Last week, I found it very hard to get down to the work I was supposed to be doing. Writing about music felt trivial, absurd. That feeling has passed - for now at least. Not because the trauma and dread has receded. But protecting the mental space to be excited and obsessed and amused by music, ideas, art, etc - life's essential inessentials - feels like something worth doing. Allowing one's consciousness to be completely monopolized, fixed in a flinch - that really would be defeat.
So here's something I wrote a few weeks before the election: a cover story for The Wire on A.R. Kane. As is the magazine's wise way, it's a print-only piece, so hie thee thither to the newsagent's or record shop.
I think this is the
fifth time I have interviewed
Rudy Tambala - and still there were so many new things I learned about the A.R. Kane story.
Also interviewed: sister
Maggie Tambala, backing vocalist back in the day but now the newly active (concerts, recordings) group's lead singer;
Stephen "Budgie" Benjamin, whose clarinet flickered through the grotto of
69's "The Sun Falls Into The Sea" and who's now a fixture of the group's line-up;
Amos Childs and
Jas Butt of
Jabu, the excellent Bristol outfit (
check out their just-out album) with whom A.R. Kane are collaborating on an EP; and
Vinita Joshi of
Rocket Girl,
who put out A.R. Kive last year and the recent
Up Home Collected.
There are also some "ghost quotes" from Alex Ayuli, taken from unpublished parts of an interview I did with the Kane boys in 1989.