Cambridge Dictionary’s word of 2024 is Manifest – “to imagine achieving something you want, in the belief doing so will make it more likely to happen”, and what better example of this than writing a song called Pop Star then spending most of the year touring the UK, then Europe then the US, and having your album go top twenty along the way?
7 : Lime Garden / Pop Star
8 : Thomas Ducout / Feminina
9 : Jamie Broughton / The Sound
10 : David Best / Terms & Conditions
11 : Welly / Shopping
12 : Ellis D / Shakedown
13 : Ladylike / Horse’s Mouth
14 : AK/DK / Nobody Shouts
15 : The New Eves / Astrolabe
16 : Projector / Tastes Like Sarah
17 : Penelope Trappes / Sleep
18 : Lambrini Girls / Big Dick Energy
19 : Holiday Ghosts / Sublime Disconnect
20 : Plantoid / Modulator
Back in the summer I got an Instagram recommendation for a page called Low Tide Heartbreak Club – a bunch of Brighton based surfers sharing their love for surfing culture not just through other people’s posts but their own creative efforts. There was an exhibition on at a gallery in the North Laine showcasing their art and photography, as well as the talents of producer and DJ Thomas Ducout. His mini-album Philosophie Du Surf was initially a cassette only release exclusively available at the gallery, which came out just in time to become the soundtrack to late summer days and nights, and is now thankfully on streaming services. I wouldn’t be so brave as to make a direct comparison, but the breezy sample based rolling hip hop beats aren’t a million miles away from the Avalanches. Tune in, turn on and drop out.
8: Thomas Ducout / Feminina
9: Jamie Broughton / The Sound
10: David Best / Terms & Conditions
11 : Welly / Shopping
12 : Ellis D / Shakedown
13 : Ladylike / Horse’s Mouth
14 : AK/DK / Nobody Shouts
15 : The New Eves / Astrolabe
16 : Projector / Tastes Like Sarah
17 : Penelope Trappes / Sleep
18 : Lambrini Girls / Big Dick Energy
19 : Holiday Ghosts / Sublime Disconnect
20 : Plantoid / Modulator
I only recently caught on to just how good Jamie Broughton’s musical output was, but now that I have I bang on about him to anyone who stands still near me for long enough. I was aware of who he was before then, popping up onstage for various other Brighton bands playing whatever instrument was required, but it was seeing him live playing a full set of his own songs that the penny dropped. Sounding not dissimilar to Tame Impala when Kevin Parker was hanging out with Melody Prochet, Jamie’s album Big Long Sun – now also the name of his group now he’s widened his horizons from playing everything himself – is a fuzzy 70s infused psych dream pop gem.
I’ve been told that Jamie has albums and albums worth of unreleased material, and right on cue a new single Heaven is By Your Side – still psych pop, but drawing it’s influences from the 60s rather than the 70s – has been released today. No doubt we’ll be hearing a lot from Jamie and Big Long Sun in 2025.
9: Jamie Broughton / The Sound
10: David Best / Terms & Conditions
11 : Welly / Shopping
12 : Ellis D / Shakedown
13 : Ladylike / Horse’s Mouth
14 : AK/DK / Nobody Shouts
15 : The New Eves / Astrolabe
16 : Projector / Tastes Like Sarah
17 : Penelope Trappes / Sleep
18 : Lambrini Girls / Big Dick Energy
19 : Holiday Ghosts / Sublime Disconnect
20 : Plantoid / Modulator
2024 was a quiet year for Fujiya & Miyagi, who weren’t up to much publicly save for their headline gig at Lewes Psych Fest and the release of a 2003 radio session to raise money for a former band member who had passed away before their time due to cancer. There was also the release of “Message – Send – Failure”, the first offering from front man David Best under his own name after numerous collaborative side projects over the years. Cream of the crop from the album was Terms & Conditions, which wouldn’t have sounded out of place on one of his bands albums, punctuated by the semi spoken lyrics and vocal tics that he’s made a calling card in his career.
10: David Best / Terms & Conditions
11 : Welly / Shopping
12 : Ellis D / Shakedown
13 : Ladylike / Horse’s Mouth
14 : AK/DK / Nobody Shouts
15 : The New Eves / Astrolabe
16 : Projector / Tastes Like Sarah
17 : Penelope Trappes / Sleep
18 : Lambrini Girls / Big Dick Energy
19 : Holiday Ghosts / Sublime Disconnect
20 : Plantoid / Modulator
Monday night wasn’t meant to be a Big Long Sun headliner – the lineup for Dead Dog Promotions second anniversary gig was meant to be topped by Bristolian Bingo Fury, but illness meant that Jamie Broughton’s band got bumped up the bill, and deservedly so.
