Setlist
Born Of Frustration / Tomorrow / Sit Down / Chain Mail / Out To Get You / Not So Strong / Ring The Bells / Upside / Laid / Honest Joe / Sometimes / Gold MotherSupport
n/a - FestivalMore Information & Reviews
None.
This wasn’t maybe a good idea. I’d seen the pictures of the mud, the water and the rain. I’d been to T before and realised that it was likely to be full of pissed up people by mid afternoon. But this was James’ first go at proving to the wider populus that they are still a force to be reckoned with, that time hasn’t taken away what made them the best live band in Britain and win over a festival crowd that had just gone mental to the rather different talents of the Lostprophets.
Born Of Frustration is beset with problems. Tim’s ear mics don’t work properly throughout and he makes constant visits to the side of the stage to try and get it fixed. Andy’s equipment seems to only work sporadically and there’s a few instances of feedback on stage. But hey, would it be James without technical difficulties. Born Of Frustration sounds perfect for the wide open expanses of the festival. The front area is already a mudpit so it’s amazing people can stand let alone dance, but they do. Tomorrow gets the crowd moving faster, losing very little in the wider expanses of the fields.
Sit Down is sort of half started while Tim goes off to get his box fixed, but once Larry leads in with 1-2-3-4, the crowd go wild. There’s no point in trying to avoid the mud at this point, although the sight of people diving headfirst into it is a little disturbing. Still, it’s a good sign that James are getting this type of response after so long away.
She’s A Star sounds so much better than the previous night in Glasgow with Larry’s slide guitar restored to the mix, but Out To Get You sees Kinross become a mass of swaying arms and calms the crowd down a little.
It’s a short respite as Getting Away With It receives as warm a response as anything else in the set. New song Upside follows, which Tim comments as being the only new song you’d be likely to hear on the main stage. Whether this is true or not, you’d be pushed to hear a better one. It’s got to be a contender for a single and a song to prove to this type of audience that James still have whatever it takes, despite what the NME says.
Laid is another crowd favourite. Mud is now being thrown around by some and those trying to dance around are being either very brave or very stupid. Ring The Bells converts effortlessly from last night’s small venue to the wider stages, allowing Andy to roam around menacingly, swop places with Saul and Larry to use the stage to maximum effect. The sound has been pretty much fixed by now, much to the relief of many of us.
Sometimes sees Tim contemplate coming down into the crowd. Probably quite wisely he decides against it, but then starts to invite people on stage for the closing track Gold Mother. The sight of the stage full of fans and friends of the band should go down as one of the moments of the festival, but will probably get ignored by the music press for the more fashionable bands on the bill.
So, James came and they won. As we departed the main stage area, there was a very definite buzz and a positive response to the set, which has hopefully reminded many how good James are and converted many a new fan.
James were grown from the womb for days like these.
Terminally rubbish they may be, but you can’t deny the fact that songs like ‘Laid’ and ‘Getting Away With It (All Messed Up)’ make for prime festival merriment.
Guilty though the pleasure may be, it’s there all the same, and you can’t help but be dragged along in its summery wake.
Do we want them to release another album? Hell, no. Do we want them to play the next rain-sodden field we visit? Absolutely.
James frontman Tim Booth seemed to be bothered with sound problems but that didn’t stop him putting on a great show.
His trademark howl started off the huge hit Born of Frustration and it only took 2 bars of Sit Down to get the crowd jumping and singing to what became a huge T In The Park anthem.
After singing She’s A Star with his soaring vocals, he sang a new song Getting Away With It (All Messed Up) while reading from notes.
He did the huge crowd pleaser Ring The Bell which raised fever pitch and said “This song was inspired by the romantic notion of the desire to be struck by lightning.”
So another secret warm-up gig it is. Oran Mor is in the crypt of a converted church in one of the more salubrious suburbs of Glasgow. It’s an interesting venue. Due to its structure it has a very low roof which doesn’t help the sound and pillars in some odd places that obscure the view from many parts of the room.
Anyway, James come around 8.45 and launch into the opening bars of Born Of Frustration. It’s clear from the start that the crowd are up for it, as they always are in Glasgow, although here a bit more controlled than at the Academy earlier in the year. What’s clear from the start is that Tim is in fine form vocally, the best he’s been to date and that there are going to be sound problems. At various points in the evening Larry is almost inaudible and from the end of Frustration right through to Gold Mother, you can’t hear Andy’s trumpet at all. That said, James are no strangers to issues with sound and tonight, as they usually always do, they conquer it and more.
