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.


Sunday, 15 March 2026

O2 Academy Liverpool 5th March 2012

 


Whatever you do don't catch the bass players eye! Liverpool 2012 and someone has rather unwisely lobbed a pint at Burnel. This action was unwise on two counts... one, only a fool would pay O2 Academy beer prices only to throw it at the stage and two, it's a sure fire way to get the bass players dander up! The clip has been on Youtube for some years now and indeed some manner of retribution for that ill advised act was meted out to the culprit at the front of the stage.

Shame really to do such a thing, especially when the band are part way through a particularly enjoyable set as was the case on the 2012 tour when the band had a new album to promote.

FLAC: https://we.tl/t-SsgFVu4MO3

Artwork: https://we.tl/t-xxT054lKzi



Magazine Konzerthaus Vienna 15th September 1978

 

Today (15th March 2026) Howard Devoto celebrates his 74th birthday. Happy birthday Howard! That is as good an excuse that I need to post some Magazine. Not satisfied with putting Manchester on the punk map with Buzzcocks, in a manner that truly embodied the spirit of punk Devoto upped and left Buzzcocks as soon as they had a record out. I would imagine that nobody could second guess where he was going next on the musical front! 'Real Life', punk meets prog.... completely different to anything that his contemporary musicians of the first wave of punk were going and all the more brilliant for that. I must make it one of the Top 30 'spotlight' albums in the coming weeks.

This short set recorded in Vienna saw Howard and Co. playing at the prestigious Konzerthaus as support to Patti Smith. 

Thanks to the original Dime uploader (unknown).

FLAC: https://we.tl/t-avyBtXUuVh

Artwork: https://we.tl/t-h7EdfDmVrc


Killing Joke The Tube Channel 4 UK TV 25th January 1985 (and 16th December 1983)

 


The Tube was perhaps the best thing to happen in music in the UK in the early '80s. From the opening show in November 1982 with The Jam's final live television appearance to the final show in April 1987 (an end that was catalysed by host Jools Holland's stating "be there or be ungroovy fuckers" in a pre-watershed trailer!), the show featured a veritable who's who of the (mostly) alternative UK music scene. As such it was a must watch.

In a final 'Night Time' themed post, here is Killing Joke's two appearances from December 1983 (which features the 'Night Time' track, ' Eighties') along with their performance from January 1985.

This was first downloaded from the much missed Punktorrents site.



16th December 1983

01. Dominator
02. Eighties
03. Frenzy

25th January 1985

01. Night Time
02. Love Like Blood
03. Kings & Queens

Watch as Cliff Richard fist pumps the air as host Paula Yates introduces Killing Joke.... who knew that he was a fan!

Killing Joke Interviews (Record Mirror 1985)

Here are a couple of interviews with members of Killing Joke that appeared in Record Mirror either side of the release of the 'Night Time' album.

Record Mirror (16th February 1985)


CRAZY OR great. Or both. Jaz Coleman, of top 40 pop combo Killing Joke, is playing me a tape of his group's forthcoming LP 'Night Time'. The volume is LOUD, the music is banging harder than a Hyde Park khazi, and Jaz is just standing there playing his imaginary guitar.

The man is totally absorbed, nary a thought of video or Hippodrome or ORS '85 in his head. As they used to say, he means it maan.

'''Love Like Blood' is uncompromising music," he says of the group's current hit. " For me it's a very disturbing piece of music. I was disturbed when we recorded it. I don't give a f**k what chart position it reaches, as long as people hear it.

"A lot of younger people seem to be picking up on our music at the moment. It's important to us that we don't patronise anyone. We won't budge from our position or start employing new tactics just to get up the charts.

"Our relationship to our music is disturbingly close ... we become our music. The way we live our lives determines our sound. The way we live constitutes our music. We've been to hell and back for our music."

Jaz says a lot of things like that. He looks you straight in the eye and just talks. So do the other Killers, dressed in leather and brogues and angry young man stares.

"We thrive on what we' re doing," says drummer Paul. "We have our own style and it's irrelevant what anyone else is doing. Our gigs are victories and we treat them as such. Nobody can touch us live."

That's as maybe, but there's something about Killing Joke's obsession that's a touch worrying.

"As individuals we don't have much to do with the musicbiz on a social level," says Jaz. "Outside influences don't affect our lives." Paul chips in : "We just live very volatile lives, get as much out of things as we can. Our music explores all sides of our emotions, there's a depth to it.

"We definitely don't isolate ourselves, though. I think we're aware of what's going on, we're not hermits."

THEY'RE CERTAINLY not hermits. As the fervour dies down, Jaz tells me of forthcoming dates in Japan, Rio, Thailand and New Zealand. Not bad for a group without a hit single pedigree. And mention of hit singles sets Jaz off again ...

"We want to be the musical summary of the decade," he says. "The insanity out there - we rejoice in it.

