RSS Feed     Twitter     Facebook

Posts Tagged ‘Pop and rock’

Jackson fans offered souvenir ticket

Concert promoters for Michael Jackson’s scheduled shows at O2 Arena given option of ‘specially created’ ticket instead of refund

The concert promoters for Michael Jackson’s planned shows at the O2 Arena in London today offered fans the option of a “specially created” souvenir ticket rather than a refund.

AEG Live said full refunds were available for all legitimately bought tickets, but suggested some fans of the singer, who died on Thursday, would prefer to receive a ticket “inspired and designed by Michael Jackson for the fans” and made with a “special lenticular process”. They are not able to have both.

“Since he loved his fans in life, it is incumbent upon us to treat them with the same reverence and respect after his death,” Randy Phillips, the president and chief executive of AEG Live, said.

Images of the tickets can be seen online from tomorrow at www.michaeljacksonlive.com.

AEG is reported to be facing a £300m insurance liability after the singer’s death, having to refund ticketholders as well as pay for the costs already incurred for the scheduled 50-gig This Is It tour.

Meanwhile, the Wall Street Journal reported that he had cut his father out of his will, dividing his estate among his mother, children and various charities.

With at least three wills having emerged since Jackson’s death at the age of 50, a final will is due to be submitted to the Los Angeles superior court by one of his lawyers this week.

Yesterday, a Los Angeles court granted his mother, Katherine Jackson, temporary custody of his children pending a hearing next month.

A valuation of Jackson’s estate is likely to be a lengthy process. The singer was heavily in debt, around $500m (£300m), but with assets thought to be in excess of $1bn.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Joe Jackson on Michael’s death

Father of the late Michael Jackson, Joe Jackson, remembers his son at the 2009 Black Entertainment Television awards in Los Angeles


Michael Jackson mother seeks care of children

Papers filed today in Los Angeles superior court for late pop singer’s three children

Michael Jackson’s mother is caring for the late singer’s three children and asked a court today to declare her their guardian.

The guardianship papers were filed in Los Angeles superior court today. A hearing has been set for 3 August.

Jackson died on Thursday, leaving behind three children: Michael Joseph Jackson Jr, known as Prince Michael, 12; Paris Michael Katherine Jackson, 11; and Prince Michael II, 7. The youngest son was born to a surrogate mother.

The filings show that Katherine Jackson is also petitioning to take over the children’s estate. Its value is listed as “unknown” in the filing.

The filing lists the children as living at the Jacksons’ family compound in the San Fernando valley, north-west of Los Angeles. “Minor children are currently residing with paternal grandmother,” the filing states in an explanation of why Katherine Jackson should be appointed guardian. “They have a long established relationship with paternal grandmother and are comfortable in her care.”

The filings provide no other declarations by Katherine Jackson, nor do they state whether Michael Jackson left a will.

The filings note that Deborah Rowe is the mother of the Jackson’s two eldest children, but list her whereabouts as “unknown”. An email message sent to Rowe’s attorney seeking comment wasn’t immediately returned this morning.

For Michael Jackson’s third child, nicknamed as Blanket, the filing states “none” for the mother.

Londell McMillan, the Jacksons’ attorney, said the family hasn’t heard from Rowe about custody.

“I don’t think there will be anybody who thinks that there is someone better” than Katherine Jackson to have custody, McMillan said today on NBC television. “She is a very loving host of other grandchildren.”

McMillan also said on NBC that the family was “quite clearly troubled” about the circumstances surrounding the death, given that Jackson had appeared healthy enough to be rehearsing for his upcoming concerts in London. Asked whether the family suspected foul play, McMillan said those words were “too strong an indictment”.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


In Glastonbury’s madding crowds

This afternoon’s sunshine at Glastonbury brought the crowds out in force. Before the next rainstorm sweeps in, take a look at what a real summer festival looks like


Who fired up Glastonbury?

Lily Allen was rude, Neil Young was gleeful and Dizzee Rascal was, well, dizzy. We look back on the hottest bands at Glastonbury 2009

Blog: How was Glastonbury for you?

There’s no doubt that a Friday afternoon slot at a Glastonbury recovering from a torrential rainstorm is a tough gig for Fleet Foxes. Their eponymous debut album has been rightly bathed in acclaim, but its currency is blissful, bucolic folksiness: with the best will in the world, a bespattered crowd staring glumly down the barrel of yet another weekend trudging through mud and sleeping under damp canvas is perhaps not the most receptive audience for a selection of songs about the unmitigated wonderfulness of the great outdoors.

