Rather like the current Katherine Priddy release, the latest advance single for the new album, The Bracken And Tread, about his journeys in Nepal, Make A Start sees GEORGE BOOMSMA taking a swerve away from his familiar sound with a strong Beatles psychedelic vibe to its narcotic vocals and woozy arrangement and circling melody line, as, painting a wintery backdrop, he sings about basically getting off your arse and doing something (“Thaw off and be thankful…shed off those shoddy rhymes on brotherly love/Come now my friend sitting by a winter's bitter end/Bare bones and heart sitting by a winter's work of art/One by one, tooth and nail, make a start”) rather than just keeping out the metaphorical cold.
Taken from the upcoming SCARLET FANTASTIC album, From Montreal To Rotherham, opening with echoing drums, the rhythmically slow walking Cowboy Guardian Angel (Last Night From Glasgow) is Maggie de Monde’s Bowie-inflected tribute to her late husband Leif Kahal, reflecting on their 27-year marriage.
His first release since 2020, Nuneaton’s CHRIS TYE marks an impressive return with ‘Getting Back To The Start’ (Little Dog Music), a sweetly sung, high voiced circling fingerpicked dreamy waltzer that speaks of heart weariness (“strung out again/
Tired of the daylight”) and the struggle to reset the emotional clock (“here in a state/Slowing down in a stalemate/Stalling before every move…Needing to be someone else…spend such a long time/Getting back to the start/And then you fall apart”).
Following on from the Fuzzbox story come two more books, both available physically and digitally, about Birmingham bands that operated on the fringes, one a memoir and the other, well, a sort of biography wrapped in a detective story wrapped in musical archeology Written by Andy Houston, Dead On It: In Search of Birmingham's Lost Band is a fascinating account of the titular Erdington band (initially Ded On It) who, in the early 90s, threatened to be the next big thing out of Birmingham, their music inspired by Prince’s deeper funk side (their name taken from a song on The Black Album), the Chili Peppers, acid jazz and rock, embracing seething primal guitars, chest-throbbing bass lines and synths. They regular played jammed venues, but then they simply disappeared.
The book’s premise is that, in 2021 in the recently reopened Flapper & Firkin, the narrator, music journalist Tom Carter, meets a mysterious stranger who hands him a cassette of a band called Dead On It, imparting no other information ither than he was the drummer. His interest piqued by the music, Carter embarks on a quest to find out more about the band, whose names he doesn’t know, and try and track them down.
What ensues is a mix of fiction and fact, real people reimagined as part of the story. Here I have to put my hand up and say that I am one of them, drawing on my days writing the Tapedecked column for BrumBeat and quoting my reviews of the band, to which end I come over as a sort of keeper of the scrolls, though sadly, while it has my career in music correct, I never lived in a large Victorian house with a purple door. Regularly cited in the book as the pundit with the keys to the quest, I confess to having a smile at some of the descriptions and comments of my fictionalised self.
Of equal importance in Carter following the breadcrumbs is my fellow BrumBeat writer Max Freeth who subsequently enters the narrative and whose reviews are also quoted along with various other writers who contributed to the mag and others of its ilk.
Illustrated with deliberately grainy black and white photos to add to the air of mystery, following press cuttings, interviews and fading memories, it slowly builds a picture of the band, the record deals that never came to fruition, their musical shifts in gear and sound, the gigs they played, mixing that with a lovely account of how they sent a cassette to Prince (they apparently did) and an imagined scenario of how that might have played out, discussing them with George and while intrigued too busy to get involved. Whether he actually sent them an invitation to join the fan club and a merchandising catalogue is true, it probably should be.
Ultimately, Carter manages to uncover the names of the band members (Iain Reid, Chris Booth, Simon Lush, Andy Martin) and what happened to at least three of them after they split up, the book ending with lyrics to their songs, Houston summing it up as “exploring what it means to go off-script, flirt with greatness, and laugh at yourself when it doesn’t work out”. It’s a quick and absorbing read that captures the story of many a local band and leaves you wanting to actually hear the music, none of which, at present anyway, is available on line. Maybe that’s a project someone else might want to take up.
By coincidence, Freeth is actually the author of the other book, Ausgang:Scarred Lips, an autobiography of himself and the band from his childhood in Winson Green and Cape Hill, through teenage years (comic books, kung fu, yoga, discovering punk, Barbarellas, etc.), art school, his first proper band The Solicitors (playing what he termed nagoy music) and the Kabuki, a magnificently unique bass-heavy outfit in a similar musical field to Alien Sex Fiend and Sex Gang Children with whom I recorded a Beacon Radio session and whose solitary single, 1982’s I Am a Horse stands the test of time, and the subsequent formation of the goth-inclined Ausgang alongside Kabuki bassist Cub, guitarist Matthew and new addition Ibo on drums.
They made their debut in in September 1983 at the Powerhouse, toured with The Cult and signed to Criminal Damage Records, their Solid Glass Spine single making it to 23 on the UK Indie Chart before Cub left to be replaced by Stu and the band moved to FM Records, releasing debut album Manipulate in January 1986 before eventually setting up their own Shakedown label, briefly taking on the name Ausgang-a-Go-Go, a slogan a friend had painted on his jacket.
After a series of musical permutations, they eventually split in 1987, reforming in 2003, releasing the Licked album two years later and enjoying a whole new level of success with festivals and gigs in New York, Prague and Berlin.
Taking chapter headings from songs or book titles, it is, as you’d expect a journey littered with familiar musical stories of highs and lows and I was pleased to see mention of Max’s daughter Naomi, who released several singles on Gut between 1997 and 1999 but never received the attention and acclaim she deserved. She later became Phoenix, her band at the time featuring Dan Whitehouse on guitar.
As befits a band who once recorded a track about a one-sided conversation between Max and his bed (Kabuki has done similar with Hair), it’s an at times bizarre story but, on account of his dynamic writing and incidental anecdotes, never less than engrossing reading, another snapshot of how the city forged bands that may never have found mainstream success but became cults whose stories and influences have endured.








