I recently moved to Portugal and have become
friends with an amazing and cool guy named Martin Weaver. Martin is best known
for his band Wicked Lady but he also has a PhD and is a scientist as well.
Wicked Lady were a wild and crazy UK
band that existed in one form or another from about 1968 to 1972. While there are no documented live fotos or
recordings of the band (yet to be unearthed!), the band did make some
recordings in their basement rehearsal. According to Martin, nearly all the
photos claiming to be Wicked Lady on the internet are not the band. All the
pictures you see of him from that time period were actually when we was playing
with Dark. The band’s name is not from the movie but comes from a pub drink
that was sold at this time in the UK.
Today, only Martin Weaver, the guitar
player and singer is alive to tell the stories and what some stories there are
to tell. In the next paragraph’s we will start to tell some of these for you.
Wicked Lady
- Potted History.
Martin
Weaver Guitar
'Mad'
Dick Smith Drums
Bob
'Motorist' Jeffries Bass.
Del
'German Head' Morley Bass (1972) Formed in 1968 -
Split 1972
Wicked
Lady was a hard rock, has been called a proto metal, band based in
Northamptonshire. We prided ourselves on being loud, hard and not giving a
shit.
We
were a jam band at heart, our greatest enjoyment was jamming around set song
structures. Jams would continue until a natural end became obvious. The tracks
on the two record releases The Axeman Commeth and Psychotic overkill are the
basic songs, recorded in order to settle arguments about how the songs went,
not intended for release, we were against recording, it always sounded lame and
soulless compared to a bands live sound. The albums were first released on
Kissing Spell CD in 1992 and later Guerssen from Spain released CD and Vinyl. A
bootleg vinyl originating from Sweden called Blow your mind featuring a naked
biker girl on the cover is a compilation and highly sought after by collectors.
We
first rehearsed in Daventry town centre, getting a following of bikers who
followed us to gigs and at several places took control of the door. One pub in
Northamptonshire lost it's music license following a mini riot in the street
outside the venue, the Police were called by neighbours because of the noise of
the band and fighting ensued Police and neighbours v Bikers, needless to say we
didn't get paid! We did play some well known places such as the Roundhouse and
Marquee Club but we found that the more high profile the venue the less we got
paid. I don't remember getting paid at all in London, then as now unknown bands
were expected to play for free 'for the good of your career'- at least we
didn't pay to play as some bands do today.
The
trouble for us was that the further we had to travel the more time we had to
drink in the van on the way. Not good for a good stage performance especially
when mixed with other chemicals! Sometimes we were great sometimes not so
great. Mostly we played on the Pub circuit, which was our bread and butter.
Performances would usually end with the drums being kicked over and guitars
left on stage feeding back till someone killed the power, Who style. I remember
playing at a large Pub in Northampton, The Romany, I played just one chord and
the room starting to clear, everyone escaping the noise. We played our set to a
few hardy souls and after playing we went to the Lounge for a drink. The room
was packed and as we walked in a worried man said 'I hope you're not going to
play in here now are you?' I don't think the midlands audience was ready for
free form heavy rock! Most bands were either cover bands or Blues bands then
and not many people got what we were doing. Our favourite place to stop after
gigs was the Blue Boar on the M1 motorway where you would rub shoulders and
swap stories with other bands, famous and unknown alike enjoying a full English
at some ungodly hour of the morning. A lot of useful contacts were made there
in the late 60's and 70's.
Many
band's sole aim was to get a recording contract and we did have an A&R man
come to see us play, we weren't really interested and it ended badly for him
when he insulted my girlfriend. No contract for us! It was just a chance
conversation with Kissing Spell in '92 in which I was asked if I had been in
any other bands and I sent them the tapes of Wicked Lady, I didn't think they
would be interested in this forgotten band but they were and now 40+ years on
we have a record release and fans worldwide.
I
am the last man standing from the band. I did see Mad Dick at an Iron Maiden
gig 30 years ago but he was so far out of it then he didn't know who I was.
