At the Sheffield University gig in June 1983, to
fill the time between songs as the band struggled (not for the first time) with
a combination of the difficulties of keeping two guitars in tune with each
other and of operating an increasingly recalcitrant drum machine, Andrew
Eldritch can clearly be heard engaging in a bit of banter with the loyal
Yorkshire following. “Who’s coming to Europe with us ?” he enquires, eliciting
cheers of approval.
One wonders what the gig schedule looked like at
that stage, as it has been the work of many aficionados and three decades to re-create such a
list. As we established in a previous post, it was only comparatively recently
that the date of the Mallemunt Festival in Brussels was definitively
established as 5th August 1983, installing it as the band’s first
date overseas.
Incredibly, however, more recent research by
legendary TSOM archivist LG has revealed that TSOM played much further afield a
week earlier than the Belgian date, in the historic Italian Adriatic port of
Ancona. To my astonishment, LG had acquired a poster listing TSOM as playing in
the Italian town on Sunday 31st July 1983, billing it as their
“unica data” and “primo concert in Italia”.
The port of Ancona had a long-established
musical festival which tended to draw an older audience, but in the early 80’s
municipal funding was made available for the production of an alternative
version, Parkingang, to be held in the historic Piazza del Plebiscito, a
beautiful traditional square complete with mediaeval town hall with clock tower,
baroque church, and restaurants whose terraces spilled out over the cobbled
interior.
Incredibly, at a time when punk musicians had been
harassed and almost driven to extinction by UK authorities, in Ancona this
alternative festival was entrusted to a collective comprising a local video art
group, “Video Pallidi”, who planned to show early alternative films (Man Ray,
H. Richter etc) and local punk bands Cracked Hirn and Rivolta dell’Odio. The
latter were an established Italian anarcho-punk band who had released their
first single by this stage, but were being increasingly influenced by the
positive punk movement in the UK. This influence can be seen in the list of
bands whose videos would be shown in the video bar during the five day
festival, as can be seen on the bottom left hand corner of a second, more
detailed poster for the gig, which I recently discovered after many hours of
previously fruitless Googling.
The scheduling of the gig is further confirmed by further
extracts from LG’s collection. He discovered this advert for the gig in an
Italian music magazine, although the excerpt suggests that the gig took place
on the Saturday (rather than the Sunday) night.
Hardly conclusive evidence of the gig having taken
place though, and the assumption was that it was an idea which hadn't come to
fruition. But LG then revealed his pièce de resistance, an Italian fanzine
interview published in Tribal Cabaret Mag no 6 (“84/85”). During Daniela
Giombini’s interview (Munich, 11/11/84) one of the band states “Yes, we played
in Ancona two summers ago. That was the time when Gary threw Ben’s camera into
the sea”. (I, for one, would love to hear more about this anecdote, from a time
when young Master Gunn was clearly beginning to consider his future in the
band!).
For further confirmation about the gig, I tracked
down one of the members of The Sisters’ support band and festival organisers,
Oskar Barrile of Rivolta dell’Odio, who passed my queries on to bass player
Amedeo Bruni. The latter was only too pleased to confirm the details of how the
gig had come about, and sent me a complete account of the events of that
summer, all written in perfect English :
“That year, the City Council in Ancona gave us some
money to organize a small festival in a beautiful in the city centre, near the
port. We were really into UK post-punk at the time, Sex Gang Children, Uk
Decay, Play Dead, 1919, March Violets, Blood and Roses, Ausgang, you know, that
sort of great stuff,” he told me.
They could therefore use some of this generous
budget to attract a UK big name. “We managed to have a link with an Italian
agency who gave us the name of some bands available for a show, and we choose
The Sisters of Mercy,” Amedeo continued. “They were to top the bill, with the
rest of the line-up consisting of local bands.”
As we have seen in previous posts about gigs of
that era, the promoters were responsible for pretty much every aspect of the
touring band. Amedeo told me that “the deal with the agency was that I had to
pick up the band in Milan, where they landed. I remember they arrived in Milan
(about 450 km north of Ancona) in the middle of the night. So me and my mate
went to the airport, met the band and took them to the train station. They were
quite talkative, and quite amazed some guys wanted them to play outside England
for the first time. That was a one-off, there was no tour ongoing, they flew
straight from Leeds to Milan (and back again).”
Despite the band’s taciturn reputation back home,
Amedeo found them to be quite the opposite. “During the train ride (about 3
hours) they spent all the time drinking....
In the early hours of the morning we arrived in
Ancona, took the band to their hotel and left them there.”
One can imagine the “this is the life” feeling that
TSOM must have felt at the time, after years of humping their gear into Transits
and sleeping on fans’ floors the only alternative to a bleary-eyed drive back
up the M1 to Leeds.
Although Amadeo has very clear memories of that
first meeting with the band, his recollections of the festival itself are less
strong, as he and the rest of Rivolta dell’Odio would have been primarily
focussed on what was a big night in their own careers, supporting TSOM. He said
“I don't remember much about their show, just a bone-shaking version of Gimme
Shelter. Also, I don't remember anything about their departure: this means the
show involved hard partying, a lot of alcohol … and a massive hangover!"
he added, charmingly.
