Author Archives: Tim Hall

Twelfth Night Reunion

Official announcement from Twelfth Night:

So as promised before the summer hols, we are now able to confirm the line-up for the November shows!!!!

We are delighted to say that original members Andy Revell and myself, will both be joining Clive Mitten and Andy Sears, along with new boy Mark Spencer.

Which means it’s now officially a ‘Twelfth Night’ reunion !!

Rev & I have actually been involved in the project from the outset, but had simply needed some time to convince ourselves that we would be able to play again – as both of us ‘retired’ from active musical service a long time ago !

Mark has been drafted in, as Rick wasn’t able to join us, to take on keyboard / guitar and backing vocal duties, multi-talented chap that he is. (If you think his name is familiar – beside being a long-standing friend of the band – he was the singer in 80s prog band LaHost).

Our first full band rehearsal weekend went very well considering it was the first time we had played together for more than 20 years !! And although we can’t guarantee to be quite as brilliant (ahem !) as we used to be !! ……….. we are confident that it will all be ‘alright on the night’, and that both gigs will be a ‘night to remember’ ……… to use but two of our old clichés !!

We expect news of the reunion line-up will accelerate the sale of tickets – which are going well already, with both venues reporting strong advance sales !! …………….. so if you want to make sure of seeing us, PLEASE get your tickets as soon as possible. Details can be found on our web-site. www.twelfthnight.info

Talking of which we are only playing the 2 already announced gigs (Kingston 17th, & Deptford 24th) as we have been unable to agree a suitable gig in the North this time. However if these gigs go well …….. who knows what the future holds ?!

We are all looking forward immensely (albeit with some nervousness) to playing together and seeing so many old friends again – and are sure that we’ll all have a great time!

This is the news I’d hoped for. Brian Devoil had been participating in the Yahoogroup, so I’d sort of assumed he’d be involved. But Andy Revell’s participation with his very distinctive guitar sound means that it will be Twelfth Night.

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Hobby Games Meme

Via Ken Hite

Boldface if “I own this game”.
Italics is “I have played this game”.
Italic and Bold are “I both own and have played this game”

The list of games comes from the essay collection Hobby Games: The 100 Best, published by Green Ronin, which includes both RPGs and board games.

