My First Music Memory

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Music. In many ways, is as much a part of my life as breathing. I love music, I love going to see my music live. I love listening to my old favourites and some new discoveries.

I love playing music through my amp back at home. I'm not sure my mum appreciates the latter contribution but what can I do, this is her fault anyway.


I don't really get a lot of musical influence from my mum apart from a few weird singles such as the Worzel Gummidge song and Neil from the young ones’ hole in my shoe. But she did start off my love for music initially.


It must have been around 1998-1999 the pre-sister years. At this time, my mum worked for an independent card shop where she would create and produce hundreds and hundreds of handmade, personalised cards. She made these while I was sat in front of the tv or having a nap presumably because at this time I was only around 2-3 and she did this to make some money while looking after me. And when she had completed a few boxes of the cards, we would pack up the boot of her blue Rover Kensington and head to a small town not far from Wrexham (where I live) called Mold.


Mold wasn’t really anything to brag about, it was a nice little town with shops on both sides of the street. Mold boasts that Jonny Buckland from Coldplay grew up there which if you said that to me in my teens I would not care a bit. But now, I'm a Coldplay megafan so to think he walked the streets where I've been is very cool indeed!


Once mum had dropped off her cards to the distributor, we wouldn't go home straight away but instead, we would take a short walk down the street, and turn the corner onto what seemed a street that was always sunny, I can always remember it being sunny there.

I can't remember what the place was called but it was a little cafe/tea room where everything inside matched the colours and details of a china cup with the white and blue floral design. That was already very striking to me as a child. I can remember the smell as if it was yesterday, and they always had a small pot of sugar cubes which fascinated me because it meant I had something to play with while mum was having her tea probably.


Now I really don't know if this song ever played there but it's really intertwined with one another. I can't think of Mold without thinking of the song/band and I can't listen to the band without thinking of Mold tea rooms but my earliest memory was The Beautiful South.


The Beautiful South was a small, insignificant part of my childhood but this has transformed my listening tastes. I'm not a huge fan of modern genres of music, I like good songs with good lyrics and a great tune when I was discovering ‘my band’ I oriented toward The Beatles first and from that grew to like The Kinks and the beach boys and Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons, that style of music suits very well with me.

The beautiful south to me was a mix of great vocals and a happy tune. Perfect 10 is a lovely tune and I love Rotterdam. The song of theirs that I remember most is You Keep it All In.

This song also takes me to 2017 too, I bonded with a work friend over it, we would break out into songs while cooking in a hot cafe kitchen and it was really great fun in the summer just having a sing with your co-worker.

A small claim to fame on my part is that in the same workplace, I worked with the Julie from ‘song for whoever’ by none other than the beautiful south!

I think it’s incredible that I have a few strong Early Music Memories in my life and The Beautiful South has been there for some of them.

To sum up my first music memory would be the happiness, sunshine and the smell of a coffee shop. fantastic.

Virtual Glastonbury Went Off With a Glitch

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The evening of Saturday 22nd May, festival and music enthusiasts alike tuned in to partake in a little pandemic escapism and have the closest thing we could get to the Glastonbury experience- although without the inevitable wading in mud and instead embracing the comfort of your own home. ‘Live at Worthy Farm’ would be filmed at the ground of the world-renowned festival and available to watch all around the world. 

But just like with happenings this past year, things didn’t go quite to plan…

Instead of being able to watch a smoothly run special film shot at Worthy Farm, featuring artists such as Haim, Coldplay and George Ezra, technical glitches were afoot and tampered with the much-anticipated event. 

The problems with the link that ‘Glasthomebury’ goers paid £20 to access failed to work for anyone when it came to logging on for Wolf Alice at 7pm for the first setlist of the evening. Organisers worked quickly and non-stop in order to avoid disappointing those who had been anticipately waiting for a night of fun amongst a chaotic year, and eventually managed to fix it. A free link was released in the end so that it could be accessible for all, and those who had paid were emailed with the offer for a refund.

I have to say though, it didn’t spoil my home Glasto fun. 

Like with many events, it was most enjoyable with others around you, and dressing up to look the part is half the fun. 

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Donning Hawaiian shirts and sporting glitter laden faces put me in festival mode, with all that was missing was a fashionable pair of wellies. Just being able to get together with others and have a laugh, a drink or two and have a nigh of distraction and fun was enough in itself. 

