With Part 1 taken care of it's now time to get on with the serious music business, one that's stopped Rob from taking a one way trip 'doon the watter', the lure of the Clyde a mere 2 minutes from his work, else he suffers in total silence, itself the sound of amazing and precious existence passing by, totally taken for granted.... (Nothing heartless intended here, mind, as rest assured Braw will get to honouring the terrible loss of John G. Miller in a more comprehensive manner come the summer....)
First up, The Orb's most welcome Prism arrived in Spring 2023 and like 2018's NSOOB (which is itself going through something of a resurgence Rob-side), when shorn of 2 middling middle tracks that bog it down - Tiger and Dragon of the Ocean (Dogon Mix) FYI - makes for a pleasantly compact hour of quality late-era Orb outings. There’s no doubt in his mind that this current iteration of the good starship, with excellent Ensign Michael Rendall now at the controls ‘making it so’ for Captain Alex Paterson, is one of Rob’s favourite and most consistent Orbular excursions – there being plenty of ‘take it or (mostly) leave it’ pairings and albums over the years – 2020’s Abolition of The Royal Familia lp being an absolute highlight, the crown jewels in their trilogy thus far….
If only DRAP/they could bring that same forward thinking and confidence in their material to their live shows – Paterson has collaborated on 5(!) extra-curricular albums (Chocolate Hills x2, OSS x1 , Sedibus x2) in a flurry of ambi-entertainment in recent years, better to churn out than fade away indeed! – instead of treading retro water with endless anniversary themed tours. See farrrrr below for the (not quite so) grim details of how they faired in the UFlesh….
The rest of The Orb's other huge ever-pulsating discography continued to delight, whether it was the joy of Rob's own Cydonia: Redux - throwing away the rule book and making the best double album possible from Cydonia and the Orbsessions I and II originals- or the sheer Thrash-tastic rising sunnyness of their unearthly YMO Technodon Remixes II....
....to the thump-tastic mid(dling)-era Dave Gilmour collaboration Metallic Spheres (given an extra twist/track thanks to an extended Japanese import, and a somewhat pointless 2023 makeover to render it 'in colour' which, like almost all post-94 Orb, is passable enough without being wholly essential)....
Again, thanks to the Orb Music & Remixes Facebook group, Rob's been delving deeper and deeper into the Live 93 era, an astonishing, fluid, ever-evolving, deftly ambient yet seriously banging time - woah, Brixton! - thanks to space cadet supreme Thrash manning the controls, capably setting them for the heart of the Ultraworld.... Yes, Paterson returned relatively unscathed but it seems Kris Weston resides there still, lost in space....
Valley (Live at Trekkoner Sunset Festival, Copenhagen, 1993)
And, gee, if Rob isn't totally mad for this live stuff, and the above hitherto unexplored version of Valley in particular, a strange, cavernous thing that just weaves its minimal components together so expertly and hypnotically - it's somehow achingly hollow and impossibly emotionally gargantuan at the same time (as opposed to the planet swallowing sonics of the dribbling loon of the eventual overstuffed studio version). Sad to say the sheer audacity of how unhinged The Orb were live, the careening sounds and oddly nostalgic samples, often gets Rob giggling at the work photocopier, completely adrift in this this deep, private universe that is so warm, so nourishing and so (blissfully) removed from any reality....
With all things quiet on The Charlatans creative front in 2023 Rob felt duly obliged - as did they if their retro joint tours with RIDE are anything to go by - to rewind the clock 30 years to 1993, scouring his hard drives and record collection to concoct his own 'deluxe edition' of third album, 1994's Up To Our Hips, comprising the lp itself, various b-sides, some demos and a few choice live cuts....
.... revelling in what was to be their last truly Hammond heavy offering courtesy of late keyboard maestro Rob Collins. Cheers! (The Blackpool leg of Day Tripper, an excellent live bootleg in itself, got its own separate makeover too....)
With Slowdive returning with their second post-reunion album, the truly slow burn emoting of Everything Is Alive, Rob decided - with a little help from a certain former Teenage Shoegazer - to delve that bit deeper into the 90s heyday of 'the scene that celebrates itself', first-footing (and occasionally revisiting) all things FX pedals from the likes of Lush, Paris Angels, Pale Saints, Swervedriver, Chapterhouse and Curve....
One of Rob's discoveries of the year was a seismic spacial shift into the far out sounds of early Hawkwind - his only prior exposure is the thundering sonic attack of their live Space Ritual - wallowing in their much more nuanced on record outsider SF optimism (tethered to earth only by delights). But after 50 years - or 'half a century', that being a more apt SF term, surely? - such wide-eyed stargazing has accumulated a definite and definitive 'what if?' wistful melancholy, a time capsule drifting in outer space waiting for eager cadets to dock and discover them afresh....