And so it proves. In truth, it’s not really the songs’ subject matter that’s the problem so much as their subtlety. The performances are note-perfect, their harmonies gorgeous. However, the band look deeply ill-at-ease on the vast Pyramid Stage, and their music struggles to hold a crowd reeling not merely from the inclement weather but a baffling, unscheduled, interminable preceding set from Pharrel Williams’s funk-rockers N*E*R*D, who turn up late, then charmlessly refuse to vacate the stage (“you paid 200 dollars to see a full show,” shouts Williams by way of explanation, blithely overlooking the fact that the crowd contains not a single person who’s paid to see NERD at all).

In different circumstances, Fleet Foxes might sound fantastic but, White Winter Hymnal aside, they struggle to draw the audience’s attention from the more robust entertainment provided in their midst by two filth-caked men cheerfully beating each other about the head with what seem to be petrol cans filled with cider.

No such problems for Lily Allen, blessed with a catalogue of jaunty hits expertly retooled for a festival audience – “Come on you ravers!” she bellows as Smile surprisingly mutates from pop-reggae into frantic drum’n'bass, displaying an ability to project a hugely likable personality to the back of a vast audience. After Fleet Foxes’ visible unease, there’s something hugely appealing about Allen’s self-confidence. “Help me out with the second verse!” she cries midway through The Fear: this seems deeply ambitious, given the unwritten rule that festival audiences invariably only know the first three lines of any given song, but they turn out to be word-perfect.

She dedicates Fuck You to the BNP (“those bastards”) and encourages the audience to sing along with middle fingers raised, performs a fantastic cover of Britney Spears’ Womanizer – the original’s blank facade replaced by a knowing swagger – and offers an insight into the impressive modernity of her family, mentioning the presence of her grandfather stage left, then performing It’s Not Fair, a pretty blunt song about male sexual inadequacy, underlining its reference to fellatio with a quick mime.

Elsewhere on Friday evening, Lady Gaga once again demonstrates her steadfast refusal to allow gimmickry to overshadow her important musical message, shooting fireworks out of her bosoms and playing piano while standing on one leg, her posterior exposed to the elements. In fairness, it smacks less of the usual tiresome attention-seeking than a concerted effort to create a splash of clubby glamour in distinctly unglamorous environs.

Meanwhile, given the reverence in which their back catalogue is held and their spotless live reputation, the recently reformed Specials are about as close to a guaranteed success as Glastonbury gets, aided by the fact that they seem to have grown old with an impressive grace. There’s an intriguing disparity between their music’s grim subject matter and the jubilation with which it’s received: never have so many songs about nuclear war, recession and the inherent ghastliness of late-70s Coventry sounded so celebratory.

By contrast to the Specials’ sure-thing status, headliner Neil Young arrives trailing a 40-year reputation for unpredictability: he’s been on relatively crowd-pleasing form recently, but as any long-term fan will tell you, what Young has been doing recently is no guarantee as to what he’ll do next.

A certain trepidation might explain why the audience takes a while to warm to him, but as it gradually becomes apparent that he’s going to roll out the classics, the response becomes more fervent, his performances increasingly tumultuous, the endings of every song drawn out into ever-longer, ever noisier codas. By the time he performs Rockin’ In the Free World, his ornery old face has been split by a huge grin: he keeps returning to the chorus over and over again, organising the crowd into an arm-waving mass. When the song finally ends, and the crowd roars, Young grabs the microphone and roars back at them, his fists raised in triumph.

An encore of the Beatles’ A Day In the Life is even more spectacular. It concludes with Young ripping the strings off his guitar and beating it with a microphone stand, before running to the back of the stage and unexpectedly performing a vibraphone solo. It sounds slightly bathetic, arriving as it does on the heels of a blizzard of feedback that feels like the end of the world: you rather get the impression that he just doesn’t want to get offstage, and having rendered his guitar unplayable, is desperately casting about for something to do. Improbable as it may sound given his grouchy reputation, Young appears to be having a Glastonbury Moment.

