The first UK gig
So somewhere near the start of the beginning…
… we pull our VW round the side of the Jericho Tavern in Oxford, and there’s already some fucker there – a van totally blocking the entire carpark.
Green milk-truck… with about a THOUSAND amps and speaker cabs and flight-cases and what-not in the back, being unloaded by these… people.
My first thought was… “Jesus… they’ve got really rough roadies in the UK”, and I felt this massive sense of dread… a bit like my first day of school, when the first thing I saw was this massive sign over the school gate saying “NO SPAZMOS”. Oh fuck I though.
They looked a bit like the band off this:
But they were the roadies.
God knows what the actual band were like. Unimaginable. We parked outside and went into the bar-bit downstairs and got a beer. Sat around the table, not really saying a whole lot. One pint, 4 straws.
(Time passes)
After a while one of roadies from earlier appears… looks around… I was all “Oh shit, he’s coming over here”.
Comes over, crouches down at our table… and with creamily devastating English charm says “We’ve gone over time a bit – you’re probably not going to get a sound-check. It’s all going to be a bit rock and roll I’m afraid” – with a smile that could knock birds out of trees, and we’re all “yea, ok, sure – no worries”
It was this guy:
Not an actual roadie apparently.
Turns out that none of them were. These people. The band:
Shake Appeal – probably biggest band in Oxford at the time; definitely the loudest. By the time we went on, the place was absolutely rammed to the ceiling with misfits and fringe-dwellers – mixtures of man-alive. Earth People. It was a LOT better than any of the London gigs I’d been to in the previous year. It fucking went off man. Bedlam.
…
Tips for Newbies?
Never do your first gig (with a new-band-config) in front of a big audience. There are a load of technical issues that you only find out about by experience. Me? It was not turning up with an extension chord. I played the entire gig standing by the back wall of the stage facing sideways towards the drum-kit, because that’s all the 1m long cable that came with the echo machine would allow.
I think we did a good gig. No idea. We probably didn’t – it definitely didn’t matter. People were leaning all over the stage and yelling stuff and spilling their beer. Hellish crusties and gorgeous Oxford chicks and wall-eyed-maniacs, and the whole place just fucking… shouting. 8-deep at the bar and people falling out of windows. It rocked.
I slept in the car that night… or like didn’t sleep… head a-buzzing and a-blaze with having just blundered into something utterly amazing – far better and far worse than I could possibly have imagined.
Hello, I found this site when surfing for pictures of Acid Daze after pondering Dr & The Medics. I bought a Carlsbro Cobra 90 bass combo off eBay from a chap out in Buckinghamshire about 11 years ago when I lived in Oxford, and it has “The Wild Poppies” written on the side in what looks like Tippex. Any relation?
Wowza I was at that gig! My first Oxford gig at age 18. It was the Local Support newspaper first birthday gig put on by Dave Newton (who went on to manage Ride and released a single by you on jericho records) and Peter Whitehead. Total mayhem caused by Shake Appeal’s loyal fans ‘The Dog Squad’. Blew me away and committed me to local music for life! I still have your demo tape from those times and bought your reissue compilation.
Yea – that will be Alan’s 🙂
Dr & The Medics were utterly fuckin hilarious at Acid Daze. Great band. I think they might have had a Dr & The Medics shop at the top of Portobello Rd in London where they sold all sorts of post-goth/grebo crushed velvet clothes etc, and Wild Poppy Cassettes. And people actually bought them, lol.
Alan lives about 10 mins up the coast from me in NZ… alive and well and quite the horticulturist etc.
I’ve started playing again (after a 25 year hiatus). My new band has 3 songs 🙂