Techno-wise there was plenty to choose from, be it System 7’s rattling 777, Dreadzone’s dub-centric debut 360, Loop Guru’s wonderfully worldly Amrita (...and all these Japanese soup warriors), Mount Florida’s chilled melange of orbanic, dubby and ambient infusion on Arrived Phoenix and the Storm, Strut and Stealth Eps, or how about the grand techno of X-Mix-2-4, Laurent Garnier, John Acquaviva, Ritchie Hawtin and Dave Angel all knocking it out the mid-90s park with their classic evergreen club mixes. Unbeatable beats indeed….
In June Rob took himself off to Glasgow's OVO Hydro to catch up with The War On Drugs, perhaps a little too under-over excited, finding their spacious and rousing rock and soul uplifting in the main - Pain, Harmonia's Dream, Under The Pressure, Old Skin and I Don't Live Here Any More all hit home - but oddly plodding the rest of the time, their 'winning formula' being exactly that - sing-soaring solo-sing-soaring solo/outro - while their onstage 'bonhomie' had a tendency to tip over into the faintly ridiculous (large) arena of rock star parody, frontman Adam Granduciel often coming across all Jack Black/Tenacious D while drummer Charlie Hall, his perm illuminated and billowing in some manufactured breeze was more laughable Eastbound & Down daft than exuding any E-Street cool. And yet, y'know, for days after Rob's mind was awash with mashed up fragments of their songs, a 24/7 mental comfort blanket. Weird, huh?
On a much more down to earth trip, November saw Rose City Band make a more than welcome return to these shores, stopping off at The Hug and Pint to play to an enthusiastic sold out crowd of 80 fortunate punters (who can say, "I was there!"). While they're not a million miles away from The War On Drugs - there's less 'heart on sleeve' emoting and a more passive, vague wistfulness, 'porch music' as they've self-coined it - there just seemed so much more space (man....) for their more than capable members to move around in musically (but not actually, given the jam-packed tiny stage), the mix of pedal steel, 'Rippleying' guitar, and jazzy Brian Auger-esque keyboards, all riding a tight, rock solid rhythm section. This adept deftness helps them never lose their clarity or to tumble over into the indulgent or contrived. And, yes, thank the guitar gods, as per last year they wrapped up their set with a blissful run through of Dawn Patrol -the very song that reminded Rob why he loves keyboards in the first place. Paul Hasenberg's playing is an absolute swirling and dizzying delight!
Following on from last year's astounding Children of Time came the two sequels, Children of Ruin and Children of Memory, books which could never hope to match the first's astounding burst of ideas - the second could never be as good, but it has no right to be this good - even it's close second is still light years ahead of the year's other reads.... Adrian Tchaikovsky wrapped up his trilogy with a grounded, less expansive third book, a highly skilled 'companion' novel to the one-two punch of the others, still deft, still brimming with ideas, still crazily readable, but not wholly essential....
2023 saw William Boyd, Rob's favourite 'straight' author, make a welcome return with The Romantic, another of his trademark 'cradle to the grave' novels, all historical twists and turns - Boyd likes to sucker punch his characters and readers alike - in what was an excellent read, with a genuinely memorable ending. The Blue Afternoon, an earlier, shorter novel, also got a reread, revealing it to be almost like the midsection of the above, the hopeless narrator trapped in a loveless marriage only to embark on a doomed affair, although this time expertly framed in a captivating murder mystery.... (It's worth mentioning here The Passenger by Ulrich Alexander Boschwitz, a book almost proto-Boyd in a sense, a fine balance of thriller-ish tension and the blackly comic at the same time, concerning a scared, indecisive Jewish man criss-crossing Germany (in vain) in a doomed bid to escape the Nazis....)
If any book was to throw modern life (and all it's superfluous indulgences) into stark contrast it was Alistair MacLean's brutal HMS Ulysses. Based in part on his own wartime seafaring experience it was a truly astonishing, emotional and humbling read - the Poppy Foundation ought to give away free copies every year! - that made Rob understand all the better the selfless sacrifice of "those that died so that we may live", for at the heart of this book lies the true 'cost of living crisis'....
Add to the above a double dose of George Orwell's eternally powerful 'state of the nation' books, Down and Out In Paris and London and The Road to Wigan Pier and the sobering thoughts were piled on aplenty, more than enough to counter the glut of fantastical fiction Rob absorbed, rendering those hyper-evolved spiders and malevolent killer clowns somewhat pointless....
