Here are some photos from the final Bedlam Six concert.
It was a wild night. At some point I will attempt to write something constructive about the whirlwind of emotions but, for now, a collection of un-annotated images will have to do.
Writer · Performer · Label Director
Tags: bedlam six, live
Tags: bedlam six, music video, video
Since the Bedlam Six and I are splitting up soon we felt it was time to lift the veil on what it’s actually like backstage at most venues.
Strangely, this video has became a sort of musical version of Sartre’s Huis Clos, depicting a musicians’ hell or purgatory.
It felt like an apt subject matter for a band on the brink of split.
The song is track one of our final album Down Down Down, available here.
Tags: bedlam six, down down down, music, release
Though it’s been on extended soft-release (such an unfortunate term) since our Spring European tour, the latest (and indeed final) studio album by The Bedlam Six is now on general release, available from iTunes, Amazon, Spotify and all the other billions of tedious money-sucking online platforms.
If you like reading press releases there’s one on the label website.
In case you didn’t know, this is our parting gift for we are disbanding at the end of the month. Here is a blog about why we are splitting.
I doubt any of us will experience a decade like that again.
There will be two launch parties: the first at The Lexington in London on Saturday 17th September, the second at The Ruby Lounge in Manchester on Friday 30th September.
The rest is silence.
Tags: bedlam six
Between the idea
And the reality
Between the motion
And the act
Falls the Shadow
[…]
This is the way the world ends
Not with a bang but a whimper.
– Extract from The Hollow Men by T. S. Eliot (1925)
Ten years, performing in eleven countries, releasing four LPs, two EPs and one DVD.
The Bedlam Six: 2006-2016.
Matthew Cleghorn and I formed what would later turn into the Bedlams in Autumn 2006. I’d just got back from the USA where I’d been studying at the University Of Pennsylvania. I didn’t have a clue what to do with my life at this point. I’d fallen out of love with academia, tired of over-analysing Shakespearean anachronisms (what can only be described as a bizarre species of intellectual circle-jerking). We met at The Thirsty Scholar in Manchester where we were both on the bill as solo artists. We went back to my apartment afterwards, got drunk and formed a folk duo that soon became a four-piece with Al Baker and Jay Bardsley, then a five piece with Ali Cegielka, then Tom Cleghorn took over from Al and we went ROCK, then it got jazzy with Nick Walters on trumpet who then disappeared so we went back to folk-rock with Hannah Miller and Georgina Leach from The Moulettes as our string section; then Dan Watkins took over bass duties from Jay and Gus Fairbairn joined on sax; then Fran Lydiatt joined on accordion and piano; then Gus left to focus on poetry and Biff Roxby stepped up with his formidable trombone skills to establish what will be remembered as the definitive line-up (if we are remembered at all). That was 2009. Three years just to get the line-up right. We could certainly never be accused of rushing things.
One thing sticks out from the early folk days with Cleg: I said to him one night “the band probably won’t go anywhere but at least we’ll have a good time” to which he replied “if you don’t think this will go anywhere I’m leaving right now.” So we made a proper go of it. All or nothing. From one angle it looks like a decade long gap in my CV. From another they’re the best years of my life.
With hindsight I think we reached our peak in 2011-2012. Journalists were calling us words like “next big thing” and “hotly tipped”, lots of unhelpful hype. But this was also the time when things changed. Ali got ill and it became six men in a tour van versus one woman in a hospital bed. We left her behind and I lost one of my closest friends. I’ve not seen her in three years and I suspect we’ll never repair our friendship, though I hope we do, some day. It is without doubt the profoundest regret of my entire life. But the band kept going, we knew we were being ruthless but it was this way or no way at all. We buried whatever remorse we felt and forged on. Our tour schedules were full of promise, what we often lacked in audience numbers we made up for in potential. But there’s no future in being new. We stupidly decided to play the PR game and all that happened was a loss of momentum. By the time Youth (what I think is our best album) came out in 2014 (recorded over a year before) the press wasn’t interested and airplay was minimal. Dennis our European booking agent told us the response from promoters was a near-universal “they were exciting once but now they’re old news”. He stood by us though, he’s been a good friend.
Potential is a funny thing. Journalists love it, they can take credit for it in a way they can’t for more established facts. They were right about us, we had lost our potential… but Potential Energy turns to Kinetic Energy (it’s one of the few bits of science I remember from school). Unburdened by the weight of expectation we toured and toured, building a word-of-mouth following all across Europe. Our last tour had the smallest media coverage but the largest attendance. But it’s too late, we all felt it in our bones, a shifting of priorities and a deep deep ache. Even our van has fallen to pieces from overuse, we had to abandon it in Belgium. We got together the other day and decided that we’d rather quit while we’re still vaguely ahead than gradually disintegrate or suffer death by a thousand cuts.
What no one tells you is that a big part of keeping a band going is trying to honour the promises you make to your younger self. I was twenty three when I started down this road. I have very little in common with that man, even my cells are different. You start out thinking you know what you want but not being able to really express it: “You know… I want to make it big… you know… BIG”.