Saturday dawns with Tinariwen, the cyclical grooves and call-and-response vocals of their Tuareg desert rock sounding oddly soothing as the sun continues to shine. Spinal Tap pay a rather glowing tribute to the recently departed King Of Pop – “if it ‘adn’t been for Michael Jackson, there would never ‘ave been a Spinal Tap,” offers Nigel Tufnel – and bring on Jamie Cullum, the latest in a long line of special guests keen to perform with the world’s most famous parody rock band: alas, the audience seem less impressed by the appearance of the boyish jazz pianist than they are by the arrival onstage of an inflatable model of Stonehenge.

But the real surprise of Saturday afternoon is delivered by Dizzee Rascal, who draws an unexpectedly vast crowd. You might reasonably expect his sound to chafe against the dopily benign atmosphere of Glastonbury in the sun: despite his new-found ability to lodge himself at the top of the singles chart, it still sounds abrasive. Indeed, it’s probably the most challenging music that emanates from the Pyramid Stage all weekend, but the rapper appears to have matured into a fantastic, engaging live performer, couching his stew of harsh beats and samples and bleak lyrics – “let me take you down to London city, where the attitude’s bad and the weather’s shitty,” snaps one song – in shameless crowd-pleasing, including at one juncture, an appearance of the time-honoured cry of “oggi oggi oggi”. The audience goes berserk.

The kind of person who bemoaned Jay-Z’s appearance at Glastonbury last year, and views the appearance of urban artists on the main stage as an unnecessary distraction from the festival’s true calling to promote indie and classic rock, might note that when Dizzee Rascal’s set ends, the audience goes altogether, leaving Neil Young’s sometime cohorts and Woodstock veterans Crosby Stills and Nash performing to a sparsely-populated field. Stephen Stills takes a photograph as he walks onstage, presumably in order to show friends at home what a distinctly underwhelming Glastonbury crowd looks like.

It seems probable that most of the audience has headed off in the direction of the Dance Arena, in the vain hope of seeing La Roux. Dubstep DJ Skream’s remix of her hit In For The Kill has already provided the highlight of his Friday afternoon set, but the audience for the genuine article spills so far out of the tent that, on its fringes, it’s literally impossible to see or hear anything of her performance. People stay nonetheless: if you’re looking for a symbol of her rise, here it is.

Back at the Pyramid stage, Kasabian do their spirited best, but there’s no upstaging Bruce Springsteen, even when he’s obscured on the video screens by a giant banner emblazoned with the words I LOVE SAUSAGES. You could argue that what he does is pretty hokey and histrionic – “we’re building a HOUSE made out of HOPE!” he cries at one juncture – and there seems to be a feeling that he might have peppered his set more liberally with hits, but it’s hard to deny his ability to project to the back of a vast crowd, honed as it has been by decades playing the world’s biggest venues.

He swings around his mic stand like a pole dancer, dons a Stetson for the finale of Outlaw Pete, plunges repeatedly into the audience and steals their banners – sadly, I LOVE SAUSAGES remains tantalisingly out of reach – tears telephone directories in half, inflates hot water bottles until they burst, etc etc. He opens with Joe Strummer’s old song about Glastonbury, Coma Girl and the Excitement Gang, which frankly could have been written for him.

Virtually everything else he plays has a communal air-punching quality, an air of charged triumphalism (Workin’ On A Dream manages to maintain this air even during an extended whistling solo, which is no mean feat), and the climactic numbers – Born To Run, Dancing In the Dark, Glory Days – are triple-tested and infallible. Glastonbury, understandably, eats it up

The big winners: three performers who grew in stature

La Roux

La Roux’s success was hardly a surprise, given that her single In for the Kill is currently the third biggest-selling of the year, but the size of the crowd she attracted to the Dance Arena was confirmation of how big a star Elly Jackson has become this year.

Neil Young

A genuinely remarkable, tumultuous performance from rock’s most unpredictable old-stager. Not a man famed for being easily impressed by festivals – he famously called Woodstock “shit” – Young looked moved by the crowd’s response.

