Thursday 10 november 2011 4 10 /11 /Nov /2011 13:38

Sons of Disaster dish up good hard rock & roll with as much humor as passion. A great discovery in the first round with a performance that suggested there was no doubt about a place in the final. Let's see what they have on the menu today...

 

(Français en bas)


 

What ingredients do you need to make good rock nowadays?

 

The same as always: leather, beer, balls and women!

 

 
But the ingredients don't make a good dish. How do you cook it up?

 

An Arab guitarist, who's put on leather pants and is afraid of nothing.
An African drummer - these guys have natural born rhythm
A Jew on bass, you have to make some savings... The crisis has hit rock n'roll as well!
Second-guitar from Charleroi - they are an endangered species after all.
And Fleming screaming, is the only thing they they're good for!

 

 
Then you have to serve it to the punters...

 

Wether there's 1000 people or 10 people, we do ​​the show full on, high speed full volume, that's the only way to work it!
 

 

A word for those who find metal indigestible?

 

Fuck off and Die, your mother sucks horse dicks at Vilvoorde's jaarmarkt !

 

 

In the final for the Kampioenschap van Brussel. What will you make of it? 

 

 

Flood the room and whiskey rock n'roll!
 

 

You gonna win?

 

Sure we'd love to! But playing the AB's is already nuts. If 10 people like our show, that's victory.

 

 


 

 

 

 

Sons of Disaster, c'est du bon rock pur et dur avec autant d'humour que de passion. Une chouette découverte aux éliminatiores, avec une performance qui ne laissait aucun doute a leur participation en finale. Voyons ce qu'ils ont à nous servir...

 

 

Quels ingrédients pour faire du bon rock aujourd'hui? 

 

La même qu’avant : du cuir, des bières, des couilles et des femmes !

 

 

Mais les ingrédients ne font pas le plat. Comment mettez-vous tout ça à votre sauce? 

 

Un guitariste d'origine arabe, qui mets des pantalons en cuir et qui a peur de rien.
Un batteur d'origine africaine, ils ont le rythme dans la peau ses gens-la
Un Juif à la basse, ça c’est pour faire des économies… C’est aussi la crise dans le rock n’roll !
Un Carolo à la 2ème guitare parce-que c’est une espèce en voie d'extinction.
Un Flamand pour gueuler, c’est la seule chose qu'ils savent faire ceux-là !

 

 

Puis il faut les servir au public... 

 

Qu’il ait 1000 personnes ou 10 personnes, on fait le show à fond avec un max de volume et de vitesse, sinon ça ne donne rien !

 

 

Un petit mot pour ceux qui trouvent le métal indigeste? 

 

Fuck off and Die, your mother sucks horse dicks at Vilvoorde's jaarmarkt !

 

 

Finale du Kampioenschap van Brussel. Vous allez en faire quoi?

 

Inonder la salle de rock n’roll et de whisky !

 

 

Vous allez gagner?

 

D’office qu’on aimerait gagner ! Mais jouer à l’AB c’est déjà la folie, alors si au moins 10 personnes ont aimé notre concert, pour nous on a déjà gagné

 

 


By Jez - Posted in: Interviews
Enter comment - View the 0 comments
Monday 31 october 2011 1 31 /10 /Oct /2011 22:17

 

New Order

Ancienne Belgique

18 October 2011

 

Now. Talk about event of the year. Not only is New Order going to get back together, they have just announced 2 gigs, the first of which is in the 2000 capacity Ancienne Belgique. So tickets are like rocking horse shit, and everyone who's anyone has turned up, including Annik Honoré, lots of musicians in various bands, including Front 242, Der Klinke, Red Zebra, a large crowd from the UK, and others as far-a-field as Germany and Norway.

 

New Order are notoriously inconsistent live. I don't mean they have some shit days and some days where they're out of this world, I mean that they manage to cram total brilliance and utter shite into each and every gig, usually with some bad jokes and a technical hitch thrown in.

 

And we are all bracing ourselves, because Hooky is not on the bill, and they're getting the bass player from Bad Lieutenant, whose name I will not dignify by googling, to fill in.

