Aural Sculptors - The Stranglers Live 1976 to the Present


Welcome to Aural Sculptors, a blog aimed at bringing the music of The Stranglers to as wide an audience as possible. Whilst all of the various members of the band that have passed through the ranks since 1974 are accomplished studio musicians, it is on stage where the band have for me had their biggest impact.

As a collector of their live recordings for many years I want to share some of the better quality material with other fans. By selecting the higher quality recordings I hope to present The Stranglers in the best possible light for the benefit of those less familiar with their material than the hardcore fan.

Needless to say, this site will steer well clear of any officially released material. As well as live gigs, I will post demos, radio interviews and anything else that I feel may be of interest.

In addition, occasionally I will post material by other bands, related or otherwise, that mean a lot to me.

Your comments and/or contributions are most welcome. Please email me at adrianandrews@myyahoo.com.


Saturday, 31 May 2025

Kraftwerk Coachella Festival Second Week 20th April 2025

 


A somewhat incongruous choice this one. Kraftwerk... more 'Kraut Rock' than 'Post-punk Rock' if you ask me. But hey, it's Kraftwerk, surely a welcome addition to any festival bill.... Cambridge Folk Festival excepted perhaps!

There is not much more for me to say about the band, they are an institution and just brilliant. There is quite a bit of their material on this site should you care to venture further.

FLAC: https://we.tl/t-EMFX1KFCgo

Artwork: https://we.tl/t-C4wxQp2in9


So there you have it 14 of the 17 bands appearing on the 'Forever Now' one day festival line up. If you are going have fun and please let me know how it went.

Normal service will be resumed tomorrow.

The The Palladium Cologne 16th December 2000

 


Getting near to the end of this particular batch of themed posts. The The and Matt Johnson. As I recall he had some early involvement with Marc & The Mambas, but I know next to nothing about his own band. I reckon I may have to put Spotify through its paces in the coming week and gen up on some of these bands!

FLAC: https://we.tl/t-Eo2FeaPtYz

Artwork: https://we.tl/t-gme7Linbnf



Billy Idol Cruel World Festival Pasadena CA 20th May 2023

 


Billy Idol is not well represented on these pages as neither he nor Generation X for that matter have ever appealed to me. It always seemed to fly in the face of all that punk stood for to disband and high tail it to the US in order to become a bona fide 'rockstar'. There is also the other consideration that I really don't go for their material.

FLAC: https://we.tl/t-NhuC5eurxo

Artwork: https://we.tl/t-wz8MhgofrS



Death Cult Cruel World Pasadena CA 17th May 2025

 


I had a near miss with the Cult once. It was around the time of 'She Sells Sanctuary', so '86/'87. A mate wanted me to go with him to see them in London. I made some excuse. This isn't for me, but if it works for you, then I am happy with that.The joke always was that in their last incarnation that would just be known as 'The'.

FLAC: https://we.tl/t-xsulYHRqT5

Artwork: https://we.tl/t-DNu4PYmGB2



Johnny Marr The Moore Seattle 21st September 2024

 


Now in The Smiths I can recognise a great British band, one of the greatest that we have produced. Despite this in their lifetime I bought just one single 'How Soon Is Now?' and to date I have just a greatest hits CD. But I get it, I get them. What I also get is the damage that has been done to their legacy by the former lead singer of that band. With his undoubted talent, Johnny Marr seems to have weathered that particular storm and he is content to play his former band's material in his solo sets.

Thanks to Mr. Sifter from Dime.





Peter Murphy The Observatory Santa Ana CA 30th December 2012

 

So this brings me back to some more familiar turf at least. Bauhaus are a band that just won't lay down and die. They are the Undead band, such is their legacy within the realms of post punk that people just won't let them go. Dave Vanian may have gone on record slating Pete Murphy for stealing his vampyric image, but certainly no band at that time sounded like Bauhaus and it didn't take too long before they were copied and a whole 'gothic' scene took to the wing as a result. Bauhaus' albums have stood the test of time I think and the members are still active. Peter Murphy has a new album out and it sounds great.... actually it sounds very like a Bauhaus album!

Anyway I digress, back to the recording at hand. This is from the 'Mr Moonlight' tour, a celebration of the 35th Anniversary of Bauhaus. sadly, it would appear that Pete Murphy has a few demons to battle, but on stage he is a great performer/frontman. I am glad I got to see Bauhaus back in '98 (first time comeback!).


FLAC: https://we.tl/t-OHdfkaO9Lg




The Psychedelic Furs Youtube Theater Inglewood CA 9th November 2024

 


A theme is developing here as I once again enter a plea of general ignorance. I must admit for all their longevity and new wave credentials I have nothing by them... not even 'Pretty in Pink'... especially 'Pretty in Pink' as I really don't like the song. Thanks to the original Dime uploader, fangsarrow.







The Jesus And Mary ChainCruel World Festival Pasadena CA 11th May 2024

 


From last year's 'Cruel World' Festival in California, here's the Reid brothers and The Jesus And Mary Chain a band from East Kilbride that guess what? .... passed me by. I remember that they were all the rage in my weekly copy of Sounds at the time of their 'Psychcandy' debut album, that live they had a bit of a reputation for chaos and that Primal Scream's Bobby Gillespie served briefly within their ranks.

