In their eight year recording career The Icicle Works only troubled the Top 40 chart compiler once, with Love Is a Wonderful Colour, despite releasing some excellent singles. There is however a large demand to hear their music live and the Brudenell is close to being sold out.
The current version of the band consists Ian McNabb, bassist Roy Corkill, keyboard player Richard Naiff and drummer Matthew Priest, also of Dodgy. The only member of the original line up is McNabb and a more accurate description of the show might be ‘Ian McNabb and Friends play the songs of The Icicle Works’.
Despite this they’re excellent musicians and it’s a great show, lasting just over three hours, and released from the truly appalling production that can make their early albums difficult to listen to the songs shine. They play every Icicle Works song you would want to hear.
Look out for them when they tour again.
The Icicle Works – Brudenell Social Club, Leeds 27th May 2016
June 11, 2016
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Live, Music | Tagged: Ian McNabb, The Brudenell Social Club, The Icicle Works |
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Posted by Stephen Towler
Richmond Fontaine – Brudenell Social Club, Leeds 24th April 2016
April 30, 2016Richmond Fontaine are calling it a day. This is very bad news! They are one of my favourite bands so I’m grateful that at least they’re playing Leeds on their final tour.
Willy Vlautin is a singer who doesn’t have what is considered by many as a classic voice but it works wonderfully well with the lyrics he writes – stories of ordinary people facing ordinary problems.
Tonight they play songs from across their lifespan (I’m reluctant to call it a career) and it all goes down well with an almost full Brudenell. Willy’s voice is a little below par and he spends a little time apologising for it. The band play as well as ever and the bass player, Freddy Trujillo, who has joined just in time to pay on their last album, You Can’t Go Back If There’s Nothing To Go Back To, and tour, adds something different to the sound.
Through eleven studio albums Richmond Fontaine have maintained a remarkably high standard and I’m going to miss seeing them live.
Here’s Willy and Dan Eccles performing Wake Up Ray
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Posted by Stephen Towler
Flamin Groovies – Brudenell Social Club, Leeds 20th April 2016
April 23, 2016I’ve been waiting been waiting 40 years to see the Flamin Groovies so the potential for disappointment is huge. From the start though it’s clear to see that the band are enjoying playing and and are glad to see a reasonable, but not sold out, crowd has come to see them on a Wednesday night.
The set list is drawn largely from their three Sire albums,released between 1976 and 1979 together with a smattering of songs from earlier in their long career.
The line up of three long standing members Cyril Jordan, George Alexander and Chris Wilson, and relative newcomer Victor Penalosa, and their enthusiasm prevents them becoming a tribute to themselves.
They say it’s good to be back in Leeds, although I don’t remember them ever playing here before. I hope they do again.
Decent support from Nervous Twitch and, particularly, The Breakdowns.
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Live, Music | Tagged: Flamin Groovies, Nervous Twitch, The Breakdowns, The Brudenell Social Club |
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Posted by Stephen Towler
May 2014
June 30, 201411 May – It’s the first time the GLW and I have seen Glenn Tilbrook for some time and, as it always is, it’s a fine evening’s entertainment. With solo material and Squeeze classics it would be hard to go wrong. Strangest song of the night is Ice Cream from his new recording Happy Endings. The most interesting, from the same album, is Persephone which owes an obvious debt to Deborah by Tyrannosaurus Rex.
20 May – Last year Jason Isbell‘s album Southeastern was in numerous album of the year list so I thought I’d go to the Brudenell and see what the fuss was about. With his band, The 400 Unit, Isbell treats me to what will almost certainly be one of my top five shows of the year. The set list mixes the acoustic feel of Southeastern with the rockier approach of songs from earlier albums and his work with the Drive By Truckers. Standouts for me are Flying Over Water, Decoration Day and a great cover of Candi Staton’s Heart On A String. I’m waiting for them to come back now!
29 May – A trip to the Leadmill in Sheffield is required to see the reunion of Paul Heaton & Jacqui Abbott. Their voices blend together exceptionally well and their new album, What Have We Become is a cracker and highly recommended. I’d forgotten what a great singer Ms Abbott is but am happily reminded tonight as they perform classics by The Housemartins and The Beautiful South as well as their new songs. They’re touring again in the Autumn so look out for them.
Setlist: Some Dancing To Do; Old Red Eyes Is Back; Costa Del Sombre; Rotterdam (Or Anywhere); Prettiest Eyes; Moulding Of A Fool; We’re Not Deep; The Snowman; Build; When It Was Ours; Dream a Little Dream; Don’t Marry Her; When I Get Back To Blighty; Good as Gold (Stupid as Mud); D.I.Y.; Happy Hour.
