And it’s goodbye to 2024

Less than half hour to go of 2024, I’m in the moose cave with a glass of Laphroaig and the radio on quietly. No, it’s not lame, for one, the weather out there is pretty mean right now, all the big festivities have cancelled (not only in Edinburgh but most of Scotland) so all the pubs and bars will be extra heaving with the folk missing out on a street party; and two, I came back up from Yorkshireland with a stowaway – thought I’d got away fine but no, my throat is on fire and no doubt my sinuses will be hit next, bah.

The forecast for tomorrow’s weather is a sad prediction that I won’t start the year atop Arthur’s Seat. Yes, I get that to go up would be very foolhardy, but it feels like such a bad omen for the coming year. The second is predicted to be sunny but baltic, that I can handle, but it just isn’t the first, right?! Okay, so if I don’t go up I shall blog looking back and forward, promise.

Toodle pip! Wishing you all a happy and peaceful New Year 💛

Happy Christmas!

It’s just after midnight on Christmas Eve, I really should already be tucked up asleep, big day tomorrow. Well, I’m not, so just a few quick words; I meant to write something earlier but there was a good Christmas movie on telly, Die Hard, so naturally I had to watch it (oh yes it is). I did get some presents wrapped while I watched, not really last minute as they’re for relatives I won’t see until the 27th.

I’m back down in Yorkshireland, it was a long grey drive down, buoyed up by festive tunes from South Park and Michael Bublé. In fact that was the first time I’ve played my Bublé christmas cd this year, up until then I’d mainly been listening to The Piano man at Christmas by Jamie Cullum (the double cd edition). They’re both fine musical feasts, then so is Mr Hankey’s Christmas Classics, honestly Eric Cartman’s version of Oh Holy Night is something else (once heard never forgotten).

On musical feasts, Blue Christmas on Sunday night was very sumptuous. Once again, Jed Potts and friends played through many old classics (23 in all); and how great to hear Christmas Island, it was one of my mother’s favourites. I’ll put up a couple of clips on Instagram, there is one already up in my Advent Calendar highlights (day 22). That was fun looking back over the year for favourite clips, needless to say Messrs Marah and Rough turn up a lot! The final one tonight was taken at the gig in Munich in May, it was a close call between the clip I used and Scotty throwing shapes to hardcore German techno. Maybe one day, I’ll show those!

Anyhoo, it’s even later now. Goodnight and have yourself a lovely Christmas 💛

Oh come all ye faithful?

Last night I went to see Conclave, wow. It’s a big movie, like old-style Hollywood, there’s big names, great supports, stunning cinematography (I likened it to Gladiator II, that bigness). One little annoyance was clearly knowing who would become the next pope (well, it was obvious to me), but the etiquette, the politics and the mind games, right up to the very end, were utterly delicious. Oh, and I love me some Tucci!

What really amused me was that I’ve just finished watching an old BBC series The Barchester Chronicles from 1982, that too is a fine portrayal of similar themes within the clergy, but way back in the nineteenth century (it was an adaptation of two books in a series by Anthony Trollope). The cast are a plethora of fine British actors, many recognisable faces; Clive Swift as the new hen-pecked bishop and Geraldine McEwan as his acerbic wife, Nigel Hawthorne is magnificent as the pompous, ill-tempered archdeacon, and how lovely to see Barbara Flynn (always feisty glint in her eye, that one).

Top honours must go to Donald Pleasance as the unassuming, gentle warden and Alan Rickman in an early role that, well, typecast him?! Haha, no, but watching it now, one can thoroughly enjoy watching a young Rickman being supercilious, odious, conniving, in a part that should be up there with his best. Whilst Rickman was playing the type of role we’ve come to know him for, Donald Pleasance was a wonderful revelation to me, so very different from some of the old film roles that immediately spring to mind. It’s a beautiful understated performance that has you rooting for him against all the mean, self-serving, just plain horrible characters around him.