Dizzee Rascal

It wasn’t a breakthrough moment as such – he’s just had two No 1 hits in a row, so he’s hardly wanting for public acceptance or attention – but nevertheless, the sheer size of the crowd and its reaction confirmed the East London rapper’s arrival as an improbable mainstream star.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Blur provide the magic moment

The best Glastonbury headliners in an age? It really, really, really did happen

Opera writer, farmer, lawyer, musician, but when they reform as Blur it’s a joy, says Laura Barton

Who: Blur

Where and when: Pyramid stage, 9.50pm, Sunday

Dress code: Damon’s going for the Mike Skinner geezer look with his gold chains and Fred Perry shirt. Alex James has finally sorted himself out with a haircut and a wash. Dave Rowntree looks like he’s taking time out from legal work to drum with his old schoolmates (funny that …). And Graham? He’s still the coolest Blur member by a few dozen miles.

What happened: And so this is what it’s come to. The man who once masterminded grand Chinese operas. Who boasted of writing compositions in the pentatonic scale. Who spent the last decade striving to be noted for his serious musicianship. And here he is, rolling around the floor screaming “woo-hoo!” over crackling cartoon punk-rock and looking like he’s having the time of his life. Tch! He should be ashamed! Did Blur not see the serious, studied musicianship of Neil Young? Can they not remember the lessons set by the Boss, that all Glastonbury headline sets must involve seven hours of sturdy rock while the crowd crosses their fingers in the hope of hearing Yawn in the USA? I mean, just who gave these guys permission to have the time of their lives?

Because, tonight, Blur are sticking their fingers up to dad-rock by falling in love all over again with the dumb art of playing pop music – and playing it loudly. Girls and Boys literally throbs with sordid energy, Song 2 sees the crowd threatening to pogo themselves off the earth’s axis, and Parklife turns every man, woman and anarcho-crustie into a cockney geeza.

It’s hit after hit after hit. From She’s So High to the Universal, via Popscene, For Tomorrow and Country House, it’s nothing short of relentless.

Some thing’s haven’t changed, of course. Dave is virtually anonymous, Graham spends the most thrilling, spinetingling moments staring at his fretboard and Alex stands on the stage amps, desperate to hog the spotlight that little bit more than his bandmates. We wouldn’t want it any other way.

But for all their energy, it’s the sad songs that work best: To the End, The Universal, This is a Low. Weirder still is the reaction to Tender, a song never really rated (at least by me) as a classic, transformed into a joyous hug-a-long that reverberates around the crowd after the first encore and the second encore.

It’s at this point – when previously dismissed tracks acquire a new life of their own – that you realise something truly magical is going on. Because tonight’s headline slot is not just about the music. It’s not even about nostalgia. It’s about friendship – and the truly heartwarming sight of two best friends throwing aside their differences and starting afresh.

It’s also the cherry on the cake of a trend that’s defined the weekend. Despite talk of the “dad-rock” lineup, Blur made sure that the real winner at this year’s Glastonbury was pop music. They weren’t alone, of course. Earlier in the weekend, La Roux packed a tent out with glitter-strewn girls who clearly wanted to be just like her. Dizzee created a Pyramid stage frenzy by unleashing a series of b-b-b-bonkers mainstream hits. And Lady Gaga showed that a 20-minute guitar solo can’t really compete with straddling a motorbike and baring your arse. Battle lines had been drawn – it was the pop scenesters who triumphed.

So sure, Young played a great gig for his fans. And Springsteen put on a fantastic show for Boss devotees. But Damon, Graham, Alex and Dave? They put on a show that touched every heart in Pilton.

Who’s watching: Seemingly everyone apart from the most obsessive Black Eyed Peas fans. And we’re all hugging each other.

High point: Damon breaking down in tears after To the End. Talented but not always entirely likable singer proves he’s human after all.

Low point: Just the one tiny flaw: Alex James’s sweat patches.

In a Tweet: Blur: the best Glastonbury headliners in an age? It really, really, really did happen.

• Read Laura Barton’s take on Blur’s performance

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Jackson doctor hires ‘bad ass’ lawyer

The doctor who was with Michael Jackson when he died has hired a notoriously aggressive lawyer and is insisting he has done nothing wrong as the singer’s death appeared to open rifts between his family and other players in his complicated life.

The lawyer, Matt Alford, described on his own website as an “intimidating bad ass” who goes about his work “with a scorched-earth mentality”, went on television with an impassioned defence of his client, Conrad Murray, underlining that he was just a witness and not a suspect.

LA police issued a brief statement after talking to Murray on Saturday, saying he had been cooperative and provided “information which will aid the investigation”.