Tomorrow is fast, frenetic and rather wonderful. Sit Down is next and met with either rapturous cheers or groans from those who think a warm-up gig is no place for it. For me, it’s been reinvigorated this tour by the way it’s been played – with the keyboard intro but then dead straight down the middle.
She’s A Star is disappointing as Larry’s guitar appears to be completely absent from the first half of the song. Those that have heard it on the tour to date know this is one of the best moments of the set. He’s a little obscured by a pillar so I can’t see whether it’s a new arrangement or whether there’s a sound problem. But it takes the edge off the song.
Out To Get You is a known crowd favourite in these parts. It brought the house down at the Academy and it gets a similar reception tonight. Similarly Johnny Yen is superb, drawn out, improvised middle section, ever changing. It’s a song over 20 years old and still evokes more passion and excitement than any of the bands that are going to grace the stage with them tomorrow.
Upside Downside [ed. later renamed to just Upside for album release] continues to grow. Andy’s presence, when you can hear it, adds some beautiful shadow and shade to the song. The lyrics are again pretty much unchanged and it’s maybe a mystery now why Tim needs the lyric sheets for this one.
As this set is primarily a warm up for tomorrow and helping them with timing and the pacing of the set due to a typical Jamesian lack of rehearsals, it’s a bit more hit heavy than many would have liked, myself included. But it works fantastically well as a show, as would be evidenced tomorrow. Sometimes is as agitated, pulsating and exhilirating as ever, building and building to its climax of layered vocals. The band are clearly enjoying this and the crowd are lapping it up.
Gold Mother and Sound are exercises in the band demonstrating their craft, and so much of what was lost in James when Larry left. Some of us older types made constant references in the post Best Of era to the sheer dynamics of the Larry era live show and what had been lost (with no disrespect intended to Mike and Adrian). James were so unpredictable, all over the place yet so vibrant so spontaneous live in that period that we were seen as mad, but I think the evidence of the past four months have convinced everyone that the James line up we’re seeing now is pushing the envelope in a way that most bands wouldn’t even dare think about, yet alone pulling off. There’s a part in Gold Mother where it seems as if the song is about to come to a messy halt and it just soars out of nowhere.
Laid is a bit throwaway if we’re being honest, but the crowd love it to bits. Tim announces that Ring The Bells will be the last song of the set “tomorrow night”. I think I’ve said enough for you to get my opinion on this one, it feels like the song is never going to end and you never want it to as Tim dances himself into a frenzy, Andy hollers into his mic in between his trumpet burst and the guitars build and build and build. Stunning stuff.
The encore starts with the second ever performances of Traffic and Not So Strong, Tim apologising in advance if they mess them up. Traffic is meandering and beautiful with a very simple chorus that sounds like “dream a lie”, before speeding into a shotgun-style barrage of lyrics from Tim and then an extended improvised outro.
Not So Strong is the real highlight though, starting with a series of boxing analogies over a brooding and menacing backing, before opening out into a vast wide musical melange of guitar, keyboard and trumpet that works perfectly and lyrics that are pretty much fine as they are despite being work in progress. Tim says at the end “that was fucking good, wasn’t it?” Too right. Waiting for 2008 for this album is going to be a long long wait.
Getting Away With It starts and then stops, as the sound problems mean Dave can’t be heard. The song has become somewhat of an anthem for the band and it’s a real shame Mercury never took the time to promote it properly as it could have relaunched James in 2001. Tonight, it’s everything it’s always been. Tim’s dancing is frenetic and Larry and Andy add those little flourishes that make it special.
And then that’s it. A great night. James yet again overcoming technical gremlins and likely under-rehearsal to deliver a sharp and breathtaking set to a small crowd. A little hit heavy maybe, but this was more a genuine warm-up than the secret gigs of Hoxton and Nambucca, and when the band are this good, it’s a bit churlish to complain.
Pouring rain, overpriced rum and fat bastards elbowing me through the first four songs could not overshadow the greatness of the gig
None
James perform at festivals throughout the summer in Latvia, Portugal, Turkey, Greece Spain and Ireland as well as the T In The Park, Belladrum and V Festivals in the UK.
Warm-up gig for the festival season and Andy’s first back with the band since 1992.
