Six months later I'd moved to London and just discovered Banquet Records in Kingston (a story documented in detail here). On that first trip, I bought a copy of Lemuria's First Collection and Kingston's Current by Dave House on cd. Those two releases were linked to Banquet Records in ways I wouldn't realise for a while to come - I'd bought the cd of Lemuria's first proper album, Get Better, in Spillers about a year earlier, a cd that Banquet themselves had put out. Dave House, who I'd first seen supporting Lemuria, used to work in Banquet (and possibly still did when I bought the cd). I wouldn't find this out for another year or so, having replaced another longtime Banquet staff member in a house share in Surbiton, and getting to know JT and Mike and co through him. If this story didn't need yet another set of semi-related anecdotes, I also bought an Above Them split 7" on that first trip to Banquet; that 7" contained photos of a very drunken night out we'd had with the guys in Above Them in Bar Sigma on the only other time I went there. I knew none of these (tenuous) connections that day when I first let Banquet Records begin to change my life.
Anyway, some years later Kingston's Current got a vinyl reissue for Record Store Day. By this point I'd just moved to Oxford but was back in Kingston a few days after RSD and popped into Banquet to see if they had any of the records Truck hadn't got in. I think this had actually been a release from a previous year, because I got it for the bargain price of £5 (the same price I paid for the cd). I was pleased to add it to my collection, partly because it's a good album, but mostly because the title-track is by far my favourite Dave House song. There was something nice about getting that song, singing the praises of Kingston so nicely, either end of my time in Surbiton/South London. I'm a sucker for acoustic punk-rock and gang-vocals.
The strongest songs on the album are often the more lamentful - Weeknights and Weekends and Stereo are both great, slower songs. I'm not 100% sold on the electronic beats used elsewhere, but perhaps that's because my introduction to Dave's music was as an acoustic singer at a punk-rock show. I didn't notice until I was taking the pictures below that the insert is numbered in pencil and mine is #3/250. I wonder who has #1 and #2?
Format: 12", numbered (3\250), insert
Tracks: 10
Cost: £5 new
Bought: Banquet Records, Kingston
When: 21/04/14
Colour: White
Etching: none
mp3s: none