Wednesday, 28 December 2022

Life, lies and the choosing of naive political arseholes

I've written before about how marketing took over from economic theory and in our lives we've all seen how social media started to dictate political choices. I laugh at the expression choices as its been the most marketed of terms. We want to choose. Eh, no we dont want to choose. We the voting public are sophisticated enough to know that choice is not a luxury a well functioning democracy can offer. As soon as you put choice into play you discard 84% of what most societies need. My favourite choice to get angry at is choice over schools. The people choosing dont understand that teachers leave and are recruited. They dont understand that past performance is no guide to future performance. It feels like rookies at the dog track being handed a programme and being told trap 1 likes to rail. Check the speed out of the traps as the winner is usually the winner at the first bend. Well except when its a fast finishing Black Moselle wearing the striped jacket of trap 6 in the 1980's era of powderhall, plunket brian and the deadly seriouos deadbeat. In my job as I tried to amass enough money to become a promoter of people with talent, aka, bands, I encountered the odd politician. I never knew about my condition back then I just said it as it was. Vinny to Treasury Minister Angela Knight at the Masionhouse in London, launch of CREST "You should sack your speechwriter. CREST is fantastic for removing risk from the industry but its just cost for the private investor. You should drag them into a room and kick the shit out of them. I'm sure there were very good words and fully formed sentences but it was nonsense. I know I'm Alan McEwan, I work for Stocktrade. We're an EO broker, and I know our costs per trade have just gone up." And the response "Who are you? I, I, I think it is a good deal for private investors........ "Yer maw, I'm away for a fag," and just then I felt the collar. One of my pals Tom grabbed me to save the minister any more humilatiation, my words, or aggravation, his words. It would be a few months until I encountered the Labour opposition minister. Wow! I thought. What a useless pair of individuals in such a short period of time. I knew the Tory story but the Labour one was the same. Vinny to Labour treasury spokesman in Edinburgh constituency "We'd like to find more ways to give staff a share of the company. At the moment we as Directors can divide a bonus pool and give them a chunk of cash but we'd like to give them more equity in the business. A wee Marx thing about the workers owning the factors of production. We do the profit share shares and the SAYE but we'd like to do more. AD - "Oh no we dont want to do that, not since Maxwell. We dont believe in that." He mumbled on about how they're happy people who have bought shares in privitisation etc and I have never felt so low. We've just added another 160 jobs in the last year to your constituency and you only want to reward the WHO! The Roger Daltreys of this world. I'd heard a lot about how NEW LABOUR had moved on or moved away from the party faithful. I was never a card carrier of any party but this one was clearly disappointing me. I'd voted for a pay more tax party all my life. I'd voted for a European party my whole life. Now I had to decide whether to vote for Tory Light as we headed into 1997. I had an ambition to pay £1m tax in my life. Every time the rates went up I would smile and think we are ambitious and want a proper caring democracy. I hadn't bargained on Gordon Brown and Tory Blair embarking on their own wee ego trips. I wasn't a fan of Major but when Mo Mowlem got the agreement over the line, it was one thing that made me think parties could work together. Brown bankrupted the workers with his pension fund theft. The tories never reversed it as they knew it was a devious trick they wish they'd thought of. They coud never have done it but he did. Countless pension funds are now underfunded. The Clown from Dunfermline thought he was stealing from the rich. He wasn't, he merely demonstrated a massive misundertanding of the poor and how pensions work. He clearly had no idea of how the market is cyclical and how pension funds can be 200% over funded one minute and only 87% funded the next. Market go up and down which is what I tried to show his dittery sidekick earlier in the decade. He clearly only saw certain over funded, or well run pension schemes and didn't see the others who had teetered on the brink. IN fact he clearly never got the AD memo about how MAxwell had raided the pension fund, or maybe thats where the first cornel of an idea had come from. Who knows where the fly Fifer found the stupidity to plunder his own voters, but his sleight of hand was the belief that 25 years on nobody would remember. After his plundering the employers stepped up their use of the pension surpluses. I think that's called O'Grade Economics. The reason this social science exists is because it believes that actions can influence decisions. Political actions on Taxation may result in a change of Behaviour. Sorry if I just sounded a bit exasperated. Its like watching Liz Truss getting elected because the country wanted to undermine itself. It seemed the country felt the poor were getting marginally richer and so if we all have a shakedown they'd be really poor and not be able to clog our doorways or polling booths. I heard them cry out, 'My house has lost half its value but its a small price to pay given that Liz is moving on up' It was the ultimate signal of marketing over economics that in my head Kondratieff desrcibes. 40-60 years ago we moved into a style over substance debate. Style won and now we have built in obsolesence, its now at level 83. It used to be that most cars lasted a lifetime then it became clear they needed to sell cars every 10 years, then every 7, 5, and now 2-3. Even the planet is not to be ignored. You now need an electric car. Truth is you probably dont. Truth is you do probably need to downsize and live in smaller place and consume less. I digress. Style wont keep you warm and it certainly wont feed you. Marketing departments will continue to sell you more food than you need with diet sheets to make sure you bin half of what they've sold you. Economists are still trying to help but they're drowned out, (mostly by each other!). Consumption is not the most important part of the economy. Its an integral part but just one we need to be mindful off. A society is based on people interacting and enjoying an existence. When we're dead there is no consumption although a few in the Funereal industry may disagree. When Thatcher moved us to a service industry I had a chuckle. She had spotted a huge gap in the market. Death and Taxes. That's the only thing we can be certain of. Forget the mining and manufacturing industries, we need to service DEATH as I'm removing taxes. I'm working on my eiptath. Hmmm, I might be onto something here! Thank you - my name's Fat Al and please enjoy the buffet as my alter ego Vinny is currently doing..... Footnote - When I was younger, so muc younger than today, my uncle was editor of the Scotsman and didnt support the union in any way, but now I'm older and I feelso self assured, ..... I almost want to stand for election to make the case to rejoin Europe and to adopt the Euro as the currency. I dont go for isolation and I do want to recognise that rogue states will come unstuck and so being part of Europe will be more beneficial than swimming in the north sea trying to catch mackerel with our badly made teeth.

