One of the many interesting things about the grass-roots scene is that new artists are constantly breaking through. We all like a bit of variety and Allan’s no exception whether it’s a new venue or a new artist. Here are some of the artists that he shot for the first time this year.

 I must admit that I would get really bored if I was just photographing the same people in the same venues every week, so it’s great to see new artists starting up, passing through on tour or moving to London; it keeps things fresh. Here are a few artists that I pointed my lens at for the first time this year.

Ophelia Ray

I saw Ophelia a few minutes before she went on stage at Water Rats as part of the support line-up for Vambo and knew that she was going to look interesting under stage lighting; I wasn’t wrong. The lighting in Water Rats can be a bit unpredictable so when you get the right combination you need to capture it quickly. What I didn’t know about Ophelia is that she’s also a model; that became obvious as she strutted her stuff through her set. This shot looked good as a monochrome, but the contrasting colours work well.

Ebony Buckle

I was invited along by Cat Hockley to a Rachael Sage gig at The Pheasantry on the King’s Road in Chelsea. Normally I’m with Elvis Costello on this one, but Rachael’s an interesting performer and it’s always good to catch up with Cat. The support was from Ebony Buckle; I spent the entire evening trying to work out where I’d seen her before. Was it at a gig or somewhere else. It was definitely somewhere else; when I checked online I discovered that she’d appeared in an episode of ‘Inspector George Gently’ as a folk singer, surprisingly enough. Here’s a shot from her set.

Rachel Croft

A perfect example of breaking my own photographic rules. This time it was the one about focussing on the eyes. 229 The Venue received a post-COVID grant and invested it in all the right areas, improving the sound system and general production values. This shot was taken while some new lighting gear (and a hazer) were being bedded in and the hazer was used a bit enthusiastically a few times. Cameras don’t really like a lot of haze (which is why Lightroom has a dehazer function) so you have to wait for it to settle before you can get a decent shot. Eventually the lighting on Rachel’s hair and a few wisps of haze combined perfectly.

Cali Rivlin

I got a Facebook message midweek to ask what I was doing on Friday night and fortunately the answer was nothing. Cali Rivlin was doing a gig at the Toulouse Lautrec Venue in deepest south-east London and I was going along to take a few shots. Cali’s a fabulous jazz singer and interpreter of songs and her performances are always really animated; there’s always something interesting to shoot. It was a cabaret setting where shooting angles were restricted but I managed to grab a lovely shot where everything just fits perfectly. Cali loved it as well.

Sunniva Bondesson

Ray Jones from Talentbanq saw Baskery play at Cambridge Folk Festival and decided that he had to book them for a London gig at 229. The band is 3 sisters, Stella, Sunniva and Greta, who all sing and play, respectively, upright bass, guitar and 6-string banjo/percussion combination. You can pick your description of their music from Nordicana, Swedish folk (with some dark elements) and rock. For most of the set, Stella and Sunniva managed to avoid decent lighting until Sunniva stepped forward to the front of the stage (which was perfectly lit) for her big guitar solo. After that it was just a question of picking the best shape.

Guitarists; like Madonna, they love to strike a pose, don’t they? It’s all very well playing great solos, but you have to look good at the same time because you might have a halfway decent photographer at the gig. I don’t think it’s an ego thing, I think it’s subliminally taught at the various pop/rock schools and colleges – who teaches guitar players at those institutions? Yep, older and more experienced guitar players. Here are a few shots that either confirm or subvert those plank-spanker stereotypes.

Si Connelly @Water Rats

What I really like about this shot of Si is that he’s so still. Anyone who has seen him live will know that he’s a bit like Taz on stage; a complete whirlwind, throwing his guitar around and kneeling on the stage, but I managed to capture him perfectly lit, with nice contrast and upright. Si’s an incredible performer and it was good to catch him taking a little time out.

