All posts by Joe

Bee Stings EP

'Bee Stings EP'  - CoverSTCD009 – Released 22/9/2008

CD | 7Digital

My debut for Sotones (with Joe Parker And The Power) was this 4-track EP made up of the title track (“a slice of poppy exuberance Nightshift magazine praised as ‘… a summery pop thrash with some great pots and pans drumming…'” according to the press release), perennial LJP standard Number Nine (an oddly restrained version, in fact) plus the obligatory live version and demo. We thought we were gonna take over the world back then, and it kind of captures that youthful arrogance, even if the highlight of our career was supporting a late-decline Voodoo Glow Skulls. I quite like it.

Not available any more – CDs were limited and distribution deal with 7Digital has lapsed.

Recorded and mixed at Orange & Blue Studios, London by Malc and Si. Produced by Malc, Lonely Joe Parker and Dave Wade-Brown. Mastered by Neil Kennedy at Shelter Studios, Southampton.

Tracklisting:

  1. Bee Stings
  2. Number Nine
  3. Opinion
  4. Love Jugs (live)

about recycling. and cycling

heres a bit recycled from the power page… then a bit that isn’t…

The Future
(i wrote a long, eloquent bit this morning and i poured my damn guts out. but myspace stole it away into the ether between ‘submit’ and you reading it. huh.)

Well we all know what Leonard Cohen thinks. And other people think it’s a foreign country. if that’s the case it seems like I must be on the wrong side of the fence. it’s all about the UK i think. there’s a whole land of weird little b+bs, couches to crash on and national distress coach tickets to fake and the other day i realised how little i really know about the rest of the country.

did you know you can’t even get pea fritters up north?

i mean, i’ve been there before, played a fair bit of it and worked in scotland, etc etc etc but with a whole band you’re always a bit distracted; focused; zeroed in on the mythology of Your Band On The Road. so i want to take some time to meet some new people and introduce them to my frankenstein guitar. and filthy moods in the morning before the coffee comes.

now, to a pretty large degree this is me rationalizing as the rest of The Power have all got their own very exciting projects to work on, but i’d like to think i’ve got some free will in it. which is either totally true or totally an illusion, depending on how you look at it.

also – after a wee break in the states to find out a bit about how they elect people over there – and probably a couple of months pouring concrete for dosh (like over twice what a scientist gets, which reflects shit on the people who pay the scientists) i’ve got a feeling that i’ll have some quite different songs in the book.

we’ll still release Do This! the last power EP at some point i hope, depending on what Sotones’ other priorities are, i guess. at the moment it looks like either a rush job before christmas, or shelving it for a year or so. i hope we do get to release it though cos its a cracker – ‘Points’ is like the third or fourth best track off it, ‘Buttercup’ is going to blow you away.

in fact making ‘Do This!’ was probably the most satisfying thing i’ve done so far. that’s probably why i’m not in a rush to get it out, cos i really, actually, for once believe its okay enough that i don’t need to worry. also it reminds me of bob and davo and cams and jimmy.

in the meantime there’s a bike tour to do, a guitar to fix, and some relationships to patch up. see you on the tour or a bit later on,

joe xx

—ooh, a new bit—–luckyReadersOfLonelyJoe—-

I really like cycling. i’m really pissed off at the moment cos i can’t cycle. i haven’t been able to for weeks now since i got hit on my way to camden and cracked out a cotter pin (bikeoids know what i mean) leaving my bottom bracket a bit of a wreck.

so i’m looking forward to the tour really.

but! don’t forget confidence – cos okay, he did pull out, but i was coming down the hill in the sunny, happy, isnt-the-day-nice-on-top-of-the-world way you do when you’re cocky, but don’t realise it.

then – bump. and that’s that

Bicycle bicycle tour – flyers and details

ello all u lovely peeps…

first off thanks a lot cos we all know what a spaz i am at organising stuff…including crashing here n there.. anyway

here’s some flyers and other info type things

a bit of a mish cos i’m still trying to write up (15 days to go…) but pretty much there and so here are some flyers n that. any help u can give to promote, please do cos trying to think in promoter-speak and science-mind at the same time is driving me slowly crazy. well, rapidly crazy. well, crazy generally.. there u see??!?!?!?