So back to Hoxton, scene of the first comeback show only three seemingly long months ago. After making us wait an age to come on, they finally made their way through the crowd and launched into Say Something, and then promptly stopped. An inauspicious start and the version was a little ramshackle to start with but half way through kicked in. Before the next song, Tim asked if anyone could play brass and an extravagantly haired Andy Diagram climbed up on stage to start off Seven. Wandering around the rather cramped stage, it was both weird but welcoming to see Andy back. For me, James peak live was this line up around 1992 and whilst under-rehearsed and unfamiliar tonight, you could see the massive possibilities for the live sound were Andy’s comeback to be more permanent than the summer festivals.
Play Dead was wonderfully chaotic, all over the place, but yet held together, verging on freeform at points. The first new song Traffic was debuted, the sound was still patchy at this stage, but the seeds of a gorgeous yearning track are there, particularly the extended instrumental end section. Chameleon rocked like hell before Larry started the elongated building start to Born of Frustration, making a very welcome and a very stunning return to the set. Andy started to prowl the stage and the song descended into a beautiful mess. Chain Mail has taken on a new menacing edge in the way Tim forcefully pronounces the words. Out To Get You gets one of the warmest receptions of the evening, yet feels a little cramped in the more intimate surrounds of the venue than it did in the bigger halls of April.
The second brand new track, Not So Strong, starts with a pulsating intro with Tim half-speaking half-singing and then opens out into a gloriously loose and instantly endearing track. All is looking well. Upside is simply gorgeous. Andy’s dashes of trumpet just add the cherry on the very tasty cake.
The set then races to a close with a stunning medley of hits. Sometimes is as driven, as passionate and as exciting as ever. Getting Away With It builds and builds to a crescendo. Ring The Bells just keeps going and going and you never want it to end as the music gets more frenetic, more desperate. Sound makes a reappearance and doesn’t disappoint, its loose structures allowing the band to take the song wherever they choose in a way only James seem to be able.
They discard the encore ritual and launch into possibly the most beautiful rendition of any James song I think I’ve ever heard. Larry’s guitar on She’s A Star makes the hairs on my neck stand up and tears well up. Embellished with a wandering trumpet the song is an absolute showstopper. Gold Mother follows Sound down the path of unrehearsed, verging on the dividing line between genius and shambolic (and falling as ever on the right side of the line). After all this fun, Laid seems a bit of a throwaway ending, but the crowd love it and everyone goes home happy, if a little late.
James 2007 have pretty much lived up to their publicity. There might be some financial reasons for the reformation, but this is a band hellbent on playing what they want to play, and playing it their way. They are the awkward bastards that took the scenic route when the highway was set out in front of them. This reunion could have been so staid, a get the hits out for the lads style that so many of their contemporaries have gone for. But it’s not. It’s true to the spirit and legacy of James greatest moments and keeps adding to it. Roll on the album.
“It was fucking amazing”
Only played twice in the summer of 2007 – at Hoxton in June and Oran Mor in Glasgow in July but had already been discounted by the time they came to record Hey Ma.
One of our favourite unreleased songs.
Song: | Traffic |
Released: | Unreleased |
First Heard: | London Hoxton Bar And Grill, 25th June 2007 |
A semi-acoustic gig for XFM competition winners in Cloud 23 in Manchester’s Hilton Hotel.
GC – James live in the 6 Music hub. Good to have you back. Reading Jim’s tour diary it seems that the shows have gone as, well, as good as you could’ve imagined. Has it been a good tour for you?
Tim – Yeah, ecstatic really, amazing. You know, I don’t know what to say.
GC – When you made the announcement of the tour and then waited, I’m not sure if there was much of a gap between the announcement and waiting for the tickets to go on sale. Were you at all nervous, or apprehensive about what the response would be?
Tim – Yeah, the promoter booked us in those dates and we were like are you sure we can fill out the Manchester Evening News building and do all these gigs and then they sold out within two hours. We were suitably shocked I think.
GC – It shows…. Within two hours, that’s up there with Take That
[general laughter]Tim – Take This!
GC – We’ll wait and see when the Streisand tickets go on sale, whether they can beat James. We’ll have to see.
Saul – We had a huge guest list though as well.
GC – Can I just chart the history of you getting back together. Jim, Larry and you started things back up again when abouts?
