Monday, 26 August 2019

Press Release: You Know More Than I Know exhibition at The Art Academy opening 11/09/19

Press Release For You Know More Than I Know
Image above by
Steve Gullick 
Image above by
Corin Johnson 
Image above by
James Johnston
Image above by 
Harry Pye 
Image above by
 Aleks Wojcik
Steve, Corin, James, Harry, and Aleks invite you to an exhibition featuring photography, painting, drawing and sculpture.
For more info click: here
 Here are 40 Facts about the exhibition:
1) You Know More Than I Know is a song written by John Cale, who was a founder member of The Velvet Underground. The song appeared on his album, Fear. Cale was born in Wales but lived and studied in South London.
2) Aleks Wojcik is the only artist contributing to this exhibition who is under 40. She was a Scout for 5 years and absolutely loved it. Her first time in England was when she was 13 and she had a day trip to Dover. When Aleks left Poland she moved to south London and lived above the Pineapple pub (near Lambeth tube).
3) Steve Gullick’s first resting place in London was at his friend Neil's flat which was above a chicken shop on Stockwell road in 1987. They worked as ushers at the Odeon Cinema on Haymarket.
4) Harry Pye was born in Lewisham. His first job after graduating from Art School was as a doorman at Catford Theatre during the pantomime season.
5) Aleks  Wojcik is quite  superstitious : She will never walk under the ladder, she will never open an umbrella indoors etc.
6) Harry Pye is allergic to red wine and never learned how to ride a bike. He has never been superstitious or religious . He has been described as being, “sooo London”,  “sooo sensitive”, “a dark horse”, “a hoarder”  (as someone who) argues like a lawyer” (as being like) Prince Myshkin and “(as someone who) can’t accept love”
7) When James Johnston sees a magpie he clicks his fingers as his Mum and Gran used to do it. James Johnston's Gran was a self-taught painter.
8) Harry Pye is a descendant of Sir Henry James Pye (1745–1813), who was an unpopular Poet Laureate.
9) Aleks always wanted to be a painter and she believes that it will happen one day.
10) James Johnston and Steve Gullick were in a band called '...bender'
11) Harry Pye once collaborated with the composer Francis Macdonald on an album of songs and stories. Mojo magazine gave the album 4 stars and said it was “odd but good”
12)  James Johnston started a band called Gallon Drunk and grew up near Guildford - which is famous for virtually nothing.
13) There was a time in 1992 when Harry Pye went through a phase of feeling he'd just walked into a cobweb but when he wiped his face, nothing was there.
14) James Johnston still has records but no record player.
15) Steve Gullick is from Coventry and he often wore eyeliner in his youth. His favourite John Cale album is, Fear.
16) Harry Pye often loves a handful of John Cale songs like; Been There Done That,  Faces and Names, Hallelulah and You Know More Than I Know,over and over again but there aren’t any John Cale albums he likes from beginning to end.
17) Corin Johnson saw John Cale give a talk about his life at, The Green Man festival. Corin is a fan of the music Cale made with Nick Drake.
18) Aleks Wojcik doesn’t know who John Cale is. For a while Roxette were her favourite band. Her first dance with a boy was to The Scorpions.
19) Steve Gullick is married and has three adult sons all of whom were born in East London.
20) Corin Johnson was born in Warwick very near the castle. He used to get peacocks flying into his garden.
21) Aleks loves having a garden and is proud of her tomatoes. Her biggest enemies in the garden are squirrels and snails. She likes it when is a sunny day and I water it with a hose because I can make small rainbows! 
22) Steve Gullick is still friends with his school art teachers, Chris Lock and Pete Hillier.
23) Corin Johnson’s art teacher came from Liverpool and was called Mr Skiffington.
24) Aleks misses her 8 pet rats. The names she gave them were; Marcel, Fidel, Stefan, Jack, Klex, Boris, Muffin and Shadow.
25) Steve Gullick has constant tinnitus.
26) Corin Johnson has an older sister and a younger brother.
27) James Johnston lived in a bedsit in Earl's court when he first moved to London to go to university, it had very thin walls as was a bit sleazy. He was studying philosophy at King's and was asked to leave. His favourite place in London is Lambeth North.
28) Steve Gullick has only ever painted on paper.
29) Newington Library was officially opened on Thursday 13th March 1975. The building next to the library caught fire on March 25, 2013. 100 fire-fighters were needed to put out the blaze and there was much water damage. In September 2017 Southwark Council granted the Art Academy use of the former Newington Library, Walworth Road
30) Corin Johnson’s mother had a print of Picasso’s Sylvette on the wall.
31) Harry Pye was born in Lewisham hospital and he went back there a few years ago to have his appendix out.
32) Aleks Wojcik has never had anything broken apart from her heart. Twice.
33) The last book James Johnston read was The Power and The Glory by Graham Greene
34) Aleks Wojcik knows how to make great pancakes, and a very nice apple pie. She loves spinach which she was never fed as a child.
35) Corin Johnson’s first sculptures were bought by Peter Snow who was a professor at The Slade.
36) During his art degree, Harry Pye did an artist’s placement with the sculptor and Slade professor Bruce Mclean.
37) Aleks believes all cool people smoke
38) Corin Johnson, James Johnston, and Harry Pye all contributed work to an exhibition called, Push The Boat Out which took place at The Art Academy last year. The title came from a  song James had once recorded with his band, Gallon Drunk.
39) Corin’s Mother’s family are from Newcastle upon Tyne and they used to sing Geordie songs and rhymes. He owns a dog called Charlie who likes bananas.
40) This exhibition features a photograph Aleks Wojcik took of her mother.  Aleks says her parents names are Krzysztof and Czeslawa and that they were both employed as art restorers. 

