30 November 1997

Fan Review: Cole's continuing Adventure of the West Coast shows 1997

West Coast, United States

vervelings....

Well.....i'm back from a 9 day excursion into the realm of great art. got a week off(paid:) from my werk, and thought i'd use the time to expand my spirit a bit. it started in san jo', and quickly made it's way up to seattle, where our host; the every friendly, and frequently "elevated" ryan scott picked up myself, (the lovely) gina, miss megan hug(of this wonderful list), and my freak of a friend rob. as well as ryan's bro from SF; matt (he was pleasant, too). we partied like madmen at ryan's house that friday night. he had a wonderful suare' for all the rolling people. met great ones from canada, especially the couple from calgary, and mindy sue, and her husband michael from seattle..... more on them later. our crew found a hotel room before we passed out, which was across from a great 24 hour diner called the hurricane cafe. it was so cool, i mean, how many restaurants have an employee bong?!? not to mention the wickedest jukebox: featuring everything from sly and the fam, to the melvins, to blur, to van morrison, to skinny puppy! we spent quite a bit of money there...

next day brought some new friends....a rockin' gal from boise, idaho, and my old friend, the guy who introduced me to the verve back in 93'. we hung out in downtown seattle, and saw some great glass art. met up at the croc for pre-party drinks, and meeting new friends. i was sporting devin's t-shirt, and met JDK because of it. the vibe was alive in the showbox. and yeah, i was lit:) someone posted that she thought the show sucked....i must beg to differ(but it is only personal opinion). the gig rocked! 3rd song; this is music, they blew the PA! but after a 5 min delay, picked it up from the very spot they crashed at. rich was pissed off, and talked some shit to the club. they were amped to play, and didn't like bein' cut off. the space and time acoustic, complete with call and response was epic. met more great peeps, and walked on... saw george and andrew, who were the film crew for the tour. we'll probably be in the vid, or they were humoring us with 8 straight mins of ramble-ia! very cool guys indeed. we went to the croc and hung like rockstars, getting fucked up, and listening to the complete purple rain album. the night ends with decadence. next stop, san jo'.....and then LA

20 November 1997

Fan Review: Warfield Theater 1997

Warfield Theatre
San Francisco, California, USA
November 20, 1997

verve as a noun means vigor, energy, liveliness, and spirit.

How perfect was that night. Everything was seriously perfect. The music, the band, the lighting, the crowd, and the length of the whole show. Everything! I went to the Warfield at about 4:30 that afternoon. There weren't many people in line yet, maybe ten at most. At around 5:00 I saw Nick McCabe, and I think Peter and the guy who was doing the photos and documentary come out of a cab. They did sound check a little while later, which I listened to from the back of the venue.

I talked to a girl for a while who told me about the two shows in LA a few days before that. She said the first night was just unbearably loud and the other night the power went out so they only got to do one song for the encore or something. She was hoping the Warfield show was going to be better. Ha, I even saw some guys from Los Angeles who had taped both the LA shows and were at that point taping the sound check. God, now they were "Mad Fer It!" They came out about 6:40 PM. Ten minutes before hand, my Los Angeles friend and I were contemplating on meeting my friend back in line, but we decided to just stay a little longer, and I'm glad we did.

This friend of mine told me about how short Richard was, but I swear, I really didn't believe her. But this guy must have been 5'9 tops and he was hunching over too. He was really nice though. Saying Cheers and Thanks for coming and also I said how brilliant the new album was and how much I loved the first two albums as well. Nick was nice too. Simon just jumped into the van to go back to the hotel and Nick, Richard, Peter, and everyone else got in a second later.

So my friend and I got back in line and we went inside. I got a white T-shirt. I'm glad there was non sleep wear stuff for sale. I also got a poster which was two dollars. They were selling stickers but I got those free at Mod Lang a month or two later. The slides and dj were ok. They should have done that for an hour though, not two. So the Verve came on a little after nine, playing for almost two hours (the longest set on the tour I think) and it included a 45 min encore.

It all went by too fast. Here are a list of SOME of the songs and not in any particular order. If I missed some...sorry!

A New Decade, This Is Music, On Your Own (during encore), History, Life's An Ocean, A Northern Soul, Bitter Sweet Symphony (which sounded great) , Sonnet, The Rolling People (during the first seconds of this song when Peter pounds on his bass drum there were great fog lights flashing), The Drugs Don't Work, Gravity Grave, Come On, Lucky Man (dedicated to Kate of course), Space and Time, Catching The Butterfly, Weeping Willow...that's all I remember.

The lighting was quite impressive. The best I've ever seen. Richard Ashcroft did three songs solo on his acoustic including "On Your Own". There was no pushing in the crowd at all and I was in the very front in between Nick and Richard. No BSS kids, thank God. Richard didn't really have any back up vocals so the audience was really his back up and it was really great that people were signing along. The show was sold out and I don't think they sold any tickets at the door, only will call and all that. It was certainly one of my favourite shows ever. Amazing and brilliant. Everything was perfect. I was really glad that I was going to see them 2 weeks later even though Evil 105 was putting it on. I don't care...It's the Verve. Everybody did their best. Anybody who had to fly to see them would never regret it. My friend from LA said the Warfield was the best out of the three she went to. Oh yeah, they didn't show up to the after show party at Popscene. Oh well...I didn't really expect them to.
  • Source: Verve-Tribute: A tribute to what was website
  • Review by Teresa

16 November 1997

San Francisco Chronicle - Verve Celebrates Spirit of Inclusion / British pop phenom pegged as likely successor to supergroup Oasis

Inside the sold-out Earls Court arena a tall, skinny man, eyes clenched shut, is onstage flailing his limbs and yelling at the audience. The fan response is instant, with 20,000 pairs of hands soaring skyward.

The Verve, fronted by limb-flailer Richard Ashcroft, is wrapping up its hourlong set as opening act for Oasis. Some critics have predicted the Verve will soon overtake that group to become Britain's latest megaband.

"I think people can relate to us because they know we're real people," says the coarsely good-looking and refreshingly genuine Ashcroft, speaking on a sunny patio at the Virgin Records offices two days after the show. "They know we go through the same sort of c-- they do, and come back better for it."

The Verve recently hit the No. 1 spot on the British singles charts with "The Drugs Don't Work"; its predecessor, "Bitter Sweet Symphony," reached No. 2. The group's third studio album, "Urban Hymns," with its sweetly crafted songwriting, cacophonous psychedelic breakouts and lush alternative sound, is the hottest musical news across the pond.

Although Ashcroft's face adorns the covers of a number of hip British publications, as recently as a year ago the Verve's survival was in question. The band -- Ashcroft, bassist Simon Jones, drummer Peter Salisbury, guitarist Nick McCabe and guitarist-keyboardist Simon Tong -- had reached a breaking point in the fall of 1995, five years after forming in the industrial town of Wigan, near Manchester. Instead of enjoying the release of its second album, the moving "A Northern Soul," the band broke up over tensions centering on Ashcroft and McCabe.

A LEARNING PROCESS

"At that point when we split up, it was because we were damaging what we had and abusing what we stood for," Ashcroft says. "We were all following our instincts into brick walls. . . . We have a magic, we've always said that, and sometimes you have to go through that c-- to recognize what you had. It's been a massive learning process for me."

After a year of playing and recording without McCabe, the Verve reunited. "A lot of the album was rerecorded once Nick came back in," Ashcroft says. "It was like putting the most beautiful icing on the greatest, biggest cake. He put the slide on 'The Drugs Don't Work,' and I don't want to sound like somebody in f-- Duran Duran here, but I really missed his vibe and soul. His spirit on these records has been so important, and to be jamming with him again was vital. And then we got to the song 'Come On' and it was, like, 'Aaahhh!' "

As for Ashcroft, he is known for his ability to express poetic, heartfelt sentiments alongside gritty life observations. It has worked like a charm back home.

"You go through the change from being a young lad to being a young man," he explains. "Different things are in your life, you have more than just 'been down to the pub and watched a game of football.' You're bringing in relationships, all your hang-ups. " 'A Northern Soul' was me taking away all that baggage and bulls--, the working-class Northerner having to go home and face the old crowd after having said something that was deep inside me. Now these 'mad-heads' (bad boys) back in Wigan see it, and some of them have been encouraged to express themselves a little differently, which I think is a great thing."

