BEFORE
Yes.
Yes, it exists in the dark
recesses of the human minds.
Millions of people secretly believing.
Think of the immense power of all these people combined together.
Makes this place become a reality, hmm?
- The Doctor
Thousands of
years ago, which can’t be right, I lived on top of a hill and next to a
park. In October 1987 there was a storm
and a lot of trees came down. It made
getting to school more difficult than it had been previously.
I drifted
into music slowly, graduating via cassette and radio audio adventures that
usually had some cinematic link until I ended up owning a record player that
looked like a coffin: a very long wooden box with inbuilt speakers and the
potential to stack records for continuous play (just like a juke box). I think it was saved from tigers or something
but I’ve no real idea where it came from.
School was
getting less and less interesting at the same speed that I was getting hairier
and more obsessed with comics. It
happens to us all in some way or another.
Fields of the Nephilim grew out of Carl McCoy’s
childhood hobbies. These were planted in
the embers of a band called The Mission1
and watered with copious amounts of
lager. The music press wasted lakes of
ink as they totally missed the point – like they had with Bauhaus – and continued misnaming a scene that should’ve
included Joy Division in its list of
members’ interests. At about the same time,
a band called The Mission2 were listening
to Motorhead and making the final
arrangements that led to being barred from The Sisterhood in perpetuity.
This is all
set in a time where music mattered. The
metamorphosis of puberty arrived in time to symbiotically graft itself to music
and reading, giving a one-size-fits-all identity and, finally, a tribe. Information was expensive and coded in a
bush-telegraph of fanzine articles, gig-lists and flickering glimpses in the
grown-up big sheets. At a pinch, Record Collector and Kerrang were shovelling filler into the hungry and unfillable
chasm, hollowed out by all that angst.
Although
I’ve got a map of my past dotted with highlighted markers to show where and
when I purchased their singles, albums, bootlegs and so on, I can’t remember
where I first heard Fields of the Nephilim.
The Nephilim 2x12” #1735
Our Price, Bristle |
I tore the
front sticker slightly when slipping it off the cellophane. The bottom left hand corner came off, but I
stuck it back on in more or less the right spot.
Psychonaut
Our Price, Bristle
|
Picked up in
the same session. I must’ve had Our Price
vouchers. I wrote to the Neff fan
club3 and asked for information about the songs I’d
misremembered from the back of a VHS.
Forever Remain VHS
HMV in Bristle, after a lot of coveting |
At this
point I still hadn’t seen any pictures of the band, so the full live Neff experience was a
bit of a surprise – they didn’t look anything like that on record.
Burning the
Fields (green)
Fan club3
|
This came
with a shiny badge and two posters.
One of the posters was for a cancelled gig in Edinburgh and covered acres. I hung it up on the side of the building I lived in during my first year at college, with hilarious consequences. |
But Can Spock Do
This?
Bristle’s Bierkeller,
Bristle (record fair)
|
Interview 1987
7” blue vinyl
Replay, Bristle
|
Flour Power #201
Cardiff’s Saint David’s Hall, Cardiff
(record fair)
|
Returning to
Gehenna
HMV, Bristle |
One school
trip to Stratford
saw the coach stuck in traffic. The teacher asked if
anyone had any cassettes they could play to stave off the boredom. I handed down my home-bootlegged copy of Returning to Gehenna and,
blow me, they played it. This was a fun
way of making myself a pariah for the rest of my school days.
Power
Our Price, Weston Super Mare
|
Preacher Man
Our Price, Weston Super Mare
|
I picked up both
of these as the worthwhile part of a geography field trip. The shop
assistant was so excited that someone had finally
bought Power
that he couldn’t stop talking. I bumped
into the same chap on another geography field
trip in Weston Super Mare4 where he remembered
me, loudly, in front of the rest of the class. In the end, I failed geography.
Moonchild
(longevity)
Replay, Bristle
|
Yes, it was
embossed.
Dawnrazor LP
Spillers, Cardiff
|
Dawnrazor US LP
Our Price, Bristle
|
The first
time I spent more money than I should’ve in order to hear Blue Water.
Psychonaut
Spillers, Cardiff |
Much better
cover.
Psychonaut
Record Shop
in Cornwall,
where I’d been dragged on safari |
Moonchild (second
seal)
Record Collector
|
I love the
post and I love getting things through the post. At about this time I was getting letters and
artwork from 2000AD alumni quite often, which put me on an up for the whole
week. I’d taken to cycling around and
around and around, often through the night.
Occasionally I’d ride up to the sorting office very, very early in the
morning and see if there was anything there for me. Sometimes there was.5 Yes, it was
embossed.
For Her Light
(Two)
HMV, Bristle |
(dead but
dreaming) For Her Light
HMV, Bristle |
I bought the
CDS and 12” with a print. Paddy had taken the day
off school to play ‘Hicks in the City’ and managed to buy a promo copy of the
CDS that shouldn’t have been available.
Neff anecdote #1 |
My Neff badge got spotted
by a chap behind the counter of one of the Watershed’s gift shops. He
told me his mate Richard made some videos
for them, which didn’t impress me in the slightest because I hadn’t seen
any. Who’d be young, eh?
Cheltenham’s
Town Hall, Cheltenham, support from Loud – 2 August 1990.