Murray was with Jackson when he suffered a heart attack at his home in Los Angeles on Thursday. His lawyer said the doctor found Jackson in his bed with a faint pulse, but not breathing, so he immediately began administering CPR. An official postmortem failed to determine the cause of death, pending toxicology tests that could take four to six weeks.

The Jackson family hired a private pathologist to conduct a second postmortem examination over the weekend and hinted that they might use the results to press for criminal charges – something the official police investigation has ruled out for the moment.

The family questioned whether the doctor had carried out resuscitation attempts properly, pointing out that on the tape of the emergency call requesting an ambulance he was described as “pumping” Jackson on a bed, not on the floor or another hard surface.

However, the Los Angeles Times quoted a source close to the investigation as saying the police had completed an “extensive interview” on Saturday night with the doctor and that detectives found “no red flag” during discussions about the death. “There was no smoking gun,” the source told the paper.

As tributes to the star flooded in, White House adviser David Axelrod said Barack Obama had written a letter to Jackson’s family expressing his condolences.

He told NBC: “The president obviously believes that Michael Jackson was an important and magnificent performer and obviously he led a sad life in many ways as well, but his impact is undeniable.”

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Police question Jackson’s doctor

The doctor who was with Michael Jackson when he died has hired a notoriously aggressive lawyer and is insisting he has done nothing wrong as the singer’s death appeared to open rifts between his family and other players in his complicated life.

The lawyer, Matt Alford, described on his own website as an “intimidating bad ass” who goes about his work “with a scorched-earth mentality”, went on television with an impassioned defence of his client, Conrad Murray, underlining that he was just a witness and not a suspect.

The LA police issued a brief statement after talking to Murray on Saturday, saying he had been cooperative and provided “information which will aid the investigation”.

Murray was with Jackson when he suffered a heart attack at his home in Los Angeles on Thursday. An official postmortem failed to the determine the cause of death, pending toxicology tests that could take four to six weeks.

The Jackson family hired a private pathologist to conduct a second postmortem examination over the weekend and hinted that they might use the results to press for criminal charges – something the official police investigation has ruled for out for the moment.

The family questioned whether the doctor had carried out resuscitation attempts properly, pointing out that on the tape of the emergency call requesting an ambulance he was described as “pumping” Jackson on a bed, not on the floor or another hard surface.

However, the Los Angeles Times quoted a source close to the investigation as saying the police had completed an “extensive interview” on Saturday night with the doctor and that detectives found “no red flag” during discussions about the death. “There was no smoking gun,” the source told the paper.

As tributes to the star continued to flood in from across the world, the White House adviser David Axelrod said President Barack Obama had written a personal letter to Jackson’s family expressing his condolences.

He told NBC: “The president obviously believes that Michael Jackson was an important and magnificent performer and obviously he led a sad life in many ways as well, but his impact is undeniable.”

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Kasabian and Little Boots

In today’s Music Weekly at Glastonbury …

- Serge from Kasabian talks about warming up for Bruce Springsteen (they were just before him on the Pyramid stage), and he talks about his previous Glastonbury experiences: “What goes up, must come down …”

- Bruce Springsteen gets a mixed review from Alex Needham, Tim Jonze and Paul MacInnes – hard work but he pulled it back by finishing with Dancing In the Dark. Dizzee Rascal seemed to do much better with top marks all round, and Blur are much appreciated in toay’s preview.

- Rosie Swash has a brief encounter with Little Boots – she played the Guardian Lounge (among other places) and tinkled her Xylophone for us. Can you name that tune?

- And cut-up king Erol Alkan talks about his new projects, and which voice he would resurrect to perform on a Glastonbury stage. You may be surprised.

Join us tomorrow for live music from the Guardian Lounge and more – we’ll be hearing from Alex Kapranos from Franz Ferdinand and er, Lib Dem leader Nick Clegg among others…



The Boss: a colossal, unashamed ham

The Boss materialised on stage like Hercules in denim, but his blue-collar belters were more Broadway than Pyramid stage

There is a religious quality to Brucedom. Disciples tend to tell benighted heathens that all they need to do is let Springsteen into their hearts and surrender to his almighty Bossness. “You have to see him live,” they say. “All will be revealed.” Doubtless some people at the Pyramid stage on Saturday had a Damascene experience but for many others, in those parts of the field which thinned out dramatically during the elephantine, two-and-a-half hour set, the light failed to materialise.