Here are the band's I played in, in order starting in 1966.
Blue Diamonds (Skiffle band) 1966
Electric Budgie (Blues) 1967-1968
Wicked Lady 1968-1972
Dark 1972-1975/1996-2017
Radar (Heavy Rock) 1978-1980
Tartan Grass (Rock covers) 1980-1983
Amber Valley (Covers) 1981-1985
Over the Hill (Blues Band) 1985-1990
Kakvoto (Metal) 2012-2014
BGB Rock/Metal 2016
What a real
Wicked Lady live gig was like?
According
to Martin, you never really knew what you were going to get as the band was
usually pretty ripped and just cranked up the amps as loud as they could and
play a few riffs from a song and then just jammed. He remembers a gig where
they jammed out a song for 90mins!
The
band played with loads of bands including the Pink Fairies (See list below). They
played famous places like the Marquee, but rarely did they ever get invited
back to play again due to either being brutally loud or just too wild and
crazy.
Blodwin
Pig / St Albans
Stackridge
/ Birmingham
Rare
Earth / Reading
Pink
Faries / Wellingborough
Writing
on the Wall / Coventry
Orphan
/ Northampton
Palladin
/ Watford
While
Wicked Lady was still going, Martin
was involved with another band called Dark.
They were primarily the band of Steve Giles but Martin came in as second
guitarist and not the lead guitarist as is often reported. In fact,
Martin only played one solo on Round The Edges, just at the end of the track
live for today, a raucous unhinged solo that is possibly his favorite solo I he
has recorded! Their debut album, which was originally made in only about 60
copies is one of the most rare and sought after vinyl records from the 70s and
sells for big money. Kissing Spell, who released the two Wicked Lady CDs also
released 4 albums by Dark on CD as well. The original Dark, Round the Edges
(but just called Dark on Kissing Spell), Teenage Angst, Anonymous Days, and The
Jam. There is also a DVD from the 1997 25th anniversary reunion
show. The band also reunited and played live in 2011. The band is all still
friends and speak and sometimes meet-rehearse but no new albums or gigs are
planned.
Besides
music Martin is also a forensic anthropologists and electrician, who has built
his own guitar pedals and guitars. He also plays keyboards and for a while in
the 90s made more electronic music like Timeshard, Banco da Gaia, Eat Static
inspired stuff.
How did you
get interested in making more electronic music?
I
got into electronic music in about 71 I was asked to join Dark as a synthetic
player and turned up at the audition with a massive synthesizer that I built
myself, it took three of us to get it down to Darks rehearsal cellar. The damn
thing wouldn't make a sound but they knew I played guitar as well and they
accepted me in as 2nd guitar. I never did play the synth for them but did
support them once at a gig as a solo artist in maybe 72. I started doing solo
gigs when Dark finished in 73 I played what we would now call Ambient music but
then we called it head music. I joined a few bands of little note as a
guitarist through the rest of the 70's and 80's and in the 90's I started
producing electronic music again as a sideline to Dark, it was for my own
enjoyment really, a hobby. I sold a few tracks here and there for compilations
but never under my name, I used a different name for every track (tax
avoidance).
What name is
your electronic music published under??
Will more
music from Dark ever be released?
It's
unlikely any more music will come from Dark, the old line up anyway. Steve
Giles has drafted in a new bassist and guitarist and still does the odd gig.
The last recording we did in 2015 was an EP called Welcome to the Edge, we
re-recorded some tracks written by Steve from the very early days of Dark and
never recorded properly. This is available from Darkedge records.
What are you
up to musically these days?
I
am now just making music for my YouTube channel: www.youtube.com/c/martinpweaver
I
played a few gigs solo in Bulgaria doing some of the Youtube tracks and a few
Wicked Lady tunes but since moving to Portugal not done anything yet. (Martin and Dr Space will make new music in 2018!!!)
Thanks for this and can't wait for the new tunes doc.
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