James record their latest album in a three-week period at the House In The Woods studio.
Tag Archives: 2000
Fanzine: Change Of Scenery – Issue 13
Change Of Scenery was a James fanzine produced by John Pude.
Download this fanzine as a PDF.
© copyright Change Of Scenery.
November 2000
James – Folklore: The Official History by Stuart Maconie is release by Virgin Books 9th November. James support Smashing Pumpkins at the Centurion Supersport Park in South Africa – their first ever gig in that country.
Pretoria Centurion Supersport Park – 11th November 2000
Setlist
tbd
Support
Supporting Smashing Pumpkins
Review
n/a
James – Folklore: The Official History by Stuart Maconie
The 2000 official biography of James.
Summary
‘Folklore, the official history of James, tells the story of this vital, cerebral group from their early days in Manchester’s fertile and feisty post-punk scene to their millennial album Millionaires and their status today as one of Britain’s biggest and most individual bands. It’s an engaging, erratic and driven tale. It’s the definitive story of James.‘
About
Stuart Maconie, famous for his work at BBC Radio 1, many of the music papers and as author of the official Blur biography, wrote the definitive history of James, charting the almost 20 year history of the band up to 2000. It includes exclusive interviews with the band, revealing the truth about the dark, dim, distant and depressing past. It charts the good and the bad times, the successes and the near break-ups, the comings and goings of band personnel. The publisher says “No James fan worth their salt will not read this book cover to cover – newer fans will get vital insights into just why this band is so special and be amazed at how it is still together at all and older fans will discover the truth behind the myths spread about the band in the eighties.”
- Publisher: Virgin Books
- First Edition First Impression: 9 November 2000
- ISBN-10: 0753504944
- ISBN-13: 978-0753504949
Review
By David Brown, archivist at OneOfTheThree.com
Band biographies tend to fall into three categories – the slavishly sycophantic, the deep emotional evaluation and the simple no-thrills story. Folklore fits like a glove into the latter. Evaluation of the music is critical rather than emotive and instinctive. This is no bad thing – we have 260 pages here for a 20 year story – and what a story it is – and you and I all have our own reasons for being James fans.
The characters are introduced as and when they come into James – there is no assuming you know anything about them just because you have bought their records. For me, this is the most fascinating aspect of the book. There is no skimming over the shady early days and the story is often told in the words of the actors themselves.
More than half the book concentrates on the pre-1989 James, an amazing feat given the paucity of the documentary material on this period. It is a must-read for the older fan as that story has never really been told and an eye opener for the younger fans that are maybe not aware of that history.
The book then becomes a series of ups and downs. There are some fascinating insights into the Gold Mother, Laid and Wah Wah sessions, but relatively little on the more fractious times in between.
The period between Gold Mother and Seven, the three-year hiatus and Black Thursday and the near breakup at the time of the Best Of are glossed over. It is perhaps a little unfair to blame the author for this as the real story of these times lie with the band themselves and some serious grievances and personal animosity have had to be laid to rest. Dragging them back up at a time of relative harmony would be self-defeating, but the book does suffer from this as a result.
So in the final analysis, is the book worth the price? The James story, all the way back to the very beginning, is critical to understanding the music the band was producing at any juncture in their career. Despite an odd chronological error and the comments earlier, the book is by far the most comprehensive telling of that story to date.
Read, inwardly digest and go back and listen to your collection.
Q Review December 2000 by Paul Davies 4/5
A country mile from the officially sanctioned, ego-stroking biographies which regularly bring the genre into disrepute. Maconie’s lemon-sharp account relates James’ enthralling spacehop from here to there in zippily relentless prose. An everyday tale of hijacked golf carts, drugs and 16-hour meditation sessions, the book is threaded with chunky interviews from all the key protagonists. The music journey from knock-kneed indie shavings to big-boned wraparound arena-gobblers is painstakingly charted and sprinkled with appetising anecdote. From Tim Booth’s public school outing to see Iggy Pop to the gormless backstage shenanigans on the 1997 Lollapalooza tour, Folklore plays tantalising keep-uppy with the twitching bag of rats that is the James experience.
