Live music listings: December 2007Roll over the dates on the calendar to see who's playing, then click for the full listing and ticket info.Click on the mailing list link to enter your email address and we'll let you know, at the start of every week, what's going on around here. EVENTS CALENDARRoll over dates on the calendar above to show event details.
|
|
Fri 14th VPMG presents JACKIE LEVEN + Michael Weston King
Doors 7.30 Born in 1950 into a Romany family, Jackie Leven spent his childhood and teenage years as an outsider in Fife, Scotland. Although Scottish himself, neither of his parents were from the area - his father was an Irish Cockney, his mother was from a large Northumberland (Geordie) family. Hopelessly wayward at school, with few friends, his attendance was woeful. But those truanting times spent alone in glens and by rivers, still form the basis of his songs' imagery to this day. His mother, unusually for the time, was a lover of American black blues music, which strongly influenced him as a teen. Soon he was playing in local bands as well as playing his own blues songs in local folk clubs. However, this brought him to the attention of local gangs, one in particular starting a baseless vendetta against him, and he was duly obliged to leave Scotland. This precipitated years of rootless wandering and sleeping rough, including four months living in corners of the South Bank Centre, London, where he busked for a living. This was during the late sixties. He also lived variously in County Kerry, Ireland, Berlin and Madrid, where he had a record released, 'Control' (1971) By John St Field (his stage name of the time) - now considered to be a psychedelic underground classic. Living in squatted accommodation across the UK, Jackie began to encounter people with serious mental illness and psychic disorder. These experiences began to inform his songwriting. This can clearly be seen in the songs which make up the first two albums by his daunting rock band, Doll By Doll, whose other members - Joe Shaw, David MacIntosh and Robin Spreafico he met in this environment. Doll By Doll (1978 - 1982), a controversial live act at odds with the cartoon violence of punk, made five critically acclaimed (or loathed) albums, before accepting they just weren't meant for those times, and regretfully going their separate ways. In 1983, after a late night recording session for a solo album due for release by Charisma/Virgin, Jackie was the subject of an unprovoked street attack during which he was nearly strangled. Unable to speak or sing, he lost his record deal, friends and way, entering his own period of psychic disorder, taking heroin and living in isolation for nearly a year. He re-joined the world in 1985 after a successful course of traditional Chinese five-element acupuncture and psychic healing, and co-founded The CORE trust - 'an holistic approach to addiction'. To this day the Trust operates a centre in London, working with people with all forms of addiction. Jackie has been their manager, chair of trustees, and is presently the patron. Shortly after this Jackie went to live in Oban on the west coast of Scotland. He spent the nights in bars with fishermen and forester friends, and the days writing the songs that became the basis of his return to music with the acclaimed Cooking Vinyl release 'The Mystery Of Love Is Greater Than The Mystery Of Death'. A string of excellent albums have followed, and the latest, 'Elegy For Johnny Cash' takes a unique and candid look at last journeys, and the people who make them. Michael Weston King, the former leader of U.K. Alt Country pioneers The Good Sons, is widely regarded as one of the UK's finest singer songwriters, and admired by the likes of Chris Hillman and the legendary Townes van Zandt (who covered one of Michael's songs). Whilst with The Good Sons he made 4 critically acclaimed albums in a seven year career, which was recently celebrated bythe double album, Cosmic Fireworks-The Best of The Good Sons (1994-2001). Mojo magazine wrote "The band who must rate as England's very own Uncle Tupelo. A truly thrilling collection", while www.americana-uk.com said "The British band that played alt.country before anyone knew what the hell it was. Had the Good Sons done this same thing across the Atlantic, they would surely have been acclaimed trailblazers." For the past six years he has been a solo troubadour, touring all over the world, performing with the likes of Nick Cave, John Cale, Roger McGuinn, Steve Earle, Chris Hillman, Guy Clark, Ron Sexsmith, Joe Henry and many more, and releasing five beautiful, articulate albums. A solo retrospective collection, The Tender Place, was released in November 2006, while his new album, A New Kind of Loneliness, including contributions from Chris Hillman, Ron Sexsmith and Jackie Leven, has just been released to critical acclaim: "Like Tim Hardin, Phil Ochs or Townes van Zandt, King transmutes squalor and self-laceration into pure gold." [Mojo]. "Michael Weston King has a voice part Nashville balladeer and part Alt Country hero; a cross between Nick Cave and Rodney Crowell." [The Independent] |



