Archives for posts with tag: Blue Orchids

The 2023 self-titled debut from House of All – redemption songs by survivors of The Fall – was what we in the trade call “A Grower”. The thrill of two thundering drummers (Paul Hanley and Simon Wolstencroft) and the gravitational pull of those neutron star bass riffs (Steve Hanley) underpinned a collection of exuberant and irreverent songs fronted by (totally) wired guitarist/ poet/ singer/ exhorter-in-chief Martin Bramah that became more and more joyful and memorable the more times they hammered into the listener’s skull. At the time of its release Bramah hinted there was more to come from the group. Here’s the first offering from second album “Continuum”, called “Aim Higher”.

House of All leader Martin Bramah (Blue Orchids, Factory Star) was a founding member and style-creator of The Fall from 1977 to 1979 and the only sacked member (there were lots of those) to rejoin The Fall (for the “Extricate” album 1989-1990) and then be sacked again by Mark E. Smith.

The best way for survivors of The Fall to pay tribute to the late curmudgeon Mark E. Smith is to do something he would disapprove of (House of All), but to do it so well that, were he still alive, he’d be even more enraged about not being part of it.

For reasons best known to Bramah the chorus of “Aim Higher” appropriates the chilling phrase “step we gaily, on we go”, the opening words of Sir Hugh Robertson’s appropriation/ re-writing of John Robert Bannerman’s 1930’s song “Mairi’s Wedding” (also known as the “Lewis Bridal Song”) with his own faux-traditional lyrics. The garbled language of this opening line comes across as something that might be uttered by a deranged Celtic Yoda. To add insult to injury, in 1959 James B. Cosh devised a Scottish Country Dance to the tune, thereby blighting the life of many a child during the 1960s and 1970s bizarrely forced to dance to it and other Scottish Country Dances at school in New Zealand and possibly other parts of the Anglosphere world as some kind of weird colonial cultural conditioning.

Anyway, I digress. Despite the triggering connotations of the phrase, Martin Bramah’s regular exhortations to “aim higher! aim higher!” crack the manic music master’s whip, and the crew of fellow recovering ex-Fall members power their way through another brilliant hard-edged pop tune with expressive storytelling from Bramah. “People thought I was off my head!” he shouts in this song, typical of the chemistry of the infectiously enthusiastic weirdness and mischief of House of All.

For House of All completists there’s a fun live/ re-mix album as well called Bay City Pistols “including the crowd fave Wet Leg / Can cover, “Ur Mum” / “Uphill”, which lasts over 10 minutes”.

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“New Chemical Light” is a song from one of the finest albums you’ve never heard by a band with a name you won’t recognise although you will most likely be familiar with its leader.

The album the track is from is called “Enter Castle Perilous” – a raw, clattering, fractious and brilliant collection of songs. The band is called Factory Star. The album was released in 2011.

The songwriter, guitarist and vocalist in Factory Star is Martin Bramah. Bramah was was a founding member of The Fall in 1976, co-writing and playing on The Fall’s debut album “Live at The Witch Trails” before leaving the band in 1979 as a result of Mark E. Smith’s treatment of band members.

After The Fall Bramah went on to form the great cult UK post-punk psych-rock bands Blue Orchids, along with original keyboard player in The Fall, Una Baines. Blue Orchids released “The Greatest Hit (Money Mountain” on Rough Trade in 1982 along with several singles and EPs.

Bramah was the only former member of The Fall to be re-hired (in 1990 for the “Extricate” album and tour). And, predictably, sacked again.

“I got back to my hotel after our last date in Oz, to discover that the band had been moved to another hotel – and there was a letter waiting for me at the reception desk, from Mr Smith, telling me I was too good to be wasted in The Fall, and my services were no longer required.”

[Read the full interview in the Spinoff]

Blue Orchids became Nico’s backing band for a few years in the 1980s, broke up, reformed, continuing on and off through various line-up changes into the 1990s and 2000s, when their first album and compilations of the singles, EPs, and radio sessions were released.

“Enter Castle Perilous” could have been released as a Blue Orchids album. If it had, it would have been heard by many more people than it did being released under the Factory Star name.

“As for Factory Star – I wanted a fairly plain sounding name that I could make my own – something that would give me room to move, musically speaking.”

Read more about “Enter Castle Perilous” and a subsequent 10″ mini-album called “New Sacral” along with the background of Factory Star in this great interview at The Spinoff with Martin Bramah.

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