Ashcroft is pleased that his band's music cannot be pigeonholed.

"We've been shoe-gazers, new glam Brit-pop," he says. "It's a part of '90s tabloid culture that I despise, but we've burst out by saying we're bigger than that. I think we have a pretty eclectic audience. A lot of American bands say stuff like, 'We were the kids smoking dope in the corner, they were the guys playing nerd rock.'

"I don't agree with judging people. I come from a (public) school in Wigan, I have friends in all walks of life and I don't judge any of them. They're different people with different lives, but it doesn't mean I don't get anything from them. And as far as I'm concerned, this music's for everyone and anyone who wants it."

REFUSING TO CAPITULATE

The Verve, which is on a brief U.S. tour, is determined to continue its journey on its own terms, refusing to capitulate to the demands of standard industry hype machines such as MTV.

"We're always re-educating people that if they want us to survive then we cannot go into those situations," Ashcroft says. "When we come back to America, people will be aware that we are not part of that 'corporate beef burger here's-another-album' cycle. It's all on a very good level, and it's very exciting."
  •  Source: SFGate, written by Steffan Chirazi

15 November 1997

Fan Review: The Snowbox 1997

The Snowbox 
Seattle, Washington, USA
November 15, 1997

Well, here it goes...

Unfortunately, I don't have a set list. But it doesn't really matter, since they skipped three songs in the encore. But, none-the-less it was one of the best Verve shows I have ever seen.

What I felt was so special about it was the vibe from the audience. Everyone knew that they were definitely seeing something special, and that this wouldn't happen again (The Showbox was the smallest venue on the tour). During "Sonnet", the whole audience was singing the second vocal line - it was really cool. I thought the sound was good from where I was standing, but the guitar could have been a little more clearer. Every band member seemed in full form. Richard was going crazy as usual. And when he put that hooded sweatshirt on - you could have mistaken him for a member of NWA! Everybody in the front was shouting COME ON! to Richard and Simon, and they were doing the same to the audience. All of the songs sounded brilliant. But one bad thing did happen that kind of put a damper on the evening, and probably resulted in them skipping those three songs.

The power went out! I can't remember what song. Richard and Simon just turned right toward each other and walked off stage. A few minutes later, everything was back to normal, and the band came on to huge screams and cheers. And, amazingly to me, they picked up right where they left off, with out even skipping a note.

I later had the privilege to see them in San Francisco on November 20, 1997 which was a Thursday.
  • By Ryan Scott

13 November 1997

Fan Review: Vic Theater 1997 (1)

The Vic
Chicago, Illinois, US
November 13, 1997

The Urban Hymns Tour

Riding a wave of rave reviews, The Verve came to the U.S. shortly after the worldwide release of Urban Hymns and embarked on a full-scale tour. The Vic had a line around the corner. I headed to the balcony and grabbed a front row seat, full of anticipation. My Urban Hymns CD hadn't left my stereo during the month since its release. Could they actually pull off the brilliant combination of classic acoustic songs and other-worldly atmospherics?

The venue filled up fast. A great mix tape filled the room with Primal Scream, Beatles and Rolling Stones songs. Accompanying the mix tape was a slide show of sayings and images. The images were similar to those inside the Northern Soul sleeve. The sayings were along the lines of “a crazy person is someone who just realized what's going on.” There was no opening band. It felt very refreshing to not have to sit through an opening band I hadn't come to see in the first place. The boys finally walked on stage to the Electric Prunes’ "Holy Are You".

For about an hour and a half, the band cranked out hit after hit, performing each with aggression and raw passion. Not Nick, of course. He was reserved, spending most of the show facing his effects racks and pedals. "Life's An Ocean", "The Drugs Don't Work" and "The Rolling People" filled the room with drifting guitars and Richard's wails. They played almost every song on Urban Hymns that night, plus a handful of Northern Soul tracks. "Slide Away" was the lone reminder of their earlier days. And "Come On" had replaced "Gravity Grave" as the set closer of choice.

By the end of the show, the band was a sweaty mess, and the crowd was satiated. I left with a huge smile on my face. Outside, crying girls slapped bundles of flowers against the tour bus door, hoping for some attention and maybe an autograph. It was a phenomenal show. They blew away my expectations by sounding tighter and more alive than ever. Unfortunately, it was also the last time they'd play in my city with Nick McCabe as a member.

Note: During their Chicago stop, they actually filmed some of the footage that ended up in the Verve Video 96 – 98.
  • By Jonathan Cohen

Fan Review: Vic Theater 1997 (2)

Vic Theater
Chicago, Illinois, USA
November 13, 1997
 
Well, I wanted to go to Toronto but I had to at least go to work/school one day that week so I skipped that show and went to Chicago. Got there at about 4:30 and pulled up to our hotel which is right around the corner of the Vic. When we pulled up to the hotel, a tour bus was right out front and I totally started tripping out. When we checked in I asked the lady who was in the bus out front and she said, "Some band that's playing here tonight. I've never heard of them before." I asked her if it was a band called the Verve and she said, "Yeah, I think that's who it is." and I started freaking out and then she said, "Oh, no...it's a band called KDFM...or something like that."

Grrr...needless to say I was disappointed. Well, I grubbed out on some Chicago Stuffed Pizza (I love eating in Chicago...best food in the States) and then walked to the Vic. We moved up to the front of the venue and waited...

Met Vicky & Doug...nice talking to you guys. Did you dig the show? I'm sure you did. Good thing no fights broke out between my boyfriend and that one chick that was all pushy-shovey. For a second I thought it was going to get ugly. :)

Wow...this show was awesome as well! Though it seemed that Richard wasn't as enthusiastic. He didn't talk to the crowd at all...and didn't really get crazy except for Come On. But it was an excellent show and the only set list difference was SPACE AND TIME ACOUSTIC! That was SO nice! What was up with the "new song" they played at the end of...oh shit, I'm pretty sure it was after Come On. Does anyone else know what I am talking about? They finished a song and everyone started clapping and while we were clapping they broke into this SWEET jam and Richard was doing some abstract vocal thing...it was really fast and crazy...anybody remember that and can help me out in describing it? It was almost like a reprise to Come On. It was a nice, nice little psychedelic swirl at the end of the show.

I took mad pictures at this show cos I got to bring my camera in. Most of them turned out pretty decent. I'll try to scan them later. I would also like a boot of that show as well. And I'll try to scan some photos later.

Thanks for listening - Vervelove to all...
  • Source: Verve-Tribute: A tribute to what was website
  • Review by Sarah

11 November 1997

Like A Hurricane

Tuesday, Nov. 11. Phoenix Concert Theatre, 410 Sherbourne. Sold out.

If Q magazine is to be believed, The Verve are The World's Most Dangerous Band. That's high rock 'n' roll praise for a band who, until the recent success of "Bitter Sweet Symphony," was important only to the most Brit-tastic of music fans. What happened and why should anyone care?

Prior to Urban Hymns, The Verve released 1993's A Storm In Heaven and 1995's A Northern Soul. These precursors to Urban Hymns' psychedelic balladeering hinted at what would come, but followed a meandering path, as the band found its focus. But it so happened that after the tour in support of A Northern Soul, singer Richard Ashcroft made a few phone calls and dissolved the band. Guitar player Nick McCabe had reached dizzying lows of depression as a result of the pressures of touring; in turn, Ashcroft -- who has himself earned the nickname Mad Richard -- decided that McCabe was more of a nuisance than a benefit to the band. Rather than simply fire McCabe, Ashcroft said The Verve had lost its vigour.

According to a cover story in The Face last summer, "The Verve now privately admit that their not-very-convincing split was really just a way to get rid of (Nick McCabe) their guitarist." Ashcroft, bass player Simon Jones, drummer Peter Salisbury and newly recruited guitar guy Simon Tong were playing together less than a month after the alleged split. However, Jones -- The Verve's current mouthpiece, since Ashcroft isn't playing with the press this time around -- doesn't acknowledge any of this, or the fact that Tong came to be a part of the group prior to McCabe's eventual return.

Says Jones in a phone interview from New York, "We've always talked about making the band grow and bringing in different members because there are so many elements on the records and we wanna get that power across live. It's so great that we had a friend who could play the guitar, play keyboards, blah, blah, blah. The time was right for him to come, d'y'know what I mean?"

