• 10 months ago
Barb Jungr is promising a remarkable collection of songs from her new album My Marquee, a celebration of the great Marquee Club, a place where so many bands and performers performed on their way to greatness.

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Music
Transcript
00:00 OK.
00:01 Good morning, my name is Phil Hewitt,
00:03 Group Arts Editor at Sussex Newspapers.
00:06 Always fantastic to speak to Barb Junger.
00:08 And you are heading to the Minerva Theatre with a really special album,
00:13 which you'll be drawing on on February the 3rd, isn't it?
00:16 Minerva Theatre, Chichester.
00:18 The album is My Marquis, and this celebrates a really special era,
00:23 a special collection of songs.
00:25 What's the story behind My Marquis?
00:28 Well, the Marquis Club in London was a kind of central focus for a lot of bands
00:34 that were starting out in the late 50s, 60s, 70s.
00:38 And a lot of those bands then became huge in the world,
00:42 like Led Zeppelin and the Rolling Stones.
00:45 And I thought, wouldn't it be great to do a collection of some of the songs
00:49 that came out of that period and that were played at that one place
00:54 in this extremely fertile time in the history of British popular music.
01:00 So we took a bunch of songs,
01:02 which included Immigrant's song by Led Zeppelin and some Yardbirds songs,
01:07 which includes Shape of Things and Oh, and Heartful of Soul,
01:13 which is just a beautiful song.
01:16 And we rearranged them, obviously, as is my want.
01:19 And we put an album together and now we've started to tour it.
01:24 And I was a bit slow doing all of that because, of course,
01:27 I was here in Sompton with my mother who died before Christmas.
01:32 And and so now I'm back in the world.
01:35 You can concentrate on the album.
01:37 But what a fantastic collection of artists that you had that you could draw on.
01:41 Let's mention The Who as well, Substitute.
01:43 Fantastic song. Substitute.
01:45 What a great song.
01:47 What a song exposing the brilliance and the hard laser-like vision
01:54 of the British working class at that point in time.
01:57 And has that changed?
01:59 And that's what's so interesting about these songs, is that they have meaning now
02:05 that perhaps they didn't have then, but they definitely have that.
02:08 That you come, you go, oh.
02:10 And you being you, you would never sing a song that didn't actually say something,
02:14 would you? But these are fantastic songs in that respect.
02:17 They are fantastic songs in that respect.
02:19 I love them to pieces. And Survivors too.
02:23 Survivors. And I've got a great band.
02:25 I've got Jenny Carr on piano and she's worked with me over 20 years now.
02:29 Jonathan Lee on drums and Dudley Phillips on bass.
02:32 I mean, these are these are the top musicians in the country.
02:36 You know, they're fantastic.
02:37 Who they haven't played with.
02:39 So this is kind of the start of promoting the album.
02:42 You're looking to play the Rope Tackle in Shoreham later in the summer
02:45 and presumably other places too?
02:47 Yes, I'm pretty sure we'll bring it to Brighton and Hastings and other places
02:52 along the coast. And I'd like to play in Worthing, actually,
02:55 because I've never played in Worthing ever in my entire life.
02:58 Something you've got to correct, isn't it?
03:00 Yeah. So, you know, let's see what's let's see what can happen.
03:04 Fantastic. Good luck with all that.
03:06 Lovely to speak to you as always.
03:08 Thank you.
03:09 Lovely to speak to you too.
03:10 Thank you.
03:10 Bye.
03:11 [BLANK_AUDIO]

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