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Stone Roses Tears Newport Live 1995

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  • Опубликовано: 4 дек 2011
  • It was 4 December 1995, at the Newport Centre venue, when an innocent gesture by an avid Stone Roses fan caused a near riot.
    Touring their second album, The Second Coming, the band (minus drummer Reni by that point) were still a big draw, despite the lukewarm reception to the album.
    Photo: David Hardacre
    They already had a connection to Newport, having recorded half their first album at the nearby Rockfield studios in Monmouthshire, and the majority of the stop-start sessions of The Second Coming too. They'd hung out in Newport and the famous cherubs from the town's bridge also made an appearance on the album's CD design.
    On the night of the gig, a young student called Nick Fisk was in attendance, wearing shirts representing his two passions of the time. One was a Stone Roses and the other a gold Cardiff City FC away shirt. Fisk takes up the story. "I went to the gig with the Cardiff shirt on top and a Stone Roses 'What The World Is Waiting For' shirt underneath. After what I thought was a particularly good rendition of Breaking Into Heaven I decided to throw the Cardiff shirt on stage.
    "I was surprised a few minutes later when he put it on; I was pretty much dumb-struck to be honest. I remember Mani [bassist] smiling quite a bit. I actually think, like [Brown] said at the time, he put it on because he liked the colour of it. He might not have even realised it was a Cardiff City shirt."
    Local journalist and promoter Kai Jones recalls, "Mani was trying to catch his attention not to put it on. As soon as he did, dozens of people in the crowd started chanting 'City! City!'"
    But Fisk says there wasn't too much response to Brown putting the shirt on. "The reaction in the crowd was as you'd expect: a fair bir of cheering, quite a few shouts of 'Bluebirds!' and so on." There was no indication of what would happen later, after the gig.
    Local photographer David Hardacre was on hand, and it's his photo you see above. He was in the thick of the action: "I was there with [local journalist] Andy Barding. I was right in the thick of a scrap after the gig and threw a few handy ones (in self defence and hurt my hand). Before I was out of bed the following morning I'd sold £1,200 worth of Ian Brown pics to magazines such as Loaded, 442, NME, Melody Maker, Q, Uncut and all the others you can think of. The Sun and Mirror also phoned. The photo continues to sell today. I spoke to Ian Brown at length about it at TJ's a couple of years after, but mostly he spoke (between drags on a special cigarette) in depth about his new Adidas tracksuit."
    Kai Jones adds, "I watched the ensuing rumble outside the Centre from the safety of the bar with some friends, including Dub War while Ian Brown wandered around, with one of those bobble hats with ear flaps, looking oblivious to the chaos he just caused. The 'Roses were incredible though that night - even without Reni on drums.
    Andy Barding disagrees as to the quality of the gig, but illuminates the subsequent crowd trouble. "The Newport show would have been a sort of homecoming, as the 'Roses had been in and out of Newport for some months before that. We'd all seen quite a lot of Ian Brown in TJ's up to that point. But it was pretty dire. The first few songs aside, they stank. Prog-indie. I even remember nodding off in a seat at the side of the Newport Centre at one point. And they'd continue to stink until their merciful demise a year or so later.
    "Anyway. Ian was lobbed a Cardiff City shirt. Like a fool, he put it on. People with small brains kicked off and the glass door at the entrance of the Newport Centre was shattered in a ruck and the cops called. In a couple of hours, Newport's recovering reputation for violence was once more back at ground zero. Nice one, Ian Brown."
    Recollections of the fight / riot / ruckus fade into the background but the gig - as ever - gained something of a legendary status. Almost as if the music doesn't matter, it's the scrap afterwards that became the focal point of the gig. It even turns up in the book Soul Crew by David Jones and Tony Rivers, about Cardiff City's hardcore fanbase, and last year Uncut magazine revisited the story. Fifteen years down the line, it may not have been the most edifying episode in Newport's colourful musical history, but it's one that still gets people talking.

Комментарии • 29

  • @danfernandes5607
    @danfernandes5607 7 лет назад +11

    Favourite Roses song

  • @ShoeGazer
    @ShoeGazer 10 лет назад +9

    Ladies and Gents: the 90's.

  • @blurry67
    @blurry67 12 лет назад +10

    What a tool that Andy Barding is! He blames Ian for bringing the "Newport's recovering reputation for violence back at ground zero". If wearing at foorball shirt at a gig provokes that kind of reaction, perhaps the reputation was well earned! Blame a few idiots from the city, not Ian!

  • @pattutty6977
    @pattutty6977 2 года назад +2

    Beautiful a work of art

  • @heed17
    @heed17 12 лет назад +8

    What an absolute little gem you've unearthed here! Yes there's no Squire on film but Brownie is possibly at one of his best on the Second Coming tour. Doubt we'll hear Tears again since the reunion...

  • @kevinredbadgerwalls6995
    @kevinredbadgerwalls6995 5 лет назад +3

    Love the piano on this

  • @paulcollis9363
    @paulcollis9363 2 года назад +2

    Amazing tune and this

  • @ksbayliss9932
    @ksbayliss9932 3 года назад +2

    I was there and it was awesome

  • @FF-so3su
    @FF-so3su 4 года назад +5

    Ian's vocals are better during the acoustic sections of the gigs, I guess he could hear himself better during those sections of the show.

  • @70newstuffs
    @70newstuffs 11 лет назад +3

    this has been available for probably about 15 odd years on a bootleg video of the entire concert.

  • @josssmith
    @josssmith 11 лет назад +7

    Wrong Squire was there he didn't leave until 1996.

  • @ifanbryon3356
    @ifanbryon3356 5 лет назад

    Class

  • @williamrobinson8151
    @williamrobinson8151 Год назад +1

    I hated how the nme etc would slate ian at these gigs. They should try achieve what the roses did and have a place in many many hearts all over the world.

  • @halcyon289
    @halcyon289 9 лет назад

    I was there, hey Carl Flage , great night yeah ?

  • @NickFisk1
    @NickFisk1 12 лет назад

    Also went to the first gig of the tour, in Cambridge, but didn't have a ticket and touts were asking quite a lot. And funnily enough, I tried saying I was writing for the South Wales Echo. When they couldn't find me on the guestlist, I then tried just running into the venue, but sadly this didn't work! Hung around with couple other ticketless people.The security at the side would not even let us in for I am the Resurrection at the end! Some strange significance then with the shirt saying SW Echo

  • @adamluck3165
    @adamluck3165 Год назад +1

    Roses, roses, lucky boro fc

  • @smileyriley2100
    @smileyriley2100 9 лет назад +3

    Anyone got the footage from the Manc gig 23/12/1995?

  • @2010welshy
    @2010welshy 7 лет назад

    Anymore footage from this gig??

  • @2010welshy
    @2010welshy 11 лет назад +2

    Shame there's no shots of squire,good vid though.

  • @archstanton3763
    @archstanton3763 Год назад

    Ian singing really well, until the full on sonic assault begins, no wonder he struggled. Even then he does well.

  • @williamrobinson8151
    @williamrobinson8151 Год назад

    Love browns dont give a shit im not into it vibe.

  • @miroslavarsov6061
    @miroslavarsov6061 5 лет назад

    ian on heroin distroy song....