Friday, 23 December 2022

Deadbeat Christmas Compilation #1

I was doing the countdown to Christmas in my head and lo behold! There is a star....and in the case of Deadbeat 16 of them.... The CD produced by Gordon Tucker as he cleaned up the DB masters in all their Dolby + nonsense is superb and this first CD will be available with the book and CD 2 of the Greatest hits in the summer. Get in touch if you want a copy. Talk of the book and a gig to cement your place in history is like my memory, fleeting. I will try to get in touch with some of the icons and try to repeat the iconic events at a venue in September next year.....judging by my past performance I'll need a lot of encouragement but I thought I could organise a golf day as everyone must be playing by now.....at the iconic Arthurs seat golf club, aka Prestonfield. Its a great track and handy for the train station for you out of town travellers......and if you dont play golf, there's always a drinks buggy to operate.... So back to the CD.....sometimes I name the song first and other times its clear I haven't. I never had a career in journalism as I am shit at writing but I do enjoy it almost as much as listening to the music! My favourite song has been saved for the second CD but regular readers know what that is. Track 1 dancing bears - Lost in my mind Track 2 - The very thing - conventionality Track 3. Metropolis - burlesque Track 4. I heard Catherine sing - autumn 1904 Shirley sang with them and only she'll know if it's her voice on this Track 5 - standing still - the floor I was lucky enough to interview Thomas and David as Slaughterhouse 5, RIP David. Track 6. Miles and miles - the relations Muggins died recently and wasnt part of the band but was part of my Perthshire experience so RIP Track 7 Trust - Track 8 - pulsebeat plus happy children sinking ships Track 9 - About you - life support Track 10 - bone of contention - strawberry tarts Track 11 - poltergeist - twisted nerve Track 12 - who do you love - strawberry tarts Track 13- way of the west - Napalm stars Track 14 - run out of time - the invitation Track 15 - influence of love - sunset gun Track 16 - loose on you - circus of hell

Monday, 19 December 2022

40 years ago today

Yes I just dyed my hair blue and the inverted skunk look didnt go down to well for Christmas. Back up the road I went topping up issue #6
and finishing collating, stapling and distributing #7. Hilary had a drawing of Edwyn for #7 and it would set Christmas 82 and the new year 1983 alight for Deadbeat. Roy Terre was getting into the groove Fran and Graeme getting involved too as the interview with Durutti Column with pictures by Fran duly arrived in the December 18 1982 - January 6 1983 issue. We only put the dates on to remind us it was time to put another one out but it worked. Fanzines were supposed to burn bright and die off but everyone from the bands, the punters to the shops everything seemed to want us to fly and my hunt around scotland for the best venue to munch a cheese and onion toastie just grew and grew into an annual review ......40 years ago today, ha ha!

Saturday, 10 December 2022

Callum Easter - Fans at work - Thank you

How good is it just to listen to the fans.

They fucking love this gig.

Lust for life is a song that has a punchy groove and a low groove. I heard that here, in a beautiful song that was loud fast but you could split it. Half time, melt it like Dali.

Mesmerising.

I was moving, I was moved.