FLAC: https://we.tl/t-JbhnDi8upx

Artwork: https://we.tl/t-dMnmhz1ttA



Happy Mondays Manchester G-Mex 25th March 1990

 

Now, if I profess to knowing not a lot about Theatre of Hate or UK Decay, it's still more than I know about Happy Mondays. I find Shaun Ryder and Bez amusing and  do know that Factory sent the band to Barbados to record in a move that produced nothing fact and hugely contributed to the demise of Factory! I would imagine that this will be the sole contribution of the Mondays to this site... but they are there on that 'Forever Now' line-up.

FLAC: https://we.tl/t-MCvHNmyvjM

Artwork: https://we.tl/t-nV0zduDTfV



The Damned White Eagle Hall Jersey City NJ 1st May 2025

 

There's not really much that needs to be said for this one as The Damned take 'MGE', 'The Black Album' and 'Strawberries' back over to US, winding up tonight in Sacramento if the poster is to be believed. I trust that TV Smith made a good account of himself as support. Great to see 'White Rabbit' in the set, a great cover from a band with a solid track record of recording distinctive cover versions (even though I read that Rat does not rate their version). Thanks to the original Dime uploader, madelf. Please note that this recording is in 24/44 format and will require conversion if you intend to burn it onto CD.

FLAC: https://we.tl/t-7YgRgGIxt2

Artwork: https://we.tl/t-PNuM9jk2aT



Public Image Limited O2 Academy Bristol 28th September 2023

 


Okay, like him or loathe him, John Lydon's name is pretty much as synonymous with the term 'post-punk'  as it is with 'punk'. We can argue into the middle of next week whether Lydon was responsible for punk and/or post punk but whichever side of the fence that you sit on it is undeniable that the bands that he was in, the Pistols and PiL, were a huge driving force behind these two musical ideas. Between them, Lydon, Wobble and Levine laid down something of a road map in 'Metal Box' that set the direction of British independent music for several years of the 1980s.

Like many bands Public Image Limited have suffered their trials and tribulations and there have been less than great albums released over the years. But when on form, the band have shone. This was repeated to a certain extent (at least in my opinion) with 'This Is PiL' when a version of the band (essentially the 'Album' era formation minus John McGeogh) reformed, buttered by the proceeds from some TV advertising that Lydon had been involved with.

Thanks to Chatts!

FLAC: https://we.tl/t-uCG6rivUBD

Artwork: https://we.tl/t-9STu4HDEw9







The Chameleons Metropol Enschede The Netherlands 1st February 2025

 


Another great band who until recently passed me by. My knowledge of Mark Burgess and The Chameleons went no further than one song, 'Don't Fall', from their first album. This track was on a compilation tape that someone had done for me which gives you an idea of how long ago it was! Thanks to the original Dime uploader, Salwel.

FLAC: https://we.tl/t-KuTD3tW3ej

Artwork: https://we.tl/t-jtHoTWwmR7



Theatre Of Hate The Roundhouse London 13th December 2013

 


Next up, Theatre of Hate at The Damned's Friday 13th show at Camden's Roundhouse in 2013. If memory serves me right (and there is no guarentee that comes with that) I arrived at this one after ToH had played. I had never payed them much attention before, I knew 'Westworld' and that was about it... oh and I had a few late Spear of Destiny records. I did however see them play a short set at the last Vive Le Rock Awards event and was quite impressed.

FLAC: https://we.tl/t-1cjxRLf5p8

Artwork: https://we.tl/t-SZGoTOXr9g



UK Decay Brighton Polytechnic 13th July 1982

 


OK then, first up is Luton's UK Decay. Whilst I have seen their name adornig a multitude of jackets over the years they are a band of which I know very little. The internet is not thronging with their recordings either, but here is one from Brighton Polytechnic in the summer of 1982. Thanks to Sewer Rat for the files.

MP3: https://we.tl/t-WoLZGASZcw

Artwork: https://we.tl/t-HaF2GKKG52



Forever Now Festival 2025

It would appear that once again small, indepemdent festivals are under the cosh. In recent weeks announcements have been issued informing music fans that two popular festivals that have happened annually for the past few years in my area, Stone Valley South and Sign of The Times, have been cancelled. I think that this also extends to the Midland and Northern versions of Stone Valley as well. And I also heard that the Sunderland based Kubix festival has also gone to the wall. 

A few years back it did seem to me that there were too many such festivals. It felt like any viable tract of land was being used to host a festival, but with so many on offer the resources of would be festival goers were overstretched, so things imploded... I assume. In more recent times things seemed to have evened out a bit but it seems not to be so.

One that seems to be well put together is next month's 'Forever Now' one day event, focussed on British post-punk (with just a dash of German 'pre-punk' added for good measure). All being well there are sufficient bands still in existance that would fit this 'post-punk' brief, meaning that Forever Now could be a fixture for a few years yet... provided that it is well run that is.


More Stranglers' to come, but as a bit of a break I thought that I would go through the running order and see if I can find a recent(ish) set from each band as a pre-cursor to the Milton Keynes event. Let's see how it goes eh?

Friday, 30 May 2025

The Damned Hammersmith Palais London 3rd March 1981


Here's one from The Damned when they played the Hammersmith Palais back in March 1981. The writer who reviewed the gig for Record Mirror in the 11th march issue was seemingly rather underwhelmed by The Damned's performance to the extent that the review, short though it is, is focussed more on Splodgenessabounds than the headlining act. 


Regardless of how The Damned performed on the night I  would love to have been there... out of arm's length from the 'Sieg Heil' ers of course!

