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Bruce Foxton on stage at Wolverhampton May 17th 2007 (DC Collection)
Brixton Jamm, London
September 13th 2007.


i'd not been to Brixton Jamm before, and the web site didn't give too
much away as to what sort of set up it might be, giving the impression
it was a jazz-come-reggae night club.  Wrong.  It is a nice little venue,
with room for maybe a few hundred and a good sized bar, clearly
under used by punk-type bands (nice plug there).  It reminded me of
a place at the arse-end of Camden's Palace, where biker-types
would sit at the front bar, while punk-types listened to their punk-type
bands out the back.


First on the bill were
EVIL PRESLEYS, not the Elvis Presleys, as the singer was at
pains to point out.  They zounded very much like
Zounds, Steve Lake has clearly
moved on a little, but by the 3rd or 4th song, they were unmistakenly
Zounds based.
They had a particularly good song called "Ancient English Man", funny and to the point (and pint) - the lyrics of the chorus escape me, but I'd buy it should they see fit to release it.

Next up were
LOST CHERREES, whose sound was a bit lacking in terms of fine tuning: the feedback I'm sure was unintentional, but irritating by more than half.  Ashamedly I am not too familiar with their work, despite both their CDs sitting in my collection.  The high point of their set was "Free to speak, but not to question", made all the better as it was the song I immediately recognised.  Sorry gang, you were tight, but unfamiliar - my fault.

Now I've waited years to see
RUBELLA BALLET. Sid and
Zillah were instantly recognisable, and working hard to keep
things running smoothly.  Unfortunately it was a small
gathering, I wouldn't have known about it had it not been for a
chance email from them both.  Their back-drop was an
amusing and colourful (what else?) painting of what I took to
be a play on the Statue of Liberty, with a sneaky looking
Batman proping up the flame-wielding arm.  They started off
under blue lights, boy, does that set Zillah's make-up off! 
"Ballet Dance" was my first taste of
Rubella Ballet live,
quickly followed by "Trial 13" and "Unemployed".  "Love life"
was just how I imagined they would be, Sid's trade mark 'tribal
drums', Zillah's distinctive singing, with the rest of the band
(the petite bass player and tall shaven-headed guitarist)
pulling it off to perfection.  "Belfast" was delivered at a frantic
pace, the urgency of its message smashed in with the intensity.

The next 4 songs were just bliss: "Dream of Honey", "False
Promises", "Death Train" and "Arctic Flowers" (one of my
favourite
Ballet tracks).  The band looked like they were
enjoying themselves, I was enjoying myself, my wife (NOT a
lover of punk-type music) was enjoying herself - I could have
gone home happy and contented with that little package, but
still in store was "Money Talks"...As Ewan MacGregor says in
Trainspotting, "I haven't felt that good since Archie Gemmell
scored against Brazil".  And I'm not Scottish.

"Slant and Slide", "Blind Ambition" and "42F" were a trip back in time.  Fond memories of a life outside London in a place far far away in a time long long ago.
Rubella Ballet decided to call it a night after that with "Emotional Blackmail".  It was all over, all too soon.  I was disappointed I had not brought my camera, but too many times I've had security remove it, and then have the evening spoilled by wondering if I'd ever see it again.  But then I wondered if I had brought it, would the flash have removed the so-called trade mark day-glo presence of Rubella Ballet?

I can't wait to see them again, unfortunately not until the end of November.  Keep an eye out for them, they say they are coming to a venue near you soon.
MARTIN (Originally from New Zealand now residing in London)
Brixton Jamm flyer
Rubella Ballet's Zillah & Sid on stage at their most recent gig Margate on Sept 7th 2007 (Pic courtesy of Anarchy At The Seaside)
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