Jim – We carried on playing together after the band ended in 2001. It went wonderfully well, but we had no singer. Larry and I camped outside Tim’s house and mithered him till he eventually gave in
Larry – Blackmailed him, kidnapped his kids things like that. Till he said yes.
Jim – When the injunction was lifted….
GC – And then, what, you were back and playing, did it feel right from the get-go?
Tim – Yeah, once I got my kids back, it was fine. I went up to Manchester and said lets meet in a rehearsal room, because that was always a good way for us to communicate, and in three days we had thirty songs. It was the seeds of songs that we knew were really great. Then literally in the middle of that we were told that Simon Moran had booked all these slots for us without telling us he was going to do it, without anyone warning us.
GC – You mentioned the new material and this is very much about making new music isn’t it?
Tim – Yes. We even had doubts whether it would be under the name James and Jimmy in particular didn’t want to do these gigs. We had to really persuade him. It took about a month or so for him to say OK.
GC – How did you persuade Jim? How was that done?
Tim – We took his kids, it works really well in this band.
Jim – Threats of violence. It works very well.
Tim – And we didn’t want it to be like the first thing about James is another greatest hits package and so we had to work that out with Mercury. And finally they agreed to put out a double CD of all the singles dating from the Factory stuff that we felt was really good because there were singles out there worth about £90 ‘cos you couldn’t get hold of them. We wanted to make them available to everybody.
GC – And the new songs? How have they been going down live? They sound really good.
Tim – Amazing. We’ve even been playing a new one where we were writing it every day and I’d go on with a lyric sheet and play it. It’s all going great.
GC – You mentioned the old stuff featuring on this new compilation as well and airing and playing those songs again. You played a secret gig in Manchester earlier this week and played If Things Were Perfect among other things. Have you been playing that all the while?
Tim – Dotted around gigs. It was particularly for when we played Brixton two nights running and Glasgow two nights running. We knew there’d be about 500 people that would come to both. So it’s always nice to have, like, six or seven songs different in a set each night. We changed our set every night. This is the whole thing about James. It’s not a performance as in this polished thing that bears no relevance to the audience you’re facing each night. The idea is to make a set that reflects our mood, reflects the audience and the gig will change very much each night as we go on.
GC – What about that audience? You all look very well. I imagine some of the audience members are filling out their vintage t – shirts delightfully and some are seeing you live for the first time as well. Did you get a sense of that mix going on?
Larry – Very much.
Tim – Parents are bringing their kids along. There were loads of youngsters around which was really sweet. It really spanned the ages. I saw a 70 year old guy in there and I saw lots of young kids.
GC – Are you still technically an unsigned band at the moment?
Tim – We are technically the biggest unsigned band in Britain at the moment. We’re in the middle of a deal at the moment. This is what happened when James broke. When we first had Sit Down, we were selling out G-Mex, you know, five, six thousand seater venues, yet we were unsigned in the country. So it’s a nice full circle for us.
GC – That means lots of festival shows this summer and then recording and releasing a record early next year. Is that the plan?
Tim – Yeah, that’s the basic plan.
GC – Has the music industry changed in the last 24 years, would you say?
Tim – Oh yeah.
GC – For the better or for the worse do you reckon?
Tim – It really varies. The first seven years of James we got one play on daytime radio. We were seen as too leftfield to be played on radio. And then we broke and Happy Mondays, Stone Roses and REM and suddenly we almost became the mainstream and you couldn’t get us off the radio and it just really varies. Now Radio 1 have this policy of not playing anything over the age of 24 year olds. You know, attention span of a goldfish. And like, now it’s much more niched and James have never fitted in niches, which has always been tricky.
Jim – There’s lots of differences. The fact that you don’t just need a major label now. People can get music through the internet. Everything’s changed a lot and of course there’s a lot more radio… [inaudible due to Jim’s microphone not working]
GC – The only thing you’re facing Jim is some sort of mike sabotage. The bass player’s been silenced.
Tim – The only thing is though, I also say is, I don’t think music’s declined. A couple of years ago was one of the best years for music I’ve ever heard with Martha Wainwright’s album, Antony Johnson’s, Micah P Hinson, Arcade Fire. There’s some great music around.
GC – There’s too much, there’s too much, but keep it coming everybody. It’s great to have you back.
Geoff Buckley has invested in a new Avolites Pearl Expert console, which had its first outing on the recent James UK tour.
