Monday 30 January 2023

Marcus Cope's "Got Reason" exhibition at Darren Flook

After the success of last year's 'Silver Linings' exhibition at PEER it's great that Marcus Cope has managed to serve up another great solo show so soon. The opening party at Darren Flook's gallery on Thursday 26th of Jan was jam packed with friends, fans and admirers - I felt a lot of love in the room for both the man and his work.


Darren Flook says: "To me, his paintings, which have taken years of development to reach the level where surfaces, narratives and layers of histories, both social and highly personal hold together in single works. This painting is We Tried The Fight, 2023, it depicts teenagers committing an act of revenge on car in a small coastal town held within two fists that form a graphic framework for the act. Painting may be a kind of permanence but what is seen pulls back and forth, the point of focus moves around, it’s a shifting permanence. In the show teenage energy and adult skill work together."


Above: Ben Newton (with bottle)

Above: Mark Jackson and Howard Dyke


Above: The Fun Boy 3 (feat. Kes Richardson)


Above: The El Dude Brothers reunion (Toby, Derek, Richard, and Gordon) 

Above: The incorrigible bounder Simon Ould 
Above: The artist in side profile

Above: Ms Thacker from Frieze

Above: Dashing Dom Kennedy & His Chums



Marcus Cope “Got Reason” is now on at Darren Flook, 1st Floor, 106 Great Portland St. London. Until 4th March. Wed to Sat 12 - 6pm. 

https://www.marcuscope.co.uk/ 

Darren Flook





Sunday 29 January 2023

Tribute to Tom Verlaine of Television



Tom Verlaine, whose band Television was one of the most influential to emerge from the New York punk rock scene centered on the nightclub CBGB, died on Saturday in Manhattan. He was 73. In May last year Verlaine had to pull out of what would have been a very lucurative tour of European arenas supporting Billy Idol. Tom Verlaine and Richard Meyers, later known as Richard Hell, met when they were both students at a boarding school in Delaware. After they moved to New York, they formed a band, the Neon Boys, which in 1973 evolved into Television, with Richard Lloyd on second guitar, Mr. Hell on bass and Billy Ficca on drums. Hell was replaced by Fred Smith in 1975. In 1977 Television released "Marquee Moon" which is regarded by most critics as a classic.



Robert Forster of The Go Betweens has said "Venus" by Television is the most perfect song of all time.

"Venus (Track Two, Side One of "Marquee Moon") got me on first listen and stayed my favourite track through the countless times I played the album. It was a pop song, while still containing all the fire and poetic lyricism of the band’s other numbers. It was a great rock song and a great pop song combined. Perfect, I thought. A song could be highly melodic and still challenge. Rivers of melody could be flowing and the lyric was “My senses are sharp and my hands are like gloves”. I adored the druggy drift of that, although I didn’t take drugs at the time. Even better was: “Richie said, ‘Hey man, let’s dress up like cops, think of what we could do.’ “Richie” was Richard Hell, Verlaine’s former Television bandmate and best friend in New York at the start of the 70s, when he wrote Venus. Besides the humour in the lyric, I liked the fact that Verlaine placed a real person into the song. Not picking up some “cool”-sounding name from rock history. You knew Hell had really said that to Verlaine. Real life inserted into poetry, poetry inserted into real life. I’d take that into my songwriting, too."

Have a listen to these rehersal tapes of Television filmed in 1974: here

"l was living downtown in Chinatown with this guy, Terry Ork, who worked for Andy Warhol... I had been playing guitar fora number of years. I never played with anybody. I wasn't the kind of guy who ran around playing with everyone on the planet. So, one day Teny says, "l know another guy who does what you do" and I said, "What do I do?" He said, "Well, you play guitar." So I went down to see Verlaine play. So Tom played these three songs. Instantly, watching this fellow, I just knew something was going to happen. Richard Hell was his manager, and we convinced him to learn the bass. In came Ficca, who had been a drummer in some blues band from Chicago. Terry offered us rehearsal space in his loft, and even offered to buy us the necessary equipment. It was an offer Tom couldn't refuse. So we started the group. We called ourselves GooGoo for three weeks, then we all went our separate ways to find a name. Richard Hell came up with Television. Tom liked it because TV was his initials. We were more like the Sex Pistols back then, in a way..." - Richard Lloyd

In '78 Television released "Adventure" which was also great. The band then split. Tom released several solo albums the best of which were 1984's "Cover" and 1987's "Flash Light." Many bands covered Verlaine's songs or cited him as an influence (The House of Love, Lloyd Cole & The Commotions, The Blue Aeroplanes, and Echo & The Bunnymen etc.)

Patti Smith once said: "Tom Verlaine plays guitar like a thousand bluebirds screaming."

Tom Verlaine (born Thomas Miller, December 13, 1949 – January 28, 2023) R.I.P.


First Sight by Philip Larkin

 

Lambs that learn to walk in snow
When their bleating clouds the air
Meet a vast unwelcome, know
Nothing but a sunless glare.
Newly stumbling to and fro
All they find, outside the fold,
Is a wretched width of cold.
 
As they wait beside the ewe,
Her fleeces wetly caked, there lies
Hidden round them, waiting too,
Earth’s immeasureable surprise.
They could not grasp it if they knew,
What so soon will wake and grow

Utterly unlike the snow.

Saturday 28 January 2023

The Cement Garden directed by Andrew Birkin



Andrew Birkin's alarming and gripping film "The Cement Garden", (released in 1993) was based upon a 138 page novella by Ian McEwan written in 1978. It's an interesting story that deals with adolescant confusion, death and depravity. We meet four siblings from a lower middle class family - Jack, his older sister Julie, younger sister Sue and the youngest, Tom (who indentifies as female) - are orphaned by the death of their Mum, their Dad having died earlier. In order to stay together and avoid being put into the care of the local authority, they hide their Mum's death by hiding her body in a trunk, filling it with cement and leaving it in the basement of their house.

Andrew Birkin, (born London, 1945) is the brother of the actress and singer Jane Birkin. The Cement Garden won him Germany's prestigious Golden Bear Award for best director. Ian McEwan was also impressed with Birkin's efforts. He praised the film for being "sensitive to its subject matter, generous to its instincts" and for being "emotionaly wise and very moving."


Julie (played by Charlotte Gainsbourg says to Jack (played by Andrew Robertson):
"Girls can wear jeans and cuttheir hair short and wear shirts and boots because it's ok to be a boy; for girls it's like a promotion. But for a boy to look like a girl is degrading, according to you, because secretly you belive that being a girl is degrading."


Duration: 1 Hour and 5 Minutes. Certificate: 18
Rating 4 out 5