…. Which takes me back to Conclave played with such perfect nuances as to have us guessing just who are the humble servants of their god and who are self-serving in their desire to become pope. As truths are revealed, the hypocrisy is in turn, damning, sadly human, and to some of us, darkly humorous; to borrow a quote from The Barchester Chronicles from a conversation between the archdeacon and the deacon about their problem, the warden, “He has persistent bouts of Christianity”, likewise, darkly funny and revealing.

This Christmas you could worse than go out and see Conclave on the big screen, then snuggle up at home and watch a fine old BBC drama, it’s just seven episodes so not too big a chunk of time and it is rotten weather outside.

Toodle pip!

Quite why Donald Pleasance isn’t on the cover picture is beyond me!

Snappy titles aren’t always obvious

Wednesday night in The Jazz Bar was a blast, the Blueswater were out to have fun and spread some joy; after a long, very wet journey it was exactly what this moose needed. Great music and fiery ginger beer, much to warm the soul!

Yes, I’d been back down in Yorkshireland for a week, dogsitting and sorting through more of mother’s things. It’s not the clearing out that’s hard, a tad sad at times, yeah; it’s the siblings later airing their views on everything I’ve done, why, where, who did I ask?! And then there’s particular items that none of us personally want to keep, but neither do we want them gone, so everyone wants another to say they’ll have it (disgruntled airs all round). Mind you, sometimes a couple of days of mulling can help, feelings assessed and resolved; all part of the process.

Whilst down, I was also under instruction to not let the garden birds go hungry! (this will also be pointed out to whoever buys the house) Mother had two bird feeders in a little tree postioned in sight of the kitchen window. The view takes away the drudgery of washing up, it can also slow the job right down as one stands enchanted by the birds. There’s house sparrows, tree sparrows, dunnocks, a robin, the occasional blackbird, blue tits, coal tits, great tits, a whole gang of goldfinches (six or seven always turn up together) and a pair of nuthatches. I was leaving all the evenings washing up to do in the mornings (okay, so I often do, but this time it really made sense!).

a nuthatch, a regular guest

I had thought I’d be playing Christmas tunes on my journey back up, with it being December now – where Christmas music belongs. The inclement weather demanded something more exhilarating and brash to keep me going, so I stuck with my downward choice of Live Forever by The Screaming Jets. I’d grabbed it as something a little different as I was leaving the moose cave. It’s a 2 cd set but I mainly stuck to Part 1, let’s just say, I had all the words down by the time I arrived in the Old Town. I would recommend it as great Aussie rock, but it may be difficult to find as the band released it themselves back in 2001, then again, as it’s from a concert all the songs can be found elsewhere.

A couple of years ago I did my own take on an advent calendar, for the 24 days running up to the Logan’s Close gigs at Sneaky Pete’s, I put up pictures of Close signposts around the Old Town on my Instagram stories. This time I thought I’d have a look back at live music I’ve enjoyed through 2024 (I may make an exception of clips from previous years’ Blue Christmas shows, I reckon that’s allowed). Oh, if you want to check them out it’s @bruceonthefringe and they’ll all be in the Advent 24 highlights for later viewings.

Today’s door is yet to be opened, it is rather late but hey, that’s musicians for you! Today’s clip will be Carl Marah playing one of his own at the Auld Hundred a few weeks back; he’s just announced that there’s solo stuff on the way, so it kinda fitting. This is such a great picture of him from his post (taken by John Mackie), you really have to see it…

Carl Marah, solo

Toodle pip!

A few quick quavers

Oo, November’s almost gone – can I write a quick post before it runs out? Just a few musical notes 🎶 Two quickies for those in Australia: I happened to spot on Instagram that Lord Rochester, an awesome rock’n’roll trio I saw in September are on your shores just now, if they’re near you check them out; and Accordion Ryan is taking his Pop Bangers to Perth, WA, for Fringe World 2025, boy, does that guy travel around!

Jed Potts and Nicole Smit are back playing Whistlebinkies regularly, a real mixed bag of treats depending how the mood takes them, country, soulful, playful, bluesy, always a pleasure! A real treat back in October was seeing The Best Bad Influence playing in Stramash, I do hope they come back again soon, I love me a bit of rockabilly.