Tour group (Facebook)
Bee Stings” EP – Released MONDAY 22nd SEPTEMBER

Brixton Windmill (facebook event)
windmill tickets

Oxford Port Mahon (facebook event)
OXFORD tickets OXFORD tickets, concs

Southampton Hamptons (facebook event)
soton tickets

full itinerary is:

SEPTEMBER
21 – Oxford (Port Mahon)
w/ Stornoway, Moneytree plus guest tbc
tickets from wegottickets, concessions here
load-in 5pm, doors 7.30pm, curfew 11pm sharp

22 – Winchester (Railway Inn)

23- Guildford (Platform Nine)
solo show

24 – London (Brixton Windmill)
supporting Let Our Enemies Beware, And So I Watch You From Afar,
tickets from wegottickets

25 – Brighton (hanging with the Moules)

26 – Southampton (Hamptons)
w/ Peter lyons, James Ewers (MY LUMINARIES), SKULLS (acoustic set), hellomynameisjoshi.
tickets from wegottickets
load-in 5pm, soundchecks: joe – 5.30 pete – 6 james – 6.15 emma – 6.30 joshi – 6.45, doors 7.30 curfew midnight, party till 1, who’s got the after party???!?

hello.
you’re at the end of the email…
i better go and write a thesis now. its okay, only 18,000 words to go. that’s only just over 1000 a day.

thanks, love you all lots and you know i’ll be mister-nice-and-calm once its all done…
joe xx

southampton
le Tours de Britain - Last Night

flyer
Lonely Joe Parker - Tours de Britain par Velo

oxford
Le Tours de Britain par Velo - first night - Stornoway + Lonely Joe Parker + Moneytree, Port Mahon OXFORD

Exile’s Sketches

Lonely Joe Parker: 'Exile's Sketches'
'Exile's Sketches - Cover'

Released 2008-05-01

Ltd. CD (run of 88)

In the summer of 2008 (while I should have been in the death throes of my PhD thesis), I collated most of my recorded musical output to that date.

Weighing in at 88 tracks, this collection of archive tracks, demos, live material and unreleased studio recordings came in boutique (read: hand-assembled and really fiddly) packaging. I made a run of, yes, 88 copies, initially each 7-disc sets. After about five of these monsters at CD-quality, I switched to a single disc per copy with tracks as 320 kb MP3s (burning 7 CDs per copy by hand being a huge pain in the arse.) The inlay was also pretty special – handwritten, I spent a couple of days laying and re-laying it out before I was happy with it. The power of PhD procrastination, hey?

The tracks span the period 2003-2008, with tracks being roughly split chronologically over discs. The first disc covers early songs written as a student in London, mainly (of course) being about girls’n’stuff. These mainly fall into forgettable 3-chord pop ditties lile ‘Spanish Girls‘ or more interesting constructions like ‘Slurry Jamaica Rum Night‘ – which I like for their naivete. I gave a lot of these tracks out at open mic nights and the like, usually with art by Liz Moores and the title ‘All My Friends Wear Stetsons‘, or something similar.

Next up, the ‘Basement Songs‘ were recorded in my first year as a grad student in Oxford, mainly with my mates Ben and Finn, who lived in the building next door. Drinking wine late at night was de rigeur for them as Oxford arts undergrads. It had a worse effect on me and these are mainly pretty hopeless songs (as in, both rubbish and depressing).

Exile's Sketches - Sleeve
The remaining sleeve art master

Disc Three is ‘Ten Friends‘ in its entirety, the demo disc that ended up turning into – with friends from Moneytree, The Beaux Hardts and Jimi Ray – The Mega Hairy Men and later The Power. The fourth disc was also released elsewhere, as the Power’s EP ‘Bee Stings’. Here it was also packaged with the vaguely Nick Cave-esque murder ballad ‘Mary Rose’, which was removed from the EP tracklisting prior to release. A shame as it was the best song on there, though a poor recording.