Record Mirror 14th March 1981


MP3 (as received): https://we.tl/t-ysviAGRHXC




Thursday, 29 May 2025

Oslo Ice Stadium 15th March 1985

 


Here is a good sounding recording, presumably an audio rip of the TV gig the band played in Oslo. The same gig can be seen as part of the 1984-1985 video compilation DVD (here). 

FLAC: https://we.tl/t-dMuOeDTWRp

Sleeve: https://we.tl/t-GpaB9sruke



JJ Burnel Interview Record Mirror 1st December 1984

 


What follows is perhaps the most uninformative interview I have read for a good while. With a new studio album in the offing this one to one with the bass player this could have/should have been an opportunity to explore the themes and motivations behind the writing of the album. However, unfortunately the interviewer instead opted to take that well worn path that so many music journalists have trodden when it comes to interviewing The Stranglers.... the bad boys of punk, out of step with all around them... The Stranglers as misogynists... that centrefold etc etc. She seems to have been warned off by Burnel's assertion that since the band were not musicians (being aural sculptors instead), questions that would normally be posed to musicians with a new album were off the table. Shame really.

Record Mirror 1st December 1984

Jean Jacques Burnel: admitted motorbike and karate enthusiast, accused woman-hater, ex-nude centerfold – and bassist with aging but perfectly formed ‘bad boys’ the Stranglers.

It’s the memory of that first bum wiggle to ‘Go Buddy Go’ on Top of The Pops way back that gets the knees going weak as I walk into this. I’ve never interviewed a past(ish) hero before… and to be perfectly honest, I’m shitting myself.

JJ is 32 but looks a lot younger. During the photosession he plays the naughty little schoolboy, pulls funny faces or growls menacingly at photographer Eugene when he dares to touch the revered Burnel DMs. Later, he indulges in sensible, and humerous conversation.

You begin to realize why so much of what the Stranglers have said in print has been turned back and used against them. The written word fails to convey the mocking tone of voice and glint in the eye that you JJ’s taking the Michael.

The Stranglers lurk perpetually on the sidelines, emerging annually to deliver another musical offering. The latest, ‘Aural Sculpture’, is their most complete album yet. Together with the new single ‘No Mercy’, it sits as a strange bedfellow to the pre-Christmas disposability of much of the charts. But where exactly do the Stranglers fit in with all this?

“Well,” JJ grins winningly, “we’re not musicians, so you can’t really ask us musician-type questions.” The Stranglers, you see, have become aural sculptors… hence the title of the album. It’s all perfectly obvious.

“We just don’t want to be guilty by association with anyone,” JJ continues, “I don’t know how Hugh feels about it, but it’s a bit tongue-in-cheek for me. But there’s certainly no family I can identify with at the moment.

“I tell you, I am so unhip. I’m not gay – well, maybe just a little bit… I’m not entirely gay… well, I’m not going to write a song about it yet anyway. And I’m not an Islington socialist… really.And I’m not a fucking soap opera lover. What else?”

What about a vegetarian? “And I’m not fucking vegetarian.” A quiche eater?

“Hey!” he swanks butchly, “do REAL men eat quiche? Yeah, actually I like quiche… so long as its got BACON on it.”

I wonder whether real men knit? He shakes his head.

“No, but I can sew. I’ll make someone a bloody good housewife one day. This is getting personal, it’s getting like a Duran Duran interview. I had sex with 57 women last week.

“Can you imagine,” he continues more generally, “someone is telling their sex stories to the press? I wonder if people volunteer that information or the reporters just say ‘look, I want something sleazy because I can’t write about your fucking music’. Wouldn’t you like to be one of those girls? To know  ‘oh yes, if I sleep with him tonight, just think – I’ll be splashed all over the place and he’ll tell everyone about it and I’ll just be number one hundred and …”

The Stranglers, and JJ in particular, have always been a strange set of characters to follow. When listening to ‘Aural Sculpture’, or its predecessor ‘Feline’, the old accusations of misogyny hurled at the band seem to belong to another group entirely. Gone are the overtly dodgy lyrics and the feeling that you were often listening to songs in which you were the butt of some mach private joke.

When the subject of JJ’s historic stint as a Christmas centre-fold came up, the whole subject is raised again.

“You’re talking about the centre spread – ‘Stud Of The Year’? Yes mam, that was me. In your Christmas stocking.

“It was meant to be a piss take, but a lot of people got really uptight about it. Everyone was accusing us of being sexist and male chauvinist pigs – which we are. But we’re certainly not women haters. I think they confuse the fact that men who are afraid of women react in a certain way – and putting them in the same bracket as blokes like us who don’t hate women and aren’t afraid of them. 

They’re calling us all sexist. I don’t know what those guys are, but – OK, I don’t mind being called a male chauvinist pig because I know what I am and I know I’m OK with women and I get on alright with them. In fact,” he adds in a voice bordering on being silly, “some of my best friends are women.”

JJ studied economics at Huddersfield Polytechnic. Unremarkable in itself, if it wasn’t for the fact that here he first began his association with karate, leading to his present role as teacher. 

“I tell you,” he says quietly, “on a block thing rather than just one little pleasure, it’s the most enjoyable thing that I’ve done since the Stranglers.

You have a lot of responsibility when you are teaching because, obviously, if someone fucks themselves, you can get in a lot of trouble. Some kids are fantastic, they’re really beautiful – make you grow up. If you’re the teacher and you’ve got to get them through their grades, you’ve got the responsibility to make them learn and for them to be aware of their progress.”

