Gong/Ozric Tentacles – Leeds Brudenell – 20 March 2023

This was a last minute dash up the M62 over the Pennines to the Brudenell Social Club in Leeds to capture some of the embers of the Last Blast tour, the final installment of the Gong/Ozric Tentacles double headliner bills of the last few years. This time around the bands have alternated headline slots rather than play gigs in blocks where one band will always go on last for several consecutive dates. Tonight saw Gong going second, although set times seem to clock in at around 90 minutes per band, whichever way the order falls.

The first thing to say is that I’d heard great things about the Brudenell and it was thoroughly merited. Situated within a vibrant multi-ethnic part of Leeds, it is surrounded by Turkish eateries, Indian supermarkets and more traditional looking boozers, with youth milling around everywhere, but itself is a brightly illuminated complex, set back from the road and with several bars and lounges. The bands played in a smallish, relatively intimate room with standing room stretching out in front of the band in a crescent shape, with people further back slightly elevated – views of the stage were good from all vantage points. The gig was sold out but it didn’t feel overpacked. Gong and the Ozrics both had fairly extensive merchandise stalls with the usual vintage fayre and special tour T-shirts  – it was difficult to work out who most people had come to see – perhaps Gong as the GAS stall always seemed teeming.

Saskia Maxwell

Ozric Tentacles have changed lineup since the last time I saw them. Vinny Shillito, who I think was the bassist on the Ed Wynne tour a few years ago provides a rather brooding presence at the back of the stage, and the new drummer is Pat Garvey. But beyond this the core of the band remains mainman Ed, on guitar and keyboards, and his son Silas on additional keyboards, although Saskia Maxwell is present for the majority of the performance, largely on flute.

Ed Wynne

My last two viewings of the Ozrics were slightly one-dimensional, firstly a stripped down ‘electronics’ set where the band was essentially cut down to Silas and Ed, and largely memorable for Ed’s soloing over classic Ozrics tunes from the 1990s, whilst the Sheffield gig on the first ‘joint’ tour, we saw from a distance whilst chatting to Gong who’d just come off stage. My view here was much more up close and personal, to Ed in particular, and it struck me that this might just be the most I’ve ever actually ‘heard’ his guitar playing. I remember the first time I saw Ozric Tentacles, at the legendary Treworgey Tree Fayre in Cornwall, in 1989 and being crushingly disappointed at the difference between the pristine, multi-faceted styles of their studio albums and the muddy thrash of live performances aired. That’s something of an oversimplification – the Treworgey gig was something of an impromptu jam on the ramshackle Wango Riley truck stage, and later gigs in the early 90s showed much more faithful reinterpretations of tracks from Pungent Effulgent and Erpland. It was just that at those gigs the sound was so dense and the guitar so treated that often the intricacies were lost.

Silas Wynne

Tonight was different. The slightly dead sound in the Brudenell, whilst unforgiving, allows each component of the music to be heard in isolation, and served to show what a phenomenal guitar player Ed Wynne is. There was definitely also a desire to step away from the most thrashy stuff – whilst classics like ‘Eternal Wheel’ were aired, the highlights were magnificent performances of atmospheric pieces from either end of the timescale: the title track of the band’s latest album ‘Lotus Unfolding’ and a great ‘lost’ track from ‘Pungent Effulgent’, namely ‘Ayurvedic’, which genuinely had me in tears. Both had common components: Ed’s crystal clear guitar and Saskia’s gorgeous flute lines. The classic ‘Sniffing Dogs’ from ‘Tantric Obstacles’ was another highlight, and at times appeared like a genuine jam – Silas showing unexpected dexterity and jazzy touches on electric piano – the band just seemed to respond to each other in a lovely languid manner – nothing rushed – capturing an almost laid back feel to their ‘support slot’. I’d have been happy to see the set conclude here, but two final tracks, the first with its weird sound effects, and ‘Sploosh’ the almost anthemic ravey piece from the early 90s ratcheted things up again somewhat incongruously to conclude, the bass player now centre stage leering somewhat oddly at the audience.

Dave Sturt

And so to Gong. I’ll keep this part relatively brief as I believe I’ve published up to 10 gig reviews relating to them since I saw them for the first time in this (re)incarnation back in 2016. The band performed 5 tracks from the latest album ‘Unending Ascending’ – including the superb opener ‘My Guitar is a Spaceship’, their wide-eyed riffy romp, and the concluder ‘Choose Your Goddess Now’, a bombardment of bewildering strobelights, heart-pulling melodies and brassy counterpunch. Elsewhere we had ‘Tiny Galaxies’ and ‘All Clocks Reset’, as well as the pummeling set-definer ‘My Sawtooth Wake’ from Forever Recurring,  ‘Kapita’ and ‘Rejoice!’.

Ian East

Somehow within all this chaos the band managed to fit in three epic pieces of largely contemplative,  transportative material which seemed to suspend the crowd in a state of abeyance, set against glissando backdrops and the shimmering light show. After almost 3 hours of being on your feet, pulled from pillar to post by the various crescendos and crashes of both bands, there’s a slightly unreal quality to all of this – the atmosphere enhanced by the reappearance of Saskia Maskell in a sheer white gown adding further to the ethereality. The band performed ‘Through Restless Seas’, ‘Ship of Ishtar’ and the IAO chant before finally releasing the shackles with the cacophony of ‘Master Builder’.

Fabio Golfetti

Hats off to the Brudenell for delivering such a balanced sound mix – the band might have come away with an abiding memory of a brief couple of moments when the sound dropped completely, leaving Ian East and Cheb Nettles temporarily exposed on sax and drums, right at the culmination of possibly Kavus Torabi’s finest ‘Rejoice!’ guitar solo yet; but otherwise the balance was perfect: one got to make sense of East’s fine and underrated contributions throughout, and the vocal harmonies between up to 5 members of the band (including Saskia) were delivered with astonishing clarity.

