Posts Tagged ‘Latitude 2008’

Jan 26

My Top 5 Gigs of 2009

Posted by Tom Lennon in Uncategorized

Why Top 5? Why not a Top 10? As a lapsed Discordian I was going to knock out a rather elaborate, mind-bending explanation based on the ‘Law of Fives’ (which, according to Robert Shea & Robert Anton Wilson’s Illuminatus! Trilogy, claims that everything in the universe can be connected to the number five if you try hard enough), but that looked too much like hard work.

Instead, I’ll just tell you the truth: I opted for a Top 5 because I didn’t go to very many gigs in 2008.

Five of ‘em, though, were fucking awesome…

5. Bearsuit, Latitude Festival 2008 – Pete Ashton introduced them to me in 2007 when I saw them play at Birmingham’s Sunflower Lounge, and their Latitude set was great fun. They’re tremendously silly, ridiculously catchy and highly recommended. Jupiter Force, indeed.

4. Foo Fighters, Wembley Stadium, 7th June 2008 – I mentioned it in passing here, here and here but never got around to writing a proper review. Oh, well. I’ve never been what you might call a Foo Fighters fan; I have, however, always been an unrepentant Led Zeppelin fan. Jimmy Page and John Paul Jones surprise guest appearance on stage – and their storming rendition with Grohl & Co of Zep classics Rock and Roll and Ramble On – made this a gig to remember.

The Foo Fighters were quite superb, too.

3. Buzzcocks, Latitude Festival 2008 Sweaty, sticky, stomping fun in a marquee at 2am isn’t everyone’s idea of a good time. It’s my idea of a good time and I wrote about it here.

2. Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds, Birmingham Carling Academy, 5th May 2008;
Grinderman, Latitude Festival 2008 I’m cheating a bit, here – I suppose this should be two separate entries – but this is my list so my rules rule. I wrote about the former here and the latter there.

1. Tom Waits, Le Grand Rex Paris, 24th July 2008 – No shit, Sherlock. A bit of a foregone conclusion, this. A Tom Waits gig will always, by definition, be the the gig of the year. That’s just the way it is.

I attempted a reconstruction of the gig here.

Top 10 Films of 2008 to follow.

Jul 15

Longing for Latitude

Posted by Tom Lennon in Uncategorized

I’ll be going to the Latitude Festival on Thursday where I plan to see, hear and experience Grinderman, Breeders, Foals, Franz Ferdinand, Bill Bailey, Death Cab For Cutie, Julian Cope, Guillemots, Rich Hall, Jeremy Hardy, The Coral, Patrick Marber, Seasick Steve, Interpol, Simon Armitage, Joanna Newsom, The Mars Volta, ‘Just a Minute’ with Nicholas Parsons, Stewart Lee, Mark Thomas, Mark Steel, Blondie, Buzzcocks, Michael Nyman, ‘Broadcasting House’, Tindersticks, Micah P Hinson, Catherine O’Flynn and Irvine Welsh.

That’s assuming they don’t all clash.

Apr 09

Latitude

Posted by Tom Lennon in Uncategorized
It’s early days yet, but the line-up for this year’s Latitude Festival is already shaping up rather nicely.

As I’ve probably mentioned before, Latitude 2007 was one of my favourite festivals ever (and that includes Glastonbury ’97). A great location, a brilliant atmosphere, a nice mix of people, a relatively intimate scale, a welcome lack of corporate presence and a veritable smorgasbord of odd, mad and interesting stuff all contributed to the mix, but I think it was the shonky handmade signs that really made the difference. It gave the weekend a nice, old-school homemade feel and I’ve always had a weakness for shonky handmade signs.

On the music front the main headliners this year will Franz Ferdinand, Sigur Rós and Interpol. I’ve got mixed feelings about this. Franz Ferdinand will be fun to see live, I like Sigur Rós a lot but I’m not sure of their big(ish)-ass festival headliner potential, and I haven’t heard enough by Interpol to care one way or the other. None of them have the same must-go appeal as, say, Arcade Fire, who stole the show last year. Having said that, I enjoyed Latitude 2007 so much that I’d have probably still turned up this year if the headliners were Adamski, Bucks Fizz and The James Last Orchestra.

In any case, like any good festival it’s not really about the headliners: there’s lots of other good music lined up, too. Grinderman, The Breeders, Buzzcocks, Elbow and Seasick Steve are currently residing in the archive file-box marked Stuff I Like Lots, while Death Cab For Cutie, The Mars Volta, M.I.A. and Amadou et Mariam are in a neighbouring folder marked Stuff I’m Planning To Listen To Soon. There’s a time-honoured migration path in my head in which the contents of the second folder often end up being shuffled into the Stuff I Like boxes. Sadly, I’ve had to put the process on hold as I’m currently experiencing an administrative backlog.

There’s lots of other stuff going on at Latitude besides the music. Last year my brother and I accidentally disrupted a woodland performance of Shakespeare’s The Tempest (as opposed to, say, Jacqueline Susann’s The Tempest) when my brother loudly barked “Arsenal!” in the style of Eric Morcambe. You don’t get stuff like that at a V festival.

The comedy at Latitude is top notch, too. Stand-up standouts last year include Bill Bailey, Dylan Moran and Jeremy Hardy (I missed Stewart Lee, Dammit!). Already, this year’s comedy line-up is looking pret-ty, pret-ty good: Bill Bailey and Stewart Lee are back, along with Rich Hall (and Otis Lee Crenshaw…), Lucy Porter, Ross Noble, Omid Djalili, Dave Gorman and the mighty Mark Thomas. More significantly, though, Nicholas Parsons and his cohorts will be recording an edition of Just a Minute from the festival. As a lifelong Radio 4 junky I can think of no better hangover remedy.

Anyhow, if – like me – you’re Uncut Magazine-reading Radio 4 listener who’s into eclectic music, good comedy and inadvertent acts of theatre disruption, then I encourage – nay, urge you to get your arse to Henham Park in Suffolk between the 17th – 20th July.

I mentioned the shonky handmade signs, didn’t I?