Encore: I’ll Sail This Ship Alone; Me and the Farmer.
Encore 2: Loving Arms; Caravan of Love.
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Live, Music | Tagged: Glenn Tilbrook, Jason Isbell & The 400 Unit, Paul heaton & Jacqui Abbott, The Brudenell Social Club, The Leadmill, Trades Club Hebden Bridge |
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Posted by Stephen Towler
April 2014
May 31, 2014 3 April – I like Simone Felice and so does the GLW. He just gets better and better, particularly as a live act, and The Brudenell suits him to a T! Tonight he’s playing as a three piece with cellist Gabriel Dresdale and guitarist/dobro/mandolin player Matt Green while Simone switches between guitar and drums. He’s out in support of his second solo album, the excellent Strangers, and plays a number of songs from it, with the standouts being Bye Bye Palenville and Molly O, as well as old favourites such as If You Ever Get Famous. The encore comprises a tremendous cover of Bruce Springsteens’s Atlantic City and Neil Young’s Helpless. If you missed him this time don’t make that mistake again!
11 April – What are Elbow? Are they, as someone said, a prog band without the solos, a great pop group or something else altogether?
Well what is indisputable is they write great songs, are excellent musicians and have a charismatic front man in Guy Garvey.
Garvey’s talent is to draw the audience in to the performance by talking to them as though he’s having a pint with them. I suspect this isn’t as easy as he makes it look but he succeeds tonight, almost making the Leeds Arena seem like a club show.
They play plenty of songs from their latest album, The Take Off And Landing Of Everything including my favourite My Sad Captains, a reflection on the nature of friendship, as well as the song many of the crowd will have come to hear, One Day Like This.
They’ve come a long way since Asleep In The Back and it will be interesting to see where they go next.
Set List: Charge; The Bones of You; Fly Boy Blue / Lunette; Real Life (Angel); The Night Will Always Win; New York Morning; The Loneliness of a Tower Crane Driver; Great Expectations; The Blanket of Night; Mirrorball; The Birds; Grounds for Divorce; My Sad Captains
Encore: Starlings; Lippy Kids; One Day Like This
27 April – I’m never going to miss a chance to see Neil Finn and this is also a first chance to visit the Lyric Theatre at The Lowry Centre, Salford.
Touring to promote his new solo album Dizzy Heights, which I recommend as a ‘Grower’, he also cherry picks from his back catalogue. Neil Finn could be a human jukebox but, luckily for us, he is so much more as he reinterprets many of the songs, for example playing Don’t Dream it’s Over as originally written on piano and organ.
The appearance of Johnny Marr for the encore is a surprise to those of the audience who’ve not seen Finn play in the Manchester area before.
There’s a second, solo, encore to bring the show to a fine end.
Set List: Impressions; Distant Sun; Pony Ride; One Step Ahead; Dizzy Heights; Into the Sunset; Sinner; Recluse; Better Than TV; Only Talking Sense; From a Friend to a Friend; Fall at Your Feet; Flying in the Face of Love; White Lies and Alibis; Divebomber; Message to My Girl; Don’t Dream It’s Over; Strangest Friends; I Got You; Locked Out;
Encore: There Is a Light That Never Goes Out; She Will Have Her Way; Weather With You
Encore 2: Love This Life; Chocolate Cake; I See Red; Pineapple Head; Better Be Home Soon
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Live, Music | Tagged: Elbow, Leeds Arena, Neil Finn, Simone Felice, The Brudenell Social Club, The Lyric Theatre - Lowry Centre |
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Posted by Stephen Towler
March 2014
April 13, 201424 March – I missed Johnny Marr when he played the Brudenell in March 2013 at the start of the The Messenger tour but I’m here tonight as he brings it to a close. Regular readers (!) will know that I was less than impressed when I saw him at Leeds Poly in October 2013 but this show more than compensates for that. Playing with his band, Jack Mitchell, Iwan Gronow and James Doviak, he is in fine guitar form as you’d expect but the pleasing surprise is the improvement in his vocals. The set includes three new songs Boys Get Straight, Little King and Candidate, five Smiths songs and a cracking version of I Fought The Law. Given another 12 months, with his new album due in September, they should be even more impressive.
