1977

A Tale Of Two Cities - Lust For Life/London Calling - Review

Images Copyright Tony Woolway

Lust For Life - Bristol Exchange, London Calling - The Globe, Cardiff

A Tale Of Two Cities. Two gigs, one week, the first over the bridge at Bristol’s Exchange for Lust For Life, a group put together by Iggy Pop and Bowie guitarist Kevin Armstrong to celebrate Iggy Pop’s iconic Lust For Life album released in 1977 and produced by David Bowie.

What was intriguing about the gig, the first night of their short U.K. was the line-up that featured such rock luminaries as former Sex Pistol and Iggy sideman Glen Matlock on bass and Blondie’s powerhouse of a drummer Clem Burke alongside the aforementioned Armstrong. On keyboards was Florence Sabeva, who tours with Heaven 17 and Luis Correia on guitar with vocals by broadcaster and occasional Pet Shop Boys collaborator Katie Puckrik.

Opening with the title track Lust For Life the band punched their way through the entire album at blistering pace halted only for Clem Burke to holler for the stage lights to be turned up as “I haven’t travelled 7,000 miles to play in the fucking dark,”.

The evening provided some real ‘pinch me’ moments with “The Passenger” in particular causing goosebumps whilst the choice of songs that followed the full album featured songs that some of the band had played on like Blondie’s “Rip Her To Shreds” plus other classics from the Iggy Pop collection with “Night Clubbing” and Stooges “ I Wanna Be Your Dog”.

Focal point of the evening, was Puckrik who was quite superb in the Iggy role bounding around and bursting with enthusiasm that proved contagious.

As if all the above wasn’t enough the encore provided a true moment of pleasure as Matlock took over the vocals as the band powered through their version of the Sex Pistols “Pretty Vacant” followed by The Stooges “Search And Destroy,” a quite stunning finish for a exceptional evening at a great venue.



Next up…. London Calling at. The Globe, Cardiff

Another great venue and another nostalgic evening with Bristol band, London Calling, the premier Clash tribute band playing the group’s debut album, also released in 1977, and rightly considered a classic, in its entirety.

The opening drum intro to “Janie Jones” set the tone for a quite brilliant set as the band, resplendently dressed in their punk era attire recreated the early days of Punk with lead singer and Strummer doppelgänger Reg Shaw spitting out vocals to a very enthusiastic crowd who were soon bouncing in unison.

There was certainly no let up in the pace with the only breath being taken was during the bands version of the reggae classic “Police and Thieves.” whilst Dave Devonaid aka Mick Jones stepped up to provide able vocal support and a real Mick Jones sound alike.

Other Clash classics “Tommy Gun” “Safe European Home and “White Man In Hammersmith Palais” sent fans home happy but exhausted such was the pace and the power.

Tony Woolway