London Brixton Academy – 8th November 2000
Setlist
What Is It Good For? / Stand / Senorita / Getting Away With It (All Messed Up) / Say Something / Sometimes / Tomorrow / Johnny Yen / Someone's Got It In For Me / Junkie / The Shining / English Beefcake / Pleased to Meet You / Born of Frustration / Destiny Calling / Shes a Star / How Was It For You? / Stutter / Top of The World / Laid / Ring The Bells / Come HomeSupport
Shea Segar / Exit 52More Information & Reviews
OneOfTheThree.com
Arriving on stage at 9, 15 minutes earlier than the rest of the tour, was a suggestion that we were in for something special tonight. And so we were. The tension evident at the previous night’s Nottingham show was blown away and replaced by a band hellbent on impressing the traditionally more laidback London crowd.
Four songs in, Work It All Out, Stand Stand Stand, Senorita and Daniel’s Saving Grace – all songs most of the audience had never heard before – and the battle had been won. Each was delivered with a power and energy that one has to hope can be captured in the studio when the band decamp back to Surrey with Eno in a week’s time. The only criticism, and it is a minor one, is that Tim insists on using Hullabaloo in Senorita and it doesn’t work. For Saving Grace, the band are joined on stage by Wired Strings, the quartet that had accompanied them at V2000 and Shepherds Bush. They help take Saving Grace to a new level.
Tim is on absolute top form tonight. His belief in the new material is self-evident, even to the extent of urging people in the crowd “if the person next to you is chatting, punch them”
Three Best Of tracks follow and these have been the litmus test of James on this tour. Say Something, knocked off as if they seemed they couldn’t be arsed last night, is reinvented, augmented by the strings and is frankly mindblowing. Tim’s frenetic improvisation over the end section takes the song to a completely new level.
Sometimes and a magnificently wracked Tomorrow inspire the crowd to surge forward, the string section adding to the cacophony of sound being produced by the band, who are the most up for this show than I have witnessed for a long time. Even Adrian is bounding about and smiling. We’ll make a guitar axe hero out of him yet.
Perennial crowd favourite Johnny Yen, by far the highlight of older material so far this tour, follows and goes down a storm as both band and singer improvise to create a sound so powerful and toxic even the most hardened cynic could not deny.
The opening bars of Someone’s Got It In For Me herald a massive response from the audience and the band’s fiery performance carry them through this epic masterpiece from Millionaires. Grown men stand and stare at the astonishing light show, listen to the wall of sound being produced and jaws drop. I’d thought James had forgotten how to be this good, this mindblowingly spectacular.
Four new songs followed and the pace did still not relent. Everyone’s A Junkie was not completely new as it had been broadcast on MTV from Shepherds Bush but this version was a world away from that. There is such an evident belief in the magnificence of this new material and it is impossible not to get caught up in it tonight.
Words cannot begin to describe just how good the next two tracks are – The Shining and English Beefcake leave me astonished. These have been my favourite new songs on the tour so far tonight, but they get better with every listen and new twist that the band add to them. Even Pleased To Meet You with a more reserved guitar end section is a major triumph, Tim focusing in on a guy in the front row and singing the “pleased to meet you, where are you from and what your’s name” directly to him.
Tim tries to get the audience to holler back the “wooo wooo” opening to Frustration back to him, but with no great success – “too many Cowboys, not enough Indians”, but this is a very minor glitch and soon forgotten as Tim bounces around the stage, Saul and Adrian move forward to perform and the crowd goes completely ape. Destiny is given a similar response, the lyrics seem even more pointed in tonight’s atmosphere of celebration and with the intensity and the ferocity of the performance.
Tim almost gives me a heartattack as I’m stood eyes closed mouthing the words to Star. There’s a white blur and two hands on my shoulder and he’s there about six inches in front of me. The crowd rush to touch their hero who is clearly enjoying tonight and he stays on the barrier until the end of the song, when he leaps back on stage as the opening bars of How Was It For You? crank up. The pace continues to increase through this welcome readdition to the setlist, Tim’s dancing and the band’s music, including the longawaited return of the cowbell are just simply mindblowing. I’m writing this review at 7 the morning after and still finding it hard to find words to describe this show.
The piece de resistance of the evening has to be Stutter. Conceived before a number of the audience in all likelihood, this is 11 musicians and one lighting man creating one of the most spectacular sound and vision that I have ever had the pleasure of witnessing. Lights go up and down in almost every imaginable colour and shape. New twists and turns in the music follow on one after the other. Gobsmacked is the most appropriate word to describe the effect this had. A breathtaking end to a breathtaking show.
