Over the years, The False Dots have done rather a lot of gigs, we get asked back quite a lot and many memories merge into one, but there are all manner of weird and wacky things that stand out. Most bands rehearse a set, go and play it and then go home or off to a party. It is more or less the same every time for the band. But for The False Dots, we are addicted to chaos. We've always tried to put the cat amongst the pigeons and we are pretty interactive with our audience, so things can get a little bit 'interesting'. In amongst the blur of memories, some stand out. In anticipation of our gig at The Dublin Castle tomorrow night, I have picked my top ten memories of gigs (You can see the full list of all our gigs here).
1. 31st January 1980 - Harwood Hall, Mill Hill. Our first gig. We put it on ourselves. All of my mates from Orange Hill School, where I was a pupil turned up, including my mates The Polecats. Half of Moat Mount also turned up, as our bassplayer Paul Hircombe was still at school there. It was packed and we wanted to impress our mates. We'd been rehearsing for nearly two years.2. 3rd April 1981 - The Midland Arms, Hendon. This was our first 'big gig'. We were supporting a band called Way of The West, who had a new single out. It was Radio 1 single of the week. We'd done a couple since the gig mentioned above and were a much better unit. The gig was being promoted by Rob Armstrong of Tape Copying Services, a top banana. We brought a big crowd. A bunch of local skinheads turned up and seemed intent on causing trouble and heckling. I've never been a shrinking violet and so I met this head on. When we started playing, they all started doing silly dances, but rather than getting upset, I started egging them on. When we played the Heartbreakers song "I wanna be loved", I got a couple of them up on stage to do the "Ooh Ooh Ooh" bit. By the end of the show, they were our top fans. There was a cassette recording and they actually sang pretty good. Stupid dancing became a bit of a thing from then on. These days people do a conga at the end!
3. 18th July 1981 - Harwood Hall, Mill Hill. This was the worst gig we ever did. Everything went wrong. Our other guitarist Craig had left and been replaced by a looney called Captain Ubungus, who didn't bother to learn the songs. It was very ropey. A bunch of herberts from Burnt Oak turned up. Half way through our song Fog, one walked up to me and spat in my face. I reacted badly. I unstrapped my guitar and hit him over the head with it, knocking him out. It had the desired effect. They were a cowardly bunch and retaliated by letting off a fire extinguisher in the toilet, earning us a ban. After the gig, about five of them tried to ambush me as I waited for my Dad to come and collect the gear. As the trouble was about to start, my Dad turned up with a wheel brace. Seeing a giant Aussie nutter screaming at them made them lose their bottle and they ran away.
4. 18th January 1982, Pub Bastun, Aland, Finland. This gig was in the middle of our tour. Aland is an Island in the middle of the Baltic and was a duty free party haven. We were the first UK band to play there. The pub was a local music hangout. We had to play three sets. It was absolutely wild, probably the best gig we did in our first three years. We had a light show. To have enough songs, we played a few covers, including Space Cowboy by The Steve Miller Band. At the end, Mark used to do a Drum solo. We all jumped up on tables for this. The lights were cut and the light guy put a strobe on. The punters followed suit and every table had punters having a boogie as the strobe blinked. It was bonkers. As I surveyed the scene, I wondered if life would ever be as good again. After the gig, all of the punters said they'd never seen anything like it.
5. 27th August 1982, Bell Motor Cycle Club Rally, Elstree. The band had been in a bit of a hiatus. Our bassist Paul had decided to move to France. We had a booking for Bell MCC's rally. I rang Tony, who booked us, to cancel. He told us that the other bands had pulled out and asked if we could do something. So I spoke to Craig, and we agreed that I'd move onto bass and we'd learn some covers. We had to do two sets. I was a tad apprehensive, to say the least. We were not a heavy rock band and we were playing to 300 or so bikers. One of the songs was Sweet Jane by The Velvet Underground. When we started playing it, a massive Hells Angel at the back started to stare at me. He slowly walked from the back of the tent towards me. I though he was going to murder me. When he drew level, he pulled the large joint he was smoking out of his mouth and stuck it in mine! I didn't miss a note. The last song we did was Space Cowboy. All of the bikers started doing a mad dance, which we called The Mork Dance. A few of our friends came down and that became part of the set for a while, we even had two dancers to cheerlead! After we played, I had a chat with the biker. Turns out it was his favourite song. His wife had died of cancer and her name was Jane. He was a lovely bloke. Don't be deceived by appearances.