More tracks from The Power make up Disc Five, this time in the form of unreleased studio tracks (finished and unfinished) as well as live sets from the Access Festival (a 4000+ open-air fundraiser held in Southampton in 2007) and the Beaux Hardts’ leaving show at The Talking Heads in September 2007. After they left, the Power effectively dissolved despite a few ill-fated attempts to revive it with a different lineup. Songs like ‘Buttercup‘ and ‘Points  / Quiet‘ are still in my live set today, however. The most finished tracks make up Disc Six, the ‘Do This’ EP which was – heheheh – never actually ‘done’.

Finally, Disc Seven consisted entirely of new works and demos from Jan – April 2008, after the van I was living in got stolen and I had to move into accommodation. I tend to write in busts and this was a great example of that – for a few months I averaged about three songs a week. Also, I was trying to pull a girl, which always helps get the creativity flowing a bit…


Tracklisting:

Disc 1 – All My Friends Wear Stetsons (2003)

  1. Intro
  2. Aim For The End
  3. <3 U Baby
  4. Caught In A Trap
  5. Charly
  6. Coke-A-Coke-A-Cocaine (Feat. Dave Wade-Brown, Alec Fraser)
  7. Davy Crockett
  8. …Ever!
  9. How To Make A Rock N Roll Song (Feat. Dave Wade-Brown)
  10. I Didn’t Try
  11. Introductions
  12. London Streets
  13. Not That Good
  14. torture
  15. Spanish Girls (Feat. Dave Wade-Brown)
  16. Sorry Lover Song
  17. Walking Down Streets
  18. Slurry Jamaica Rum Nite
  19. Surprises (Feat. Dave Wade-Brown, Alec Fraser)

Disc 2 – Basement Songs (2004-2005)

  1. bedsitroom (Feat. Finn, Benn)
  2. beestings2
  3. Concrete Gypsies
  4. cowboyjam (Feat. Finn, Benn)
  5. definitelynotbjork (Feat. Finn, Benn)
  6. moreswing (Feat. Finn, Benn)
  7. notevenslightlybjork (Feat. Finn, Benn)
  8. princesses
  9. somedaysaredifferent
  10. spacemehbones (Feat. Finn, Benn)

Disc 3 – Ten Friends (Original Demo) (2006)

  1. _mcs
  2. _op
  3. _r
  4. _R
  5. _t
  6. _c
  7. _e
  8. _d
  9. _mE
  10. _m

Disc 4 – Bee Stings EP (2006)

  1. Bee Stings (Feat. Campbell Austin, Dave Wade-Brown)
  2. Number Nine (Feat. Campbell Austin, Dave Wade-Brown)
  3. No Sex (Feat. Campbell Austin, Dave Wade-Brown)
  4. Going Out (Feat. Campbell Austin, Dave Wade-Brown)
  5. Mary Rose (Feat. Campbell Austin)

Disc 5 – The Power… (2007)

*Live tracks feat. Campbell Austin, Dave Wade-Brown, Rob Wade-Brown and Jimmy Hatherley, except where indicated.

  1. Bee Stings (live)*
  2. Love Jugs (live)*
  3. advertisingdemo 2
  4. Coffee (demo)
  5. Dublin Girl (demo)
  6. Fatkids (demo)
  7. Hake (demo)
  8. jimsnotgunafixitdemo
  9. onedegreeoutsidedemo
  10. Opinon (demo)
  11. Robbie’s Reins (demo)
  12. townHallBluesSLOW
  13. townHallBLuewsABilly
  14. whenyoureatschooldemo
  15. Kleptoromantic (live, feat. Michael Anderson)
  16. The Power Song (demo)*
  17. Big Car, Small Cock (demo)*
  18. Deep (demo)
  19. A (demo)