Top Of The World was almost muted as a encore opener by what had gone before, but Saul’s violin solo saves the day.
Laid is short, powerful, ecstatic and swallowed whole by the crowd. The band, every one with wide beams on their faces look out on to their adoring masses heaving, sweating and yelling themselves hoarse as they sing back every word to Tim.
Ring The Bells is spoilt a little by a Tim-induced stage invasion. One crowdsurfer is invited onstage by Tim and this encourages a whole brigade of sweaty moshers to follow suit. Trouble is that security are totally unequipped to handle it. There are five blokes for the whole pit and one skinny ten stone security guard cannot lift a fifteen stone beer monster out of a crowd at arms length however much he thinks he can so the front two rows get bodies landing on their heads . Security at some venues can work this out, but tonight they are complete twats, there’s no other word to describe them.
The crowd refuse to let the band go and so they agree to play another song, a triumphant version of Come Home, backed by the string section who Tim tells “you don’t know this one girls” but they join in anyway.
This was the best James gig I’ve seen in a long long time. The new material is so powerful and the band’s belief in it is self evident. Record it and release it now please, don’t give it chance to go stale. The older material is reinvigorated by performance. Ten out of ten.
Alison
Everyone always says “James are such a good live band…!” which has made me always want to see them so I would have been happy whatever was played at Brixton Academy – as long as it was good but I knew it would be, I was seeing James play live!!! Shea Seger was a great choice of support band and played a good set but everyone was waiting for the band we had all come to see.
James opened with new songs which I know some fans were disappointed by (they were warned they’d play new ones by the band themselves when tickets went on sale!) but I loved it. The chance to hear new stuff before it’s even been released was great. My personal favourite of these four new songs was senorita, maybe just because I always see Tim Booth dancing when I remember it! After this surprising start they moved onto old favourites including Tomorrow which sounded sooo good live and also Johnny Yen. They returned to new songs soon enough though including Beefcake and Pleased to meet you – in which Tim Booth came off the stage and being near the front, I got so squashed! Next came a mixture of songs from throughout their career and I think they planned to finish with Ring the Bells as they seemed surprised to find themselves back on stage again and singing Come Home to a thoroughly mad and enthusiastic crowd!!
I’ll not forget this concert for a long time and not only because someone jumped on my feet so much that my toenail has fallen off! Now that’s how you know you had a good time…
Trevor Baker, Melody Maker (4/5)
You put your left leg in. Your right leg out. In. Out. In Out.
In-out-in-out-in-out-in-out. You pump the air with your fists. You spin like the hands of Big Ben on fast-forward. You don’t know whether it’s this year or 1983. You do the Tim Booth and shake it all about.
No. This will never catch on. It’s halfway through “Senorita”, one of nine new songs James play tonight. The vibe is “Different Class”-era Pulp – all soaring melodies and low-key softly despairing vocals. And unbelievably, James are back on form. The Tim Booth School Of Better Dancing won’t be opening any time soon, but the James Tune Academy (est 1803) is still very much Ivy League.
This shouldn’t work. An opening that consists of four new songs, while their best known offering (“Sit Down”) is consigned to the dustbin of history. It’s arrogant. It’s bloody minded. But bear with them, because at this point in their career, it’s all that James can do. They play two very distinct sets tonight. The first consists of the new stuff – highlights being “Someone’s Got It” (sic) – the missing link between U2’s “One” and Frankie Goes To Hollywood’s “The Power Of Love” – and “Pleased To Meet You”, with its desolate guitar squeals, nails the horrors of music industry falseness, like a gentle cousin of Radiohead’s “Paranoid Android”
The second set, though, is pure spangly topped cabaret. “Born of Frustration”, “Destiny Calling”, “She’s A Star”, “Sometimes”, “How Was It For You?” – all pushed out to totter round the venue like an ageing circus elephant. We may not be bored, but, disconcertingly, you can tell by the frown on Saul’s face and the lack of sparkle in Tim’s voice that James are.