So the responsibility of nurturing a young human being is appealing to him – does this means he’s getting broody for sproggits of his own?

“Umm, hold on,” he hesitates, “I’m not old enough am I? No, you see, I’d like to have the responsibility – without the responsibility of actually bringing them up – which is just not on. And I’d still like to find the perfect vehicle for it. Receptacle… receptacle for my sperm.”

You never want to contribute to a sperm bank then? He laughs loudly. 

“What, just in case? No, I think that’s more Cornwell’s line of thinking.” Which means, for the time being, the world will have to do without lots of little JJs running about.

“Oh no!” he looks horrified at the prospect, “God forbid.”

ELEANOR LEVY


Wednesday, 28 May 2025

Ventura Theater Ventura CA 22nd March 1997 and Colston Hall Bristol 29th September 1992 - LOSSLESS ADDITIONS

 I'd like to thank yesican for sending on lossless versions of the above mentioned gigs that I previously posted in MP3 format. Cheers!

Ventura Theater California 22nd March 1997 - here.

Colston Hall Bristol 29th September 1992 - here.

Sunday, 25 May 2025

The Beat Emerald City Cherry Hill New Jersey 8th October 1980

 


To round off the posts related to The Specials and The Beat in Dublin in 1981, here are The Beat recorded in New Jersey in October 1980. As with The Specials, the Dublin gig of January 1981 isn't around... or if it is it is hiding in someone's collection unloved... or perhaps not. Anyway, this US gig is a great recording of a band at the peak of their powers.

MP3: https://we.tl/t-tUGSsNrC9t

Artwork: In download folder.



The Specials Jaap Edenhal Amsterdam 18th October 1980

 


To the best of my knowledge, recordings of The Specials and/or The Beat sets from the Stardust Ballroom in Dublin from January 1981 do not exist (or at least they are not in circulation). Here then is a recording from Amsterdam of a few month's earlier with a similars set list with representation of material from 'More Specials'.

Please note that to my cloth ears this recording runs a bit fast in places.

FLAC: https://we.tl/t-PmWkSkqIid

Artwork: https://we.tl/t-OuG9iDEUpc



The Specials and The Beat Stardust Ballroom Dublin 15th January 1981 - Reviews

Once again looking through old music press, specifically from January 1981 I saw once again reviews of a gig that as they say I would have given my eye teeth to have been at... or perhaps not given what transpired.

The reviews coupled with my own reading arould this gig lead to a darker more tragic place. Please read on.


A three date gaunt over to Ireland which would see a double billing of The Specials and The Beat was announced in the 3rd january issue of the new Musical Express. The band were to play Belfast, Dublin and Galway over the 14th to 16th January 1981, with proceeds from the gigs being split between various welfare and anti-nulear charities. On paper it sounds like a dream gig (mine at least) but this was the very early 1980's, a time when gigs could be highly unpredictable (or depressingly predictable, depending upon which way you want to view it).


Two contemporary reviews follow, coupled with some more recent online articles that appeared in the Irish Press at the time of Terry Hall's death in December 2022.

New Musical Express 24th January 1981.


"2-Tone isn't this year's thing, which is really good. It's very easy to go from absolutely nothing to being the future of rock'n'roll in the space of a few months these days. It's a very different thing sustaining it. If you're still there a year later, then that's good going." - Sir Horace Gentleman, The Specials.

“If a year ago, everyone was saying we were ska before you were ska! Now they're all
saying that they've never had anything to do with it!" - David Steele, The Beat.

THEY MIGHT have raised a few eyebrows with occasional jolly japes like when they cheekily
switched bass players to liven up an otherwise-uninspiring new year Top Of The Pops, but The Beat and The Specials have surprisingly never toured together before.

Yet the two groups have plenty in common, not least that both have practically stood alone in broadening the musical base of punky-reggae, developing rather than re-hashing the new ska that prospered in the slipstream of 2-Tone's initial outbreak two years ago.

Hence this low-key Emerald Isle engagement, the first ever joint Go-Feet/2-Tone revue, hastily put together following a chance meeting between the two groups for the benefit of various local charities.

The gig at Ulster Hall in Belfast alone raised over £2,000 for an inter-denominational HELP set-up who arrange holidays for both Catholic and Protestant children in the west of Ireland. Proceeds from the Dublin Starlight show, on the other hand, are earmarked for a group of local anti-nuke activists.

"More bands should play places like Belfast. The audience is great, probably better than most of the audiences we've played to in England!" – Ranking Roger.

"Just look at The Beat. They're really bubbling, even before they go onstage. Watching them makes me feel like a real old campaigner!" - Sir Horace Gentleman.

THE BEAT bound around a stage with so much naked enthusiasm and fresh-faced spirit, you would be forgiven for assuming that every gig was their first. They are still absorbed by the thrill of it all, just being there, and reflect that ebulliance in two sets that reverberate with upful, positive sound.

Feeding off the fervour of an over-appreciative crowd the Belfast audience in particular - The Beat's insatiable verve more than ' compensates for some live musical shortcomings. Only sedate saxophonist Saxa - more incongruous than ever in a pair of ludicrously patterned canvas baggies topped by trendy Johnson's T-shirt - and drummer Everett Morton are exceptional musicians, but the crosscut rhythms of guitarists Andy Cox and Dave Wakeling give everything a melodic edge and resonance that characterises the group's sound.

