So, it was amazing that we got anything done at all. Yet, against all odds, we went to London twice to record the first two singles, Floor and Toytown Star. We had KK, a manager, now, in London. He organised the studios, and got the things mastered, cut and pressed, as well as sorting out a distribution deal with Pinnacle, set for early 1987 release. At least that was something to look forward to at last.
Now, when Exo came over he’d brought with him the Age of Chance single. It was wank, absolute rubbish. They’d got it played on Peel apparently, but John, apart from playing the very best records of the day, was also know for spinning some absolute dross. You can’t get them all right I suppose. Example: I remember him playing to death, Dead Pop Stars by Altered Images, some Scottish girl trying to sound like Siouxsie. Siouxsie=brilliant, innovator. Scottish girl=crap. I think she became an actress, made a film, but then ended up as a TV presenter. ‘Nuff said.
Summer of 86, someone sends us the NME, it comes with a cassette, C86. The Age of Chance are on it, we give it a listen. It’s just as bad as the first single. We listen to the rest of it; it’s all jingly-jangly pap, valueless. Shit, even The Wedding Present are on it! They’re from Leeds, Exo’s x-girl shares a flat with Gedge, the singer/writer/mastermind. It’s the most dour toss you’ve ever heard. NME are championing this as the new, fresh, blah, blah, blah……
I have this very dark foreboding that we’ve lost before we’ve even started. Of course, I’m right in the end, The Wedding Present become one of the biggest ever indie bands. Heaven spare us.
1987, the singles come out, no one plays them, no one reviews them. We’ve really no idea how to do this. At least we get our first gig.
On the 26th of April was the 50th anniversary of the bombing of Guernica, they’re having a big festival. I know the guy who’s putting the bands on, his name is Palomo, he comes to see me.
“Can I book ConGod to play?” He’s heard the singles.
“Hell, yes”, I tell him. We work out the details and shake on it. I know Palomo quite well so I’m not worried. This inexperience of youth. I phone London, KK is flying over with his girl, my girl is flying over and I tell Waj to come.
Waj is a friend of mine, a sculptor, he did the artwork for the singles. He’s not a musician, but then neither was Exo. I had to buy a bass, a 68 Fender Precision, 290 quid, so he’s have something to play. Waj will look good standing behind the drumbox. All he needs to do is push a few buttons, it’s not rocket science. He said, no problem, he’s delighted, well into it. I’ve seen Exo, hardcore punk or not, getting steadily more and more nervous as the date approaches. I had the foresight to tell him we were playing some little dingy club, whereas we’re on the main market-hall stage, capacity, 3 500. There doesn’t seem much point letting him wind himself up even more. He’ll find out when we get there.
The team flies in from London, and the day of the gig we drive off with a couple of cars loaded with the gear. When we get to the market-hall there are so many people on the streets, it takes us half an hour just to get round to the back entrance. I say to them, “wait here, I’ll go and find Palomo,” and off I go. No one else speaks Spanish anyway.
I find him inside, he’s just got there himself, but there’s about 1000 already in.
“What’s going on?” I ask him, “What about the sound check? Where do we leave the gear?” He’s looking a bit bewildered.
“There were so many people outside, they started letting them in an hour ago, they’ve cancelled the sound check and the first band are gonna go on now. I just booked the bands, someone from the town hall is supposed to have organised all this….”
I can see that there’s an area by the stage with some music gear, but it’s cordoned off with just a couple of flimsy metal barriers that are already getting pushed apart by the surging crowd. We’re only on in a good couple of hours; I think we’re next to last.
I look over to the main, well, only entrance. There’s only a couple of the same movable metal barriers there and just two old guys collecting tickets as the punters stream though. They’re looking flustered already and I can see there’s a massive swelling crowd just outside.
