It’s
Swindon Shuffle time again! This multi-venue, multi-night charity-focussed
local event, conceived by my old mate Rich Craven as Swindon’s answer to the Camden
Crawl and shining a light on the musical talent available in the ‘don, had been
shamefully absent from my Dance Card for 3 years for a variety of reasons, but
mainly due to the demise of my local faves Raze*Rebuild. With nothing else
local really grabbing me by the ‘nads and depositing me on the dancefloor like
Si’s blue-collar popcore rockers did, I allowed myself to drift a bit from the
goings-on within my very own town. However, with a smattering of intriguing
local acts that I’d been meaning to check out, plus a couple of old faves and
one surprising Big Name (well, at least for The Shuffle!) on this year’s bill,
it felt time to end my self-imposed absence…
Starting with the (musical) opening night on Thursday, and a run of checkable-outable acts on at the upstairs room of The Hop. I drove up the hill early doors and parked in Britannia Place behind the venue, greeting Linda, manning the merch, and popping upstairs to join the early comers for openers AQABA, on at 7.15. A veteran Bath unit, this lot, I have to confess I didn’t hear too many of the supposed Death Cab/ National US alt-rock influences in their sound, but what I did hear was intriguing; some taut, brooding rhythms on opener “Girls On Glass”, then some more upbeat keyboard embellished jangly 70’s new wave and more understated melancholic pop on subsequent tracks. A couple of bum notes too, but to be expected from this evening’s opening act, which I cut short as I needed to return a call from my brother.
Stepped back in via a chat with old mate Andy, for SEBASTIAN AND ME, next up. This was immediately much more the ticket, and right in my 90’s alt-rock wheelhouse; “Keep On Running” was an anthemic slice of Dinosaur/ Superchunk laze alt-rock, and “Love Conquers All” featured some nice choral harmonies from this Devizes lot, along with some more sweeping and widescreen middle 8 guitar work. “I Wanted You To Know”, apparently a recent release, recalled early Teenage Fanclub in its chunky ascending guitar pattern and mid-song harmony break, and overall this was a heartfelt emotive rock set played with attention, purpose and no shortage of talent, culminating in the band exhorting a mate to add the “la la la”s on closer “Typical Boy”. Good stuff from a band whose overall sonic template would have seen them fitting right in with TFC, Posies and even my faves Gigolo Aunts in that 90’s post-grunge era…
Took
a break in the pub downstairs, running into old Posse mate Rog, in town for the
Shuffle! Popped back upstairs for the more popular SOBER SUNDAYS; a younger
band (clearly with plenty of mates in the crowd!), I liked the slow-burn,
heartfelt number about the singer’s older brother, which ultimately proved an
outlier to their usual oeuvre of bouncy, taut, tempo-changing almost funk based
pop with occasional pastoral interludes and brief nods to knockabout Britpop
indie, over which the chunky, kinetic vocalist largely rapped his delivery. As
I said, a popular set and clearly good at what they do, but not my cup of
eclecticism.
Another downstairs break, another old friend; this time my fellow R*R fan Paul, whom I’d not seen for a few years! Catch-up time then, and a quick chat with the Sebastian And Me gents (which earned me a free CD. Yay!) before we joined the busiest crowd of the night for the 9.30 arrival of BETTER HEAVEN… this was so busy, in fact, that much of the young BH massive had stepped up onto the front of the Hop’s admittedly wide stage. This however created a two-pronged issue for us folks at the back; not only did this render seeing the band nigh-on impossible, but it also mucked with the sound, the onstage bodies absorbing the speaker volume and bouncing it back onstage. Given that BH’s material was largely wispy female fronted Summery yet understated ethereal dreampop, this gave the impression that their songs might just drift away on the slightest of breezes! So ultimately a frustrating experience overall, with their most memorable number being the closer, a real outlier with an almost scuzzy glam metal base. Bizarre!