The opening party for, 'You Know More Than I Know' is on Wednesday the 11th Sept from 6pm till 9pm.
On Thursday the 12th and Friday the 13th the gallery is open from 10:30am till 6:30pm. On Sat the 15th and Sunday the 16th the gallery is open from 11am till 5pm. 
The Art Academy used to be Newington Library The address is: 155 Walworth Road S.E 17 1RS
It's 5 minutes from Elephant & Castle tube.

Tuesday, 2 July 2019

Oedipus Wrecks thirty years on



30 years ago Coppola, Scorsese and Allen came together to make 'New York Stories'. Each director contributed a mini movie about their favourite city. Curiously one actor, Paul Herman, was given a bit part in all three segments. Recently I watched New York Stories for the first time in many years. The first story (Life Lessons by Scorsese)was very good. The second story (Life Without Zoe by Coppola)was very bad. And the third story (Oedipus Wrecks by Allen) was very funny.


In her review for The New Yorker Pauline Kael suggested the best thing about Oedipus Wrecks was Julie Kavner (who shortly after the film would be cast as Marge in The Simpsons). Kael wrote, "Woody Allen has written the role that Julie Kavner deserves: she’s the cartoon Jewish woman redeemed, and she plays it superbly—she’s a Yiddishe Olive Oyl, a hopeless involuntary comic. And, even in the guise of Sheldon the lawyer in tweeds, Woody Allen recognizes her as his soul mate. The movie is a Freudian vaudeville, worked out with details such as Sheldon’s loose, improved sex life during the period of his mother’s disappearance."


I'm also a big fan of Kavner. She appears in several other Allen movies; Hannah & Her Sisters (86), Radio Days (87), Alice (90), Shadows & Fog (91), Don't Drink The Water(94), Deconstructing Harry (97)and she's brought a bit of magic to all of them. As you'd expect they both have said complimentary things about each other... 

Allen described Kavner as being "a naturally funny person", and added, " When she does a scene, you listen to her and look at her, and the prism through which it's all filtered is funny." Whilst Kavner has been quoted as saying, "Woody is a true filmmaker, one that has something to say, continually experimenting on different themes within his own film-making", adding that "anything Woody ever does, I always want to do...I don't even have to read it." 
One part of the film features a stage magician who has a box that seemingly makes people disappear - this idea is not a million miles away from a story Allen featured in his book, Side Effects published in 1977. The story is called, Kugelmass Episode. And it's about how Professor Sidney Kugelmass meets a magician called "The Great Persky" who has a cabinet that people climb into and are then sent back in time. (It's interesting to think how the time traveling aspect of the story would eventually evolve into the 2011 film, Midnight in Paris which made over 150 million dollars at the box office.)Oedipus Wrecks isn't a challenging or ground breaking movie, it's simply Woody giving people what they want.

