Showing posts with label ABC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ABC. Show all posts

Saturday, 1 April 2017

The Beat and The Selecter. ABC Glasgow, March 2017

The Beat and The Selecter . Co-headline tour 2017. 

ABC, Glasgow. 31.March 2017. Live review. 


The Selecter, fronted by the stylish Pauline Black I last saw play a couple of years ago in Oran Mor and The Beat with Ranking Roger, were in Glasgow 3 years ago at the ABC 2. Tonight playing a joint headline tour they have managed to sell out the bigger hall at the ABC on Glasgow's Sauchiehall Street for a night of nostalgic 2-Tone ska. Originally a 6 date tour it has now grown arms and legs, including a return to Glasgow in November 2017, after the first dates sold out so quickly. I was surprised to see how easily they filled this place, the crowd ranging from 50 year old overweight men with shaved heads, to girls night out crowds and hipsters adorned with ginger beards and pork pie hats. 2-Tone was always a broad church.



First on stage for us in Glasgow on Friday night were The Beat. The indefatigable Ranking Roger runs the show, but accompanied on stage in recent years by his son, Ranking Junior (or Matthew Murphy). Ranking Junior's rapid MC rhyming style appeared on the Ordinary Boys song "Boys Will Be Boys" (1 min 50 secs in on this video) and he gives some of the Beat songs a bit of a shake up with this. But only a wee shake up, as there are so many tunes you want to hear entirely as they should be. It is also so refreshing to hear songs with a bit of a political bite to them, such a big part of the 2-Tone scene. When did music start living in this apolitical bubble that makes songs like "Stand Down Margaret" sound alien? The Beat are still writing new songs and fitted a couple seamlessly into the set without dropping the energy levels. There is no sign they are coming to a Ranking Full Stop (see what I did there?)
The Selecter, Glasgow March 2017
Each night they will swap over who plays first and second. Playing first The Beat had to step aside when it looked like they could happily carry on. The Selecter swept on stage next, with rude girl Pauline Black and Arthur 'Gaps' Hendrickson looking as stylish as ever. They have a fantastic back catalogue of songs and this is a bigger band playing with them than I have seen for a while. Despite that a couple of my favourite Hammond organ and guitar riffs from the recordings were a bit subdued tonight, and the two sax players could have done with their volume being up a bit. That aside they had the hall bouncing when blasting out Three Minute Hero, Missing Words and On My Radio. Again politics is never far below the surface with The Selecter, was references to police shootings and Brexit thrown in amongst the dance tunes. 

The night came to an end with a nostalgic nod to the finale of the 2-Tone tour, with members of The Beat joining The Selecter on stage for a rendition of Prince Buster's Madness



Tuesday, 27 October 2015

Battles. Glasgow ABC. October 2015

Battles. Buke and Gase. Live review. Glasgow ABC. October 2015


Last time that I saw Battles play in Glasgow was in the Arches in about 2011. The intensity of their sound and the sheer volume in those tunnels under Central Station blew me away and left my ears ringing for days afterwards. It was absolutely packed as well, with a lively, sweaty crowd. 

Four years later and touring to promote their latest album "La Di Da Di", the Arches has now closed down and we find ourselves in the more open space of the ABC on Sauchiehall Street. Maybe the space is too big, maybe their latest album isn't generating so much buzz, or maybe it wasn't a great idea to play on the same night as Godspeed You! Black Emperor are playing along the other end of the M8. Whatever the reason, the hall seems to have a bit too much space in it, and the audience remain a bit subdued throughout. 

Battles (and their improbably high cymbal) ABC, Glasgow

Support act Buke & Gase play an excellent, jerky, unpredictable set and start to rouse the crowd. When Battles arrive on stage, Dave Konopka crouches on the floor for 5 or 10 minutes building up loops and rhythms before Ian Williams and John Stanier join him and give us "Dot Net" from the new album. The new album continues their experimental, post-rock/ math-rock/ jazz-rock sound. "Rock" is at the heart of it all though, with the forceful drumming of John Stanier front and centre on stage and in the sound. They batter through some great tunes, all angular and twitchy, but fail get the crowd engaged. Older songs like "Ice Cream" and "Atlas" get the biggest responses of the night, but when the band pause to briefly chat they acknowledge the flat feeling of the evening, asking "Did somebody die in the audience?". Their biggest cheer of the night, as they note themselves, is when they thank Glasgow for giving the world Mogwai.

