley's XL-1 album. It included a half hour Dubhed selection of songs and mixes from the album, which you can find here.

Both Pete Shelley albums are available to pre-order from Domino now.

 
 
 
 
 

Tuesday, 25 March 2025

Standards Of Living

Bryan Ferry has a new album out, which seemed a good excuse to post a Dubhed selection featuring his old band, Roxy Music.

More by accident than design, over half of this 10-song is drawn exclusively from 1973, with a few diversions from the 1980s occupying the second quarter.

A reminder that I don't listen to Roxy Music nearly as often as I should. For Your Pleasure and Stranded are on this week's playlist, for starters.

1) Amazona (1973)
2) The Pride And The Pain (1973)
3) The Main Thing (Dance Mix) (1982)
4) Oh Yeah (Album Version) (1980)
5) More Than This (Album Version) (1982)
6) Same Old Scene (Album Version) (1980)
7) Strictly Confidential (1973)
8) Do The Strand (USA 7" Mix) (1973)
9) In Every Dream Home A Heartache (Album Version) (1973)
10) A Song For Europe (1973)

1973: Do The Strand EP: 8
1973: For Your Pleasure: 7, 9
1973: Pyjamarama EP: 2
1973: Stranded: 1, 10
1980: Flesh And Blood: 4, 6
1982: Avalon: 5
1982: Take A Chance With Me EP: 3

Standards Of Living (47:29) (KF) (Mega)

Monday, 24 March 2025

Kim & Kim & Kim & Kim & Kim & Kim


I stumbled across a clip of Kim Gordon and Kim Deal performing Little Trouble Girl live on TV for the first time ever last Wednesday, and it's a treat.

I only sporadically subscribe to Netflix (e.g. when there's a 30-day free trial or the like), so I was completely ignorant of the talk show Everybody’s Live with John Mulaney, which debuted on 12th March. I also have no idea who John Mulaney is either, if you're asking.

However, a major benefit of living in 2025 is that it doesn't matter where you live, or whether or not you shell out money every month to any number of subscription channels. If you have access to t'internet, then you have access to music clips from around the world, past and present. 

I mean, what are the chances that Kim and Kim would do this again on, say, The Graham Norton Show, Later...With Jools Holland or Sunday Brunch?

Kim and Kim's version of Little Trouble Girl is all the more affecting for it's pure, raw performance: there's no vocal gymnastics, no glam costumes or hair, no dancers or choreography; just Kim singing and Kim speaking, supported by the band. The song speaks for itself.

As if that weren't enough, it was preceded by Kim Deal with the title track of her album Nobody Loves You More


And, earlier in the show, by Kim Gordon with BYE BYE, from her album The Collective.


To complete the complement of Kims, here's the original video for Little Trouble Girl, released as a single from Sonic Youth's 1995 album, Washing Machine. 

The chorus on the studio version is completed by Lorette Velvette and Melissa Dunn, though only the two Kims appear in the promo.


Sunday, 23 March 2025

Deservedly


Bringing you yesterday's post today! 45 minutes of Pet Shop Boys 12" mixes from the 1980s (but mostly 1988).

At school, my friend Adrian was really into the Pet Shop Boys, I was into Depeche Mode. The consequence of this was I bought every 12" single that I could get my hands on by the latter and ignored the former, knowing that we could swap records and do our own C90s.

It turned out to be a rather one-sided relationship in that respect, as Adrian didn't buy much Pet Shop Boys music beyond West End Girls (naturally, the Stephen Hague remix that eventually took Neil and Chris to #1 in 1985). 

He also took a rather more relaxed approach to vinyl care, as I discovered when he eventually returned the 12" of Stripped, lent in more or less pristine condition and received looking like the Incredible Hulk had taken an intense dislike to it, bent, scuffed, scratched.

I remained good friends with Adrian for the rest of our school days, but I never lent him one of my records again.

And I never got to hear any more Pet Shop Boys 12" singles either, yet for some inexplicable reason didn't start buying them myself either.

So, it was many, many years later before I started immersing myself in their extended mixes, beyond the Disco compilation and the bonus Mix disc with the PopArt singles collection. And of course, they're brilliant.

This selection randomly grabs half a dozen A-sides from the 1980s, and demonstrate that the 12" single was no mere marketing gimmick, but a way of giving the songs room to breathe on the dancefloor. 

Stephen Hague's refresh of West End Girls is the definitive take, but I've a lot of love for the original version by Bobby Orlando, even if it lacks the confidence and swagger of the later version.