Also on the line up were Van Zon and Hill Collective, who brought a chair up to the stage to sing a jazzed up version of Happy Birthday to Dead Dog / Ideal Living head honcho Billy Marsh
This week, Flip Top Head released I Can’t Wait Until I’m Old – the second single taken from their forthcoming EP Up Like A Weather Balloon. We caught up with two thirds of the band last week at Presuming Eds to get the low down on the EP, starting with where the title came from:
Bertie: We had our only ever band meeting at the Walrus – and looked through all the lyrics and there was nothing really gelling but I had those words on a notes page
Bowie: I remember you saying them and us all going like “yeah”. But it doesn’t have anything to do with any of the songs.
Track One: I Can’t Wait Until I’m Old
Bowie: It’s about how the feelings about becoming old change from when you’re younger and you can’t wait to be old and to be able to go on all the rides or stay up late and stuff like that, to when you get to a point when you slowly don’t want to age. I was thinking about that kind of idea, and juxtaposing Can’t Wait To Be Old with old things like shaky hands.
Track Two : Weightlifter
Bertie: The lyrics came from a poem I’d written after a long shift at work where I’d met an ex bodybuilder and I saw when reaching for his pint that his hands were so calloused from years and years of lifting weights. And clearly that hand is no good any more, and it’s his own fault because of the weightlifting.
Ollie: I was at Bertie, Bowie and Alfie’s house and I was playing a whole load of different parts but didn’t know how to put them together. Alfie got us to number them and then he sat down and said “this one here and then that one there and then this there and that one there”. And then we were done – As easy as that. Sometimes when we’re playing that song we’re looking at each other and thinking how did we do that?
Track Three : Marie’s Interlude
Bowie : Marie’s Interlude does exactly what it says on the tin, transitioning effortlessly into the EP’s first single. It’s a bass line Marie has had for a while now and we love the way it slots in between Weightlifter and So Much for Mole Catching; although written completely separately and without intent to do so.
Track Four : So Much For Mole Catching
Bertie: It’s a fun pop song. In my head I was like How are we gonna write a fun happy song but have it still have our sound? But it came together was pretty naturally and somehow it was like “oh, we can do this, this is really cool”
Bowie: The lyrics are based around a sob story. We were living on St James Street and it was Pride weekend, so obviously it’s stupid busy St James Street, and our flat was a good people watching spot. I saw this girl sat on the pavement – she looked upset so I decided to go and have a chat see if she was OK. She’d lost her partner so we invited her up to our house, got her some some water, calmed her down and got chatting to her. She charged her phone and she managed to tell her boyfriend that she was here, so he came and they ended up staying at ours for hours, just chatting – and they were telling us about how his father was the Somerset British Molecatcher of the Year. It got me thinking about those interactions where you meet strangers – because I could have just chosen not to go and speak to her or maybe I might not have even seen her at all if she hadn’t sat outside our window – Certain chains of events lead to something like that.
Ollie: And it was Somerset Mole catching originally. I remember being in the car, and someone was suggested changing it to “So much”, and it just clicked.
Track Five : Parish Cafe Meetings
Ollie: I went to school with a girl whose dad was a vicar, and he had no nails – They were just all gone. I remember going around to play piano and thinking “why does that dude have no nails? What’s his story?”. And then one night, me and Bowie were off super late, and it came up in conversation and she said “That’s gonna be a song”. And then it was.
Marie: Yeah. It used to be called No Nail Vicar but we changed it, but I think I’d never be able to call it Parish Cafe Meeting. It’s still “No Nail” on our set lists
Track Six : Jesse Paints The Houses
Bowie: It’s probably one of our oldest songs and to this day it’s still my favourite song to play and to listen to. Alfie wrote it, and it brought that cinematic element that we ended up going for, and the stuff we’re writing now, post EP, is similar in that sense. It’s one that we hold close to our heart.
Marie: We have some gigs where everyone gets really quiet when we’re playing Jesse, and everyone’s just listening
Bertie: the best time that happened was when we played Brighten the Corners Festival in Ipswich. Five minutes before we went on stage that room was completely empty, but when we walked on the room was full, but was properly silent for the quiet bit.