I've seen them before and know that they are a great live act, but tonight they just seemed a bit flat. I think that was more down to them than to us. 

Friday, 27 February 2015

Ólafur Arnalds Plays Broadchurch. Glasgow Film Festival, ABC. Live review

Ólafur Arnalds Plays Broadchurch. ABC, Glagsow. Live review. 25 Feb, 2015


There ended up being an accidentally Northerm European slant to the events in this years Glasgow Film Festival which I managed to get to. First there was the "Moomins on the Riviera", a traditionally animated cartoon, bringing Finn Tove Jansson's bizarre characters to the big screen. Then I went with my son to see Icelandic composer Ólafur Arnalds perform from his soundtrack of the TV series Broadchurch amongst other pieces. I had been listening to it at home the previous week and my 12 year old son thought it was great so we decided we'd both go. 

About 10 years ago we went on a family holiday to Iceland, one of the best trips we've had. As is my want, at the time I was trying to soak up some Icelandic culture before we went. As well as reading the novels of Halldór Laxness and Hallgrímur Helgason I took in any Icelandic musicians that were passing through Glasgow. As I liked what I found I've kept on doing it. This meant that I have got to enjoy Múm, Sigur Ros, Mugison and Amiina amongst others (I suspect this may mean that I've seen Ólafur Arnalds cousin, Ólöf Arnalds, perform at some point). Since I made that trip the opportunities to hear the distinctive sound of Iceland has become increasingly easy in Glasgow ever since BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra conductor Ilan Volkov joined the Iceland Symphony Orchestra. In the past couple of years diverse acts such as S.L.Á.T.U.R. and the fabulous Hildur Guðnadóttir have played in Glasgow as part of the Tectonics festival which Ilan Volkov curates. 

So as well as the Icelandic angle appealing to me for this concert there was also the fact that I am a big fan of soundtrack music, although I don't really think it counts as a distinct musical genre as it contains such a diverse range of stuff. When I was younger the soundtracks from the films "The Godfather"  and from "Betty Blue" were two of my favourite albums. More recently I have had been listening a lot to Broadcast's soundtrack for Berberian Sound Studio, Mogwai's album for French TV series Les Revenants and driving about Glasgow picking up strangers in my car whilst listening to Mica Levi's Under the Skin soundtrack. I haven't ever watched Broadchurch but I guess it is a pretty tense, haunting and melancholy affair as that was the feeling I got from listening to the soundtrack album this week. 

For the live performance at the ABC in Glasgow Ólafur Arnalds sits at the grand piano, synthesizer and iPad. He is accompanied by a string quartet (have at least one of them been in Aamina?), two musicians on French horn and another on keybord/ Octapad/ trombone. At times the playing is quiet and ethereal whilst the audience's attention is gripped throughout. At other times, supplemented with a crescendo of electronic percussion, the drama mounts, augmented by the austere lighting at the back of the stage. Despite the sombre and unsettling music, between tracks Arnalds is affable, witty and chatty with the audience. As well as the Broadchurch music he dips in and out of his back catalogue too, giving us a bit of context to the music.



In the middle of the performance singer Arnór Dan joins them onstage. Looking like John Hartson and sounding like Andy Bell, he gives us a chance to hear his song from the Broadchurch end credits, which he laments is usually interrupted by the ITV continuity announcer. It is an excellent change in the tone of an evening which has been put together so well, and flows perfectly. 



The well put together shape of the evening is made clear by the two songs of the encore. At the end Arnalds is left alone on stage to round off the night perfectly by performing the evocative "Lag fyrir ömmu" (For Granma). 

As I am making another trip to Iceland this summer I am putting together a new holiday playlist. I've got Ásgeir on there, I'm waiting patiently for Bjork's Vulnicura album to come out, but I've just added a few Ólafur Arnalds tracks to it in the meantime. It is rare for my taste and my son's musical taste to overlap, but tonight it did.

Friday, 9 January 2015

Glasgow Ice Rinks and the ABC Cinema

Glasgow Ice Rinks and the ABC Cinema


Quick quiz for you.

Where was Glasgow's first indoor ice rink?
Where is there a 110 year old outdoor curling rink in Glasgow?

I had been reading about both of these things recently when I saw the answer to one of these questions come up in a news article in the Daily Record today.

