Tuesday 29 July 2008
Stuff to see on the River Lea
Sunday morning, Em and the kids away, so the time was perfect for a couple of hours on the bike. As I always cycle along the River Lea from the 'stow into Islington, I decided to head north.
Just above Tottenham Hale lock are a couple of lovely old barges (above) Or at least, that's what I thought. But Granny Buttons says they're part of a concerted attempt to regenerate the 'Tottenham waterfront', and are permanently moored office spaces. He's a bit sniffy about them. Me, I just like looking at nice boats.
If they really do want to do something about the waterfront, they might think about closing down the waste incinerator that lurks outside the North Circular;
Instead, they've had the brilliant idea of renaming it 'The London Waste Eco-Park'. I'm sure the people campaigning against the new plan to hike up the amount of stuff the plant burns are that impressed. Is this the most unlikely thing to have been rebranded with an 'Eco' prefix?
Still, just up-river were some geese. A flock, I think. They looked cute, so I took a photo;
I made it all the way to Waltham Abbey, had a bacon sandwich in a very nice riverside caff, and came home. Pausing only to take this snap of a woman sculling on the river just by Walthamstow marshes. Well done, madam!
Tuesday 1 July 2008
A Sound Salvation...
Wednesday 26 March 2008
Reason To Be Cheerful
The street was deserted, and so I crossed over and had a look. It was a brand new copy of ‘The Dangerous Book For Boys’. Unopened, the spine not even cracked. I was so impressed, I took a photograph of it on my phone;
I’ve been thinking since about this quite a bit. And it’s all good thoughts. The most likely explanation of how the book got there is that someone had found it lying in the street, and, assuming someone had lost it, placed it somewhere highly visible in the assumption that it’s rightful owner would trace their steps in the hope of finding it.
This simple act of kindness, a small attempt to help out a stranger, gave - and continues to give me - a warm glow. Just when you get worn down by the incessant screwfaces, the refusal to give up seats on the tube to pregnant women, the general abrasiveness of life in London, you witness something which reminds you there are people who are trying to be pleasant as well.
Either that, or it was a situationist art prank/book review. It was near Dalston, after all.
Tuesday 25 March 2008
The King Of Shinar Is Hiding Out In Dalston
OK, so much of my time is spent planning how to get out of London. But that doesn't stop me loving the way anyone with half an eye can have their minds thrown in wildly random directions by the bizarre signs and views the city throws up. I don't mean to get all Iain Sinclair, psycho geographic on yo' ass, but take today as an example. Finished recording The Word podcast on Pentonville Road, had a couple of hours to kill before next meting in Dalston, so wandered through Islington towards my destination.
And just south of Dalston Junction I stumbled across this sign. I's a dead end, one back from the shopfronts on Kingsland Road, and the name just leapt out as slightly incongruous in this neck of the woods. Having googled him, I now know that Nimrod was a biblical king, who got his hands on the clothes worn by Adam & Eve, which gave him great power and the ability to kick seven shades of shite out of anyone he wanted. He started building the Tower of Babel - and that's where it all went wrong. A classic case of over-reaching yourself. That he's now given his name to a cobbled alleyway in one of the most multicultural areas of London has a certain pleasant symmetry to it.
Friday 14 March 2008
Do The Hippy Hippy Shake
Just been absorbing a lovely record by Al Wilson. Best known for his recording of 'The Snake' which apparently was a big Northern Soul tune 'back in the day' - about which I have to confess, in the manner of Manuel from Fawlty Towers 'I know nothing' - I picked it up because of the title track, his take on Fred Neill's beautiful 'Dolphins'. Wilson's voice is a lovely instrument, and the arrangement does Neill's song justice.
But there's other good stuff on there as well. The stract I can't stop playing at the moment is 'Summer Rain', a very funky tune whose chorus details 'dancing in the sand, to Sgt Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club band''. Got me thinking how many artists from, say the rock/indie field would current soul singers namecheck in a lyric? Maybe Radiohead might crop up on a Saul Williams tune, but that's about it. Shame, in a way.
Wednesday 6 February 2008
Back To The Old School
Apart from the upcoming Echo & The Bunnymen reunion, I've been left a bit cold by the recent craze for playing whole albums live. But the news about Public Enemy's Brixton rendition of 'It Takes A Nation Of Millions To Hold Us Back' has got me buck wild, as a believe we used to say back in the day.
Speaking as someone who saw P.E. quite a few times when they were releasing records that people were bothered about, rather than appearing on reality TV and curating Black music history, I'm most interested in seeing who's actually going to be attending the gig. Given hip hop's obsession with 'the new thing' I can't really see many current heads getting down with Night Of The Living Baseheads' and 'Black Steel In The Hour Of Chaos'.
So, it could well be the oldest hip hop crowd in living memory. Whatever, it'll be fun.
Tuesday 22 January 2008
It May Be Hell Down There...
A bright, cold and shining morning today. The perfect weather for listening to Echo & The Bunnymen's spiky second album, 'Heaven Up Here'. Haven't heard it all the way through for a long time, but doing so reminded me why they were/are such a special band. The complete package. From Mac's perfect haircut down, they had it all. A virtuoso guitarist, a fantastically muscular rhythm section, a motormouth vocalist who could (almost) walk it like he talked it, and, in Bill Drummond, a lunatic visionary for a manager. Come on, a tour of ley lines? Genius.
After the slightly druggy disheveled bedsit debut of 'Crocodiles', 'Heaven Up Here' was wide open spaces, as wide as the Weston Super Mare mudflats the band were pictured in the middle of on the cover. Will Sergeant's sharded guitar, at one moment angled and chorded, the next deadened and picked, provides a perfect counterpoint to McCulloch's grandiose lyrics. It's a blown clean kind of record - cold, frosty, but something I find easy to love.
Can't wait for Ocean Rain at the Royal Albert Hall...