So, we can now confirm the Parkingang Festival as
the very first TSOM show outside the UK, but Amedeo had another fascinating
anecdote to share. “Some year later, already big and famous, The Sisters of
Mercy returned to Italy. I went to their concert at Budrio near Bologna
(the subject of a previous post on this blog), but I was skeptical about the
chance to meet Andrew E. and the rest of the band : I thought they wouldn't
give a f… about meeting me. On the contrary, he was quite happy to talk to
me before the show, we drank a bottle of Port together, and he remembered
perfectly everything about their show in Ancona, and took a lot of time to let
me know how much he appreciated the Cassette Album of my band I had given him
in Ancona. 'A very raw and strong band', he said.”
Thanks to the wonders of YouTube, it is still
possible to hear contemporary Rivolta dell’Odio recordings, such as “Altari delTerrore”, which appeared on their next single the following year, which
features many of the features (driving tribal drumming, slightly whining
post-Lydon vocals, interesting guitar chord progressions) prevalent amongst the
scene at the time, and certainly well-worthy of Eldritch's approval. The orange
vinyl single, like other Rivolta dell'Odio releases, now commands upward of £25
as interest continues to grow in these Italian post-punk pioneers.
Amadeo concluded : “Much time has passed, new bands
and music attracted my attention, and I can't even remember the last time I
listened to the Sisters, but this is a memory I will hold dear forever.”
On behalf of
all TSOM aficianados, I would like to thank Amadeo for taking the time and
trouble to share with us his memories of this historic and unique occasion. The
square the Sisters played in still features concerts to this day, with Nick
Cave and (in this video) Mumford and Sons amongst those to attract a crowd to
its attractive confines. As usual, my thanks are also hugely due to LG for his
key role in helping to solve at last one of the longest running Sisters
Mysteries, that of the first TSOM show outside of England.
(I would love
to hear from anyone who was at one of the 1983 gigs (or earlier) not yet
covered on the blog – Newcastle Dingwalls, the Hacienda and the Bradford
Manhattan being good examples.)
Fascinating, well-written and much appreciated. Thank you!
ReplyDeleteTremendous read....as usual. We do appreciate the massive effort. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteThanks to both for the feedback! More unlisted gigs coming soon on the blog...
ReplyDeleteI played in that festival with my band EXXESS and I well remember the TSOM gig! I was very excited becouse at the time they were one of my fav band, the show was really cool!. a funny anecdote about the post show: at some point, we learn that the Sisters will go to dinner in a restaurant in the city and so I take my car and we go in pursuit of the band. arrived at the restaurant we sat down at their table. while the rest of the band had a genuinely sociable and relaxed attitude, Andrew Eldritch who sat at the head of the table was still wearing his dark glasses and kept his glacial charm for all the time. at a certain moment the police broke into the restaurant, perhaps recalled by some person frightened by this strange group, and the boys of the band reacted by taking slices of watermelon and put them under their t-shirts shouting: - we hide the drugs!
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
DeleteEXXESS ,Thank you very much for your testimony !
DeleteI'm Aurelio of the EXXESS and I have a very good news!!!!! the gig was accidentally taped by a friend of mine and now the tape is in my home ready to be digitally converted for all of you!
ReplyDeleteThis is fantastic news, Aurelio! There are lots of people who would LOVE to hear this historic recording. WE hope to hear more about this soon! Nik
DeleteA brief history about the registration. Patrizio, this is the boy's name thanks to which we have an audio testimony of the first Sisters Of Mercy gig abroad, that day he went to the sea with his Vespa scooter, in the late afternoon instead of going home he decides to come to the Sisters concert even if he does not know anything about the band. he has his cassette recorder and a single tdk c60 cassette with him where he has already recorded the live of a local band. Fortunately, their live set was very short, about 17 minutes, so it still has about 43 minutes free on the tape. At the beginning he is not very convinced by the band but the more the minutes flow the more he falls in love with the band! at one point he is afraid of not being able to record the whole show and so he tries to optimize the space on the tape by cutting the pauses between one song and another, or like in Gimme Shelter cutting the final (grrrrr). Another song: Burn is at the end of the A side of the tape and as far as he quickly turns the tape, a part of the song is lost! the cassette ends with Body Electric whose final part is missing. Unfortunately I do not remember if there were other songs besides these on tape: 01 Kiss the carpet 02 Anaconda 03 Alice 04 Burn 05 Emma 06 Jolene 07 Heartland 08 Adrenachrome 09 Floorshow 10 Gimme Shelter 11 Valentine 12 Body Electric. The quality of the tape is acceptable, it's a mono recording!
ReplyDeleteand this is the link to the mp3 https://drive.google.com/file/d/1_92TOcupqNzRAVwFiSnErwWa-4kI-YYX/view?usp=sharing enjoy it! Aurelio
ReplyDeleteMille grazie, Aurelio, we are so excited to finally hear this show, and the story of Patrizio on his Vespa adds fantastic local colour to the story. This is a great recording of the band at their best, and we are very grateful to you for sharing it.
ReplyDeleteYou're welcome!
ReplyDelete