We don't want to create an illusion like all the rest. Killing Joke is our sanity. It's music not just as a pleasure principle, but because we need it. If we didn't do this I don't know what would happen to us.
That feeling is 'Love Like Blood' ... "

Paul: "We have taken that 'Love Like Blood' too far to ever return from it. We can't do without it." Jaz again : "With 'Love Like Blood' we feel that man doesn't get what he deserves but what he resembles, we're trying to explain our fanaticism . With other groups the relationship between artist and subject is so weak."

And on they go, so convinced that you can't help liking them. So right about the gutless parade of top 10 pop that you can't help wishing them well. And if they did well what would they spend all the money on?

"I'd spend it in the right direction," says Jaz cryptically. "Killing Joke is a vehicle for our own freedom, an expression of our own personal politics and a way of being in control of our own destinies. To be in an uncompromising band is a dream come true for me."

Record Mirror (20th April 1985)


KILLING JOKE are in Germany, the home of the Brothers Grimm and an apt setting for a band who've had more fairy tales written about them than tight panted princes on white horses. Joke aren't ogres hunting for blood, they aren't dragons breathing fire into the tape recorders of the music press, they're just fed up.

Fed up with mealy-mouthed journalists intent on getting 'a good piece' whether it represents the band or not, fed up with encountering people'who don't know anything about, like, or even listen to the band. Personally, I love 'em. 

"We've had a lot of prejudice against us of course," says drummer Paul resignedly as we sit backstage in Cologne's now defunct old railway station - scene of tonight's gig. "We're renowned for being a bunch of fu---ers or whatever. Now, finally we've got other people to listen to us who wouldn't normally, and that's what we need. We want to spread our music as wide as possible, we don't want to turn people against us, we want people to like and appreciate us. That's the biggest buzz, people turning up to the gigs when they would never have considered it before."

He's right of course. Killing Joke gigs have traditionally been a hot bed of spikey haired leather jackets, a hard core of fans who've ignored the bands up-and-down hip status and concentrated on - the music.

"We always think of Gary Glitter and Alex Harvey," grins Paul when I tell him how the title track of the new album 'Night Time' reminds me of Gazza. "They're the two guys who we all really really like musically. We're not ripping them off but there's always this idea that that's where we see pop music."

Guitarist Geordie nods. "Gary Glitter rang us up and asked if he could do a cover of 'Follow The Leader'. That's what 'Love Like Blood' was, great pop music as it should be."

GREAT INDEED, Killing Joke's first top twenty hit and never off the turntable chez moi, a huge pop noise and classic pop single. It must have come as a welcome reword for the band after six years of relative poverty.

"I don't find it rewarding particularly, says Geordie sipping the ever present Tequila (cue raucous renditions of Mexican tunes in Killing Joke tour bus). “I find It funny because the success of 'Love Like Blood' shows that we were right all the time to believe in our music. We've still got no money but the thing is we've spent five or six years surviving somehow and If we'd had the money we'd have done exactly the same things, but we'd Just be in a lot worse physical condition.

Paul turns our attention to the new single.

"We may have been skint for five years but we've been living like kings and queens, he beams. ‘Kings And Queens', the new single, is another slice of Killing Joke at their best. It drives along on a typically thunderous Geordie riff, showing up most so called 'heavy' guitarists for the wimps they are, and is topped off  with a suitably manic Jaz vocal. Paul and Geordie are quick to put me right when I suggest the lyrics could be taken as somewhat apathetic.

"No, not at all," says Paul. "In fact it's quite the opposite. It's about what we've been doing for the last five years, living with no money. We're saying live as if you've got everything because you don't actually need very much. One of the things we actually would consider as a message, if there was to be any attached to us is that you take what you want out of life because life is there to be used. If you go round thinking ' - shit I've got no money, I can’t do anything, then you won't do anything will you?"

Geordie agrees. "We started out like that right? We were squatting and we wanted to do a record so much that we blagged some geezer out of £250, blagged someone else for another £300, recorded and pressed  500 copies, gave it to John Peel who played all three tracks first time he heard it and that was it. We wanted it so much, it was mind over matter."

"It's saying no matter how little you’ve got you can live like a king. You don’t need anything, you just need to do it because you can do anything you want to - way or another," adds Paul. We’re not saying make the most of what you’ve got, make more than you've got. It's enthusiastic, not apathetic.”

AS THE band takes the stage in the now packed hall, that enthusiasm and self-belief pays off. As Jaz stalks the stage with the two familiar black smudges framing his cheeks, you can't fail to be impressed. This is a band that's worked and worked hard hard and as the band storm through a set which ends with the anthemic ‘Eighties’ they don't even seem to be bothered by the rather cool reception which is the norm in these parts.

As we sit ourselves down some twenty minutes later in a restaurant which Jaz assures me is the number one Japanese in Europe, he is still excited about the gig.

