Posts Tagged ‘hippy’

Gong & Ozric Tentacles Newcastle University Student’s Union 21 March 2024

gong0I go back a long way with Gong and have seen them several times over the years since I first saw them at Newcastle City Hall in the early 1970s. That was at the time of the Flying Teapots Trilogy and just after the Camembert Electrique album.

The line – up of the band has changed many times over the years with the one (almost) constant factor being found remember Daevid Allen who sadly passed away in 2015. The last time I saw Daevid Allen in the band was at Allston Town Hall with my daughter Laura in 2012.

gong8“Australian beatnik poet Daevid Allen (ex-Soft Machine) began making music with his partner Gilli Smyth in the late 1960s, along with a constantly evolving community of creative musicians. Albums from this period include Magick Brother, Mystic Sister (1969) and the influential Bananamoon (1971) – one of David Bowie’s favourite 20 albums.” (From Gong website).

gong2The current members of Gong are: Fabio Golfetti – lead guitar, vocals (2007, 2012–present), Dave Sturt – bass (2009–present); Ian East – saxophone, flute (2010–present); Kavus Torabi – vocals, guitar (2014–present) and Cheb Nettles – drums (2014–present).

This tour was a co-headlining outing with Ozric Tentacles with whom I have seen Gong perform on a number of occasions, the last time being at York Crescent. Jackie and I arrived at the student’s union building just in time to catch the first number of Gong’s set, having traversed a series of ramps and lifts, through the supermarket and into the venue. Yes it is quite a complicated route into the concert venue in a wheelchair; but everyone was very helpful.

gong3The venue holds a lot of memories for me having seen many bands there over the years going back to the Clash White Riot tour and early concerts by the Cure, Magazine and others. I think the last time I was here was to see Gong. The current band contains relatively new members, but such is the lineage of Gong. Like Hawkwind it is a family collective within which members come and go. However the spirit and ethos of Gong carries through the band members and this was very evident for this concert. We made our way around the back of the crowd towards the left of the stage. Everyone was very kind and allowed us through, right to the front.

gong4The current front man has a look of Marc Bolan about him with curly hair and heavy eye make-up. He was also joined by a lady singer who transformed from an angel like persona into an Indian/Persian look. Fantastic. The music was, as always, heavily psychedelic, trancelike and absolutely mesmerising. One song seemed to blend into another.

gong01During the interval I managed to catch a pint of Guinness and the band kindly signed my ticket (see image). Next up was Ozric Tentacles whose music is less familiar to me. However, as always they provided us with an excellent set of psychedelic music. We left just as they were finishing.

gong5“A campfire at the Stonehenge free festival in 1983 witnessed the birth of Ozric Tentacles. It was there that composer and band leader Ed Wynne (guitar & keyboards), and brother Roly Wynne (bass), who were performing in a group known at the time as ‘Bolshem People’, along with drummer Nick ‘Tig’ Van Gelder (Jamiroquai), stumbled upon keyboardist Joie Hinton. After a session of warming their bones and discussing imaginary breakfast cereals, the group went to perform an impromptu late jam session. Over the course of what became an epic six hour performance, an audience member inquired as to the name of the band. Randomly thinking back to the group’s former conversation, visions of ridiculous mythical mueslis entered Ed’s mind, and consequently he replied; “Ozric Tentacles”. (…Good job too, since some of the previous alternatives had been “Desmond Whisps”, “Gilbert Chunks” and “Malcolm Segments”).” (From Ozric Tentacles website).

gong7Two fantastic bands who are still quite “out there” flying the hippie flag high. The lady next to me had great dreadlocks and was dressed as an angel complete with wings. That sort of sums up the atmosphere of the evening.

Many thanks to Jackie for the photographs and to Chris for manipulating the site.

Gong Setlist: My Guitar Is a Spaceship; Kapital; All Clocks Reset; My Sawtooth Wake; Through Restless Seas I Come; Lunar Invocation; Choose Your Goddess

Windsor Free Festival 1974

Windsor Free Festival 1974
windsor1 When I was writing about the 1974 Roy Harper and friends free concert in Hyde Park the other day it made me think about the Windsor Free Festival of that year. I visited the Windsor Festival that year to see what it was like, wandering around Windsor Great Park for a few hours taking in the atmosphere. I drove across from the Reading festival with a friend, tempted by the leaflets that were being given out on the Reading site. The Windsor Free Festival was held in Windsor Great Park from 1972 to 1974. It was organised by a group of hippies from London, and was the forerunner of the Free Festival movement and later events like the Stonehenge Festival. The festival was set to run for 10 days in 1974, starting over the bank holiday weekend, and continuing to the following weekend. Some friends were intending to go to Reading, across to Windsor, and then finish the festival week with the free Hyde Park event. Being a weekend hippy, I just popped across to Windsor for a visit, and went home between the weekends. I don’t recall which bands I saw but do remember the great friendly atmosphere at the festival. windsor2 I can’t recall which day I visited, probably on the Monday, on the way home from Reading. I didn’t see any of the main bands who were, I think Hawkwind and Gong. The 1974 Windsor Free Festival was the largest, and also the most eventful, festival as a result of the police reaction to the gathering. On the Wednesday morning the police raided the festival and broke it up, amid reports of police brutality. Although I wasn’t there that day, some of my friends were, and they told me about it when I met up with them at Hyde Park on the Saturday following that eventful Wednesday. I have some flyers about the event which were given out at Hyde Park, and have copied them here. See: “Why did the cops smash the festival?”, which tells the tale of the day. windsor3 I also have a flyer for the 1975 Windsor Free Festival, which was planned for the bank holiday week, but didn’t take place for legal reasons. I must have picked this flyer up at a festival somewhere during 1975. An alternative event took place at Watchfield, which I also attended, again after the Reading festival. It wasn’t a particularly well attended event, and had lost some of the spirit of the previous year’s festival at Windsor. Those days of the free festival and its ideals seem so long ago, and so different to the events we have now, which have become much more middle of the road, and corporate. We lost something along the way. In those days a group of hippies believed that they were building an alternative society, and I guess some of them did, and are still living it through the new age travellers movement which is the descendant of those events in the 70s.