The fact that Eurovision was able to entertain in the meantime whilst Worthy Farm experienced difficulties was a huge bonus. There’s nothing that gets you in the party mood quite like some cheesy European anthems paired with eye-catching outfits. So, after some glitzy Eurovision fun, getting on to the Glastonbury livestream was still a joy.

It may not have been quite as upbeat and energetic as what was being streamed live from Rotterdam, but the film itself was beautiful. It was a very laid-back sort of affair, with Haim playing their chilliest, dreamiest songs and Damion Alburn taking a seat at a piano rather than riling up the virtual crowds.

Coldplay arguably brought the most concert-like performance of the evening, with their statement colourful bright lights and upbeat anthems being belted out in front of the structure of the famous Pyramid Stage. Chris Martin’s love for Glastonbury isn’t exactly a secret, so perhaps his passion and enthusiasm for the Somerset festival helped carry the performance across into viewers living rooms. 

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There were many who were disappointed with what happened, but I chose to embrace the Glasto spirit and look at the positives. I had a good time with people, we had DIY Glastonbury decorations which cheered everyone up and we managed to watch it in the end and have a good time. It just shows that in this digital age we’re in now that even the giants encounter technicalities, and if over a year of Covid has taught us anything, it’s to have just a little more patience. 

Happy 80th Birthday Bob Dylan

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One of the world’s most influential singer/songwriters American Bob Dylan celebrates a milestone today, his 80th birthday.

Robert Zimmerman, legally changed his to Dylan in the early Sixties.


The most commonly accepted version has long been that it was a tribute to Welsh poet Dylan Thomas. Later, another theory posited that his pseudonym grew out of an early appreciation for the Matt Dillon character in the TV series Gunsmoke.


The ever-enigmatic Dylan – who told Playboy in 1978 that "I just chose the name and it stuck" – was typically of no help. Long after signing the first management contracts that finalized his new identity, he claimed that Dylan was his mother's maiden name (when it was actually Stone), that there was a Dillon Road in his hometown of Hibbing, Minn., that he took it from the name of a town in Oklahoma and that he had an uncle on his mom's side of the family with a similar name.


He even took shots at Thomas along the way. "Dylan Thomas' poetry is for people that aren't really satisfied in their bed – for people who dig masculine romance," Dylan told The New York Times in 1961. "I didn't change my name in honor of Dylan Thomas: That's just a story," he told Jules Siegel during a 1966 interview quoted in Bob Dylan: The Never Ending Star. "I've done more for Dylan Thomas than he's ever done for me."

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Dylan’s been a regular visitor over the years since he first strolled onto the stage in Cardiff in 1966 and left many speechless with an electric set that tested the loyalty of his diehard folk living followers.
The set for his first visit included-

Tell Me,
MommaI Don't Believe You (She Acts Like We Never Have Met)Baby,
Let Me Follow You Down
Just Like Tom Thumb's Blues
Leopard-Skin Pill-Box Hat
One Too Many Mornings
Ballard of a Thin Man
Like a Rolling Stone

It was March 1995 when Dylan next appeared in Cardiff playing the Cardiff International Arena, nearly 30 years later and the following setlist

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Setlist

Down in the Flood
Señor (Tales of Yankee Power)
All Along the Watchtower
Play Video
Just Like a Woman
Tangled Up in Blue
Born in Time
Mr. Tambourine Man
(Acoustic)
Boots of Spanish Leather
(Acoustic)
Desolation Row
(Acoustic)
Dignity
She Belongs to Me
Maggie's Farm

Encore:
Like a Rolling Stone
It Ain't Me, Babe
(Acoustic)
Highway 61 Revisited

He returned again in 1997 to the same venue.

The 2000s saw Cardiff becoming a regular on Dylan’s tour schedule with an number of visits with the last being 3 May 2017, with the following setlist

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Things Have Changed
To Ramona
Highway 61 Revisited
Beyond Here Lies Nothin'
I Could Have Told You
(Frank Sinatra cover)
Pay in Blood
Melancholy Mood
(Frank Sinatra cover)
Duquesne Whistle
Stormy Weather
(Harold Arlen cover)
Tangled Up in Blue
Early Roman Kings
Spirit on the Water
Love Sick
All or Nothing at All
(Jimmy Dorsey & His Orchestra cover)
Desolation Row
Soon After Midnight
That Old Black Magic
(Johnny Mercer cover)
Long and Wasted Years
Autumn Leaves
(Yves Montand cover)

Encore:
Blowin' in the Wind
Ballad of a Thin Man

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Morgan Fisher Part 5 Available Tomorrow!