And
so to tonight’s headliners WILD ISLES. I’d heard good reports of their
billowing and windswept post grunge/ alt-country sound, which made them sound
like a toned-down Manchester Orchestra, and the lead singer’s fulsome beard
only added to that impression! However, opener “Stand In Silence” was much more
upbeat than expected, giving very Therapy? vibes in its rambunctious riff-heavy
alt-rock groove. Things became mellower thereafter; “What Would You Say” was a
blend of slow-burn QOTSA desert/ stoner rock with strumalong interludes and a
big crashing crescendo; a “couple of emo things” were suitably brooding and
plaintive; and “Fake Hearts” was a more upbeat Gaslight Anthem-esque heartland
blue-collar bluesy rocker. Closer “Still Dreaming” featured a big singalong
choral hook and a riff-heavy climax, before Shuffle impresario Ed persuaded the
band back out for an impromptu (and moshpit-inducing) encore, rounded off with
thanks from the singer, “for staying out way past my bedtime!” Mine too, but
chats and catch-ups with Paj and Avril saw me getting home about half 11, after
a fine Shuffle Day 1 won out, for me, by Sebastian And Me!
Shuffle Friday, as per last night at The Hop, was a one-venue night, Vic all the way for me; a slightly later drive up the hill meant the usual Vic car park was already full, with cars circulating aimlessly, but luckily, I grabbed the last space in the car park behind the Roaring Donkey. These parking shenanigans however meant that I was a bit late for ANYMINUTENO’s opening set at 7.45. Featuring mate Pete “Monkey” backing up his punk rock scenester brother Jeeves, I was expecting this to be a bit of a buzzsaw UK82-alike hardcore racket. Happily I was proven wrong from the outset; this was strong-armed robust street urchin punk rock, undoubtedly, but with more leanings towards the class-struggle polemics of the likes of Stiff Little Fingers, The Men They Couldn’t Hang, and the ‘No’s most obvious comparison, New Model Army (a bit on the nose, this comp, but hey, if I hear clip-clops, I’m saying “horse”…). Much more coherent and actually melodic than I expected too, particularly when Jeeves hit the frantic strumalong acoustic guitar button, this was a fine opening set, Jeeves announcing at the end, “there’s loads of other bands coming up; [however] I can’t remember them as I’ve got a fish head,” his bandmate retorting with, “and a mouse cock…!”
Loads
of folks already out – Paul, Andy, Dubs, Paj and Avril, and old punk mate Olly
(it’s crusty old punk rocker night, of course Olly is out!) – so a bit of rock chat
whiled away the time between bands. A particularly fun catch up too with old
You Are Here drummer Alan, who I’d shamefully not recognised putting in a shift
with Jeeves’ lot, which then pitched us up for Essex folk trio WILSWOOD BUOYS,
next up. Taking the noise down a notch, their set was however still shot
through with a similar protest punk attitude (viz. the early emotive anti-war
protest “Crisis”) alongside their rootsier hoedown material, with an early
“This Must Be Love” a bouncy hoedown with a stream-of-consciousness gabbled vocal.
“Change”’s speeded-up ending required some intricate picking from guitarist
Joe, and “Save The Queen”, referring to a drinking game of the same name, was a
punkier closer recalling (again, clip-clops = horse) Frank Turner.