It was fortunate and it makes for a pleasant story, but what about Nick?

"Basically we, y'know, it was just a case of relationship breakdown for a bit. We were all so close anyway, that's what made it possible for Richard to ring him up and say, 'Yeah, I'm all right now. Everything's all right. Let's give it another go,' d'y'know what I mean? Because we were friends, it's easy, y'know. I don't know... something with this band... things happen. That's the way we feel. We don't know where it comes from, this music. No big deal at all really."

That's a far cry from McCabe telling The Face, "He (Ashcroft) had to eat shit. I told him, 'I ought to tell you to fuck off but I'm glad to hear from you. They asked me back, so they can't complain. I get to do what the fuck I want now."

If Jones is to be believed, The Verve are like archetypal star-crossed lovers connected by some sort of divine intervention. Urban Hymns certainly sounds like music made by a band with confidence to spare; it's far cheerier than past efforts and there's no denying the catchiness of "Bitter Sweet Symphony." (The song's title has became ironic after the news that The Verve had to give 100 per cent of the song's royalties to infamous Stones/Beatles manager Allen Klein for sampling The Andrew Loog Oldham Orchestra's version of The Rolling Stones' "The Last Time" without permission.)

"It's simple," he says "When we play live, we'll be jamming -- we can play together. We're not machines but we have got an instinctive way of playing music together. The chemistry is massive. We know having broken up and gone through all that... the 18 months in the wilderness gave us some perspective on how important music was to all of us, y'know, we all had to come to terms with The Verve split-up. None of us could come to terms with it. That's why we got back together, because we knew how important it was."
  • Like A Hurricane, written by Joanne Huffa

Fan Review: Phoenix Concert Theatre 1997

Phoenix Concert Theatre
Toronto, Canada
November 11, 1997

Toronto Dream

Well vervies last night was the long-awaited in my mind and for so many of us Torontonians the return of the "best band in the world" (RA quote). I have never ever left a concert feeling so at peace, so filled with this spiritual well being. I could hear the mumbles of so many others saying it was the best show ever. I had not been having a good day, I had a sleepless night, I was stressed out for school and other matters, it was cold, and last night was the first of flurries. We also had to wait two hours for the show to start, but I wanted to be early so I could be upfront. All of it was soon forgotten. There were two screens showing slides of the band, of quotes, and of other miscellaneous pictures that must mean something to the band. Finally the house lights when down, and as if I were in a dream the band walked on the stage, Richard in some parka with fur, strutting like he knew that he would affect us like never before. With his opening words "A new decade, the radio plays the songs we made", the band in a wild enthusiasm began to play, and I knew this night would be unforgettable. I wish to post the whole set list, but I don't remember what order the songs went. I can list them though: this is music, catching the butterfly, (replacing man called sun I suppose), slide away(!!), rolling people, sonnet, weeping willow, life's an ocean, the drugs don't work, stormy clouds, reprise, on your own (I cried during this) bittersweet symphony, lucky man, history, come on.

*Richard at one point thanked all the people who came to see them the last, then he thanked all his new friends...see he accepts new fans, we should do the same.

*Richard pointed to Nick several times during songs, it really showed an unselfishness on his part.

*Richard quoted the verve as the "best band in the world", this made me think of oasis and their claim to this...hmm am I sensing future tension? ;)

*I yelled out history about 5 times and then the next song was history, I would like to believe I influenced them cos it didn't look like they were going to...no? ok well just humour me :)

*the sound was extremely loud, and some security guy took pity on us and gave my friend and I ear plugs.

*Richard yelled out "see you next year Toronto!" wooo I am so there.

Well that's all I can think of as far as highlights go, truthfully I was happier to hear them play their older stuff since it dawned on me that I might not be able to hear them again, but I was happy with their selections of the album (although I wish they had played space and time rather than weeping willow). The audience were not so called bittersweet heads, it was a good mixture of fans. It was come on that made me shake and really got me going at the end, I could not get over how hard Richard goes to that song. I had to hold on to the speaker after the song, cos I thought my legs would fail me if I walked. I left that show as if it were almost a spiritual experience I took part in, and I just didn't want to look at anything as negative. Despite my bad day, and bad week was worth it for that hour and half of the verve, since I forgot everything. The best show of my life (and I have been to dozens), I can't wait until they come back.
  • Source: Verve-Tribute: A tribute to what was website
  • Review by Andrea
-------------------------

...On to Toronto, an International border crossing, Loonies and Twoonies, more dollars for the dollar, more potent beer, more km/h than mph and more units of petrol per tank. Mick E Finns was an ideal place, ordered some grub and greeted the rolling people as they entered, aaron, eric, guy (thanks for the skin-up), andrew, grable, and the latecomers, your names have slipped me. Rebecca and crew (from Ottowa? that's a part of Canada, right?) never showed up as they were waiting for the radio interview to be broadcast. We got to the Phoenix at 9:00 and caught Wayne's set, this time the slide screens were set up on adjacent walls and I could see both at the same time. Saw a lot of different ones than before, was this because I could see them all or because they had to show a whole lot of slides...to the sounds of day tripper, jumping jack flash, love's theme, can (or do you say kahn) and super stupid. I don't know if anyone remembers the funeral songs thread, or if you bothered to read it, but Flying by the Beatles was one I chose, the deejay played it and I was ready to be scooped up then and there. Geeze, you don't think someone's paying attention and played it . . . Nah. Tried to ask him who does the song Holy Are You, but he wasn't talking to idiots.

I found my spot again at the foot of Nick, and waited. and waited. A lovely nubile female named Lindsay was standing near me, she came up to me and said her friends were being stodgy, not wanting to dance, I said I was just looking to loosen up my boogie shoes, and we grooved like freaks for a bit. I saw some activity in the doorway and looked up to see Richard and Kate standing there, with Wayne. I closed my eyes and centered myself. I swear I could feel a warmth emanating from them. I called out it was as if I could feel the sun. Still another fifteen minutes until the band finally came out at 11:00 (supposedly planned). Richard announced they were glad to see some friends there, and something about the wankers in the back. Tonight they fiddled around and began A New Decade. "And it makes sense..."

Notable at this show was the sound, as crisp and clear as the cold Canadian air. Between songs 2 & 3 I think, someone threw a joint on stage (not lit), someone else followed suit, then a couple more, then suddenly it was raining joints, must've been a dozen in just a few seconds. On one of the last songs Richard went off on a short This Time rap, and Come On had the "if you don't like our sound, get up and turn it down" ad lib. Seemed shorter than Detroit. but I was drunker.

Hooked back up with the rolling people afterward and dined at the exclusive golden griddle. Who's sitting at the next booth, but Rebecca!!?! A good thing nobody took me up on drinking the beer I planned to bring home, as the next morning I knew my stomach wouldn't have appreciated it. Walking back to the hotel I passed a few blatant prostitutes, one of them giving me the fist-to-mouth international-symbol-for-blowjob. More information than you need, I know, but that visual image was one of the most comical I have ever seen, and it still cracks me up.

"Never coming down now never coming down no more no more" CHEERS ALL
  • Source: Verve-Tribute: A tribute to what was website
  • Review by Jason Alex

10 November 1997

Fan Review: St. Andrew's Hall 1997

St. Andrew's Hall
Detroit, Michigan, USA
November 10, 1997

"Tell me what you've seen, was it a dream, was I in it?" - On Your Own

The following story is TRUE. The names have not been changed because we're all guilty as sin. Don't deny it !! Thank god someone else posted the setlists, because my pen ran dry at St Andrews and my Toronto setlist looks like a grid of scribbles and scratches. So this account of the shows has little accurate information about the music they played, it's just full of details about the one thing I know about - ME! After all, a self absorbed review is the precedent ;-)

First off, when I made my hotel reservations for D a month ago, the city was booked up as far away as the airport. Some convention. I found a co-pilot at the last minute, and knew my chances of exchanging my single room for a double were slim. While checking in, the phone rings and it's someone wishing to downsize their double to a single. From here on I've got a really good feeling about this night, my first Verve show.

