Showing posts with label armchair. Show all posts
Showing posts with label armchair. Show all posts

Sunday, December 30, 2007

Kids and Larks

30 Dec. 07

Independent Armchair Theatre, Cape Town


photo :liam lynch

KID OF DOOM, stripped down. Or, sort of.

They lied. It wasn’t unplugged. But it was naked enough to see the bones of their songs. With two and sometimes three guitars, Kid Of Doom showed us what their glorious melodies sound like in the shower. If you can be in the shower with a voiceless voice, that is. They shamelessly bared their tensile build-ups and steely crescendos, and possibly also bits of their souls. It’s hard to tell with musicians, naked and obscured at the same time as they are. Sometimes the synth snuck in and I don’t think it was lunar powered so that was where their lie lay. In fact, it was just looney in comparison to the atmosphere their strings had been conjuring up. That was when we had our “what the fuck?” moment, me and the sound guy. Not in a good way, or a bad way, just a , well, what the fuck way – the sudden return to Nintendo niceties was a little left of ventser for the bristling, low-key vibe they’d created by sitting down and stripping back, but the crowd seemed to think it was a bit of alright. Alright, granted. The crowd rules, né? Wrong, we’re still learning to be an informed, critical and truly appreciative public, given our historical hangover and persistently myopic and dictatorial media. And to cure that, we all have to be brave enough and stand up and have our say. Eloquently, like here, or unintelligibly, like that blessed, blissed-out, hairy chick who kept bouncing around drunkenly, spilling her drink and her body on me. She, too, knows what resonates, and the Kids were resonating. Light, life and love. Even if she did implicate everyone in her overenthusiastic mirth. A sit-down with candles and strings and things doesn’t leave much room for jungle bunnies. But. There she was, making her statement. We need her. Even if we don’t need the wine stains. We need you. Are you listening? Are you standing up and clapping? Booing? What are you doing? Do something! live music needs you!)

And. To add to the injury, they lied not once, but twice. I’m an honest girl, ek sê, and Kid Of Doom -they’re that über hip band that doesn’t sing, right? Wrong again. They do. And very nicely, too. The final two tracks were covers and they sang in both of them. Here! What is it this season with all these original bands doing covers? Sies! The only time a cover is anything more than a cop-out is when you bring something new to it, and that doesn’t happen often, especially as musicians have a penchant for covering bands more accomplished than them, or from completely unfamiliar genres to the ones they’re fluent in. More’s the surprise then, it happened this night. Kid of Doom’s second copycat track was the hauntingly beautiful Lilac wine by Jeff Buckley. They warned us, and I cringed. Covering a master like Buckley? And Lilac wine? Shooting yourselves in the foot, I thought. But they shot me in the heart instead. The amusing, animated posturing that whatsisname had put into his simple guitar riffs earlier suddenly made sense. He feels every note, and every note feels him. A fine, feathery voice slowly crept into bed with the audience. The crowd, unused to having to actually LISTEN and THINK in a gig without a rhythm section, had been bumbling along with a restless, conversational hum through the set so far and clapping enthusiastically at the end of every track, coz they’re loyal fans, even if they weren’t listening (and obviously illiterate considering the term unplugged escaped them as meaning er.. sort of acoustic. No doubt they were a bit righteously disappointed, too, that they didn’t get their dose of triumphant happy, and couldn’t jump up and down deliriously to the mirthy synth, so at least they were being civil, right? Wrong. An evening like this is like gold. This is when people who think they are – or aren’t– fans find out what’s really going on in the music. When this track began, however, the listeners’ hum hastily hushed to a rapt silence. The unnaturally naked strumming and exposed, swelling melody of a very beautiful song handled by very adept lads got everyone’s attention. I’m not easy to please, and I generally practise diplomacy here in an attempt not to sabotage the fledgling live music scene I so love (and abhor, at times, for its lack of effort, organisation and/or inspiration) because, as my namesake pointed out once, I’m actually very good at being a bad bitch. But this rendition made me cry. I do not think Kid Of Doom are kak. I think Kid Of Doom could grow up to be a Sun Of Hope in their own style, and make Jeff in heaven proud. They certainly did this night.





