Rhythm Records

Buy Bedrock On-Line!

 

The Band
BedRock

 

In The Sand
Dining Room Studios P.O. Box 1225, Oranjemund, NAMIBIA BedRock Email

  So Where's The Party

Recovery

La Cantina - Sorry, out of stock.....

-------------------
BedRock
The Band In The Sand
-------------------
The More You drink,
The better We Sound

-------------------

-------------------

BUY BEDROCK ON LINE!

Bedrock’s Top Selling Downloads

1.Rock ‘n Roll Man (Album: Recovery)

A personalised and nostalgic look back at rock heroes through the ages, together with the influences they have had on many of us. Charted twice in Indie charts.

2.Crowd Invasion (Album: So, Where’s The Party?)

No prisoners! A BIG rocker – lots of guitars and plenty of noise and energy! Fashioned on Bedrock gigs. Another song which charted in the Indie charts.

3.The Air Guitar Song (Album: So, Where’s The Party?)

A biographical account of how a young policeman turned into a rocker!

4.Nothing Worries Me (Album: So, Where’s The Party?)

A tongue-in-cheek bit of reggae built on the traditions of Jamaica and green leaves!

5.Last Round (Album: So, Where’s The Party?

A friendly sing-a-long crowd pleaser widely played in pubs throughout Namibia.


Paper Lace

Kitwe, Zambia
1972 - 1975
From the eyes and ears of Paudie Coughlan

This band was in existence when I moved to Kitwe in December 1973. The up-front musicians were Kenny Ramage on lead guitar and Adrian Lawlor as lead vocals. Sue Forde managed and organised the group. Kenny was actually in his last year of boarding school at this time, and was talented way beyond his age. We used stand-in lead guitarists while Kenny was away.He joined full time in mid 1974. Most of the sessions were in Kitwe at places like the BCEL Club, Polo Club, and Flying Club. Unfortunately Mindolo Dam was going through a ban on sessions at the time of these photos due to fights. Sue also managed to get us a formal function at the Kitwe Club, which led to other formal club functions.

Kenny Ramage
Kenny Ramage doing a lead guitar solo during a session at the BCEL Club in Kitwe. Robin Kinnear is in the background. Out of shot are Dave Robbins (drums), Robbie Centonze (bass), Adrian Lawlor (lead vocals) and Paudie Coughlan (keyboards/rhythm guitar). This was the beginning of a transition period just before Dave Robbins leaving, and Robbie going onto drums, and Robin onto bass. The BCEL Club became a very popular session venue during this period due to the ban at Mindolo Dam.




Dave, Robin and Paudie

This, and the next two shots, were taken at a private function at the Masonic Hall in Kitwe (alongside the Buff Club, furtherest away from the Parklands shops). The function was either Billy Charlton's 21st birthday party, or a wedding (around that time could have been Pierre and Cherrie Fabel? Gavin and Jill Knowles?). Out of shot are Adrian Lawlor and Gavin Cochran (a stand-in lead guitarist). The fingers on the left belong to Robbie Centonze on bass. These three shots were taken by Sue Forde.


Dave

Music affects musicians in different ways (as it does the people who listen to them playing it). Here Dave Robbins is off on a musically induced fantasy about.........? The music must have been slow and dreamy here because drummers don't usually play with their eyes closed, for obvious reasons (like missing a drum or two).




Gavin and Adrian

 

Out of shot is Robbie Centonze. Gavin Cochran was from Ndola, ex Lusaka. He later played in a number of Ndola bands, including several started by Mike and Geoff Paynter. In addition to being a lead vocalist, Adrian was also a fairly accomplished drummer and rhythm guitarist. Obscured in the photo are Robin and Dave.




RobbieThis was taken at Rhodwins Resort on the Mufulira - Kitwe road, at a band & friends picnic. Robbie was a bassist, drummer and vocalist. He was the main naughty bugger in the band. When he and Kenny Ramage got together to make mischief, things generally became unpredictable. Note Robbie's mischievous grin. Readers will be either amused or shocked to see that Robbie is holding a Vienna sausage at a strategic angle to the dog. We were all discussing going up to "the hut" on the other side of the lake to buy hamburgers etc. Robbie had just said "Be careful of the hot dogs - you never know what part of the dog you might get"!

Kenny - Checking that things are OKKenny Ramage undergoing what we musicians called "Pre-Gig Maintenance". The procedure being carried out is "Body, Mind and Soul Lubrication". Kenny is using the very popular and highly respected "Mosi Lager Ingestion Method". Note the semi-braced position and the determined look on his face. The procedure is repeated several times before, and even during, the gig. This method was controversial because the recommended dosage could easily be exceeded. The symptoms from exceeding the recommended dosage included lack of coordination, slurred speech, inability to stand up properly, and a general loosening of social inhibitions resulting in anything from over-amorous, to ridiculous, to aggressive behaviour. HOWEVER, musicians are a tough and hardy breed (especially NR / Zam ones). Even when suffering from severe overdose symptoms from this treatment, they managed to play complicated chords and solos on guitars and keyboards, play complicated drum beats, stand up straight, remember the words of songs and pronounce them properly, sing in tune, check out the chicks, and in general carry out proper and enjoyable entertainment of their audiences. True professionals.


At Sue Forde's farewell dinner before she left for Australia. Note the true musicians' attitude being demonstrated by Kenny, in that he is wearing a head-band at a dinner at the then snooty Kitwe Club. Karen Kearns, then going out with Adrian, was sister of Geoff Kearns, drummer in that very successful ex-Kitwe band "The Gentle People". I believe that Karen is in RSA, and John Costopoulos tells me that Geoff is now in Australia after leaving Durban. Keith Parry married Kitwe girl Carol Hope, and as far as I know they went "down south". The look on Sue Bartlett's face shows that she was clearly not used to the behaviour of musicians in posh surroundings. Sue B. was from Kalalushi.

Paper Lace eventually broke up in late 1975 after both Kenny and then Adrian left Zambia to go to RSA, where they later played in bands together in Jo'burg. Robbie Centonze (drums), Robin Kinnear (bass), and myself (keyboards/rhythm guitar) then joined up with Pete Cotterill (lead guitar) to form "Crystal Blu". This band was Ndola based, and played a lot at Tudor Inn, and the usual Kitwe venues. Mike Thomas frequently guested with "Crystal Blu" on lead vocals (and tambourine!). Mike, Robbie, Robin, and myself went on to play for various separate Copperbelt bands into the 1980's.

The people involved in 1970's Copperbelt bands "Paper Lace" and "Crystal Blu" are now spread over the globe: UK (Adrian Lawlor), Namibia (Kenny Ramage), Jo'burg (Robbie Centonze, Dave Robbins), Durban (Mike Thomas), Zambia (Robin Kinnear), Australia (Sue Forde, Pete Cotterill,) and the Republic of Ireland (Paudie Coughlan).

 

Criminal Records

All Music Produced by
"Criminal Records" at
"Dining Room Studios"

Criminal Records

Copyright © 1998 - Perpetuity by BedRock-The Band in The Sand
All rights reserved.
Information in this document is subject to change without notice.
Site designed and maintained by Kenny Ramage.
Editorial Comment and Diary by Pete Shout.

This site is best viewed with a monitor.