logo
Chuck Ragan on King Tut's mishaps and fishing the River Tay

Chuck Ragan on King Tut's mishaps and fishing the River Tay

The singer-songwriter released his fifth solo album, Love and Lore in October last year.
It's been a decade in the making, with Covid, family, fly fishing and his band, Hot Water Music, putting it on the back burner.
Read More:
Formed in Florida in 1994, Hot Water Music split in 1999 after releasing three LPs to scene success but not a whole lot beyond.
Over time though the group's influence became apparent, their punk-Americana sound an evident inspiration for the likes of The Menzingers, The Gaslight Anthem and Against Me!.
Having reformed for a second time in 2008, last year saw them play a series of 30th anniversary shows.
Ragan says: "It's humbling man, 30 years is a long time to be doing anything.
"If you want to live this type of life - and not just in music but any kind of independent art or expression - you have to make a ridiculous amount of sacrifices along the way.
"There was a lot of reflecting on that, everything that we've done, everything that we had sacrificed to to still be standing here.
"But the most important reflection to me was looking back at all the friends and the supporters, everybody who worked in the industry that had anything to do with supporting Hot Water Music along the the way.
"But most importantly, our immediate family, our blood family, who I don't think ever have or ever will get enough credit.
"Any of us who you seen on stage or on the marquee, they have just as much to do with all this as we do.
"I mean, as clichéd as it sounds, it takes a village. It takes a it takes a family and a community to reach a milestone like that and to have that type of longevity."
The singer-songwriter will bring his solo show to King Tut's in Glasgow on Monday, April 28 and it's a venue he's very familiar with.
Ragan says: "I love King Tut's.
"I remember Hot Water Music were playing somewhere else, but our friends the Murder City Devils were playing at King Tut's and we went down to check it out.
"Derek, the bass player, jumped up and came down and broke his ankle really badly, like he destroyed his ankle.
"We had to carry him to the car to ship him to the hospital - so that was a good memory of King Tut's!
"Unfortunately the downside of touring and always working within the parameters of budgets and whatnot, more often than not we're only in town for one night.
"Today's a perfect example, we're going to Grand Rapids, Michigan, we'll get into town at 4-5pm, we'll sound check, maybe have a chance to get something to eat, then we'll play the show, head to the hotel and wake up tomorrow and do it again in another town.
"That's kind of the downside of touring when you visit amazing places like Glasgow and unfortunately you don't have a tonne of time to experience it.
"Every once in a while though you get a little bit of down time, I have a good memory of fishing the River Tay years and years ago, that was a pretty incredible experience - it's some of the coldest water I can remember."
Ragan is also the mind behind the Revival Tour, a touring folk-punk extravaganza which has brought the likes of Frank Turner, Dave Hause and Brian Fallon along for the ride around the world for more than two decades.
He explains: "I never wanted people to look at it as my tour. I wanted people to to see a poster from across the road and whether they knew who was playing the show or not they just knew 'that's something worth seeing'.
"The concept was to create a more or less a revolving showcase where the music never stopped.
"My buddies and I typically play music with our heart on our sleeve. We love it and we'd be doing it whether it's a massive room full of people or if there was just a handful of people there - or even no-one.
"Those are the those are the kind of songwriters I want to see, those are the musicians and that's the music that I would I would want to see.
"It's the same for our solo shows, if it's real it's real and if it's in any way false you can smell it.
"People understand where we're coming from, we're normal folks, normal guys.
"If we're not making money playing music we're at home working jobs that we have to work to make ends meet and feed our families.
"I think people can relate to that."

