Thomas Dolby - UK Gigs Imminent!

Posted by: DenisA on 09 July 2007

For Thomas Dolby fans, keep your eyes peeled here.

This Autumn sure looks on the good Gig front.

Denis
Posted on: 09 July 2007 by DenisA
Thanks munch, next time I might prof reed Red Face
Posted on: 11 July 2007 by Tam
Excellent news (I had thought this might be forthcoming). I hope we get a gig up this way.

regards, Tam
Posted on: 04 August 2007 by DenisA
Here are the UK dates

Detail
I’m about to board a Large Ocean Liner for a six day trip, so it’s time to publish info about the UK dates! Here’s the current state of affairs:

*edit* These dates are updated as of July 18th, 2007

10/3 - ICA, LONDON
10/4 - CONCORDE, BRIGHTON
10/5 - ACADEMY, BRISTOL
10/7 - ACADEMY, MANCHESTER
10/8 - ACADEMY, BIRMINGHAM
10/10 - ACADEMY, ISLINGTON

10/11-10/14 - Possible DUBLIN, BELFAST, and GLASGOW dates (no promises…)

At the ICA (as I blogged previously) I’ll be doing a special performance to mark the 50th anniversary of the launch of Sputnik. I have a special place in my heart for this event as Sputnik was so evocative to me as a kid. I’ve checked with some of my friends and contemporaries and we all share this feeling. So I will be inviting some of them to join me onstage, in the guise of The Radio Science Orchestra. This is the ensemble formed by Bruce Woolley, to whom I owe a great deal because he hired me to play keyboards in his first band The Camera Club in about 1978. He is now a very accomplished Theremin player, and has a motley assortment of oddball musicians who variously comprise RSO.

Another friend, David Hoffman, has produced a feature-length documentary about Sputnik, entitled The Fever of ‘57. It debuted at the Seattle Film Festival a few weeks ago and got rave reviews. David collected rare footage of Sputnik as well as the reaction to its launch around the world. The film is fantastic and I hope it makes it into theatres this Autumn. To my delight, David offered me the footage to project as part of my stage show. This is too good to be true, so over the next couple of months Bruce and I are going to try and compile our own edit of the footage, and compose an original soundtrack that we will perform live at the ICA as the first part of the show, which I have entitled Sputnik And Beyond. The rest of the performance (and the rest of the UK tour) will be my own one-man show, drawing on The Sole Inhabitant material, plus a couple of brand new songs.

Denis
Posted on: 23 September 2007 by Tam
Well, I'm going to be at the London gig on the 10th (annoyingly there is no Glasgow date) anyone else going to be catching any of these?


regards, Tam
Posted on: 23 September 2007 by DenisA
Hi Tam,

I'm going to the ICA gig on the 3rd, should be an interesting night.

Denis
Posted on: 23 September 2007 by Tam
That one did sound interesting but it was sold out by the time I came to book (I left it as I had hoped we'd get a gig up here), but there are several other people I know going to the one on the 10th so it works out quite well. I'll be interested to hear what the ICA one is like though (with any luck he'll do that one as a DVD).

regards, Tam
Posted on: 23 September 2007 by DenisA
Tam,

I'll report back on the experience and let you know if I see any Cameras.

Denis
Posted on: 04 October 2007 by Tam
Interested to know how you found it.

Apparently there were some problems as two horn players travelling from the states were turned back at the airport owing to having the wrong visas (it seems that even if someone is only getting board and accommodation a work visa is still needed).

This after customers officials trashed his computer.


Last night I finally got round to watching the Sole Inhabitant DVD. Very enjoyable it was too.


regards, Tam
Posted on: 04 October 2007 by DenisA
Hi Tam,

Unfortunately I didn't make the gig. I had to collect my daughter from Football Training, as she had only joined the club last week. The Ladies team play in Stadium which I could only have dreampt of playing in my day. As I had been to a lot of gigs lately I couldn't be selfish. Hope you enjoy yourself at Islington next week.

Denis
Posted on: 04 November 2007 by Tam
And enjoy myself I did. In another one of my mad dashes south to catch a single concert (and increase my carbon footprint), on morning of Wednesday 10th October, I jumped on a plane down to Stansted in order to hear Thomas Dolby live.

Apologies in advance for my skills, or lack thereof, with the camera.



I should also point out, right at the start of this review, that this is going to be neither objective nor unbiased, due in large part to the fact that there is a glaring conflict of interest: Mr Dolby (not his real name) is my uncle.