ABC Regal Cinema, Sauchiehall Street


I was pleased to see a story on the Daily Record website that the O2 ABC concert venue is temporarily to revert back to its former guise as a cinema, for one night only. This is for a night commemorating the O2 ABC on Sauchiehall Street's former life as the ABC Regal cinema, as part of the Glasgow Film Festival in February 2015. However the news article was illustrated by a picture of a different building altogether, which is nearer the O2 Academy venue on the south-side. The photo they used from the 1930s was the Coliseum cinema, now sadly demolished after a fire, where the first "talkie" movie was shown in Glasgow.

Daily Record article on "A Night at the Regal", illustrated with a picture of the Coliseum

I've been to many concerts in the Sauchiehall Street O2 ABC and quite like it as a venue. They did a decent job refurbishing it and keeping it as an entertainment space after the cinema finally closed in October 1999. By then the cinema had been running at this site for 70 years. The picture below shows it in its glory days as a cinema, when it had one screen, a 2300 seater auditorium and an RS McColl's by the door to get your sweeties. In this picture you can see the empty space to the right where the 1960s extension was added to provide an extra screen. In 1979 the main screen was divided to make four more smaller halls, so that when I was going to it as a child it always had rather labyrinthine corridors taking you to one of the five screens. I can remember which films I saw at which cinema when I was younger. Nowadays all the cinemas are so uniform that they merge into one. I remember seeing Highlander here at the ABC with some friends from school in 1986. I remember that I saw Gremlins and Dumbo at The Grosvenor Cinema off Byres Road, Watership Down and Rocky 3 at La Scala on Sauchiehall Street, Ghostbusters and Star Wars at the Odeon on Renfield Street and Grease at the Salon off Byres Road. The grim live action/ animated version of Lord of the Rings from 1978 I think I endured as a very wee boy in the GFT (only at the end of the film did you find out that this was only half the story, no sequel was ever made).

The ABC Regal Cinema, Sauchiehall Street
...and the ABC today

I was intrigued to discover that the ABC cinema when it opened in 1929 was in a building already 55 years old, that had gone through several uses. Built in 1875 it started out as a circular building, a domed "Diorama" - where paintings of famous battles would cover the walls. By the time of the 1888 "International Exhibition of Science, Art and Industry" at Kelvingrove it was called the Panorama, with an illustrated re-telling of the Battle of Bannockburn adorning the walls for people to enjoy. If you look at the etching below you can recognise the shape of the arched windows still seen at the Sauchiehall Street face of this building.

1888 etching of the "Panorama" on Sauchiehall Street
What is harder to picture is a circular building filling this space, unless you look at this picture below taken during the extensive refurbishment work in 2002. From the Scott Street side which leads up to Mackintosh's Art School building behind, you can see the circular shape of the original auditorium space.

2002 refurbishment work at the ABC building.
Picture from "Scottish Cinemas and Theatres Project" website
The hall was owned by South African impresario Arthur Hubner, who later owned the Brittania Panopticon. When he decided there was no future in dioramas he converted the building into Scotland's first indoor ice rink in 1895, the Glasgow Ice Skating Palace. The circular rink 95 feet across had an orchestra performing on the platform seen in the architect's drawings above which were done for the conversion. It was apparently home to Europe's first international ice hockey match when crowds of 1000 people watched exhibition matches against an English team.

As an ice rink it wasn't a great success and lasted only two or three years. During that time Hubner showed Glasgow's first ever film screenings here with the newly invented "cinematograph" in 1896. These included short films of local interest, eg a paddle steamer heading off from Rothesay pier or the Gordon Highlanders leaving Maryhill barracks.
Only visible brickwork from the outside of the original circular building,
halfway up Scott Street beside the fire exit you leave the ABC venue from

The building was then converted into The Hippodrome, complete with a circus ring and water tank underneath. From 1904 to 1924 it was home to Hengler's Circus, showing films in the hall when the circus was not performing (the name lives on as a JD Wetherspoons pub across Sauchiehall Street opposite the dental hospital).

In 1927 it re-opened as the Waldorf Palais dance hall and in 1929 finally was re-invented as "The Regal", the ABC's grandest Glasgow cinema. The thread in the Glasgow film festival this year marks Glasgow's place as a "cinema city" in the 1930s, with more cinema screens per head of population than anywhere else in the world.