What Have I Done To Deserve This? is labelled as a dub mix but the vocals are pretty much fully intact which, let's face it, you'd be a fool to mess with when you have Neil duetting with Dusty Springfield. Shep Pettibone and Junior Vasquez do not disappoint.

In 1987, I was more familiar with Ian Levine as the guy the tabloids would wheel out for angry quote every time the BBC threatened to cancel or change Doctor Who. I had no real idea of his 'proper' job as a DJ and involvement in the Northern Soul and Hi-NRG. Not my favourite mix of It's A Sin, but Ihe isolated vocoder bits are a nice touch.

The commercial releases of Left To My Own Devices featured remixes by Trevor Horn, Stephen Lipson, Shep Pettibone and Frankie Knuckles. Pet Shop Boys singles were also beloved by the DJ promo-only services, with their music also finding edits and remixes by Razormaid and Disconet. This extended mix of Left To My Own Devices is by Steve Smith, which I discovered on the Art Of Mix: Art Of Compilation 1 CD.

For Domino Dancing, Neil and Chris are at the controls with Lewis A. Martineé. I was less keen on this song at the time, but it's grown on me over the years and I particularly love this 12" version.

Last but not least, the boys took on an Elvis Presley classic and made it their own. The King managed #9 in the UK in 1972; Pet Shop Boys spent 4 weeks at #1, which probably says it all. Again, a bright remix from Julian Mendelsohn

Lots more in the PSB 12" collection for a future post. Enjoy!

1) West End Girls (Extended Mix) (1984)
2) What Have I Done To Deserve This? (Dub Mix ft. Dusty Springfield) (1988)
3) It's A Sin (Remix) (1987)
4) Left To My Own Devices ('New Toy Mix') (1988)
5) Domino Dancing (Disco Mix) (1988)
6) Always On My Mind (Extended Dance Version) (Cover of Elvis Presley) (1988)

Deservedly (45:41) (KF) (Mega)

Saturday, 22 March 2025

Witness The Shitness


It seems that the likely problem with the Clan K computer is me. My dedication to daily posts and in particular regular Dubhed selections means that I've squeezed every last kb of storage on the hard drive.

I'm in the process of a major housecleaning exercise this weekend, which should hopefully bring things back to some semblance of normality. 

Today's planned selection will therefore appear next week and for today, rather than witness the shitness of yours truly, you can witness the fitness of the rather fine Roots Manuva instead. 

Take it away, Rodney!

Friday, 21 March 2025

Remember To Live Is To Change


I blinked and I missed an opportunity to get tickets for Kae Tempest's gig at the Thekla in Bristol next week, which sold out in a couple of days.

Having just seen and heard Kae's new single and video, Statue In The Square, I'm even more gutted. What a fizzing, cracking, popping return.

Thursday, 20 March 2025

(S)Hot Computer

Art imitating life? Computer, server, applications all moving at a glacial pace today, possibly reflecting my physical and mental state right now. I could sleep for a week. Probably in the literal sense.

No time for that though, here's Australian combo Gerling from 2002, who profess to having a rather different relationship with their PC than I'm having right now...

Normal service will (hopefully) resume tomorrow.

Wednesday, 19 March 2025

Please Don't Judge Me Too Strong


A live version of Cosmic Slop by Funkadelic shuffled on to my playlist, a song I haven't listened to in nearly five years, according to my Apple Music app.

This particularly fine take features on the 1976 album Hardcore Jollies, but came my way via Mojo magazine's rather excellent 2020 freebie CD Heavy Soul Vol. 2: Mojo Presents 15 Hits Of Psychedelic Funk, Black Rock And Cosmic Slop... (from 77p on Discogs, if you're tempted).

I had a look on YouTube to see if there may be a clip of this or another live version to post here. And I found what I was looking for. But I found more. Much more.

There's a mad, bad and dangerous to know promo video for the original 1973 single release, which is pretty much the band running and dancing around New York, but is just brilliantly compelling viewing. 

And then there's this blistering live version from 1979, which just makes me wish I was in crowd experiencing the energy, the sound, the infectious insanity of the whole thing. 

All of which may distract from the lyrics, which are far deeper and personal that you'd assume from a superficial listen. 

What a band. Funkadelic and/or Parliament live in concert back in the day is one for the time travel bucket list. 