Then I actually heard lust for life...3 songs later....the beat, the bass, then it went again...music morphing..... Another song another piece of invention and even a beautiful nod to Bob Marley.

Hold me when the feelings gone. It's always rock n roll when the crowd are singing it for you. Think Freddie at Wembley. It's not a lazy gig it's one you've worked so hard for. It's a lifetime of work that has fans singing your songs when they hear the first beat. The fiddle in young at heart, the e chord in safe european home, need I go on.... It's a love that smacks performers and the crowd in equal measure. It's a mutual love, a shared existence, experience and at  it's best explosive. 

This was quite simply at its best.

As Mr Kipling would not say, exceedingly explosive....like a scotch bonnet....like old Mountbatten's boat....like for fucks sake a petrol storage tank in one of those WWII movies......like me when I'm on the Camino, eating alubias and sleeping in a dorm of 40 Pellegrinos who had the same menu.

You wake up in the morning and there's 40 duvets on the ceiling, a bit like tonight as we peeled all the guys off the queen's hall roof. The gig was electric and the fans and the band were at a wonderful one, aka W1.

Crowd happy, performers happy and the world is happy. My world is happy. This is an ever giving world and I hadn't heard Callum and his band before. I can only use my 60th birthday bash for so long. I did have 59 years before that but I'm a sucker for the velvet underground, fire engines, strawberry tarts and of course every other band my wee ears and head exploded over 

Yes explosive night. 

Sorry Russell, sorry Davie but candyskin has gone,  we have a new Scottish all time classic......sisters....!

Merry Christmas 

PS - my eyes are my soul and my ears are my memories.......on behalf of the rest of me THANK YOU for the whole evening from accoustic, support and band, it was exceptional.....

Friday, 2 December 2022

Deadbeat CD a 16 track compilation from Scotland's finest 1982-86

A chink of light from the dark days of the 80's these Scottish bands would play up and down the country and we've put together 25 tracks cleaning up the old masters and putting them into the 90's on a CD. A digital copy will be out in the new year but one lucky punter can put a comment below and I'll post this copy to them, or even hand it over for a pint, whichever happens first. I'm 60 on Sunday so it'll be Tuesday before I get around to looking. 

The full track list of this first compilation will be published then too.
APOL~~~~~O~GIES ~its only 16 tracks as we have saved the other 16 for the next greatest hits...

Saturday, 1 October 2022

Harry & Al walk the 500+ mile Camino to Santiago de Compostela: Godfathers - Helldorado Vitoria gasteiz


What a night what a night club

i did a review when pissed so apologies if it was shit, the gig was great.

a great warehouse venue in the middle of a bathroom supplier and someone selling or manufacturing roller blinds.
On the edge of town but only a 20 minutes stumble for the Camino kids.
so many punters on the 0° gig I even had a few myself and it felt better this morning
Bounced out and got the train back down through some brilliant landscapes 
Back on the Camino again so next up will be a wee venue in Leon in a week's time.

Monday, 26 September 2022

puente la Reina

Food great bizarre day when bulls appeared on the streets and the next morning the locals were stumbling back from the allnighter at the local discoteca 


Wednesday, 21 September 2022

Mink DeVille, let's hear Spanish Stroll and talk about the camino

I borrowed Dancing Brave's blacksmith and I'm suitably shorn for my Spanish Stroll. https://youtu.be/N5LveBIjg3o .

i can't tell you how wise it is when you are embarking on a 500 mile walk to make sure that you don't have any rough edges.

I lost a toe nail last year and I often lose a nail and buy a set of new clippers but as light as a pair of nail clippers are I'd rather wait 2 weeks until I'm fit enough to carry them.


this year we've already done Leon ponferrade by bus and then walking to Santiago in March with Simon as we toasted Jackie's 70th.

I've also done Najera to Hornillos with the walking jakies in May for Paul's 50th.

So now it's time to plug a few gaps. I'm returning to Pamplona where Simon and I will relieve memories of James McFadden against France when we stayed at Maisonnave in 2007. Check out 500m.wordpress for Simon sleeping through the goal!

I love Pamplona and the tin soldiers on the hill, aka pilgrims at mont el perdon. I've got many pictures with John and Jimmy up there as well as previous years with Harry, Stu or Paul.
I love the background with the sky as a blue and white wall.

We go to Logrono and then onto Burgos with the last stop at Cardenuela rio Pico.

