Tuesday, November 23, 2021
Strike against job cuts at Goldsmiths
Wednesday, November 17, 2021
'Close to Me' - Christopher Eccleston and Connie Nielsen in the Rivoli
Channel 4 drama 'Close to Me' is the latest to make use of the Rivoli Ballroom as a location. In the story a fundraising event for refugees in Hastings actually takes place in Brockley Road SE4. Sometime Dr Who Christopher Eccleston and Danish actor Connie Nielsen - sometime Queen Hipployta in the DC universe - tread the boards and wander through the side bars alongside the dancefloor.
See previous posts about the Rivoli - featuring Kylie, Lana del Ray and many more
Monday, November 15, 2021
Joy Crookes - South London Songs
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| Joy Crookes at Queens Road, Peckham |
Singer Joy Crookes has a new album out, Skin, and very good it is too. She's been compared to Amy Winehouse, but she has a great voice of her own and her songs are rooted firmly in 2020s London. Joy grew up at Elephant and Castle and her songs reference various South London locations, notably the Elephant itself on the track '19th floor' which bemoans the changes there: 'Lost the tower where my heart is, Cinema skylines that I don't recognise, Strip the life out of these streets, It's a daylight robbery'. The song mentions 'Bopping down Walworth Road'
'When you were mine', a single from the album, has a Brixton setting - 'Hand in hand, Coldharbour Lane... Smile with a Brixton shine'. The Ritzy cinema and Electric Avenue are namechecked and the video is filmed around Brixton market particularly the area near Brixton Rec.
Joy explored these streets on some of her earlier songs. London Mine (2019) is a kind of hymn to multicultural London with a video shot on Walworth Road featuring local faces including tailor George Dyer. Lyrics include 'Lovers walk Old Kent Road' and Kennington Road is also mentioned.
There are kids playing football at Peckham Town's ground...
...and dancing in the now vanished Elephant and Castle shopping centre.
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Thursday, October 28, 2021
Little Amal comes to Deptford
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| 'Migration is not a crime' says Paddington Bear, picked up this bag from Migration Museum stall on the day. 'Disco Against Fascism' badge from 'We Do Good Disco', whose giant 'campotastic' disco washing machine was set up outside the Albany during Amal's visit. |
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| Photo from LRMN |
Wednesday, October 27, 2021
Open Mic at Telegraph pub
The open mic session at The Telegraph at Earl of Derby pub (Dennetts Road SE14) continues to go from strength to strength. It was a full house last week (21st October) with featured act Bolt the Door. They started out with 'Last night's fun' which as well as being a well known Irish Reel it also the name of one of the best books written about traditional Irish folk sessions (discussed here before). They also played a version of the North East song 'When the Boat Comes In'.
The Open Mic at the Telegraph is on every Thursday, if you want to sing/play turn up early and put your name down.
As for Bolt the Door, they've been booked to play in the pub in their own right, playing there on every second Saturday in the month from 6 pm - next one on 13th November.
Monday, October 18, 2021
An Anti-Slavery Speech in Deptford, 1830
Modern historians of slavery are quite rightly critical of a narrative of British 'white saviours' leading the abolitionist fight, and there is scepticism about the motives of some who may have been concerned for instance with wider colonial interests (such as undermining the French in the Caribbean who were arguably more dependent on the slave trade continuing).
It is important to recognise that slaves themselves continually resisted slavery and in this sense were a key driving force in its abolition. There is an echo of this within this speech, with a reference to the successful slave revolution in Haiti (described as Saint Domingo here): 'Who can for a moment doubt that this great island, under the dominion of a free negro population, situate in the very centre of the West Indies, and contiguous to the large and populous islands of Cuba and Jamaica on the one side, and Porto Rico on the other; who I ask, can doubt that the government of that island, will take every occasion to stir up the surrounding slaves to insurrection?'. The author uses this threat to argue that the abolition of slavery is actually in the interests of the 'white inhabitants' as the alternative is that 'the lives and immense property of the colonists be thus exposed to destruction'.
Some of the specific proposals put forward here seem rather feeble now, such as the suggestion of gradually abolishing slavery by starting with young women (whose children would then be born free).
Nevertheless it is also important to acknowledge that rank and file slavery abolitionists were putting forward what was, in the context of the growing British Empire, a principled and radical assertion of equality and opposition to racism.