 

I've got 2 reviews points here. They look at the event from different perspectives, and I thought both were sufficient valid to be worth publishing.

 

First from Jerôme Delvaux, former editor of PopRock.com, which pretty much describes the gig wrapped up in the controversy that surrounded it, then from me, as it happened.

 


 

As seen by Jerôme Delvaux


New Order live without iconic bassist Hooky. Just this announcement is enough to let passions rip. Yû, former star columnist at Pop-Rock.com, speaks without hesitation of high treason, a crime which in which he states that the audience is complicit. From our private correspondence:

"It's not a provocation, it is a fact. And the argument is simple: according to the original agreement, the group no longer existed if anyone left is well enough known to be valid, and moreover, has at no time been refuted by the people concerned, rather the opposite. As one founder member left, the group no longer exists, following the principle established by this agreement. To continue to use the name and act as if the group still exists is a betrayal of the member who left, and go to their concert is an act of complicity in the betrayal. Whether you like it or not, this is how things are. "

 

The prospect of seeing two members of Joy Division for the first time on stage, however, is too tempting, regardless of their internal wars and clashes of ego. Especially seeing as the keyboard player Gillian is back after an absence of over ten long years. Add to that the official justification for this unexpected comeback of the Mancunians (for just two concerts yesterday in Brussels and Paris tonight) is to provide financial assistance to their friend video director Michael Shamberg, who is seriously ill. This overrides the Yû theory about the legitimacy of the set-up: it is not about money or glory but only about friendship. And that it deserves at least respect.


In the end, everything went pretty much the way I had anticipated. This concert at the Ancienne Belgique was good, and that's it.


That's it because too short: only fifteen songs whilst Brian Wilson played another forty for the same price (42 euros), it's baffling.


That's it because Bernard Sumner sings badly, dances badly and has the charisma of a drunk Englishman on a beach in Ibiza. (which we knew really)


That's it because you can hear that this set is not run in (and how could it - its the first gig in six years, with a new line-up...).


That's it because one of my favorite songs, Crystal, was massacred right at the off: it wasn't far off like seeing a New Order cover band (The Killers?).


That's it because the first album, Movement, and the ever popular Technique are completely ignored in the set list.


That's it because  the new bass player (Tom Chapman, as seen in Bad Lieutenant, Sumner's latest side project) does not play like Peter Hook. But in his defence, nobody plays like Peter Hook.


That's it because the film by Michael Shamberg about Lebanon projected before the concert broke the festive atmosphere that prevailed up until that point.


That's it because a final Blue Monday / Love Will Tear Us Apart was too predictable.


That's it because a single Joy Division song, that's really not enough.

 

That's it because Annik Honoré clearly loved it and we know she is not objective.


That's it because cute little couple tenderly entwined in the pit for The Perfect Kiss broke up with a crash at the end of Temptation. And that's really sad.

 

 

 


 

As seen by Jez:

 

 

I hope you enjoy it as much as we're going to, because we're going to fuckin' enjoy ourselves tonight.

 

Bernard lays down the mission statement, just as Eligia kicks in with a backdrop of pills, blood cells, smoke, and a few pictures of derelict buildings.

 

Then a shaky launch into Crystal. No, it's not Hooky on the bass, and I don't know if it was nerves, the sound engineer or a problem with Bernard's autoqueue, but by verse 2, everything is sorted, and unbelievably that is (almost) as bad as it got.

 

Regret, is much better, almost flawless, and has the crowd convinced that maybe it won't be that bad a gig after all.

 

Ceremony sees Gillian on guitar and Steve doing what he's been doing for 30 years - the tightest, must mechanical drummer in the business. In fact all these songs in the early set see; to be played live without a sequencer.

 

Phil & Whosisface don't get much of a cheer, but Steve does, as we've now realised that Bernard is introducing the band, and a "welcome back" for Gillian gets one of the loudest cheers of the night.

 

Age of Consent is immaculate, but is followed by "something from the latest album", which falls rather flat. (Krafty, apparently)

 

1963, which they "never" play suffers from the sound engineer mixing the guitars too high, inaudible synths and the bass playing a bass line that was never meant to be played on a bass guitar. Interestingly enough, Whosisface has swapped his Fender Precision (I think) for a Musicman 4-string that looks like it has a low B tuning for this one.