November saw the Miracle Glass Company playing the Ballroom in The Voodoo Rooms to a capacity crowd (which included yours truly). A welcome return, an awesome evening. I will get round to putting a reel or two on Instagram, at some point.

Oo, for the first time in aaages, Jed Potts and the Hillman Hunters played Stramash, honestly it has been a long while (and it’s been some time since I saw Nicole and the Back-up Crew there, ahem, just sayin’). They were bloody good, of course. And thanks to Mr Potts diligent media posts, I’m debating whether to head to the Jazz Bar for 9pm Wednesday 9th December to see Blueswater play (ticketed, but there’s usually some at the door); also, tickets are available for this year’s Blue Christmas 2024 at La Belle Angele on Sunday 22nd December. If you’re in Edinburgh it’s a sure way to get into the Christmas spirit with plenty of festive favourites performed by some of the best blues musicians around these parts!

Yes, I know there’s a lot to spend your money on in December but don’t forget to buy a ticket to see Logan’s Close in January. While you’re at it, why not buy another for your best pal’s Christmas present? Really, that gloves and scarf set is a lousy present and you know it!

Anyhoo, it’s now December. Woohoo.

There’s been a few films out

Casting an eye back on the last few posts, I mentioned seeing Joker again at the end of September as a recap before seeing the sequel, it wasn’t until almost a month later that I got to see Joker: Folie à Deux. Blimey, Arthur Fleck, Lee Quinzel, the film itself, all had serious personality disorders; the film flips around between drama and weird musical numbers – because of Lady Gaga’s inclusion? Okay, so I should mention that I really don’t care for Lady Gaga, I don’t get her, yeah, so she is a very talented musician but she doesn’t move me at all (apart from a shrug and shake of my head). I get that her character was fixated on Joker and bringing him out of Arthur, I get that both of them have like a musical narrative in their heads, on finding each other their drums are beating the same rhythms (isn’t that what we all want, just without the psychotic edges?).

I did enjoy Joker: Folie à Deux, more than I thought I would, just a little less Gaga would have been better, and if Arthur had been more in his own right, rather than a manipulation of Lee. Will there be a third film? How would it fare?

I caught Venom: The Last Dance a couple of weeks ago, ooch, fun but I much prefer the first two films. There was plenty of action but I thought the storyline and detail were a tad weak, not enough padding. Another third instalment, Paddington In Peru was very entertaining, it did have lame moments, but over all it was wonderful. Paddington In Peru has so many nods and winks in it; it took me a while to realise the familiar nun in the background was from Nonnatus House (Call the Midwife). Olivia Colman released her inner Julie Andrews for the big musical number Let’s Prepare for Paddington, what a hoot!

Hugh Grant has a very brief cameo at the end of PiP, still in jail as the baddie in Paddington 2. He does baddies so well, you should check out Heretic where he turns his bumbling, amiable gent act into something quite creepy and devious. Our Heretic does have some interesting things to say on religion and faith, he just couldn’t leave it as a chat over tea and biscuits. Mind, see next time any Jehovah’s Witnesses knock on my door…!

Two more then bedtime, Juror #2 snuck up on me, I knew nothing about it so clicked to see the details, oo, Nicholas Hoult and Toni Collette, yes please. Oh, blimey Charlie, great film, hard watch, a good man with a serious dilemma, totally gripping; it reminded me of the 2013 film Locke, another intense dilemma. Lastly, Gladiator II is big, like, really big with an old-style Hollywood epic quality. Like a lot of the old Hollywood epics great character actors swell the production but the female parts seem rather formulaic, obvious, a tad dull. For me, Denzel Washington was the stand out, oh, and the psychotic twin emperors, a nice touch.

I’ll leave you with a few pics taken last Saturday morning – we had snow (it was all gone by Sunday morning, except for a few snowmen remains). Goodnight!

