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Justin Currie



Last Updated: 11/24/2009

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Status: Single
Country: UK
Signup Date: 9/14/2005
Sunday, April 27, 2008 
From the interstate New Jersey mostly appears to be an industrial scale service area for New York City - warehousing, processing plants, railroad yards and depots. We emerge from the Holland tunnel into the 21st century Disney-fied and strangely sedate Manhattan. No clamour anymore, no insane rush of adrenalin, no filth except the filthy rich. Successive mayors have expunged pretty much everything that made New York unique and now it's safer and calmer and a great place for the wealthy to shop and school their kids. I miss the old version, the eighties bankrupt, crazy capital-of-the-known world version. I guess you'd find that buzz now in Rio or Shanghai. In the U.S. everything gets suburbanised eventually, even the vertical. But I'm an outsider scratching a square inch on the surface of a city containing four times the population of Switzerland and New York is still out there, in there, but not right in your face like it was.
It is a fairly leisurely day. Check-in, sound-check and then a wander through the streets around the venue to find places to shoot more pictures with the snapper, Geoff. He has me sit under the awning of a little Korean bar and then asks the petite waitress, Cindy, to take a shot of us both. Geoff's big Canon camera looks like a cinder block in her two hands but she persists and shoots off a few decent frames.
The gig is in Joe's Pub which despite its homely name is an upscale arts theatre bar/ restaurant. It's an early show - seven ten, so not exactly raucous. I think we do pretty well. We don't tear the roof off, we don't tear anything except perhaps the corner from a paper napkin.
Unusually for me in New York I have a reasonably early night and wake up to a long, quiet sponsored walk filing past the front of the hotel. After breakfast in the nearest diner I emerge to the now empty street to watch a dapper old dude with dyed hair, bow tie, a sky-blue jacket, navy blue flared slacks and royal blue loafers make some quip to two stout female traffic cops. As they guffaw together a really old guy comes out of the news-stand behind me asking, "What's happening - are they fighting? Hoo, I'd like to see that."
So I'm back on the road bound for the city of wholly heterosexual brotherly love and the final date of this short jaunt around the U.S.A. I have fond memories of Philly, meandering through the streets in high summer, admiring the architecture in a post New York reverie. History happened here, the Declaration, the Constitution, the Liberty Bell. But history happens everywhere, they just don't teach it in school. The city's dense clump of skyline appears beyond a wide bend of the Delaware and we come upon a tail-back, our first of the trip. It's symbolic of my slowing and stopping. My momentum will diminish and I'll soon be marooned again, nothing flowing past the windows but the wind and the light things caught in it.
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karen_in_ny

 
The show was great in Joe's Pub last night! Have fun tonight. Next time there are East Coast gigs I will plan ahead better and make it to Philadelphia.
 
Posted by karen_in_ny on Sunday, April 27, 2008 - 8:25 PM
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Lori
Lori Weinstein

 
Funny you should mention it Justin, but I had a convo with a friend just 3 days ago about how we both missed NYC in the 70s & 80s. We went on for ages. While I love living here, I totally agree with you that its just not the same anymore. Times Square is one giant lit up billboard...I miss walking by the seedy old movie theaters and going into the arcades to play some video games. Its changing all over the city......:(
 
Posted by Lori on Sunday, April 27, 2008 - 8:45 PM
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Louis

 
Just out of the shower and reading my email I notice that Jason has yet another post his myspace. America seems to have activated his interest in communicating to his fans once more. I can’t help feeling that he will write better songs than his latest album when he returns home... don't get me wrong I really like this guy's music and have spent many an hour listening to Del Amitri while sipping the last few drops from a bottle of wine. I took some friends to see him in Manchester and Liverpool a few months back and we really enjoyed the shows, although in Liverpool the noise of the band on the upper floor did spoil the occasion some what.

Anyway Cathy and I have been hard at work building the patio so we can invite some friends round in the summer, actually we are doing it ourselves because the extortionate quotes we have received prompted my wife to crowbar me off the sofa, thrusting a spade into my hands and ordering my to dig.

Mesmerized by the rotation of the cement mixer my mind wondered to a time when all this tortuous manual labour would be completed and I could resume my rightful place on the sofa watching football (soccer to you yanks). It occurred to me that we should have a grand opening for the upcoming patio completion; a polished brass plaque mounted on the conservatory wall would look good.

In lime street station Liverpool there is a plaque "Opened by Princess Ann and Cpt Mark Phillips" alas they parted some years ago. This got me thinking that I needed some auspiouse person to open the slate and granite patio; I wonder if Jason Curry would do the honours and open our patio for us. So Jason, if you are free later this year and don't mind doing a few acoustic numbers on your guitar drop me a line.

