Last night I went to Nottingham Playhouse to see a fantastic performance by Graeae Theatre Company. Ten of us went. Their marketing co-ordinator is my friends’ daughter, and we wanted to support her.
The show is called Reasons to be Cheerful, and as I write this, they will be warming up for their last performance of the run.
It’s a play based on Ian Dury and the Blockhead’s music.
There’s a story threaded through, set back in the late 70s. There’s a family coping with terminal illness, a desperate desire to get tickets to see Ian Dury and the Blockheads, and some late teen rites of passage.
Graeae Theatre Company are an inclusive theatre company, and this means some of their performers could be described as disabled.
Suspend your preconceptions about musicals. Suspend your preconceptions about what might be meant by disability.
This show is a message for our times, in spite of being set in the 70s. Politically we are all facing the same problems. And Ian Dury’s music, and the themes of the story resonate just as powerfully in 2012.
There is more to this show than a great back catalogue of songs threaded through a story, imaginatively and enthusiastically performed. The choreography incorporates signing. A character in the corner appears to be on an old payphone, but he’s describing the action on stage for those who can’t see it. There’s a screen that’s used for projections of the script as it’s spoken and some brilliantly chosen images and photographs to enhance the action. The main vocalist has Ian Dury’s jacket slung over the back of his wheelchair, given to him by the Blockheads in recognition of what they are all doing for Ian’s legacy.
Seeing the lyrics on screen makes you realise what an exceptional poet and wordsmith Ian Dury was. Every word, every little phrase expresses multiple meanings and conjures up images and connections. A rap artist, an artist, a performer, a poet, a vocalist. It’s very powerful. When I spoke to one of the signers after the show, he said the most difficult thing is to express the nuances and innuendoes – it’s a challenge to sign such clever and intricate wordplay.
They have played Hackney Empire, with the Blockheads in the front row. ‘Oi, Oi’.
It’s a celebration and a tribute. A rediscovery and an affirmation of everything he stood for.
‘Spasticus Autisticus’ was banned from airplay by the BBC, fearful of offending. It’s an anthem and a battle cry. Maybe they just didn’t want something so powerful broadcast far and wide. As the band on stage perform it, there’s a montage of images on the screen, all terrifyingly familiar from my youth. Collection boxes for cripples. Models of a boy in callipers, holding a collecting box for your loose change. They used to be on every counter and outside the high street shops with a conscience. And then you look at the people on stage, and you recall Ian Dury, white silk scarf, black leather glove, silver topped cane. Part teddy boy, part dandy, part Sweet Gene Vincent. Razorblade earring and slicked back dark curly hair. A beautiful, stylish and charismatic man by any standards.
I met him twice. Once backstage at an Edgar Broughton Band gig in London in 1973, and later at Les Prior’s funeral in Heptonstall. Les was in Alberto y los trios Paranoias, and died too soon of cancer. The Albertos were on Stiff records and they became close.
I saw Ian Dury and the Blockheads in 1977, when I went to see the Stiff tour in Rochdale. We weren’t encouraged to dance in the aisles back then, but last night I got my chance to leap up and dance for the joy of it all to Sex and Drugs and Rock ‘n’ Roll. It’s been a long wait. I felt privileged to see Ian back in ’77 and I feel privileged to have seen the show last night.
Showing posts with label Ian Dury and the Blockheads. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ian Dury and the Blockheads. Show all posts
Saturday, 7 April 2012
Sunday, 19 February 2012
Reasons to be Cheerful, Part 2
I posted something quoting this Ian Dury song a couple of weeks ago, and it set me thinking about the man and his music.
Back in I think 1972, I became friends with the Edgar Broughton Band and their wives, girlfriends, roadies and families.