As such I've been a fan of Dolby's music for as long as I can remember. I can remember, for example, dancing around with my brothers to such hits from the 1988 Aliens Ate My Buick album as Hot Sauce (and listening to it again now, and the nature of some of the lyrics, I'm a little surprised my parents didn't mind). However, he hasn't produced an album since 1994's The Gate to the Mind's Eye (well, this isn't quite true, there's been a 'best of album', some remixes and several live recordings but no new studio album). In fairness, he's been busy working at his company Beatnik, which is responsible for software in some roughly two thirds of the worlds mobile phones and is used to create the polyphonic version of the annoying Nokia ringtone. I should stress that that sound is not representative of what you hear at a Dolby concert. However, it has meant that at every family gathering for the last decade or so, he's had to put up with me asking him when he's going to record a new album.



So it was excellent news when a year or so ago he decided to return to music. He started out with a solo tour of the states, finishing up with two gigs in London. In part because one of these was at the Wireless festival (which is televised), I decided not to make the trip down. When it turned out that only 30 seconds was broadcast, and after the rave reviews of the Scala gig that preceded it, I rather wished I had. I contented myself with the rather fine DVD and CD that he made out of the American performances. However, when he was visiting Scotland with his family a year or so ago, we made the point of insisting that when he toured the UK he made it up here. He hasn't (I'm told this was because they couldn't make a date work), so there was nothing for it but a trip south.

So, after meeting up in a nearby pub, the Angelic (which has an interesting Tapas menu - Tapas fish and chips, who would have thought it?), with several of my relatives we headed in to the Carling Academy. An interesting venue, located as it is in the middle of a shopping centre. As we arrived the warm up act was still on stage, I have no note of who they were, and there doesn't seem to be on the venue website. They were not memorable though.



At a little after 9pm Tom took to the stage and played what seemed to me to be a new song: Your Karma Hit My Dogma. At least, I've never heard it before (and it's on none of the many CDs I own), but then given the way he introduced a new song later on, I'm not certain. Then it was into The Flat Earth, Europa and the Pirate Twins and One of Our Submarines (the later a slightly different mix, without much by way of bass lines, this prompted by a computer issues at a previous gig and him having decided that he thought it worked rather well this way). One of the reasons it's interesting to hear Dolby live is that the songs sound rather different than they do on the studio album, the sounds and textures he's used the way he builds them up may be rather different. It's also fascinating to watch him put the tracks together.



At this point the Hot Sauce Horns (a trumpet, trombone and sax) were brought onstage. Apparently, these were something of a last minute addition owing to visa problems with the musicians Thomas had intended to bring, though you wouldn't have guessed that to hear them play. They also integrated well to Dolby's electronic one-man rig and added a nice extra colour to the sound.

Someone (screen name heretic) on the forum on Dolby's website posted this playlist (which looks roughly correct, I wasn't keeping note):

quote:

Your Karma Hit My Dogma
The Flat Earth
Europa and the Pirate Twins
One of our Submarines

With the Horns:
What I Like Most About You Is Your Girlfriend (Cover of the Specials track)
The Key to Her Ferrari
May The Cube Be With You
My Brain is Like a Sieve
Jealous Thing Called Love? (new song)

Introduces Kevin and Matthew
I Scare Myself
She Blinded Me With Science

Thomas and the horns:
Hyperactive
Airhead

Introduces Lene Lovitch and Les Chappel
New Toy
Sway (duet with Lene)

Thomas and the Horns close with
Hot Sauce

Encore (just Thomas)


A look at the list shows a number of songs not there in the Sole Inhabitant tour. It was particularly nice to hear May the Cube Be With You, a favourite growing up, similarly Airhead. Sadly though, both here and on the Sole Inhabitant DVD the woman (presumably the eponymous airhead) saying "Oh, you speak French" in response to the line "Quad erat demonstrandum baby", which has, in my view, always been one of the funniest in the song, was absent.

The new song was rather hard to judge, I didn't quite catch all the words, and I think judgement is best reserved until it appears on the new album that Thomas is working on.

He was also joined on stage by a number of people whom he'd worked with some years back. All of them were unknown to me, but it added more colour and variety to the show. They were clearly all having fun together and that always makes for a better performance.



If I had to make a criticism it's that after a few weeks on the road, both here and in the states, you can tell from the voice, but that's inherent to this sort of live concert tour. Another might be that it would have been nice to have heard some of the material from Astronauts and Heretics, in particular Close But No Cigar. However, now he's back in the UK for a while, we'll doubtless get the chance to hear him live again before too long.

All in all, a great evening's entertainment, and something I've wanted to hear for some years now. And even if you're not related, and the name Dolby means nothing more than surround sound processors to you, his blend or electronic sounds and intelligent lyrics is well worth investigation.




regards, Tam