GLAXO BABIES
"In the Beginning"
(LP. Trio rcds. 1980 / rec. 1978-80) [GB]
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GLAXO BABIES
"In the Beginning"
(LP. Trio rcds. 1980 / rec. 1978-80) [GB]
Rob Chapman (@rcscribbler on Twitter), self-descibed 'ex_music journalist & hackademic' & author of many fine books including the wonderful 'Syd Barrett: A Very Irregular Head' tweeted this today: "Sadly it only seems appropriate to repost my original block erase dub cut up of Nick Kent's Marquee Moon review. It still conveys the album perfectly."
https://twitter.com/rcscribbler/status/1619671726073479168/photo/1
Nothing lasts for ever and nothing disappears so rapidly (and yet retains its emotional hold so assiduously) as childhood.
Rob Chapman, Psychedelia and Other Colors
In The Sunshine by Clockwork Wolf & Co - Directed by: Daniel Curtis Lee of Apex Vision
Review of The Lyrics of Syd Barrett, by Rob Chapman and David Gilmour
The Lyrics of Syd Barrett. The definitive statement on Syd’s lyrics , according to Rob Chapman. Or is it not. Read the Church’s review at: http://atagong.com/iggy/archives/2021/02/the-syd-barrett-cookbook.html
Back Pages Book Review: “Syd Barrett: A Very Irregular Head” by Rob Chapman (2012)
Author Rob Chapman thought he needed 472 pages to tell the story of Syd Barrett and his editors apparently - and incorrectly - agreed.
To fill them, Chapman writes far too many words to detail the life of an artist whose mystery and myth overshadow his brief recording career, which lasted just three years and comprised two Pink Floyd albums and two solo LPs.
By the time Barrett was 25, his career was over. But his mythology as Floyd’s “Crazy Diamond” was just beginning.
Published in 2012, “Syd Barrett: A Very Irregular Head” takes its title from Barrett’s own description of himself in Rolling Stone magazine. And while it painstakingly covers Barrett’s pre-, post- and contemporaneous pop-star life, the story could’ve - and should’ve - been told in far fewer pages to prevent it bogging down in tedious details and asides that will lull even the most ardent Barrett heads to boredom.
Credit Chapman for his tenacious shoe-leathering as he tracks down childhood mates, teenage girlfriends, art-school colleagues, fellow psychedelic voyagers and family members to give first-hand accounts of his subject’s most-unusual existence. The Pink Floyd guys - Roger Waters, Nick Mason, Richard Wright and David Gilmour - are represented via previously published interviews but did not speak with the author.
Obviously a partisan and an acolyte, Chapman spends much time arguing Barrett did not actually crack up, as his associates said, and then spends just as much time chronicling said crack up. He debunks some myths, reveals just how much of Barrett’s work was derivative of English writings and makes Gilmour - who replaced Barrett after briefly playing alongside him in the short-lived, five-piece Floyd - smell like a rose for helping Barrett make his solo records (the Madcap Laughs and Barrett, both in 1970) and always ensuring he received his royalties from the Floyd days.
The most revealing aspect of “A Very Irregular Head” comes from the last third of Barrett’s life - he died in 2006 at 60 - as Chapman paints a picture of a disturbed man who sought, and found, a modicum of peace.
Along the way, readers are treated to excerpts from his sporadic interviews; get first-hand accounts of Barrett’s fruitless, final recording sessions in 1974; remember his eerie appearance at his former band’s Wish You Were Here recording sessions; and walk away with a picture of a man rather than a myth.
Better editing could have made “A Very Irregular Head” a page-turner. Instead, it’s a slog - a worthwhile slog, but a slog just the same.
Grade card: “Syd Barrett: A Very Irregular Head” by Rob Chapman - C
9/13/20
Firefly (Skyhill Cover) - Rob Chapman
‘Rob of Ages’ YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCP5erAsT-Rxc7BMA-PPxjHQ
ok fuck it I'm gonna do one of these music things anyway ok so this is more of a recommendation than a review but if you've never heard of the check out Dorje! They're one of those bands that I listen to and think their style was made specifically for me. most ppl wouldn't be too familiar with them if not for already knowing about the singer/guitarist Rob Chapman for his guitar videos and his guitar company Chapman guitar, but he is amazing in the band too! the rest of the band are basically another prog metal band, Tosska. The other guitarist Rabea from that band is amazing in both but anyway their style is hard to explain it's kind of prog metal I guess but more blues and groove metal influenced with mostly melodic vocals, heavy riffs, and very technical instrumentals and solos that show off their skills and are produced very well. I was shocked at how much I enjoyed their music when my cousin showed it to me l, specifically Rob's voice, because I knew him only as the dorky British guy from the guitar videos on YouTube that he does, so I was suprised by how talented and powerful he is with his vocals. I'll admit the lyrics don't often make much sense to me and are a bit of metal lyric nonsense that are more to paint a picture of a feeling than talk about anything real but there is real emotion in his voice which is cool. He almost sounds like a British Eddie Vedder at times. but anyway, check them out they are amazing and I think people who aren't huge metal fans too will appreciate the style. They have just two short EP's out from last year and year before but it's rly amazing stuff!