The Darling Buds

On This Day 05/08/1989 Simple Minds

Images may be subject to copyright

On this day, 5 August 1989, Scottish rockers Simple Minds played Cardiff Arms Park on their Street Fighting Years tour. Support was provided by Texas, Welsh band The Darling Buds and The Silencers.

Street Fighting Years Tour

"After we'd finished the record we knew what would work on stage: by the time we did the Street Fighting Years tour all those songs fitted beautifully in to that set. We were definitely down the Celtic road – it was "this is who we are and we’re not ashamed of it." We'd avoided that before."

The rehearsals took place at The Point, Dublin, Ireland for three weeks before the tour. This included all the prep work for the equipment and culminated with full dress rehearsals. (The second day of the full rehearsals was on the 9th May 1989). The songs worked on were: Street Fighting Years, Wall Of Love, Mandela Day, This Is Your Land, Soul Crying Out, Waterfront, Ghostdancing, Book Of Brilliant Things, Don't You (Forget About Me), Gaelic Melody, Take A Step Back, Oh Jungleland, Big Sleep, Kick It In, Let It All Come Down, Belfast Child, Sanctify Yourself, Alive And Kicking, East At Easter, Sun City and Biko.

The rehearsals were recorded and can be recognised by the lack of audience reaction before and after the songs. (Lone roadies and support staff can be heard clapping and cheering after several tracks).

The "live" version of Big Sleep, which appeared on the Kick It In single, was taken from these rehearsal sessions.

"We played things like Celtic songs with a fiddle break in the middle and we were giving everything a shot. We opened our Wembley show with the title track of Street Fighting Years, which doesn't even really have any drums in it! It was a bit mad, but we had to play stadiums on our terms. If we were going into that environment, we had to do what we wanted." - Charlie, Classic Pop Magazine, March 2020

Review - South Wales Echo

Simple Minds are a long way from becoming an endangered species - 50,000 adoring fans at the National Ground on Saturday night proved that.

Having said that, they have other similarities to the blue whales they showed on the video screens during an ecologically-conscious interlude halfway into the set. Impressive and powerful, even magnificent but, it has to be said, a little bit dull really.

On the night Kerr and Co just couldn't be faulted, managing to communicate a genuine warmth and enjoyment.

They open opened up in a relatively low-key manner but things improved with a stunning Great Wall Of Love, Charlie Burchill's beautifully pure lead guitar and Mel Graynor's awesome drums powering the song along. The celebratory Mandela Day followed, and already Jim Kerr had the crowd where he wanted them - nestling comfortably in his waistcoat pocket.

Kick It In, Ghostdancing, The Book Of Brilliant Things - they were all tight, sharp, and powerful, but were songs all dressed up with no place to go. The band encored with a ferocious version of Steve Van Zandt's rousting Sun City (I Ain't Gonna Play), and Peter Gabriel's worthy but rather dull Biko. A triumphant Alive and Kicking closed the show with what looked like the entire crowd waving and singing. Simple Minds left the stage very much alive and kicking.

Concert Preview and Review - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_qd4LQMPzV8

Setlist

Theme for Great Cities

(intro)

When Spirits Rise

(intro)

Street Fighting Years

Wall of Love

Mandela Day

This Is Your Land

Soul Crying Out

Waterfront

Ghost Dancing

Book of Brilliant Things / Five to One

(The Doors cover)

Don't You (Forget About Me)

Gaelic Melody

Once Upon a Time

Oh Jungleland

Big Sleep

Kick it In

Let It All Come Down

Belfast Child

Sun City

(Artists United Against Apartheid cover)

Biko

(Peter Gabriel cover)

Sanctify Yourself

East at Easter

Alive and Kicking

Theme for Great Cities

(outro)

On this day 29/09/1988 The Darling Buds

Images may be subject to copyright

Images may be subject to copyright

On this day, 29 September 1988, Welsh alternative rock band- The Darling Buds played Newport TJ’s.

From Newport, South Wales. The band formed in 1986 and were named after the H. E. Bates novel The Darling Buds of May – a title taken in turn, from the third line of Shakespeare's Sonnet 18: "Rough winds do shake the darling buds of May".

Signing with Sony in 1988, several singles preceded the band's critically acclaimed 1989 debut LP, Pop Said.... The album, described as "relentlessly chirpy", ultimately reached the Top 30 in the UK Albums Chart, and the band appeared on Top of the Pops as well as the cover of Melody Maker twice (24 September 1988 and 18 February 1989).

hqdefault (2).jpg

Influenced by the catchy simple sound of the early Beatles as well as that of Blondie, the band created melodic, hook-driven, short-duration singles. They were considered part of the short lived "Blonde" movement (indie rock band fronted by blonde female singer with all other members being dark-haired males) along with the likes of The Primitives and Transvision Vamp, but also referenced the C86 scene of a few years earlier.

On This Day 8/5/1988 The Darling Buds

All Images Subject to Copyright

All Images Subject to Copyright

On this day, 8 May 1988, alternative rock band from Newport, South Wales, the Darling Buds, played Cardiff’s Clwb Ifor Bach.


The band formed in 1986 and were named after the H. E. Bates novel The Darling Buds of May – a title taken in turn, from the third line of Shakespeare's Sonnet 18: "Rough winds do shake the darling buds of May".


Signing with Sony in 1988, several singles preceded the band's critically acclaimed 1989 debut LP, Pop Said.... The album, described as "relentlessly chirpy", ultimately reached the Top 30 in the UK Albums Chart, and the band appeared on Top of the Pops as well as the cover of Melody Maker twice (24 September 1988 and 18 February 1989).