New Musical Express (20th August 1977)
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, 22 March 2026
Jean Jacques Burnel - Holiday '77
Saturday, 21 March 2026
Interview (New Musical Express 4th December 1976)
So here then is an interview that appeared in the 4th December 1976 issue of the New Musical Express. A punishing touring schedule maintained throughout 1976 had earned the band some gravitas as a serious rock band, most certainly across Greater London. With continuous mentions in the weekly gig listings, coupled with increasing interest brewing over a handful of other London bands that together were coalescing into a 'punk' or 'new wave' new music scene. This extensive interview from early December '76 was amongst some of the earliest press that the band received from the big hitting music weeklies in the UK.
For their part, Cornwell and Burnel, whilst harbouring a certain degree of suspicion towards the NME journalist, Phil McNeil (principally stemming from a review he wrote of the band's appearance at the Marquee the previous month), were yet to adopt their infamously hostile manner in their subsequent dealings with the music press. And, to be fair to McNeil on this occasion, he was not really in the business of giving the band a hard time. His observation that contrary to the band's implication that the music business was actively hindering the band, as of December 1976, the Pistols, The Damned and The Vibrators had had a relatively easy and rapid journey into a recording studio carried some weight. The Stranglers themselves had studio time booked at the end of the same month. Sure, they had undoubtedly put in the legwork to establish themselves as a live band but then again that was part of the rock 'n' roll apprenticeship that countless bands before them had served.
As to the interviewer's attempts to pin the two of them down in terms of their politics and philosophical stance on the new music scene that would serve them so well in the coming year, their responses were at best indeterminate or just confusing.
Despite the flaws in the interview it is great to read about The Stranglers and their views on the punk scene so early on. At that stage they had no records recorded or released, a live album, intended to be their debut, was due to be recorded imminently so things were looking rosy indeed for The Stranglers. As for punk, well, by the time that this issue hit the newsstands, knowledge of punk was no longer confined to music journalists and a few hundred London kids on the scene. The appearance of Sex Pistols on the Today Show on 1st December with Bill Grundy meant that by 2nd December the entire country had heard of punk.... and everything changed!
As much as I would love to present you with an audio of the Marquee performance to complement this interview I cannot, but I can add context by reference to the Marquee review referred to at the start of this interview (here) and I can direct you to a partial recording of the Nashville gig of 10th December, mooted to be their 'Dead On Arrival' album but vetoed by the band as not sufficiently representing their live act (here).
Thursday, 19 March 2026
Let's All Go (To The Fire Dances) Killing Joke Inked
Let's all stay on our feet so
In the market here we are then
Sing a song for sixpence oh!'
Killing Joke Squat De Argand Geneva September 1983
1983 saw the release of Killing Joke's 'Fire Dances' album, which whilst not necessarily one of their best albums, in its defence in the discography it does sit in between two of the band's titan albums, 'Revelations' (1982) and 'Night Time' (1985). Anyway here are KJ promoting the album in Geneva. There was some uncertainty as to the correct date of this gig. The cassette that I had many years ago stated September (with the exact date unknown). A peruse of Discogs earlier threw up a bootleg cassette with the date of 26th November 1983. The issue was settled by the https://killingjokeconcerts.blogspot.com/ website that includes specific mention of the squat gig taking place on 26th November 1983.
FLAC: https://we.tl/t-rEpKJc2eHa
Artwork: https://we.tl/t-LZ72AyMMc6
Wednesday, 18 March 2026
The Specials Max Schmeling Halle Berlin 3rd April 2019
Here is a great quality recording of The Specials in Berlin promoting the 'Encore' album. There was an occasion when I saw them play at The Troxy in 2014. It was a gig I came away from absolutely crestfallen. I said at the time that it was like watching a band that had had the heart ripped out of it (of course there are some who say that with Jerry Dammers absent The Specials reformed had no heart to start with ... I was not one of those). However, the Troxy gig was a low for me after the thrilling five years of gigs that preceded it. At that time, Neville had gone and so had Roddy and it was clear where the band were trying to fill in the substantial gaps left in their wake.
After lockdown or during one of the brief windows of lockdown respite, I can't remember which, The Specials returned, playing the Roundhouse in September 2021. I was apprehensive with memories of the night at the Troxy still in my head. If anything, there was the potential for things to be even worse (in the interim we had lost Brad)... but it didn't turn out that way at all. Since 2019, the band had released a second album of new material, 'Protest Songs'. Thus with two albums worth of new material, the gig was out of this world. Despite the fact that the six originals of 2009 were now down to three, the inclusion of new material propelled the band into a new era of lyrical defiance of many of the world's injustices. Sadly this new era was short lived as Terry Hall succumbed to cancer little over a year later in December 2022.
I am so glad that the Specials and I parted on such a high since, regardless of my love of The Stranglers, The Specials remain as the most important band to have emerged through the '70s and early '80s.
Thanks to the original uploader on 'Live Bootlegs'.
MP3: https://we.tl/t-xEyYqJd0oN
Artwork: https://we.tl/t-0xk3Jb7VSo
Tuesday, 17 March 2026
Putting The Fast In Belfast 7 (Stiff Little Fingers, Public Image Limited, Sham 69)
Seeing that today is St Patrick's Day here's the craic from Belfast from back in the summer. Stiff Little Fingers hosting the 'Putting The Fast In Belfast' punk all-dayer, an event that has become an annual fixture in the city. This billing was interesting, what with PiL and Sham 69 sharing the stage. As I remember there was bad blood some years ago between Johnny and Jimmy, to the extent that they made some tabloid column inches after a couple of punches were thrown in London back in 2005. 6 Music reported the incident.... why didn't The Proclaimers wade in one asks?!
'Punk punch-up!
Handbags at dawn between Jimmy Pursey and John Lydon.
24 Aug 05 - Punk legends John Lydon and Jimmy Pursey came to blows outside the US embassy as they queued for visas.
There has been bad blood between the pair since the Seventies - and things came to a head this week as they waited outside the embassy at 0730.
Former Sex Pistol Lydon ignored Pursey's offer to shake hands and threw coffee over him, while the Sham 69 singer responded by kicking his punk rival. Bizarrely, The Proclaimers were also there and witnessed the whole thing before armed policemen intervened to calm the situation.
Pursey was waiting for a visa so he could travel to New York for a benefit gig in aid of the CBGBs club. He told 6 Music the scrap was like being back at school.
He said: "It would be like standing in the dinner queue with someone that you don't really get on with when you're at school. Suddenly, it just turned into him and his mate throwing coffee at me, then it just went from bad to worse with the armed guards luckily interpersing the whole thing. One of them, thank God, know knew who we both were."
He continued: "It's not every day you get a guy with a submachine gun round your head telling you he's a Sham 69 fan."
Lydon meanwhile dismissed Pursey's claims.
He told The Sun: "All the usual low-rent and lies. He's not fit to be in the same sentence as me. What do you expect from a low-rent fake mockney two-bob runt?"
Jody Thompson.'
The Sun
I assume that the lack of punk love stems from the Sham Pistols thing from back in 1979.