The people here are amazing. I first met Miryam and her laddie when I was kicking a football across the Camino in 2013. He was probably 7 or 8 and wanting to kick the ball. Occupational hazard I thought, despite being exhausted I loosened off the limbs as he stood protecting a gap between two chairs and kicked it into the river! Well, the last time I saw him he's probably 16/17 and taller than me. Aye, this Camino can age you.
We're going to be staying there on October 2nd and that's about the only date in the diary, the rest will be freewheelin, like the wind on the meseta we'll find out where we're staying when we cant walk, think or talk. October 2nd is a Sunday and you dont want to hit Burgos on Sunday. Its busy. Also Simon knows its Man City v Man Utd so he'll want a bet or at least he'll want to hide in Atapuerca. Go on, google Atapuerca Mandible, you know you want to. You'll learn all about our ancestors and what came before homo sapiens asserted themselves as the dominant version of us, although some of us still carry lots of traits from our Pleistocene hominin past. So we will walk into Burgos on the Monday while Stu comes down from Santander on the 8am bus. Edinburgh to Santander is a great service on Sunday and Wednesday. We're flying to Bordeaux as all our planning was based on the eurostar and trying to be mindful. £400 from Edinburgh v £20 was always going to be a tough sale when you're not rich enough. Once we're in Spain we do tend to walk everywhere so not so much of a footprint, more a boot mark. https://youtu.be/N5LveBIjg3o - give it a whirl

Saturday, 20 August 2022

Happy Birthday to us!