 

Bizarre Love Triangle is the first time they've used a sequencer in the set. It suffers only from that huge stage presence that is Hooky that ought to be up there going "turn me up you bastard so we can really annoy Bernard or I'll ram my bass up your arse". Which may well have a lot to do with Bernard being on top form an seeming very relaxed, managing to get through the whole set without mentioning the war...

 

True Faith has been reworked with an almost unrecognisable intro, and is evidence that the band are not prepared just to reproduce what we know from the records, but are still finding new life in old material. 586 also proves to be an absolute Gem, to the great delight of some of the hardcore fans.

 

Perfect Kiss would have made a good set closer, and get's by far the biggest cheer of the night so far. How could they follow that? With Temptation, which is just as good. And then off.

 

Back on for Blue Monday. Bernard does his rockstar thing and comes on at the last minute in cue for the vocals, and for once, the bass is close to being right. Or to use the words of a certain young bass player (whom I shall spare the embarrassment of naming), it was too loud and too in-yer-face. Just the way it should be...

 

Only one thing could surpass that, and surpass it, it did. A very cheerful rendition of the best song of the evening:Love Will Tear Us Apart.

 


 

 

Post gig consesnus? Quite possibly the best overall New Order gig ever.

 

But it would have been SO MUCH better with Hooky.

 

BLT - a personal favorite.


 
By Jez - Posted in: Live reviews
Enter comment - View the 0 comments
Sunday 23 october 2011 7 23 /10 /Oct /2011 08:11

http://www.hetkampioenschapvanbrussel.be/

Candelershuys, Ukkel, 21st October 2011

 

 

 

Luck of the draw has OK Cowboy on at 19:30, and traffic and difficult parking conspire to me also missing Laughing Academy.

 

OK Cowboy, I have heard good things about and I've managed to miss them for about 2 years now. But Flupke & Simon from the Narcotic Daffodils are out in force and assure me they are very good. Though they also missed them. Laughing Academy, they reported, had some great songs, but that it hadn't scaled up that well to the full band, and the main guy (clearly the singer-songwriter) needs to choose either voice or guitar, but both at once wasn't quite working.

 

 

We Stood Like Kings

 

Sort of Coldplay does Post-Rock is my first impression. 2 large amps, a drum kit, a piano and a huge pedal board leave little room for 4 musicians on stage. Post rock live tends to be either utterly entrancing or overly repetitive and clinical, but they are neither (to be fair they've only been going in this form for 3 months). Their previous incarnation as Pan-Spherics gives a fair idea of what they sound like - gentle and competent prog-post-rock.

http://panspherics.bandcamp.com/

 

I don't think the laptop with a synth / atmosphere backing / click helped - I thought it was maybe a bit restrictive, and they'd be better if they were a bit freer. Try processing the piano instead.

 

Wierd choice to put an instrumental post-rock band on for Singer Songwriter night...

 

 

Little Giant

 

There's 5 of them, but they fit on stage better than the last lot. Seems to be built around a guitar/vocal duo (both do both), with some discrete extras on bass, drums and piano. They really haven't paid any attention whatsoever to their image, and don't even look consistently scruffy.

 

The first song is OK, despite being a 2 chord trick. Her vocals are quite Dolly Parton like - strident, distinctive, cuts through the mix. The lanky one in a hat has a very different Hillbilly-Johnny Cash type voice, and despite the contrast between the two voices, they work very well together both alternating and in harmony.

 

But this is not country. There's a lot of folk and 60's pop, and they really reminded me of The Magic Numbers. In fact, they have everything, with one but. For that style of music, you can't rely on 2 chords. You have to have great songs, with great melodies and memorable choruses. They're so very nearly there, but as they are now, they fall flat.

 

Work on the choruses and dig the melodies out guys. And learn a new chord.

 

 

The Sunshine Remedy

 

Sax and reggae Bass are clearly harder to mix, but there's no drums to balance, and once the guitar is put back in its place, the sound is verging on OK.