On one level, Springsteen’s sheer passion and energy are something to behold. He gives a good impression of being the most virile 59-year-old on earth, running, soloing, hollering, and sweating the good sweat. Next to Neil Young, who would look at home sitting in a rocking chair scaring children off his lawn with blasts of feedback, he looks like Hercules in denim. Everything about him is writ large, in block capitals, underlined. And if it grabs you, if the immensity strikes you as majestic rather than faintly ludicrous, it must be thrilling stuff. Alas, this critic, despite doing his homework, putting in the hours and opening his mind to the fullest, found it fundamentally silly.

For someone acclaimed as a perceptive blue-collar bard, he’s rarely far from self-parody. Many of his songs sound like numbers from a Broadway musical about a guy who works in a garage. If you drank a shot every time he sang the words work, dream, streets, highway or refinery, you would be unconscious within an hour (less than halfway through the set). During Working on a Dream (two shots), he begins testifying like a southern preacher, or, more accurately, like a Saturday Night Live comedian doing an impersonation of James Brown, about building a house of lurve, a building of soul and a loft extension of hope.

But then it seems that the whole point of Springsteen is that he’s a colossal, unashamed, scenery-chewing ham. Born to Run is both the most preposterous song in his catalogue and the most heart-thumpingly joyous. Dancing in the Dark and Glory Days are elevated, rather than marred, by their corny use-before-1985 synth riffs. More of a problem than the garage-guy lyrics, the oh-lawdy business and Clarence “Big Man” Clemons‘s reliably ghastly sax solos, is the realisation that, despite Springsteen’s stature, he has very few songs that have entered the mass consciousness. Only the three just mentioned – along with Because the Night and Thunder Road – excite mass singing all the way to the back. Calls for Born in the USA go unanswered. Fair enough, because it’s a good song massacred by its bombastic arrangement and is now avoided by the very man who made it, but during long stretches of bar-band rock and American Land’s horrible Irish jig, one wished he would throw another bone to the agnostics.

There were the odd special moments. Springsteen paid tribute to his hero Joe Strummer, by opening the set with Coma Girl, a relatively unknown Mescaleros track that was written on the Glastonbury site itself. Apparently, his band learned how to play it on the tour bus down. Being bored, irritated and only occasionally thrilled by the man routinely called the most electrifying performer in rock is no fun at all. He is clearly a good guy with a heart as big as New Jersey, he radiates warmth and charisma and he is, on occasion, a marvellous songwriter. Who wouldn’t want to be converted on a Saturday night in Glastonbury? Unfortunately, this critic felt like someone standing in front of a magic-eye picture and being told that, if he stares long enough, he will see the Statue of Liberty but who finds, two-and-a-half hours later, that it’s still just squiggly lines.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Bring on AC/DC, I say

It was the week before Christmas and, with each fresh Bacardi, an inelegant Glasgow wine bar was looking more sophisticated than Rick’s. And then the boy informed me I was to become a grandfather. Clive Dunn in a rocking chair began singing “Grandad” in my head and suddenly I felt too old for my surroundings.

After 23 years I felt I was just beginning to get accustomed to the responsibilities of fatherhood.

Becoming more sporadic now were the furious outbursts at Celtic’s defensive ineptitude and I was beginning, occasionally, to avoid the temptation of dancing like Kraftwerk after too many at social occasions.

I was even considering single-coloured suits at M&S. Sometimes I would find myself discussing holidays, schools, soft furnishings, the oeuvre of Alexander McCall Smith for God’s sake. And then the fat lady, or in this case old Clive, began to sing.

At 46, I felt I was too young to contemplate the idea of dandling my own grandchild and so I consoled myself that if I lived in Dundee I would most probably be a great grandfather by now. For years I had endured gentle agonies when people, on encountering my “craggy” features and discovering my age, struggled to contain their surprise that it was around a decade less than they had assumed.

Nor had it helped that my hair had been seeking an exit strategy from my scalp from the age of 25. Or that my wife always looks like she’s about to do an advert for L’Oréal.

By way of riposte I had to construct a witty and quick narrative along the lines of having had a tough paper round and to accompany it with a wry smile, all faux regret. Now, for the first time as an adult, people are saying I actually seem too young to be something. It is a new and giddy experience. I have been a grandfather for a week or so now (a girl, Orlaith, all well, thank you), but am having slightly to move the goalposts on looking at the world.

