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Between
the recording and the release of Being
Boiled ,
the group began to reconsider their stance on live performance. |
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had previously decided against playing live, primarily because
they felt uncomfortable on stage (Philip: "I'm just too
embarrassed about dancing. The others describe me looking like
a clumsy giraffe if I even make the slightest attempt."),
but also because live performance seemed irrelevant to their
work. |
| Philip:
"Other groups get together with two guitars and a drummer
and a singer, and they'll thrash out a song and learn to play
it, and then they'll go out and play it live, and then
maybe get to make a record of it. The first thing we do when
we get anything we like is put it down on a tape, and then see
about adding to it, which is a very different set-up." |
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| However,
frustrated at their lack of progress at the time, the group
were eventually persuaded by friends to play live, assisted
by backing tapes. Their first show took place at Bar 2 in Sheffield's
Psalter Lane art college (above) on June 12th 1978, in front
of a bank of deliberately badly-tuned television sets. The event
is now marked by a plaque at the venue (see Old
Imagery: Miscellaneous). |
| Ian,
describing the group's early live shows: "The tape recorder
would be placed centre stage, where a drummer would be, deliberately,
and all the rhythms and bass would be on there. The show started
with us deliberately walking on and turning the tape recorder
on, and the stuff would start without us playing anything...
which was pretty provocative at the time." |
| Philip:
"It was just so not like a band 'should' be, and
everyone did laugh at us." |
| Martyn:
"Oh, they did. We were a joke in Sheffield. We were an
affront to their sensibilities. People wanted to hit us and
stuff." |
| Ian:
"I remember someone actually threw a pint of beer over
Martyn and his keyboard, which was a bit shocking 'cause we
couldn't afford insurance or anything. So I built a cage to
surround the synth to protect it, which all the writers thought
was a powerful statement of alienation." |
| Philip:
"In fact, it was a beer guard." |
| For
many years, stories of the League making their first television
appearance around this time have circulated, claiming that the
group appeared on the Granada network's What's On TV
show to promote Being Boiled. The stories claim that
Philip was interviewed wearing a wedding dress and that the
network's switchboard was quickly jammed with complaints from
viewers, outraged at Philip's attire. However, this myth was
recently dispelled by Ian, though he was sorry to do so, admitting
it would have been a "nice idea"! |
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