Showing posts with label After Cease to Exist. Show all posts
Showing posts with label After Cease to Exist. Show all posts

Monday, 21 January 2019

40 Years of Throbbing Gristle - Centro Iberico, Sunday 21 January 1979

Throbbing Gristle (and audience) - Centro Iberico, 21 January 1979
On this day forty years ago -  21st January 1979 - I made my way from my parents' home in Heston (a small village about three miles from Heathrow Airport) to an event organised by Throbbing Gristle, or more specifically by legendary Whitehouse manager (Jordi) George Valls. I had just started going to gigs on a regular basis - I was 17 - and was quite confident about attending things on my own. Few of my friends shared the same musical tastes as me in those days and even those who did would have balked at going to watch a group infamously titled 'the wreckers of civilisation' by MP Nicholas Fairbairn.

There were two unusual things about this particular 'gig' (that word doesn't really do justice to what I experienced). One, it was taking place in Westbourne Park, an area of west London that I didn't really know and had just started to frequent via regular trips to the Rough Trade record shop every Saturday morning (which is how I'd found out about the TG event). I was used to attending gigs in central London, mainly at The Marquee, clubs in Hammersmith and occasionally The Electric Ballroom and The Music Machine (now Koko) in Camden; 421 Harrow Road, Centro Iberico's address, was very much off the beaten track. I was unaware then of the counter cultural history of the area - it just seemed like the back of beyond to me.

One of the posters for the Centro Iberico event
The second odd thing was the timing. The gig was on a Sunday afternoon. At 3pm. So I sat down for Sunday lunch with my parents in their very sweet chalet style house where we'd moved four years earlier from my first home in Hounslow, prior to venturing out to one of the most important occurrences of my life. My dad had not been well - he was to retire on ill health grounds the year after following a massive breakdown - and things were strained at home as I recall. I hadn't helped matters by seriously getting into new wave/post punk music, which my mother hated, having seen far too many red top headlines and feeling that her son was only a couple of riots away from a prison sentence. I'd also started full time work in November the year before and was on a pretty good wage for a person of my years, which of course was almost entirely spent on vinyl, either from Rough Trade or our own version of that shop, 'Cloud 7' in Hounslow High St (if you wanted punk you went to visit Keith who operated a record stall at the back of 'Rumbelows' further down the road, but 'Cloud 7' was the best bet for imports and limited edition DIY 7" singles). So I was completely obsessed with music, cider, and the excitement of going out to see live music. Typical suburban kid then.

And as a typical suburban kid I of course was in thrall to the week-nightly John Peel show, and my listening at the time was equally split between more experimental music - Cabaret Voltaire, The Residents and This Heat included - and mainstream stuff; research shows that Peel Sessions leading up to the 21st included Gang Of Four, The Prefects, Gary NumanGeneration X, reggae band Capital Letters and The Members, which sort of summarised what I would have been listening to.

So how had I discovered Throbbing Gristle, who were clearly very different to most of these bands? The answer was an Ian Penman review of 'D.o.A. The Third And Final Report' in the NME, which I read and re-read fetishistically, before going out and buying the LP as soon as it was released in December 1978 (I always conflate the strange and varied sounds of this album, with the ghastly memories of my first office Christmas party, for some strange reason). So all I had to go on was that disc and the 'United' single, released earlier that year, in terms of sonic expectations.

Entry ticket for the event
A weather report of the time reads that heavy snow occurred on both the 17th and 23rd of January 1979 with fog a persistent feature of the 21st. I think it's safe to say that my memories of it being inhospitably cold were correct. So, dressed for my wintry trek, including a donkey jacket (with handmade cardboard-backed letters spelling D, E,V and O pinned on it - I'd been to see the band the previous December at the Hammersmith Odeon and was a big fan) I took the tube from Hounslow West to Hammersmith, changed onto the (then) Metropolitan Line and got off at Westbourne Park - the veritable stranger in a strange land. I remember getting a bit lost - I'm not even sure if I owned a London A-Z - and I'm fairly convinced I used a roughly drawn map on a flyer to navigate myself there.

Once at the building I experienced my first understanding of scene and situation. Centro Iberico, a Spanish Anarchist collective, had set up a squat in a dilapidated Victorian edifice, a disused primary school that had fallen to rack and ruin (it's since been demolished and, slightly psychogeographically, is now the site of the Paddington Law Centre). This was exactly the kind of place that the wreckers of civilization would and should play - a crumbling former seat of learning, now appropriated for counter cultural activities. To access the room where the event took place, punters had to walk up a couple of flights of stairs. There was a really long line of people which snaked down the staircase and out into the courtyard of the former school. I've since heard that this queue attracted a bit of a '100 Club Punk Special' reputation - if everyone who said they were at the gig actually stood in that queue it would have stretched back to Ladbroke Grove station. Well it didn't, and I'd love to say that I recognised all the great and good in the audience - sadly all I picked out were Green Gartside and Tom Morley from Scritti Politti, and Jim 'Foetus' Thirlwell.

