Skip to main content

Ray Davies @ Camden Roundhouse

I have almost gone to see Ray Davies play on a number of occasions, but never quite made it, so when this opportunity came along I jumped at the chance - and I am glad I did. For just about 100 minutes, in a set comprise mainly of Kinks songs - with a few of his better solo numbers thrown in - it was a complete joy. Davies is, without a doubt, one of the best songwriters the UK has produced and in one truly golden period wrote or co-wrote a batch of timeless classics, all of which made the set tonight: Tired Of Waiting, All Day And All Of The Night, Good Times Gone, Sunny Afternoon, Dedicated Follower Of Fashion, Days, Waterloo Sunset, You Really Got Me, Lola ... every one of them, songs that most songwriters would have killed to have written.

Things were made even better by the fact that Ray really seemed to be having a good time, and looked like - even at 64 - he still fancied himself a rockstar.

For me it all kicked off brilliantly with I'm Not Like Everybody Else from the Kinkdom album - not a song I ever thought I would hear live, and hardly let up for the 100 mins. Other personal highlights were Tired of Waiting, All Day and All of the Night, Waterloo Sunset, and the title track of the new album, Working Man's Café.

Of course there was also Lola, and on the online BBC version of the gig (it was taped for BBC's 'Electric Proms' series - I appear singing my heart out for a few fleeting seconds ... for those who can view it (Uk only I'd guess) its about 1 hour 30 and approx 43 seconds in ...

The addition of The Crouch End Festival Chorus for a number of the later classics added some additional voices to the mix, and we also go Razorlight's Johnny Borrell - a man who mistakenly thinks he's a genius - actually getting to share the stage with a real one. A cracking night.


SET LIST

# I'm Not Like Everybody Else
# Good Times Gone
# Til The End Of The Day
# A Well Respected Man
# The Tourist
# Sunny Afternoon (with Johnny Borrell)
# Working Man's Café
# Morphine Song
# One More Time
# Come Dancing
# 20th Century Man
# Celluloid Heroes
# Tired Of Waiting
# All Day And All Of The Night
# Dedicated Follower Of Fashion (with The Crouch End Festival Chorus)
# Days (with The Crouch End Festival Chorus)
# Shangri-La (with The Crouch End Festival Chorus)
# Waterloo Sunset (with The Crouch End Festival Chorus)
# Lola
# Imaginary Man
# You Really Got Me

Comments

Jim Marquis said…
Wow, good fun. I went to see him a few years ago...it was a one-man tour where he sang a little but mostly told anecdotes.

Popular posts from this blog

Substack: the new blogging and a new music newsletter

  Hello again my old blogger blog. Just checking in to plug the new substack newsletter I'm doing. It is also home to the CTTB Music podcast and its archive too. Why not pay me a visit and sign up for future editions of the newsletter (free) 

Todd Rundgren @ The Forum 23/11/2008

I think this was Todd's first appearance at the Forum since he recorded a live album there back in 1994 on the No World Order tour. He was all alone for that one. Tonight, things could not have been more different as Todd brought the Arena tour to London. What can I say. It rocked. Playing the same set that he has been doing for the whole tour - opening with Love in Action, Open my Eyes, Black Maria, I Saw the Light etc, before playing Arena in its entirety - this was guitar rock heaven (and let's face it, probably the last time you'll see Todd doing this kind of tour in the UK). The band were tight, the backing vocals near perfection, and a few ropey moments aside, Todd's vocals strong and good. It was a real joy to see him playing so much lead guitar, after recent years of being more of the 'singer in the band'. There were a few technically issues near the start, when Todd couldn't get the clean guitar sound he wanted, and one amusing moment when he manag...

The Decemberists - 'The Hazards of Love'

Whilst the Decemberists have been around for a number of years, and a friend of mine is a big fan, I have to confess - a few tunes aside - they have never really made much of a splash with me. With their fifth album - 'The Hazards of Love' - a 17-track concept album that sort of tells a story about a fair maiden ravished by a shape-shifting demon (no, really) - however, I am suddenly find myself surprisingly won over. On some levels - like most concept albums - it is utter tosh, but with its repeating musical motifs and reprises, making you quickly think that actually there are only about five actual songs on the album - a clever trick. Like with all good concept albums this makes listening on shuffle not the ideal way to digest this album - especially as their are short 'interlude' pieces joining all the songs too. Added to all this the fact that the band seem to have a love for early 70's British folk/prog/heavy metal and this walks right up my street - and will ...