tnfert.blogg.se

The railway children band
The railway children band




the railway children band

Tickets for next year will go on sale in the middle of Febuary. We are now closed until our Easter excursion trains in the spring. It is only by your continued financial support that we are able to continue our efforts to preserve and protect the railroad heritage of New Jersey. We would love to hear about your own gig experiences whether they are recent or in the past.The Members and Volunteers would like to thank you all for your support during the past year. We hope you’ve enjoyed reading about John’s gig night. He is currently raising money to support men’s mental health charity CALM He tweets as and gives away his music, generally for free. And that’s it: off stage they head, the lights come on, the DJ’s playlist resumes and we all head home, some of us with a souvenir t-shirt that cost a mere £12 – another pleasant reminder that not everything has to change.Īfter spending the best part of twenty five years trying to write the perfect pop song John Hartley has turned his attention to writing about those who have done a much better job at it. A quick dash off stage, then back on, and we are treated to the almost inevitable encore ‘Brighter’, a song whose outro could go on forever and still not seem too long. The tunes come thick and fast, culminating with “our last song, which was also our first song”: ‘A Gentle Sound’.

the railway children band

Final album title track ‘Native Place’ shows Newby’s voice at its best. Slower songs such as ‘Big Hands Of Freedom’ are given space to breathe and flourish. ‘Somewhere South’ sounds as good as it ever has, recorded or live. All three band albums are covered well, there’s the inevitable run out of most – but not all – the singles and, most pleasingly, space for some b-sides: ‘After The Rain’, ‘History Burns’ and ‘Darkness And Colour’ all get a run out.Īs the set proceeds, so the performances get stronger and better. There is little room for chat – a wry “This was our hit single” introducing ‘Every Beat Of The Heart’ being as close to banter as Newby gets – but that means more time for songs. With nothing to promote and no longer having to play the part of a mere cog in the wheels of the music industry machine The Railway Children can offer a relaxed and varied set. Gary Newby still looks youthful and sings with rich tone, Hull still plays the bass like it’s the easiest thing in the world, Guy Keegan still keeps impeccable time and drives the more uptempo songs along, and Brian Bateman still looks like he’s enjoying every minute of strumming Newby’s perfectly crafted pop songs, even when he forgets to change to the second chord of a two-chord song (the band’s debut single ‘A Gentle Sound’) within the first three bars. Sure, there may be a bit of stubble (shaving gets to be such a chore, doesn’t it) and silvery receding hairline, but not much else has changed. Always a good-looking band they have aged as much as their music: very well. Buoyed by finally breaking into the Top 40 singles chart, the band were in great form, the crowd roared them on, bassist Stephen Hull departed stage left momentarily to be sick, and t-shirts cost a tenner.Īt The Lexington in 2017 it feels like the band has never been away. The last time I saw The Railway Children was in a rampant hometown gig on Wigan Pier. The gathered throng, and there are a fair number of us, are present to greet long-absent friends, friends who only came back into our midst last year after a hiatus lasting well over 20 years. We’re getting old folks, we’re getting old. At the bar a man begrudges the £5 price of a bottle of ale, whilst noticing the barely-discreet notices advising patrons that ‘Earplugs are available: just ask at the bar’. Up a narrow and steep steel staircase with perhaps one or two too many steps is a room filled largely with men of hair greying and thinning – where it exists at all – and waistbands expanded more than their owners might choose. Here is John’s Gig Night review of The Railway Children at The Lexington, London on Saturday 18th March 2017… Fresh from submerging himself knee deep in the world of The Railway Children courtesy of his wonderful item for Toppermost, John Hartley managed to keep the momentum going by checking them out in the flesh.






The railway children band