Fans of, Curb Your Enthusiasm may be interested to see this movie as it features a cameo from a young Larry David. The pair would of course work together again when David starred in Allen's 2009 film, Whatever Works. In my opinion David's acting is good in Oedipus Wrecks and he's convincing in the part he plays. In Whatever Works I feel David is trying to do an impression of Woody but he can't quite express feelings of emotional turmoil and anxiety on screen the way that Allen can. The only actor I could imagine delivering as good a performance as the central character in Oedipus Wrecks is Gene Wilder.
Allen often says that people confuse his screen persona with the man he is in real life. Amusingly, in 1997, many years after Oedipus Wrecks was released there was a documentary made about his life called, Wild Man Blues and in one scene we see Allen introduce his 90 year old mother to his South Korean born wife Soon-Yi Previn only to hear, "Why don't you marry a nice Jewish girl?" -  sometimes life imitates Woody Allen movies. 


Oedipus Wrecks (from 'New York Stories')reviewed by Harry Pye
July 2019

Tuesday, 25 June 2019

Rage Collective at C.F.C.C.A. reviewed by Astrid Horkheimer

Rage Collective are currently five Royal College of Art graduates; Amale Freiha Khlat, Bonnie Wong, Camila Mora Scheihing, Tamara Kametani, and Yoshi Kametani. Their exhibition, '404: Resistance in the Digital Age' is on at Manchester's Centre for Chinese Contemporary Art until the 21st July. 


I was lucky enough to experience the Rage collective's film and sound installation when it first opened in May. Their unique presentation of old footage from 1989 and contemporary pieces from today is both intelligent and impressive. 1989 was of course the year the World Wide Web was born, the Berlin Wall fell and the Tiananmen Square protests happened. '404 Resistance in the Digital Age' uses events such as these as an entry point to look at how digital platforms have been adopted as the primary means of protesting.

Bonnie Wong is the member of the collective we have to thank for both researching into Hong Kong's history and supplying the footage of China. Wong also informs us that the Chinese word for 'protest' also symbolises the hand. In her opinion, protesting began as being a physical action but now in Hong Kong, everything is happening online. "physical protests no longer work and the battleground for protesting has gone digital."
Amale Freiha Khlat's contribution to the show features footage from 1989 which has been overlayed with images from video games. The artist has explained that, as a child, playing Gameboy, Tetris and Pacman was her distraction from the war in Lebanon. She believes Tetris was invented by Russia in 89 to distract it's people from the fall of Communism.
The C.F.C.C.A has been working with artists who explore relevant global issues from different international perspectives for over 30 years. It's great that they've given Rage collective a chance to shine. The gallery is based in the heart of Manchester's Northern Quarter. The gallery is free to enter Tuesday to Sunday (10am to 5pm). '404: Resistance in the Digital Age' is well worth a visit.




Text by Astrid Horkheimer June 2019

Thursday, 20 June 2019

TEN THINGS WE LOVE ABOUT HOT SAUCE PONY'S EPONYMOUS DEBUT



South London-based Hot Sauce Pony are Caroline Gilchrist (vocals), Stephen Gilchrist (bass), Anna Dodridge (drums) and Ross Davies (guitar) and after a string of acclaimed singles they've taken their raucous grungy noise and turned it into one of the albums of 2019.  John Robbins loves loads of things about it, but he's narrowed his list down to these ten...

1)THE PINK ROCK PUNK ROCK COVER
Think the Pistols' ''Never Mind The Bollocks' or the first New York Dolls album – you have to be pretty hardcore to dare to put pink on your record sleeve,  The retina scorching front cover is only reinforced by the vaguely disturbing black and white band portrait on the back, which seems to suggest the South Londoners may have gone feral  in a forest somewhere and echoes the wild eyed stares on the back of another classic LP, Captain Beefheart's 'Trout Mask Replica'.