This saw the original band, headed by charismatic front man Tim Booth, perform live for the first time in nearly 6 years – to great critical and popular acclaim.
Geoff – also known as “Tea-and-Toast” on tour – has worked for the band for the last 18 years. They hit the road again after a substantial break, with a new energy and vitality, plus a new album due out later in the year. These initial gigs were to test the water and interest in their loyal fan-base, which has very much proved to be still bubbling for them even after this substantial break.
Geoff has owned Avolites desks of one sort or another for some years and has always been a big fan of the brand, and particularly a massive Pearl fan, right from the outset. When this came up, and he was asked onboard, he seized it as a great opportunity to test out the new Pearl Expert console, “It was the perfect tool for this type of show” he declares, deciding to put his money where his mouth was!
He received no specific creative brief for the James show, other than the fact that – as with all artists on the road today – they expected a bigger and better production than that of the last tour at the end of 1990s!
While news of the reunion reverberated with great enthusiasm among James fans around the country, tuning into this vibe, Buckley reverted to his first three golden rules for successful medium-sized stage lighting design, “Does it fit in the gig, in the truck and in the budget!”.
The tour was playing a full variety of venues – from Academies to the Manchester Evening News Arena – which was completely sold out! With practicality to the fore, he designed a modular rig that could simply be added to for the larger shows – in theory without too much reprogramming.
As has always been the case with James, the set list changed dramatically each night, so the best way to run the shows was to busk them – again absolutely ideal circumstances for the Pearl Expert.
“I think the split roller is pure genius” says Geoff “it’s great for ‘mixing and matching’.” He maximises the facility by running all his moving lights on one side of the roller and all the generics on the other.
The rest of the lighting equipment was supplied by Neg Earth. The standard version of the rig consisted of two 40ft trusses (increasing to 3 at 60ft for the arenas). The moving lights were a mix of High End Systems X-Spots (16 in the standard set up and 30 for the arenas) spread over all trusses, and these were also used as projectors onto an upstage cyc.
There were 14 Atomic strobes, used strategically on a couple of numbers, plus PARs, plus 20 Source Four profiles and 20 Source Four Parnels with the new ChromaQ Plus scrollers offering 20 different colours.
Then there were 8 “Fag-Pods”, consisting of 9-lite DWEs with an atomic strobe in the middle and a large scroller covering the whole fixture.
All of this was controlled by the Pearl Expert. Geoff is extremely pleased with his investment, commenting, “It’s a Pearl, therefore I knew it would be a good experience”.
A singles compilation album released to coincide with the band’s comeback tour 18 years ago.
Single disc version:
Ring The Bells / Sometimes / How Was It For You / Come Home / Destiny Calling / Laid / Born Of Frustration / Chameleon / I Know What I’m Here For / Seven / Just Like Fred Astaire / Waltzing Along / Say Something / Who Are You? / Lose Control / Sound / Getting Away With It (All Messed Up) / Tomorrow / She’s A Star / Sit Down
Two disc version:
What’s The World / Folklore / Fire So Close / If Things Were Perfect / Hymn From A Village / Chain Mail / So Many Ways / What For / Ya Ho / Johnny Yen / Sit Down / Come Home / How Was It For You? / Lose Control / Sound / Born Of Frustration / Ring The Bells / Seven / Sometimes / Laid / Jam J / Say Something / She’s A Star / Tomorrow / Waltzing Along / Destiny Calling / Runaground / I Know What I’m Here For / Just Like Fred Astaire / We’re Going To Miss You / Getting Away With It (All Messed Up) / Who Are You? / Chameleon
Release Name: | Fresh As A Daisy – The Singles |
Artist Name: | James |
Release Date: | 30th April 2007 |
Format: | Compilation Album |
Catalogue: | 173184-6 (double) |
BBC Manchester Review: Fresh As A Daisy – The Singles is a new Best Of compilation released in April 2007 to coincide with the reformation of James and their first live shows for five and a half years. The album comes into two CD formats. The single disc version, aimed at supermarkets and casual buyers, features 20 of the band’s biggest hits including two new songs Who Are You? and Chameleon. The two disc version features all James singles in chronological order, plus all the tracks from the two debut singles Jimone and James II. Four tracks – What’s The World, Fire So Close, If Things Were Perfect and Chain Mail – are released on cd in studio version form for the very first time. There is also a companion DVD version.
