Aural Sculptors - The Stranglers Live 1976 to the Present


Welcome to Aural Sculptors, a blog aimed at bringing the music of The Stranglers to as wide an audience as possible. Whilst all of the various members of the band that have passed through the ranks since 1974 are accomplished studio musicians, it is on stage where the band have for me had their biggest impact.

As a collector of their live recordings for many years I want to share some of the better quality material with other fans. By selecting the higher quality recordings I hope to present The Stranglers in the best possible light for the benefit of those less familiar with their material than the hardcore fan.

Needless to say, this site will steer well clear of any officially released material. As well as live gigs, I will post demos, radio interviews and anything else that I feel may be of interest.

In addition, occasionally I will post material by other bands, related or otherwise, that mean a lot to me.

Your comments and/or contributions are most welcome. Please email me at adrianandrews@myyahoo.com.


Friday 19 April 2024

The Roundhouse London 26th June 1977 - A Review (Record Mirror 2nd July 1977)

Here's a review of sorts from one of several near legendary visits that The Stranglers paid to London's Roundhouse in Camden Town throughout 1977. Poor old Barry Cain eh!? Whilst part of me sympathises with Barry, an early advocate of the band and one of the few undoubted allies that the band had in the music press, for having to review the band once again when all available superlatives in the writer's arsenal have been exhausted. What more can be said? On the other hand for me who never saw the punk Stranglers, it is irksome indeed. I'd be happy with a dry Sunday matinee!! A word of explanation in the unlikely event that anyone under the age of 50 is reading this post. If you think Sunday's are dull now, back then the law was such that Sunday licencing hours were very restricted (a hangover (or not) from efforts to boost productivity during The Great war). Pubs shut at 2pm only to reopen at 7pm.


Record Mirror 2nd July 1977.

What more can Barry Cain say about The Stranglers. He's just...

LOST IN SPACE

The Stranglers
London

I'm fed up with reviewing strangler's concerts.

Screwing words to fit white spaces. Saturation level reached. Nothing more to say. Nice to go along and simply see them without making any hollow analysis.

Right I've got 15 minutes to write this…

Two shows at the Roundhouse. Queues along Chalk Farm Road. Staple guns in Camden. Around 6,000 tickets sold in one week. Reporters from the Guinness Book of hot shots abounded.

First show sober. This fair land strange licencing hours prevented a lot of people having a better time. The band (I thought Hugh Cornwell was dead anyway) played. Played very well in fact. Probably never played better. Lots of healthy new songs too.



Second show – Bar-room blitz. Audience reaction one over the eight. Dedicated followers of fashion loving every minute. The band played again. Played very well again. Then they finished. Peachy.

End of a tour. And what a bummer summer. This is getting ridiculous.

Few minutes to kill. Oh yeah, The Cortinas were pretty good. Terrable view from side stage but there was a nice pair of Bristols up front (na, that's where they come from). Numb crowd first set, second, more support.

The Cortinas drove along at a… Enough of that. Just watch this space.

Thank you and goodnight. BARRY CAIN.

One of the day's shows (afternoon? evening?) can be found here.

Tuesday 16 April 2024

Joey Ramone And The Resistance 'Rock The Reservation' Festival Tuba City AZ 18th October 1996 (TFTLTYTD #7)

 


OK, hands up, I missed it. The anniversary of Joey's death... the reason why Mo is named Ramona! Sadly, this 'Too Fast To Live Too Young To Die' applies equally to all of the founder members of Ramones, but this is for Joey.

Here playing the 'Rock The Reservation' benefit in Arizona, Joey and his band The Resistance play a good quality set of covers and Ramones classics!

FLAC: https://we.tl/t-2Q13gHr2Ba

Artwork: https://we.tl/t-gAgo2aVOL6



Saturday 13 April 2024

2 Tone The Story BBC Radio April 2024

 


Here is another radio documentary that tells the story of the world's greatest record label. Narrated by Pete Waterman who was at the time a Coventry record shop manager soon to be tied up with The Specials. Like many other independent labels, Stiff being a perfect example, the 2 Tone Records story is a short lived roller coaster journey that encompasses innovative genius and awful business decisions.

As ever, I make no apologies for continuing to spread the word about the cultural and political significance of The Specials, Jerry Dammers and all things that 2 Tone and their roster of great bands represented.

FLAC: https://we.tl/t-c76LImCrDX

Artwork: https://we.tl/t-1AywsL7PzR



Sunday 7 April 2024

Raradise Rock Club Boston 7th April 1983

 

So with many thanks to yesican, here is an anniversary gig from a mere 41 years ago. A partial set unfortunately but a good sounding audience recording nevertheless!