 

They remind me of what passed as reggae from Doe Maar or UB40. The 1st song suffers from the lack of drums, but the intelligent choice of musicians and a good, confident and positive delivery carry the song.

 

James swaps his piano for a banjo and a flute in song 2, just as an Eagles like intro pops through on the guitar.  These singer songwriters (again, 2 in this band, but not a proper 'duo') have put a lot of attention into the detail - not only in writing good songs with proper choruses, but in varying the material, and producing something I find myself just naturally singing along to.

 

James takes over the guitar and lead vocals for something quite English folkie a la Nick Drake, which relegates Patrick to harmonica and harmonies. Now THIS IS GOOD. Class songwriting, and performance/presentation/delivery to match.

 

I missed a drummer on the uptempo stuff, but that's really the only flaw. The material is good, the presentation is excellent, the bass and sax are not just there to fill up the stage, but really sound like they're part of the band. With the right production and management, I could see this becoming very radio-friendly and mass market. IMHO, they have the most commercial potential of any band I've seen so far.

 

 

Sunday Residence

 

This is what I expected to see on a singer songwriter's night - one guy with a guitar.

 

He has brought a fairly vocal fanclub with him, and whilst the songs are not brilliant, they are OK, and do not suffer from the spartan presentation.  Unfortunately, there is an overreliance on the four-chord-trick, and the set suffers from it.

 

Here comes another song which relies on a 4-chord pattern repeated throughout. It's a shame, as he's good at picking out melodies, but if he worked just a proper chorus and the occasional bridge into what he does, it would be so, so much better.

 

As the last act, he has the privilege of an encore - a cover of Tracy Chapman's Revolution. Which just like the rest of his set, is a 4-chord trick without a proper chorus...

 

 

 

Technical note

 

If you're wondering what a 4 chord trick it, these guys make a pretty good job of explaining it:


 

Admittedly, you can write a great song with just 4 chords, but 3 of the 4 bands I've seen tonight have dished out most of their material where there's nothing else in the song. Something like a chorus with a key change or a bridge could have given at least 2 of the acts an extra dimension. And when you can refer to Motown or Beatles tabs through the internet in seconds, it's not exactly rocket science.

By Jez - Posted in: Live reviews
Enter comment - View the 0 comments
Friday 14 october 2011 5 14 /10 /Oct /2011 09:42

http://www.hetkampioenschapvanbrussel.be/

Kultuurcafé, 13th October 2011


I've been looking forward to tonight, as it's 'rough' night. And after last week, I could do with some real-proper-rock'n'roll.

 

 

Blast Year Zero

 

I missed them, but had reports that they were a good metal act, very tight, very energetic, not terribly original.

 

 

Sons of Disaster

 

Good, tight, heavy, fabulous lead guitarist, these guys rock hard and loud. They evidently love what they do, somewhere between Motorhead, Metallica and Iron Maiden, and they do it with an infectious cheek that pretty much contaminates the whole audience.

 

First band I've seen, and they're already better than any of the acts I saw last week.


A comparatively varied set, with no room for ego-trips is rounded off with their mission statement: We want to drink, fight, rock and fuck.

 

Great show, pure rock, and for me, biggest grins and best stage show of the night.

 

 

Horse Antlers

 

Judging by the Telecasters and Fender amps that have appeared, we're in for something a bit more bluesy and intellectual.

 

Sure enough, the sound is heavy, psychedelic, dark blues, with a hint of U2 (around The Joshua Tree), and a good dose of Suzi Quatro.

 

I was impressed with the sound, the song writing, the singer, everything about this band is excellent. The only disappointment was that they only played 4 songs (and the last one was instrumental). Not long enough.

 

On a purely musical level, best band of the night. By far, and that's saying something. I'll definitely go back and see them for a full set.

 


 

 

 

Humanotronic

 

Metal suggests a series of clichés to most of us, and Humanotronic have worked hard to incorporate most of them into their show. Vomiting unintelligibly into the microphone, a megaphone, overly bass-heavy guitars, amps on 11, carefully choreographed pogoing.

 

Unfortunately, clichés don't make a good song, and the audience seems to share my indifference.