The EP was produced by Theo Verney who got the occasional mention here as a Brighton Based guitarist around ten years ago, but more recently has been producing, including being behind the desk for some of Lime Garden’s singles. He approached Flip Top Head and was the first person the band had worked with who hadn’t been a friend, but very quickly gelled with them, helping them figure out how their songs needed to sound.
There are three launch gigs for the EP, in Brighton, London and Colchester, where the band first started as a three piece of Bertie, Bowie and Harrison. Although Alfie is Bertie’s brother, he didn’t join the band until they had relocated to Brighton.
As with a lot of Brighton acts, some members of Flip Top Head also play in other bands. Alfie plays on the EP, but has just left and joined Goodbye (although that wasn’t the reason he left)
Bertie: things just happened at the same time. He didn’t enjoy playing trombone or just want to play guitar solely in a band, and it happened that he found his people around the time he left Fliptop.
Ollie: I wanted I think it suits him better as well. When I saw Goodbye, I realised that he deserves to be a dude in a band that can play guitar really well and then occasionally dip in to do a song of his own too. That’s perfect for him. Because even in the Famous People, a bit of why that ended was was because Alfie didn’t want to sing all the time. So he can play guitar and sing, but not all the time. And he doesn’t have to touch trombone!
Ollie and Marie are both in Atticomatic (playing at the Rossi Bar on 23th November).
Marie: Fliptop was my first band ever and I joined Attic later on
Ollie: I was in Atticomatic, and then I joined Fliptop. It was from playing together, I guess, because we knew that Attic’s bassist was gonna leave. And then I saw Marie in sound check when both bands played at Prince Albert together and asked if she wanted come to a practice. It’s good to have a homie in both because it’s easier when you have commitments with the other band.
Bertie: I drum for Ideal Living, and every now and then I play in Freddie J Watt’s band, who Bowie also does backing vocals for sometimes. But that’s a part time thing – Ideal Living is full time.
Bowie: The thing with an kind of creativity is that because it’s hard to do it can become a little bit competitive, but the Brighton Music Scene just isn’t like that. It’s so lovely. Everyone helps each other, everyone in, everyone’s fans. It’s like it’s just nothing but – I don’t know – It’s love.
Back when we first started the blog, Dome Studio Live gigs were a regular fixture. Initially the nights had started as a collaboration with Juice FM, before they split away and started their own new music nights. The Dome then partnered with The Source Magazine until they changed from being a print magazine to online only. After that the Dome put the nights on themselves and branded them as Spectrum. Then in 2017 the Dome Studio Theatre closed, only reopening last year.
Over the years we saw the likes of AK/DK, Gazelle Twin, Traams, Physics House Band, The Miserable Rich, Jacko Hooper (who still plays as well as running the Folklore Rooms), Jennifer Left (who’s gone on to become landlady at the Hand in Hand) and many, many more at the Dome Studio nights.
Since reopening the new music nights have been run by Ned from QM Records / Normanton Street (who also used to feature on the blog in the early days), who have approached the project with a much wider vision than the pre-closure nights, as well as looking outside of the city borders for acts. Friday night’s Dome Studio Live though was a night of local guitar based acts – headlined by Holiday Ghosts, supported by Currls (with a brand new bassist) and Room Service (with strong fan base in attendance, judging by the tee shirts). It was great to be back.
There’s been a bit of an anomaly since the introduction of streaming that while you can get your recordings online the moment you’ve finished recording and mixing them, there’s always going to be a bit of a lag to get a physical product out in the world. Ladylike released their latest single Horse’s Mouth back in July, but the physical option – on flexidisc – is just coming out now and was available as part of the ticket bundle for last friday’s show or at the Merch stand. If you didn’t make it to the show you can pick it up on their bandcamp page. Support at the gig came from newcomers with familiar faces Goodbye, who we’ll be keeping an eye out for, as well as a Mandrake Handshake DJ Set, who aren’t a Brighton band but Elvis’s support for the local scene is unsurpassed, so warrants a mention. Here’s our photo gallery:
Last week Opal Mag released their new single “Looking For“, and celebrated the launch with a gig last night at the Green Door Store (supported by Glass House Red Spider Mite and Frances Mistry). We were down the front with our camera to catch the action: