A Night of a Thousand Vampires: Live in London | |
Type: | live |
Longtype: | and concert film |
Artist: | the Damned |
Cover: | A_Night_of_a_Thousand_Vampires.jpg |
Released: | 28 October 2022 |
Recorded: | 28 October 2019 |
Venue: | London Palladium |
Genre: | |
Length: | 93:27 (audio CDs) 96:25 (Blu-ray) |
Label: | earMUSIC |
Prev Title: | The Rockfield Files |
Prev Year: | 2020 |
Next Title: | Darkadelic |
Next Year: | 2023 |
A Night of a Thousand Vampires: Live in London is a live album and concert film by English rock band the Damned, released on 28 October 2022 through earMUSIC.[2] It was released as a 2-CD/1-Blu-ray set and various two-LP gatefolds.[3] The film premiered as part of FrightFest Halloween on 27 October 2022 at Cineworld Leicester Square in London.[4] It was recorded and filmed for a special one-off musical and theatrical performance billed as A Night of a Thousand Vampires at the London Palladium on 28 October 2019. Directed by Martin Gooch, the concert film features the cast of The Circus of Horrors performing alongside the Damned.[5] The live show marked the final gig of drummer Andrew 'Pinch' Pinching after 20 years with the band.[6]
A Night of a Thousand Vampires reached number 1 on the UK Music Video Chart[7] and number 7 on the UK Blu-Ray Chart.[8]
Singer David Vanian told Paste magazine in 2023 that "there actually were a thousand vampires in the audience. Everybody came dressed as vampires, of whatever era they wanted to be, and the whole point of it started off because I just wanted to make a very different type of show – I wanted to [do] something we've never done, which was picking songs we'd never played and also doing it as a theatrical experience."[9]
Songs performed on the night but not included on the album and in the film are "New Rose", "Smash It Up", "Nasty", and "Shadow of Love".[10]
The film opens with black-and-white footage of fans arriving at the London Palladium – many in Victorian dress and vampire attire – as a horse drawn carriage arrives with a coffin inside. The coffin, with David Vanian's body in it, is carried into the theatre and laid on the stage. As the concert begins, the film changes from black-and-white into colour. The Damned performs songs from their 40-year catalogue, supported by trumpet player Chris Coull, solo violinists Yury Revich and Vanian's daughter Emily Vanian, and the Maple Rose Strings. Throughout the show, the band is joined by an array of vampires, ghouls, dancers, acrobats, contortionists, and fire breathers.[5] [11] [12] [13]
For the first half of the show, Vanian is made up as a "very typical Bela Lugosi type of vampire, with a cape and an evening suit and the same kind of look," Vanian said. "And then in the interim, the 20 minutes between the shows, I then shaved all my hair off and completely converted into Nosferatu for the last part of the set – the classic Max Schreck look."[9]
Vanian said of the theatrical part of the show: "we didn't rehearse any of it and the band didn't know what was happening – only I knew. It was quite an interesting night!"[9]
New Noise Magazine described the album as a "remarkable set" that includes much of the Damned's "darker, goth material." They felt that the band is "still playing at their best," and that the addition of strings and trumpet "just adds to the ghoulish atmosphere." Besides some of the band's own songs, they highlighted a cover of the Doors' "People Are Strange" and an "inspired medley" of "Neat Neat Neat" and Bauhaus' "Bela Lugosi's Dead."
Metal Digest wrote, "There are a few moments here which probably need the visuals to be fully appreciated ... but even in the twilight of their career, the Damned show that they can still pull out all the stops with an excellent live album." The House of Prog web site called it a "superb album," writing, "Vanian is singing as well as he ever has, while Oxymoron has always been a wonderful sonic asset to the band, the rhythm section is tight, while Sensible is polished and powerful."
Reviewing the concert film, The Moshville Times website said that "there really isn't a dull moment ... the spectacular elements are brought courtesy of the numerous extras who add so much to the show ... It's not a gig, it's a spectacle and it's been captured very well indeed for this release."[13]
Other reviewers also noted the Vampira dancers and The Circus of Horrors, who appear onstage throughout the show.[12] [5] The V13.net website wrote that the performers "punctuate each song as a type of set piece, adding to the theatre and ambience of each song's theme,"[12] while Louder Than War felt they bring a "bizarre and affecting beauty to the music of the Damned."[5] Maximum Volume Music called it a "well thought out and executed occasion" and a "totally immersive experience both visually and aurally."[11]
Adapted from the album liner notes and film credits.[14]
The Damned
Additional musicians
The Maple Rose Strings:
Film performers
Technical
Peak position | ||
UK Music Video Chart | 1 | |
---|---|---|
UK Blu-Ray Chart | 7 |