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This great series of Vodcasts continues with the Musician that has done everything.

Tomorrow Morgan will chat to Steve Johnson of KCL about his love of Japan, Travels, Meditation, and Spirituality.

All Previous Vodcasts are available on our Youtube channel.

Please Click the Button and Subscribe.

Venues - The Gaumont

The Gaumont

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Next up in the series of famous Cardiff venues is The Gaumont. In the Fifties and Sixties it was the visiting place of the early rockers.

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Gene Vincent and Eddie Cochran visited whilst UK’s very first rock’n’roller Tommy Steele also made an appearance, whilst jazz legend Oscar Peterson and Ella Fitzgerald also performed together on the same bill.
Situated in Queen Street it was first a music hall, known as Levino’s Hall, which opened in 1887.


In 1889, it reopened as the Empire Theatre and later, in 1990, The Empire Palace Theatre.


Rebuilding work in 1915 increased the seating capacity from 1725 to 2820, operating as a major theatre on the Moss Empire Theatre circuit.


Having been taken over by the Gaumont British Theatres Corporation, it was converted to a cinema, though still able to provided live entertainment.

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It became the Gaumont in 1954 when programmed by the Rank organisation and played back up to the larger Capitol Theatre.


With attendances dwindling, Rank decided to close the Gaumont on 30th December 1961. Live shows which had been ideally suited to the Gaumont’s large stage and backstage facilities were relocated to the Capitol Cinema where there were some stage facilities but larger seating capacity.


After demolition in 1962, a new building for the now-defunct C&A clothing business was built with a large ballroom in the basement initially bearing the "Top Rank" name. This has now been demolished and replaced by a new building for the clothing chain Primark, which by 2014 had become a Matalan store.

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And We Have A Winner!

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We Have been running a competition in conjunction with The Cardiff City Phone In To coincide with the recent appearance of City legend, Dave Carver on the Phone-In, we're giving away one of our lovely 'CCFC 1927' T Shirts.

The question was how many times Cardiff City won the Welsh Cup during Dave Carver's time with the Bluebirds (1968-1973).

The correct answer was Four

We have Selected a winner at random from the many answers we received.

We are very happy to announce our winner is Clive Lintern.

Clive, please email us at infocardifflive@gmail.com to arrange postage of your shirt.

We would like to say a Big,Big thanks to everyone who entered, Steve Johnson,The Cardiff City Phone In, and of course Dave Carver City Legend.

Please Check Out our Retrovybe store for more T-Shirts and Products.

All sales help us Run KCL

Please Click the Button Below for Link

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The Rotanas

The Rotanas are a gritpop group from Cardiff, South Wales. Much like many other music artists the pandemic has affected them in both positive and negative ways.


"We hugely benefited because it's given us a chance to slow down and write new material which we really needed. We needed time to discover ourselves and mature musically and the pandemic has given us time to do so.


"Hopefully attendance will go up across the board for bands at a grassroots level and not just for the first week that gigs are allowed back but at a sustained level for years to come. Going to gigs is really good for you too, so it's a no brainer!

I think gigs will be really emotional. Hopefully the industry as whole profits from people's newfound love and appreciation for the return of artists to techies to roadies to photographers"
Many artists have found it quite difficult to book gigs, especially as venues will look to prioritise the "bigger" acts and try to make their profits back.


"Not as such for us no because I think we had stuff that's carried over, but I can appreciate that it must be very difficult for bands just starting out because everything's getting rescheduled. If any bands that have started out during the pandemic and are finding it hard, drop us a message and we might be able to get some bands on support.


"The jealousy of seeing some bands get priority I think is firepower that should be used for good. Use that emotion to your advantage and punch above your weight. That's what we have always done"

Cardiff City Phone In Prize Giveaway!

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Image and T Shirt Copyright©

We are running a competition in conjunction with The Cardiff City Phone In. To coincide with the recent appearance of City legend, Dave Carver on the Phone-In, we're giving away one of our lovely 'CCFC 1927' tee shirts, hurrah!

All you have to do, to be in with a chance to win, is

•Like our Facebook page

  • Tell us how many times Cardiff City won the Welsh Cup during Dave Carver's time with the Bluebirds (1968-1973).

Just tell us the answer and like our page and you might win one of these shirts. Imagine how cool you'd be when you hit the beach! Go on, you know you want one...

Up the City!!

Please Check Out our Retrovybe store for more T-Shirts and Products.

All sales help us Run KCL

Please Click the Button Below for Link