2)WET PET SOUNDS
The band's single from last year 'What You Don't Know' is basically a marital row brought to life, and all with the band's married couple Caroline and Stephen Gilchrist shooting lines at each other.  Among a lorryload of funny lines, our favourite has to be Stephen's enraged boast: “I'm drowning your pets!”  Don't try this at home kids.


3)'HO'-DOWN SHOWDOWN
Anna Dodridge's drumming cements the whole Hot Sauce Pony sound, keeping what would otherwise be a chaotic racket (just about) on the straight and narrow,  Again, there are lots of choice moments to pick from, but the tub thumping intro to 'Ho' is as goof an example as any.

4) 'CRUMBLE'S X-RATED SIGNOFF
Caroline Gilchrist's throwaway last line to 'Crumble' -  a casual but sincere sounding “fuck you, Crumble” - never fails to make us laugh

5) CAROLINE GILCHRIST'S MYSTERIOUS LYRICS
Seemingly pieced together from snippets of subliminal musings, there's no simple way to explain what's going on, but there's no shortage of memorable lines either.

6)THAT CLASSIC STEVE ALBINI SOUND
The band have played down the role of Pixies/Nirvana knob twiddler Albini, who recorded and engineered – he never takes credit as a producer – the album at his Electrical Audio studios in Chicago.  There's no denying, however,  that the impactful, raw sound is classic Albini, a sound that will ring a pleasant bell of recognition with fans of 'Surfer Rosa and 'In Utero'.

7) THE SMALL BUT PERFECTLY FORMED 'BURNT ENDS'
It starts with a grungy warning shot of gnarly guitar and bass and it ends a mere 70 seconds or so later, ending so abruptly it can't fail to raise a smile.  Nice touch.

8) THE  CHRISTMAS HIT – SORT OF
Er, well not exactly, but 'Christmas In Prison' is an oasis of reflection and relative calm amid the squealing guitars and rhythmic thrashing going on around it,  It's got a distinctly folky flavour, with Ross Davies switching his fuzzbox for nimble finger picking while a violin weaves its way into the mix too.

9) 6/8 GREATNESS
'My Pet Hate In 6/8' certainly does what it says on the tin, with a wonderfully lopsided groove and a structure that lurches from fragility to brutality and back again pretty much without warning.
 
10) 'LOUDER' TURNS IT UP TO 11
Hot Sauce Pony's resident guitar slinger Ross Davies proves to be equally adept at evil riffing and intricate fretwork, but it's when he starts stepping on the effects pedals that his sound truly goes into orbit.  Suitably enough, the album ends   with the sound of one such climactic wigout. More like the end of a particularly rabid gig, really, rather than a carefully curated album, but we're not complaining.



'Hot Sauce Pony' by Hot Sauce Pony is out now on Brixton Hillbilly.
Text by John Robbins June 2019

Wednesday, 29 May 2019

Amazing Grace Aretha Franklin


Amazing Grace is a Sydney Pollack directed documentary of Aretha Franklin performing gospel songs at the New Temple Missionary Baptist Church in Los Angeles in 1972. Unlike every other music documentary I've ever seen, Amazing Grace is pretty much no chat and non stop music.
As most readers will already know Aretha Franklin was the undisputed queen of soul and she began singing gospel hymns as a teenager. Aretha was raised by the Reverend C.L. Franklin, who was the most famous gospel preacher of the 1950s - commanding $4,000 dollars a sermon. We see the incredibly well groomed Reverend gently mop his daughter's brow. There are also various other enjoyable cameos from the director and from Mick and Charlie from The Rolling Stones.