Bruce C. Shelley on Acquire
Nicole Lindroos on Amber Diceless
Ian Livingstone on Amun-Re
Stewart Wieck on Ars Magica
Thomas M. Reid on Axis & Allies
Tracy Hickman on Battle Cry
Philip Reed on BattleTech
Justin Achilli on Blood Bowl
Mike Selinker on Bohnanza
Tom Dalgliesh on Britannia
Greg Stolze on Button Men
Monte Cook on Call of Cthulhu
Steven E. Schend on Carcassonne
Jeff Tidball on Car Wars
Bill Bridges on Champions
Stan! on Circus Maximus
Tom Jolly on Citadels
Steven Savile on Civilization
Bruno Faidutti on Cosmic Encounter
Andrew Looney on Cosmic Wimpout
Skip Williams on Dawn Patrol
Alan R. Moon on Descent
Larry Harris on Diplomacy
Richard Garfield on Dungeons & Dragons
William W. Connors on Dynasty League Baseball
Christian T. Petersen on El Grande
Alessio Cavatore on Empires in Arms
Timothy Brown on Empires of the Middle Ages
Allen Varney on The Extraordinary Adventures of Baron Munchausen
Phil Yates on Fire and Fury
William Jones on Flames of War
Rick Loomis on Fluxx
John Kovalic on Formula Dé
Anthony J. Gallela on The Fury of Dracula
Jesse Scoble on A Game of Thrones
Lou Zocchi on Gettysburg
James Wallis on Ghostbusters
James M. Ward on The Great Khan Game
Gav Thorpe on Hammer of the Scots
Uli Blennemann on Here I Stand
S. Craig Taylor, Jr. on A House Divided
Scott Haring on Illuminati
Dana Lombardy on Johnny Reb
Darren Watts on Junta
Greg Stafford on Kingmaker
Lester Smith on Kremlin
Wolfgang Baur on Legend of the Five Rings CCG
Marc W. Miller on Lensman
Ted S. Raicer on London’s Burning
Teeuwynn Woodruff on Lord of the Rings (boardgame)
Mike Breault on Machiavelli
Jordan Weisman on Magic: The Gathering
Steve Kenson on Marvel Super Heroes
Gary Gygax on Metamorphosis Alpha
Greg Costikyan on My Life with Master
John D. Rateliff on Mythos
Chris “Gerry” Klug on Napoleon’s Last Battles
John Scott Tynes on Naval War
Erick Wujcik on Ogre
Marc Gascoigne on Once Upon a Time
Mike Bennighof on PanzerBlitz
Steve Jackson on Paranoia
Shannon Appelcline on Pendragon
JD Wiker on Pirate’s Cove
Richard H. Berg on Plague!
Martin Wallace on Power Grid
Tom Wham on Puerto Rico
Joseph Miranda on Renaissance of Infantry
James Ernest on RoboRally
Paul Jaquays on RuneQuest
Richard Dansky on The Settlers of Catan
Ken St. Andre on Shadowfist
Steven S. Long on Shadowrun
Peter Corless on Shadows over Camelot
Dale Donovan on Silent Death: The Next Millennium
Matt Forbeck on Space Hulk
Ray Winninger on Squad Leader
Lewis Pulsipher on Stalingrad
Bruce Nesmith on Star Fleet Battles
Steve Winter on The Sword and the Flame
Jeff Grubb on Tales of the Arabian Nights
Shane Lacy Hensley on Talisman
Douglas Niles on Terrible Swift Sword
Ed Greenwood on Thurn and Taxis
Mike Fitzgerald on Ticket to Ride
Thomas Lehmann on Tigris & Euphrates
Warren Spector on Tikal
David “Zeb” Cook on Toon
Mike Pondsmith on Traveller
Zev Shlasinger on Twilight Struggle
Kenneth Hite on Unknown Armies
Sandy Petersen on Up Front
R. Hyrum Savage on Vampire: The Eternal Struggle
George Vasilakos on Vampire: The Masquerade
Kevin Wilson on Vinci
R.A. Salvatore on War and Peace
Jack Emmert on Warhammer 40,000 (I have played an RPG set in the W40K universe, but using a different system, which I don’t think counts)
Chris Pramas on The Warlock of Firetop Mountain
Steve Jackson on The Warlord
John Wick on Wiz-War

I may have missed a few games that I’d played at a con years ago and have forgotten. I notice that I don’t own a single game on this list that I haven’t actually played. This is probably a good thing.

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Fish loses his voice again

Just after he released a blinder of an album (I’ll post a review tomorrow), things start going pear-shaped again.

Tonight’s gig at Manchester was cancelled 15 minutes before he was due to go on stage, because he’s lost his voice yet again. It’s been rescheduled for Monday 1st October, which little compensation for anyone that’s paid a lot of money for travel and accomodation.

Update: The full story on Fish’s website

I knew I had to conduct an extended warm up and ran through a 15 minute session which didn’t fill me with confidence. At this point it was 7.30 and doors were open. I had 90 minutes to pull it together. I left it for twenty minutes and ran through another warm up. The voice wasn’t opening up and in fact it was shutting down even more. I let my concerns known to Yatta. It was now 8 o’clock. The support band was on and they were told to extend their set to give me time. I tried again to loosen up and by this time my voice was fading quickly and I was struggling to speak. I lost my entire top range in a matter of fifteen minutes. I made the decision to pull the gig and to pull the Sheffield show as I knew from experience that whatever I had was not a simple vocal strain.

I’ll be there for the rematch on 1st October.  Hopefully his voice will behave itself for the remainder of the tour.

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Concert Meme

Music meme from John Kovalic.

Copy this list. Leave in the bands you’ve seen perform live. Delete the ones you haven’t and add new ones that you have seen until you reach 25. An asterisk means the previous person had it on their list. Two asterisks means the last two people who did this before you had that band on their list.

My list is skewed towards acts I’ve seen live in the past few years, with a smattering of legends from festivals in the 1980s

  • Anathema
  • Blue Öyster Cult
  • Breathing Space
  • Bryan Adams (I only went to see the support act!)
  • Deep Purple (Once with Blackmore, twice with Morse)
  • Def Leppard
  • Dweezil Zappa
  • Hayseed Dixie
  • Iron Maiden
  • Jethro Tull
  • Journey
  • Karnataka
  • Marillion (4 times with Fish, 5 with Steve Hogarth)
  • Mostly Autumn (14 times!)
  • Odin Dragonfly
  • Opeth
  • Pink Floyd *
  • Polish October
  • Porcupine Tree
  • Queensÿche
  • Rammstein
  • Rory Gallagher
  • Styx
  • The Reasoning
  • Thin Lizzy (with Phil Lynott!)

