Remembering Elain – Spotify playlist

11 months ago 27

Image: Daniel Hambury Compiled by her friends Bob Stanley (journalist, author, film producer and member of the indie band Saint Etienne), David Trevor Jones, Emily Gee, Paul Stirner and Jon Wright, C20 Society presents a special musical accompaniment to...

Image: Daniel Hambury

Compiled by her friends Bob Stanley (journalist, author, film producer and member of the indie band Saint Etienne), David Trevor Jones, Emily Gee, Paul Stirner and Jon Wright, C20 Society presents a special musical accompaniment to this months Remembering Elain Harwood event at the Southbank Centre.

Spanning punk, post-punk, folk, art rock and african music, the playlist features many of Elain’s favourite tracks and shows her taste in music was just as eclectic as that in buildings! Click the player below and drop the stylus for 3+ hours of sonic exploration.

 

Musical recollections

David Trevor-Jones – Lifelong friend and Chairman of Cinema Theatre Association

Elain was passionately into music.  It was what brought us together in Bristol in 1976.  She joined the ‘Ents Committee’, the group of would-be musicians, promoters, roadies (and groupies!) that put on concerts in the Student Union.  As a major league Union we could get some quite big names, and being there through the dawn of the punk revolution was a fascinating experience for both of us.  It changed Elain’s style and outlook as well as her listening.

On moving to London in 1980 Elain started going to gigs at venues such as The Marquee, The Moonlight Club, The Electric Ballroom and The Clarendon (all now long gone).  This was the immediate post-punk period that spawned a whole generation of innovative, thrilling music.  It also saw the emergence of world music from its narrow niche and Elain dived enthusiastically into African music, especially the East African guitar bands championed by Andy Kershaw and John Peel.

Most importantly, Elain adopted The Fall very early in their recording and performing career, starting a life-long fandom and special relationship with that band and their music.  They were undoubtedly her favourite band of all time.  Among Elain’s literary works was a contribution to ‘Excavate – The Wonderful and Frightening World of The Fall’, edited by Tessa Norton and Bob Stanley.

Music really mattered to Elain.  Before the pandemic she commenced the huge project of listening to her very large record/cd collection in alphabetical order – I don’t know how far she got or whether she completed it.  So she did look back as well as forward in her listening but in recent years she pursued a path into electronic and dance music, and necessarily into the soundtracks for SPIN classes.  I am not sure that she revisited the music that she was listening to pre-punk, around the time that I first met her, but she did talk about it in an interview with our mutual friend, the music journalist and author Mike Barnes, for ‘A New Day Yesterday’, his definitive account of Prog Rock.  I do know that she maintained her commitments to African guitars and to The Fall (though it ceased to exist as a band/project following the death of main-man Mark E.Smith in 2018) and also to the radio show presented by John Peel’s son.  Just as Peel Senior inspired Elain’s musical listening from the start and through the decades of his BBC Radio 1 shows, Tom Ravenscroft continued to do so with his show on Radio 6 Music to the end.  Elain’s musical taste was never, ever mainstream!

Assorted song notes

The Fall – Hip Priest             
Band Elain saw more than any other; many with this line up (the Hanley/Scanlon years)
Burial – Archangel     
Her taste in the 21st century turned more to electronica, dance and dubstep, hence Burial
Zombie Zombie – Vae Vobis 
Missed their recent 2022 gig, but loved the new album Bo Ningen – Slider         
Elain saw in 2014 with these Japanese noise merchants, new year’s eve 2013, Cafe Oto Underworld – Crocodile   
At one of the Roundhouse gigs in October 2007, loved electronic music that worked when quiet and very loud The Pop Group – We are all prostitutes 
Emerged from Bristol during Elain’s university years, she retained soft spot for Mark Stewart Robert Wyatt – Sea Song       
Loved mavericks, Robert Wyatt fitted the bill, loved the album Rock Bottom Squarepusher – Hello Meow   
Elain had an affinity with Warp Records, its northern roots, its eclecticism Scritti Politti – Skank Bloc Bologna   
Always liked a discordant guitar, and another maverick Coil – Departed   
Avid reader of The Wire, magazine for music challenging or magical or weird, like Coil Creation Rebel – Chemical Specialist     
Had room for reggae, dub and particularly the work of Adrian Sherwood Bhundu Boys – Hupenyu Hwangu      
Faves of John Peel, Andy Kershaw and Elain Boards of Canada –  Music is Math 
Always looking for instrumental music that helped rather than hindered her writing Floating Points – Anasickmodular           
Listener to John Peel in her 20s, son of Peel (Tom) latterly, one he champions The Fall – Blindness   
Driving bass line; at this point of a Fall gig, if not before, Elain would surge down the front Magazine – Shot by both sides 
A track with special significance and a fave for both of us in punk era Bristol 1977-1978 The Fall – Hit the North (1987)
Paul has nominated two Fall tracks but so far as Elain was concerned you just couldn’t have too much Fall.  She saw them live at every opportunity, including in New York.  This was an anthem that reflected Elain’s own strong northern identity. Captain Beefheart – Big Eyed Beans from Venus
Elain was a Beefheart fan from early on and saw him perform live with the Magic Band at least twice.  After Don van Vliet’s death the Magic Band re-assembled and we saw them live in Islington on their final farewell tour.

Elain Harwood: A legacy lives on

C20 has created the Elain Harwood Memorial Fund to ensure that her invaluable contribution to the safeguarding of Britain’s remarkable modern architecture and design heritage. The fund will help secure the long-term future of our vital casework and campaigns, while offering new opportunities to young people passionate about heritage. If you’re able to give and want to invest in the future of the Society, please click here for more information.

Elain Harwood (1958-2023)

Image: Wilde Fry


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