6. 28th January 1983, The Copper, Tower Bridge Road. Our roadie Derm had asked if he could perform a number with us. Derm was a big, good looking charismatic guy. He had decided, for reasons I can't recall, that he wanted to do a "Country and western rap song" called "The Dukes of Hazard Rap. We worked out a basic country chord progression and beat. Our then singer, Eleanor Caine was horrified when we told her that we were doing it as the encore. As we relied on Derms goodwill to drive us around, I explained it was non negotiable. The gig was pretty unremarkable until the point where Derm got up. Eleanor stood at the side, staring daggers at me. Derm came up, did his rap and then started getting everyone to do a line dance. It was completely bonkers. The pub guvernor told us he'd double our money if we did country and western music and line dancing for the next gig. We should have, but it was a one off.
7. 19th May 1990, St Josephs College, Mill Hill. This was the last gig we did in the 20th century. We had an amazing singer called Tony Robotham. I actually think the set was the best we had in that period. Tony could make anything sound great. The problem was the sort of music we were playing was out of fashion, so it was almost impossible to get gigs. However we were asked to play at St Josephs College. Even better, there was a real life Princess there. She was the Princess of Tonga and was a large black lady. To our amazement, when we started grooving, she jumped up and started dancing and didn't stop until we'd finished. The other band on with us were a rock band. She didn't get up at all when they played. She asked if we could do some more songs, as she was having a great time. As the other band had got us the gig, it was a bit delicate!
8. 27th July 2011, Mill Hill Music Festival, Mill Hill Sports Club. The False Dots always hosted an indie night as part of the festival. We had the amazing Connie Abbe on vocals. A bunch of my muso mates were present. When we finished, there was a demand for another song. We didn't have one, so we just started jamming on a blues riff. Paul Amsterdam jumped up with his sax and started blowing. I wanted a beer and I'd spied Bob Stout, a brilliant guitarist in the audience. I had a wireless rig, so I jumped off the stage and gave him my guitar. Connie was rapping and doing scat singing over it. The band was brilliant. I got my beer, then jumped up, grabbed a tambourine and we jammed for another ten minutes. I have this memory of listening to them jamming from the bar, and thinking "what a great band".
9. 15th September 2023, The Dublin Castle, Camden. This was the first gig we played with Tom Hammond on trumpet. Initially Tom only played on about half the songs. He came to a few rehearsals and fitted in. However one thing I've learned is that there is a big difference between sounding OK at rehearsals and being good live. At the time, we always used to start with our reggae/dub number Wacky Races. We started playing and from the second Tom blew his first note, I knew that the band was a million times better. We've not looked back, But that moment, and seeing the reaction of the audience was priceless.
10. 22nd June 2024, The Dublin Castle, Camden. We were supporting punk legends, The Bollock Brothers (feat Jock McDonald RIP). Tom couldn't make it, but we were doing a punky set. I think it was the moment we realised just how important Tom had become to our sound. It wasn't as good. But as a band, we always give it 100%. On the last number, Fil Ross, our bassist threw his bass guitar up in the air. To everyone's horror, he missed the catch and the neck of the bass snapped. It is an expensive Ibanez five string bass, so it was a shocking moment. Luckily, Fil is also a good guitar tech and he managed to glue it back on. But it was a horrific moment.
If you want to see the band, please come tomorrow to the Dublin Castle.