Got to the venue around 6:30, circled and found a parking spot on the street, behind the hall. As we passed in front of St Andrews, a film crew has just started interviewing some dude for the documentary. Glad I wasn't the one they chose to have to choke out some wise words on the spot, as I was a bit cold footed, but that was soon to change... Walked inside Steve's Place and found Joe easily: He was wearing the same shirt I was. Settled quickly into a few Labatts, shooting the shit with Joe, his friend (owen?), and Mark, who spur of the moment came up alone, and had scored a ticket already for $20. After a bit Devin joined us (keep going bro! I think we're giving Kentucky a good name), but since he was still looking for a ticket, he only stayed for one. Round about 8:30 I've got my jungle noises working and it's time to get eerie, which we did Spiccoli-style in the van. Headed for the queue, I see Devin just crossing into the pearly gates, "Nice Ticket!" I yell, and he says William Stearns had one for him and generously kicked it down. Well I'll be. That was one of the extra tickets I mailed to William...

06 November 1997

Fan Review: Irving Plaza 1997

Irving Plaza
New York, NY
November 6, 1997

IT'S BEEN FIVE YEARS THAT I'VE WANTED TO SEE THE VERVE LIVE AND DESPITE THE HIGH EXPECTATIONS I MUST SAY THAT I WAS NOT DISAPPOINTED at all. SEEING THE VERVE LIVE is an experience which indicates that rock starts and ends with this momentous band.

I was very surprised with the composition of the crowd, which ranged from the young, mother and daughter, oldish and even yuppyish especially given the fact that to get a ticket you either had to be quick or generous. There seemed to be no casual onlookers around, most of the people, I was relieved, were invariably familiar with Verve material some even repeating the experience of the night before and hyping the atmosphere even more before the show.

Pre-concert atmosphere was very cool with a slow paced slide show (with messages like "there would be no rules without rule breakers" and the like) and very cool music which I would be very interested to find out what it was (I recognized Trainspotting and some Electric Prunes). This music was a perfect backdrop for the tension/anticipation that was slowly accumulating. And at 9.30 the PA stopped playing music and the greatest band in the world came out and immediately without even them starting a song it became apparent that these guys have a lot of confidence, that they are on a road that has no return. You could tell that these sort of gigs are stepping stones to something bigger. Much bigger. And Richard..has the aura of a man who is doing exactly what he was brought in this world to do. Which makes him a lucky man.

First song was "A New Decade" and then "This is Music". Richard lit a joint on the first song gave us the middle finger and claimed that he lost his voice from the previous night but it seemed pretty damn good to me. He dedicated these songs to "any fucker that bought A Northern Soul". And we all know that Urban Hymns will make the band huge but ANS was the Verve at its most raw, effective and emotional. From then on I don't remember the exact sequence of songs only that no songs from A Storm in Heaven were played. It was amazing: On Your Own, Drugs Don't Work (terrific), catching the buttery, a fantastic merging of Stormy Clouds and reprise of Brainstorm Interlude from ANS, A Man Called Sun, Sonnet, The Rolling People, Weeping Willow, Life's an Ocean and most perfect of all History. The encore included Bittersweet Symphony (live I found it missed something), Lucky Man and of course the orgasmic Come On in which Richard lead the crowd on to a frenzy with his Dionysian dancing and taunting of the front row. End. In essence I feel great to have seen a great band at its most humble, raw and most earnest before they got too big and who knows what they will become.
  • Source: Verve-Tribute: A tribute to what was website
  • Review by Oceania

Bitter Sweet Smell of Success

NEW YORK - In the video to The Verve's latest single, ``Bitter Sweet Symphony,'' bandleader Richard Ashcroft is expressionless as he strides along a city sidewalk bumping into anyone who crosses his path.

It's a simple but arresting image that accompanies one of the year's best songs and top discs, Urban Hymns. Fortunately, crossing the path of the wiry singer inside a record company boardroom proves less perilous, though Ashcroft's wilful arrogance at times is enough to knock you off your feet.

The Verve was once set to be Britpop's next big thing. Now, after breaking up and making up, they want some of that promised fame

``Would any other rock band in the world make a track like this?,'' he says of ``Bitter Sweet Symphony,'' an epic, lushly orchestrated piece of music with a powerful lyrical hook. A few seconds later he follows with another bold pronouncement: "We want to stand head and shoulders with the giants."

``We want to look at them in the clouds (and say) `Yeah it is nice up here Bob Dylan, John Lennon because I'm Richard Ashcroft. I'm Simon Jones. We're The Verve.'''

Ashcroft's heavenly ambitions aside, Urban Hymns is one of the sonic highlights of 1997 even if its maker is enrolled in mate Noel Gallagher's school of modesty. Gallagher wrote ``Cast No Shadow'' for Ashcroft and during an Oasis concert here in Manhattan dedicated a song ``to the next biggest band in the world.'' He was referring to The Verve, whose members happened to be in the audience. Both bands were in town plugging records.

Before the concert, Gallagher gave Urban Hymns a thumbs up, albeit qualified. ``I think it's got six really, really strong songs,'' he said backstage before the show. ``There's a couple on there that sort of passed me by but it's really rare that you get 10 tracks on an album that you like.''

There was a time when it was The Verve, not Oasis, who seemed destined for monster commercial success back home in England. But after two critically acclaimed albums, 1993's A Storm In Heaven and 1995's A Northern Soul, the group imploded for a variety of reasons Ashcroft and interview-mate and bassist Simon Jones understandably prefer to play down.

``Many a band would obviously be selling our story to sell records whereas we're different kind of people,'' says Ashcroft, who is 26. ``Like any relationship where people . . . were having problems, the problems were becoming so big that The Verve could no longer exist.''

Now, while Ashcroft and Jones want to avoid trotting out band baggage in half-hour interviews with North American journalists, the British press has been filled with stories blaming the break-up on everything from too many drug-taking sessions and in-fighting to nervous breakdowns experienced by guitarist Nick McCabe and possibly Ashcroft himself. Whatever the reasons, McCabe seems the centre of the difficulties, though he's keeping a low profile since Urban Hymns was released.

The break-up itself didn't last that long. While McCabe retreated to the band's home town of Wigan, England, Ashcroft, Jones and drummer Peter Salisbury began working in the studio on a nameless project. ``But after a few months it became very apparent that there wasn't much point recording the music without Nick, because people would be asking `So what are you going to be called,' '' explains Jones.

Ashcroft continues: ``Instinctively the time came to ring Nick up and say let's do it. I knew I was right . . . because in a week we were in a room, laughing about it all.''

Together, the quintet, which plays its lone Canadian gig at the Phoenix on Tuesday (it sold out in an hour), created an album Ashcroft says reflects ``that period of frustration.'' Lyrically, the songs are straightforward ruminations on the essence of living and dying. There's a wistfulness about the fleetingness of life examined without extraneous detail. ``It's a bitter sweet symphony this life/ try to make ends meet/ you're a slave to the money/ then you die.''

``It's very easy to hide behind imagery . . . but I also know speaking to someone quite direct without wasting time is also very important,'' says Ashcroft of his songcraft on the album. ``A lot of people I admire who've gone before us were able to speak on a very personal level, universal level.''

Though there are several standout tracks on the disc, like ``The Drugs Don't Work'' and the psychedelic swirl of ``Catching The Butterfly,'' it's ``Bitter Sweet Symphony,'' that has the best shot of a world-wide breakthrough. The melancholic refrain, ``I can't change my mode,'' stems from a period when Ashcroft was obsessing about ``the genetic code.

``The whole idea of how much can we break outside the code which we have been given by our ancestors, family, where we're born, our environment, how far can you get out of that. Is it inevitable that all my father's traits are going to start coming out of me in any given situation. It's just about that feeling of sometimes being completely and utterly trapped and having your life written for you.''

Ashcroft considers The Verve's output a refreshing change from the "surface'' dross dominating the airwaves. "You put on the radio and no one else seemed to be on that vibe, especially in our country it's like everyone was on this flying the flag, we're all great, everything's all right,'' he says in a gibe that seems aimed at Oasis. ``I like going underneath a little bit. That's our job for God's sake. The job isn't to like paint a pretty picture all the time.''

He's fond of comparing himself to directors like Martin Scorsese and Francis Ford Coppola who emerged from New York film schools in the '70s and stamped their identity on that decade. ``I want to look in the mirror in 30 years time and say, "Yeah, at that point in time you were doing it and you were doing it for the reasons you always wanted to do it.' ''

The one sore point about this album is that the band will not collect a cent in royalties to ``Bitter Sweet Symphony.'' The song includes a tiny sample from an Andrew Loog Oldham orchestral arrangement of the Rolling Stones' song ``Last Time.'' Allen Klein, the former Stones manager who owns much of the band's early catalogue, demanded and is now collecting all royalties from the song which is climbing the charts in several countries.