Setlist: Upstarts, The Right Thing Right, Boys Get Straight, The Crack Up, New Town Velocity, The Messenger, Stop Me If You Think You’ve Heard This One Before, Generate! Generate!, Big Mouth Strikes Again, Word Starts Attack, Little King, Getting Away With It, There Is A Light That Never Goes Out
Encore: Please, Please, Please Let Me Get What I Want, Candidate, I Fought The Law, How Soon Is Now?’
28 March – My first show at Leeds Arena, and what an excellent show it is. I may have said this before but the Manic Street Preachers are one of the few artists who are still producing work that is equal, or almost equal to anything they’ve ever done. Their last album, Rewind The Film, is very good indeed. What is apparent tonight is their enthusiasm for playing live. James Dean Bradfield is an underrated guitarist, Sean Moore is a bedrock and Nicky Wire is, well, Nicky Wire. A set list that includes everything that you’d want to hear short of a ten hour show!
I didn’t catch the name of the support act, which is a shame as it will make it harder to avoid them in future!
Set list: Faster, Your Love Alone Is Not Enough, Motorcycle Emptiness, (It’s Not War) Just the End of Love, Europa Geht Durch Mich, Love’s Sweet Exile, Everything Must Go, Rewind the Film , Show Me the Wonder , You Stole the Sun From My Heart, Enola/Alone, If You Tolerate This Your Children Will Be Next, Black Dog on My Shoulder, This Sullen Welsh Heart, Archives of Pain, Futurology, Revol, You Love Us, Tsunami, 30-Year War, Motown Junk, A Design for Life
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Live, Music | Tagged: Johnny Marr, Leeds Arena, Manic Street Preachers, The Brudenell Social Club |
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Posted by Stephen Towler
November 2013
December 27, 2013 15 November – I first saw Secret Affair on the March Of The Mods tour at the Fforde Grene in Leeds in August 1979 with The Purple Hearts and Back To Zero. The following year they played St George’s Hall in Bradford and I saw that show too. They made some great singles but after being ignored or abused by the music press, and with a little internal bickering, they called it a day in 1982.
Re-uniting in 2003 for three shows, they now appear to be a going concern again. This is the first time they’ve played Leeds in 30 years so I’ve no intention of missing it! I’m not disappointed. Now a six piece, having added a Hammond player and saxophonist, but with just Ian Paige and Dave Cairns from the original line-up, they play their back catalogue like men determined to show just how good those songs are, ending with a triple whammy of Time for Action; Let Your Heart Dance and the incomparable My World. Don’t leave it so long next time.
A mention for the support The 45’s, young lads from Carlisle who are mining the same seam as The Strypes, 60s R’n’B, and doing it well. Worth catching.
17 November – Another evening of nostalgia, if I believed in that, with one of Britain’s finest Rock bands: Mott The Hoople. They’re another group who’ve decided to give it another run round after a long break, splitting in 1974 and picking up the reins again in 2009 for five London shows. After thinking about it they decided to play five dates around the country in 2013 and I’m at this one at the Manchester Apollo with Brian. Despite some negative reviews for the London show, mainly centred on Ian Hunter’s vocals, I think this is a great show! All the songs you’d want to hear played by the original line-up, with the exception of drummer Buffin who is very ill these days and is replaced by Martin Chambers of The Pretenders. Joe Elliott of Def Leppard joins them for All The Young Dudes and seems to enjoy the opportunity to play with a decent band for once.
I may never see them again, unless I buy the DVD of tonight’s show, but now I have a great memory.
Set List: Rock And Roll Queen; One Of The Boys; The Moon Upstairs; Hymn For The Dudes; Sucker; Soft Ground; Waterlow; Born Late ’58; Death May Be Your Santa Claus/You Really Got Me; Ballad Of Mott The Hoople; Walkin’ With A Mountain; Violence; When My Mind’s Gone/No Wheels To Ride/The Journey; Honaloochie Boogie; The Golden Age Of Rock ‘N’ Roll; All The Way From Memphis.
Encore: All The Young Dudes; Roll Away The Stone; Saturday Gigs.
27 November – Second time of seeing Jonathan Wilson this year and he continues to be a champion of the West Coast sound made popular by Crosby, Stills & Nash, Jackson Browne and others. In fact Crosby, Nash and Browne all guest on his new album Fanfare, which this tour is promoting. He still gives plenty of space to songs from his first album though and I’m particularly happy to hear Desert Raven and Dear Friend. Not that the new songs are slouches in any way. I do wonder how long the Brudenell will be big enough to accommodate him.
Have I mentioned I have a Spotify West Coast playlist before?
