If you go HERE, you can also read an in depth feature on the Levellers, which includes an interview with frontman Mark Chadwick, where he talks about the past, present and future of the group. The 2 CD/DVD 'Greatest Hits' album is out now, and is available HERE.
Showing posts with label Mark Chadwick. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mark Chadwick. Show all posts
Saturday, 4 April 2015
PHOTOGRAPHY: photos of the Levellers (Bristol, November 2014)
If you go HERE, you can also read an in depth feature on the Levellers, which includes an interview with frontman Mark Chadwick, where he talks about the past, present and future of the group. The 2 CD/DVD 'Greatest Hits' album is out now, and is available HERE.
Saturday, 14 March 2015
REVIEW: 'A Curious Life' film screening and Levellers acoustic set - 07/03/2015, The Forum, Bath
Directed by former Chumbawamba member Dunstan Bruce, it's more of an insight into the lives of the group rather than a comprehensive document of their career. Billed as a tale of "25 years of subsidised dysfunctionality", a lot of the band's story is told by the film's central character, the band's bassist/artist/archivist Jeremy Cunningham. As well as a highly entertaining appearance from Jeremy's proud parents, the film goes shopping with the bassist for vintage whiskey, and takes a look at their early years as part of the anarcho punk scene, their gradual self-built success, the impact of their classic 1991 album 'Levelling The Land', their triumphs at Glastonbury, as well as the band's notoriously volatile relationship with the music press. We also get a look inside The Metway, an old factory in Brighton that the band made into their own self-contained headquarters and recording space, plus a moving scene featuring guitarist Simon Friend starting a new life living on a barge following the deaths of his partner Jude and his mother.
Following a humourous and enlightening audience Q and A session with Bruce and Jeremy, the band appear for an acoustic set. Well, acoustic except for the presence of Matt Savage's keyboards. They begin with perfect renditions of 'The Boatman' and 'The Road', which inspire sections of the audience to leave their seats and dance their way to the front, to the displeasure of the limited amount of venue staff. Everyone is told to go back to their seats until later, and as it turns out, for good reason.
The pace is upped and the energy increased for a resonant blast through 'Barrel Of A Gun', which immediately tempts the crowd from their seats once again. And after a superb 'Truth Is', a riotous 'Dirty Davey' and an equally charged 'Burford Stomp', a large percentage of the seats are empty as the front of the stage fills up. The band reappear for a hugely enjoyable encore of 'Carry Me', before the frantic energy of 'What You Know''s climax sends the assembled crowd into a frenzy one last time.
Not the first memorable night I've enjoyed with the Levellers, and probably not the last, but certainly a different experience, and a rewarding one that really demonstrated their versatility.
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