Scarfolk Council did not approve of popular music unless it could be utilised as an indoctrination tool. In fact, most music was banned unless it contained subliminal messages which had been approved by the council's department of social education.
Scarfolk's first music festival in 1973 was only given the go ahead with the stipulation that all bands play songs which contain backmasked content. Additionally, they had to perform the songs backwards so that the subliminal messages could clearly be heard and understood by the audience.
Infamously, local prog-group Beige's* performance of their 3-hour epic song-cycle about a school gym teacher with missing-personality disorder contained subliminal elements that triggered mass hysteria. Many audience members hallucinated seeing in the sky the shape of satan with a trident, though others argued that it looked more like an intercontinental travel plug.
*For more information about Beige go here.
Not too different a bill from many local festivals today judging by the acts' ungainly-cum-wacky names (eg 'The 1975' - one of your's?)
ReplyDeleteI like to think I am as tolerant as the next guy, but i think we all agree, at least the majority of us, single personality freaks really should be in detention centres... - AD
ReplyDeleteI was actually a roadie for The Crucifixion Pyjamas at this gig. The mass hysteria to which you refer was thankfully (almost) successfully erased from my memory by a year-long course of Alzheimerological Treatment and a constant supply of Dementiaflumothyozide tablets, which I take to this day. I think. Or was it the Second Hand Puddings? Anyway, normality was soon restored. And as I say, bless the baby Jesus for that. And his brother. Amen.
ReplyDeleteA lucky roadie, I have to say ! Like all people who escaped Scarfolk through a hand-made space-time continuum machine, all the band members was erased at a Jonestown, Guyana concert in 1978.
DeleteNot sure anyone would get "The Gay Cows" in 78. Sounds way too 1996
ReplyDeleteAny of the posters for this still around? I'd love one for my wall. Sausage Warfare were amazing! My hair caught fire after lighting up my chipolata for the ballad.
ReplyDeleteFondlebum were a great band - never sold out. Of course, it's hard to sell out when you're never off the sex offenders register...
ReplyDeleteIs this the one where there was a warning on the brown ale ?
ReplyDeleteI saw the Amiable Poos - they were shit. In a likeable sort of way.
ReplyDeleteHitler likes Twix !!great band names
ReplyDeleteStill cracks me up. A festival t shirt would be a winner.
ReplyDeleteIf you haven't heard 'Stool Pigeon', the seminal second album by The Amiable Poos, you haven't lived.
ReplyDeleteIf you haven't heard 'Stool Pigeon', the seminal second album by The Amiable Poos, you haven't lived.
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