Kavus Torabi

The band now conclude their tour north of the border this weekend, before heading off to South America and then returning for the summer festival season amidst talk of new album recordings.

Gong with Saskia Maxwell

Phil Miller Guitar Prize – Birmingham Conservatoire 29 February 2024

This is the third annual competition commemorating the life of Phil Miller, open to students at Birmingham’s prestigious music institution, funded by generous donation from Phil Miller’s widow Herm Mew, who has also bequeathed Phil’s archive to the university.

The Phil Miller Legacy Band: Marcus Coats, Fred T Baker, Jamie Mcleish, Kyle Welch, Grace Conner, Henry Hanson, Ben Kempner, Kefan Hu (not visible), Jim Bashford

This event continues to evolve: last year it was memorable for a number of highly interpretive, largely solo performances, with extra treats thrown in for for good measure, with performances of Phil’s music through a trio led by Fred Baker; tonight the evening kicked off with the Phil Miller Legacy band, a group of whom Fred, Phil Miller’s long-time right hand man and musical kingpin of this event, identified as first and second year students. This is something that he was particularly excited about as, under his tutelage, it means that the band can grow during the lifespan of its contributors’ studies.

Henry Hanson

Over the course of around 45 minutes, the band, underpinned by Baker on guitar, featured a very impressive frontline of sax, trumpet and voice, augmented by piano/keyboards (Marcus Coats), a second guitar (Jamie Mcleish), bass (Kyle Welch) and drums (Kefan Hu) and worked through 3 pieces. I understand the musicians here are students on the Conservatoire’s jazz course, and the interpretations reflected that: themes were stated and restated, before the band went along the frontline trading solos, moving on to piano and both guitarists. The opener ‘No More Mister Nice Guy’ is from Miller’s bluesiest album (‘Out of the Blue’ ) since Delivery and a casual observer might not appreciate the full gamut of his quirky compositional style from this opener, but it was a good vehicle for the band’s soloing talents, Henry Hanson in particular on trumpet.

Grace Conner

For ‘Calyx’ we were into more iconic Canterbury territory, introduced by Baker’s atmospheric guitar effects – but the joy of this piece was the fulsome vocal performance of Grace Conner. With clear, rounded vocal sounds and an impressive range, she started off the piece with the ‘lost’ lyrics ‘Poetry in Motion’ but beyond this it was her improvised scatting which really embellished the piece.

Ben Kempner

‘Delta Borderline’ finished things off, a hugely enjoyable blow through this most counter-intuitive of Miller pieces: the brass messy and cacophonous, and the soprano sax of Ben Kempner solo cutting across it abrasively and providing my personal highlight of the entire evening. Jim Bashford provided extra precision to this piece on a second drum kit.

Fred Baker

Fred concluded the first half with two short pieces on acoustic guitar: ‘Nowadays a Silhouette’ – in my thoughts in the last few days for a number of reasons: Billie Bottle’s new interpretation on church organ, as well as its original format being that long lost Canterbury album ‘Before A Word Is Said’; as well as ‘Lock In’ from the second Miller/Baker duo album ‘Double Up 2’. This format sees Fred Baker in one of his conducive manifestations: intimate and dexterous.

James Cony / Joseph Hiles
Olly Millington / Jude Edson

And so into the main event: the Phil Miller Guitar Prize. Last year there were 5 entrants: 4 of whom were solo performers on either guitar or bass. Performances had been impressionistic: with much use of loopery and effects. Tonight’s versions were much tighter and much closer to the originals – and all were duos: James Cony and Joseph Hiles, last year’s winners,  set the bar high with a beautiful rendition of ‘Calyx’, written for 2 complementary guitars. Ollie Millington and Jude Edson meanwhile interpretated ‘Second Sight’, and, like the original, saw the guitar chords giving space for some wonderful bass solo work, somewhat faithful to Baker’s original performance.

Ben Lawrence / Tom Winter
Aedan Lang / Kyle Welch

The third duo of Ben Lawrence and Tom Winter broke the mold in featuring a somewhat subdued saxophone alongside guitar in interpreting ‘Phrygian Blues’, before a very strong final rendition of ‘Eastern Region’ from Kyle Welch and Aedan Lang on bass and guitar – from a low-key beginning, the interplay between the two instruments was impressive and cohesive, and only the siting of a field recorder on my table stopped me from whooping my approval.

Final results:

1st: James Cony / Joseph Hiles

2nd: Aedan Lang / Kyle Welch

Joint 3rd: Ben Lawrence / Tom Winter / Olly Millington / Jude Edson

Nan True’s Hole!

In true Phil Miller Guitar Prize style, the traditional set ender is a whole stage rendition of ‘Nan True’s Hole’, where most of the original band, plus associated competition entrants, converge on stage for this most exultant of celebrations: one dirty riff extending over 11 minutes with solos galore – a rousing finale.

One final word: last year the walls of the jazz venue were festooned with Herm’s wonderful portraits of Phil Miller: tonight there was an exhibition of artefacts donated by her to Birmingham City University, curated by Pedro Cravinho. Some are presented below.

There is a hope that this event will continue to grow with the Legacy band potentially supporting Soft Machine on site at some point in the future – there is little doubt that this event is not only keeping Phil’s legacy alive, but providing an unusual and appreciated focus for many of the Conservatoire’s highly talented students – this is neither easy nor easily found material and it’s a joy to hear Phil’s music in a new and enduring context.

The evening’s events were taped and will hopefully be available on the Legacy site in due course.        

Please visit the Legacy site at https://philmillerthelegacy.com/