``We were told it was going to be a 50/50 split, and then they saw how well the record was doing,'' says Jones. ``They rung up and said we want 100 per cent or take it out of the shops, you don't have much choice.''

Ashcroft chimes in. ``Obviously at first my reaction . . . I wanted to smash a few doors down. But then you think at the end of the day that song, whoever owns it, we know it's us . . . We've got to go beyond that and realize that song has opened up many doors around the world for us, where people don't know our story about breaking up, they just connected with it.''

His rationalization then gives way to bitterness, trademark bravado and sharp-edged humour.

``On the next album, when we don't go into any of Allen Klein's back catalogue and we make our own symphonies, it makes me burn I'm going to make something so . . . big that you won't believe it and . . . there'll be The Verve and that's it.''

After the outburst, Ashcroft pauses and a grin spreads across his face. ``They (Rolling Stones) just had the biggest hit they've had since `Brown Sugar' probably.''
  • Source: Toronto Star, Pop Music Critic, written by Betsy Powell

05 November 1997

Review: Irving Plaza 1997

Irving Plaza
New York, NY
November 5, 1997

Richard Ashcroft, lead singer of UK sensation-of-the-moment, the Verve, must have visited the same psychic that told Kula Shaker's Crispian Mills that his band was going to be "very busy for the next ten years." Back after an amicable break-up in 1995, the Verve is now riding a massive wave of popularity thanks to their hit single "Bittersweet Symphony," an over the top in rock quality new LP, Urban Hymns, and a wonderful friendship with Verve cheerleader Oasis's Noel Gallagher.

As the house lights went down and the roar of the crowd went up, a blinding beam of laser lights signaled the entrance of the Verve. Guitarist Nick McCabe, bassist Simon Jones, drummer Pete Salisbury, and keyboardist Simon Tong walked out, followed by Richard Ashcroft, ever the consummate showman in matching white shirt & jeans, and the famed black shoes from the "Bittersweet Symphony" video. The band took the stage and launched into "A New Decade," the track from their second LP A Northern Soul's introducing the crowd to a an hour and a half set of pure sonic bliss.

The groovy, pschedelicized set was a mix of the band's three LPs--A Storm In Heaven, A Northern Soul, and Urban Hymns--and had an arena gleam that might be more at home at Madison Square Garden. On songs like "Slide Away," "Man Called Sun," and "Stormy Clouds" various audience members could be seen in a trance-state, often levitating with eyes rolled upward.

On the more subdued tracks like "On Your Own," "Drugs Don't Work," and "Sonnet" Ashcroft strummed away on an acoustic guitar, letting the melody flow and seemingly cleanse his body. "The Rolling People," was the most potent song of the night where the band got to bare their teeth, indeed achieving what they had wished to do all along: Make rock dangerous once again.

Ashcroft kept the onstage chatter to a bare minimum, stopping only to introduce a song or two or say thank you to the adoring crowd. Often, he would beckon the crowd closer and closer, hoping to incite a riot that surprisingly never happened. There wasn't even stage diving or crowd surfing!

Finally, after closing the set with "Stormy Clouds," the band took an extremely short break, only to come back and play the hit song, "Bittersweet Symphony." Complete with a recording of the famed string section, the band pleased the majority of the newer fans, but the real piece de resistance was combined in the last two songs, "History" and Urban Hymns closer, "Come On."

"We're gonna leave you with a fu**ing good one!" Ashcroft chanted before "Come On," a song that closed the show at an apex. Ten minutes of sound that seemed too much for an opening night. After three years away from New York, it was a strong comeback show for the Verve--enough to make a believer out of the uninitiated.
  • Originally featured on The Verve Sunset Strip site run by Matt
  • Spin Magazine, by Arleen Colone

03 November 1997

Fan Review: 9:30 Club 1997

9:30 Club
Washington, DC, USA
November 3, 1997

The Verve live at the new 9:30 Club, Washington DC, 11/3/97

 "….lead guitarist Nick McCabe played most of the show with chin on chest or back to the audience, crafting great, breathing walls of sound." "Amid all the noise, though, the band still found a way to display more personality than ever before. As 'Come On' faded, Ashcroft gave a thumbs-up to the crowd and McCabe, dropping his still-buzzing guitar into the hands of a roadie, lifted chin from chest and - lo and behold - smiled." - ROLLING STONE 

This show was much better than the Atlanta show. Maybe it had something to do with the fact that I had a much better spot closer to the stage. The music was incredibly loud, probably the loudest I've ever heard them. The set list was pretty much the same as Atlanta, except they played Weeping Willow instead of Slide Away. Bummer.

Before they started, I was talking to a 13 year old girl and her mother who were up near the front. The only Verve song the girl had ever heard was Bittersweet Symphony and it was her favorite song. I saw them leaving about three songs in. Richard was fired up and gave a great performance although there seemed to be very little connection between the band and the audience. Most of the time, the band members were just looking over the top of the crowd like someone looking at the ocean.

The highlights were Northern Soul and Stormy Clouds. Both great songs that they didn't play on the Northern Soul tour. Near the end of the show, several people were shouting for Gravity Grave, but Richard just pretended that he didn't hear them and went on with the set.

In conclusion, I just want to say that these last two shows were great, but not even in the same ballpark as the first two in terms of intensity. I think that when a band connects on a personal level with an audience, its one of the most amazing feelings in the universe. Artist and fan becoming one and sharing the power of music. Too often, bands become too popular too fast because of a hit single, and unfortunately, this connection is often a casualty of that success. I don't think the Verve could have played any better than they did at these shows. However, since the crowd was so much bigger, and a lot of these people only knew one song by them, establishing this intimate connection was virtually impossible.
  • Review by Stephen Galloway
-------------------------

Washington, D.C.

Last night was the best night of my life...I'm still stunned at having had my mind *totally* blown away. I'd kill to go to other concerts in the tour if I had tickets, but at least I'll see them at that thing on November 30th, screw studying for finals!

Anyways, here's my story...might be a bit long but I just have to share it (as Urban Hymns blasts on my stereo).

I left campus at 2:00 looking forward to the show, expecting it to be good, but I didn't know how good. I got there at 3:00 pm and there were only two blokes there at that point, which had come from the Atlanta show to D.C. Which was neat cos I pressed them for info on the D.J., who up to that point had remained a mystery to me. Anyhow, at one point the band wanted some pot so they got to go backstage with them for a while and got free beer and some stuff signed. I, of course, sitting outside in the cold got jealous. But then again, it paid off in the end. The video bloke came up to me and was like: "we have three minutes left on our tape, its for a verve documentary, so say something". I think I managed to spit something out but then the other blokes he was with told him he was being cruel so he apologized, lol. Then at around 5:30 this roadie dude came up to me and said "Have you been out here all day? You must be freezing" and then said he would've invited me to the bus if Nick hadn't been hiding..

01 November 1997

Record Collector - This is Music: A Verve History

1990

Aged between 18 and 20, Verve form at college in Upholland in Wigan, Lancashire, drummer Peter Salisbury, bass player Simon Jones, guitarist Nick McCabe and the strongly featured Richard Ashcroft (singer and lyricist), who's "been in bands since he was 17."

15th August: The Honeysuckle pub, Wigan, plays host to Verve's first gig, at a friend's birthday party. Wayne Griggs (alias Music Of The Spheres) DJs - and spins records at every Verve gig since.

1991

3rd February: An eight-song gig at Manchester's famous Boardwalk prompts an enthusiastic review in The Wigan Reporter: "By the second number, they were cooking on gas, singer Richard had the crowd of over 200 eating out of the palm of his hand." Further dates at the venue follow.

9th March: Verve play the decidedly unglamorous Bolton Institute Students' Union.

18th March: "Dole lads on the brink of success", runs the local headline as Verve attract a "packed house" at the Citadel in St. Helens. A demo cassette lures A&R men from WEA offshoot East West: "We're on the dole so we had to save up for a while before we could afford the £200," says Richard. Verve's aim, it seems, is to concentrate on moving the body rather than the mind. "We don't want to be too heavy. We just want people to enjoy our music," says Richard, who modestly predicts Verve will be the biggest band ever. The band return to the Citadel on several occasions.