Yes its 40 years since we first hit the shelves and while next year will be the 41st anniversary it will be the 40th anniversary of the Pop Wallpaper / Wild Indians flexi disc issue Deadbeat is .........40.............40...........happy birthday Dudbutters..........you are 40..........40..........
Really true its 40 years since issue #1. Its hard to believe. We are 40......40.....which means.....I'm 59 and some of the gang are 60
Its hard to believe. I think its called living a life and then looking back to when it took 40 days to clean the ink off your hands. It still only seems like yesterday to me. When people say nice ink, its not a tatt, its just residue. If truth were told I learned to stop running around naked around this time. I'd been a natural naturist. I always felt hot and loved getting my kit off to run free but printing naked was madness. The naked printer is not a book title and I'll tell you why. It's a complete madness. A flight of fancy and if getting your rocks off is being naked dont do it while you're printing a fanzine using real ink, splurges fly off at all angles and I'm just saying, I'm no Jackson Pollok but if we had mirrors... in those days, ah'm just sayin..... Dementia has a wonderful way of making your childhood a lot more colourful than the monochrome set of Deadbeats!
Issue #11 and #13 can be read in full, click on the tabs above, and I highly recommend both. Karen's interview with New Order was the first the band had done that was published. We sold out in both Virgin stores within a day. We went into Edinburgh daily that week and didn't make it through to Glasgow until later in the week to be greeted by "Where have you been. We tried to contact you." It was our one and only big news day. Apparently the music press had done interviews with New Order but whether they were too slow getting it to press we had inadvertently landed a scoop. I think we had collated, stapled, folded and distributed all the copies within 3 days. Never had I got up so hungover and worked so hard. If you did get a copy with an upside down sheet or 4/13 wrong way around, that'd be me and its now a collectors item, just check ebay or wherever fine nostalgic nonsense is fenced. One good issue doesn't always make for another good one. All this drunkenness leads to better interviews and reviews but it also means they go missing. It was bad news for issue 14 as the £7 I got from Virgin in Glasgow, as they weighed me in and I gave them more, meant I got slaughtered and slept on someone's floor in..... Pollockshields I think. Clark Kent rings a bell. Well.... that night it was me ringing the bell. I barely remember stumbling about at a front door. Saintly people they were. Were the Rutkowski sisters there that night or am I just merging different trips. It may not have been the right house but they took this drunk in, let him sleep and I fucked off in the morning in search of the cure, so the perfect tramp I was. I can just picture the picture today as some 47 year old tells their 80 year old father, "Daddy remember the time we took the young homeless guy in who'd been pestering you at the gig in Glasgow,..... was ringing the wrong door bell, .....lying in our hedge,,,.....". Isn't it funny how our memories come rushing back, especially those that raise our emotions. Our emotions are everything. It's what drives us. They drive us to feelings that seem insurpassable, until the next tme when its even better. That's when you know you're still living. When that buzz of existence, that spark of life that sends us routinely into ecstasy. From browser bargain hunting to great gigs and loves. It's like having access to those jump leads that put life into the battery and regularly accessing that emotion is now for me. I'm fresh off a few different bouts of adrenalin rush and the latest left me digging tatties like I was in someone else's allotment. I kept saying calm down, this is your site, nobody is going to nab you. Before I knew it, I knew that twinge. Its the one where you down tools and start howking wae your hands. I'd typed hauns, but I used ma hanz. Its an east coast dialect and one of my bastardisations of language. It was like Deadbeat, I'd used Dundee, Fife, Edinburgh and a wee tad of the west in most paragraph if no the same sentence. I picked someone up, by the way, for using 'dinnae ken' in a sentence spoken by someone fae the west. I said, d'y'know ken that the only ken in Glasgow sings for The Bluebells. They dont use the word 'ken' like we do. I think they use Boabby the same as us, but no Ken! Who knew The Bluebells to be useful linguists, we knew they were cunning songwriters....
Ah, the emotions, if only we could bottle it and overpower the lingering stench of the economy. When I look back over 40 years the whole industry behind emotions is phenomenal and music is centre stage. I walk that camino to the sounds of new songs I write and old songs I sing. All of them are wrapped in the glorious glamour only the camino can bring. You only carry 3 shirts so it takes a bit of improvisation to make it work but you can have fun with it. I was going to talk about an old cashmere jersey that has expanded with me over the last 40 years. It's now a tank top, well closer to a crop top. It's like squeezing into my hibs strip from 1973, quite simply wrong. Whats really wrong is that twinge led me to a sair back. I was howking away as I knew straigtening up was not an option. By the time I stood golf was not an option either and now I'm pogoing in my bed, aka swimming like a mermaid as I cant stand up.
I'll just plug my spanish stroll website. Fatal-bananas.blogspot has my Pamplona to Porto walk. I'll be joined by the legendary Life Support, Ruby Suit, Carbona not GLue and currently S.A.L.T. bass player Simon Kettles. Mostly along the camino de santiago, through the vineyards of the Navarre, Rioja, Duero before we jump a train in Ponferrade and head for the Galician port of Vigo.
From Vigo we wander down to Porto and then wander a few days around the wonderful Portuguese coast. Simon and I did the 500 miles stroll in 2007 from St Jean pied du Porte in the French Pyrenees to Santiago de Compostela and I often look back at our 500m.wordpress.com website to work out why I stopped working and started walking. Quite simply I found my spiritual home. Its a simple life, eat, drink, sleep, wake, walk, sing, drink eat sleep, yes repeat. Its like a new song you're taking on tour.
It is a tour with just slightly less gear. We never did tour but the idea that each day you wake up in a new town. Each day you walk out of town and do your stand up to a new audience.
Sometimes its the same set to the same audience, but the same jokes work. The venues vary from the top of hills in the sunshine to huddled around the fire in wet wet rooms. But that's enough of the camino. Before that journey I've got to slaver on about the 40 years that got us from #1.
It was a bizarre start but hats of to WM. I'd worked in the post room after school and during breaks from uni. When it came to printing a fanzine, after hours in the print room was perfect. When it came to mailing copies to record companies, the franking machine did the trick. It became all consuming. Going to clubs, getting records, getting more diverse content. It wasn't long until we were at issue #5.
Roddy Frame, Campbell Owen and the drummer that week for Aztec Camera at the Dundee Dance Factory. Stuart Clumpas knew a thing or two about putting shows on. Every band that played the Dance Factory were in Deadbeat within the week. We pushed at doors and the ones that opened did so with aplomb. We saw Swing Club perform the Sloane Square Malady. I'd forgotten who that was by but I'll remember it shortly, and now I have so I'll type in Swing Club. I'm picturing myself inside the venue. Smoking like a lum, me and Hilary not the venue and balanced between pillar and dancefloor. Hilary, hand in glass or glass in hand, reminding me it was worth dancing to this stuff. I'm mesmirised by the fact that the band not only know how to play, they all seem to be playing the same song. It's intoxicating and yes, you asking.... ah'm only dancing.
The Daintees were in almost every week in the autumn of 1982. I think we interviewed them and lost the notes once. THe would appear in issue 4 and 5 and anytime I got a chance to say something about MArtin Stephenson and the Daintees I'd be there. I loved the album and little red bottle is a popular song on the camino. I cant sing it enough and should ask if there's a spanish translation. My Spanish is, like me, barely functional but I do manage to get a bed, drink and meal most days. I bought the tape of the Daintees first album as I did with Aztec Camera. I usually got the LP's free from their record companies but I confess, I was a ghetto blaster kinda guy. It was mental how fast it went from issue #7 and John Peel Christmas review.
#8 was already out. 1982 was ending but we were already working on #9 I went to two things in the Festival on Tuesday and I needed a rest. I had a game of golf on Thursday then went to one show and needed a rest. Living was feeling like yet another test.
I needed to slow down............................... I needed time to write a review................... Time to think it all through...................... Time to type it too............ Time to stick it with Uhu................. Yes that was what went through my head....................I needed another camino as this place was getting busy. I love the vibe and then suddenly I get claustrophobic, like fuck off terrets style out of ma city..........then I calm myself and say why dont you just fuck out out of their party you old bastard.........even the hippies were only in their 20's when you were 18...........
Caitlin went into another show and I'm just thinking how to write it up. My mind drifted back to #6 and Hilary's great cover................... The drawing of Siouxsie Sioux is still a masterpiece now. There's a lot of really good comedy around just now. They're all my daughter's age so I never wander far. She keeps me on one of those leashes so its obvious. For most its obvious she's just looking after me. For some in Edinburgh they think its a fettish thing. Its only in August, but back to NYC's Mary Beth. You dont want to give away any of the punchlines.