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Gemma Collins considering low-key wedding with partner Rami Hawash
Gemma Collins considering low-key wedding with partner Rami Hawash

Wales Online

time14 hours ago

  • Wales Online

Gemma Collins considering low-key wedding with partner Rami Hawash

Gemma Collins considering low-key wedding with partner Rami Hawash The 44-year-old reality TV star and businessman Rami Hawash got engaged for the third time on Valentine's Day 2024 Gemma Collins (Image: Gemma Collins Instagram ) Gemma Collins is considering a low-key wedding. The 44-year-old reality TV star and businessman Rami Hawash got engaged for the third time on Valentine's Day 2024 during a romantic getaway to the Maldives - having previously postponed their wedding in 2023 to focus on other priorities - and explained that the pair are planning a more intimate ceremony after Rami's father sadly passed away last year. ‌ In an interview with Closer magazine, the former star of 'The Only Way Is Essex' said: "The more this has gone on, we kind of just want to do a wedding for us. Because with these showbiz weddings, it all becomes about other people." ‌ Despite the pair being forced to postpone their wedding day again, Gemma is adamant she will say "I do" to Rami in 2026. She said: "We're definitely getting married. Definitely, definitely doing it." Gemma and Rami, 50, met in 2011, and they got engaged in 2013 before breaking off the engagement just weeks later. Article continues below However, they reignited their romance during the COVID-19 lockdown after Gemma broke up with her 'The Only Way is Essex' ('TOWIE') co-star James 'Arg' Argent, 37, in 2020. She and Rami got engaged for a second time in 2021, and the lovers' relationship has been strong ever since. Gemma said: "We're really happy. Everything's just aligned." ‌ The GC - Gemma's alter-ego which was created by TV personality Sam Faiers, 34, during the third series of the ITV reality show - shot to fame when she joined 'TOWIE' in 2011, but she quit the show in 2014. The programme is celebrating its 15th anniversary this year and Gemma has revealed she has been asked back and wants to do it - but her agent is less keen. She explained: "They've asked me back. My agent's saying no, but I do want to do it. ‌ "It'll be fun." Gemma has battled with her weight for years, but after she shed two stone after doctors approved her for the weight-loss jab Mounjaro last November, she hopes to have a baby with Rami in 2026. Gemma - who is a stepmum to Rami's six-year-old son Tristan - recently told The Sun newspaper: "I want to have a baby. I truly believe that once my weight goes, I'll fall pregnant. Article continues below "That's my hope. I want a baby... And I truly believe I'll have twins... "I can't believe I've finally found something that works. I've lost nearly two stone already and it's been completely effortless - I don't even want to eat anymore!"

Dundee's kilted yoga star marks 5 years since 'joyous' garden wedding with a difference
Dundee's kilted yoga star marks 5 years since 'joyous' garden wedding with a difference

The Courier

time17 hours ago

  • The Courier

Dundee's kilted yoga star marks 5 years since 'joyous' garden wedding with a difference

