www.betika.co.uk
Loads of gigs since the last post- firstly with Delicate Hammers, who came down from Manchester to play with us a couple of weeks back and spread some half-hop tinged love around Bournemouth. I'd taken the day off work so I could be at home when the Hammers arrived, and I'd spent most of it pottering around the garden without bothering to switch on the TV or radio, so it wasn't until about 3.30pm that I went to check my email and discovered that the terrorist attacks on the London Underground had taken place. Talk about living in a hole. So I got onto the phone to my Londonfriends pretty sharpish to make sure they were all okay- this was the third time I've had to do this in my life, and the first call in each case has been to the same person, my friend Ali. She was living in Manchester in '96 when the IRA blew up the Arndale Centre, then working just around the corner from one of the nail bombs that were set off in London around '99. Trouble seems to follow her around, but thankfully never quite catch up with her. This time, as before, everyone was present and accounted for. For me at least.
Naturally, the atmosphere at the gig was subdued. Again, this is the third time I've found myself in that situation, trying to play music while feeling strange and slightly numb with shock, to an audience in the same state. The night Princess Diana died I played a gig (with Police Dog and The Elastins), and also in both the 12th and 13th of September 2001 (with Tex la Homa and Betika respectively). It doesn't get any easier, but we all still played our hearts out as best we could. The Hammers were awesome, but for me Betika's set felt a bit like an out-of-body experience, like it wasn't quite real.
A couple of days later we played our first outdoor gig of the year, at Grooves on the Green in Parkstone, which is a relatively small event that just runs for an afternoon in a park. We thought it would be a fairly small-scale do that would ease us gently into the festival season, but as it turned out the weather was glorious and there were probably a couple of thousand people there. Which turned out to be a very good thing. I've had to start changing the lyrics to some of our songs slightly, so as to protect the younger audience-members who are so abundant at daytime festival events from the cussing and grown-up subject matter. I hadn't really thought about this prior to taking the stage at Grooves, so I had to come up with some bizarre off-the-cuff nonsense. Some of it was words, some of it was just noises. One section of "By Default" just went "bimbimbimbim, bimbim bimbimbimbim", though Carolyn, having a filthy mind, thought she heard even worse language in there than there would normally be.
In conclusion, an afternoon of good clean family fun was had by the whole band.
Thursday last week took us to the Larmer Tree Festival, where we were scheduled to play a couple of sets over the first couple of days of the festival - as it turned out we played no less than four! The first one was just before seven on the Thursday when we were the first act on a bill the culminated with a set by Jools Holland and his r&b orchestra (some time later and on a different stage!), then we returned at around 11.30 that evening to play another, more wired set joined by Sancho Paul on vibes and some random strangers on extra percussion. Chaos ensued. The next set we did was Friday lunchtime when we played a few of our quieter songs, kicking off with the first outing of "You can call me brother" which Carolyn and I did with just guitar, melodica and voices, and concluding with "Hatred", which has fast become my favourite Betika song. Having retreated back to camp with Hubcap and Lee and Sarah Dutch, we had a bit of a singalong around what would have been our campfire had we been allowed to make one, and inbetween various Pavement and True Swamp songs (it took all of our collected minds to remember all of the words to "Dear Fingerprint") we worked out some nice four-part harmony singing for "If you go to work on me" (Imogen and Hubcap providing the extra voices), and also a cover of Hefner's "The Greedy Ugly People", which we've been considering doing in our acoustic sets for a little while now, but had become reluctant after having witnessed Darren Hayman's own spine-tingling rendition a few weeks ago. It all sounded rather lovely, so we took it all along to an open mic session much later that evening, where it didn't seem to work quite so well. We'd done several hours of drinking inbetween, which in retrospect probably wasn't such a great idea, and not something we'd do again in a hurry.
The rest of the weekend was spent watching bands, highlights for me were Jose Gonzales, This is Seb Clarke, Otis Lee Crenshaw and what little I caught of Flipron. I'm sure there should be many more, but it's all a bit of a blur to be honest.
Lots of new songs being rehearsed at the moment, look out for a couple at this week's Betika gigs;
Wednesday @ o'neill's - with Dutch Husband and One Shade Lighter
Sunday @ Le Bateau - me and Caz doing acoustic stuff.