LARK, unplugged

Oh, ok. You know what I always wonder when I see LARK performing? How many happy (or unhappy) couples go home and fuck better than they have done all week. Or all year. It’s silly to deny that Inge brings a sensuality and intensity to the scene that everyone is silly and post-Victorian enough to always translate into SEX. But it has to be said, and it has to be put into context. I see the clutching couples from the side; the boys, rapt, the girls looking worriedly between the songstress they struggle to admit they love, too, (and would probably sleep with if they were brave enough and lucky enough) and their man (erum, or woman, or drag queen, as it were, in the spirit of MCQP etc) who is lost to the world in all but the fact that he has his hand on her bum, so why is she really worrying about his fantasies of another woman that will make their union more complete, anyway, huh? Go figure. Jealousy is a strange beast. And we’re all prey.

Silliness of the sexy season aside, this was perhaps the most precious gig of theirs I’ve ever had the pleasure of trying not to drool over. Last I saw, LARK were slamming it up at the biscuit mill a few days back (or weeks, it’s all a blur), all metal and madness, in a room with a bad sound rig, harder and heavier than I’ve heard them in a long time. I liked the new look of their new songs. Inge was wired then, and didn’t care, which is the way we know and love her.

This night she was reposed and refined, and my god I never knew she had quite so much control over her voice, or over her audience. Without the beats, the cadence and texture in her vocals shone through as cleanly as cut glass. There are more characters hiding in her throat and lungs than most fairy tales have fairies, trolls and elves, and probably more lightness and darkness, too. She even coped with bass notes that made me think her eyes were going to drop out of their sockets. But of course her royal eyebrows kept them there. she IS beautiful. In the best way, which is her way. It’s possible; also, that this gig was a more challenging one for her as well as it was for the wicked sound man who had all sorts of unusual knobs to fiddle with what with extra fiddles and hearts I mean harps (I mean double bass, actually) on stage. When it’s all acoustic, all ears are on the tongue, and Inge knows how to use hers. (You can interpret that the way I meant it, or you can just be typical). Lick your wounds, ladies. This diva is dark and divine, and she can whip with words as well as she can with a glance. It was nice to see her sitting down for a change and feeling the full force of the melodies she channelled so that we could feel the full force of the music she makes with her body.

So, it was unplugged, right? Right. Unlike the fateful children that preceded them, they were true to their claims - they DID get naked, though not in the way most people would hope. This set hosted a number of other acoustic musicians, including the fresh, (un?)grounded, pouty Kyla-Rose and a pretty boy from Fokof whom somebody in the audience introduced as one of the “best guitarists in the country”. Slow, I know, but me, I’m still getting into Fokof, and its trajectories Van Coke Kartel and A King (so clever that second name – couched Emo – did you get it? are you aching for me to tell you?), so I don’t know if that’s true; this one’s your call - stand up and give your opinion!

The truth of the matter is that the extra strings, guitars, clarinets and such, were beautiful and the rearrangements showed a musical sass that is clearly branching the band out into new audiences. It didn’t matter that there were no head-bopping beats, no Sean Ou Tim (actually, I missed him) – it sounded like a symphony of strangeness, and hearing the songs naked and then redressed like this proved why LARK plugged is on top of the underground – their melodies are sound, their sound is magical, bad, balanced and believable. Some songs were given total overhauls with flourishes of Paul’s Spanish fingering; others were cleaned out and touched up with eastern European effects. The songs sounded new and familiar at once, synonymously homely and heavenly and unearthly. But that’s what you get when a passionate, opera-trained songstress in a tree meets an acoustically accomplished beatmatser at a party and they play together. In other publications their synergy would be called The Eventual Unfolding of LARK. In this one, it’s called the Natural Explorations Of Talented Music Makers. You can choose your publication, but not its slant. The rearrangements resurrected their classic hits in a totally new way, and I have to tell you, it was something like listening to a new band. They could even do their own covers! (btw, how come local bands don’t cover each other? Eh? Where’s the incestuous support we’re so famed for?)

LARK unlplugged was strange, beautiful, accessible and a resounding success with the crowd. (and they didn’t even play Tricksy!) It gives me new hope for the shifts and changes happening in bands across the city, and the country, as we hurtle from Slaapstad to Jozi, from Stillbaai to Plettenbergbaai, towards the new year, making music, making love, breaking it and making (it) up (as we go along). It underlines the importance of sticking and growing with people you know you are making a piece of heaven with. Hell, we all know how badly we need that, Afro-pessimism or none. I think there needs to be much more of this from Lark in 2008, and I think they are going to do much better with this approach than they expected to. Audiences will expand. It’s inevitable. It might even be their uncompromising entry point into mainstream, though we know they’re not doing it for the moolah. Inspiring to see a band taxiing along in their musical evolution without an ounce of inappropriate violence.

