Classic Rock

Classic Album Sundays

We all love to put on a favourite album, switch off the lights and just totally tune in. So does Colleen Murphy, and with her Classic Album Sundays she’s taken the experience further.

- Words: Jo Kendall Find out more at classicalb­umsundays.com

We all love to put on a favourite album, switch off the lights and just totally tune in. So does Colleen Murphy, and with her Classic Album Sundays she’s taken the experience further.

It’s September 2013, a Saturday evening, and I’m at Hayes & Harlington station, about to Google Map my way through an office-block-filled maze to a secluded destinatio­n where loud music, soft bean bags and Trooper beer await, at a new vinyl LP listening club called Classic Album Sundays.

At an outbuildin­g by The Old Vinyl Factory, formerly EMI’s enormous HQ and, fittingly, record-pressing plant, excited metal fans are hovering. Then it’s time to file in, grab a drink and flop out as Classic Album Sundays founder Colleen Murphy and Classic Rock/ Louder contributo­r Dom Lawson play a selection of 70s rock and NWOBHM sounds in the run-up to an informal ‘lecture’ presenting Iron Maiden’s Seventh Son Of A Seventh Son, released on the EMI label and pressed in this very factory in 1988.

With the talk finished, the lights dip and Seventh Son begins, booming through high-end hi-fi. Some people air-drum. Some bang their heads (at appropriat­e points). Some drift off. Afterwards we stretch our legs on a tour of the old pressing plant exhibition – great value for the £30 ticket price, with profits going to War Child.

But the Classic Album Sundays operation wasn’t always this expansive. Its beginnings were more than a decade ago in producer/ presenter/DJ Murphy’s vinyl-filled East London home, when friends would relax after Sunday lunch cooked by her husband. “We’d ask them what they’d like to hear – could be Brian Eno, Stevie Wonder, anything – and we’d listen to a classic album from beginning to end on a great sound set-up,” Murphy says.

For Murphy, a love of music and record collecting ran deep. Born in Massachuse­tts in the 70s, she hosted a radio show at Holliston High School at age 14, and at 16 was working in her favourite record store, Nuggets, in Boston. Spending her wages on stock or shows – “I remember one week seeing Stevie Ray Vaughan, Rush and Black Flag” – her musical curiosity and broadcasti­ng skills led to her becoming programme director at the influentia­l college rock radio station, WNYU, where she produced shows for 200 stations across the US. “That’s when I got into interviewi­ng bands in a big way,” she says. “I got used to talking about music and records.”

Living in New York, Murphy found inspiratio­n in the ‘loft scene’, where allnight private parties took place in rented living spaces.

The king of this undergroun­d realm was antiques dealer-turned-DJ, David Mancuso, who’d started the movement in 1970. His MO was: play any genre, as long as you could dance to it; invite people from all walks of life; listen to the best pressing of a record on the best sound system you could get.

“David was a hippie,” Murphy says. “He did mixes for [LSD guru] Timothy Leary, and his sets were like acid trips. He’d play R&B mixed with Grateful Dead and Led Zeppelin. I started going to his parties and I was just blown away. I identified with it because of rock music; as well as playing Salsoul and Chicago house, David would play Jimi Hendrix and The Clash.

“His sound system was also very pure,” she continues. “He had Klipschorn loudspeake­rs and handmade Koetsu cartridges. I was amazed at the sound in these spaces.”

Mancuso took Murphy under his wing and they co-hosted parties.

When Murphy relocated to London at the end of the 90s, she created some Loft compilatio­ns for the label Nuphonic, and co-created the Lucky Cloud loft party, featuring Klipschorn speakers and a Mark Levinson pre-amp, Mancuso-approved staples.

With this kit as Murphy’s actual home hi-fi, her lunchtime sessions were sure to evolve into an event. Spurred on by participat­ing in a Living To Music blog event by Murphy’s DJ friend Greg Wilson (“where his following listened to

“Giving yourself over to music for forty-five minutes, that’s a healing experience.”

Australia and Orkney, led by Steve Hackett’s tour manager Adrian Holmes. Murphy has appeared at festivals and galleries, working with artists from Mastodon to The Damned and producer Eddie Kramer. Part of a multi-genre hit-list, she’s presented Frankie Goes To Hollywood’s Welcome To The Pleasuredo­me at Sarm Studios with Trevor Horn, and Mike Oldfield’s Tubular Bells in the stone chapel of St Barnabas in London. Then she was asked to host an event with Nick Mason at the Pink Floyd V&A exhibition in 2017. “As it all started with The Dark Side Of The Moon it was a dream come true. I could not believe it!”

Now in its tenth year, CAS is currently online with voted-for Albums Of The Month, plus regular pop quizzes, free videos and blogs.

Special guests such as The The’s

Matt Johnson and Steven Wilson – who recently co-hosted Kate Bush’s The Dreaming – pop by. Murphy knows the brand has meant a lot to its patrons but admits that through the pandemic

“it’s gone both ways: seeing familiar faces two or three times a month and having meaningful social interactio­n has been wonderful for me, too.” Murphy’s knowledgea­ble and accessible style is universall­y appealing. “About half my supporters are women,” she says, “and we’ve all ages.”

Ultimately, CAS is a muchneeded dose of musical selfcare. “The act of turning everything off and giving yourself over to music for fortyfive minutes, that’s a healing experience,” she offers.

“Albums aren’t just for lockdown, they’re for life.”

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 ??  ?? Colleen Murphy talks to Nick Mason at the Pink Floyd V&A Museum exhibition in 2017.
Colleen Murphy talks to Nick Mason at the Pink Floyd V&A Museum exhibition in 2017.
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 ??  ?? Colleen Murphy: “Albums aren’t just for lockdown…”
Colleen Murphy: “Albums aren’t just for lockdown…”
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