Mary Beth came out with a great show. Fantastic wise cracks and great continuity stories. I love a comedian that layers a joke.............its like the way I layer words or dots to make the picutres look like they're in the right spot. The obvious thing to do is learn the blogger language and stuff but instead, I just do dots..................but back to the layering of jokes......... Each time they come back to a subject it just gets a bigger laugh............. By the time of the crescendo, if really gets the full lift off............ Like any good gig the loudest applause is at the end..........and that's what Mary Beth did at the Pleasance upstairs........she likes her parents and most of us are their age so its not like we're in 'no persons land' and will take abuse for it......and as I'm a Sagitarius apparently my daughter tells me I'll not know what's going on.........strangely enough we're usually in the kitchen at parties....................searching for food or drink.......... This year I appreciated the multi media................
I think the audiences appreciate it, I know I do. Using a TV lets you put some of the show out in your social media advertising too......and if you get really smart about it you can start doing product placement in your advertising.......so Rob Madge, Mary Beth, any chance you could photo shot a copy of Deadbeat into one of those old videos, I'll pay handsomely with reviews and plugs...... As with the 5 star Rob Madge, Mary Beth used the old footage well. A brilliant use of all the videos from proud parents. The "See Me" nature of performance really benefits from the documentary angle old videos provide. When comedians explain their journey and the manufacture of VHS cassettes you feel old. Its like the plant of the long haired person in the conrner in the Young Ones tv show back in the 80's I think the gig was they were a leftover from a house party. I always thought it was a bad disguise for the person operating the camera or props. The 1980's like any decade from the past had its moments. We printed articles and glued pictures onto the proofs then got plates made. We were splattered with glue, ink and no small amount of paper snippings. When we had printed the Deadbeats it was time to take them to Groucho, Virgin or wherever. I used to joke soon we'll be able to get our readers to print their own at home. But how would they staple them, I'd think. So tomorrow I will raise my glass to 40 years.
I'd like to thank everyone for their contribution. From Hilary, Karen and Keith, Lynne and Kath, Roy Terre and Julie who all got the party started. We need another party to show us all how much the Oxford Bar has changed. It would be a fitting sight to see us all in the Tayside Bar but sitting in that roundabout might be a tad dangerous given the amount of zimmers and wheel chair users there are. Let's just go for a day out in Dundee, maybe the park. I remember a gig there, mostly because people took pictures. I like pictures. I'm not got a placing them correctly but I do like them. A Big thanks to Budgie and Stevie who printed it To Gordon Gurvan who's contribution is all over the site. To Alan Mackie and James Marr for their input in #1 To Gary Joyce and Gordon Tucker for the reviews he never wrote To the Nikki and Jill at Virgin and all the shops To all the bands and particularly Jeremy Thoms who not only performed my favourite track but also recorded extra copies of the tape on his twin deck casette back in the day as well as setting up the club The Front, see issue #27. Once we sold enough copies I bought a similar tape to tape and was able to make copies but Jeremy was the master mixer after the great Peter Haigh had put them onto the tapes at Pierhouse.
To all the pub/club owners and Stuart at DF and the guys from Regular who usually gave us the advert to allow us to pay the printer to buy the paper. and of course all the Fans who read it. Wherever you are put in Deadbeat tape #1 Listen to the Strawberry Tarts Talk to me about their 2nd track "Walking in a straight line" Its a camino classic.
I play it about 50 times every camino. Click on the link to hear it or go via discogs. Deadbeat (3) is the label name on discogs. http://www.mediafire.com/?zjmyy68licz44zm Link above to Deadbeat 1 - The bands and where they came from and if I have an address for you - as if you cant google it yourself..... Strawberry Tarts (Edinburgh) http://www.myspace.com/jeremythoms Twisted Nerve lots on discogs Burlesque Life Support (St Andrews/Dundee) Sunset Gun (Glasgow) (Louise and Deirdrie Rutkowski and http://www.louiserutkowski.co.uk) or see the releases on CBS during 85-88. Sluaghterhouse 5 (Glasgow) Wild Indians (Edinburgh - https://youtu.be/hsh8FOJypIQ ) bonus track from the Rhyme Tray - Newcastle's Paul Milner plays gigs in London now and teamed up with Derek Anderson (aka Roy Terre) who lived at the corner of Bell Street for this scratchy accoustic tapa dish. They changed their name so sometimes I wrote the new or old name on the tapes when I sent them out. Also not all the copies have the bonus track as it was only when we realised that side one was shorter than side two they offered to squeeze their 59 seconds in! Deadbeat 2 Dancing Bears (Edinburgh) http://venuesandbands.com/bands/Richie_Paul Napalm Start http://www.myspace.com/napalmstars and also Circus of Hell (Dundee) Kitchen Raiders Autumn 1904 The Very Thing The Invitation (Edinburgh) Monument 14 Strawberry Tarts Deadbeat 3 - I have a digital version that Gordon Tucker did for me. I've managed to whatsapp it but never managed to upload. I'm notoriously slow even when I raced I cant catch my ponderous pals The Government Rhythm System (Les Gaff, Glasgow) The Men Men (David Wells & Graham Samson, Glasgow) TheSwirle Pulsebeat Plus (Dundee) Crossfire The Relations (Perth) 2 of 3 on youtube https://youtu.be/TJtbcyS3e3I https://youtu.be/tBHOJUOaynw Splash me I'm Drowning