It would be too simple to say that new=good, old=bad. “The Shining” and “Beefcake” both descend into the platitude rock of U2 at their hollow worst, while jubilant classics “Laid” and “Stutter” are simply enormous – ripping the roof off the venue and using it as a frisbee. But the great thing about James now is that they’ve rediscovered fear – the fear of not being as good as they used to be and the fear that if they’re not careful they could turn into performing seals. “If I hadn’t seen such riches, I could live with being poor”, Tim sang with terrible irony at the peak of their career – but, tonight, the bank’s still very much open for business.
Tim Booth’s Verdict : “It was really good. I was worried that we’d peaked too early because for the first few songs, it felt really transcendental, you don’t get moments like that very often. I thought the reaction from the crowd totally justified our decision to play the new stuff.”
Saul Davies’ Verdict : “I’m gutted. I can’t believe it. Relegated to playing Celtic in the UEFA Cup. No, sorry, I’m a big Barcelona fan (the Spanish team were knocked out of the Champions League tonight) – you’ve got to get your priorities right. Ha! It was great. It was hard to come to London and play something people weren’t expecting, but it went down really well.
Debbie Craig, Music365
Like Roy ‘Chubby’ Brown or Starlight Express, they’ll always be acts for which there is no end to their appeal and longevity. And into that group James are now beginning to fit quite snugly. While critics and floating musical voters may thumb their noses at the hippy Mancs, there remains a staunch and very sizable group of people for whom there’s no better band alive.
But before the disciples can touch some Tim Booth cloth, it’s down to Texan Shea Seger to warm them up on this bitterly cold night in South London. Sounding like a cross between Shania Twain and Sharleen Spiteri, Seger takes to the bare-looking stage and manages to keep the crowd interested but it’s hardly inspiring.
It’s clear from the moment Tim Booth – complete with trademark baseball hat – and his merry band take the stage they’re here to entertain. But not before they’ve tried out a few new songs. Opening with ‘Work It All Out’ isn’t the kind of start you expect to a James concert, it being a dreamy ballad number made all the more soothing by the beautiful lighting that makes the band appear enveloped in sheets of gossamer.
Following up with another new number ‘Stand, Stand, Stand’, the crowd seems appreciative, but are getting restless, a fact Booth acknowledges when he commends the audience on their patience. Another two new songs ‘Senorita’ – thankfully not the expected Latin number but does find Booth doing some Spanish hand movements – and ‘Saving Grace’ both elicit polite applause but it’s with an air of inevitability that the band launch into ‘Say Something’.
As the party atmosphere increases in potency, James manage to slip in another couple of new numbers ‘Junkie’ and ‘Beefcake’ before Booth acknowledges the difficult songs are over and it’s straight into a blistering version of ‘Born of Frustration’. Dedicating ‘She’s a Star’ to all the ladies in the audience, Booth combines the role of showman with a conviction, style and energy few could compete with. ‘Top of the World’ sums up the atmosphere of the evening and finishing with an unplanned encore of ‘Come Home’ is the icing on the cake for everyone.
They may not rub everyone up the same way, but given the right location, James are as much a well-loved British institution as beef dripping or pie-in-a-can, only a lot more tasty. 8/10
Eyewitness Report: Tim Booth asks the audience to retaliate when he says: “If you find someone standing next to you talking through the songs, just punch ‘em”
Kevin McGill, Dotmusic
Strolling on to a capacity crowd at Brixton Academy, James simply radiate confidence. Not many bands reach this level of self-assuredness onstage, but then again, not many bands can match their ability to fire out an entire catalogue of great singalong pop-rock tunes that span almost two decades.
So it was interesting that they opened with a handful of new songs, a slightly audacious move given the fact that their greatest hits album virtually re-launched their career, but it just about paid off. The new material is more minimalist and skeletal than much of their earlier work, but it still garnered a positive response from the audience, particularly a song that chorused “We’re all junkies”.
‘Say Something’ brought the crowd back to more familiar territory. Most bands would content themselves with four guitars and a keyboard, but after a few songs, four ladies ran onstage, clutching violins and a cello (and no, it wasn’t The Corrs!) While adding a touch of finesse to anthems such as ‘Sometimes’, the string section was ultimately over-ambitious.
The heavily-laden sound veered between very loud and very muggy on some songs, and frontman Tim Booth’s crystal-clear voice gave much needed coherence. Also, the omission of songs such as ‘Out To Get You’ and ‘I Defeat’, is surprising, as the string quartet would’ve been perfect for the softer nuances of such songs.