So, back in the room where it all started, where Tim and Jim first met over a nicked pint of beer, James return to their roots with a gig for competition winners from Amazon and XFM, plus the more eagle-eyed members of the official and oneofthethree messageboards. Following a farcical attempt by the venue at handling entry to the gig with a series of conflicting directions, odd ticket arrangements and then what was effectively a scrum from one of the bars to get down a narrow staircase, everyone managed to get in, although the stage time of 9.40 was significantly later than most had expected. To be honest, I think Jim, Gavan and Paul climbed through windows because it was the safest and quickest way in.
From the start, it was clear that this was going to be no normal James set. Well not normal in the context of what you’d expect from this type of gig. Intended as a counter to the explosion of adoration, celebration and the sheer enormity of the reaction to the MEN gig on Saturday, this was the other side of James. The main set did not contain a single one of the band’s Top 40 singles.
Opening with Seven wasn’t really an indicator of things to come. But following it, Tim asked the crowd who had been at the Arena on Saturday. Predictably most of the crowd had, and he warned them this wouldn’t be a repeat, it would be very different. And it was. And to be fair, the crowd in general were more than knowledgeable and attentive enough to deal with the set. I think, in fact, hearing some of the views afterwards, they’d have been disappointed to have got anything else.
Before launching into Heavens, Tim told the story of how him and Jim first met when Jim, Gavan and Paul were watching Tim dance whilst nicking his beer and the subsequent confrontation which led to an invite for Tim to join their band as a dancer. Heavens is wonderful. It should really have been a single in my opinion.
Chain Mail is met with cheers of applause. And rightly so. Again, in the more confined surroundings, it doesn’t get lost in the ether. It’s tight and loose at the same time, there’s a passion for the song driven through the performance. Tim watches Larry’s guitar work at one point, seemingly as much in awe as the rest of us. The crowd love it, Tim explains the background as being inspired the works of a writer whose name escapes me now, but who also inspired Patti Smith’s Birdland and Kate Bush’s Running Up That Hill. Riders gets pretty much the same reception, cheers of recognition, the song builds and builds until it stops dead and starts again and builds back to a climax. Shorn of the big rigs of the arena, the lights are simple, but add more to the songs this way in this venue. The sound quality is excellent too given fears expressed by some regular attendees at gigs here.
Don’t Wait That Long is beautiful, the highlight being Larry’s guitar solo which just kicks in and takes the song off in another direction. Really Hard follows suit, Tim’s words in the singles collection about these babies having deeper qualities than the singles ringing true. Larry again steals the show, but you feel that if you took one component out of this sextet, the whole thing would lose so much. There’s a tighter closer-knit feel to James than I’ve seen for a very very long time and this set is dynamic proof of that. Whilst for one moment, I can’t imagine things are as wonderfully harmonious as they have been painted, it’s clear that relationship issues have been ironed out and shouldn’t plague the band in the way they did since Larry left in 1996.
Top Of The World makes its first appearance of the tour and is as poignant and beautiful as it’s ever been. Saul’s violin is haunting as it soars and cuts its way through the spindly bass and guitar. Hair on the back of the neck on end time.
Tim introduces Stripmining as about the 1985 Mexican earthquake disaster. It’s sung with a passion as if it was about Tim’s own loved ones. The great beauty of playing these fragile songs in such intimate surroundings is that they don’t get lost in the way they would in the big, bad arenas. You can’t deny the power, the passion and the sheer fucking hell impact of Saturday night and what James can achieve in that environment. Yet here, they prove they have no peers at this either. You have to hope the new future incarnation of James is going to manage the balance between the two, big celebration gigs and small intimate low-key gigs like this, because with the right approach, you can do both.
If Things Were Perfect is the deepest delve back into the midst of time. Seeming oddly described by Tim as “Moby’s favourite song”, it sounds miles away from the quiet, fragile piece that graced the James II EP, but the delivery of the vocals is almost like a mantra, forcing the listener’s attention not to wander. According to Tim, Jim’s eldest son says “they don’t write songs like Things Were Perfect anymore”. True I guess.
Jumping forward nearly two decades, Fine comes next. It had been a shambles whenever the 2001 line-up tried to play it live, but sounds great now. Five-O has always been a live favourite of mine and doesn’t disappoint here again. Once more, there’s a point where Tim faces Larry, watches then starts dancing and gets lost in his own movement.
