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The Urban Voodoo Machine Tickets, Tour Dates and Concerts

The Urban Voodoo Machine

Mar 23, 2019

8:30 PM GMT
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The Urban Voodoo Machine Tickets, Tour Dates and Concerts
About this concert
The Palladium is please to welcome The Urban Voodoo Machine to Bideford for the first time, for an amazing night of 'Bourbon Soaked Gypsy Blues Bop'n'Stroll' YouTube video: https://youtu.be/trUtqJhyR4w Tickets: £12 Adv - £14 door Bands Bio; The Urban Voodoo Machine is a collective of shadowy, London based, ne'er do wells, led by Norwegian born songwriter/frontman Paul-Ronney Angel. Featuring up to twelve musicians at any given time, The 'Machine mash-up guitars, twin drumers, fiddle, trumpet, tuba, banjo, washboard, upright bass, gong, mandolin, accordion, harmonicas, saxophone, sousaphone and even empty bottles and tie racks to create their unique brand of Bourbon Soaked Gypsy Blues Bop'n'Stroll. With their lurching sea shanties, debauched murder ballads, messed-up tangos and whiskey-soaked gypsy stomps, some reckon they're from the same stable of stallions as Tom Waits and Nick Cave; others point out the last gang in town swagger of The Clash and the hellbound blues that John Lee Hooker first dragged out of the swamp The stars were very much aligned the night Paul-Ronney Angel was begged by a promoter to be the filling in a triple-bill band sandwich. Never one to turn down a knees-up, P-R realised he had 48 hours to put a band together. No problem! Trawling the dives and doss houses of London, he called in some favours, cracked some whips and so it was that The Urban Voodoo Machine lurched into life. That was April 2003 and since then, this shadowy, rambunctious troupe of rabble-rousing troubadours has been bringing the spirit of the carnie and their now legendary 'Gypsy Hotel' nights (famous for the attendance of strippers, fire-eaters , jugglers and sundry degenerates,) to the stages of clubs, festivals and theatres across London, the UK and Europe at large. In 2008 the Urban Voodoo Machine opened for The Pogues on their American tour after a personal invitation from Spider Stacy, which in turn led to them being offered The Pogues full UK & Ireland X-Mas tour later the same year. The following year saw the release of their debut album 'Bourbon Soaked Gypsy Blues Bop'N'Stroll', on Gypsy Hotel Records. The album scored top reviews in all the major music magazines and made 'Albums of the Year' lists in Classic Rock and Big Cheese magazines. This was backed with lots of live shows and touring including headlining East London's prestigious and beautiful Hackney Empire and joining the legendary New York Dolls on their UK tour. Notable live events since then have included prestige shows in Norway, Hungary, Spain, Finland, Holland, Belgium, Portugal, Switzerland, Germany and France. Major festival appearances include Glastonbury, Download, Latitude, Edinburgh, Sziget, Hard Rock Calling alongside Paul McCartney, Bestival, Bulldog Bash and Ukraine Stadium alongside Goran Bregovic and they have performed everywhere from prisons, schools and churches! Second album 'In Black'N'Red', was released to more positive acclaim and hullaballo from the media in 2011. A collection of rare tracks and early EP sides called 'Rare Gumbo' was released to coincide with the bands sell-out 10th anniversary show at London's historic Leicester Square theatre in June 2013. This was followed late the same year by a double A-sided single 'Help Me Jesus / Heroin (Has Put My Brothers In The Ground) which featured legendary British guitarist Wilko Johnson. At the time of writing the bands third studio recording 'Love, Drink & Death' is in the proverbial bag and scheduled for release late summer / early autumn 2014. Line-up: Paul-Ronney Angel Lead Vocals, Acoustic & Electric Guitars, Mandolin, Banjo, Harmonica Nick Marsh Electric Guitar & Vocals Gomez DeVille Trumpet & Vocals Slim Accordian & Vocals The Reverend Gavin Smith Upright Bass The Late J-Roni-Moe Drums Jary Drums, Cajon Ane Angel Sousaphone, Gong Lucifire Tenor & Baritone Saxophone Rob 'The Kid' Skipper Fiddle Joe 'Mongo' Whitney Washboard, Melodica, Autoharp Drawing deep from a dirty well where Tom Waits, Nick Cave and Dick Dale are enjoying a burlesque all-nighter with Ennio Morricone. CLASSIC ROCK The band veers into mariachi-influenced blues, whiskey-soaked country rags and punkabilly-style rave-ups. THE WASHINGTON POST
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Clarabow
July 28th 2023
It's official. I've been brought into the Urban Voodoo Machine fold. What an amazing gig. Even my bf, who is a self-confessed metal head, is feeling the love.
Blackpool, United Kingdom@
The Waterloo Music Bar
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The Urban Voodoo Machine Biography

THE URBAN VOODOO MACHINE
Official Biography – March 2016

We know what you’re thinking. You’re thinking: “Why should I care about The Urban Voodoo Machine? They’ve been around for ages, haven’t they? Aren’t they a novelty band who wears funny make-up? Don’t they sometimes play jazz? Aren’t half of them dead or something?”