I will etch a brass plaque with “Opened by Jason Curry songsmith and all-round genius - summer 2008” in anticipation.


Ta

Louis
 
Posted by Louis on Sunday, April 27, 2008 - 9:07 PM
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Kinse

 
Aahhh ..I'm genuinely gonna miss the States when you come back Justin....p.s Unfortunately the old Manhattan buzz has not migrated to Shanghai. Starbucks and KFC yes, bohemian abandon ..No.
 
Posted by Kinse on Sunday, April 27, 2008 - 10:05 PM
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Beth

 
Kinse,
I had such a laugh when I saw your "avatar' because my boyfriend and I were just emailing these found "dummy" album covers back and forth a few months ago. We discovered Erick and Beverly. Some are unbelievable. I'm sure you have seen some of these, but just in case you have not:
http://purgatorio1.com/?p=235

Our personal fav is Geraldine and Ricky, "Trees Talk, Too."
There actually is a whole story about Geraldine and Ricky, apparently Ricky was lost by the airlines post 9/11, sad but true.

Total agreement about NYC as a former New Yorker, myself.

Take care,
Beth
 
Posted by Beth on Tuesday, October 14, 2008 - 7:51 PM
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Kinse

 
Aahhh ..I'm genuinely gonna miss the States when you come back Justin....p.s Unfortunately the old Manhattan buzz has not migrated to Shanghai. Starbucks and KFC yes, bohemian abandon ..No.
 
Posted by Kinse on Sunday, April 27, 2008 - 10:05 PM
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the last to know

 
"My momentum will be diminished and I'll soon be marooned again." It's how I felt coming back from the UK.

As if it matters.
 
Posted by the last to know on Monday, April 28, 2008 - 12:19 AM
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Rachel Wifall

 
So when is your travelogue coming out in paperback? You're as much a writer as a musician, it seems to me.
 
Posted by Rachel Wifall on Monday, April 28, 2008 - 2:59 AM
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The Nightfillers

 
Has Justin changed his name to Jason?
 
Posted by The Nightfillers on Monday, April 28, 2008 - 10:19 AM
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Windowlicker

 
Dear Jason,

your little travelogue is giving me itchy feet, it's either that or these new socks.

By the way, I didnt know that Switzerland was a standard unit of measurement, it has now joined the ranks of double decker buses, football pitches, elephants and 'to the moon and back'.

As my old granny used to say to me, 'get off the greenhouse you little bugger'.

Yours irreverently

licker of windows
 
Posted by Windowlicker on Monday, April 28, 2008 - 1:05 PM
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Paddy Nash & The Happy Enchiladas

 
Get a scoot over to the North of Ireland when you're home for a few gigs. I know a place where the air smells like weed and we can down stout to the wee hours. Good for soul lad.
 
Posted by Paddy Nash & The Happy Enchiladas on Monday, April 28, 2008 - 4:03 PM
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spikyredzz
Lilian Cooper

 
Yep seems you have faithful fans everywhere....I'll miss the blog, but can't imagine how much spare time you'll have when you get back, maybe you'll need to blog us around the UK or maybe you could go on a pub crawl and give us your insight....that would be a scream...especially if you try to visit the ones you mentioned way back when!
Keep up the brilliant writing! L x
 
Posted by spikyredzz on Monday, April 28, 2008 - 6:33 PM
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Heikki Nieminen
Heikki Nieminen

 
I love the Travels With Charley vibe these stories have. My favorite book meets my favorite (Scottish) singer. A match made in my kinda heaven.
 
Posted by Heikki Nieminen on Monday, April 28, 2008 - 8:38 PM
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mark

 
All the gods know is destinations.
 
Posted by mark on Tuesday, April 29, 2008 - 7:10 AM
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Marco R.

 
Yeah... I agree with you wholly about New York Justin... I have been in awe as to how the city has changed... It even seems like less people live here... But I'm not sure its just the wealthy, though. At least the people, musicians, waiters and waitresses I've been hanging with on the Lower East side or Wiiliamsburg Brooklyn...
I lived here in the late 70's early 80's, for about 10 years. Hadnt visited in at least 5 or 6, and like you, came to gig around the Village (and Pete's in Williamsburg). The Lower east is the hood of my first home here, on E. 9th. It is sedate and calmer as you say, but what can I tell you Justin.. I grew up in Rio till I was 15. And seeing and "feeling" New York now, I much prefer feeling fine walking around at 2 or 4 am, going home after a gig to Brooklyn on the L Train. When I lived here, no one (no one of "us") dared hit the streets or the subway after say, 9 or 10 pm tops. And in my hometown of Rio, we dont go out to some hoods with a wrist watch on. It catches the muggers attention right away, you see. But I guess the New York mayors shipped all the "undesirables" up to Kingston. But thats another conversation. I hope you find excitement back in Scotland brother. Peace (or not ;-)
Marco
 