The set closes with two new songs. Chameleon grows again, tighter, fitter and faster than on the record. It’s nice to see quite a bit of the audience joining in with this one, that the new material is connecting as much as the old. The set closes with Upside Downside [ed. later renamed to just Upside for album release]. The reaction to it is mental. Whether it’s the “right” type of song to be a future single is debatable, but it promises to continue the family line of great James tracks that the band are promising us. On the evidence of Upside, the future would seem very certain.
Coming back for the encore, the band placate the few dissenters in the crowd with a singalong rendition of Getting Away With It. It’s amazing how this song has burrowed its way into the consciousness of James fans. For me, as with Sit Down, it captured the essence of James at a specific point of time. All Messed Up was a pretty fair description of where the band was at that time, but yet so much positivity came out of it.
Out To Get You then pretty much steals the show. This song connects the band with its audience more than any other except Sit Down. The band leave for a second time before coming back and running through a fast and furious Laid.
So, on the way out, the response was generally extremely positive. One James diehard said “best set ever” and the consensus appeared to be strong. I’d had a couple stood near me leave half way through though in disgust at the lack of hits. This is the James dilemma. You get the feeling they’d be happy to play these types of sets to this size of audience forever as long as they could continue to play live and write new material. Yet, as already stated, there is something undeniable about what happened on Saturday night at the Arena. You couldn’t have got away with last night in there though. It’s a fine line, a very thin tightrope, yet you can get across to the other side. It’s going to be a very interesting ride in the next 12 months. At the end of day, enjoy them while they’re here.
Back in 1982 in the basement of the Manchester University Student Union building, a young drama student was dancing wildly trying to forget a girl who had recently left him. Unbeknown to the wiry student, on the very same night, three local rough types had employed their usual tactic of getting into the student disco without paying. With no cash in their pockets but with spirit in their hearts, they did what any self-respecting young men would do in the same situation; they stole the drinks of the dancing masses. Fate dictated that the pint in the hand of one of the three, belonged to the aforementioned student, who briefly challenged them on his return to where he had left his drink. After inevitably quickly backing down, he was intrigued to learn that they had been watching him dance and I dare say even more amazed when they asked him to go along to a rehearsal of their fledgling band. A telephone number was scrawled on his hand, sparse arrangements were made and thus a legend was born.
Jim Glennie was on of those Moss Side miscreants that night and Tim Booth the dancing student. Call it luck, call it chance, in fact call it whatever you like, this meeting was just as life changing as a certain John Maher (later to become Johnny Marr) knocking on the door of 384 Kings Road, Stretford, Manchester, the home of some bloke called Steven Morrissey.
Roll the clocks forward twenty-five years and Jim Glennie and Tim Booth are back in the same basement room. A quarter of a century has taken the two of them around the world, has seen them as close as brothers and as far apart as the bitterest of rivals and yet, here they are, back where it all began. There have been many other defining moments in the history of the band we now know as James, like the day Jim and his old mucker, Paul employed Larry Gott as a guitar teacher and the day they came across Saul playing a one-note solo in a Manchester cafe bar. However, the basement meeting has to be the most important, being the start of something so beautiful that it aches.
So, what brings these two middle-aged men back to that same dingy University basement in the spring of 2007? The answer is, of course, that the date marks the release of a career defining singles collection. A bunch of songs that have meant so much, to so many people over so many years, have been placed together and titled Fresh As A Daisy. So, what do James do on this seminal night? Anybody who has followed the history of the band will know the answer already. They play just six of the songs from the new collection, two of these being more than twenty years old and one having been written for inclusion on Fresh As A Daisy. It could be said that they have no need to play the hits tonight, given that they have managed to air nineteen of their singles on the sold-out tour, which ended triumphantly in Manchester on Saturday. They are also playing in front of a room full of James devotees, all desperate to be challenged and eager to concentrate. However, it is still a brave move but boy does it work.
Seven opens the show, just as it did on their return to us in March following their (almost) six-year hiatus. The song positively soars and the singalong begins. Heavens follows and still shows today what it showed fifteen years ago, that it could have been a massive single. We are then treated to a run of songs that I never believed I would see on the same setlist.