It then got noisier again (and a damn sight busier!), with a double-whammy of younger local punk/ emo types. NOT WARRIORS, on at 9.15, had seemingly brought their families and all their college mates with them, and played it hard and riff-heavy from the outset, with an early “Escape Redefined” taking me right back to those 2000’s Finch/ All American Rejects/ Taking Back Sundays times. A well-observed cover of Modern Baseball’s excellent “Your Graduation” was an early highlight for me (also sounding a bit scuzzy and Midway Still-esque to these old ears!), a punk rock cover of the Scooby Doo theme had me texting my absent son Logan (a headache precluding his planned attendance tonight – lightweight!), and a frantic, noisy yet occasionally quite hooky and anthemic set closed out with a robust fist-pumping “King Of The Playground”. A chat with a passing Pete Monkey, before VIDUALS kept the volume up at 11 and the pace setting to Eiffel Tower High with some hard-hitting emo punk popcore. A bit more haphazard and thrashier than the previous lot, surprisingly, Swindon’s self-confessed “laziest power trio” nonetheless ploughed gamely through their technically beset (the singer repeatedly cussing out his pedal board) yet well-received heavy beat/ power-chord driven set, the hooky chorus of closer “Coming Back To You” the best of a Greatest Hits set from an apparently long if unproductive career…
This took us to 10.30 and the place surprisingly thinned out a little (past Not Warriors’ college mates’ bedtimes, maybe?!), but I was joined by Beef and his mate Jas for tonight’s headliners, and possibly one of the best-known bands to play The Shuffle. “I’m so fucking excited I might wet myself!” exclaimed Shuffle Head Honcho Ed by way of introduction to PET NEEDS; I’d last seen this Essex rabble delivering an impressive set in support of Frank Turner in Bristol in 2022 (gig 1,248), and since then they’d put together a valid case to be the Mega City Four of current times, packing in their day jobs and embracing a DIY “have van, will travel and gig” ethos which has seen their profile raise accordingly. Quite a coup for The Shuffle, then (I suspect my gig friend Joanne, who’d toured Europe with them as merch person and was standing next to me, front and centre, at this point, had a hand in their inclusion...), and the boys proceeded to justify their status from the outset, tearing the Shuffle a new one with a high-octane, high energy set of rabble rousing yet hooky emo punk/ old school punk noise. “We’ve got a brand-new van – it’s been cleaned inside and out and is the slippiest thing ever!” announced frontman Johnny Marriott, prior to a riotous Buzzcocks-esque “Fingernails”; “Separations” was a super-speedy gabbling punk rock luge ride with Johnny’s in-your-face vocal a feature; and “Tracey Emin’s Bed” an old school proto punk romper stomper. Throughout, Johnny demonstrated he’d learned much at the feet of the archetypal audience mass communicator Frank, calling for singalongs, jumpalongs and general involvement and inclusion from the unusually engaged Swindon crowd. The “ba ba ba” singalong of “Toothpaste” and emotive and anthemic “Get On The Roof” rounded off a breathless and incendiary set from a band I really need to get to see more often…
Caught my breath, grabbed a list and got it signed by the buoyant band, and bade farewell to all and sundry after a very enjoyable punk rock Shuffle Friday, home after midnight via the kebab van for a (very) late tea. I still got up for my usual Saturday morning gym sesh, however, but the after effects of said workout and the Friday night, plus the Red Sox on TV, persuaded me to give the Saturday Shuffle a miss altogether. Now who’s the lightweight…? Nonetheless, after a family Sunday lunch gathering, I was up for some Sunday afternoon acoustic shenanigans at the Beehive, this time with son Logan and his boyfriend Kristian in tow. We hit the surprisingly quiet ‘hive at 4.30, the Tuppenny apparently having run late so shunting back acts here by 15 minutes. We grabbed a drink and a seat in the side room, then, for a listening brief for Beehive openers TRIAMI at 4.45. A trio of 3 female voices and one lightly strummed acoustic guitar, their stock in trade was warm, wistful and wispy pastoral strumalongs with layered and intertwining choral harmonies, very angelic in expression and delivery, and formed a pleasant backdrop to our quiet chatting (didn’t want to disturb any listeners…).
Ben Sydes and Evie arrived midway through after apparently travelling 5 ½ hours (!) from Pembrokeshire for his B SYDES set; we offered our services as a backing chorus if he wanted to compete with the opening act but thankfully he declined, announcing to a fuller crowd when he kicked off his set at 5.30, “[those were] lovely vibes from the previous act – and now I’m going to ruin all of that!” After a suitably pacey and impassioned new opening number, “Crutches” was its’ usual rollicking self, Logan and I chanting “knees! Knees!” at the suitable juncture. Another newie, the slow-burn descending chorus of a stark “Full Of Screams” preceded a singalong to “This Was My City Once”, and another newie, the sombre and introspective self-examination of “Character Arc” was followed by the discordant emo of “Self-Sabotage”, before an ebullient Ben rounded off an energetic and intriguing (with some splendid new material on show) half hour with another rousing choral singalong to “The Desperate Dance”. Fine work, young man!