So bear with us, sunshine, cos you clearly need educating.

The story starts with Paul-Ronney Angel, a man with a double-barrelled first name. I could be a wanker about this and say the story starts with Bon Scott-era AC/DC – with Tom Waits, or the Clash, Louis Armstrong, the Pogues, the Sensational Alex Harvey Band, Johnny Cash, Lionel Bart or Bertolt Brecht – but let’s stick with Paul-Ronney, it’s quicker.

Paul-Ronney Angel ate his parents and fled the fjords of Norway with just a bottle of moonshine and several slices of decomposing fish in his back pocket. (Before he left they tried him in the Norwegian Army – he lasted a total of five hours.)

After that, Angel washed up in London during the dying breaths of Thatcherism and took advantage of all that swinging London had to offer: he sold The Big Issue, busked Johnny Thunders & Robert Johnson numbers in Soho bus stops and played guitar for anyone who’d have him.

The Urban Voodoo Machine came to him in 2002 as a fully-formed idea. He’d lead a band who’d play ‘Bourbon Soaked Gypsy Blues Bop’n’Stroll’. They’d dress in black and red. There would be a LOT of them. And their music would sound like a great night out in a dangerous part of town. From the get-go, The UVM fused junkyard blues and stinging rockabilly with mariachi horns, fiddles, sinister cabaret and punk rock tangos. “I wanted to play rock’n’roll music with a different instrumentation,” says Angel, “taking inspiration from everything from delta blues, latin and gypsy music without losing the spirit and attitude of punk.” His lyrics – part Lemmy, part Bob Dylan – made other (more acclaimed) songwriters sound totally. Fucking. Boring.

“We’re not Americana and were definitely not ‘retro’,” says Angel. “I write songs about living in London right now. Although having a shit time, no money, heartbreak, mental illness, addiction and suppression from the big guy is kinda universal and timeless, I guess…”

“Yeah-yeah-yeah,” you’re thinking, “but can they cut it live?” Well, there’s a reason why they’ve played Glastonbury, Download, Latitude, Bestival, Hard Rock Calling and toured with The Pogues and New York Dolls. With an act honed alongside the burlesque dancers, snake-charmers and fire-eaters they call friends, The UVM have become one of the greatest live acts in the country – terrifyingly bizarre, hysterically funny; a riot for the eyes and sensation for the ears: a sing-a-long, drink-a-long, clap-a-long affair.

In 2006 they launched the Gypsy Hotel Club in the then-unfashionable part of London’s East End, Dalston, a monthly Bourbon Soaked Snake Charmin’ Rock’n’Roll Cabaret night for likeminded misfits, movers and shakers. Time Out Magazine wrote, “If you have 12 hours to live, spend it at Gypsy Hotel!”

Magazines and newspapers have lauded them for their “mariachi-influenced blues, whiskey-soaked country rags and punkabilly-style rave-ups” (The Washington Post) and noted that they’re “drawing deep from a dirty well where Tom Waits, Nick Cave and Dick Dale are enjoying a burlesque all-nighter with Ennio Morricone” (Classic Rock). They became one of the few bands that could appear on Clive Anderson’s Loose Ends on BBC Radio 4 and Britain’s biggest heavy metal festival Download in the same year and win at both.

In 2014, when Paul-Ronney named their third album Love, Drink & Death! he had no idea what the year had in store. In October, fiddle-player Rob Skipper died of an accidental heroin overdose, aged just 28. Guitarist Nick Marsh (formerly frontman of Flesh For Lulu) fought throat cancer throughout that year. He died in June 2015, aged 53. The Voodoo Machine transformed themselves into a New Orleans-style marching band for his funeral. The Urban Voodoo Machine Marching Band also played the Classic Rock Awards that year – the only band to do so without electricity.

And that brings us to new album Hellbound Hymns. Marsh plays on eight of its 13 songs. (Angel: “He was really putting the hours in when he knew the cancer had come back. He was like, ‘Right, these might be my last recordings with this band, so let’s roll the tape and make it a good one!”) To borrow one of the song titles, it’s all mixed-up. It’s part wake, part protest, part valediction – a party at the gates of hell – because the greatest tribute you can pay the dead is to live life to the full: “We will sing and we will dance/We will drink and we will laugh/We will not forget the past and our fallen brothers…”
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Jazz
New Orleans
Stroll
Latin
Blues
Bop
Country
Gypsy
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