Ah hear my mother call

I was one of five born to my mother
An older sister and three young brothers
We've seen it hard, we've seen it kind of rough
But always with a smile, she was sure to try to hide
The fact from us that life was really tough

I can hear my mother call
I can hear my mother call (Ah)
Late at night I hear her call
Oh lord, lord I hear her call
She said, "Father, father it's for the kids (Ah)
Any and every thing I did
Please, please don't judge me too strong
Lord knows I meant no wrong
Lord knows I meant no wrong"

Then the devil sang
"Would you like to dance with me? We're doin' the cosmic slop"

She was well known through the ghetto
Tricks would come and then they'd go
The neighbors would talk and call her Jezebel
But always with a smile, she was sure to try to hide
The fact from us that she was catching hell, hey!

Hear my mother call
I can hear my mother call
Late at night I hear her call
Oh lord, lord I hear her call
She says, "Father, father it's for the kids
Any and every thing I did
Please, please don't judge me too strong
Lord knows I meant no wrong
Lord!

Hear my mother call (Ah)
Hear my mother call
She says, "Father, father it's for the kids
Any and every thing I did
Please, please don't judge me too strong
Hear my mother call
Hear my mother call
I can hear my mother call
Hey!
I can hear my mother call (ooh-ah-ooh)
Mother, mother

Late at night
Calling me
Mother
I can hear my
I can hear my mother calling me
Late at night I hear my mother
Hey!


Tuesday, 18 March 2025

Heavy Lifting


Everything (me included) seems to be moving at a sluggish pace, so I'll keep the words short and let the music and visuals do the talking.

Then again, when it's a spectacular video for Roustabout, the new single by The Moonlandingz featuring Nadine Shah, what more can I can say?

The album, No Rocket Required, is out in just over a month's time and The Moonlandingz are touring the UK in May. Three things to get excited about.

Monday, 17 March 2025

Over Easy

I always thought that The Egg was a Bristol band. Not so, they all met and started up in Oxford. However, their first couple of EPs were released in 1995/96 on Bristol-based label Cup Of Tea Records.

In 2005 The Egg released Walking Away from the previous year's third album Forwards, featuring Sophie Barker on vocals. In January 2006, Tocadisco aka Roman Böer de Garcez remixed the track, delivering a significantly zippier club cut that also came with a radio edit under two and a half minutes and a video featuring women in lingerie that must have looked dated then and certainly does now. 

The single initially made little impact and didn't chart in the UK until six months later, for reasons which will soon become clear, peaking at #56 at the end of July 2006, before shuffling back out again.

A shame as Tocadisco's remix is an earworm and quite a departure from the chilled cinematic sweep of the original album version.

The full length Tocadisco remix doesn't disappoint either. 

Yet, it took David Guetta to get his hands on the Tocadisco remix of The Egg and create a bootleg mash-up with his 2002 single, Love Don't Let Me Go featuring Chris Willis to send it into the stratosphere. When it was officially released, Love Don't Let Me Go (Walking Away) shot to #3 in the UK at the end of August 2006. 

I assume that the original's belated appearance in the chart the previous month was either due to the public buying the earlier version by mistake, it's appearenace in an advert for the Citroën C4 car, or that Guetta's Frankenstein's monster of a track wasn't widely available until August.

Credited to David Guetta vs. The Egg, the re-release at least had the decency to include the Tocadisco remix as a B-side/bonus track. I'm not a fan of the Frenchman's mash-up, if I'm honest and the video's equally dated and meh for me personally.

The Egg remain a going concern, and you can find a box (egg box?) of delights on their Bandcamp page, including the original album of Walking Away, remixes, collaborations and live performances. Well worth a visit.

Sunday, 16 March 2025

Do You Wanna Get Real

I had the immense privilege of seeing Alan Sparhawk live in concert last Thursday 6th March. An unforgettable experience...

...which I'll come to shortly. First though, the latest example of why you should always try to get to the gig in time to catch the support act(s). Case in point: Haley Fohr aka Circuit Des Yeux.

The second gig I've been to this year and my second visit to the Beacon in Bristol. However, unlike John Grant's concert in the main hall in February, this show was in the adjacent Lantern Hall, a smaller venue which on first impression had the same vibe as the Subscription Rooms in Stroud. 

Even so, the space was still sparsely occupied when Circuit Des Yeux took to the stage. I'd not heard any of Haley's music prior to seeing her check the mike, press a few buttons and wait for the sonics to bed in before adding her voice. 

If you checked out Friday's post, then you'll have an inkling of what Circuit Des Yeux is about. My initial reaction to what was unfolding before me was "Tanita Tikaram meets Diamanda Galas in a post-apocalyptic scrapyard" and that's truly not meant as a negative. 