Kilted yoga star Finlay Wilson is deliriously happy. He's just marked five years of marriage to the love-of-his-life, fellow yoga teacher Alan Lambie. 'We're both each other's favourite person,' beams Finlay, 38. 'We laugh riotously on a daily basis.' The couple are fresh back from a trip to Italy – but haven't yet had a chance to celebrate their anniversary with friends and family. Finlay, who lives in Dundee's West End, became known globally as the 'kilted yogi' after performing cheeky tartan-clad exercise routines in social media clips that went viral. He and Alan, 46, had planned to get married on June 7, 2020, to mark the anniversary of their engagement – when Finlay proposed during a Pride parade in Washington DC in 2019. But thanks to the Covid-19 pandemic, they feared they would be forced to cancel. That was until RuPaul's Drag race star Michelle Visage stepped in to save the day. Ultimately, she enabled the couple to tie the knot during a virtual ceremony that was slap, bang in the middle of the pandemic – on May 29, 2020. It was a wedding with a difference, thrown together quickly with bits and bobs from B&Q and on a seriously tight budget. Finlay, who runs Heart Space Yoga & Bodyworks on Scott Street, takes up the story. 'We'd been doing loads of work on our garden and hoped to use it as our wedding venue, with around 30 to 40 guests in an intimate ceremony,' he says. 'We were really disappointed when we thought we'd have to cancel and posted on Instagram.' The post attracted loads of attention, and fans suggested Finlay and Alan contact Michelle Visage – who was offering her services as an ordained minister to marry couples. 'We thought, och, it's never going to happen, but we sent an email anyway,' says Finlay. 'They came back, and were like, yeah, let's do it.' It was a frantic dash to get everything organised. Pandemic rules meant there were few places you could go, so the couple dressed their house for the wedding from B&Q. 'The day before the wedding, we queued up outside B&Q so we could get stones to make our front path – the aisle – look nicer,' recalls Finlay. 'It was a budget wedding. We only had 36 hours to get everything together. 'One of our friends is a baker who had a cancelled wedding cake that he rapidly re-iced for us. 'We also managed to convince the florist up the road, which wasn't technically open, to put some bits together for us. 'Our neighbours were amazing, too, putting out plants, flowers, bunting and balloons, and using rose petals as confetti. It was very boujee.' The rules only allowed Finlay and Alan – plus two close friends – in the garden during the ceremony. But neighbours stood on stepladders to celebrate over the garden wall, and folk on the street looked in, too. 'It was great to see people in their glad rags, smiling and laughing, despite the 2m distance,' says Finlay. 'Our families were on Zoom. My family dressed up but my dad didn't quite believe what was happening, so he was wearing a running vest! He stood out like a sore thumb. 'And I swear my mum didn't think it was real because she wasn't there in person.' Finlay and Alan cut each other's hair and cobbled together clothes they found in their wardrobes. Thankfully, there was no shortage of kilts. Another highlight was when two kids Finlay had taught yoga piped the couple down the aisle. 'There were lots of really sweet moments,' he muses. 'After the ceremony we went down the street to Magdalen Green for the party bit. 'We had our first dance in the bandstand. Our friend, Farrah Fawcett, brought her violin and played her version of Kylie's Can't Get You Out of My Head by request.' Finlay's twin brother, Alastair, took the wedding photos, which Finlay describes as 'really joyous'. Michelle, who was in LA, conducted proceedings via a tablet on a stick in her garden. The wedding featured on her BBC programme How's Your Head, Hun? a few weeks later. And the star, who sent Alan and Finlay a framed wedding certificate, messages to congratulate them every anniversary. However, the couple's dreams of a transatlantic honeymoon were foiled by the 'traffic light' travel system. It was a year before they had a 'mini-trip' to Lanzarote. 'We treated that as 'honeymoon part one', and then went to Mexico not long after,' says Finlay. So, to 2025 and five years on from the big day, have they marked their fifth anniversary yet? 'We're in talks with our family about that because they never had a party for the actual wedding!' says Finlay. 'I don't think Alan and I going out for breakfast on our anniversary cut the mustard. 'But for us, going to Naples was convenient timing. We were both like, 'gosh, how the heck is it five years?'' The couple have been together eight years, having met in Edinburgh when Finlay was teaching a yoga workshop. Finlay jokes that he 'poached' Alan for Dundee: he's originally from West Lothian. Finlay reckons the ritual of sitting down to eat together has huge significance. 'We do have different interests but we really centre our days around meals. 'We eat three meals a day together. And I prepare all of our meals. That gives us a lot of time together. 'When I hear of other couples that have separate dinners at different times, I'm like, 'oooh'. 'We've also got a dog to walk – and we're just really fond of each other's company.'+ So how has life change in the five years since they got married? Finlay laughs. 'We're older and more in bits! That's from doing a physical job. 'Other than that, I don't think much has changed. We didn't stop working during the pandemic. We were either teaching online, or when possible, in person. 'The pandemic didn't change our day-to-day lifestyle. If anything we got closer because we're both each other's favourite person. 'We're really close. We laugh riotously every day.' Would the couple consider adopting? 'Woah, no,' says Finlay. 'Because I teach kids, I'm more than happy to have them for 45 minutes and hand them back! 'I have an identical twin brother who has three kids, so genetically that's as close as I really need to get to children.'

