Edgar Summertyme Jones

The Common Room Of The Great North, Newcastle Upon Tyne.

       

This event is for 18 and over - No refunds will be issued for under 18s.

Ticket type Cost (face value)? Quantity
GENERAL ADMISSION £19.25 (£17.50)
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Liverpool-born Edgar Jones made his mark in the early '90s as the leader of the highly regarded '60s revivalists The Stairs, then transitioned into a sideman with artists such as Paul Weller and St Etienne. He also launched a solo career under various names and group settings that swerved from reverb-heavy garage rock and swaggering blues-rock to off-kilter '60s-isnspired pop and even swinging jazz. No matter the sound or name of the group, Jones could be counted on to deliver breezy pop music, anchored by his languorous vocals and skillful musicianship.

Starting his career at the tender age of 20, Jones joined Ian McCullough's post-Echo And The Bunnymen band in 1990, playing bass on-stage and on 1992's Mysterio album. Meanwhile, Jones (now using the name Edgar Summertyme), guitarist Ged Lynn, and drummer Paul Maguire launched The Stairs, releasing their first single, "Weed Bus," in 1991, then the Mexican R 'n' B album in 1992. The band made a point of dressing and playing as if music had stopped dead in 1966, a view that was out of step with the prevailing musical landscape. After a few more singles that year, they began work on a second album, but ended up leaving their label Go! Discs and taking a turn into blues-rock territory before splitting up in 1994.


His next project was more straightforward: the blues-rock trio Free Peace, which featured Stuart Gimblett on guitar and drummer Nick Miniski. They released one album, Stormy Weather, in 2011, then broke up soon afterward despite snagging a spot supporting Oasis. But he didn't sit around feeling blue, instead relaunching the mothballed Edgar Summertyme name for two albums, 2012's Sense of Harmony and 2013's Morphic Fields, both of which refined Jones' approach into a unique kind of pastoral psychedelic soul. Fittingly, The Stairs were soon called out of retirement. Though Viper had done much to keep their name alive by issuing collections of rare songs, it was the band the Wicked Whispers who convinced Jones and company to re-form for a show in November of 2015. In support, they released a new collection of rarities on Viper called The Great Lemonade Machine in the Sky, from which a single, "Shit Town," was culled.

The show went so well that the band stayed together to tour the next year with the Wicked Whispers, hitting the Liverpool International Festival of Psychedelia along the way. At the same time, Jones was readying his next solo album for The Coral's Skeleton Key label. Titled The Song Of Day and Night, it was released in early 2017. Things were quiet on the recording front for Jones for a few years after, though he returned to the marketplace with the three-disc collection The Way It Is: 25 Years of Solo Adventures in early 2021. It was issued by Cherry Red and covered solo recordings and songs made by the various post-Stairs incarnations Jones played and recorded in.