Following that interlude, James spent the remaining 45 minutes running through classics such as ‘Born of Frustration’ and ‘She’s A Star’. Four guitar players front-stage can sometimes look and sound a bit dull, but James are blessed with the presence of Booth – an absolute marvel onstage. Like Bono, his voice always seems to be at its peak, and his antics are equally entertaining: he constantly dances, pouts, and swirls around the stage, a hybrid ballet-dancing punk rocker.
When the band come back for an encore, an excited version of ‘Laid’ turns the Academy into a sea of hands, and one excited gentleman even clambers onstage. Booth walks away from him, and at the end of the song he quips “If you are going to get onstage you gotta do something”.
The front row read this as a red rag to a bull and when the band kick into a fantastic version of their melodic anthem ‘Come Home’ there is a mini-stage invasion, and what follows can only be described as a geek-of-the-night competition – whether people were trying to imitate Booth or not the results were hilarious.
After nearly being upstaged by the groupies, the band lingered on to lap up the applause. There’s little doubt that James are a formidable force live – they know what they’re here for.
Emmet Murphy
There are certain moments in a person’s life which they will always remember and cherish. The day you get married is one; as is the birth of your children; your first trip to a football match; the first time you kiss a member of the opposite sex; your first job. These memories and experiences form the backbone of one’s life, very often staying with that person to the grave. It has often been said that seeing James play live is an experience which is on a par with many of those listed above. As live acts go, James have always had a reputation for being both powerful and original: often bringing together the most unlikeliest groups of people, uniting them in a sharing of the spell that James seem to effortlessly cast on their audiences.
Indeed, it is a well-known fact that James’ real strengths lie in their ability to perform live: not merely playing live songs, they possess the guile and the talent to turn an evening’s show into an unforgettable experience for those who were present to witness it. And it was against this extravagant background, that I saw my thirteenth James concert at Brixton Academy, on November 8th. There was a feeling up until quite recently that James had become complacent of late, and had begun to rest their laurels squarely on the formidable shoulders that is their greatest hits. The feeling had been that their live set, although still of a very high standard, somewhat over-relied on Sit Down et al. and that the creativity and invention which had previously been the hallmark of their shows had begun to fade slightly. And this – to be fair – was probably true. Throughout recent years they have played their way through the Best Of many many times, and it had been getting to the point where the setlists were beginning to become (dare I say it) slightly predictable.
Tonight, however, James reversed that trend, and completely tore to shreds the theory that they are a group well past their sell-by date. The biggest testament to that has to lie in the mere fact that they were prepared to play nine new tracks in one show: a feat that lesser bands would never seriously contemplate. Out of those new songs, ‘Senorita’ and ‘English Beefcake’, in particular, stood out as tracks of genuinely outstanding potential. It was, however, thirteen songs into the show before Tim informed the audience that the new songs were over: the responding sense of relief was almost tangible! Magical renditions of ‘Born of Frustration’, ‘How Was It For You?’, and ‘Ring The Bells’ followed, and they were cleverly interspersed with other crowd-pleasers as we reached the show’s finale. As the final notes of ‘Ring The Bells’ filled the grandiose arena that is the Brixton Academy, the band were urged, pleaded with even, to play one final number. And the rendition of ‘Come Home’ that they produced has to rank as one of the best I have heard. It was an awesome end to a show that had, for long periods, threatened to disappoint.
That, however, it did not ultimately do and the vast majority of the crowd were sent out into the cold London air on a massive high. The new songs that they played tonight showed much promise; each was – in its own right – a very good tune, and collectively they promise much. However, there were too many of them! There is a very fine line between not playing enough new material and playing too much, and I think that James have yet to find that line. Whereas before, their sets relied on classic crowd-pleasing hits, this fresh outlook (whilst it is a welcome change) is too extreme. For prolonged periods, it reduced tonight’s crowd from a sweaty, thronging, mass, to a calmed, quiet, arms-folded, listening, audience.
However, as Saul stated at V2000 in August, the tour was essentially intended to be used as a vehicle to test out the new songs, with the tracks being recorded more-or-less as soon as the tour ended. So – the ultimate measure of this tour’s success has to lie with that new record (provisionally due for release sometime in 2001). If that album is successful, then this tour will be remembered as a brilliant stroke of genius. If, however, the album is not a success then it is hard to see how anyone could justify what would ultimately be remembered as nothing more than a pompous series of live public rehearsals.
