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BEVIS FROND/TERRASTOCK, Sunday Times, August 22, 1999 Andy
Partridge of XTC once described record fairs, and more specifically
record collectors, as "smelling of broken biscuits". Butlocating
a mint-condition second West Coast Pop Art Experimental Band album
or a bootleg of Sonic Youth rehearsing is a difficult job that Described by Wire magazine as "a psychedelic three-ring circus", Terrastock began life in New Jersey in 1987, as a benefit to clear Terrascope's debts. "If anything we're in a worse state now!" says McMullen. "Terrastock 1 lost money because we had to make an unexpected and very large payment to the City of Providence fire department at the last moment - I'd rather not go into it, to be honest." But the three-day festival had already gathered an unstoppable momentum, unifying separate stratums of the international underground into a hermetic whole. Forgotten American electronic pioneers the Silver Apples were coaxed out of retirement by Terrastock, later playing alongside Blur at last year's Meltdown festival on London's South Bank, while some more modern explorers of musical extremities, Bardo Pond and Windy & Carl, shared space with a former Julie Burchill beau and Portobello Road revolutionary, Mick Farren, who scared young children with a revivified version of his 1960s proto-punk group the Deviants. American noise addicts drove from as far away as Alaska to pay homage, and a rematch the following year in San Francisco became inevitable. "It was nothing less than a gathering of true believers," wrote one local reviewer in a piece entitled How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Drone, "somehow combining the retro-obsessed nerdiness of a Star Trek Convention with the most open-minded and avant-garde elements of the indie-rock underground, all gathered together under the genre-spanning umbrella of 'psychedelia'." The
Bevis Frond, the band fronted by Terrascope's 46-year-old co-publisher,
Nick Saloman, typify Terrastock's eclectic aesthetic. Saloman's
band, and the record label Woronzow that he runs with his bassist,
Adrian Shaw, enjoy considerable international success with a negligible
press profile. Indeed, you're most likely to remember gentle giant
Saloman via his fantastic performance in the 1989 series of Richard
Whiteley's TV quiz Countdown. "I won it six times in a row
but I fell apart in the semifinals and tried to rewrite the dictionary,"
he confesses, drinking tea in his back garden, but still clearly
wracked with guilt and shame. In 1984 Saloman was touring the fairs
as a second-hand record dealer, but was secretly one of the Saloman went into partnership alongside long-term fanzine contributor McMullen in 1989, to publish the Ptolemaic Terrascope. A recent issue featured the Christian pop star Cliff Richard discussing the early British rock scene alongside an interview with Aleister Crowley acolyte David Tibet, of shadowy English mystics Current 93. "That pretty much sums up the Terrascopic world-view," says McMullen proudly. "Two extremes whose musical orbits cross paths even less often than that of the moon and the sun, but who have both made equally valid contributions to the musical enjoyment of a great many people down the years." Sadly Sir Cliff won't be getting on stage to sing Mistletoe and Wine in between sets from My Drug Hell, the Supreme Dicks and the Bevis Frond at ULU next weekend, but the festival isn't without its surprises. The return to recording and performing of the 1960s folk singer Tom Rapp from Pearls Before Swine, who makes his belated British debut at Terrastock, is a coup for which McMullen can justly claim some credit, having tracked him down for the 1997 event and promised him an appreciative audience. Bailing
out of the music business in the mid-1970s to become a civil-rights
lawyer, after his manager made off with $150,000, Rapp was unaware
of the influence that his group has had on new psychedelic-folk
acts such as Japan's Ghost or softly spoken duo Damon & Naomi.
Rapp relearned his old songs from tabulations on an internet fan
site. The reaction to his 1997 return, after a 22-year hiatus, astonished
him. "I had no idea there were any fans out there. Despite the success of the last two Terrastock events, and an impressive bill that includes the UK debut of the Byrds-inflected Seattle group the Green Pajamas, two performances from the Silver Apples, and the overwhelming epic noise of Bardo Pond, Saloman is characteristically sceptical about the weekend. "I'm worried that some of the younger US bands will be hoping for a bit of coverage out of it, but I've a feeling that if there is any press it'll all be, 'Hey! Dust your kaftan off, man!' " And then he goes back into the house to paste me together a copy of the new Tom Rapp CD, A Journal of the Plague Year, which his label releases next month, and gets sticky-backed photo mounts stuck all over his fingers. Terrastock may be the ancient DIY music ethic in action, but there isn't a kaftan in sight. |
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