Disc 6 – Do This EP (2008)

  1. Buttercup*
  2. Opinion*
  3. Points*
  4. Kleptoromantic* (also feat. David Miatt)

Disc 7 – And Beyond… (2008)

  1. Arcs / Deal
  2. Bitter River
  3. Boom / Word
  4. Closing
  5. Drunk and Disorderley
  6. Fishwife
  7. Greatcoat
  8. Hathaway
  9. Hill
  10. i just got home drunk
  11. Language Barrier
  12. Peacemaker
  13. Piano1
  14. Piano2
  15. Queasy
  16. Quiet
  17. Raining
  18. Scars
  19. Shanty
  20. toot!
  21. While
  22. Outro

Correlating Viral Phenotypes With Phylogeny: Accounting for Phylogenetic Uncertainty

Infect Genet Evol. 2008 May;8(3):239-46. Epub 2007 Aug 21.
Parker J, Rambaut A, Pybus OG.

Many recent studies have sought to quantify the degree to which viral phenotypic characters (such as epidemiological risk group, geographic location, cell tropism, drug resistance state, etc.) are correlated with shared ancestry, as represented by a viral phylogenetic tree. Here, we present a new Bayesian Markov-Chain Monte Carlo approach to the investigation of such phylogeny-trait correlations. This method accounts for uncertainty arising from phylogenetic error and provides a statistical significance test of the null hypothesis that traits are associated randomly with phylogeny tips. We perform extensive simulations to explore and compare the behaviour of three statistics of phylogeny-trait correlation. Finally, we re-analyse two existing published data sets as case studies. Our framework aims to provide an improvement over existing methods for this problem.

Silence in the Streets

SOCPA Record attempt
12 Letters in... a Record-breaking protest.

Originally published in The Oxford Student, Feb 2008.
Read the original article here (.pdf format): OS6.20.OST OS6.21.OST

It’s 8.30 on a wet Monday morning in January. I’m standing beside the Thames outside 11 Millbank – better known as ‘MI5’ – holding a small cork noticeboard taped to a broom handle. I’m trying hard to look reasoned, righteous and above all, lawful, as I have an excellent view of both the river and two black, efficient-looking submachine-guns gripped by a pair of the Met’s finest. For the last five minutes we’ve been having a heated debate spanning police operating procedures, Government green papers and ancient civil liberties that concerns my right to stand here at the corner of the road by the rush-hour traffic.

Eventually the policemen, their guns and a curious piece of legislation officially on the statute books as ‘SOCPA (2005) s132-138’ all prove as powerful as the mighty ebb tide of the Thames itself and so I walk away with my board. I have not been arrested but, in some sense, I don’t feel free, either.

The copper has offered to arrest (or, as he ominously puts it, ‘process’ me) because pinned to my board is an A3 piece of paper with the hand-written words ‘B-is-for-Margaret-Beckett – Get Out Of Your Caravan And Get A Clue’ and her mugshot in all its grainy laserjet glory.

It’s a modest enough statement of political opinion and I and my companions Todd and Chris are doing little more than standing benignly in the rain, taking turns to lean sleepily on the broom handle and half-heartedly offer our opinion in a Michael-Palin-cum-market-trader patter to anyone who’ll listen.

We have undertaken to carry out 26 separate demonstrations in one day, with a different target politician for each letter of the alphabet. We will become record breakers, stealing an official Guinness World Record held by comedian-activist Mark Thomas (21 protests) but though the tone of our demonstration (from ‘A-is-for-Dianne-Abbot: Stop Laughing At Portillo’s Rubbish Gags!’ to ‘Z-is-for-Zac-Goldsmith: Pick A Party And Stick To It!’) is flippant, our purpose is deadly serious.