It seemed to take a long time to process the customers, who numbered around 180. So much so that punters were still arriving towards the end of TG's support slot, a screening of their 1977 Coum Transmissions/TG film After Cease to Exist - I was presumably towards the front of the queue as I was present for the screening of the whole thing. I'd clearly read something about what to expect here already, as I'd prepared myself for the lengthy castration/surgery scene which takes up quite a lot of the film. I was no stranger to 'transgressive' cinema, but this was up there with Richard Kern's 'Death Trip' films made a few years later - very disconcerting (a 2K restoration is currently touring arts establishments of the UK - viewer discretion is, as they say, advised).

So yes, I was already pretty traumatised. But then the group took the stage. As to my memories of the next sixty minutes (and it was precisely sixty - they used a clock to count down the time and the equipment shut off at the hour point) I remember the arc lights shone at the audience, blinding us almost completely at times, and of course the noise. Oh god, the noise. It was my first sight of TG's on stage set up (as a budding electronic musician at the time I was fascinated by the sheer amount of hardware on stage - most of this would be stolen at a later date, forcing the group to move to a more stripped down, less DIY sound). The other thing that I wasn't used to was hearing a band and not recognising any songs. Now I'm sure I wasn't naive enough to think 'oh, they haven't played anything from the new album!' but even so I wasn't prepared for the incessant cacophony that only now and again disclosed a lyric or a halfway familiar guitar or bass motif. What I do recall, somewhat incongruously, is that Chris Carter, whose rig included a small portable TV which he'd plugged into the rest of his gear and was busily channel surfing (ok just three channels, but even so...) suddenly produced the unmistakable tones of Brian Moore commenting on 'The Big Match' football show (a Sunday afternoon TV staple in UK homes). A recording was made of this event, like all of TG's shows, and if you're lucky enough to get to hear it, it's unmistakable. I recall at the time that this was almost too weird - I was mentally projected back from this insanity, Proust style, to visions of an average suburban Sunday afternoon sitting at home while dad watched the football and mum quietly did the washing up.

Two stills from After Cease to Exist 
But something definitely happened to me during that hour - a sort of deflowering of my expectations of what sound could do. This was the famous 'winter of discontent,' where rubbish piled up on street corners, ignored by striking bin men, and bodies went unburied. Depending on who you believed, anarchy was a real possibility in the UK, and something in TG's performance effectively soundtracked that unrest in a way that a hundred angry punk songs at the time could never achieve. This was true nihilism, but nihilism as art, and I liked it a lot, even though it scared the pants off me.

When the 'set' finished, Genesis the 'singer' asked the audience whether they'd like to see the film again (for those who missed it the first time). I'd had enough, so didn't take him up on the offer, and made my exit.

On the train back to Hammersmith, I sat in a carriage next to Foetus and his (then) girlfriend. They both used to work at the basement Virgin Records shop in Oxford St (where he used to front up his own singles in the 7" racks, the cheeky so and so) and were the epitome of cool. As I sat there, stunned by what I'd witnessed, Mr Thirlwell and his partner saw my home made Devo badges and sniggered knowingly. They kind of had a point. I got home, rather confused, and turned the TV on. I'd made it back in time to watch The Muppet Show, but something suddenly felt very wrong. I turned the television off, ripped the DIY coat adornments from my donkey jacket, threw them in the bin and faced my future.

As a post script to this little story I'll leave you with Genesis Breyer P-Orridge's account of the Centro Iberico event:

"We decided to do it on a Sunday afternoon, as it was the least commercial time to play. It was really cold so we built bonfires inside. We were really surprised when almost exactly as we were about to begin there was this massive queue in the freezing cold outside, right around the building and out into this big Victorian school yard. We decided to put the fires out in case it was dangerous. It turned out quite crowded and the place filled up with choking smoke and steam. People who went there said it was one of the most intense atmospheres they'd experienced and that you could never recapture it. It seemed post-apocalypse. It summed up and decoded the whole of civilisation's collapse, and this was a tribal ritual that only those initiated would understand. It was in a sense so completely meaningless that it was very potent. That was the day we did 'Five Knuckle Shuffle' for the first time, our first real deconstruction of words, gibberish."