They had done a live on a lorry gig in Redcar, and had been arrested. A good friend and founder member of On the 8th Day in Manchester, Brian Livingstone, was their solicitor. He had a reputation as a sympathetic and radical man of law. At the turn of the year 1971 to 1972 he was invited to spend new year with the band and their friends and families at East Down Manor, just outside Barnstaple. The band were recording an album there. I'd had a bad time after leaving school. I had to take a gap year before I went to University (too young at 17), and I had found myself a very unsuitable drug dealing boyfriend. I needed a bit of rescuing, so Brian took me to Devon to meet the Broughtons, along with a couple of other friends from Manchester. It was a wonderful time. Gina Broughton and I became good friends, bonding over the coincidence of having gone to rival boarding schools in Matlock ( you thought this was going to be about rock 'n' roll didn't you?). There were other similarities in our respective fates at this stage of our lives, and we established a friendship which lasted over a number of years. I used to go and stay with them when they moved back to London. I took Captain Beefheart's tour manager round to meet them, taking a copy of their album back to Beefheart.
In the summer of 1972 they were appearing at the Rainbow, and as already mentioned, I had been part of a dance troupe in Manchester. I was asked to open the show as a broken down ballerina, and then myself and another dancer were at each side of the stage dancing for the rest of the set. I remember it being filmed, but have no idea if any footage still exists.
Backstage I was introduced to a friend of theirs, who had polio. It was Ian Dury.
Some years later I was at the funeral of the amazing Les Prior, star of 8th Day and Alberto y los Trios Paranoias. He had lost his battle with cancer. His funeral was held in Heptonstall, where he had lived. He is buried in the same churchyard as Syvia Plath. It was a snowy January day. And Ian Dury came to pay his respects.
The Albertos were on Stiff records, a family of extremely talented and rather eccentric artists. I saw Ian Dury and the Blockheads on the Stiff tour when it hit Rochdale, sometime between these two meetings. Wreckless Eric was on the bill too.
It all seemed so unremarkable at the time.Of course I don't mean that the characters and music were unremarkable, but that I took these adventures and opportunities for granted.
Back in I think 1972, I became friends with the Edgar Broughton Band and their wives, girlfriends, roadies and families.
They had done a live on a lorry gig in Redcar, and had been arrested. A good friend and founder member of On the 8th Day in Manchester, Brian Livingstone, was their solicitor. He had a reputation as a sympathetic and radical man of law. At the turn of the year 1971 to 1972 he was invited to spend new year with the band and their friends and families at East Down Manor, just outside Barnstaple. The band were recording an album there. I'd had a bad time after leaving school. I had to take a gap year before I went to University (too young at 17), and I had found myself a very unsuitable drug dealing boyfriend. I needed a bit of rescuing, so Brian took me to Devon to meet the Broughtons, along with a couple of other friends from Manchester. It was a wonderful time. Gina Broughton and I became good friends, bonding over the coincidence of having gone to rival boarding schools in Matlock ( you thought this was going to be about rock 'n' roll didn't you?). There were other similarities in our respective fates at this stage of our lives, and we established a friendship which lasted over a number of years. I used to go and stay with them when they moved back to London. I took Captain Beefheart's tour manager round to meet them, taking a copy of their album back to Beefheart.
In the summer of 1972 they were appearing at the Rainbow, and as already mentioned, I had been part of a dance troupe in Manchester. I was asked to open the show as a broken down ballerina, and then myself and another dancer were at each side of the stage dancing for the rest of the set. I remember it being filmed, but have no idea if any footage still exists.
Backstage I was introduced to a friend of theirs, who had polio. It was Ian Dury.
Some years later I was at the funeral of the amazing Les Prior, star of 8th Day and Alberto y los Trios Paranoias. He had lost his battle with cancer. His funeral was held in Heptonstall, where he had lived. He is buried in the same churchyard as Syvia Plath. It was a snowy January day. And Ian Dury came to pay his respects.
The Albertos were on Stiff records, a family of extremely talented and rather eccentric artists. I saw Ian Dury and the Blockheads on the Stiff tour when it hit Rochdale, sometime between these two meetings. Wreckless Eric was on the bill too.
It all seemed so unremarkable at the time.Of course I don't mean that the characters and music were unremarkable, but that I took these adventures and opportunities for granted.
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