This was
special. This was a birthday gig for me,
my friend Gruff acting as guardian chum for the evening. Loud were
outstanding, which came as a shock. The Neffs were marvellous, being all real and everything, but the
songs were a bit different, with the then-unheard Elizium stuff appearing in
a confusing form – Submission live didn’t sound much like the remixes on the single... At this point I was still trying to work out
how I understood this band. They were a
laughing-stock at school. The venom in
the derision was acidic. They didn’t
look like they sounded, they didn’t sound how they felt and they didn’t feel
anything less than transubstantiational.6
Elizium
HMV, Bristle
|
Took the day
off school, headed to Bristle, bought the LP and CD off the shelf then headed
straight back and listened to the CD once, because that evening the Neffs were playing…
Bristle’s Studio, Bristle,
support from Creaming “Here’s a song that Robert Smith wrote for us” Jesus. – 24 September 1990.
Bless my
cotton socks, it’s in the New (Musical Express).
Sumerland
HMV, Bristle
|
Sumerland
HMV, Bristle
|
Sumerland
HMV, Bristle
|
The three
editions of Sumerland were all limited release – available
for one week only – in a (pointless) attempt to break the charts. I skipped school and headed to Bristle, once
again paying more money than I should’ve just to hear Blue Water.
Morphic Fields VHS
Our Price, Gloucester |
Don’t ask.
Earth Inferno
Worlewind Records, Clevedon |
For some
reason I only bought the cassette version of this. And, until this year, the only format that I owned
this on. I’d moved up from the bike now,
flying up and down the lanes that surrounded Hell in a friend’s car. Days spent driving up and down and around and
around – never really watched the Visionary
Heads VHS (Our Price, Bristle) either.
The Sacred and
the Profane
Spillers, Cardiff
|
London’s Forum, London, 30 April 1991.
The final UK gig by the
original line-up. It did feel a bit
portentous, they opened with Preacher Man and
all. I’ve never managed to track down a
copy of Festival of Fire, the supposed bootleg of this gig, which isn’t
for lack of trying.
During all
this time I had a band up and running.
We were embryonic and played a lot of cover versions.7 Unable to handle the competition, the Neffs called it a day and Nod’s
Corner was pulled.
The Lost Ones
Replay, Bristle |
This knocked
the cotton socks off Earth
Inferno. The shop
owner insisted that the sleeve was supposed to look
like that. I had my doubts. My favourite Neff bootleg up until I heard Memoriam, which is stunning.
I picked up
the limited edition 2CD and managed pay more money than I should’ve, just to
hear the Blue Water b-side. And Psychonaut Lib I,
the cassette mix.
During my
third and fourth years in college, I flogged practically everything to Moonlight Records,
Wrexham.
Bought the
cassette on a whim. Listened it to bits.
That’s about
it for one century.
One More
Nightmare
Spillers, Cardiff
|
I’d been
following the rumours on the internet.
From the Fire
Tested
really badly when premiered on a radio show, mostly because it was
dreadful. I didn’t buy it, couldn’t see
the point. It didn’t even have a live
version of Blue Water.
|
Fallen
HMV, Newport8
|
Power, Preacher Man, Burning the
Fields (green) – Kelly’s Records, Cardiff. Fired by something approaching enthusiasm, I
vowed to replace the gaps in my Neff
collection.
Interview 1987 12” black vinyl
Lost Chord, Glasgow
|
Blue Water (finally) (and Loud)6
Lost Chord, Glasgow
|
Earth Inferno LP (and Loud)6
Missing, Glasgow
|
Mourning Sun
HMV, Glasgow
|
Live in Dusseldorf
HMV, Glasgow
|
Ceromonies
Fopp, Glasgow
|
Genesis and
Revelation
HMV, Glasgow
|
This dodgy
boxset can also be found in Hillhead library.
Fields of the Nephilim Five Album Boxset
Love Music (nee Avalanche), Glasgow
|
Glasgow’s 02’s Academy,
Glasgow, support The
Mission.2 - 14 December
2013.
In the end,
everything’s connected.
1.
No, not that one.
2. Yes, that one.
2. Yes, that one.
3. Sorry, “Information Service”.
4. Insert Jeffrey Archer/John Cleese/Coil joke here.
5. And often, it’d been there for a while, undelivered.
6. This doesn’t go anywhere: LOUD – memories and thoughts – purchasing… Jaz Coleman, D Generation – Cambridge, same record shop I found Anaconda in. The only support band to win over the fans.
7. FotN: Preacher Man and Submission. TSoM: Alice (in the middle of Preacher Man), Floorshow, Temple of Love. U2: Bullet the Blue Sky. Mish:2 Hymn (for America), Deliverance, Wasteland. Stooges: 1969. Marillion:2 Three Boats Down From the Candy. We also played a few of our own songs, including a couple that later turned up here, but no Kate Bush or the Queen. Bah.
8. Neff anecdote #2. I made a faux pas with the member of HMV staff who sold me this. She looked exactly like someone I sort of knew and so I struck up an over-familiar conversation with her that must’ve been an unsettling experience from her point of view.
9. Obviously it can’t possibly be the same one.
Even though the sticker’s got the same damage…