Monday, 8 August 2022

Forget UB40 how about DB40

So much excitement this week as I've got another party to organise. First though back in February as a shameless attempt to get the tories to realise they were not the party of tax I suggested waiving the VAT on fuel. Its taken a while but they're getting with the programme. My next top tip for them is to revive the hospitality secotor by doing away with the tax on drink. Let's face it, the next few years are going to be tough as fuck, especially for the poor and those in the dole offices. Our unemployment has never been higher if you include all those people on zero hour contracts who are doing, yes you've guessed it, zero hours. I know a few people who juggle 5 zero hour contracts, some of you will know people who juggle 10 such useless contracts. This shows why employment in the country is booming. Everyone has a zero hour contract. My plan is to make those zero hours turn into real hours. Real hours mean government recieve taxation, especially from the poor who pay tax earlier than they used to since the tax free allowance was frozen. So what is this tax free plan for drink.
Its called the multiplier effect in economics but its this simple. If drink falls in price so does inflation, reducing the pressure on wage growth. If drink falls in price consumption increases. If consumption increases the bars and restaurants will be jumping. If the bars are jumping so are live venues for music. IF live venues are umping the atmosphere is electric, I'm thinking Transmission, I'm thinking dance dance dance dance dance to the radio No! I'm thinking DANCE DANCE DANCE DANCE DANCE to the RADIO Yes it also means that people will be employed in the hospitality industry. During the first issue of Deadbeat in 1982 it was clear the tories wanted a service industry. THey wanted a return to the days of the serfs and SERVE SERVE SERVE SERVE SERVE To the Politico.....became a wee mantra especially later in the 80's during the poll tax debacle. I digress again. Abolish tax on Alcohol, give us back our pubs. I dont mind paying £6 a pint or £6.20 for a tin of San Miguel at the 02 recently watching SLF. It was jumping and I couldn't help chuckling as Jake and the gang did bang out the classics. 'Grab it and change it it's yours' has worked well but not sure we got far with some of the other stuff. Our collective voices disappeared as most took the LIV cash thinking 'there's always someone better off than you' as they embarked on that chase, never looking back. So what if we could return to 1980's pricing. It reminds me of issue #5 the October that us interview Roddy Frame and at another famous Dundee gig watch Dolphin run across the crowd, not surfing as much as stomping!
IF tax on drink is abolished and more people went into pubs as a result we'd all be more sociable and we'd get rid of this shower of bastards. They keep us in our houses, and we're not 'safe as houses' there, we are being banned from meeting collectively, except at the odd gig or football match. Revolution is harder to attain when everyone's at home on social media sending 3 words out looking for a fight. If it was 40 years ago "Somebody's gonna get their head kicked in tonight", was such a mantra surely 2022 will see the release of "Somebody's getting tweeted at tonight". In the first issue of Deadbeat we had a column called Hiccups. It was because we were always pissed.
As teenagers in 1982, you go drinking and try to avoid getting twatted. There would be glasses flying across the bar som etimes and genuinely you had to duck. I famously did at La Sorbonne when we were playing and an ashtray came my way. I cover the story in the Life Support section but I ducked and the drummer didn't! Watch out he's gonna twat you? loosely translated for 2022, 'he's gonna tweet ya baby' So back to the abolition of tax on drink. It could be Scotland's version of the Boston Tea Party! I'm sure we'd get some help from our Northumbrian pals. If you are serious about helping the hospitality industry and regenerating the city and town centres. If you are wanting to help small villages and rural communities give them back their pubs. The church, God bless them, is a busted flush. Father Christmas was a lovely concept and it worked well until we found out the world is more than 5000 years old, so the hub of our communities is our local sports clubs, miners and social clubs. Next up its the pub. All will be very grateful to have back the opportunity to socialise at a price they can pay. My Dad turned 90 this year. He's lucky, he can afford £20 for a night out as he only drinks 3 pints. He doesn't need to stagger far and so he has enough change for his taxi home. So the Tories are currently fighting it out over reducing tax to stimulate the economy. In the unlikely event that anyone reading this has a vote in the forthcoming election of the UK prime minister please ask them to abolish tax on drink. During the recent pandemic many gin distillers turned their stills over to the production of products useful in an age of sterilisation. Surely these people deserve not just applause but some tax free bonus. If you think how production could grow. We've been a service economy for nearly 40 years now since Margaret, Tony and Co dismantled the unions and manufacturing. They paved the way for the sale of our industries, their jobs and trademarks. I leave John Major and Mo Mowlem out here as they at least had listened to the lyrics for an alternative Ulster. The rest however, have made us a service tourist economy.
Drinks giant Diageo still does a lot of manufacturing and Whisky luckily is still made in the UK, although for how long I dont know. If Scotland owns the trademark and the post independence government adopts a zero tax on drink policy, how quickly will the tourist economy boom. We will have stills on every street corner. If we adopt a similar policy as the Netherlands on hash, we will be able to utilise all that wind. Every village in the Grampians will have a wee hash farm. When the deep hot redundant mines are turned over to the production of every plant known we'll be onto a winner. The green industries will be getting more and more investment. The small country with a chip on one shoulder and a deep fried mars bar on the other will suddenly find itself at the centre of something useful. Instead of carping on about pollution in our waters we can clean up our rivers and salmon farms. We can get those fisheries protection vessels back out to sea and protection the marine life. Its not about watching Seaspiracy on Netflix, its about making it happen on our doorstep. We cant stop gangsters worldwide, but we can on our doorstep. We can stop the trawlers landing their catch onto a russian super tanker by imposing laws that say that cant leave our waters. If a Scottish ship wants to catch fish in Scottish waters they cant leave. If they want to leave thats fine but dont come back when you want to see a doctor or a dentist. I dont get the idea you'd let your own people be gangsters and tolerate it. If you make drink cheaper in certain ports in Scotland, you might have to increase the bouncer industry, but thats good for job creation too. It would certainly help build some community trust and give all those highland games folk some work when they're not tossing cabers. The more people doing more work, the more income tax they pay. Deadbeat was 10p from issue #4 and we never upped it, we just ran out of cash and time. I think that was when drink had gone from 50p to £1 a pint. I did a diary back then. I'll have a look. I'll probably be a bit of time but surely back for a piece of that DB40 cake.

Friday, 4 February 2022

Government to Slash VAT?

In the latest murmurings Deadbeat hears VAT is getting a shake up. Domestic utility bills which are being hit by energy price rises may benefit shortly by the reduction of VAT as well as businesses. With inflation running out of control government is daft not to be considering one of the bluntest levers available to it. Slashing VAT and reclassifying certain products will help industry, in particular hsopitality, enormously. Pub landlords and restaurant chains know the amount of VAT they pay and of course it is all handed onto their customers. What most punters dont realise when quaffing their £6 beer is £1 of it is VAT. Government knows that more people are drinking at home after lockdown so hospitality has hit one of those cobweb cycles of increasing prices to maintain jobs and turnover. So will the government take this populist move? As short term deflation goes it hits the spot. Hospitality is a headache for them as we emerge from Covid and they know how much small business meets over dinner and pints. Do they want to encourage people to party, why of course they do. Reclasssifying or zero rating could be an easy, simplistic jump out the hole they find themselves in. Zero rating utilities for domestic users is so simplistic its already in a song but I'm saying nothing, becasue nothing always happens! Or then again, nothing ever happens....

Friday, 21 January 2022

Classic Scotsman

I had a double take as my Dad's pile of Scotsmans made their way to the recycling!

Deadbeat enjoyed self plagiarism, but we usually tried to rearrange the words...

This is a classic....I love it.

KB is saving on the letraset...so many sub plots