 

 

Thieves of Silence

 

Despite being the youngest band of the night, this lot have already opened for Gang of Four and Shadowplay (with Peter Hook headlining). Will they pull of being the only band without a drummer?

 

Cure, Editors, Talking Heads, Gang of Four. With the most aggressive bass of the night, you can see why the local Darkwave community have picked up on them. They have brought a new kid in to press the buttons and play the synth parts. With a result that they thunder through the set almost without pause. They have done a huge amount of work on their sound since I last saw them at La Porte Noire, and the show is much the better for it.

 

Short and intense, the best band of the night for me. But it's only their tunes and originality that just edge them ahead. They're must be the band most likely to take off and fill the AB, so definitely ones to watch.

 


 

 

 

Kamperen in Frankrijk

 

A tangled mess of cables, no bass, a guy sat on the floor with a laptop, a barbeque, and a banner announcing "A new golden century". So I'm fully expecting something a bit Portishead like.

 

However, the sound is atrocious, with one of the guitars not going through the PA, the electronica muddy, and the bass synth suffering from painful distortion. The drummer, fortunately, has a click to play along to, but it seems even that has it's glitches. She certainly doesn't manage to vary the very straight beats, and drum rolls or other embellishment is out of the question. Drab vocals and a farcical attempt at a guitar wall-of-noise over 2 chords give a distinct impression of something more at home in a circus than on a stage.

 

"We do weddings" they said. If I were them, I'd stick to divorces. And I'm not hanging around for the threat of an Eric Clapton cover.

 

 

Overall

 

I have seen 3 excellent bands tonight. (not counting the one that I missed). I have to wonder why the Brussels region does not subsidise venues like the Flemish do. There's a message there that Brussels has a huge amount of talent to offer, and it's gagging to get out. It just needs a little help.

By Jez - Posted in: Live reviews
Enter comment - View the 0 comments
Saturday 8 october 2011 6 08 /10 /Oct /2011 12:29

Conspiracy

La Porte Noire

7 Oct 2011

 

Bruno1.jpg  

The voice is dry, the guitar is - let's say - "discrete", the synth practically inaudible. But we don't care, because it's the best sounding bass we've heard in yonks, and some concessions need to be made to the neighbours here at La Porte Noire.  Which incidentally happens to have an exceptionally good selection of Belgian beers, for those of you not familiar with the place.

 

First Conspiracy gig in 20 years, and singer Bruno has swapped his the grey shoulder padded suit & skinny tie of yesteryear for his birthday suit (within some limits of decency) by the second song (the first one was instrumental). Raw, angry, punchy, and yet smooth and melodic, though subtly is hard to grasp in this context, as the sound balance is not the best. There's certainly a great variety in the tunes.

 

Cons2.jpg Bruno, being an echte Brusseleer, swaps with ostensible ease between English with a marginal French accent and French with a strong Brussels accent, often within the same song. Which is most impressive, as he really uses both languages effectively, despite each language having its own rhythmic signature.

 

A cover of New Dawn Fades confirms at least one influence in what must be a long list of 80's bands, and unlike us, they play it with a certain sense of urgency, in the right key, and without fluffing the lyrics. It does go down well with the audience, which is a decent turn out and features various illustrious characters from the local indie scene.

 

We've got to get these guys up on a larger stage with a bit more than a pub sound, cause I want a proper balance on that guitar (the snippets I did catch were fabulous). Conspiracy may be Old School New Wave, and would have been passed it in the early '90s, but with bands like Editors and White Lies floating about, they're definately relevant today, and well woth checking out.


Cons3

 

Many thanks to Fred from Soirée Cerises for pics and organisation.

By Jez - Posted in: Live reviews
Enter comment - View the 0 comments

Profile

  • Jez
  • Don't get out much!
  • Male
  • music rock brussels live
  • I'm a classically trained Bass Baritone. I sing with Brussels based band Perverted by Language. You can contact me through: Http://pervertedbylanguage.bandcamp.com

Recommend

Create your blog for free on over-blog.com - Contact - Terms of Service - Earn Royalties - Report abuse - Most commented articles