A tourist stood still too long?!
Psychotic twin snowmen?!
It was a very cold day

A proper Winfrey feel

Who’s Winfrey? And is a Winfrey feel something I’d like?! Does Winfrey ask permission before he goes feeling around? I guess that would be an improper Winfrey feel. Anyhoo, it’s late Monday evening, I’m debating whether to go see The Scat Rats later in Stramash, later as in after midnight. I am still up and for once spotted Stramash’s Facebook post for the week’s line-up before Monday ends. See, despite the line-up poster for the month and the website both saying it’s the Gorms playing tonight, it isn’t, yet again it’s The Scat Rats, they’ve played the slot for a wee while now but I’ve either been away or not seen the Facebook post til too late. Okay, so the poster has a time when it has to be printed, so the odd change afterwards will happen, but what’s the excuse for not correcting the website, huh?

The lads will be back at Stramash at a very respectable seven o’clock on Friday, oh, and at Whistlebinkies tomorrow midnight. Should I stay or should I go? Will it be all bangers tonight or might they stick in a new number? Oh yes, there’s plenty of new LC tunes coming in the near future and the lads told me back at the end of September that they’d be trying some out at Scat Rats gigs, so far I’ve caught one (with being away so much). And did I ever mention the Logan’s Close gig in January? No, I don’t think I did; originally it was to be in December at Summerhall, but with all the problems ongoing there, the show has been moved to The Caves on 17th January. If you’re gonna be in Edinburgh then, treat yourself to a ticket for Christmas!

Also out and about with new songs is Mr Marah! Yes, Carl Marah has decided to do something with all his other non-LC music, watch this space!! And if you’re very lucky, you may catch the odd one during his solo sets around town. I happened to catch him in the Auld Hundred on Rose Street some weeks ago; it wasn’t particularly busy so he played about four of his own, and boy, they were good! The Auld Hundred is a fine wee pub about halfway along Rose Street, there’s often live music on from nine o’clock and an Open Mic night on a Sunday.

You know what? I’m just going to pop out a while! G’ night!

My inner night owl loved that! It feels so long since I’ve been in Stramash for the late night band, but tonight was a wonderful return. If you’re quick there’s a story on my Instagram. So glad I chose to go. Just do it!!

Messrs Marah and Rough doing their thang

Another three weeks later…

Okay, so it hasn’t been soon, and things aren’t normal(ish) just yet – I have a lot going on in my head, more than I’d been paying attention to this last while. And there’s the hard task of letting go of my material past, ie., my mother’s stuff. Oh, none of the big stuff, the furniture, things like the dining table and sideboard that were part of the household before I was. For one, I haven’t the room, and hopefully, a sibling is going to re-jig their cave and take them; I really do hope so, so much of my life was lived at that table, so many memories.

No, for me, it’s about the small things, particular kitchen utensils, an old tablecloth, jars and tins, mum’s recipe tin, plants, knickknacks, the troll (an original Dam Troll doll from Denmark, she’s pretty scruffy now, but I was happily surprised that not one of my siblings wanted to take her in). We hadn’t even started through the old family photos when I came back up, and there’s the Christmas decorations (plenty will just go, but I predict, at least, heated negotiations over certain cherished pieces).

So many bits and pieces tied to our lives by memories of bygone times, childhood, teens dashing into our twenties and disappearing away, later returning more regularly, with a wiser appreciation, some time in our thirties. And always there was mother moose (dad went to the great pasture some years ago), our bedrock, everything gravitated around her, not that I particularly realised it, but without her, all the pieces seem to be floating off aimlessly. I want to grab everything, hold it all still, keep some semblance of how things were, it’s too soon to let it all go; but mum’s gone, life is moving on, hanging on to stuff won’t change that.

What a maudlin piece! I promise my next post will be lighter, brighter, with plenty of musical notes from the last month. I shall leave you with a picture of the troll, already settling in here. Good night!

Normal service currently on hold

It’s three weeks since I last wrote anything, in part because, sadly, mother moose has passed away. Life is currently a mixture of busyness, fritteriness and inertia; I haven’t exactly been in the right frame of mind to write. I’m sure you understand. Normal service will resume (well, my kinda normal) soon, at some point, once the way ahead is clearer.

I’ll leave you with a few pics from deepest, darkest Yorkshireland …..

A path of particularly pesky tree roots
A fungi or a Norman no mates?