Nottingham Rock City – 7th November 2000
Setlist
What Is It Good For / Stand / Senorita / Gaudi / Getting Away With It (All Messed Up) / Say Something / Just Like Fred Astaire / Sometimes / Johnny Yen / Someone's Got It In For Me / English Beefcake / Pleased To Meet You / The Shining / Destiny Calling / She's A Star / How Was It For You / Top Of The World / Laid / Ring The BellsSupport
Shea SegarMore Information & Reviews
OneOfTheThree.com
Arriving on stage about ten minutes late having left Tim “on the toilet, the bastards” and without the tacky “James, (city), come on boys” intro, the band were met with a rapturous reception from a Nottingham crowd for the first time since 1991.
Dropping Gaudi from the five new song opening onslaught, the band opened with Work It All Out, Stand Stand Stand, Senorita and Daniel’s Saving Grace. Work It All Out sounds more emotive and powerful on each listen. Stand Stand Stand (about “things we’re proud of”) and Senorita (about “addictions of all forms”) are singles in the making, both effortlessly simple songs which will stick leech-like in your brain. Saving Grace has a fantastic keyboard opening from Mark and is a full throttle romp throughout.
Say Something follows and is sadly like James on autopilot. Tim tries to inject energy into the improvisation at the end, but you feel the band could play this backwards and blindfold. The crowd loved it to bits though.
Born of Frustration and Sometimes have a similar delirious effect on the audience. Tim refers to the two as being about transcendence, but Sometimes is unusually weak tonight. There are some bad vibes on stage and this and other seasoned James observers picked up on this.
Johnny Yen blows the audience away. This is the best version so far on the tour. Saul’s violin wrestles with Jim’s bass and Adrian’s guitar for room, whilst Tim’s dancing becomes more intense as the song progresses and the lyrical improvisation more varied.
Someone’s Got It In For Me is again greeted with surprising warmth but again it seems to suffer under the weight of the on-stage atmosphere.
English Beefcake, described by Tim as “one we’re very proud of” was the undoubted highlight of the evening. In the three nights since this was debuted at Norwich, it has gone from sounding like a jam with potential to a fully fledged show stopper.
For two and a half minutes, Pleased to Meet You is a beautiful, reflective, fragile lament and then overdone guitars and a megaphone come in and the emotion gets lost in the feedback. This could be one of those simple powerful and poignant songs that James do (Blue Pastures, Lullaby, Top of the World), but they need to ditch the guitars.
Destiny, Star and How Was It For You? are rattled off in almost double quick time to close the show. The crowd lap up the hits and the front rows become a seething moshpit. Tim loses himself in dance with such an intensity that hasn’t been seen for years.
The encore begins with Top of the World and there are sound problems as Tim can’t hear the guitars. Some of the crowd begin to sing to the band before Tim cuts in and starts the song. The false start has dissolved some of the atmosphere on which the song is dependent, so it’s less powerful tonight than usual.
Laid follows and whilst it is an immediate crowdpleaser, it just sounds too easy to play tonight.
Dave’s What The World intro to Ring The Bells signals the last song and it is here that the defining moment of the gig occurs for me. As the band crank up the speed and the volume to the climax of the song, Tim stands dead still, eyes closed and then starts to move, slowly at first, just arms, then a smile, eyes still closed, gradually moving faster before erupting into his more traditional dance to the end.
This was not a bad gig and the crowd loved it. But there was an atmosphere and a tension on stage. The set itself was much shorter than previously – about 80 minutes with a late start and a 10.45 finish – and there were only six new songs. Hopefully it was end of tour tiredness or bad hangovers, but there was definitely an edge there tonight.
Rock City website by Luke Seagrave
Shea Seger had the enormous task of being the support act at what was anticipated to be Rock City’s biggest gig of the year. It must quite daunting to support a group as big as James, but she pulled it off quite easily. Shea Seger is very reminiscent of Gwen from the group No Doubt. She played a lot of radio friendly songs. Although she was pleasing, the audience eagerly awaited the appearance of James.
James came on and were swallowed by thunderous applause. The audience were there to experience a really special show. However, being exposed to some of the slowest melodic tracks from the outset seemed to have a distinctly numbing effect. This lack of reaction from the audience may have occurred because the songs played were from James` forthcoming album, which won’t be released until next year. After five songs into the set list, James finally put some effort into the show and played something the crowd knew. `Say Something` awakened half the audience and got them moving. The rest of the crowd carried on sleeping.