David 'Shuffle’ Steele, meanwhile, stands in the great British tradition of the physically stylised bassist (Matlock, Simon on, Hook, Gentleman ...), his shuffling and pirouetting at the back of the stage confirming my deep-seated suspicion that most bassmen are far bigger posers than guitarists can ever hope to be.

But the visual focus, as always, is the irrepressible man in black, Ranking Roger, prince of the freeze-frame skank and ongoing grin. With The Beat instrumentalists - including for the Irish gigs new organist Blockhead - concentrating their attention on musical detail, the onus falls heavily on Roger to project the group, which he does in fine style, eventually becoming so carried away that he forsakes his jacket, shirt and even that sacred stove-pipe hat by the end of the set.

"We've got really interested in dancing over the last year and looking at the effects that dancing has at a gig. It can make for a really optimistic feel without having to preach, help people go away feeling a bit stronger." - Dave Wakeling.

WITH A SECOND LP, tentatively titled 'Dance Yourself Stupid' due to be cut soonish, The Beat previewed a brace of new unrecorded songs: the bouncy and repetitive 'All Out To Get You', continuing in the racey vein of the sublime 'Too Nice To Talk To' hit; and the rockier 'I Am Your Flag', inspired by party political adverts the group saw on American TV during the recent election campaign.

The Beat are still at their best on record however, the studio giving them the extra time and space to breathe and indulge their more inventive instincts. Live, they might still lack the impressive upfront dynamism of The Specials, but they are coming on well.

It's great watching them learn.

"These gigs are probably the last time we are doing some of the older songs. The thing is it's a very young audience and probably the first time most of them are seeing us, so it's basically a greatest hits set." - Jerry Dammers.



SOME MIGHT maintain they have never fallen from grace since the golden beginnings of 2-Tone, but The Specials have 'never forgotten what made them great in the first place - the energy and vitality of their stage show plus the incisive wit and morality of their lyrics.

Starting both shows with a twin-pronged opening shot of 'Concrete Jungle' and 'Gangsters', The Specials immediately put their hatred of violence and corruption on the line. But it's the newer stuff that really catches the ear: while bassist Horace might be slightly off the mark in a claim that 'International Jet Set' is the best thing the group have ever done, it certainly does stand out as a uniquely disconcerting track. Like much of the 'More Specials' LP, its risks and musical maturity are becoming more apparent with hindsight.

But while The Specials have been either credited or lambasted for "going muzak" on their second LP, the fuller integration of the Rico/Dick ' Cuthell horn section into their sonic maelstrom has been practically ignored. That horn section - plus the' occasional addition of Paul Heskath on sax - has given the group's uptempo skank an added carnival stridency. 

Singer Terry Hall, too, has come on tremendously as a frontman and focal point of the band. Time was when he was more or less submerged by the lunacy of Dammers, Staples and Golding that surrounded him. Now he is the unfussy vortex of the group's newly refined attack.

When a few pissed-up lunkheads threaten to overrun the Dublin date, to the disgruntlement of the rest of the crowd, Hall deals with a potentially nightmarish situation with sensible aplomb, his calming sarcasm making a mockery of his recent conviction by Cambridge's answer to Judge Rougneck.

The disruptions, however, do destroy any continuity The Specials' set might have had and it ends amid an ugly stage invasion, the sort of thing that should have gone out with gobbing.

But at the heart of things, The Specials are keeping their hand in. Sometimes musical tensions and the strain of touring seem to be on the verge of pulling them apart; sometimes they look

distinctly jaded as they plough through the likes of 'Too Much Too Young' one more time; sometimes The Specials myth seems to be an albatross of Clash City proportions around their necks, but the spirit lives on all the same. Don't Hargue!

"But we're just being a bit more realistic about things: let's try talking about things and maybe doing something rather than just ignoring it, cause it won't go away by just ignoring it." - Sir Horace Gentleman.

And remember. It's good to be wise when you're young.


Adrian Thrills may have downplayed the violence that marred the Dublin gig but he was insightful regarding the tensions that were starting to show within The Specials' ranks. The band would be no more within six months or so of these Irish dates.

Record Mirror 24th January 1981.


I still struggle with the idea that 2 Tone music, which is generally so positive (the music that is, not necessarily the lyrics!) brought with it so much violence.

As suggested ealier on in this post, the Stardust Ballroom in Dublin was to hit the headlines again for very different reasons. Sadly, whilst 99 out of 100 times a gathering of people in a venue for a gig or event is a joyous thing, but occasionally the unexpected happens. Thinks of the fate of the Clutha in Glasgow or more recently the fatality that occured in the Brixton Academy, just such a tragedy was to visit the Stardust kust a few weeks after The Specials and The Beat played there.

Totally Dublin 16th January 2019

Brian McMahon

“The kids who burst through the doors at opening time at this down at heel ballroom were all set to have a real good time, a riot. Which is exactly what happened.” So said English pop magazine Record Mirror in its review of the Specials at Dublin’s Stardust ballroom in January 1981. The review continued, “All the pent-up frustration and boredom of living in Dublin’s roughest suburb was beginning to explode. It’s difficult to persuade bands to play gigs in Dublin and after tonight I can see why.”

