Tour Flyer with De Stijl Alison |
In my determination to get as many of the recordings from the archive up here as soon as possible, here is the next which is from 21st January 2002 at the Betsey Trotwood, in Farringdon, London.
This was one of the dates on another long tour for us, supporting Kindercore and Track and Field label-mates Dressy Bessy. I don't think a week touring was very much to some of the US bands we played with like Dressy, Great Lakes or of Montreal who seemed to know how to handle the mental and physical strain. But to us, a week touring was a big deal as we we all had jobs or college to go back to, and none of us agreed with the diet of peperami and kitkat chunky.
I don’t have very much in terms of artifacts from this tour, which is why I am a bit sketchy on details. I do have the flyer scanned here, although I don't know if we used it as its accuracy is questionable and is of most interest for the creepy picture of Alison with the image from De Stijl (and the ‘Shopping’ record sleeve) superimposed on her face creating a creepy robot / Boards of Canada look.
Saloon and Dressy Bessy Mash Up |
The tour itself I don’t remember that well either, which is why I can’t talk about it at the same length that I did Summer 2003. Dressy Bessy were a great bunch of guys and gals, although on a tour like that we didn't get to 'hang out' a great deal (as permanent designate driver I never got to ‘hang out’ anyway). My most profound memory of the tour was the members of Saloon eating really good fish and chips (cooked in beef dripping) in the front bar of the Adelphi in Hull, watching an episode of ‘The Good Life’ (from where came the song title)
I didn’t know much about Dressy Bessy before we toured; I had a copy ‘Pink Hearts’ and quite liked it, although it was miles off of what we thought we were doing. The difference between our tracks on the great tour split single showed that we were very much on a different page.
At the Betsey (in £3 Primark Shirts) |
Dressy Bessy were though the *loudest* band we ever played with, which was a total shock considering their recorded sound. They forced me to wear earplugs from then on. We did play with them again in the Summer of 2002 for the live Peel Session. By then ‘Progress’ had come out, and they made us realise the degree that we had ‘broken’ in the States with tons of college radio play. They were probably surprised to be 'supporting' us on the Peel show, but obviously they had the last laugh and are still going strong with a new LP for 2014. They were a cool bunch and, although I didn't understand it at the time, I am proud that we got to do that split single with them.
Anyway back to the gig posted on here. Relatively tight for us (with the odd bass- slip from me) the vocals are nice and clear and Amanda’s voice has held up amazingly we had been on the road for a week. A good example of the 7 song Saloon set- structure of the time: Big Opener, Poppy Up-tempo One, Slow One, Fast Noisy One, Slow One, Fast One, Big Noisy Ending. Most interesting perhaps for hearing Spacer again, which we played far too much considering it was only ever released on the Blue Demo, nice to hear the the megamix opening of Movimiento / Impact also notable the lack of GATNB which we were no doubt sick of by the end of the long tour.
The recording is not bad for one done on a tape recorder. I don’t know who recorded it, as someone sent it to me at the time. What I always remembered this one for was the audience chatter, notably the person who slags-off the bass player, saying midway through ‘Bicycle Thieves’ of the bass-playing “it’s not nice, it spoils it.” Perhaps this is one I shouldn't share with my grand-kids then.
Saloon Live @ Betsey Trotwood 21.01.2002, a set on Flickr.
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