Dan Owen @Crypt Lates, St Martin-in-the-Fields

Dan Owen is a master of his instrument, whether he’s playing acoustic or electric you can guarantee that you’re going to hear something special. His raw voice is perfectly suited to the songs he delivers. He’s also a very physical player who likes a bit of a stomp around on stage while he’s playing, which means that there are a few dramatic moments to capture. Here’s one of his characteristic stomps.

Matthew, The Molotovs @229 The Venue

While we’re on the subject of raw energy, how about The Molotovs? Matthew, Issey and Ice are all under eighteen and still developing as a band at the moment as they write more of their own songs. When they hit the stage some magic happens as the adrenaline kicks in and Ice’s pounding drums and Issey’s thumping bass create a platform for Matthew’s singing and playing as he whirls and leaps around the stage. There’s a lot happening on stage and it’s just a question of having the camera pointed in the right direction at the right time. The shot works quite well in black and white, but the warm colours and contrasts really work in colour.

Daybreakers @Slim Jim’s Liquor Store

Sometimes you get results because you’re having to work around things like lighting that’s not ideal and lots of people on a small stage. I found a nice shooting angle (which meant I got a nudge every time someone went downstairs to the toilets) but it paid off when Aidan, the guest guitar player and bass player Conor Cotterill all had the necks of their guitars at slightly different angles to create a bit of structure out of a very busy scene. The expression on the guest player’s face is the icing on the cake.

Joanne Shaw Taylor @Shepherd’s Bush Empire

This was a last-minute thing. My friend Richard Bolwell from MNPR magazine couldn’t make the gig and asked me if I was available to cover it. I hadn’t seen Joanne play before and I always like a pit shoot at The Empire. Except it was cabaret seating and no pit, so the order of the day was keeping out of the way of the people in the expensive seats at the front and grabbing a few interesting shots. The positives were that the lighting was perfect and Joanne is incredibly photogenic. Probably one of my favourite shots of the year.

wah-scrollerThere was a time in the mid-eighties when the north-west of England, and Liverpool in particular, dominated the music scene. The Crucial Three, Pete Wylie, Ian McCulloch and Julian Cope, were at the top of the pile, bursting with creativity, vision and sheer audacity and never short of an outrageous quote for the press. Fast forward thirty years and Ian McCulloch’s in semi-retirement, Julian Cope’s a scholar and novelist, and Pete Wylie’s still doing what he does best; as the t-shirt says ‘Part-time rock star, full-time legend’. Which is why I was wedged in to a heaving crowd at The Water Rats in Kings Cross, watching him prove it, with the current incarnation of The Mighty Wah. He’s still got it.

The room was packed with fans from the eighties, London-based Scousers and even Liverpool-based Scousers, so he didn’t really have to warm them up. As soon as the stage lights went up, it went, well, chicken oriental, as they say in these parts. Pete Wylie’s gained something that you wouldn’t have expected from his eighties pronouncements; he’s learned to have a bit of a chuckle at his own expense. The chats with the audience between songs are sometimes funny, sometimes political (Thatcher and Trump) and sometimes fond reminiscence (Pete Burns and Wylie’s good friend Josie Jones, who was commemorated with the criminally under-rated “4 11 44”). There was plenty of nostalgia, but some powerful new material as well.

When the band kicked into “Come Back” as the second song in the set, it was an acknowledgement that Pete Wylie has anthems to spare, he didn’t need to save this classic for the end of the set. The rest of the set included “Heart as Big as Liverpool”, “Seven Minutes to Midnight” (record of the week in four music papers), “Story of the Blues” and a version of “Sinful” which morphed into “Heroes” as a Bowie tribute. Just when the audience thought he’d run out of anthems, for the encore the band blazed through “I Still Believe”, a new song from the album that’s as good as anything he’s ever written. The album’s called “Pete Sounds”; now that’s what I meant by audacity.

For ninety minutes, a little corner of Kings Cross turned into mid-eighties Liverpool. Trust the t-shirt; Pete Wylie is an absolute full-time legend.