23rd March: "Wigan's not big enough for the both of us." say Verve as local rivalry prompts more regional publicity over a double-bill with Wigan band, the Tansads, at the town's Mill At The Pier. Verve are adamant they aren't so much supporting as playing the gig "to show Wigan who is boss". In an article under the banner "Band War Breaks Out", Verve state their influences as Funkadelic and, somewhat bizarrely, Aphrodite's Child.

Fan Review: Roxy Theater 1997 (1)

The Roxy Theatre
Atlanta, Georgia, USA
November 1, 1997

The Urban Hymns Tour

My Verve Experience

I am a huge Verve fan. I have been since I first heard them back in 1995. A friend of mine had just bought the Northern Soul CD and played “A New Decade” and “This Is Music” back to back for me, oh so nonchalantly, like it was no big deal. “Oh my God, who is that?” it finally dawned on me to demand. I was hooked from that day forward though I’ve only recently been able to admit it in public. I probably would have remained a Verve addict forever even if there were no other albums…but then I went backwards and discovered “A Storm in Heaven.” It was like offering chocolate to a sugar addict who’d only ever eaten Zotz. My DNA now permanently reconfigured, I had mutated into a new, deeper form of Verve addict, never to be the same again. And I’ve loved every minute of it (except for their last album, but I’m healing.)

 I remember my radio station announcing that not only was the Verve coming to town but they had bought nearly half the tickets to the venue. Their plan was to give them away in pairs every hour until they were gone. Trying to win anything from a radio station is not the normal way I go about attempting to fulfill my life’s goals but since I am so against the exorbitant fees scalped through Ticket Molester, I decided surely I could win at least one pair.

The big day arrived and I had won nary a pair. I finally conceded to pay the mafia and get some tickets for a friend and myself. “Sorry sir but that show is sold out.” taunted the agent’s monotonous, cybernetic response. I was amazed that I had allowed my rage over corporate extortion to so severely jeopardize my chance to actually see the Verve before they faded into oblivion. Still refusing any personal responsibility I decided to hate Ticket Molester even more.

“Come on.” I told my friend. “Let’s go down there. I’ve just got a feeling.”

We got to the Roxy Theater in Atlanta, Georgia just after dark. No help were the usual hustlers whose primary source of income comes from buying extra tickets at or below face value and reselling them at twice that plus a mandatory pay-it-or-I’ll-steal-your-car insurance policy. So we walked on and stood at the back of a long line that had formed along the front wall of the theatre. They hadn’t opened the doors yet so I didn’t know who already had tickets and who had been so stupid as to bank the success of what could be the most rapturous evening in music history on a long-shot radio station give-away.

One bright moment in line was when two very British looking chaps walked around the corner toting a recording deck and a big, furry microphone. I mean they were Brit-ass-ish with their paper-white skin and uncombed, horrible haircuts. They both wore the Ashcroft-special winter jackets with fake fur around the hood’s rim. Eventually they walked up to us, shoved the mic in our faces and asked, “wot do you fink of da Verve?” I think I rambled on about how they were the best thing since Pink Floyd and how our then-defunct band used to write and play Verve-ish music. I didn’t realize it then but my inability to articulate was to play a major role later that evening.

 I decided to walk the perimeter of the building to try my luck someplace away from the rest of the line. In back I found the elite of my kind, The Verve Fan Caravan people. This was a brotherhood of true believers who had dropped everything and decided to follow the Verve instead of the Dead. They offered a version of reality that was like a mobile Amsterdam to the true marijuana aficionado. “Hey, anyone got any spare tickets?” I asked the collective. “Good luck, dude. If anyone here had tickets they’d be inside. Verve fans are hardcore.” I hadn’t yet done the math but he was absolutely right. I couldn’t deny that things were looking grim and they looked even worse when I got back around front.

The doors had opened and it was clear who the idiots were. We, the foolish or unlucky stragglers, stood outside in the cold, barred entry from a once-in-a-lifetime evening of musical redemption. The policemen looming in the darkness kept a keen eye out for any kind of scalping transactions. I made a failed attempt to bribe the doorman who obviously had no idea who was about to play that evening. Then it happened. I don’t remember the precise placement of all involved but I do remember a limousine pulling up along the curb in front of the theatre in seeming slow motion. Now, don’t get excited; it wasn’t the Verve, just three friends getting out to see the show. “Do you have any spare tickets?” I asked under my breath. One of the guys stopped. “Do you know who’s playing tonight?” he asked me.

“Of course. The Verve.” I tried to answer without sounding condescending.

“Do you like them or are you just here for something to do?” He asked.

“Are you kidding? I love them.” I replied. “God, if you have some tickets please let me buy them from you.”

“I’m not going to sell them to you. I’m going to give them to you but you’ve got to prove to me you’re a true fan.” He warned.

“Yes! I’m in!” I internally cheered, certain there was no bigger Verve fan in Atlanta.

“What’s your favorite Verve song?” he asked. In that moment I knew the true, nearly comedic reaction known as choking under pressure. I realized that as much as I loved their music I actually only knew the names of a handful of their songs, and none of them would surface in that moment. “I’ve got all their releases.” I blurted.

 “But what’s your favorite song?” he persisted. “I can’t think of the name but it’s on the EP that starts out, ‘Ah-ah-ah-ah-ah-ah-ahhhhhhhhhhh.” I attempted to sing the beginning of No Come Down. It was all I could come up with amid the terror of actually experiencing the moment when he would grow weary of my babbling and go on to the next person. Thankfully, one of his friends said, “He’s doing No Come Down.”

Here is where stress, like too much alcohol, prevented the memories of the following details from being imprinted but I do know that I eventually wound up with the tickets in my hand. And I’m fairly certain I never collapsed. My friend and I were going to see the Verve in a small venue and all it cost me was a little faith (and a near heart-attack).

Trying to describe a Verve concert to somebody is like trying to describe an acid trip to a watermelon. It’s almost meaningless to use words to describe what only music can communicate. I remember that they played a good mix of songs that spanned their career; it was by no means just an Urban Hymns show. Perhaps the oldest song they played was A Man Called Sun. They played Stormy Clouds and went straight into Reprise. I saw Nick McCabe play fucking Reprise. It was incredible. It was definitely not to be missed and thank God, literally, I didn’t.

I saw the gracious Samaritan who gave me my tickets on my way out after the show had ended. I wanted him to meet my family and to get his address so I could send him Christmas cards every year for what he had done for me. Instead, I tapped him on the shoulder and offered a heart-felt “thanks, and by the way, One Way To Go is my favorite verve song.”
  • By Chris Evans

Fan Review: Roxy Theater 1997 (2)

The Roxy Theatre
Atlanta, Georgia, USA
November 1, 1997

The Urban Hymns Tour

 I pretty much knew what to expect going into this show. Having been a Verve fan since the early days, I was a little let down by Urban Hymns. Don't get me wrong, I love the album, but I couldn't help thinking that it didn't quite live up to its potential.

Richard was exerting his influence more and more and the result was, in my opinion, an album that sounded like it was half The Verve, and half Richard Ashcroft. Furthermore, I had seen some setlists from earlier shows on the tour and knew that they weren't playing many old songs.

Nevertheless, I was very excited to see them. I got to the Roxy a little late and didn't get a very good spot. I was immediately struck by how much bigger this show was than the others I had seen. There were a few thousand people at this one compared to less than five hundred on the Northern Soul tour. Everyone seemed to be really into it though.

A New Decade and Slide Away were over before I knew what was happening. The band seemed a little detached from the crowd which was unfortunate, but they sounded great and everybody was having a great time. The setlist was something like this:

New Decade
Slide Away
This is Music
Rolling People
Sonnet
Drugs Don't Work
Man Called Sun
Northern Soul
On your Own
Life's an Ocean
Stormy Clouds
-------
Bittersweet Symphony
History
Come On

I was a little disappointed that they didn't play Gravity Grave or Superstar, but I really wasn't expecting them to. I had a great time at this show, but I felt like I didn't get the show that I wanted, so I bought a ticket for DC two nights later.
  • By Stephen Galloway

Fan Reviews: Roxy Theatre 1997 (3)

Roxy Theatre
Atlanta, Georgia, USA
November 1, 1997

Whoa...