Do I get my name down for the bowling club up the road? What am I to do about the AC/DC tickets for this week’s show? The last time I saw this toxic rock’n'roll fusion of Caledonian aggression and antipodean insouciance I was someone else’s grandchild. I thrilled to a rhythm section that was truly infernal and which took me down a Highway to Hell with a bountiful lady called Rosie and paved with Dirty Deeds Done Dirt Cheap, all of them the dark imaginings of a lead singer called Bon who hailed from the Angus glens.

Now as I embark on my third age I must confront a new and terrifying dilemma. Just what does a grandfather wear at a rock concert?

In years to come, will young Orlaith appreciate the fact that barely two weeks after her birth her grandfather was to be seen in jeans and a Black Sabbath T-shirt singing “Whole Lotta Rosie” with half a bottle of Jack Daniel’s rattling around inside him?

I will indeed go to Hampden Park on Tuesday night and see the heroes of my adolescence. And in mitigation perhaps I will direct my granddaughter to the work of TS Eliot.

Perhaps it was for such as I and for an occasion such as this that his J Alfred Prufrock mused:

Let us go then, you and I,
When the evening is spread out against the sky …

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


‘I like to do whatever I want’

Is it punk? Is it hip-hop? Jamie T defies categorisation with his gritty, witty vignettes of twentysomething urban life

It looks as if the evening will end with Jamie T slumped in a backstage corridor with blood spattered across his white vest. In the dressing room, his band, the Pacemakers, are exultant, cracking open cans of Kronenbourg, their debilitating hangovers of earlier in the day now vanished in the wake of a blinding gig at Northumbria University in Newcastle. But it’s the rigours of the show that have left their leader shattered: two songs in, the lights went up on the crowd and he’d thrown himself onto a sea of hands; carried to the back, he clambered up into the high-raked seating area and urged the fans there to pile down to the front. “I’ll start picking on one of you in a minute!” he warned. With his mike chord stretching back to the stage, he started a version of his Top 10 hit “Calm Down Dearest”, with the crowd of students and Geordies singing every syllable back to him, followed by a chant: “Jamie! Jamie!”

No wonder he’s spent after the gig, but then when I met him at teatime earlier in the day, he was already in the pub, drinking a pint with a sambuca to chase it and asking if we could sit outside so he could smoke. He had with him a bag of records that he’d just bought second-hand: a Fats Domino LP, the soundtrack to The Rocky Horror Show, an Iron Maiden album and more, all on vinyl. “I shouldn’t really have gone into the shop,” he admitted, pale of face but grinning, eyes flitting from side to side. Like much of what he has to say – in interview and on record – his reasoning could have been clearer, but the gist was there: “I wiped about six grand’s worth of music off my iTunes by mistake; the computer got blocked up so I tried to – this is fucking stupid – I tried to put my music on a hard drive, but I was watching that Martin Scorsese blues thing at the same time, and there’s this great bit about space in it and how someone put this Blind Willie McTell record out into the stratosphere…

“So I deleted it off my computer,” he continued, as his carrier bag blew away across the street, “but I also deleted it off my fucking hard drive… so because I don’t have a CD player, the only thing I own now is vinyl.”

It’s not easy to pin down the 23-year-old Jamie Treays. Despite critics raving about his Mercury Prize-nominated debut Panic Prevention – the Observer Music Monthly made it their second-best album of 2007 – no one was sure whether to call him a singer or a rapper, or whether the record sat within the traditions of punk or hip-hop. Starting with the bewildering rallying cry “Fucking croissant!” the tracks careered past with an energy reminiscent of the Clash, the lyrics dense with imagery spat out to conjure an impressionistic picture of young London: “Girls singing on the bus, fellas kicking up a fuss”; the reek of a crack pipe in Trafalgar Square; the splash of spilt lager and subsequent recriminations. There was even a sample of John Betjeman, reading his poem “The Cockney Amorist”.

In person, he’s mischievous, often evasive, with words whistling through his crooked gnashers. I say to him that no one knows quite what to make of him and he says, smiling: “I know, but I like that. I do whatever I want, I’m not watching anyone else, I’m not trying to fit into any box.”