This is because for every single one of our miniscule, peaceful, Goons-esque protests we have had to give the Commissioner of the Metropolitan Police advance notice in writing detailing our proposed actions. Eye colour and favourite toothpaste aren’t quite included; exact timings to the minute, meeting details and press briefings are. It’s a lot of information to fill in 26 times over just to stand around with a silly banner and as well as being laborious, intimidating and Byzantine it turns out our rights can still be suspended, as our armed friends’ behaviour demonstrates.

Others have discovered this the hard way: Maya Evans was the first person convicted under the law, for reading out the names of the British an Iraqi war dead by the Cenotaph in Whitehall. Speaking to Tim Barton she pointed out that the weight of bureaucracy involved and range of police powers granted to the police on the day ‘…makes it so draconian and anti-freedom… that’s not really a free demonstration, once you go through the requirements.’

Map of the Protests Around Parliament area, c. 2008Similarly, comic-turned-activist Mark Thomas was incensed by the scope of SOCPA, but typically, saw the surreal nature of the special legal conditions around Parliament as a comic opportunity after a friend was threatened with arrest for picnicking with a political Victoria sponge (with ‘Peace’ iced upon its jammy face.) He has since organized a series of peculiarly British protests in favour of trolls, surrealism, bans on surrealism and the record-setting speed-protest we’re attempting to better today.

However with a straight face, and at some expense, he is currently seeking a public prosecution of Gordon Brown, who last autumn may have inadvertently committed an offence by reading aloud a speech by Nelson Mandela live on TV in Parliament Square itself. Could life get weirder?

This may have catalysed the Government into a partial retreat. This month they announce the results of a public consultation, though official nods and winks to ‘harmonization’ of police powers have led some to suggest an expansion of the rules countrywide. I put this to a Home Office spokesperson, who insists the consultation was merely to see if ‘there remains to be a case for the current legislation.” When pressed, however, they refused to comment on or rule out suggestions that powers might be expanded across the country, insisting there had to be a law governing protest since without one, ‘anyone could turn up’ – clearly a nightmare scenario for the Government.

Timing demonstrations
Even cutting-edge political aggitators sometimes need to improve their timekeeping...

Suppose, I wondered, an ordinary member of the public – with no legal training – takes issue with a topical Government policy, gets an unpaid day off work and hops on a train down to London with a placard? Wouldn’t they be guilty through ignorance of an offence? The Home Office were at a total loss, ending the interview.

Baroness Sue Miller (LD) will this week question the Home Office on the outcome of a recent Green Paper consultation, with a view to introducing a Repeal Bill. She opposes the law, to the extent that she organized a public protest against it with fellow politicians. The law was, she explained, “clearly nonsense – incredibly beaureaucratic. It’s in place for one of three reasons, and only the Government can say why; because Brian Haw’s protest was undtdy; because it was an embarrassment to Blair; or because of a perceived terrorist threat. Well, the information we get from Black Rod – security briefings – tells us that in relation to the security issue it’s the road that’s always seen as the real difficulty, not protestors. It’s a small step towards a police state. People should be able to demonstrate”. Any proposal to extend the powers nationwide would, she said, be ‘chilling.’

Chief Inspector Paul Switzer is the policeman with responsibility for enforcing the law throughout most of the Parliament area. He is helpful, polite and (for someone simultaneously policing a football match during our interview) attentive. Nonetheless, he has the strained, even Canuteian air of a man trying to enforce the laws of an Alice In Wonderland world, where crossing a road can turn a ‘peace’ T-shirt into political heavy weaponry. Our team was repeatedly asked to produce a paper copy of our authorization, he reasoned, because it was ‘common sense… it saves time,’ but he agreed it wasn’t necessary. In that case, I ask, would then be unlawful for a policeman to demand it of a demonstrator under threat of arrest? He could only concede that ‘a lot of police pass through the area… some may not be as au fait with SOCPA as the various units that work that area.’ It seems even the police are in confusion over the law.

