The Portland Arms Set List Notes Reviews Media


Click to see 2 images in gallery

Details

Date
November 01, 1978
Venue
The Portland Arms Cambridge, England
Billed As
The Soft Boys
Gig Type
Concert

Notes

Photo is from a slightly later Portland Arms show (see below for details).
This November 1 gig partially released as "Live at the Portland Arms" acoustic album (the final three songs were not included on the album).

NOTE: The Robyn Hitchcock Songography site reported that a source close to the band has shared that the date of the gig as listed on the official releases is incorrect and the January 13, 1979 is what is actually featured on the album. However, after posting the above image on Facebook in August 2023, Morris Windsor stated that the Nov 1978 gig has to be the one on the album as both the November gig and the album featured Mungo Carstairs. The January 79 gig featured Robb Appleton (seen in the center of the photo) and Mungo was not present. This photograph is from the January 13, 1979 gig.

Set List

  1. Give it to the Soft Boys Robyn Hitchcock, Robert Lamb
  2. Sandra's Having Her Brain Out
  3. Give Me a Spanner, Ralph
  4. My Evaline Traditional
  5. Human Music
  6. I Like Bananas The Four Hoosiers
  7. Horns Large Horns Traditional
  8. Book of Love The Monotones
  9. Wish I Had My Baby The Five Satins
  10. White Shoe Blues Robert Johnson
  11. In The Mood Glenn Miller and His Orchestra
  12. That's When Your Heartaches Begin Shep Fields Rippling Rhythm
  13. Have a Heart, Betty (I'm Not Fireproof)
  14. Duke of Squeeze
  15. All Shook Up Elvis Presley
  16. Postman's Knock Traditional
  17. Wey Wey Hep Uh Hole
  18. The Deck of Cards T. Texas Tyler

Media

Live at the Portland Arms album
Archive.org player

Reviews

From Paul at Albums That Should Exist (thanks for the mention - too many sites list our old JH3.com url!)

I recently noticed that while I've posted a ton of Robyn Hitchcock solo music - over 70 albums as of May 2023, and more coming - I've posted relatively little from his first band, the Soft Boys. So I'm going to post a few more albums to try to rectify that.
This is a very odd concert, even for Hitchcock. Consider that 1977 was the year of punk rock, and while the Soft Boys weren't a punk band, they were a rocking band influenced by that late 1970s punk rock energy. So, to totally buck the trends of the time, not only was this concert acoustic in format, a good portion of the songs were done acappella style! And furthermore, even though the Soft Boys had plenty of good originals already, most of the songs were covers from the 1950s or earlier, often quite obscure ones. (The only originals are tracks 1, 3, 5, 8, 22, and 24.) In 1978, there wasn't exactly a clamor for songs like "The Deck of Cards" by T. Texas Tyler in 1948 or "That's When Your Heartaches Begin" by Shep Fields Rippling Rhythm in 1937. But that's one thing I like about Hitchcock, that he's so weird.

Most of this concert was officially released at one point, but in a limited way, for a limited time. It came out as "Live at the Portland Arms" in the 1980s on cassette and vinyl, but never on CD or any other format. And that record is long out of print. It also didn't include all the songs, but some extras came out on bootleg with the same high sound quality. Apparently, just one song is missing, the original "Wey Wey Hep Uh Hole," which was the second to last song. However, "Caroline Says" may also have been played.

I'm still puzzled how or why this concert came to be. This is the only Soft Boys concert I know of in the acoustic/ acappella format. According to the Hitchcock database askingtree.com, many of the songs here were only played one time ever by the Soft Boys or Hitchcock solo, such as "My Evaline," "Horns Large Horns," "Wish I Had My Baby," "White Shoe Blues," "In the Mood," and so on. Yet they must have practiced quite a bit to get the acappella harmonies right. Maybe it was all done with the intention of making that limited release live record. But for whatever reason, it's really nice that we have this.

Even though most of this was officially released, I still needed to do a lot of editing to make it sound better. The songs were fine, but the volume of the banter between songs was quite low. Furthermore, it was often obscured by crowd noise. I used the UVR5 audio editing program to add volume and clarity. And by the way, there's a lot of talking. It's interesting to see that even back at the beginning of his music career, Hitchcock had the exact same kind of stream of consciousness surreal banter that he'd been known for in later decades.

By the way, a couple of the songs are songs by other band members than Hitchcock, but I don't have the details on that. Also, there is a claim that the concert actually took place on January 13, 1979. But I haven't been able to confirm that, so I'm sticking with the dates from the official version for now.

This album is 56 minutes long.