While not quite in the same category, Allie Morgan’s The Librarian still had it’s finger on the state of the current nation’s (weak) pulse, a pertinent slice of life novel about delivering front line library services in Scotland, all ‘broken Britain’, austerity cuts and brave facing up to (or should that be facing down?) the limiting council red tape encountered at every turn (of the page). The reality, for that is what it is, is much more interesting, given Rob once worked a Library Assistant’s shift with “Allie” herself, and so he knows many of the parties (who have had their “names changed to protect the innocent/guilty”) involved in this quasi-autobiographical tall tale, as well as identifying with the plight of the librarian’s pain and pleasure, including many of the overarching themes that course through this enlightening book….
With Alan Partridge again scoring a bullseye - or should that be spearing a b-lister? - with the razor sharp I, Nomad, there was a second entry into the fake autobiography category in the simian shape of James Lever's Me, Cheeta, a strange and compelling book - you'll often forget it's supposedly written by a chimp - that packs a considerable emotional punch due to Cheeta's undying love towards Johnny 'Tarzan' Weismuller and her rejection of Jane's constant reaching for civilisation, her infuriating 'time-disease' that threatens to undermine the joy, the 'dreaming' of the sanctuary of the 'escarpment' (film set). Sadly the 'immortals' of which she speaks (often in scathing and revealing detail) such as Bogart, Chaplin and Niven are already perhaps slipping from view, but nevertheless as the book weaves towards its melancholy climax it proves that the 'magic' may indeed be preserved 'up there' (on the big screen) forever even if time eventually catches up with us all....
Stephen King-wise Rob tackled three of his more linear novels, The Dark Half and The Dead Zone, finding their single central character arcs and length a little more to his liking (than, say, committing to a sprawling epic like The Stand, with it's giant cast and 1000+ pages of reading). Pet Sematary came billed as King's 'scariest book', but Rob found it his bleakest, his blackest, his most nightmarish and brutal, bordering on the unpleasant and repulsive - the way he punishes and pummels his characters without mercy is pure unflinching horror in every sense. If The Shining could be considered the fear of what a father could do to his son, then Pet Sematary perhaps asks what a father would do for his son....
With those three Kings under his belt, Rob then ignored his own advice (above) and added several more notches to allow for the gargantuan undertaking that is IT, 1300 pages of quite astonishing novel - the kind of book that sets you wondering, 'how the hell could all this possibly come out of one person's mind?' - IT is that good, an incredible, epic, titan of a book - there's a lot of devils in King's detail for damned sure! Even the slightly 'eh?' aspects of the ending - perhaps a stretch too fantastical for Rob, but nowhere near the 1200 page buzzkill some vocal corners of the internet'd have you believe - could not detract from the towering achievement....
And while we're on the subject, could there be a more pleasant way to while away an afternoon tucked up sick and snuffly in bed than breezing through Cycle of the Werewolf, all the while admiring Bernie Wrightson's startling and evocative illustrations....
This year's favourite quote comes from the strange, and strangely powerful The People's Act of Love by James Meek....
Comics-wise Earth X was 2023's heavy hitter, a dense (or maybe that's just Rob?) tale that manages to sweep the entire MARVEL universe up into a single, epic book. Maybe there's a bit too much Sentinels, Deviants, Celestials and Inhumans action/chat going on, but it's absolutely worth it with (the late) John Paul Leon's moody and evocative artwork - rarely has such a thorough comic book history lesson looked this damned good!
Scott Snyder's intriguing The Black Mirror headed up the Bat-entry in 2023 - it's just a shame that it's great story is beholden to/spoiled by the then DCU continuity - y'know, Batman's elsewhere/dead, while Nightwing is maskuerading as Batman and Robin is currently Damien (Batman's son) and all that pointless Batcrap - but again, the wonderful artwork by Francesco Francavilla and some iconic covers by Jock (his interiors are admittedly less interesting) make it worth a bit of a Bat-punt for sure....
There were two further heavy, heavy losses on the braw radar this year - as if the truth behind MF DOOM's passing didn't hit hard enough - as Brian McBride of warm wooze wizards Stars of the Lid – their Even If You’re Never Awake and Requiem For Dying Mothers are bona-fide ambient classics, firm Braw favourites – marking a huge loss for (fans of) left-field sonic explorers everywhere….
And what, dare you ask, of Braw’s 2023, a year that began with much bravado and optimism as regards working on the John Stark comic only to have crumbled entirely in the past month with the passing of John Miller…? Well, you’re looking at the sum total of Rob’s creative output above – those 3 hour work brainstorming sessions have to be good for something, right? As for now finishing John Stark: Secret Agent itself, who can say what the future holds - there's 50 or so pages of strips 'good to go', but without a definite ending and John's recovered pages of 'work in progress' still to be assessed, then….
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