“Let’s just go and get the gear”, I say to him and we’re about to walk off when this student type walks up. He’s got a clipboard and this Che Guevara very over-serious look about him. He asks Palomo who I am, Palomo tells him. He glances down at his clipboard. “Ah, the Engish band”, he says, “yeah, they’re not playing”
“Excuse me,” Palomo tells him, “I’m the person who has booked all the bands, and it is ME who says who’s playing, and who’s not”
Che gives him a little sneer, “Yes, and thank you for your very hard work, but we are taking over the running of the days events…”
“We ?who is we?” Palomo cuts in. The guy stops talking, he doesn’t answer.
Then, as if reading from an invisible cue card, the little shit starts again,
“This is the anniversary of a historic day for the Basque people…”
I cut in, “Listen, it wasn’t the English who bombed this place anyway, but I’ve got two cars of people flown in from London sat outside, contracted by the event organiser, this man here….”
Palomo’s started to shout something and I can hear the clipboard jerk saying something about it having been decided that only local bands could celebrate this historic Basque… but I suddenly realise exactly what is going on.
This little cunt is from HB the left wing Basque fascist party and I can already see more approaching through the crowd towards what is turning into an argument. Che is a little fanatic on some half arsed sociology degree somewhere, but the guys I can see coming are farm hands, just down from the mountain, eyes slightly crossed, the product of generations of gene-pool deficiency, and they’re big fuckers. I can count 10 of them now stood a little way off, staring at us. These people are stupid and dangerous. They’ve been sold the same shit as the Hitler Youth, our blood is better than everyone else’s and we must protect the fatherland. I really want to punch Che in the side of the head, but there’s no way I can handle ten of them. What are we gonna do anyway? Fight our way in and onto the stage?
It doesn’t matter anyway because at that moment I see the poor codgers with their ticket control barrier swept out of the way as the crowd crashes in en-masse. Some of the farm oiks look around, probably wondering what to do. I’m guessing they’re supposed to be the new security, but it’s well too late now because, in a matter of minutes, the whole place has filled with far too many people than this hall can safely hold, and they’re all in a very boisterous mood. I tell Che he can go and fuck his mother (maybe he already does) but it leaves me unsatisfied, and I grab Palomo by the arm and pull him towards the blocked main door. Before we get there, I hear the first band start up, someone must have told them to get on stage, quickly, and I look back. The area by the stage seems to have disappeared beneath the roaring crowd and as the singer nervously steps up to the mic. stand, I see a beer bottle, a green one, probably Heineken, sail out of the crowd and bounce off the microphone he’s reaching out for. Whoever threw it had good aim. Maybe not playing is a blessing in disguise.
ConGod 1st gig…………….CANCELLED
Palomo has a big house on the edge of the town with, more importantly, a massive ground floor garage, so we left the gear safe in the cars and went upstairs for the industrial sized lines of coke he was slicing out. He kept apologising, but it wasn’t his fault. We didn’t get paid. I’ll try and remember to ask for half upfront next time.
The summer flashes by, we’ve been in Spain for two years now. We’re gonna have to move back to London if we want this to ever get started. Exo goes first while I pack in my job and organise moving everything else. KK has got some contact at Mute, and says they’re very interested. He’s also got us some free studio time for a third single and a gig supporting the Swans either at the Town and Country or that other one up north London, same kinda place, can’t remember its name. Anyway, Mute want to see us there and Swans are one of my favourite bands. I can’t get back in time so the gig goes to some unknown Icelandic band, The Sugarcubes. They never got anywhere, of course. Things seem to be looking up though. I get back to London and we’re recording the 3rd. Exo’s supposed to be coming down from Leeds.
The night before we start I get a call from a friend in Spain, Exo has just turned up at their house. “What?! Put him on……What are you doing there? We’re recording tomorrow. Get back here now”
He gives me some bullshit about his life, the future, the past, just unintelligible rubbish really. I know dammed well he’s chasing some skirt. Unfortunately I’d talked to said skirt after Exo went back to Leeds, and she made it very clear that theirs was no more than a summer fling, and summer was long gone. So, another bass player lost. He kept the 68 Precision. He must have thought he deserved it. That’s friends for you. I never saw him again.