However, from here on the audience livened up and the show really began to take off. James ploughed their way through `Sometimes`, `Destiny Calling` and slipped in `Born Of Frustration`. Anyone who knows James will know that they have had quite a lot of top ten hits but never quite made it to the category of Major British Band. Those people who say they don’t know James will probably find that they actually do! When you see them live you can guarantee that they will play a song that you recognise because you’ve heard it countless times before- people just don’t realise it’s by James.
They brought the show to a close with `She’s A Star` and `How Was It For You`, which you just can’t help but jump along to it. They strolled off stage and the audience awaited the obvious and traditional encore. Sure enough, they returned to the stage and did an encore that had the entire crowd rocking. They played `On Top of The World` followed by a brilliant version of `Laid` which is one of those songs that sounds so much better live. The true end to the show came with `Ring The Bells`.
The downside to this gig was that they did not play `Sit Down` which is disappointing because it’s such a crowd pleaser. Apart from the first few songs being nothing short of tedious, more a test of endurance than anything else, the show did improve and became quite memorable. It is rumoured James were paid more than David Bowie to play at Rock City, if true, then it was money well spent. On a personal note, I found it insulting that James referred to Rock City as a `toilet`. Careful, lads. It’s practically my second home and I find it very comfortable!
Sheffield City Hall – 6th November 2000
Setlist
What Is It Good For / Stand / Senorita / Gaudi / Getting Away With It (All Messed Up) / Say Something / Just Like Fred Astaire / Sometimes / Johnny Yen / Someone's Got It In For Me / English Beefcake / Pleased To Meet You / The Shining / Destiny Calling / She's A Star / How Was It For You / Top Of The World / Laid / Ring The BellsSupport
Shea SegarMore Information & Reviews
OneOfTheThree.com
Due to a ticket cock-up, we started this show up in the grand circle, allowing us to sit back and take in the first five new songs – Work It All Out, Stand Stand Stand, Senorita, Gaudi and Daniel’s Saving Grace. The seated crowd responded probably better than any crowd so far on this tour to the onslaught of new material, but the atmosphere was virtually non-existent save for the power created by the music.
Tim took the initiative during the opening bars of Say Something and jumped into the crowd, climbing across the seats to about two-thirds of the way back in the stalls where he stood on a seat with a single light focused on him. The whole venue was now on its feet and the ice broken.
The band launched into Fred Astaire and I launched myself out of the circle, down the stairs and through to the stalls where a couple of bouncers were negotitated during Sometimes to get to the front row by the time the band started Johnny Yen which received its now traditional roar of recognition from James gig veterans for a song old enough to be the parents of some of the new ones, this sounding as fresh and vibrant as ever.
Someone’s Got It In For Me was equally well received from its opening bars. It seems as if everyone at these shows must have bought (or taped) Millionaires given the reception this has been given.
Another trio of new songs followed – English Beefcake is making a late play for being my favourite of the newies with Tim’s quickfire verses merging into a plaintive chorus of “we are born, we are slaves, we must find our own way” before the song mutates into Tim and Kulas almost chanting “it’s all my fault, I get in the way, unable to break obsession”.
Pleased To Meet You starts out as a lament to a “boy out of touch with his feelings” and has a simple chorus of “pleased to meet you, where are you from and what’s your name?” It has a beautifully slow pace until 2 1/2 minutes when the guitars kick in and Mike yells himself hoarse into his megaphone and the guitars are cranked up – a song with two halves.
The Shining is almost messed up as the band seem to start out of synch and they pull it through despite Saul’s guitar sounding awfully out of tune. Epic and with a lyric about Nazis and Jews, this is a great song and may raise controversy at some stage at the future.
Destiny, Star (dedicated by Tim, Barry White style, to the women) and How Was It For You? close the set. Being now stood stage centre and being able to dance freely was a strange but enjoyable experience with which to close the show.
The encore opened with Top Of The World, the emotion punctured by five dickheads stood at the front trying to drown Tim out by talking about how much beer they’d drunk or how small their penises are. Tim told them at the end of the song to go and stand somewhere else if they wanted to talk rather than listen. Saul got it spot on “in other words, shut the fuck up!”
