Stewart Lee: 6 things... I loved at the Southbank Centre

Stand-up and writer Stewart Lee has been described as ‘the comedian’s comedian’, with a distinctive performance style that drew critical acclaim for his BAFTA Award-winning BBC series; Stewart Lee’s Comedy Vehicle.

Pleasingly, not only are we big fans of his, but he is also a big fan of us. Back in 2018, ahead of an appearance on our Royal Festival Hall stage with his stand-up show Content Provider, Lee kindly took a moment to share his memories of six favourite Southbank Centre performances. So, here's the man himself to talk you through it.

Stewart Lee, comedian
Idil Sukan

The Southbank Centre has been a central pole of my cultural tent since I moved to London 30 years ago, with early 1990s shows hosted by the London Musicians' Collective being especially important to my post-provincial discovery of cool metro-shit. 

It was very difficult to pick a top six, with gigs by Lee Ranaldo and William Hooker, Hawkwind, Television, The Soft Boys, Shirley Collins, Sonic Youth, Acid Mothers' Temple, The Stooges, Faust, Ornette Coleman, Iva Bittova, Sonny Rollins, Boredoms, Evan Parker, Alan Tomlinson and Harry Hill doing John Cage, and Camille Paglia in her leather trousers all lodging in the memory. How does one get to curate a Meltdown? Is it gauche to just ask? Anyway, here's six heavy hitters.

 

Derek Bailey and The Ruins

The Purcell Room | 3 April 1997

Twenty-one years ago and this was a life changing gig.  Free jazz guitar pioneer Derek Bailey was playing with Japanese improvisation duo The Ruins. At one point, lost in a reverie, he wandered into the back wall of the building, clanging his guitar into it. The Southbank type stiffs in the room seemed embarrassed. Uncle Derek did it again and seamlessly incorporated his accident into his arsenal. I realised you had to roll with what happens. What happens in the room is the gig. I went on to win Celebrity Mastermind answering questions on Derek Bailey.

Stewart Lee answering questions on an episode of BBC's Mastermind
Screengrab from video: FOR BLOG USE ONLY

Tony Conrad

Queen Elizabeth Hall | 30 September 1998

Minimalist drone avatar Tony Conrad played one wavering note on the violin for a hour and then stopped, and in the moment he stopped I was forced to contemplate the vastness of the gulf between absence and presence.

 

Patti Smith & Kevin Shields' The Coral Sea

Queen Elizabeth Hall | 22 June 2005

Patti Smith's poetry uncoupled from rock backing, and Kevin Shields' abstract guitar whoosh unleashed from the framing device of My Bloody Valentine. And we were near enough to the front to see exactly what effects pedals he was using, and on what settings.

 

John Peel Tribute Night

Queen Elizabeth Hall | 12 October 2005

The Fall, in a peak late period incarnation, at the bottom of the bill; country chanteuse Laura Cantrell; the sublime protest reggae of Misty in Roots; New Order playing a Joy Division set with an appropriately busted guitar amp; and Delia Smith.

 

Peter Brotzmann & Full Blast

Purcell Room | November 2008

Pinned to the walls by the German free jazz saxophonist's unforgettable noise trio.

 

In Search of Nic Jones / The Nightingales

Queen Elizabeth Hall / Purcell Room | 28 May 2011

In 2011 The Southbank Centre invited me to curate a three day 'Austerity Binge' in tandem with my stand-up run at the Royal Festival Hall, and I gave myself some tough choices. This night saw missing-in-action folk hero Nic Jones, and supportive friends and collaborators, trawl his much-missed back catalogue. Nextdoor Birmingham's Beefheart-channeling post-punk survivors The Nightingales played the set of a lifetime, Robert Lloyd leaving the stage to roam the royal venue and compromise its dignity. I scampered between both stages in a daze.

 

A side on profile of comedian Stewart Lee; a grey haired man with thick, black glasses smiles in front of a microphone. He's wearing a black blazer over a grey checked shirt and a slim black tie.
Steve Ullathorne
Stewart Lee: Basic Lee

Stewart Lee returns to our Royal Festival Hall, 28 June – 2 July 2023, to present his new show, Basic Lee.