A double album of  Amazing Grace was released in July 1972 and was a huge hit with both critics and the public. However, the film version has only just been released as there were technical problems with what Pollack shot that have only just been sorted out. 
Aretha's gospel project was a collaboration with James Cleveland and the Southern California Community Choir.
Cleveland is a joy to watch and all the musicians and singers are simply superb. Aretha sings a mixture of both old Gospel classics (How I Got Over, Give Yourself To Jesus) and contemporary pop songs such as Marvin Gaye's Wholy Holy and James Taylor's You've Got A FriendIn my opinion you don't have to be a Christian believer to love these songs. Looking around at looks on the faces of the people in the cinema with me, I saw shock, wonderment and bliss. It's brilliant that this long lost film is now being screened. Aretha really is amazing. Don't miss out.


Text by Simone Hoffs

Monday, 8 April 2019

The Flying Pickets: "Only You"

'Only You: The Best of The Flying Pickets' was first released in 1991 on EMI. 

The 16 tracks include covers of songs originally made famous by such diverse talents as; Yazoo, Marvin Gaye, Roy Orbison, David Bowie, The Rolling Stones, and Bob Marley.

David Brett:
Ken Gregson: Ken (real name Kenneth Gregory) was born in Wolverhampton. He joined the Incubus Theatre group.
Brian Hibbard Brian was born in Ebbw Vale, Monmouthshire in Wales.
(born 25 November 1946; died 17 June 2012)
Rick Lloyd was born in London.
Red Stripe (real name: David Gittins) 
Gareth Williams.

Watch 'Da Doo Run Run' (1982) here
Watch 'Space Oddity': here 
Watch 'Psycho Killer': here
Watch 'When You're Young And In Love': here
Watch 1986 Interview with Donnie Sutherland: here.

Watch 'The Girl of My Best Friend' here:

Watch 'Whose That Girl': here.
Watch 'Only The Lonely': here



Wednesday, 27 February 2019

‘Daredevil. Know Fear Part One’ reviewed by Humphrey Fordham


In this particular always-continuing ‘Modern Age’ of comics, it seems to be a common truism that when a popular Superhero “dies” or is missing in action - he usually experiences some sort of explosive re-birth upon return. Case in point: ‘The Death Of Superman’. 

This, however, is not so in this new series of ‘Daredevil. Know Fear Part One’ written by Chip Zdarsky and drawn by Marco Checchetto. Matt Murdock’s comeback after his “death” is brilliantly empathetic and suitably wobbly. More potentially Icarus descends than Phoenix arises. 

Designed to commemorate the 20th anniversary of filmmaker Kevin Smith’s seminal re-vamp for the Marvel Knights series, the story begins like every new series of DD: deep within the gritty urban badlands of Hell’s Kitchen. Such a backdrop proves to be food for thought for Murdock’s self-rehabilitation, rather like a mixture of Frank Miller’s 1986 ‘Born Again’ series and the latter part of Ann Nocenti’s and John Romita Jr’s run a few years later. 

After weeks of intense therapy, the usually monogamous Murdock has concerns which are somewhat pressing. He painfully enters a bar, and immediately picks up an attractive tattooed nameless female who, luckily for him, isn’t a Typhoid Mary clone. She is humane enough to be totally open with him, and says he is not her type, even though his muscles rather than his blindness is her fetish. Later on, to test his radar sense, he skims and soars across the enticing rooftops as Daredevil. Both situations are Viagra-redolent. The die is cast. Game, set and match to Murdock. So far so good.

There are what appears to be the usual childhood flashback scenes weighing heavily with Catholic guilt - which have been depicted many times over the decades. However, unlike the boy scout smiling in the face of adversity persona of yore; young Murdock, interestingly enough, is evidently a disturbed youth verging on being unlikable. A new dimension is most certainly in the making.



The artwork itself is both subdued and intense. The story’s oppressively urban setting is depicted in a wholly naturalistic way with a subtle emphasis on ‘the time of day’. Daredevil’s costume is suitably redder than red. The swashbuckler from the 60s has definitely returned!

There are pieces of this debut issue’s jigsaw that will inevitably come together in the forthcoming issues, notably in the more than noticeable form of a familiar adversary. Right now, hell ain’t a bad place to be. 
Text: Humphrey Fordham Feb 2019