Gaz
is on the road again! Punky folky storytelling wandering minstrel and “live”
favourite (indeed, currently my most-seen “live” act going away) Gaz Brookfield
initially held back from his usual seemingly perpetual programme of gigging
following the easing of Covid restrictions last July, poking his head above the
parapet for a select few appearances (“My Dad’s” Festival and his own Christmas
Fleece gathering, my gigs 1,187 and 1,204). But then, following the release of
his new album “Idiomatic” at the arse end of 2021, the man announced a New Year tour
with his 2 besties and analogues, Jake Martin and Ben Sydes. Mainly centring
around weekend dates, our only shot initially seemed to be the Southampton 1865
gig, so Logan and I booked for this. However, following the postponement of the
Dean Wareham gig (for about the 9th time!), the clashing Swindon Vic
date opened up, so I booked for that too (no Logan as it’s 18+; boo!).
Part
2 came 13 days later, one night after the Chameleons’ Fleece gig (gig. 1,207, hence
the gap in the count!), as I trundled up the hill, meeting tonight’s promoter
Ed Dyer, plus Rich and Ady in The Vic for some pre-gig rock chat. We were
however well ensconced in the old back room for B Sydes opening set at 8.30,
Ben running through the same set as Southampton, this time with extra added
piss-taking from the side-stage Jake after a lyrical slip-up during the
otherwise excellent opener “Crutches”, and of course the ubiquitous penance
shots! Ben however fired back at his tour buddy whilst exhorting the audience
to sing the “woah-oh” fill during “This Was My City Once”; “it’s easy, it’s like
one of Jake’s songs!”, prompting an entertaining bitchy exchange between the
two, which continued throughout both their sets! The Placebo-esque, tense and
taut “Still In Saigon”, featuring an impressively held final note, ended
another fine opening set – he’s up The Tuppenny in April; so are we!
“I said to Gaz and Sydes I might be the drunk one tonight, but then Sydes got a little bolshy!” announced Jake at the outset of his set, continuing the pseudo-feud, but then admitting, “I’ve proved by mocking my best friends that I’m a bit of a twat!” So following a raucously sung-along “For Fuck’s Sake Jake” (during which he nonetheless changed the hook to, “Sydes, you’re an asshole!”), the boys all made peace with an onstage hug-in. Again, motormouth Jake’s set followed the same lines as Southampton, with the Frank Turner-esque closer “We Sing The Words All Wrong” my favourite of his well-received set.
This bumped us up to 10 and an amply full room; Gaz took the stage to little fanfare, quietly strumming the opening bars of “Pantomime” whilst prowling the stage and eyeballing the chatty crowd until they paid attention! Gaz also followed the same set structure as a couple of weeks ago, but from the outset you could tell there was something extra tonight… “You have no fucking idea how much it means to be here!” he announced at the end of the opener, “let’s not dwell on it or I’ll get all teary…” his comments making us realise that he was playing with the spirit of his old friend Dave Young, former proprietor of this very venue and sadly lost to us last year, looking over his shoulder. That being the case, he did his old friend full justice with a splendidly delivered set. The early “Gunner Haines” was again amazing; “Monochrome” was again preceded by his sad lyric-forgetting lament, although this time his phone served as prompter (“I’m actually playing “Doom”!”), and the excellent “Godless Man” was referred to as, “one from my wedding set!”
A mid-set break to raid Jake’s fish supper (“I love Mr. Cod! I used to live around the corner from [there]…”) preceded a loudly accompanied “Under The Table”, then, after checking in on the crowd (“how we all doing? Thought I’d check… I’ve been rabbiting on… scruffy cunt with a guitar, what’s he doing…”), the rest of the set passed in an inclusive and raucous singalong blur, my highlight being a splendid “Lostfolk”. Jake and Ben again joined him onstage for the communal manifesto of “Aged Revolt” and the three-handed drinking song “Great Minds Drink Alike”, Gaz leaving us with a heartfelt comment of, “it means even more [than usual] to be playing here… this is my fucking town!” to appreciative roars.
That wasn’t it, however, as Ed took the stage and persuaded Gaz to come out for another couple of clearly unplanned numbers. Gaz, seemingly reluctant at first, ran through a savagely bolshy “Be The Bigger Man” and an emotionally charged “West Country Song”, murmuring between songs, “this is the first time I’ve been back [to The Vic] since…” his voice then tailing off. By the end he was an emotional mess, heading off backstage in short order, with both Ben and Ed following to check on him, after a performance which would have done his old friend proud.
Not much else to say on that… I left pretty promptly too, as my knees were aching, home at 11.30 in reflective mood. Strange how a performer can play the exact same set over 2 shows, but for the mood and atmosphere of those shows to be completely different. One relaxed and full of good humour, the next a poignant tribute to an old friend. Either way, 2 splendid nights out from Gaz and his besties. Here’s to Dave Young… and the Original Trilogy!
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