Restless Natives
Restless Natives

Edinburgh Reporter

timea day ago

  • Edinburgh Reporter

Restless Natives

There are those of us from a certain generation that grew up with Restless Natives. I remember it being screened on Channel 4 while still at St Mark's Primary School in Oxgangs. The next day my classmates were buzzing with tales of the Clown and the Wolfman riding on a Suzuki motorbike and holding up buses. They presented a new kind of Scottish hero from just down the road in Wester Hailes. Part of it was seeing characters with accents like yours, they were modern day folk heroes robbing the rich to literally throw money around Edinburgh council schemes. Forty years later the story returns with a new stage production which arrives in Edinburgh this month at Leith Theatre exactly four decades after the film premiered in Edinburgh's ABC cinema in June 1985. Original Restless Natives screenwriter and now lyricist Ninian Dunnett and director Michael Hoffman invited Sarah Galbraith to be part of an original workshop for the new musical version just after Covid-19. The role she was invited to play had a certain amount of heft thanks to the great character actor Ned Beatty who played American cop Bender. In the original film he gets involved in the police chase to capture Will and Ronnie. (This time around Bender remains American but he has changed gender.) 'I didn't know they were going to switch the role' said Sarah of Bender's transition from male to female, 'but like the character, I was an American in Scotland.' Galbraith is now based in Falkirk with her husband and daughter. 'Later I asked Michael Hoffman and he explained that he hadn't really thought about it, but decided it would be great for this version. They've developed this brilliant story around her and the reason she really wants to catch these boys is because of issues with her dad. It's a cool transition.' While the original film is packed with Scottish banter and humour, it was also political with an undertone of Scottish nationalism. It's fair to say anti-Thatcherite themes were more obvious. Ms Galbraith said: 'The production does have a moral compass, there's dialogue where the characters talk about tourists spending £20 on a pair of plastic bagpipes while they are underpaid. Will's moral compass kicks in and he wants to give the money away to help people. The scene where money is fired out of these cannons to his community with people picking up the money is very powerful. Ronnie goes more off the deep end and is more into the badness (of robbing). It's really all about how you 'stick it to the man' and make more of yourself than what was ever expected of you.' The production has been successfully touring Scotland where certain audiences have cheered when the classic line is recited 'I hold up buses'. Edinburgh is central to the story with locations such as Wester Hailes, Princes Street, North Bridge and Salisbury Crags all included in the original film. The bus station scene was said to have been filmed in Glasgow but the yellow Bar-Ox (a teenage gang from Oxgangs) spray paint on the escalator suggests otherwise. Now north Edinburgh will become part of the story when Restless Natives arrives at the regenerated Leith Theatre. Sarah said: 'We are looking forward to arriving in the capital where the story is set. It's a home-grown Scottish musical, there are lots of jukebox musicals now but as well as the original Big Country material there's new music written by Tim Sutton. The sounds very much belong in the 80s in terms of the Big Country guitar riffs as well as the kinds of sounds you might recognise from an advert or something that could only be from that time.' The much loved Big Country soundtrack amplified the Scottish underdog spirit of the film, and Will's fascination with Rob Roy also added a further swashbuckling romance. The musical, much like the original film, suggests it's time for Scotland to produce new stories and heroes. Sarah added: 'The tourists are no longer interested in the original Scottish heroes. They want to know about these new ones. As the policeman says at the end 'spending is up, tourism is up; you're bigger than the Loch Ness Monster'. These boys become the Scottish heroes of the times'. Ned Beatty was persuaded to take on the original role of Bender for £25,000, a kilt and a Scottish holiday. Ned Beatty Photo courtesy of Studio Canal Sarah agrees there are resonances with herself and the character. She arrived in Scotland after growing up in New Jersey and meeting her husband while singing on a cruise ship. She said: 'I was about 15 minutes from New York and my thing growing up was Broadway shows. In those days you could get tickets for the last row for around $15. My idol was Lea Salonga who was the original voice of Jasmine in the Disney film Aladdin, I would go and see her in Miss Saigon and Les Misérables, really anything she was in'. Sarah achieved something of an American dream when she met Lea and became her backing singer for UK tours and a subsequent Christmas tour of the states. She will carry on in that role later this year. 'I met my idol and now I sing backing for her'. Sometimes dreams do come true. Restless Natives is at Leith Theatre from June 7 to 21 2025 A still from the original film courtesy of Studio Canal Sarah Galbraith – an American in Scotland 'Restless Natives' Musical Scotland Tour 40 years on from their last ride (the original film was released in 1985), this hilarious and faithful new adaptation is produced by the same creative team behind the beloved classic Scottish film. PHOTO Colin Hattersley Like this: Like Related

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store