Just one act in common with John’s. My list is marked by the complete absence of 80s new wave or current indie/alternative bands; genres that just leave me cold.

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The Reasoning, The Borderline, London, 7th Sep

Friday night saw The Reasoning’s first gig in central London, at the Borderline.

The Borderline is a small club just off Charing Cross Road, quite a bit smaller than Crewe Limelight where I’d seem them back in April. As seems usual for just about every gig I go to nowadays, I recognised quite a few familiar faces in the crowd, both from previous Reasoning gigs and from the Mostly Autumn fanbase. I also put a lot of faces to names for people from the Reasoning forum and TheStorm mailing list. By the time the band hit the stage, the place was pretty much packed.

It didn’t take very long to show just how far this band have progressed in the eight short months since their first gig in Swansea. They’ve really gelled as a live act now, and have the perfect combination of tightness, energy and emotional intensity. The band were clearly enjoying being on stage, and feeding off the tremendous enthusiasm of the crowd. They were also blessed with a good sound mix, which meant you could hear every instrument and each voice clearly. I noticed Gareth’s vocal contributions a lot more this time.

Naturally songs from “Awakening” made up the bulk of the set, although their version of Karnataka’s magnificent “Talk to Me” is still one of the high points of the show. They also introduced two new songs from the forthcoming album “Dark Angel”, the title track, and “Breaking the Fourth Wall”. Both sounded impressive on first listening, the former reminding me a little bit (but not too much) of Dream Theater. This augers well for the new album.

In short, The Reasoning rock. If they keep up this momentum (and I’m sure they will), they’ll be playing much bigger venues than this in a year or two’s time.

Posted in Live Reviews, Music | Tagged | 1 Comment

Back in England

I’ve just got back from a week in Switzerland, travelling all the way by rail, with a stopover in Luxembourg on the way out, and Köln on the way back.

I haven’t got time for a full writeup, but here are a few random observations:

  • You know you’re a Mostly Autumn fan if you use the phrase “The weather was absolutely Murrayfield”. It didn’t rain all week, fortunately.
  • Now I know why travellers don’t recommend the EC “Vauban”. 5 hours from Luxemboug to Basel with no catering. Argh!
  • Only serious delay was on the way back, where the Deutche Bahn ICE-3 from Köln to Brussels broke down. So much for the wonders of German engineering promoted in all those car adverts. Fortunately I managed to get on board the following Paris-bound Thalys TGV and make the connection into the Brussels-London Eurostar with just a couple of minutes to spare.
  • Rosa Klebb has a new job as the sleeping car attendant on the Frankfurt to Moscow sleeper that I saw departing from Köln on Wednesday night. The contrast between the shiny red Russian sleeping cars and the absolutely filthy German locomotive wasn’t something I would have expected to see.
  • Swiss beer is good. Cardinal, Gurten, Eichhof and Walliser Beir all taste great. It’s not just the atmosphere and ambience that makes it seem good; I ate at one restraunt in Brig where the house beer was Heineken. And it tasted, well, like Heineken :(

And now I’m off to see The Reasoning at The Borderline in London, for the final gig that bookends the holiday.

Posted in Railways | 2 Comments

27 Years Ago this Weekend…

… was my first ever ‘proper’ gig, the 1980 Reading Rock Festival. Headliners were Rory Gallagher, UFO and Whitesnake, with special guests Gillan, Iron Maiden and Def Leppard. Highlights (for me) were Gillan, Maiden and the barnstorming comeback performance by, of all people, Slade.

I’ve seen two artists this year who were on that bill 27 years ago, Ian Gillan, now back with Deep Purple, and Magnum. Both look a lot older and wrinklier now, but can still cut it live even after all those years.

25 years ago, at the 1982 Reading Festival, was the very first time I saw Marillion, a fact that marks me as ancient amongst Marillion fandom (One even said “I didn’t think there was anybody alive who’s heard them play ‘Grendel‘) . I don’t think it occurred to me that I’d still be a fan of theirs a full quarter of a century later.

