Friday, 9 December 2011

1980 - Sounds reviews


SOUNDS: 1 March 1980              CRASH COURSE IN SHEEP FARMING

            Toyah goes back on the road in March to play a series of gigs. She’s just completed a tour here and her import album, “Sheep Farming In Barnet”, is featuring in the Sounds Alternative Chart.
            She starts at Bath Pavilion on March 7 and then plays Leicester University 8, Birmingham Top Rank 9, Manchester Polytechnic 11, London Electric Ballroom 14. Toyah herself has just finished filming a new BBC series “Jekyll And Hyde” and appearing in Derek Jarman’s new film “The Tempest”, which opens soon at London’s Screen On The Green.

SOUNDS: 22 March 1980             TOYAH, LEEDS

            Having trashed Huddersfield a couple of days earlier, “pert punkette” Toyah Willcox moved east to bring home the full implications of her recent successes to the Fan Club audience whose responsiveness lent weight to the snowballing thesis that she’s “arriving” but pronto. It might well be premature to start talking about “Toyahmania”, but since she cameoed in “Shoestring”, fracas of one form or another are the order of the day – all of which adds up to one of the heaviest acts of recent times.

            The Short White Dukette opened this one with “Neon Womb”, “Race Through Space” and “Our Movie” – the three “biggest” numbers on “Sheep Farming In Barnet” – instantaneously finding favour, so that later on, mid-set, even “the weaker numbers” (Toyah’s description) stormed the joint.

            Toyah owes much to Bowie, and much to her band. Pete Bush (keyboards), Joel Bogen (guitar), Steve Bray (drums) and Charlie Francis (bass) are definitely tight – especially in the gig situation where they cut the experimentals of “Sheep Farming” – owing much to the sterling rapport between Bray and new-boy Francis (I identified you as useful when you were with P. Fitzgerald and I claim my £5), while Ms Willcox on “verbals” delivers along the lines of Bowie and Lovich in a voice not unadjacent to, but certainly more substantial and emotive than the standard female new wave vocal. Additionally, she rightly perceives rock as a form of theatre, and fully realise its limitations. For her, this is only one ballgame amidst the “chaos” of a multi-media life.

            Manifestly relating to/identifying with Toyah in a pretty big way, the punters surrendered unconditionally, thus necessitating protection for the starlet plus a re-evaluation of the Fan Club’s air-conditioning. “Tribal Luck”, the new single’s flip, achieved the biggest response, demonstrating the extent of the band’s improvement since “Sheep Farming” and showing just why Toyah’s “so embarrassed” that the album is set for UK release.

            Finishing, appropriately enough, with “Last Goodbye” – a number with a strong “Man Who Sold The World” (album) resemblance – which coincidentally, gave Bogen a belated opportunity to get his rocks comprehensively off, the band stuck around to encore the single “Bird In Flight” before splitting for fresher oxygen and another conflab on just how big this whole thing can get.
                                                                                                                                    DES MOINES


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