"The atmosphere of a gig is the most important thing as far as I'm concerned," he says between alternate swigs of iced water and sake. "There was a feeling about tonight that was great. Those people were really for Killing Joke and most of them had probably never heard of the band until a couple of months ago. Killing Joke's in this year!

"What more do you need to know about the taste and colour of Killing Joke," he grins. "Wasn't that just serious business, the best food in Europe?"

"There are only three great pleasures in life Andy," offers Geordie. "Sex, food and music!"  Bass player Raven, who would not look out of place playing the baddest baddie in a spaghetti western (except for the red DM's), asks me what I thought of the gig and with a bottle of sake warming me, I'm ready to tell him the truth.

"'Love Like Blood' and 'Kings And Queens' were a bit slow actually Raven," I offer, half expecting to finally be flung through the nearest window.

Raven's bear-like features break into a huge grin. "That's very astute of you he says. "I thought so too."

Killing Joke - regular Mr Nice Guys? Well almost.




Saturday, 14 March 2026

Killing Joke - An Assault On Scotland In 1985 (FLAC files added)

 

Jaz Coleman and Paul Raven in 1985.

In February 1985, Killing Joke took their new album, 'Night Time' out on the road, first across the UK and then into Europe and beyond.


On the 21nd and 22nd of February the band played in Edinburgh and Glasgow. many thanks to Sewer Rat for these two gigs! My thanks also goes out to Peter who has also provided  the FLAC versions of these two gigs. Cheers!



















Top 30 Punk Albums #8 Night Time - Killing Joke

 


As I remember, I first became away of aware of Killing Joke as a thing in about 1982/1983. It was the sight of a scary looking bloke in a cut down T-shirt (weren't they all then!) bearing the image of a disconsolate jester that I recall. I thought nothing more of it until I heard 'Eighties' on The Tube quite a few months later. My next encounter with the band was when someone gave me a C90 cassette which had on one side 'Permanent Waves' by Rush (the album with 'Spirit of Radio' on it), whilst the other was better for it was Killing Joke's first album. In the weeks that followed, this borrowed tape was in heavy rotation.... well one side of it was at least! I still cannot believe that a lot of the revision for my mock O-levels was done with that album in the background!

In January 1985 I heard 'Love Like Blood' the single that heralded the arrival of the band's fifth studio album, 'Night Time' due for release the following month. There were no two ways about it, 'Love Like Blood' was an immense powerhouse of a song and I fell for it big time. So come February I was off to W.H. Smiths (perhaps with a Christmas Record Token in hand) to get the new album).

'Night Time', the song, sets the tempo for this, if not their best album one that is in most fan's top 5 I would guess. The two Pauls, Ferguson and Raven drive the tracks along with thunderous drums and bass, whilst moody keyboards glide over the top and provide a counterpoint to Jaz Coleman's unmistakable vocals. 'Night Time' feels like a complete body of work, everything is in its correct place. There is not a duff track on it and certainly no filler. It was a real return to form after 1983's rather patchy 'Fire Dances' album (an album that was perhaps always going to struggle as the follow up to another classic, the 'Revelations' album).

I think 'Night Time' was a turning point for Killing Joke. Many of the songs on the album, 'Love Like Blood' and 'Europe' for example, compositionally remind me of religious music, hymns I suppose, a writing style that the band have carried through to subsequent albums.

I know that there is a lot of cross over with The Stranglers fan base and Killing Joke (I believe Jaz is a fan of the band), but in case you are unfamiliar with them, then 'Night Time' would be the perfect point at which to jump in... then work both backwards and forwards to understand just how diverse their material has been over many years.

Unfortunately, I don't have a full complement of UK music press reviews for 'Night Time', so these will have to do for now.

Record Mirror (2nd March 1985)


Smash Hits (28th February 1985)






Siouxsie And The Banshees California Hall San Francisco 26th November 1980

 

Now's here's a gig that I would have loved to have witnessed, not so much for the Banshees, but for Vancouver's irrepressible D.O.A. who supported on the night. To have seen 'Kaleidoscope' era Banshees for sure have been a treat too. This soundboard captured gig was nothing but lively judging by the comments and admonitions coming from the stage (lots of spitting and fighting it would appear). I never really got the spitting thing and it should have died out by late 1980... having said that there was still plenty of gobbing to be seen at gigs in the mid-'80s! Thanks to Edge (101Guitars) for this one.

Siouxsie and the Banshees (along with The Creatures) are a band(s) that I saw a few times late in the day. Then, I never really ventured much beyond the singles so I am quite enjoying trawling their back catalogue (better late than never!) since I have all the albums... it's just that I didn't give them much airplay at all.

FLAC: https://we.tl/t-0nHZ8XTmhf

Artwork: https://we.tl/t-WNVeyiZahR