I don't even know where to begin.

this is going to be one long post, so be ready..................

The weather had been intense all day, lightning at times, threatening, and then sunny gorgeous.....a storm in Atlanta, folks....perfect for the Verve's first US tour date in two years....nature was talking to us....

Devin came by my place before the show.......he gave me my trip shirt and we talked about verve for a long time, about what it meant to us, etc.

We headed downtown towards Buckhead around 3, listening to Hultsfred 94, it was the coolest thing because it started pouring and the highway was misty but then the sun came out and we were listening to the sun, the sea.....yesterday was just one huge metaphor......

As we were driving towards Buckhead, we saw this giant bus and we followed it and when it stopped, I got out and pounded on the door.... the driver told me that Verve was in the Roxy doing a soundcheck...so we went inside. Oh my god, I heard A Northern Soul and I got to my knees and listened to it.....some security guard said are you with The Verve and i said yes. She told me that I wasn't and asked me to leave. At that moment Christopher, who is the band's photographer, he did the black and white photo on UH, came out and I walked right up to him and started talking to him, so she couldn't toss me... I told him that Verve had been my life for the last little while, he told me that I needed to get out more often... Devin had brought a bag with 10 trip shirts for the band and we gave it to them with a card that had two joints in it too. Chris thought it was cool and he promised he would give it to the band...

Record Collector - Sheer Verve



John Reed charts the Wigan bands triumphant comeback

Frowning, awkward, charismatic, single-minded, passionate, intense, gifted, complicated and incredibly striking - Richard Ashcroft is without doubt the Face Of '97. His gaunt expression stares moodily out from newsstands and billboards everywhere, all piercing, deep-set eyes, a pouting expression and razor-sharp cheekbones. He looks like a man in a permanent bad temper but if you look closely -- very closely -- you may just spot the first inklings of a smile.

Ashcroft, you see, has just cause to celebrate. Since the summer, his band the Verve have returned from their two-year, self imposed (neon) wilderness to notch up two jaw-dropping singles, "Bitter Sweet Symphony" (No.2) and "The Drugs Don't Work" (No.1), and a chart-topping third LP, "Urban Hymns" (selling quarter of a million copies in a week, no less). Only now, it seems, had the music caught up with promises of stardom, the hyperbole and features that screamed "rock star", a face which was both Jagger and Richard's and a nose that had survived being broken four times, sacrificed while Ashcroft had pursued as a child his previous dream of playing for Manchester United. Pardon my mischief: other bands are too sheepish or follow trends, sheep-like; from certain angles, Richard Ashcroft simply looks like a sheep.

Back in summer 1995, the Verve's fortunes weren't so rosy: after appearing at the T In The Park Festival, Ashcroft issued a curt statement, out of the blue, announcing the band's demise. No reasons were given; and this from a man who had ravenously courted fame with grand gestures and lofty, self-aggrandising statements ever since Verve's arrival in 1991. Like other 'Manchester' bands before (the Stone Roses) and since (Verve's mates, Oasis), Ashcroft's ardent, heartfelt desire to make Verve special, to lift them exultantly free from the grimy, ever-so-'umble, work-aday nature the inconsequentially - of the indie circuit, had literally defined the band. To say that the Verve figurehead was seen as precious is an understatement.

From the start, the Verve (or, back in those days, just plain Verve before the U.S. jazz label had a moan) reached for the stars. With apologies to R. Kelly, it seemed Ashcroft really believed he could fly - both live and on record. On stage, his idiot dancing and his Tim Burgess-playing-Jesus Christ poses, all 0 mouth pout and vacant stare, fell midway between Primal Scream's Bobby Gillespie (he of the limp-wristed handclap) to the Doors' Jim Morrison (whose narcissistic hogging of the limelight begged comparisons with Ashcroft). On record, too, early Verve vinyl dabbled in a 90s space rock that drifted off into the ether.


Maybe such ferocious ambition was fuelled by the outwardly unglamorous image of Verve's hometown. Even to their more sophisticated urban cousins in Manchester, the mention of Wigan attracts sniggers - "aye, they're pie-eaters oop there, lad. It's all flat caps and whippets." Hmm, but weren't Verve all about spectral soundscapes which painted aural pictures that threatened the space-time continuum, which transfixed their audience - where song titles were meaningless, where one set supporting Spiritualized at the T&C ended with a 25 minute song? Yeah, strange, that: not what you'd expect from Wigan.

The Verve are younger than they look: the original foursome formed in Upholland, just outside Wigan, in 1990 when they were 18ish. Having written songs in their bedrooms, the violently skinny Ashcroft and bassist Simon Jones roped in school friend, drummer Peter Salisbury, followed by guitarist Nick McCabe from their sixth form college, Winstanley. Verve were officially born that August with a local birthday party pub gig and all the ingredients were there, from Ashcroft's meandering vocal wails to the band's, er, meandering, effects-laden music. Hiding behind gaunt features, long hair and skinny-rib attire that shunned Manchester's de rigger Baggy uniform, the band rotated gigs in nearby indie haunts like the Citadel in St. Helens and Manchester's Boardwalk over the ensuing months.

They left an immediate impression. Clearly, everyone (from the numerous major labels who'd responded to demo tapes to early reviewers) was captivated by Ashcroft's star appeal, and the Virgin-funded Hut label snapped Verve up after their first visit to the smoke (that's London, you southerner). By March 1992, on the eve of their debut single, Verve were already attracting ridiculous adulation from some critics (notably, Melody Maker's Steve Sutherland, now NME editor), who all but hailed Ashcroft as the new messiah.

In fact, the jury was out on the band - at least initially. Verve were the next Great White Hope to follow Suede - but whereas Brett & Co. proved to be smart game players in that rocky road between critical favor and commercial news, Verve issued a string of unfocused pieces (songs would be too restrictive a term), which explored instead the possibilities of multi-layered electronic sound. Clouds of ethereal, hypnotic music washed across the speakers like a boat at sea, the waves sometimes crashing violently, at others scarcely creating a serene ripple. Cynics, alternately, denounced them as hippie hogwash, self-indulgent progressive rock created in a druggy haze. As one writer put it, the musicians spent their gigs studying the dust patterns swirling around the heads of their audience.

Their first EP was promising, though. "All In The Mind" was a pleasant assault on the senses, a bleak, dissonant funk workout which finally introduced two longest cousins, Can and the Happy Mondays; "Man Called Sun" was a mesmerizing shimmer of the Doors' "Riders On The Storm"; and the too-long "One Way To Go" probed the same ambiance as Durutti Column or that Stone Roses flip to "One Love".

The follow-up, "Superstar", was even more atmospheric, a ponderous epic which was born heavy but ebbed and flowed like some scary, unpredictable soundtrack; its companion, "Feel", took soporific monotony to new limits before building to a soft destruction, at once beautiful/mellow/dreamy and mind-numbingly boring. True, Verve were following their muse but this was commercial suicide (despite topping the indie chart, they were plainly falling short of their considered potential).
The "Gravity Grave" EP trod water, too, the lead track slumped over a mournful pulse echo, as if the Velvet Underground were interpreting whale noises before drifting into some dream state. "Endless Life" was lulled into submission by monotone, half whispered voices and keyboards - like Pink Floyd's "Julia Dream" after a bad car accident - before emerging from its
stupor to pick a fight with the speakers.

Maybe this is as good a time as any to broach the awkward genre that was 'shoegazing'. The term was invented by the music press to describe the indie scene's drift into aural confection, a wistful music that substituted rock'n'roll raunch for stoned radiance - and ten million effects pedals. Inspired by both the bitter-sweet symphonies (sorry!) of My Bloody Valentine and the choral majesty of the Cocteau Twins, bands like Slowdive, Catherine Wheel, Ride, Chapterhouse, Lush and (to a lesser extent) Curve created a music that evoked colours, hues and moods rather than more obvious emotions. A new psychedelia, if you will. Even Blur were tagged with the shoe-gazing brush (due to Graeme Coxon's penchant for lengthy descents into guitar dissonance).

Verve were different, insofar as their music felt closer to the psych paranoia of Terry Bickers' Levitation, the heroin rocks of Spiritualized/Sonic Boom/Spacemen 3 or the wigged-out experiments of Bark Psychosis. Where many so-called shoegazing acts were too demure, Verve's music felt yearning and hungry; the listener was, according to one fan, "lost in a sensual bath in which you became lost, entranced, irradiated". Despite exuding an arrogant glamour, Ashcroft's stage theatrics were way too absurd for shoe-gazing cool and their improvisational spontaneity was too, how should I put it, Rock.