It was an intense half hour, but one that increased in meaning and impact as it progressed. Haley's capacity for deep, deep notes in one breath and operatic soaring the next was astonishing. I made a similar comment about Joe Hicklin from Big Special when they supported John Grant in Bristol last month. Whereas their sound is rooted in the UK, the Midlands specifically, Circuit Des Yeux is informed and influenced by Haley's homes in Indiana and Illinois. 

Yes, there's a deep, deep darkness in the aural landscape, but moments of light and beauty poke through, offering hope, a lifeline. There wasn't a great deal of audience interaction during the brief set, until the end when Haley offered thanks to the relatively few that had turned up on time. It was worth it. 

Circuit Des Yeux has been releasing music since 2008 and Halo On The Inside, out last Friday, is I think the 8th album. I will start with it and work my way back.

It was of course a perfect primer for the main act. Last July, I posted about Can U Hear, the first indication of Alan Sparhawk's solo path, following the death of wife Mimi Parker in 2022 and the subsequent end of Low. Alan's album White Roses, My God followed in September but that one song remained the only one that I'd heard prior to standing in Lantern Hall, waiting for him to take the stage.

Much has been written about Alan's need to find expression whilst finding it impossible to hear the sound of his own voice. A chance encounter with a vocoder provided the solution, with Can U Hear, and reportedly the whole album, processing Alan's voice and words beyond recognition, over skittering beats and bass. The Beacon website listed a two hour song. What on earth were we going to experience?

Alan took the stage suddenly and without fanfare, followed by son Cyrus, who strapped on a bass and started playing over programmed beats, wrangled by Alan from a small pad on a stand, centre stage.

Not that I recognised it, of course, but the set commenced with album opener Get Still, albeit with an extended intro, stretched to the point that you may have been forgiven for thinking that this was an instrumental. Alan's frentic dancing around the stage only added to this strange sense that this aimed more at a club than a concert hall.

Yet, after a few minutes, Alan raised the mike to his mouth and filtered, processed vocals emerged from the PA. The breaths between corresponded with the bodily movements on stage, connecting the strange, alien sounds with the human who was making them. 

It was an astonishing start to the show, and set the tone for the next half hour. Alan played seven of the eleven songs from White Roses, My God in non-sequential order. About half way through, Alan started removing his sweatshirt, revealing his trademark dungarees over otherwise topless body underneath. At least two songs were performed in a mid-state of undress, the sweatshirt becoming an ad-hoc poncho. None of this seemed strange.

Cyrus Sparhawk's bass playing provided a weight and heft to the otherwise synthesised sounds coming out, groovy where it needed to be, solid and dependable throughout. It provided an anchor, a consistency to Alan's more unpredictable behaviour, whether whipping the mike lead like a skipping rope, bouncing around like a featherweight boxer or reaching out, beyond the audience, to something that was present but not visible. 

Even having heard just the one song prior to experiencing this all first hand, White Roses, My God makes perfect sense in a live setting. Yet, could Alan really keep this going for two hours?

The answer is no, that was never the intention. What was surprising and delightful though, was that the remainder of the set was a complete volte face. Alan strapped on a guitar and played with - and often to - his son. No other accompaniment than the two guitars and of course Alan's unfiltered, raw beautiful vocals.

What I hadn't expected what that of the nine songs that made up the remainder of the main set, six were new and/or unreleased. Few were introduced with titles, so I've had to rely on Setlist to reveal that these stripped down, achingly intimate songs included Screaming Song, Torn And In Ashes and set closer No More Darkness. All of which indicate the journey of healing and catharsis that Alan continues to make.

There were a few covers, mainly of Alan's other bands. The first was JCMF by Retribution Gospel Choir, which appears to have been in their live shows circa 2013, but doesn't feature on any of the albums that I own. Whereas Retribution Gospel Choir in the studio are a raucous, rocky proposition, this twin-guitar take was a deeply affecting experience.

There was also a song by Derecho Rhythm Section, a band featuring Cyrus and daughter Hollis Mae Sparhawk, who I was completely aware of until this gig. Alan and Cyrus played 2024 debut single Get High, followed by a new/unreleased song called Too High, Alan noting the irony of their side-by-side setlist placement.

The third cover was an impromptu cover of Liquid Love by Roy Ayers, who sadly passed a couple of days before. Alan introduced the song as "one of the first things we played together when Cyrus was learning to play guitar". A moment of unexpected and delightful grooviness, it was wonderful to see how in synch father and son were on stage.

