'Ver Curves & 'Ver Boy — 20 Years Later
Honestly, I don’t remember exactly when I joined ILX. I think it was likely in either late 2002 or early 2003, when I was living in Chapel Hill, and for some reason I vaguely believe it was due to searching for information on Saturday Looks Good To Me, which is a little odd, as they’re not exactly an ILM or ILX band. Anyway, I loved hanging out in the background1, making a comment here and there, but mostly being a lurker as Poptimism took root there and I rediscovered my younger Smash Hits reading self (heavens above! — Ed.)
What I really wanted to do is meet up with everybody at Club Popular. But…while I had got to the point where I was relatively okay with going to concerts by myself (seriously, the hours spent awkwardly hanging about before the advent of mobile phones), I was absolutely not okay with making the trip from Bicester to London for a club night all by myself. I just couldn’t do it. Still a regret.
By 2006, I was still mostly lurking, but I had made a friend — Forest Pines, or Caitlin. And ILX had a band! Shimura Curves! ‘Ver Curves! Kate ‘Masonic Boom’, Anna, Frances, and Miss AMP! Krautrock and girl group harmonies! Zeitgeist songs like Noyfriend and Keep My Name Out of Your Blog (there isn’t another song that encapsulates the pre-Facebook Web 2.0 era as perfectly as the latter). They had an afternoon gig on a Sunday when I was already going to be going to London to see Johnny Boy. Suddenly, I was invited to a pre-gig pub meet up with Kate and Caitlin.
So I ended up drinking strawberry beer with them for several hours before we decided we’d better actually go to the Notting Hill Arts Club, Kate carrying her guitar through town. By that time, we’d also picked up Ed, another ILX regular. The concert itself is mostly lost to my memory, but I remember groupie cards kissed by individual band members, banter about Brown and Sticky, and the Berlin, 1973 ending of Stronger.
Even just all that would have made for a wonderful day. But I still had the second half. Johnny Boy at The Luminaire in Kilburn. I was, of course, back on my own, and resigned to standing sheepishly in the venue waiting for the band to come on stage. But it wasn’t quite to be. I’ll admit my memory does not give me perfect recall, but the way I remember it is this: I noticed a group of people sitting in a booth. One of whom I was damn sure was Kieron Gillen, who’d I known in an online sort of way since joining the Kenickie Mailing List back in 1997. Eventually, I worked past my shyness enough to go over and say hello. This was about two months before the first issue of Phonogram, so we talked about that, and me seeing Miss AMP earlier in the day. The idea of just randomly bumping into somebody I knew at a concert…it had just never happened to me before. And given how the day had gone so far, I was getting beyond giddy at this point.
Towards the end of the gig itself, I found myself dancing with him and Alex De Campi. The elation I had coming out of the venue and rushing to get the last train from Marylebone to Bicester North was something I hadn’t felt since that house party in Chapel Hill way back in 2003, or that time I went into the Carrboro woods to smash up a piñata for a late birthday celebration. On the journey back, I think I was plotting…or more realistically, fantasising about the potential of moving to London. Maybe every weekend could be like that, I thought, as I went past Haddenham & Thame Parkway.
Anyway, twenty years ago this week. I never did move to London; instead I took a rather different direction which sees me typing this in Cincinnati. Which I have to say has worked out very well for me, as I pause to think about Maeryn demanding I play drop dead again on the way home from daycare (Tammy: “With me, it’s Wheels On The Bus. There’s apparently a different vibe in Daddy’s car). And then this September, I’m going to be back in London again, Saint Etienne will likely play Popular, and I’ll smile, recognising all the names.
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Okay, there was one person from the British contingent I took an initial dislike to, and that was before I knew details that really made me glad we never met… ↩︎