Now what would happen if we put Le-Roi and Inge behind mics together? There’s a nice new years’ resolution for the Arch Angel of Live Music. (And no, that’s not Inge, boys and girls; she’s the dark angel)

Bless you all.



Thursday, September 13, 2007

Find The Party - Desmond And The Tutus




(yissis! This was written December 2006! - Nine months ago...enough time to birth a baby, né? Forgive, kittens, twas hiding somewhere in my harddrive archive – can you say that five times fast?! Harddrivearchivehardivearcdrivedarkhivearkdive eeuyaargh!)

*Ahem.*

Kiss on the cheek

(dec 2006)

Last night was a typical Cape Town Summer’s night out. You don’t always find the (right) party by default; it’s usually somebody else’s fault. In this case, many people contributed to my fun. I left the stiff-collared middle-of-the-road (but jamming) yuppy jol at armchair (hey, it takes all types to float a business in this industry, gil’s just doing his job for live music) and found a flood of summery seventeen year olds making the (former) Cool Runnings very happy about their deal with Cobra. There were hoards of homies buzzing about while the fire dancers tickled our short attentions spans with flashes of flame and local fame. Cape Town is living up to its reputation for beautiful women and pretty boys. I didn’t quite know where to look, actually, it was eye-candy-cum-kindergarten - Hip chicks with slim hips, the token would-be beauties with everything hanging out. Sjoe! Like any media mind-washed mêdem, my eyes settled on a tiny creature flaunting it all, sporting little more than a strip of fabric across her punani and a cropped leather jacket over the fresh, desperate skin exposing her honour. She looked lost. I wanted to take her my arms in and give her some undies to put on under her loincloth, and teach her that a woman’s weapons is not her wang – uh - whatsit. But anyway.. Freedom means finding your own boundaries, innit?

So that got old, and I ebbed off to Mercury, which is possibly older than all of us, and seedier. I enjoyed Eat This, Horse (despite their bad hair) and then I really enjoyed Desmond and the Tutus(despite their bad name). Sparing me the crackers and overfull tummy, the tutus brought Christmas to me. They did a dandy job of impersonating kissmiss trees. They came on stage dressed in skinny jeans and stripy tops (~sigh~) and long Hanson hair. (were the Hansons boys or girls? I was never totally convinced either way). The white, twinkling Christmas lights wrapped around their necks sold me completely - I’m sucker for sparkly things and party animals. With the stage lights off, they bopped around beautifully like illuminated robots, their knees knocking together in all the right places, and their heads nodding about in concurrence.

No idle promises from these boys –their noise is easy to enjoy, and they know how to dance, I guess, because they do it their way. It’s happy, it’s hairy, it’s happening.

Oh. And they rival Taxi Violence and The Sleepers with their flyer art…!

Tuesday, June 26, 2007

BABU, baby!



Story time for fine jazz fusion

Take a little Hot Water, add some Restless Natives and you’ve got a stew of local jazz improv that's gone all the way to India and come black to Africa.


Fittingly, the word Babu has both great and low connotations on the continent of India (erm, it is too a continent. If you’ve been there, you’ll agree), but in Cape Town it has only one: Brilliant, which fits well with words like Kesivan, Shane, Reza, and Ronan. A standing ovation from a demanding crowd at their Armchair gig a fortnight ago is evidence. Wish you’d been there.


Jazz is juicy. Jazz is not easy. It’s an acquired taste. We know. But the abstraction in jazz‘s musical narrative can alienate uninitiated listeners. Babu takes that to heart and to the extreme by breaking the set up into intriguing installments of an epic tale told by Kesivan. It embodies the music as much as it guides your mind. Whiskey time becomes story time without a bedtime under the careful hands of fine musicians who have found their mojo together.


They play like they love each other; tight, joyfully, and full of expression. Ronan’s incredibly sensitive touch turns a Tabla into an angel’s heartbeat. Kesivan is inspired, knocking the nonsense out of noise and never letting go of the rhythm. Reza’s quiet subjugation to his guitar belies his power over it’s twitches and tones. I’ve never heard distortions like that. At the flick of a switch or the pick and warp of a string he coaxes the voice of a sitar, a banjo, and a violin out of his baby, and then returns to its traditional articulation as if nothing unusual just happened. His machine is an uber-electric goddess in his arms. And he’s happy to worship while Shane holds it together with that affable effortlessness of his, apparently dancing with his baby more than plucking emotion out of bass notes.