After a few minutes off stage, Alan and Cyrus returned for a two song encore, and the only two songs recorded by Low. Perhaps unsurprisingly, the two picks were from what proved to be their final album, 2021's Hey What. Again, White Horses and Days Like These were presented in shortened, stripped back versions. 

More than ever, the absence/presence in the room was felt, the space between the notes, both the guitar chords and Alan's aching beautiful voice, inviting the listener to fill that void in whatever way felt right.

At one point, an audience member was sufficiently moved to pronounce, "Thank you, Alan, it is such a joy to have you here", to which another replied "I'll fucking second that" and a third added, "you've got lovely arms!"

Which I think probably captures better than any of the prosaic paragraphs above just how bloody brilliant the night was for all of us in the room.

I missed my chance to see Low and I am so grateful that I took the opportunity to see Alan in this town on this night. 



I usually post a Dubhed selection to accompany a gig review, attempting as far as possible to recreate the setlist. Given that nearly a third of this show featured unreleased music, that was a non-starter, so I've gone for something a little bit different.

I have included the seven songs from White Roses, My God that Alan played on the night though, apart from the first, none of them are in the order that they were performed. I've also intentionally excluded the two Low songs from Hey What that were performed as the encore.

Instead, I've pulled togther all of the LowRetribution Gospel Choir and Alan's other collaborations and solo ventures that existed in my music collections and picked a dozen more songs. 

One of them is Point Of Disgust, the song by Perfume Genius and Alan Sparhawk which featured on last year's excellent TRAИƧA compilation. Another is the first and shortest version of Sagrado Corazón De Jesú that Alan released on his 2006 album Solo Guitar.

The remaining ten songs are connected only in the sense that they increased incrementally in duration by a minute. That is, I first chose a Retribution Gospel Choir song that comes in at under a minute, and ended with a Low song (Landslide) that is just under ten minutes.

I played around with sequencing of all 19 songs, resulting in a 74-minute selection that seeks to recreate the drama and tension, conflict and harmony of Alan's work, past and present, with and without others. I think it works, but I would love to know what you think.

1) 
Get Still: Alan Sparhawk (2024)
2) The Last Of The Blue Dream: Retribution Gospel Choir (2010)
3) Lordy: Low + Dirty Three (2001)
4) On My Own: Low (2013)
5) Station: Alan Sparhawk (2024)
6) Can U Hear: Alan Sparhawk (2024)
7) Heaven: Alan Sparhawk (2024)
8) Landslide: Low (2015)
9) I Made This Beat: Alan Sparhawk (2024)
10) Sagrado Corazón De Jesú (First Attempt): Alan Sparhawk (2006)
11) Not A Word: Low (2016)
12) Project 4 Ever: Alan Sparhawk (2024)
13) Brother: Alan Sparhawk (2024)
14) Your Poison: Low (2007)
15) Shine Eye Dub #1: Retribution Gospel Choir (2006)
16) Point Of Disgust: Perfume Genius + Alan Sparhawk (2024)
17) For Her Blood: Retribution Gospel Choir (2008)
18) Electric Guitar: Retribution Gospel Choir (2010)
19) Over The Ocean: Low (1996)

1996: The Curtain Hits The Cast: 19
2001: In The Fishtank, Volume 7 EP: 3
2006: Solo Guitar: 10
2006: Tour EP #2: 15
2007: Drums And Guns: 14
2008: Retribution Gospel Choir: 17
2010: Retribution Gospel Choir 2: 2, 18
2013: The Invisible Way: 4
2015: Ones And Sixes: 8
2016: Not A Word EP: 11
2024: TRAИƧA: 16
2024: White Roses, My God: 1, 5, 6, 7, 9, 12, 13

Do You Wanna Get Real (1:14:29) (KF) (Mega)


A note about the gorgeous photos in this post: 
I only took one pic all night (sparse crowd in Lantern Hall) as I was then so immersed in the performances that I forgot to take any more.

I trawled Bluesky and discovered a series of superb shots from other dates on the tour which mirrored my own experience that night in Bristol. A huge thanks therefore to:

Gonçalo (@gonch145.bsky.social‬) for the headline photo of mike and leads, Alan in red and Alan playing guitar, all from the Berlin gig on 25th February.
Andrea (@parramaterial.bsky.social‬) for the shot of Alan and Cyrus in Manchester the night after the Bristol show.
1 Of 100 (@weare1of100.bsky.social‬) for the picture of Alan reaching out in Glasgow on 8th March.