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Odin Dragonfly: York and London

While I’ve seen quite a few bands more than once on the same tour this year, this is the first time I’ve ever seen the same act on two consecutive nights in completely different cities.

Friday night at Fibbers was on Odin Dragonfly’s home ground of York before an audience made up of an equal mix of hardcore Mostly Autumn fans and friends of the band, which made for a tremendous atmosphere; an awful lot of familar faces, and one of those gigs that’s more like a big private party that a regular concert. It’s the first time I’ve been (literally!) dragged to the pub afterwards by the support act and made to drink beer. ’twas one of those nights.

Saturday was at The Fly in New Oxford street, a very small and intimate venue, probably one of the smallest venues I’ve been to this year. With the low stage in one corner, only the front few rows could actually see much of the band! The sound was still excellent, though.

Support at Fibbers was half-hour sets from the excellent harpist Sarah Dean, who I’d seen supporting Odin Dragonfly before, and Aimee Ryan. Aimee’s set was rather spoiled by far too much audience chatter while she was on stage, especially when everyone had kept quiet during Sarah’s performance.

The support at The Fly was the excellent Anne-Marie Helder, who I’d seen supporting Mostly Autumn back in February. I recognised several of her songs from theat Astoria show; as I said back then, a solo acoustic set requires a powerful voice and strong material; Anne-Marie has both.

As I’ve come to expect from them, Heather and Angie put on a great show both nights. I still find it amazing that they can produce such a rich sound with just the two of them on stage, with nothing more than acoustic guitar, piano, flute and two voices. The setlist this time around was made up of the “Offerings” album played in order, plus a lot of the usual banter between songs. So much banter, in fact, that the York show started running considerably over time, and “Caught in a Fold” had to be dropped. They manage to fit all twelve songs in the time allowed at The Fly.

It’s just impossible to single out any highlights, there were just too many. There was Angela’s fantastic flute playing on the cover of Jethro Tull’s “Witches Promise”. There were the two beautiful renditions of “Magnolia Half-Moon”, one of my favourites from the album. Their cover of the unreleased Stevie Nicks song “Forsaken Love” comes over really well live too. But so does everything else; there really weren’t any weak spots on either night.

If anyone had told me a year ago I travel a couple of hundred miles to see two shows by female acoustic duo, I wouldn’t have believed them. But they were well worth seeing.

Posted in Live Reviews, Music | Tagged , | 2 Comments

Odin Dragonfly coming up!

I’m off to see Odin Dragonfly in York tomorrow night, and again in London on Saturday. I’m expecting both to be the sort of gigs where I recognise at least half the audience, which always results in a great atmosphere. I’m really looking forward to these two gigs.

And speaking of Odin Dragonfly, Planet Rock have been playing tracks from Fish‘s new album, 13th Star. While my feelings about the man himself are well-known to anyone that reads this blog, I have to say the songs they’ve played have been the strongest I’ve heard from him for many, many years; dark and powerful with a very strong emotional charge. Hardly going to be comfortable listening, especially as I know who the songs are about. There’s no way I’m going to be wearing any Fish t-shirts to either Odin Dragonfly gig.

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Something beginning with….H

A meme being propagated by The Psycho Chicken. In which you must name your ten favourite songs beginning with a letter chosen by whoever you picked up the meme from. I my case, Psycho Chicken gave me the letter “H”.

I don’t really have time to go through my entire CD collection and listing everything beginning with H (I don’t have an iTunes library that can do it in a flash!) So there are bound to be some glaring omissions. But I can recommend these ten.

  • Hallowed Ground – Paradise Lost
  • Harvest Moon – Blue Öyster Cult
  • Harvest of Souls – IQ
  • Hasan I Sabah – Hawkwind
  • Heaven and Hell – Black Sabbath
  • Heroes Never Die – Mostly Autumn
  • Hey Hey, My My (Out of the Blue) – Neil Young
  • Hollow – Mostly Autumn (But played live by Breathing Space)
  • Hotel Hobbies – Marillion
  • How I Feel Today – Odin Dragonfly

I’ve tried not to include the same artist more than once. Yes I know counting “Hollow” as a Breathing Space song is cheating, but it’s my blog, and nobody else is going to rules-lawyer me! For the record, Half a World, Half the Mountain, Heart Life and Helm’s deep were all in the short list.

If you want me to choose you a letter, leave me a comment!

Posted in Memes, Music | 5 Comments