Of course there is criticism of how slaves are treated: 'And, now then ye degraders of humanity ! -the best of your slaves are allowed but one pint of corn meal for their day's allowance, which is no more, and no better, than that which every gentleman's sporting dog has in England. They are flogged - abused and mutilated, whether feeble, decrepid, or lame, - spurred on to a laborious task, in a sultry climate, without encouragement or reward'.
But more than this there is a recognition that slaves are people with the same rights to liberty as anybody else: ' although the system of negro slavery demands all the force of intellect in its defence, yet it requires only a sense of justice , an universal sentiment of execration, and a determined intention to do unto others , "as we would they should do unto us ”. It requires I say, only the belief and practice of that one golden precept of our holy religion, to induce us, at once, to hate, to despise, and to abolish it [...] I am sure you must all feel such a just sense of horror at the thraldom, which is entailed upon the black, by his merciless owner, who differs from him only in the colour of his skin, and an anxious desire of breaking their bonds?'.
At the end of this meeting in Deptford, 'Several resolutions were then read and carried, and a Petition praying the Total Extinction of Colonial Slavery adopted'. Those involved obviously wanted to disseminate the message further as they took the trouble to print it. We are told that it was available in Deptford 'sold by Warcup, Broadway; Ellis, Lower Road' and W. Brown, printer, High Street; also by J. Cole, London Street, Greenwich'.
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| 1850 sketch showing the chapel next to pub and railway line |
Tuesday, October 05, 2021
Monday, October 04, 2021
BBNO - new brewery at Mordern Wharf
Out for a bike ride round the Greenwich peninsula last weekend we saw some people drinking at tables next to a warehouse on the riverside at Morden Wharf. So of course we stopped to investigate and had a quick drink - just one, hey we were cycling.
The site is the new home for South London craft brewery BBNO (Brew by Numbers), moving from previous location in the Enid Street railways arches in Bermondsey - though their taproom will remain open there as well as their barrel store in Peckham. The new site in its early stages of development but you can already choose from a wide range of beers and sit at tables inside or out. The brewery hosted the Riverside Beer Festival there last month.
Monday, September 20, 2021
Music Monday: Broadside Hacks
Monday, September 13, 2021
Croydon racist protest outnumbered
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| London Anti Fascist Assembly banner |
Sunday, September 05, 2021
Dub London - nights of raving
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| Photo of Saxon Sound in exhibition - taken at Lewisham Riverdale Centre in 1982 it includes Maxi Priest (also Lezlee Lyrix now Prof. William Lez Henry) |
My favourite bit was a wallpaper of flyers, many of them from Saxon parties in the 1980s. Lots of South London venues featured in this including:
The Eve Pool Club, 13 Upper Brockley Road Parade
Lewisham Boys Club, 1-9 Horton Street SE13 ('A Saturday Night Jamboree' in May 1982)
Deptford Crypt [St Pauls Church], February 1982 with Saxon, Young Lion and 'Revolutionary A1 sound from Lewisham'.
Club Harmony [aka Harmony Hall], Childers Street, Deptford - Fe.b 1982 'Night of Raving' with Saxon and Sir Coxsone Outernational
New Moonshot Club, Fordham Park SE14, July 1982 with Saxon and Nasty Rockers from Brixton
51 Lewisham Way - 'Night of Cool Runnings' in March 1982
Dick Sheppard Youth Centre, Tulse Hill SW2
Temple 62, Railton Road SE24 ('Wanna have ah Nice Time? STEP-it down ah Front Line!' with Saxon and Front Line International in 1983)
Late Night Cruise on a boat from Greenwich Pier (the MV Swanage Queen) in June 1982
22 Clyde House, Sumner Road, Peckham
Would be great to hear memories of these nights and others like them.
Sunday, August 29, 2021
Extinction Rebellion back on Blackheath - if not now, when?
Sunday, August 15, 2021
Music Monday: The Battle of Lewisham 1977
The accompanying video features various local faces and was filmed at locations significant on the day, including Clifton Rise SE14 and the Lewisham Clock Tower.
'In Clifton Rise and New Cross Road, many decent people showed,
to oppose their racialism and far right fascism...
The people united won't be defeated'



















