As he rings off, I feel a bit confused, too. It all seems reasoned, reasonable, even. But I reflect: The courageous protestor bravely standing up for their beliefs is a part of freedom’s folklore, a part of the language of democracy we take for granted. In recent months we have watched protestors in Pakistan, read about police pay pickets at home and joined Facebook causes from Burmese monks to marine conservationists.

The right to assemble with others, to freely and peacefully protest is one of the most ancient and basic liberties we have enjoyed. Since medieval times – the basic right to petition those ruling us has never been called into question. Security threats are clearly a smokescreen – but should we now subordinate this right to present a friendly face to visitors, or allow the government to meet in peace?

I hope not. I have been to another place in the world where the organs of government meet peacefully while tourists happily snap away. The photos are of Lenin’s tomb, the place is Red Square, and the ‘unhindered Government’ is that of Putin’s Russia. It’s efficient, certainly. But it’s not accountable, and an insult to our history and traditions if we allowed it to happen here.

World Protest Record Attempt: SOCPA videos

Inspired by Mark Thomas‘ ‘official’ world record attempt (highlighting the ludicrous SOCPA law) we thought we’d try and break his WR of 20 protests in a day. We managed 24 out of 26 planned protests (being unlawfully prevented from completing one by the police, and failing to record another thanks to a camera fault.

Vol.11

'Vol.11' CoverFeatured Artists:
The Beaux Hardts, Money Tree, Edward J. Hicks, Monoboy, rude_NHS, The Scarlet Letter Union, The Limes, Band Of Skulls (previously Fleeingnewyork), Loose Caboose, Blakfish, Joe Parker And The Power, Philip Barebones, Chin Music, Caesura, JayEtAl

STCD001 – Released 2007-08-01

Reissued online in 2009 with a slightly different tracklisting:

Buy iTunes | More Stores | Listen on Spotify

(‘Vol.11′ was a scene on a CD – Sotoness’ first proper release and a showcase for everyone involved…)

Original blurb:

Featuring the best bands in the south there’s something for everyone as post-rock jostles with glitchcore, drum’n’bass rubs shoulders with indie. Uniting the music and the musicians is a belief that good music is better put together and released by artists who care about it, about their fans, and each other. Every single copy is individually put together and numbered by hand, by one or more of the bands making this a truly historic release.

But don’t take our word for it – read the review in Kruger Magazine

You can also listen to the whole record online now using the media player on this very site (top left corner)…

Tracklisting:

  1. The Beaux Hardts – Lucky Pierre
  2. Money Tree – Cyclical History
  3. Edward J. Hicks – Skeleton Hand
  4. Monoboy – Gurb
  5. rude_NHS – My Viscus
  6. The Scarlet Letter Union – Agoraphobia
  7. The Limes – Glider
  8. Band Of Skulls (previously Fleeingnewyork) – Blood
  9. Loose Caboose – Hard Task
  10. Blakfish – Captain Burns
  11. Joe Parker And The Power – Bee Stings
  12. Philip Barebones – I Am Why You Are You
  13. Chin Music – Our Last Chance
  14. Caesura – Time Passage
  15. JayEtAl – Place Of Trust

Ten Friends LP

'Ten Friends' demoSelf-released LP (September 2006); ten songs about ten-friends.

Break up with a girlfriend and imprisoned in the house? Write some songs…

Recorded in two days in a bathroom. The names of the ‘ten friends’ were never revealed, though most of them guessed since. Three of these songs went on to become mainstays of the Mega Hairy Men / Power set (‘r’ / ‘No Sex’; ‘c’ / ‘Princesses’; ‘mE’ / ‘Number Nine’).

I ran off about 20 of these on a CDR machine. Each disc was spray-painted a different colour and numbered. None are left that I know of.

Also, I’ve since been told that spray-painting CDs is a REALLY bad idea; the paint tends to melt after repeated plays and screw up any disc drive unlucky enough to house them at the time…

Tracklisting:

  1. _mcs
  2. _op
  3. _r
  4. _R
  5. _t
  6. _c
  7. _e
  8. _d
  9. _mE
  10. _m