Really Hard is simply beauty itself and the aching refrain ‘I am dying to begin again’ never fails to bring a lump to my throat. Chain Mail has become a live favourite again and seems to have even more energy tonight, if that is in any way possible. Tim introduces Riders in the usual manner and the words “This song is about a dream” are enough for the knowledgable audience to know the treat which is to follow. As old song follows old song, it becomes increasingly clear that this night is going to be the most special night of my life to date. We get a gorgeous Top of The World, for the first time on the tour and the reintroduction of Stripmining after its airing at the first warm-up gig. We can barely believe it when we get a frenetic performance of If Things Were Perfect and the live favourite that is Five-O.
We are treated once more to the delights of Chameleon which is growing in stature with every outing and the band seem to really love playing this song. And then there is Upside Downside [ed. later renamed to just Upside for album release]. At this point I stop writing, just for a moment and close my eyes. Has a new song ever been such an instant classic after just a handful of live appearances? Maybe Ring The Bells back in 1990? Possibly. This song should be heard by every living human who has a heart and when Tim sings “Hear my echo”, I feel like the world is going to come off its axis.
Inevitably, we get a couple of hits in the encore. Getting Away With It, which I described as sexy on a website forum earlier in the day, reinforces its position as a hip-swaying beast of a song. Don’t Wait That Long is welcome at any party and whilst not yet at its 1991 peak as a live song, it still sits comfortably in the set. And then James close with a monster, the pogo-inducing, headswim that is Laid. Yes, it has been played at every gig, bar Nambucca but oh, what a song. You could dress it up in women’s clothes and line its eyes and call it pretty and it would still know it was a hit of epic proportions. And then they are gone. Away to the whirl of promotion for the record. Hopefully, away to a studio to consign Upside Downside et al to DAT for our later listening pleasure. In love, in fear, in hate, in tears, I hope they are not strangers for long.
So, how was it for Tim and Jim to be back in that basement twenty-five years on? If it was half as good as it was for those lucky enough to be there, I imagine that mine may not be the only night where sleep just seems too tedious for words.
After playing to a 20 odd thousand capacity home crowd at the MEN Arena on Saturday night, it was a far more intimate gathering for an exclusive James’ gig – hosted by Radio Station Xfm on Monday.
Built into the labyrinthine bowels of Manchester University’s Academy Building, Academy 4, or ‘Club Academy’ holds a crowd of approximately 300 people. With a low ceiling, an audience floor space containing several large pillars and a backstage area the size of a telephone box, it’s typically the venue for local unsigned acts playing to friends or those international groups awaiting UK Music Industry recognition that seldom ever eventuates. Rarely does it play host to a band with a following so devoted that even the group’s lead singer describes them as Trainspotters.
James may have taken a long hiatus, but this successful comeback tour seems to prove that the break has done nothing but build the band to cult status. The way people stood throughout the performance – heads bowed and arms raised; men dancing alongside their mates and everybody singing along – the atmosphere at this small concert was more like witnessing a Gospel service in America’s South.
The band sounded great. Fact. But for me (who isn’t a James obsessive) it was to be a night of slight disappointment. Vocalist Tim Booth promised not to repeat the performance from Saturday night, which is fair enough, but with the words “Tonight isn’t a party, it’s an inner celebration – these are songs that never got the airing we think they deserved” I must admit, my heart sank.
What followed was a set of songs that were, dare I say it.. a tad indulgent. Though the crowd lapped it up, songs such as ‘Strip Mining’ – written in response to a 1985 Mexican Earthquake – seemed almost cringeworthy in its outdated earnestness.
Booth has a gorgeous voice and he sings in a very distinctive, emotive style. He’s a great frontman, sharing stories with the crowd and jigging around the stage like Michael Stipe during the wailing guitar solos, but singing tunes that rhyme ‘Angel’s wings’ with ‘Magic Things’ however, (Seven – which failed to reach the top 40 in 1992) is far from showcasing the band’s best material.
Thankfully, the inclusion of new tracks towards the end of the set proved that the band still have the ability to produce great, contemporary singles. ‘Chameleon’ showed the band’s musicality has not stagnated and ‘Upside Downside’ [ed. later renamed to just Upside for album release] is a pop song that displays both great depth and a catchy chorus.
Finally for the encore, one of the band’s more successful singles reared its head. ‘Getting Away with It (All Messed Up)’ was by far the best tune on the night and the rest of the audience seemed to agree. This song was a single because it was great, not great because it was a single. “Daniel drinks his weight, Drinks like Richard Burton, Dances like John Travolta”… Brilliant. Please Sir, can I have some More?