Their next single, "Blue", was a masterpiece. A rotating rhythm of loping guitars chugged along as Ashcroft offered his most straightforward song to date. Reworking the spirit of Echo & the Bunnymen at their finest or, dare it be said, early Simple Minds, "Blue" felt like the headrush of a good night out. It had a structure. It was a step forward. The other songs, by contrast, felt like a trip to the medicine cabinet the next day, from the leafy, Sunday-setting blues of "Twilight" - acoustic, harmonica and a vocal whimper (think Primal Scream's "Damaged") - to the spooky bedsit balladry of "Where The Geese Go" and the sedative charm of "No Come Down".

Despite their self-aggrandising ideals, Verve's first album, "A Storm In Heaven", had an air of anti-climax. It was received favourably enough, but by summer 1993, music once more had tilted on its axis and Britpop was just around the corner - Blur had just created "Modern Life Is Rubbish". Maybe the problem was more-of-the-same, refinement rather than reinvention. A surefire classic was "Already There", a schizophrenic mix of featherlite touches and grinding guitar shades. "The Sun, The Sea", too, was refreshingly unpredictable, from its sax break (a' la Stooges' "Funhouse") to the momentary madness of wildly mutated guitar, Ashcroft sounding like some desperate, angst ridden crooner - on drugs.

"Slide Away" was the obvious choice as Verve's next single. With echoes of the moodybut-handsome strength of Creation-era House Of Love, the song coupled Ashcroft, all wide-eyed and angry, with flaming guitars sparring over a killer riff. "Butterfly", meanwhile, was a guttural slide blues gem, and the odd flute or brass extended the soundscapes' horizons. But the LP wasn't the masterpiece Ashcroft had promised.

Instead, "A Storm In Heaven" marked the end of an era for Verve. Out went the flowing locks and disorientated and disorientating collages that were forged out of stoned jams. And in came songs which at last fulfilled Ashcroft's burning ambitions - an attitude, incidentally, which the singer attributes to the death of his father when Richard was just eleven. Like Everything But The Girl's Ben Watt, who famously stared death in the face after developing a potentially fatal condition, Ashcroft displays the intense drive of someone who's witnessed the fragility of existence first hand.

In 1995, the Verve returned with a new muscle, a renewed vigour that was born not only of frustration but also of touring with the Black Crowes and enduring spells on Lollapalooza, Penny Farrell's rock'n'roll circus across America. The States, incidentally, welcomed Verve with wide-open arms, hence two export-only collections of out-takes and B-sides, "The Verve EP" and "No Come Down", and an official live bootleg, 'Voyager 1", ostensibly designed for American consumption.
Probably the strongest persuasion to develop, though, was Oasis, who supported Verve on tour in late 1993. The two bands have since maintained something of a mutual admiration society and the streamlined barrage of guitars and attitude of early Oasis must have rubbed off. Inevitably, tales of rock'n'roll debauchery were soon linked to Verve they were banned from London's legendary rock resting place, the Columbia Hotel, for example.

Instead of wallowing in aural dry ice, Verve now felt like a lean, mean blast of hot air. To return to the Floyd analogy, the virginal "Julia Dream" now shared a bed with the hedonistic heavy metal thunder of "The Nile Song". To be blunt, it felt like Verve's balls had dropped.

The first signs of this revelatory pubescent experience was "This Is Music" in brink-of summer 1995. Smack! The grinding, wall-of-sound guitars pummelled you into submission as Ashcroft got straight to the point: "I stand accused just like you of being born without a silver spoon". Impact! The opening statement of intent was even printed on Ashcroft's sandwich-board on the front cover. Whack! No vague underwater ramblings: just a grand, rollercoaster juggernaut as an excuse to celebrate rock'n'roll. Chur-Ching! The Verve went Top 40. Yes!

"On Your Own" was swiftly snapping on its heels - in the nicest possible way, since its roosty acoustic balladry was essentially a vehicle for an Ashcroft love song (yep, proper emotional stuff, with soulful falsetto vocals to boot). Maybe Verve had got a taste of the spirit of Britpop and thought, let's have a slice? Nab. It's just that they'd turned off the effects pedals and written some decent songs.

All of which paved the way nicely for "A Northern Soul", Verve's second album, in July. First impressions begged comparison with the more intelligent aspects of U2, without the pomposity. Ashcroft sounded a tad like Bono, too, or a bleaker Ian McCulloch, but the breadth of vision was stunning. "A New Decade" set the scene - "the radio plays the sounds we make and everything seems to feel just right", bragged Ashcroft, "so come along and listen with me", as the leaden pace was dragged along in the jet-stream of guitars. To Verve, 1995 was the start of a new decade.

What else? Oh, too many songs to mention. "A Northern Soul" itself was a weird spacefunk workout that pulsed along as Ashcroft delivered a cathartic rant: "I'm alive with something inside of me that I can't get out". That bled into the mental confusion of the evocatively-named mindfunk, "Brainstorm Interlude". The anthemic "Knock On My Door" shared grooves and guitar leads with Oasis and the Stones. And the closing "Stormy Clouds"/"(Reprise)" may have dipped somewhat but still carried "A Northern Soul" off towards a spectacular sunset.

But then something snapped and the Verve vanished. For two years. No public reasons were given; Ashcroft and Co. just pulled back from the brink of enormous success and retreated into the shadows. It felt like one of rock's biggest anti-climaxes: after one of the 90s' most blatant exclamations of audacity, a vacuum. As a swansong, Hut went ahead with the next single from "A Northern Soul": the poignantly-named "History" was a yearning, incredibly moving acoustic ballad about lost love that built to a spine-chilling climax. It had that special quality lacking, for example, from Oasis's "Whatever". And its intense string arrangement paved the way for the future.

Occasional stories filtered out later. The Verve had had "differences" with Nick McCabe and were now working with a new guitarist, Simon Tong - but it wasn't to be called Verve. In 1996, Ashcroft then popped up playing some new tunes on acoustic guitar at an American Oasis gig - but nothing more was heard.

Out of the blue, then, Verve re-emerged this summer - swelled by second guitarist Simon Tong. "Bitter Sweet Symphony" was rightly greeted with universal praise, and its canny use of an old string-laden backing track felt like a clever, rock variation on (you know, the music from the Lucozade ad). Its soaring groove perfectly underscored Ashcroft's lyrical quest for identity and the meaning of life - "I feel like a million different people from one day to the next/I can't change my mould" - and the single soared to No.2 as the Verve were hailed as the most important band of the year.

The acoustic lament, "The Drugs Don't Work", went one place better, topping the charts with a sombre tale that wasn't so much a "Just Say No" message as a vehicle for another of Ashcroft's downbeat love songs. It's a beautiful tune but few songs have so captured the Zeitgeist. The single was issued in the wake of Diana, Princess Of Wales' death, when the nation was whipped up into a frenzy of near-hysterical public mourning. Had the tragic accident not happened, Chumbawamba's "Tubthumping" would probably have won out; as it was, "The Drugs Don't Work" caught the mood.

And so to Verve's recent No.1 LP, "Urban Hymns". It shares more with "A Northern Soul" than the reviews would have us believe - though it's more restrained/considered and occasionally Radiohead (U2-like, and heavier on Ashcroft's 'solo' songs, of which "Sonnet" is arguably the finest. To these ears, the album's peaks lay elsewhere in the group compositions. "Rolling People" sports a lolling vibe, menacing and bluesy, "Neon Wilderness" is just that, resembling those sprawling, poetic Doors epics, and the forthcoming single, "Lucky Man", builds to a shuddering climax - Verve's "Hey Jude" or "All You Good, Good People". The album could have been wilder and less predictable - but what the heck.

From nowhere, then, Verve are the most talked about band in Britain. Their performances at Oasis's Earls Court shows were, by all accounts, remarkable and "Urban Hymns" has a mainstream accessibility which should win friends and influence people in foreign climes. "History has a place for us," said Richard Ashcroft in 1993. "It may take three albums but we will be there." Spooky. Damn Spooky.
  • Record Collector, Sheer Verve, November 1997 (No. 219)