Revelations that he comes from a middle-class family in suburban Wimbledon, and for a period went to the same Surrey public school as Tim Henman, might have invited scrutiny of his authenticity, but this rather misses the point that ever since the Rolling Stones emerged out of Richmond, the social mobility that has energised British pop has worked both ways. His birthright lets him mimic Bob Dylan to me one minute, the comedian Chris Morris in character as ragga singer Carlton “Killawatt” Valley the next and then sing a snatch of Queen (“I texted my mate once to say I thought they were the best pop band in the world, and he texted back: ‘That’s a funny way of coming out…’”)

Endearingly fogeyish, he says the last gig he went to was the Specials at Brixton, and “I’ve heard of this Twitter thing but I don’t really understand it. I don’t want to sound like a dick, but I don’t use the internet much”. But he’s keen to leap to the defence of his own generation, too, even if he’ll run a mile from being painted as their spokesman. “I don’t know about modern music much,” he’ll say, “but kids today are probably more like kids in Japan. From what I know, which is very little, I’ve never been there, they go out in punk rock gear and the next day they’re Teddy boys. Culture is changing – it’s put on, put off. But I don’t think there’s anything wrong with that. It’s a new generation and all you old cunts can fuck off! It doesn’t mean there aren’t still [different pop] tribes, and people grow up in the same old shit.”

Lurking on the edges of his song is a political awareness if not an agenda. “I don’t talk about politics because it’s not something I’m educated in,” he insists. “It annoys me when people start getting righteous in bands. But then again some of my favourite bands are pretty righteous. Ha ha ha!”

It took 18 months to tour Panic Prevention, of which Treays says with a puff of his cheeks: “I’m not saying it’s a hard job, because it’s not, but it does take a lot out of you and at the end there’s a bit of Vietnam veteran syndrome. I was having a hard time.” Hunkered down in the studio constructed in the shed at the bottom of the garden of the house that he now shares with his older brother – down the road from their parents – he started work on an album of acoustic songs. “I’ve got a friend who likes wearing brown cardigans and Ray-Bans and sitting around feeling depressed about his life and he introduced me to people like Ryan Adams and a lot of folk. And I hate the way people say ‘I found Dylan’ but … that’s what happened!”

Despite this, Treays soon found he was bored of this new direction and he scrapped the sessions. Instead, with his friend Ben Bones, who produced Panic Prevention and plays drums with the Pacemakers, he started piecing together the scarcely less polished but even better album that will come out in August with the title Kings & Queens. It’s preceded by an EP this month which gives a good taste of the new material, particularly the title track, “Sticks ‘n’ Stones”. Laugh-out-loud lines include: “As I travel down the track all my memories flood back/ We were running like infantry men back to your mamma’s flat/ It’s the only place but home I feel relaxed enough to crap/ I know it sounds crude, but there’s something in that.”

“It’s based on real life,” Treays says to me of the song over his second lager. “It’s the idea of: ‘I remember you smoking weed in the park and now you’re working in the city. What’s going on?’ I don’t really know any stockbrokers, but then again, when you’re writing songs, you can make things up. What annoys me is, though, is when people ask me what my songs are about. It fucks me off. Find out for yourself! I fucking wrote them – listen to them. I don’t want to sit here and talk about them.”

Pity his poor A&R man. “We rang him, man, and said: ‘We think we’ve got the single. Yeah, we think it’s really good, it’s wicked.’ We’d found all these lift versions of songs” – classics rerecorded as muzak – “and we sent him ‘Highway from Hell’ with me singing it like wosshisface from AC/DC and it was really horrible. I know he wasn’t amused. I found it fucking funny. Oh well.”

Following that evening’s gig and sweat-stained singalongs of hits past and future, it doesn’t look as if Treays is in any state to speak, but it turns out the blood on his T-shirt is simply the result of a nicked thumb, and he’s soon enough on his feet again and heading off to a student ska night. “Pressure-wise, if anything gets too much, I just run away,” he had said earlier. “I still get freaked out when people know who I am, it’s still uncomfortable- although I love performing. I can’t work it out myself!” He concludes: “As the Eagles said, just take it easy.”

• Caspar Llewellyn Smith is editor of Observer Music Monthly. Jamie T’s Sticks ‘n’ Stones EP is released on Virgin tomorrow

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds