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Sunday, December 11, 2022
Fingers Crossed : How Music Saved Me from Success by Miki Berenyi (Nine Eight Books 2022)
Wednesday, January 26, 2022
In and Out by Mat Coward (Five Star 2001)
Tuesday, November 02, 2021
The Crafty Cockney by Deryk Brown (Futura 1985)
Sunday, August 15, 2021
The Crafty Cockney : the autobiography by Eric Bristow (Arrow Books 2008)
Tuesday, February 02, 2021
Bobby Dazzler: My Story by Bobby George (Orion 2006)
Friday, October 16, 2020
Before We Was We: The Making of Madness by Madness (with Tom Doyle) (Virgin Books 2019)
LEE: Roxy Music were a big influence. Myself, Mike and Chris went to see them at the Rainbow in Finsbury Park when the Stranded album had just come out. We saw David Essex going in, with a blonde lady friend, and they were dressed to the nines. Our mate John Jones goes, ‘He’s got a bit of a flash car.’ He had some convertible Merc and I can’t remember if the roof was down or not, but I know we got in it. Inside, he had one of those new-fangled eight-track tape players. We thought, ‘Oh, they must cost a fortune.’ So, we ended up having several of his eight-track tapes away.
Then, we bunked into the gig. Supporting was Leo Sayer. I got on someone’s shoulders – probably Mike’s, because he’s tall – and hauled myself up onto a window ledge, because I’d noticed it was on the latch. As I climbed up and looked in this window, there’s Leo Sayer, putting his makeup on. He’s got that clown’s outfit on that he wore around that time. He had all the gear on and one red cheek. He turned round, and I went, ‘Can you let us in?’ He was like, ‘Sorry, I can’t.’ I’m going, ‘We’ve come to see you, though, Leo …’ Have we fuck! But he said, ‘I can’t, obviously,’ and I descended back down.
MARK: Lee always told me that Leo Sayer mimed, ‘I can’t let you in,’ in Marcel Marceau style …
Sunday, May 27, 2018
Any chance of a game? : a season at the ugly end of park football by Barney Ronay (Ebury Press 2005)
Saturday, December 09, 2017
Up The Junction by Nell Dunn (MacGibbon & Kee 1963)
Thursday, May 26, 2016
The Speakers by Heathcote Williams (Grove Press 1964)
Thursday, April 14, 2016
Dangerous in Love by Leslie Thomas (Penguin Books 1987)
Saturday, May 09, 2015
The People of Providence: A Housing Estate and Some of Its Inhabitants by Tony Parker (Picador 1983)
Thursday, March 05, 2015
London'ish
Monday, March 02, 2015
Journey Through a Small Planet by Emanuel Litvinoff (Robin Clark Limited 1972)
Thursday, February 26, 2015
Bright Summer - Dark Autumn by Robert Barltrop (Waltham Forest Libraries and Arts Department 1986)
Wednesday, January 14, 2015
King Mob: A Critcal Hidden History by David Wise with Stuart Wise & Nick Brandt (Bread and Circuses 2014)
Monday, September 23, 2013
Bad Vibes: Britpop and My Part in Its Downfall by Luke Haines (William Heinemann Ltd 2009)
December 1993. End-of-year round-ups in the music press. American bands still holding up – all polls feature Nirvana, Lemonheads, Belly and the Juliana Hatfield Three. Tindersticks by the Tindersticks is album of the year in Melody Maker. New Wave is at number 19. In the NME Writers' Top Fifty Albums of the Year Bjork's Debut is number one, and New Wave comes in at 18. In Select magazine New Wave is voted the seventh-best album of the year. And the best album of 1993 as voted for by the writers of Select: Giant Steps by the Boo Radleys. Suede lurk around the top three of most critics' polls, and Mr Blobby gets the Christmas number one in the singles chart.
Thursday, November 01, 2012
How to be Good by Nick Hornby (Penguin Books 2001)
Sunday, September 02, 2012
Dupe by Liza Cody (Charles Scribner's Sons 1980)
Tuesday, July 24, 2012
London's Burning: True Adventures on the Front Lines of Punk, 1976-1977 by Dave Thompson (Chicago Review Press 2009)
Somebody—I don’t know who, but they didn’t look impressed—pointed out Siouxsie Sioux, the dominatrix-clad queen of a gang of fashion horses known to themselves as the Bromley Contingent, Ă¼ber-followers of the Pistols machine, who were fast garnering as much notoriety as the band itself. Someone else nodded pityingly toward a beanstalk by the stage, leaping up and down on the spot and clearly in danger of crashing through the ceiling. Muted by the din of the band, you could lip-read their contempt nevertheless.
“Look at that idiot.”
I looked. I knew him. Bev . . . John Beverley . . . lived in Finsbury Park, close by the station where I swapped my bus ride for the tube. A total Bowie nut, which is why a mutual friend introduced us, he enjoyed nothing better than a lager-fueled argument over which of the master’s songs was the best. Neither, at the time, did I. But whereas I was willing to change my opinion, depending upon what kind of mood I was in, Bev was unyielding.
“‘We Are the Dead’?” I would suggest.
“Fuck off! ‘Rebel Rebel.’”
“‘Drive In Saturday’?”
“‘Rebel Rebel.’”
“‘Cygnet Committee’?”
“I said, Fuck off!” And so it would go on until Bev fucked off, usually lured away by one or other of the pimply weasels who’d renamed him Sid, but who themselves were also named John: Wardle, who was sufficiently pear-shaped to be rechristened Wobble; Gray, who was anonymous enough that his surname already suited him; and Lydon, who was now up onstage with the Pistols, flashing the teeth that first gave him his nom de guerre. Sometimes you wondered what Bev saw in them. He hated it when they called him Sid, he hated it even more when they added the surname Vicious. And it was pretty obvious that his main attraction to them was to see how many outrageous stunts they could prompt him to rush into, simply by reminding him what a “great laugh” he was, and letting his overdeveloped need for attention to take over.
But he never shrugged them off, and you saw less and less of Bev these days, and more and more of Sid Vicious. One day, a few worried friends prophesied, Bev would vanish altogether and Sid would take over completely. Tonight, for sure, Sid was in total control, bouncing up and down on the dance floor, grinning wildly at the noise that his mates were making, and utterly oblivious to the fact that whatever rhythm he was hearing in his head was inaudible to everyone else in the room. Somebody said it looked like he was riding a pogo stick. Somebody else thought it looked like fun. The next time you saw the Sex Pistols, half the audience would be doing it.