Not quite running over
Finally, I got to see the northern lights, yay!

Oh, the tribulations of life (on screen)

Yesterday early evening I bumped into a friend as I was walking through the Grassmarket, “Are you okay?” I was asked – having just come out of an Imax screening of Joker I was feeling slightly on edge. In the rapidly falling dusk and the Saturday night revellers already roaming the streets, it felt kinda Gotham-y to my recovering senses. I’d forgotten so much of the film’s detail, and on Imax it’s all really, really in your face! (I only saw it on Imax because it was just one screening before the new Joker: Folie à Deux comes out) I think my face was still feeling it and showing as such.

Joker is brilliant and disturbing; as the story unfolds it’s one bleak inevitability after another. There’s no hope that Arthur Fleck could ever live a happy, normal life; circumstances can get away from anyone and send the most level-headed into a tailspin, Arthur was hanging on by his fingertips at the start. I’m not sure the follow-up can match the tragic ferocity of it.

A few take-aways from it: those three guys were nasty, no doubt use to dishing it out physically as well as verbally to any poor soul they happened upon, without any consequences, they had it coming; I’m not 100% convinced that Thomas Wayne hadn’t manipulated things way back (a single, disturbed young woman being allowed to adopt a child?), he sure didn’t come across as a pleasant chap, neither did Murray Franklin; don’t stop taking your meds.

Mind, when it comes to dishing it out, Ian McKellen in The Critic is a master. He enjoys the power of his pen, considers himself untouchable and will happily use anyone to keep it that way. Poor Nina Land, played by the wonderful Gemma Arterton, really should have walked away from the deal, but her desire to make it as an actress was just the right-sized cog for Jimmy Erskine’s (McKellan) vengeful mechanisms. The Critic is a fine period drama, great performances by all; just one slight criticism that the last quarter felt overstuffed, like they ran out of screentime, five more minutes might have kept a better pace?

It’s Elisabeth Sprinkles desire to keep her fame that lands Demi Moore in trouble. The Substance offers Elisabeth, an aging fitness star, the chance to be young again, how can she refuse? This is American TV, she won’t refuse, the studio are already planning to replace her for someone with a younger, fresher body. Kudos to Demi Moore for taking this role, things get really ugly and she goes for it, well, she’s probably come across plenty of sexist, ageist attitudes to help goad her performance.

The Substance causes cells to replicate, resulting in a younger better version emerging from the back of the origin body, but, very importantly, the two bodies are still one person, they must take turn about and follow all the necessary procedures. Ha, the young version, Sue, gets greedy and wants more time – remember what happened in Gremlins when Billy didn’t follow procedure with Gizmo? This is a great cautionary tale on the cult of youth and beauty, and the price paid for it. The third act, as it were, is where everything ratchets to level 10, oh, it’s all magnificently grotesque; shades of the wonderfully bizarre films made in the eighties, it goes there! Trust me, this would have been permanently out on loan at Blockbusters.

From fantasy horror to real horrors, I went to see Lee starring Kate Winslet as Lee Miller, the American photo journalist, who despite much male opposition was able to make it all the way to the front line in World War II to report the truth of life there; she was one of the first war correspondents to enter Dachau after it’s liberation. Lee Miller had quite a life, she was briefly a model, became a muse to Man Ray in Paris, before making her own way as a photographer in America. The film begins after Lee returned to Paris in 1937.

As I was watching the film I realised I’d read about her a few years ago, in a book I was lent, The Lives of the Muses by Francine Prose, a fascinating read of mini-biographies about nine women. From this, I realised the identity of the man interviewing Lee in the film, a bit of poignant licence. Kate Winslet has put a lot into getting this film made, after being given a book about Lee back some fifteen years ago. Lee is a great film, a fascinating look at an extraordinary but flawed female, thank you Kate.

One last word, on another extraordinary lady, Maggie Smith passed away this week. A national treasure, she’ll be fondly for so many great roles over the years. Personally, I can’t help wondering what the Dowager Countess of Grantham would say about all the accolades over the last few days!

Goodnight, sleep well.