No, I don’t know. I still don’t know. Not only do none of us know what we want out of this, we don’t even know what we’re supposed to want. We’ve done great things. We’ve been all over the world, played venues large and small – in some places there have been as many as ten thousand people, in other places the rats outnumbered the humans. I am proud of what we’ve done and how we did it. We did it OUR WAY. I think we were a success, though no major label would agree.
So the new album DOWN DOWN DOWN will be our last. It’s a mixture of brand new material and live favourites that up until now haven’t been recorded in a studio. I personally think the first three tracks sum us up well, possibly the best work we’ve ever done.
There will be two farewell shows: one in London at The Lexington on 17th September, the second in Manchester at The Ruby Lounge (the first place we played under the name Bedlam Six) on 30th September. The rest is silence.
There is, of course, unfinished business: video ideas we never tried out, songs we never completed (I’d originally planned for the Matilda saga to have ten chapters but I doubt that’ll happen now). Still, that’s always the way of things. To quote Leonardo DaVinci (probably): “No work of art is ever finished, only abandoned.”
But we’re still friends, we’ll still play together in various permutations, still go to the pub together and scheme about things. We all have other projects bubbling away: Tom’s in a new band, Biff and Dan’s recording business is going from strength to strength, I’m writing a musical and continuing my work with the MU and Debt Records, Fran and Cleg are both at the top of their game and play with all sorts of people. We’re about, you’ll see us.
But it’s time to close the doors on Bedlam and lock up the asylum for good.
We had fun though right?
Damn right.
Some advice for bands starting out:
THANKS
Thanks to our booking agents Dennis Adler at Listen Collective and Rob Gibbs at Live It Out for being tireless and optimistic when everything was pointing the other way. Also to Liam Walsh and Joe Sparrow at Ask Me PR who really did try very hard to make us famous. Thanks to all the amazing people who worked on our music videos: Andrew Ab, Ste Webster, Sammy Deas, Brett Gregory, Ella Gainsborough, Andy Brittain, Charles Leak, Joe Mannion, Sam Alder, Scott Lockhart, Sarah Jane Blake, Paul Wright and all the crews; artists who have given us wonderful images for record sleeves and posters like Grebo Gray, Aixinjerro Valliard, Mary Eileen Croft and Rebekah Joy Shirley; to the people who’ve built sets and designed costumes like Mari Ruth Oda and Kelly Joseph; to people who’ve joined us on stage as special guests like John Otway, Bridie Jackson, Kirsty Almeida, Hope & Social, Liz Green, Becca Williams, John Robb, Rioghnach Connolly, Hannah Miller, Laura Kidd, Felix Hagan, Mika Doo and so many others; to the photographers who’ve gifted us great press shots like Christine Keating, Steve Hall, Ben Robins, Ian O Brien, Annie Golden, Karen McBride, Gordon Jackson and all the live photographers who I’ve chased around the stage and generally abused over the years.
Also thanks to Tom Robinson and Chris Hawkins at BBC 6 Music, Sam Walker, Chris Long and Michelle Hussey at BBC Radio Manchester, Jason Cooke, Uschi Engel and Caroline Rennie at All FM and Shell Zenner at Amazing Radio for playing us regularly when no one else would. We’ve also been helped a lot by reviewers at R2 Magazine, Drowned In Sound, Echoes & Dust, Now Then Magazine, Louder Than War, Von Pip Musical Express, Even The Stars, The Devil Has The Best Tuna, Get Into This, BeardRock, City Life, NARC, Whisperin’ & Hollerin’, Manchester Music, Soundwise, The Underclassed, Never Enough Notes, A New Band A Day, Fresh On The Net and so many great independent periodicals, local and international.
And thanks to our long-suffering partners: Bryony, Sara, Hannah, Jess and Marta who’ve stuck by us through good times and bad, plus the ones who fell along the way (gone but not forgotten). Also, sorry to our parents – we know how much you worry about us.
But mostly thanks to our audience, the people who came to the shows and bought the music. We couldn’t have done any of it without you.
Farewell.
Tags: ep, project fear, release
An EP raising money for Médecins Sans Frontières.
For the last year I’ve been writing a musical all about power struggles and political manipulation. Up until now I’ve been relatively coy about the material, trying out songs on the road but with no plans to publish anything officially until the full cast recording is underway later this year.
The recent EU referendum in the UK, however, left me and many others in varying degrees of despondency and fury. Whilst I do not think this little EP will alter the bleak situation facing us, writing and playing these songs has helped me focus my thoughts and keep busy. I think expressing this stuff is important, even if it’s ultimately an empty gesture. The aftermath of the Leave vote has lifted the lid on the most rancid of everyday prejudices that were always there but have, up until now, been consigned to the margins and shadows. Now that hate crime and far right rhetoric are on the rise those of us who wish for a kinder more inclusive society must make no secret of our views.
One little EP of live demos won’t change anything but it exists alongside many other gestures, large and small, that express the hopes and judgments of those that want a lot better from our political leaders and neighbours alike.
Tracks 1 and 3 are sung from the point of view of the politicians who engineered our current situation; tracks 2 and 4 are from those they affect.
All money raised from sales of this EP goes to MSF: an international, independent, medical humanitarian organisation that delivers emergency aid to people affected by armed conflict, epidemics, natural disasters and exclusion from healthcare. MSF offers assistance to people based on need, irrespective of race, religion, gender or political affiliation.
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