Trouble started during support act The Beat who, also, had to contend with some “morons at the front with their stiff-armed salutes.” Concerned for everyone’s safety, The Specials threatened not to perform. But they did, and after just two minutes, “the blockheads at the front started to beat seven bales of shit out of one another as the band were forced to stop for the first of many interruptions.” Lead singer Terry Hall pleaded, “No violence, we hate violence,” as the mob invaded the stage twice, causing mayhem and stealing microphones and other sound equipment. When a stack of PA speakers came crashing down on stage for the second time that night, the Specials gave up and walked off.

Despite the chaos, violence and poor organisation, the gig (a charity event to raise funds to take children from Northern Ireland on holiday to the West of Ireland) was memorable for many. For 16-year-old Paul Heller, the music and performance was so inspirational that he is a lifelong fan and became friends with some of The Specials. Paul has “bad memories of the violence but the gig was electric. My parents didn’t want me to go – even they predicted trouble – but I sneaked out the bathroom window and jumped onto the flat roof of our kitchen.” Paul lived in nearby Beaumont so it took only five minutes to get to the Stardust where he joined the long queue and “saw a black man, for the first time in real life.” This wasn’t unusual back then. Even Record Mirror noted that “the black guys in the bands were the only coloured people I saw the whole time I was in Dublin.”

The striking young man Paul had seen was actually another Dubliner; Jeff Keogh a 15-year-old from Dundrum. Wearing Doc Martens, a red Harrington jacket and a pork pie hat borrowed from his father (Ray Keogh, the first black footballer to play in the League of Ireland!), Jeff looked the part. He remembers queuing outside from lunchtime and when “someone mistook and called me Ranking Roger, a doorman looked at me and let me squeeze in the side door because he thought I was with the band. I ended up coming out on the side of the stage and got a roar from the crowd.”

Four weeks later, in the early hours of the 14th February, the sirens of the emergency services woke Paul Heller in his Beaumont bedroom. Worried and not knowing what was happening, Paul’s father did a head count check of his children. All were safe and at home. But outside, they heard the news of the horror happening at the nearby Stardust and of the fatal fire which killed 48 young people.


The Irish Times 30th December 2022

‘No violence – we hate violence,’ Terry Hall pleaded the night The Specials played Dublin.

Two songs in and already the bottles were flying. “No violence – we hate violence,” Terry Hall, the lead singer of The Specials, pleaded. But the crowd crammed into the Stardust wasn’t listening. Minutes later came the first stage invasion. Punches flew. Mics were knocked over.

The English ska band, from the hard-knock city of Coventry, had never seen anything comparable to the anarchy at the 1,400-capacity nightclub – housed in a former jam factory in Artane, in north Dublin – that night of Thursday, January 15th, 1981. Not that they hung around to take it all in: Hall, the Specials songwriter Jerry Dammers, and their bandmates were soon barricaded in the dressing room, praying for the madness to subside. It never really did.

“All the pent-up frustration and boredom of living in Dublin’s roughest suburb was beginning to explode,” the reviewer wrote in Record Mirror, the British music weekly. “It’s difficult to persuade bands to play gigs in Dublin and after tonight I can see why.”

Hall’s death, on December 18th, at the age of 63, has prompted an outpouring of emotion. As the Specials frontman he was the voice of such bruised classics as Too Much Too Young and Ghost Town, a howl of anguish for a Britain riven with racist tensions and about to be plunged into the economic nuclear winter of Thatcherism.

Ghost Town went to number one in Britain, and to number three in Ireland, in the summer of 1981, six months after The Specials’ notorious Irish tour. Of the three shows, Dublin was the undoubted lowlight. Violence erupted almost the moment the band went on stage, and the performance was finally abandoned. Accounts from people in the crowd suggest the gig was somewhere between a fracas and a fascist rally, the trouble spearheaded by shaven-headed thugs in the front row.

The violence also had an air of desperation. North Dublin was a backwater of a backwater in 1981. Any opportunity for mayhem was to be seized by the lapels. “The kids who burst through the doors at opening time at this down-at-heel ballroom were all set to have a riot,” Simon Ludgate wrote in Record Mirror. “Which is exactly what happened.”

Ironically, The Specials expected Dublin to be the calm after the storm, having kicked off their tour in Belfast, at that point more war zone than city. But Dublin would be worse – a concert that dissolved into chaos. (A month later, on February 14th, the Stardust was engulfed by a blaze in which 48 people died and more than 200 were injured. The Republic’s worst fire disaster, it has entered the Irish psyche as a byword for tragedy, of young lives cruelly snatched away. An inquest is due to open in 2023.)

The Specials hadn’t expected a smooth ride in Ireland, which they toured with their fellow ska act The Beat as support. With conflict raging in the North, British artists were generally reluctant to cross the Irish Sea. But Dammers had founded The Specials with the explicit goal of uniting divided British communities. Taking that message to Ireland seemed the logical next step.

The first gig, at the Ulster Hall, in Belfast, on Wednesday, January 14th, had been tense. National Front skinheads had taunted the audience queuing outside. (They were rebuked by punters who chanted: “Skinhead, skinhead over there / what’s it like to have no hair?” 

That afternoon two sets of skinheads came in. They told us they were ever so pleased we’d come to Belfast. They appreciated it so much that one set would stay downstairs and the other up on the balcony, so there was no fighting

“We were nervous – of course we were,” Dave Wakeling, The Beat’s lead singer, would later tell me. “That afternoon two sets of skinheads came in – clearly different sets, because they wore different uniforms.” The Beat feared the worst. But the message was that they had nothing to worry about. “They told us they were ever so pleased we’d come to Belfast, as a lot of people weren’t. They appreciated it so much that one set of them would stay downstairs and the other up on the balcony, so there was no fighting.”