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Live, Music | Tagged: Jonathan Wilson, Manchester Apollo, Mott The Hoople, Secret Affair, The 45's, The Brudenell Social Club |
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Posted by Stephen Towler
October 2013
December 24, 201312 October – The first show in a busy month sees me making a trip over the Pennines with Stephen and the GLW to see Crosby, Stills & Nash at the Phones4U Arena in Manchester. I’ve loved CSN since I went on a caravan holiday to Withernsea in 1970 with a portable cassette player and two tapes, Crosby Stills and Nash’s first album and the Glenn Miller Story soundtrack. Not so keen on Glenn Miller though. They’re now all in their 70s but are still excellent, using their younger band members to cover the cracks when necessary, which isn’t often. Stephen Stills is still a great guitarist and why he never gets a mention when lists are made is a puzzle to me. Almost uniquely for a band of this vintage they’re still writing and performing new songs. I could have done without the ‘choir’ sitting behind us though. Set list Set 1: Carry On/Questions; Military Madness; Long Time Gone; Southern Cross; Lay Me Down; Bluebird; Cathedral; Radio; Don’t Want Lies; Golden Days; Déjà Vu; Love the One You’re With Set 2: Helplessly Hoping; Just a Song Before I Go; Guinevere; Treetop Flyer; What Are Their Names; Burning for the Buddha; Triad; Our House; Almost Cut My Hair; Teach Your Children; Wooden Ships.
Encore: For What It’s Worth

Encore: Please, Please, Please Let Me Get What I Want; The It-Switch; I Fought the Law; Getting Away with It; There Is a Light That Never Goes Out



Encore: Passion Is No Ordinary Word; Don’t Ask Me Questions.
Encore (2): Soul Shoes.
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Live, Music | Tagged: Crosby Stills & Nash, Graham Parker & The Rumour, Johnny Marr, Leeds College of Music, Leeds Metropolitan University, Leeds O2 Academy, Phones 4U Arena Manchester, Smoke Fairies, Spear of Destiny, The Brudenell Social Club, The Danse Society, The Expelaires, The Silver Seas |
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Posted by Stephen Towler
September 2013
November 15, 20138 September – I saw the 2013 Diana Jones album The Museum Of The Appalachians Recordings mentioned in the No Depression newsletter and decided to give it a listen on Spotify. This was based solely on the fact that I’d visited the Museum in 2001. I was glad I did because it’s a fine piece of work and I bought a copy. Recorded sitting around a microphone in one of the cabins in the Museum grounds, with two accompanying musicians on fiddle and banjo and Jones singing and playing guitar, these are songs that could have been written any time in the last 150 years.
A first trip to The Hop in Wakefield is my chance to see her play live. The show would, in all honesty, have been better if she’d been accompanied by the musicians who played with her on the album. Despite that she’s an excellent singer and guitarist and the audience, the GLW and I see a great show. Highlight is O Sinner, the opening track both of the CD and tonight’s show.
They’ve played a few tours


The support are Hatchem Social, a four piece from North London. They’re OK but need to have a clearer idea of how they want to sound as at the moment it sounds like a mish mash to me. Their bass player, fact fans, is Riley Difford son of Chris.
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Live, Music | Tagged: Diana Jones, Gang Of Four, The Brudenell Social Club, The Hop Wakefield, Tim Burgess |
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Posted by Stephen Towler
August 2013
September 3, 201329 August – So for me this August is a very quiet month for shows, especially after the cancellation of Neil Young and Crazy Horse’s tour, just The Rutles at The Brudenell. I used to really like the Rutland Weekend Television show, and am amazed it has never been repeated, and it’s spin off film, All You Need Is Cash, so a chance to see The Rutles is not to be missed.
As you may have guessed this is an affectionate spoof of The Beatles, with songs by Neil Innes. There are only two original Rutles in the current line-up, Ron McNasty (Innes) and Barry Wom (John Halsey). The additional musicians are Mark Griffiths (bass guitar and vocals), Mickey Simmonds (keyboards and vocals) and Ken Thornton (lead guitar).
The first half of the set largely features songs from All You Need Is Cash and is excellent, full of lovingly crafted Beatle parodies: I Must Be In Love, With a Girl Like You, Ouch!, Doubleback Alley and Get Up and Go amongst others. After a short break they return for a weaker second half with songs from the Archaeology CD and a couple of songs from Innes’ solo career. The highlight of the second half, and possibly the show, is a lovely version of George Harrison’s All Things Must Pass.
All in all though, a great evenings entertainment.
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Live, Music | Tagged: The Brudenell Social Club, The Rutles |
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Posted by Stephen Towler