Man
Alive!
The
Legendary
Len Leggins
We knew him as one the Wedding Present, but
his real calling was of a Ukrainian persuasion.
Sid celebrates a living Leeds legend.
_____________________
Just
when I was about to post up Leeds' Legendary Len Liggins and his
band The Ukrainians as 'missing in action', what should jump out
of my radio speaker but a new single with a familiar folk twist
to one of the Sex Pistol's jolly ditties - Anarchy in the UK.
The Ukrainians are back, and I for one am happy to have those
men from Leeds enliven up daytime radio. But what happened to
them and the legendary man? Curiosity got the better of me.
In the days
of old, one would have suspected they'd won a lifetime's trip
to a distant Gulag, but post Perostroika, I found out that it
was something more serious - Record company hassles. In fact it's
the traditional story of record label woe which had sent the band
into hibernation. I was glad to see that The Legendary
man's enthusiasm had not been dented.
So how did
the man become legendary?
Len's
been a charismatic action figure in Leeds for more years than
anyone cares to remember, but let's stick him in 1982, when
he was running an 8 track recording studio with colleague Andrew
Middleton. Lion Studios was a small but happening /drop-in place
near the city's railway station, and one that soon had the talents
of Leeds knocking on its door. It must have seemed an obvious
step to him to create his own record label, 'AAZ records' ('An
Apple and a Zebra' - in case you wondered). Out of the cauldron
came its first release, 'Giraffe in Flames' [1983] (did anyone
say Dali?), a major compilation of bands in and around Leeds.
The highlights of it were Nick Tozcek, Party Day and The Sinister
Cleaners.
As for gigs,
Len rose to the challenge of poet and compere, as part of the
Leeds Fringe Festival in 1983.
Never
one to sit idly by, Len had begun a band called The Sinister Cleaners.
It was a trio of diverse songsters which produced Dylanesque tunes
with a pop beat that bounced over the wasteland of Leeds. AAZ
became its natural home, where they released the brilliant and
feted single, 'The Gnomes of Zurich' [1985]. However, the band's
diversity was also its undoing and it soon expired. Unperturbed,
Len continued alone and released several more singles including
'A Remedy for Bad Nerves' EP, (which featured the stark industrial
sounds of 'Lead'), and later the truly wonderful 'Yuri's Hair
Salon' - which hinted at his later chosen path.
Len began
to play a few solo dates and I caught up with him one night supporting
Party Day in Sheffield. Although it was 'supporting' in the loosest
of the word, more like performance art. On stage he was delivering
his songs accompanied by a backing tape, whilst he was sat in
an armchair and watched the TV. A tall living room lamp behind
the chair added to the overall ambience. I wasn't sure if Sheffield
was ready for him that night.
During
this time, he produced and edited his own fanzine, ROAR, which
was a damn good read even if its print was, at times, microscopic.
ROAR was a genuine rarity, in that it had sympathetic local advertising
that actually helped it rather than attempted to destroy it's
individualistic flavour. The fanzine ran to several issues over
the next few years and covered much of the local indie scene before
it folded, "It had reached its natural conclusion".
So how come
this creative man suddenly jumped centre stage and still managed
to maintain credibility.?
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LEN
LIGGINS
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"Peter and I have a deep love
not just of Ukrainian music and culture but of all things
Central and Eastern European. People from that part of the
world are still in many ways too naive and sensitive to cope
with the more negative influences coming from the West. Cynicism
and the selfish ethos of capitalism don't square up with their
nature. I love their humanity and their faith in human nature."
GLOBAL VILLAGE IDIOT.COM
More... |
Well strangely
enough like others, I knew of Len's passion and language skills
in all things Russian as originally he'd arrived in Leeds to study
them. But one could not have laid such a bet with Ladbrokes that
Len was ideally placed for it to be so useful to him. Then one
day Leeds' main indie band The Wedding Present had decided
to do something different for the next John Peel radio session,
and Pete Solowka asked him if he'd like to 'join in' for the day
by singing and playing violin. What started as a passion had found
it's home. The session was such a success that it was re-aired
5 times - a record in itself. Thus spawned an EP release based
on the songs from the session by The Wedding Present (minus David
Geddes the singer), and then Pete left to form The Ukrainians,
with Len.
An inspired
release soon followed that of an homage to The Smith's - 'Pizni
iz the Smiths'. Four songs re-worked as Ukrainian folk songs and
it became a major public success.
To date,
The Ukrainians have released several CDs combining a mixture of
original and traditional Ukrainian folk songs in their own inimitable
style. As one of Britain's best exports they were to play centre
stage at the main square in Kiev on Independence day. The Ukraine
took to them like long lost sons.
After the
silence, they're back with a wave of productivity that would warm
the cockles of any five year plan. The first part of the schedule
is: 'Drink to My Horse' a live CD, the aforementioned homage to
the Sex Pistols,EP CD, a compilation CD entitled 'No. 1 International
Ukrainian Group' out soon, a brand new CD for 2003 in the works
and live UK dates due for October 2002.
It's good
to see that Leeds' adopted son still has a few strings to his
bow.