Other Glasgow Ice Rinks


January 2010, my dad dusted off his skates to give the ice on Bingham's pond a go
Before anyone came up with the idea of indoor ice rinks people were skating and curling on Glasgow's ponds and rivers, particularly during the colder winters 150-200 years ago. A "Glasgow Skating Club" was formed in 1830 and a Glasgow map of 1894 of Bingham's pond calls it a "Boating and Skating Pond" with a rectangular "Curling Pond" laid out alongside.

After Glasgow's first indoor ice rink closed in the late 1890's it was a few years before Glasgow's skaters had a new indoor venue. Crossmyloof ice rink opened in 1907 and this was where I first went ice skating aged about 12, a few years before it finally closed in 1986. When I was there I think it was on its last legs and we had the ice to ourselves. I could hardly stand up as the leather in the scabby old ice skates that they handed out was so knackered that they gave absolutely no support. The boots didn't seem to hold my dad back though, who had skated there as a youth. However from the picture below you can see that it did have grander days in the past and was home to ice skating, curling and ice hockey for almost 80 years. It is now demolished and the Morrisons supermarket at Crossmyloof stands where it once was.

Crossmyloof Ice Rink a few years after opening, with  an
orchestra suspended from the roof in the middle
In 1918 with falling attendances during the war, the building was sold to Beardmore's who used it for manufacturing airplane engines, but in 1928 it was redeveloped as an ice rink again. There was a flurry of ice rink building at that time of which only the Kirkcaldy rink (built in 1937) and the Murrayfield rink (built in 1939) are still up and running in Scotland. In Glasgow the Kelvin Hall briefly had an ice rink, but it was 1986 before Glasgow had another rink, the Summit Centre in Finnieston. I had many a portion of chips in the cafe when hanging about down there, resting my aching calves after skating with their big solid plastic boots. This lasted from 1986 to 1998 when it had to close due to subsidence blamed on the River Kelvin flooding. Since then Glasgow has had no indoor rink. Skating, curling and ice hockey has migrated to the rink at Braehead, which opened in 1999.

When I've looked at old maps of Glasgow in the Mitchell Library my eye is often caught by the now long gone "curling ponds" marked in them. 

"Curling Pond" on Peel Street, Partick map 1861
The Drovers Inn on Byres Road changed its name to Curlers in 1849 as the Partick Curling Society (which exists to this day) used to meet here and a curling pond was laid out in the land behind it. Another curling pond could be found up in the Botanic Gardens. The map on the website "Historical Curling Places" shows some of the sites of the 80 curling ponds that have been identified around the Glasgow area including at Church Street, St Vincent Crescent and several at Anniesland and in the grounds at Gartnavel Royal Hospital. 

One of the most interesting though can still be found in Victoria Park. As warmer winters meant less chance to curl on natural ponds John Cairnie, a former surgeon with the East India Company, devised a way to make artificial curling ponds. The idea was to have a shallow bed with a raised edge that could be artificially filled gradually with water which would freeze in layers. Once John MacAdam invented macadamisation, the perfect lining for these ponds was available. Partick Curling Club now practice at Braehead rink, but their clubhouse in Victoria Park still stands beside their Cairnie rink, which was built in 1902.

Partick Curling Club curling pond in Victoria Park
(filled with water due to today's Glasgow weather)

Markings visible on the Victoria Park curling pond

Their clubhouse still contains a lot of the club's old curling equipment apparently and is now a Grade A listed building, but unfortunately is hidden inside a Glasgow City Council parks department depot. However from Balshagray Avenue you can see the curling pond and the markings on the floor of it.

The back of the Partick Curling Club clubhouse in Victoria Park, now marooned in a council depot
So Glasgow has no indoor ice rink, and when we go to visit relatives in Fife this weekend I'm planning to drag my children along to the Fife Ice Arena in Kirkcaldy, where the Fife Flyers ice hockey team play, for a wee bit of skating. 

So...
Where was Glasgow's first indoor ice rink? - At the ABC on Sauchiehall Street.
Where is there a 110 year old outdoor curling rink in Glasgow? - In Victoria Park in the west end. 

Final thought


I can't finish this without mentioning the dark cloud that now hangs over the annual Glasgow On Ice festival, which has featured an open air ice rink in George Square every winter over recent years. I've taken my children there or to see the lights, I've gone along as a helper with their primary school classes, everyone in the city knows it inside out. This year Christmas shoppers and people heading to enjoy the activities in George Square were caught up in a tragic accident, when a bin lorry crashed into the crowd here. Several people died and many are still recovering from their injuries. Details of how to donate to the fund set up to help those affected by the incident can be found here.