Day Off, Bristol
I’m in a Radisson Blu which is a good thing. Twelfth floor with spiffy decor and big windows. I have a tiny silver kettle with the word “distinction” written on it. I have two kinds of tissues and a desk and chair set painted gold. I am a modern man in my modern box and nobody can take it away from me. Not for 48 hours. We rush out to catch the high drama of English football’s final instalment. An enormous wall of a man sitting in front of me seems tense. After City win he reveals that he’d placed £1,500 on their victory. The bookies call this buying money – laying large sums on very short odds. A fucking idiot’s game. He screws up his copy of the Sunday Sun in anxiety during the match when City go 2-1 down. I could tell straight away he wasn’t watching the football. He was staring at the turning wheels of a big-screen fruit machine, sweating blood, just like the billionaire owners of the two clubs on the pitch.
Later there is a dreary curry taken somewhere on a hill before we briefly decamp to a little pub advertising a “secret garden” where a group of middle-aged men are playing gin rummy with a deck of oversized cards, lending the space a trippy quality. The bell clangs at ten fifteen and we shuffle out shortly after. The garden was locked so remains a secret. It was probably just a beer garden that was seeing someone else’s rockery on the side.
The following day I snoop about the city centre. You can see where it was bombed to bits in WWII but Bristol has enough old shit left to be interesting and charming. There are brutalist concrete structures hiding behind great Georgian edifices, roofless ruins of Bath stone churches among pretty curved brick rows, cobblestones and old nautical fittings. I find Wanted Records and flip through some vinyl. I buy some Roy Ayers, Mel Tormé and Sly Stone’s last listenable record, Small Talk.
The gig is a pub gig; dark, seamy and functional. A good-sized crowd rolls up and I do my thing. For some weird reason, when you play solo everybody you talk to afterwards asks you if you’ve enjoyed yourself. I can’t think of a response that doesn’t sound arrogant and rude. I’m not supposed to be enjoying myself – they are. I’m balancing on one toe on top of a marble trying to reach a dud lightbulb with a drumstick. If you’ve enjoyed yourself you’ve failed badly. It’s not a night out, it’s an expedition into enemy territory. If you get back unscathed, consider it a success.
We light out to Brighton at eleven. The traveling is a balm after the brief becalming. You can’t get mired in the clutches of the past when you’re constantly outrunning it.
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Hi again Justin, you compared the ‘Thorpe’ room at Kendal to the tower room London bridge…if Shelly Winters had been sat in front o me (instead o psycho sheep woman…actually come to think of it, maybe it was SW? she looked n sounded like she was drowning) i’d have been convinced i was in the boiler room POISIDON ADVENTURE…..but the venue did not detract from your performance dear boy! and don’t be so hard on your older self, one thing that made for a happy start to my 2013 was re- discovering you and discovering you can still sing…better than ever, aint bald, and don’t look like you are expecting quads! My now deceased pro-musician ex opted for the trainers n jog bot look…much to my dismay, which is prob 1 of many reasons he became Mr X! you exude presence, quality, style…looking good as ever Mr Currie! 1 thing, actually numerous things i noticed about Kendal…no pot-holes, no smashed Buckie bots, and no dog-shit…and a very hard bed in a freezing B&b BUT ALL WORTH IT TO SSE YOU! Fiona Vivers p.s my maternal great grandfather was Walter Currie (update on letter-origin of Islay)
Love this photo. If ever you need help in the bathroom (ie scrubbing your back in the shower) I’d gladly put my hand up to help.
Beware the piranha pumice ;-)
Up where?
Great night at the fleece, thoroughly enjoyed the request show even if you didn’t. If 2.5K is all it will take to get you playing in Wales, get in touch !
What a wonderful concert at The Fleece, Justin! I really enjoyed as all the audience did! Great singing and you really played all my favourite songs!! If I had known that “Kiss this thing goodbye” was on the planned setlist and had not been too distracted by the Welsh guy behind me with his loud singing and multiple requests I might have dared to request it myself… But sure, I’ll do it next time!! It was my first Del Amitri song and still haven’t listened to it live!
Thanks for a great concert!! Cheers!
You certainly gave the impression of enjoying yourself! The concert was immense – loved every minute!
There’s just no replacing a good wander round a record store is there? No feeling like watching that needle float in a warm analog sea of grooves.
Excellent photo of you!
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Oh and I thought Derek was fab too so I bought his cd today.
Hurrah!
Well I enjoyed myself – thanks!
Looking at the photo, I feel like I’m about to get squashed between your thumb and index finger. Will I see the light after it’s all done?
Day off? Day Off? Your whole fucking life is a day off.
I love you x
Imposter reverb…erb…erb…I’m the fish…ish…ish..!!! LOL!!!
we had a great time at Bristol Fleece, couldnt stop talking about the concert all the way back to Newport. wonderful was the conclusion by all.Thanks J for a GREAT night out.
Why shouldn’t you be enjoying yourself too?…Burke! Loving this diary xxx
We relinquished our bar stool to someone that we vaguely recognised in the Seven Stars, one of Bristol’s oldest pubs, last night who was enjoying a quiet drink with mates. Would have said hello, but didn’t want to intrude. So hello now.
Enjoyed an excellent Chinese in Dynasty just around the corner before the gig – highly recommended.
The Fleece itself was atmospheric and suitably sticky under foot and the fellows around us were hearty and well-met. Hello to Andy and Fran from South Wales and the two young guys in front of us who sang every word. Who says that the young have no musical taste? Not I.
Gig itself was excellent – so many memorable songs, both old and new, and a voice has that never failed in the last 15 years. God is it really that long?
Would have liked to have introduced you to Andy and Fran (aforementioned) who have enjoyed your CDs and gigs since before Twisted, but never been forward enough to say hello. Pity there was no chance this time.
Thanks Justin – a splendid evening was had by all. Enjoy the rest of the tour, and here’s to next time.
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Louise,I love Ben’s wall! This the perfect way for him to learn, as it not only viuasl, but will enable Ben to recall his surrounding while discovering something new. For, Ben has never lived within himself, but through those he loves and feels blessed to meet –this is how Ben was able to recall playing hide-and-seek with his cousin so many year ago. So, keep taking him out and coutinue writing his adventures on the wall. A little bit at a time is good. This will allow Ben to learn is his own time and way. For example, he could use the words on his wall to compose a sentence or two. Once, he begins doing this, he can claim and accept a wonderful gift from his mother: BLOOM. For, it has always been his. We are merely the safe-keepers standing gaurd at its gate.lovemattlovematt