He recalls feeling hugely relieved. “It was fantastic until the encore – you look up and there is a line of people standing on the balcony [urinating] over the edge.”

“I’m very proud of the fact that The Specials, along with The Beat, played in Ireland,” Horace Panter, the group’s bassist, told the Irish Examiner last year. “We played in Belfast when nobody else would.”

With Belfast behind them, The Specials and The Beat concluded that the difficult bit was over. Crossing the Border, they were off to Dublin and then Cork. What could go wrong? Lots, they realised as they took to the stage at the Stardust and were greeted by a row of skinheads who, according to Record Mirror, were giving “stiff-armed salutes”.

“We were driving to Dublin, and everyone was bright and cheery: ‘Oh, it will be dead easy now.’ It wasn’t,” Wakeling said. “Lots of skinheads got up on stage while The Specials were playing, and a fight broke out – beer was being thrown all over the place.”

The Beat were in the dressing room when The Specials came hurtling in, followed by a hail of bottles. “The band did a runner, and the fight carried over backstage. There was blood on the walls and broken glass on the floor. We noticed all the exits at the back were chained up and padlocked,” Wakeling said. “There was no way out. So we went back into the dressing room and put up a sofa against the door until they had finished bottling each other. Later we read about the fire.”

What struck Simon Ludgate was the resentment that seethed from the audience. “Irish kids ... seem to hate everything and everyone in a big way ... An English accent was reason enough to get beaten up outside. The black guys in the bands were the only coloured people I saw the whole time I was in Dublin ... It’s not hard to be unacceptable in Ireland.”

He said Ireland but perhaps meant the capital. The gig in Cork, on January 17th, could not have been more different, according to Wakeling. When they performed at the Arcadia Ballroom – a venue, near Kent Station, that also hosted The Cure, XTC and U2, among others – the vibe was mellow and welcoming.

“In Cork there were a lot of people singing and dancing. We were very pleased,” Wakeling told me, his voice still full of relief all those years later. “It had been an odd tour.”


Fan photo from the Stardust gig (Roddy, Horace and Lynval look on disapprovingly at trouble at the front).

Irish Mirror 22nd December 2022

The night the Specials and The Beat got trapped playing Stardust nightclub - weeks before fatal fire.

The late Specials frontman Terry Hall had close ties to Ireland.

Hall and The Specials performed at the Stardust nightclub back in 1981 – a month before the tragic fire at the Artane venue.

The band played what was described as a “chaotic” concert at the Stardust on January 15, 1981, and told of their fears at trying to flee the venue from a riot – but all the exit doors had been locked.

It was reported that the show was marred by anti-social behaviour by a minority of those attending, despite repeated appeals for calm by both bands.

Dave Wakeling, lead singer with The Beat, said in 2018: “We played the Stardust, which burned down about 10 days later. Lots of skinheads got up on stage while The Specials were playing and a fight broke out – beer was being thrown all over the place.

“The band did a runner and the fight carried over backstage. There was blood on the walls and broken glass on the floor. We noticed all the exits at the back were chained up and padlocked.

"There was no way out. So we went back into the dressing room and put up a sofa against the door until they had finished bottling each other. Later we read about the fire.”

Records also revealed that concerns over alleged overcrowding and other issues relating to the event were raised a number of days later by Dublin Corporation in a letter to the owners of the Stardust.

The venue, on Kilmore Road, was licenced to hold a maximum of 1,400 people but it’s believed more than 2,000 were at the concert that night.

In June of this year, Antoinette Keegan, chairperson of the Stardust Victims’ Committee, said she was determined to meet members of The Specials when they were due to visit Dublin’s Trinity College in July.

“This was one of the biggest concerts ever held in the Stardust and we would love to find out if anything stands out about that night in the original band members’ minds,” she said.

“Given that it happened just weeks before the fire, we are hoping they might remember something of significance that could assist us in our search for answers.”

In 1981, Hall left the band to start Fun Boy Three, his new wave project with Specials bandmates Lynval Golding and Neville Staple. They released their self-titled debut LP in 1982 and followed it up with 'Waiting' the following year before disbanding.

In 1984, Hall formed another band titled the Colourfield, which released two albums: 1985’s 'Virgins and Philistines' and 1987’s 'Deception.'

Additionally, Hall joined the bands Vegas and Terry, Blair & Anouchka, and released two solo albums. He would also go on to co-write the Go-Go’s 'Our Lips Are Sealed' and collaborate with a wide range of artists, including Sinéad O’Connor, Gorillaz, Tricky, M.I.A. and Lily Allen.

Hall also recorded Dana’s All Kinds of Everything with Sinead for the 1998 album "A Song For Eurotrash".

In 2008, Hall reunited with the Specials for a number of tours and concerts. They went on to record two new albums together: 2019’s 'Encore' and 2021’s 'Protest Songs 1924-2012'.

His death was announced by his family on Monday. He was 63.


Dublin Live 22nd June 2022 Kim O’Leary.

Families of Stardust fire victims hoping to meet The Specials over 'sparks' at venue before tragedy.

The families of the 48 people who died in the Stardust fire are seeking a meeting with British ska band The Specials, who performed at the Artane venue just one month before the 1981 tragedy.