Laid and Ring The Bells brought the show to a close, the crowd still on their feet and dancing in the aisles.
This was a very strange gig – I can’t remember the last time I saw James play an electric set in the UK in a seated venue. Tim valiantly tried to create an atmosphere and was successful to an extent. But you can’t beat an elbow in the back and the air being squeezed out of your lungs. Please don’t play seated venues again.
Norwich UEA – 4th November 2000
Setlist
What Is It Good For / Stand / Senorita / Gaudi / Getting Away With It (All Messed Up) / How Was It For You / Johnny Yen / Someone's Got It In For Me / Say Something / Scratchcard / English Beefcake / Pleased to Meet You / Sometimes / Destiny Calling / She's a Star / Born of Frustration / Vervaceous / Laid / Ring the BellsSupport
Shea SegarMore Information & Reviews
OneOfTheThree.com
Making a return to the UEA LCR a year after a storming hits and Millionaires show, James opened their set with a quintet of new songs – Work It All Out, Stand Stand Stand, Senorita, Gaudi and Daniel’s Saving Grace – which left the audience stunned. To be fair, there was very little dissent so one has to assume that the audience were listening and taking in what James were doing. The sound was almost perfect and once again Geoff Buckley’s light show matched the pace of the songs immaculately and captured Tim’s frantic dancing and illuminated him.
The opening bars to How Was It For You? were greeted with cheers from about half the audience, but the expected crush at the front did not really materialise. Johnny Yen followed and as usual was not out of place amongst songs almost twenty years its junior. Someone’s Got It In For Me was as powerful as ever, the band’s performance of this song keeps being raised to new levels, Tim losing himself in the crescendo being produced by his bandmates. The response to the opening bars of the song suggested that many in the crowd had bought Millionaires on the strength of last year’s gig.
Scratchcard with its infectious “Oh Lordy” chorus followed and was perhaps the best of the new songs on the night. Say Something was next, but the opening bars have been significantly altered since I last heard it a week and a half ago. Tim took the opportunity to jump into the pit and stand next to the barriers in front of his adoring crowd, one of whom made an unsuccessful beeline for his trouser button.
Two more new tracks, both new to me, followed – English Beefcake received its premiere and was the more successful of the two, with Tim firing off quickfire lines in the verse. The song itself deals with addiction and the subject’s inability to shake off an obsession. Kulas uses a megaphone to shout himself hoarse over the chorus refrain at the end. Pleased To Meet You had been played at Poole and Blackpool and is more of a slow burner with a repetitive chorus of “Pleased to meet you, what’s your name and where are you from?” The one complaint with both songs is that they tended to last too long, probably due to the fact that the band haven’t yet decided on the best way to end them.
A quartet of hits – Sometimes, Destiny, Star and Frustration – sent the front rows into a frenzied moshpit and placated those in the crowd that had started to get impatient at the lack of hits earlier in the set.
The encore started in true James fashion with a slower number, and Vervaceous was simply stunning. Like its Millionaires companion Someone’s Got It In For Me, this track has to be heard live to do it real justice, the swoops and dives and the highs and lows of the backing track complementing Tim’s dancing and vocal pirouettes and the stunning lighting effects.
Laid returned the crowd to a seething mass, before Tim asked the audience “which song that we haven’t played would you like to hear next.” The sham What’s The World opening slid into Ring The Bells, the crowd moshed, Tim twisted and turned and the band cranked up the speed and noise. And then they were gone.
Blackpool Empress Ballroom – 2nd November 2000
Setlist
What Is It Good For / Stand / Senorita / Say Something / Sometimes / How Was It For You? / Pleased To Meet You / The Shining / Runaground / Someone's Got It In For Me / Johnny Yen / Coffee And Toast / Getting Away With It (All Messed Up) / Destiny Calling / She's A Star / Born Of Frustration / Come Home / Top Of The World / Laid / Ring The BellsSupport
Shea Segar / Exit 52More Information & Reviews
None.
October 2000
James spend three weeks at the House In The Woods studios in Surrey writing and refining new material with Brian Eno. James perform a low-key UK theatre tour unveiling 12 songs written for their as yet unrecorded album.
Poole Arts Centre – 27th October 2000
Setlist
tbd
Support
Shea Segar
Review
n/a