Saturday 21st April Iggy Pop
+ The Zones
Iggy Pop. Yoof of
today know him as a weird longhair advertising car insurance. Yoof of 1969 in Detroit knew him as the king
(or clown) of some form of shock rock. Youth of Liverpool in 1979 knew of him as a legend, a myth Nowadays you can find out anything about anyone at a couple of clicks (this whole blog is just youtube searching). But in the 1970s it was a different story.
Legends were truly legendary: their exploits
passed down by word of mouth. I knew
someone who saw Jimi Hendrix at the Isle of Wight, someone else who saw the
Doors at the Roundhouse - in a different age.
Iggy Pop was a legend. A legend
gone bad (all part of the legend), Drink, drugs, loose cars and fast
women. And then, courtesy of David
Bowie, there was a comeback. Bowie even
played keyboards for Iggy on some gigs.
These were the days of The Idiot and Lust for Life. Iggy at the top of
his game. And in April 1979 Iggy toured
the UK and played these two gigs at
Eric's. It was a week after my 18th birthday. And it was the day of his 32nd birthday.
I went to both sets.
With a different group of friends each time. Unfortunately for them they went the wrong
way round. For the afternoon gig I was
with a younger group of punks who knew the legend and wanted to see him bleed
all over the stage. He didn't. He had an incredibly tight band (with real
live Ex Pistol, Glen Matlock on bass), played an absolute blinder of a set. The young punks were disappointed. I loved it.
Later on that evening I was back with some college mates who
liked proper music. Not to worry, I
thought, Iggy has the tightest band.
He'll play a blinder. However, at
some point between the two sets Iggy and band had partaken of something to help
them relax. After all it was his 32nd
birthday. Possibly just alcohol,
possibly not. They were no longer the
tight little band. They were way out
there. Iggy was bleeding all over the stage
(this is Eric's stage, 18 inches high, two foot away from where we're
standing). It was manic, it was crazy,
it was all over the shop. It was that
(godbless) bomb going off on stage right there in front of us. My muso friends weren't impressed. I loved it.
To get to and from the stage at Eric's performers had to
walk from the dressing room through the mob before stepping up onto the stage.
Can you imagine how that went?
I touched Iggy Pop's jacket.
Everyone
was there. Everyone that was in a band in Liverpool in 1979, yer Teardrops, Bunnymen,
Pink Military, Naughty Lumps, Wylie, Pete Burns, 051. Quite a lot of people
suffered from that aloofness that plagued the Liverpool scene at that time.
From some (the Zoo circle) there was a collective air of "whatever".
Their loss. Iggy was incredible.
Frank Cottrell Boyce was at Eric's that night and spoke about it on Desert Island Discs. It's about twenty minutes in. He wrote about it in the Guardian too. Frank was wrong. Iggy was electrifying. Frank Cottrell Boyce has a guilty secret. He was a Dead Trout.
Support was the Zones. Don't remember them at all.
I was there to.
ReplyDeletei was there at the matinee,,,my mates and i started the birthday chant
ReplyDeleteis the thumbnail for the new values audio taken at the matinee by any chance as that could be me in the white shirt ?
ReplyDelete