They have a sense of humour too. Last time , after a heady buildup, after they’d killed off the baddies, they finally joined the protagonists in unholy union, which meant, of course, that they closed with a Love song. Very well. You’d expect a saucy, spanking climax after the way they wound you up through the journey. But. They gave the love song the gospel treatment. Just because you were expecting sex. And then they gave everyone a Tantric climax. Just because we thought they’d let us down.


Big up to babu.

Subjugate yourself.


live and lovely at The Waiting Room, Thursday, 28 June 2007
info: tel 083.640.6464

Face it

(no myspace, yet, sorry; they seem to be too busy making great music...)

Wednesday, May 23, 2007

buckfever underground

Wrap your tongue around Buckfever Underground. They're a departure from the norm.

Just when you thought poetry was dead, here comes Toast to read you his writes. There's something achingly soothing in an even voice telling tempered tales of the imbalance in things. he could even tell the whole truth with that voice, and probably escape execution. A lot of what he says is simply profound. And grounded. And funny. And poignant.

But it's even better that it's fitted out with tightly tailored bass and drums that are practically married to each other and a careful lad coaxing all manner of moans and humms out of his electric mother. The moods shift. The landscapes shift. Images flash. Fade. It's an audio-visual journey across the country. (the bassist also runs the city's coolest live music venue , so is it any wonder it's called the armchair theatre? the trajectory is tangible. the timeline, not)

Ten years strong and still looking into the looking glass to find out what's behind music's smile, they've found their freedom in sound and it sounds something like i'd imagine a stretch of the karoo in full, blushing bloom after a gushing downpour to sound....if flowers could sing...

Wednesday, March 7, 2007

Ve r y S m ö r ... .. g å s b o r d

Smörgåsbord? It’s not a Nordic tongue. Though the band I’m talking about certainly do nice things with theirs. And their fingers.. <sigh>.

Smörgåsbord, kitlings, is a variety of things. Originally, things you could stuff your face with. But in this case, its things you can wiggle your bottom to. Verismo (say it silently, imprint it into your sonic synapses!) is all that. And a bietjie more. (ok, say it loooooud)

They make mad music. They dress in velvet and studs. They leap about almost as much as their audience does (now that is a good sign), and they aren’t going to stop any time soon.

It’s a constant dance of quiet little moments that gently build up to fullblast, heartfast deliciousness.

See if you can keep still.

I was like, kululululuuu (or izit kilililileeee?): here's celebration. They bring out the Prima Donna in boys, girls and inbetweens who can’t help dancing to the bouncing frenetics of something other than ordinary. Toss some ska and opera and some yiddish funk and some Antarctic blues and a lot of heartfelt theatrics and a lot of red-faced fans with delirious grins, stir it up like Mr Marley suggests, and voila! You have an unnameable, almost describable evening of hip happiness. Prepare to sweat. And swoon.

And yes, they sing all about love. Lust. Life and the little things that make it magical. Like velvet and lace and lots of pretty faces. That is what Verismo is made of.

Btw they’re wicked musos too.




p.s. Verismo sounds like Verismo, but i'm having moments of Desmond and the Tutus, too. in tone. not taste. and the (wonderful, amazing, where are they now?) Honeymoon Suites.

Monday, February 19, 2007

At this stage





Stages are funny things. Half often all that separates a crowd from a band is the implicit agreement of territories and a step in the right direction. And all them wires. These strips are more like skid marks, they’re so small and dingy. But maybe we like it like that.


The Armchair's slit of stage is so slight that musicians often enter through the crowd. It works for this soundbar. It’s that ultra easy, instantly accessible cool that makes the Armchair the seat of underground sound. That, and the grimey carpets and the sink-into, neverwashed sofas. Our scene might be small, but it’s dirty.


I feel sorry for cramped musicians. The brawling, adoring masses (well, um.) get all the space to bump shoulders and break bread and bones together (think Half Price). They’d no doubt rather be doing it with the stars admirably shaking their asses and venting their catharses in their individual square metres of space, plugged and wired. But they can’t because Air guitars make crap music.