The legendary band, whose hits include Ghost Town and Concrete Jungle , will be in Dublin next month to play a sold-out gig at Trinity College on July 2. Speaking to Dublin Live, survivor Antoinette Keegan - who lost her sisters Mary, 19, and Martina, 16, in the Stardust fire - said that they are hopeful that they can get in contact with The Specials.

A number of people who were at the gig in 1981 later told gardai they saw “sparks” in the ceiling during the performance.

Ms Keegan said: "We want to see if they can remember anything at all from the night they were in the Stardust, even something at the thing they didn't think to be important could be significant to us in the lead up to what happened on February 13 and 14. My sister Lorraine wanted to go see The Specials the night they performed in the Stardust but my dad said no, and she is still a fan all these years later.

"We would really appreciate if they could contact us."

A number of people who were at the gig later told gardai they saw “sparks” in the ceiling during the The Specials performance the month before the tragedy. Antoinette said that the families are "hoping and praying" that The Specials will get in contact and agree to meet them.

There were 48 people killed and over 200 people injured in a fire at the Stardust nightclub on 14 February 1981. Ms Keegan said she is hopeful that the full inquest hearings into the tragedy will go ahead in September, with a preliminary hearing taking place on July 21.

She said: "On July 21 is the next preliminary hearing for the inquest, it'll be the first time me and my family won't be there because my mother is being presented with the Spirit of Mother Jones Award in Cork."

Her late mother, Christine Keegan, campaigned for many years to get an inquest into the deaths of her two daughters at the Stardust fire. She sadly passed away in 2020.

There was recently a breakthrough in a dispute between the Stardust families and the Department of Justice over payments for inquest jury members, with legislation brought in to pay the jurors for their service.


I do not know whether Antoinette Keegan did in fact meet with members of the special, but the an inquest into the fire did conclude in 2024, some 43 years after the event.

The Guardian 18th April 2024

All 48 victims of 1981 Dublin nightclub fire unlawfully killed, inquest finds.

Survivors and relatives of those who died in Stardust club on Valentine’s Day in 1981 wept and thanked jury.

Forty-eight young people were unlawfully killed after an electrical fault started an inferno at the Stardust nightclub in Dublin in 1981, an inquest jury has found.

The jury delivered the verdict in a coroner’s court on Thursday more than four decades after a disaster considered one of the darkest moments in Ireland’s history.

Survivors and relatives of those who died applauded, wept and thanked the jury for a decision that appeared to deliver catharsis after a long quest for justice and accountability.

The conflagration in the north Dublin suburb of Artane on Valentine’s night killed 48 people, aged 16 to 27, injured 214, and left questions over how it started and why it claimed so many victims.

The jury concluded the fire stemmed from an electrical fault in the hot press in the bar of the Stardust Ballroom and that polyurethane foam seating and carpet tiles on the walls contributed to the fire’s spread.

Smoke, heat, lack of staff preparedness, ignorance of the building’s layout and emergency lighting failures impeded people’s ability to escape, the jury found. Asked if locked, chained or otherwise obstructed exits impeded the ability of any of the dead to escape, the jury foreman said “yes”.

After the verdicts relatives embraced and rose to applaud the jury, with one person shouting “thank you”. The inquest lasted 12 months.

Families said previous efforts, including a tribunal of inquiry, a victim compensation tribunal and two legislature-appointed reviews, were rushed, perfunctory or botched, reflecting official indifference to working-class communities.

The tribunal of inquiry that convened within three weeks of the fire found the “probable cause” was arson, outraging the families who said it smeared the dead and allowed the nightclub manager, Eamon Butterly, to claim £580,000 compensation for malicious damage.

The arson finding was removed from the public record in 2009 but families said only a fresh inquest could absolve those who died.

The coroner, Myra Cullinane, paid tribute to the families’ persistence in obtaining a fresh inquest. “To the families, I acknowledge the deaths of these 48 young people is a source of ongoing grief to those who loved them and it remains the defining loss of their lives.

“However, I hope that family members will have taken some solace from the fact that these fresh inquests were held, that the facts surrounding the deaths were examined in detail, that moving testimony was heard from many of those involved in the events of the night and, most importantly, that you the families felt fully involved in proceedings, however difficult it was to hear all of the evidence.”

Families marched to the Garden of Remembrance carrying photographs of those who died and a black banner that said: “They never came home.” Some called for a state apology over flaws in the investigation of the blaze and what they termed callousness towards survivors and relatives.

President Michael D Higgins said the inquest findings were a result of tireless campaigning.

“I am very conscious that today will be a day of the deepest emotions for the loved ones of those who died,” he said.

“A day of vindication and of honour, but also a day of the deepest sadness and regret. I think in particular of those whose passing means this conclusion comes too late for them.”

The taoiseach, Simon Harris, said the families had carried the weight of the disaster with strength and dignity.

“The Stardust tragedy was one of the darkest moments in our history, a heartbreaking tragedy because of the lives that were lost, the families that were changed forever, and the long, drawn-out struggle for justice that followed.

“Their relentless pursuit of truth and accountability, their profound commitment to justice, even in the face of overwhelming challenges and setbacks, was not only a fight for their loved ones but a campaign to ensure that such a disaster never happens again.”

The government will consider the verdict and the jury’s recommendations, Harris said.


Memorial to the memory of the victims of the Stardust Ballroom fire
(Stardust Memorial Park, Dublin).