Hugh Reed and the Velvet Underpants

Hugh Reed and the Velvet Underpants were a cult Glasgow based band who have supported Debbie Harry, Simple Minds, the Fall and John Otway.[1]

Biography

The band was founded by Hugh O'Hagan, now commonly known as Hugh Reed, c. 1990 from an amalgam of members of the Harlequin Cabbage Bugs, Halcyon Days, the Rhythm Kittens and the Trouser Coughs, including at different times Lawson Campbell, Stewart MacDonald and Lindsey Watt.

The first gig HR&TVU played was at Annie Miller's in Glasgow in 1989, supported by The Harlequin Cabbage Bugs followed by The State Bar where they were supported by The Rhythm Kittens. On both occasions, members of the support bands also took part in Hugh Reed and the Velvet Underpants' set. For the Annie Miller's gig, Hugh Reed used a bass borrowed from Lindsey Watt of Halcyon Days after breaking the strings of his own bass during the sound check. Video footage of the gig shows the Halcyon Days logo stuck to the front of the bass.

Hugh Reed and the Velvet Underpants also played in support of Pas the Gas at His Nibs with a short set consisting of four songs: "Sweet Jane", "Walk on the (Clyde)side", "Waiting for the Man", "White light/Heat", and "Get it On".

Hugh Reed and the Velvet Underpants had many different members throughout its existence in addition to core personnel Hugh O'Hagan and, slightly later, Tom Docherty. Tom's younger brother, Terence Docherty was their first guitarist and returned later as part of the Hugh Reed Explosion. Tom's youngest brother Tony Docherty was an occasional bassist. The association between the Docherty brothers and Reed still carries on.

The Velvet Underpants was particularly noted for its highly theatrical presentation and witty use of puns, titles "Take a Walk on the Clydeside" and "Smells Like Troon Harbour" being examples, and also, of course, the name of the band.

Hugh Reed and the Velvet Underpants lasted until Valentine's Day 1998, but was later reborn as the Hugh Reed Explosion.

Song material ranged from discussion of public perceptions of trainspotters and descriptions of hangovers, to accounts of what can happen when you drink in Glasgow's east end during an Old Firm game while wearing the wrong football scarf.

A typical Underpants gig would feature a stage dressed with numerous television sets all turned on, glitter balls and an overhead projector having coloured oils dropped on it. Reed would go through numerous costume changes and actions ranging from a policeman to a bride to illustrate each song.

Quite often he would leap manically about the audience, lost in an almost primal scream presentation. However, underpinning this was a tight backing band who could shift from punk rock ("Trainspotting") to scat-funk ("Salt, Sperm, Saliva, Sweat").

Since 2009, Reed has been living on and off in China, playing gigs in Beijing and played the first ever rock gigs in the southwestern city of Zunyi, a town with a population equivalent to Glasgow, Manchester or Liverpool.

Media exposure

The band's first single, "Six tae Wan", was used by BBC Radio 1 as the theme to a series on Scottish rock music.[2] O'Hagan and various band members also appeared on Scottish Television's late night debate programme Trial By Night in 1994.

On the recommendation of a friend, who saw Hugh Reed and the Velvet Underpants on local television, Deborah Harry invited the band to support her eleven date 1993 UK tour.[2]

Hugh O'Hagan also appeared in the 1996 film Trainspotting as the man failing to chat up Renton's love interest Dianne, played by Kelly Macdonald.

Discography

Albums

  • Take a Walk on the Clydeside - 1996
  • Ni Fa Feng Le Ma? - R U Mad? - 2010

Singles

  • "Six to Wan" - 1991
  • "Satellite Baby" - 1992

Videos/DVDs

  • Carry On Up the Underpants - 2002
gollark: What are you complaining about now?
gollark: Radio astronomy is also fairly expensive.
gollark: I mean, you can, but that would be stupid and no.
gollark: You can't use a claim as evidence for itself.
gollark: > About the latter half of the question, the inverse square root law would imply that the rules that generally put down magnetism are removed.What? No. It wouldn't imply that, because galactic orbits run on gravity and have nothing to do with electromagnetism.

References

  1. "John Otway + Hugh Reed and the Velvet Underpants @ Fibbers on 23 April 1996". Archived from the original on 14 May 2003. Retrieved 24 May 2008.
  2. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2016-12-30. Retrieved 2017-06-02.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)

Sources

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