| Step Off The Stage |
| Thursday, 07 May 2009 | |
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Mark E. Smith. Ajanta Cinema Derby, sometime in 1977 or 1978, back at the time when he was talking at least as much as singing, punctuating the songs with extended delirious rants about the proliferation of psychics and Cash & Carry stores or the possibility of time travel or how much he did not like Doncaster, or the audience or Stalin you could never be sure which. Huge fucking row of music, small audience. A venue that used to be, by some incomprehensible irony, The Derby Playhouse (I mean before they built that new one with hexagonal barstools and purple orange cross-hatch carpets) and was by then (the old playhouse, re-named as Ajanta Cinema), a semi-derelict music venue run by some Asian guys maybe as a front for a drugs ring at least if you believed what was gonna be in the paper ten months later, who knows.
Just in front of the stage there is a space that used to be seats, but
which has been for some months now an extended no-mans land, a zone of
smashed floorboards and seat-remains – a cleared space created when the
first gig took place here and at which the room allowed for the crowd
was patently not big enough and so by Mutual Agreement the seats were
kicked to pieces by those present, the debris for the most part lifted
high and Hurled Asunder, causing minor injuries. It is this space -
directly to the front of the stage that Smith has his eyes on, when he
turns around, neglecting the routine that he himself has characterised
as ‘backs to the audience and pass the hair-dye mate’ though he of
course has no hair dye. This space, right there in front of the stage,
this no mans land, is clearly bothering him, big time. Maybe cos
there’s no one in it – I mean there’s only fifty people in the venue
max and most of them are leant against the walls holding lager cans.
And maybe its bugging him – this space – cos he’s not sure who’s it is.
I mean – he’s on the stage and he’s wandering all around it like he
owns the fucking place, which for all extents and purposes he does –
but somehow he doesn’t seem so happy there on the stage – like he’d
really like to be somewhere else, in some other place, a bigger one
perhaps. Like somehow the stage is too small because it isn’t a whole
world.
What does the character Price say about the nightclub in Trevor
Griffith’s play Comedians? Something like: When I stand up there on the
stage - I still hit my head on the ceiling. It might be literally true
– but mainly of course he means it more like a metaphor – a way to say,
that the world which Capitalism has on offer isn’t big enough yet to
accommodate his dreams or imaginings.
.
Aaron wrote: I've known Aaron since sometime in the early 90's I think - but had no idea that I'd seen him perform back in the 70's! We must've been at a lot of the same gigs together. Aaron also flagged that "a Derby lad Johnny Vincent, has recently published a book that focuses on the Ajanta Cinema as a punk venue" and available here. I'm intrigued - my memories of all that are a bit blurred.
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