FLAC: https://we.tl/t-tMO8rBSQIz

Artwork: https://we.tl/t-2W3cuwPZFJ

01. Intro
02. Nuclear Device (The Wizard Of Aus)
03. Toiler On The Sea
04. Ships That Pass In The Night
05. It’s A Small World
06. Just Like Nothing On Earth
07. Who Wants The World?
08. Never Say Goodbye
09. Baroque Bordello
10. Golden Brown

Rattus Norvegicus Review (Zigzag May 1977)

 


IV Rattus Norvegicus
The Stranglers
United Artists UAG 30045

Here come The Stranglers with 40 minutes of brain-rapingly original spewings like you ain't gonna hear anywhere else.

They've come a long way since I first saw them supporting Patti Smith a year ago. All that untamed potential has been refined and channelled into yet another of the year's great debut albums… and what a great year for debut albums!

Melody Maker’s Mike Oldfart says the Strangs have got nothing to offer… he must have the hearing capacity of a cat’s willy. The Stranglers also sometimes come in for a bit of stick from the other new groups who say they're not new, etc. I don't know about that and I don't care… neither should you.

The Stranglers make vibrant inventive music which I like a lot (and so do a lot of other people judging by the numbers turned away from their recent Roundhouse gig). What I'm trying to say is, don't listen to anything or anyone except your own ears (and The Stranglers album).

It's hard to describe this erent ,and some of the melodies tear the top of my head and light the blue touch paper on my brain cells. I've heard that about The Stranglers sounding like The Doors, The Velvets etc., and there's no disputing the influences, and Dave Greenfield's magic organ is primed to soar off into regions only previously charted by Manzarek.

Take ‘Princess Of The Streets’, for example, which perfectly evokes The Doors’ desolate, sleazy romanticism. The Doors are cited because I suppose that they’re the nearest thing but it's still The Stranglers all round. THE STRANGLERS!


There are some sinister influences at work here. Psychedelic embroidery, like on ‘Ugly’ which takes a menacing spiral riff and some NAAASTY vocals all about being UGLY. Look… The Stranglers may have consumed these influences but When they’re spewed out it's the contents of The Stranglers own unique stomach that comes out.

This album is a sinister, scary ride through unknown dark sewers, culminating in the climatic ‘Down In The Sewer’ itself, my favourite track. It epitomises the sound of The Strangs…Jean Jacques Burnel's piercing, grating bass clanking about over Jet Black’s GBH drumming, while Dave Greenfield soars and sears. Meanwhile Hugh Cornwell hacks rusty chords or squeezes out his highly melodic solos from his guitar, which I'm sure has the power to pop spots at fifty paces.

While the group cruise on their creepo riffs as effortlessly as a turd on course for the sewage plant, Hugh or Jean Jacques belt out the words, which are incisive, rasping comments on the sorry state of the human being or psychedelic horror-slanted stories.

At the moment I like the opener ‘Sometimes’, with its propulsive catchiness; ‘Hanging Around’ and its stunning guitar solo; ‘Goodbye Toulouse’, whose vocals remind me of ‘West Side Story’ at 100 mph; and ‘Peaches’ the sleazy tale of beach vouyer.

Both sides of the single are on here too – (Get A) Grip (On Yourself) which is fuckin’ murder to type and ‘London Lady’.

The first 10,000 copies had a free single – a live version of Dave Greenfield's rancid ‘Peasant In The Big Shitty’ and Choosy Susie’, which is OK. I would like to have seen Hugh Cornwell's masto-stage-spew classic ‘School ma'am’ somewhere on this package, but never mind. This’ll do.

KRIS NEEDS

Friday 5 April 2024

Shoddy Ebay Stuff

 I was quite lucky in that I discovered eBay quite early on, about 2001 perhaps. At that time there were some genuine bargains to be had. I remember getting both the Stiff America MIB and Last Supper posters for about £30 for the two. There was loads of other stuff too, it was great, not to mention exiting when the clock ran down to the last minutes! Every so often, although increasingly infrequently, I dip in and have a look at the Stranglers in music memorabilia. Sadly, for the last few years it seems that only about 20% of listings related to genuine memorabilia. It is shocking how much badly produced reproduction stuff is on there. Even worse than the repro stuff are the items that have been cobbled together by someone on a computer. It may be that the sellers are not trying to pass this stuff off as genuine (the price gives that away) but the items are lazy, devoid of thought and just out to make a quick buck... and seemingly people are buying the stuff.

Here's an example that I saw tonight.

No need for answers on a postcard to reveal the anomaly here! No need for a watermark here to safeguard the image from copiers!

Thankfully, the proliferation of bootlegs for sale on eBay has died down. I hate to see that someone has forked out £15 for something that is freely available online... we left that kind of thing behind in Camden High Street 25 or more years ago!