Posted by Marco R. on Tuesday, April 29, 2008 - 4:19 PM
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Solletwo

 
*****
 
Posted by Solletwo on Tuesday, April 29, 2008 - 7:24 PM
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Loran Alary

 
So if I understand well, you won't come to Montreal this year. Too bad, it's not that far from New York, but it's in Canada, yes, I know.. (there's the Queen's face on their money, but they speak like americans with a strange accent.. no offence intended, it's North America, I guess it explains everything). I expect the worst from your next blogs full of maroon-ness, and boredom, and I sort of wait for them, restless, and smiling to myself remembering all the places you've talked about and where I will never go, let aside "go and play there".
It was like watching some old movie with a slightly morose and humorous narrator talking about places and people that have been and never again will be like in the memories evoked by that journey.
Completely filled my actual mood.
Come on write some more.., there's always something happening, even at the corner of my street, or yours. But of course as musicaly inactive as I am, I'm getting used to it and boredom arrives every day almost welcomed as an old friend, takes a beer in my fridge and starts to talk about those times when the momentum was life and music was light and we were all going to be happy for ever in that dream. Changes are good they say, I say bullshit, changes are good when you are not happy, and when you're happy why in hell would you want things to change?
No momentum, and marooned.. guess I'm already there.
Thanks for those blogs and the songs.
Lo.

Lo.
 
Posted by Loran Alary on Wednesday, April 30, 2008 - 7:55 AM
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Frank
Frank Knight

 
Oh as mentioned by Mrs Wifall... you should write a travel log and publish it... I'm quietly confident it will sell very well... :-).. I know I would buy it.
 
Posted by Frank on Tuesday, May 13, 2008 - 11:24 PM
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Angela McCluskey

 
Hi Justin,
remember that day you came as my voice of authority to scarify that amex - nicking urchin at the hotel on gt western road...those big wide eyes..."l'll never do it again..it wis fur the weans christmas."...and how we let her off and much to our surprise in london the next day found out she did a good 1000 more after we left the buliding ....lol...oh well ya live and learn...as i do in NYC.
Everything you said is true..but there are still pockets of the big apple not rotting quite so fast...l wish l- had been here when you played ..that sounded like such an un - ny night...show at 7 then early night...yuch...i hate joes pub...people that work there should be in a show store....nightmares of unhelpfullness....what a shame...next time you muct get in touch..lm big fan as always and still have yet to tell you of my night covering one of your songs at the troubadour where l was spiked with heavy weed before the show ...and of course your song has 800 verses to remember..haha...aghh ..eek!!!..l was so stoned.....(very unusual for me)...that l asked the audience ..."what the fuck you all doing here"......... can you vaguely imagine.

..anyway loving the new stuff..i will be in glasgow around 13 14th of june...i managed to persuade GLASVEGAS to come record here in brooklyn and took them out a few nights...they've made a wicked album...so glad to see scotland still keeping its end up musically....they have a lot to live up to....

hope all is well...

angela mccluskey
 
Posted by Angela McCluskey on Sunday, May 25, 2008 - 4:49 PM
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Beth

 
Justin,
As a former New Yorker, I couldn't have said it any better. I totally agree! I lived in the city for 13 years ( 1989-2002) and I am so completely slayed by the fact that everything that made NYC what it was is now dust. No filth except for the filthy rich, indeed. Most of my friends have moved out at will (like myself) or have been forced out economically. I guess that's what happens to most creative types (musicians, actors, writers, etc..)
No more CBGBs, no more Tramps ( which by the way is where I first saw Del Amitri live in 1998 or 99...and you guys were brilliant...I manuveured my way downstairs and handed you my then boyfriend's (now ex-husband) band's tape --Radio Zero, they had a good local following in their day ( mid to late 90's) and played CBGBs, Continental, Ludlow Cafe, and Arlene Grocery.
Anyway, I just want to thank you for your music, solo and with Del Amitri. I still listen to "Twisted" and "Change Everything" on a regular basis and they make me think of the "good years in NYC".
Hope to catch a show of yours soon. I live in PA now ( back to my roots). Originally from Harrisburg, but I live in Lancaster now...so any shows in my old college stomping grounds of Philadelphia would work or even in NYC ( I still go up quite a bit for work).
Wishing you all the best,
Beth
 
Posted by Beth on Tuesday, October 14, 2008 - 5:37 PM
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