
Sunday, December 6, 2009
Hinds Bros

Wednesday, July 8, 2009
niceties that mean something
Aah. What better way to end another confused, not-so-winter's day that starts wet and ends dry than with a simple tune under a milky, spilling moon? And what lies there in el inbox in the invisible post-sushi slump? (Invisible because you don’t get sleepy from sushi, but you do from sa-ke. Even if you didn’t drink any and can't spell it in the first place) Nothing but the unmastered, unadulterated preproduction recordings of this little known band's tracks, “Lost In Translation" and "Recent Developments". That's what you get for being Nice, for making friends with good people, for loving life even when it doesn't love you.
I'm possibly one of fewer than eight or ten lucky pandas to have their paws on this new material, and it’s only really because Nice is a well kept secret that... well... that I just told.
The trio has gigged here and there for a bit more than a year. Between musical studies and grabbing Berkley scholarships and giving the ivory towers the stick, its boys made ripples where it’s real (as well as in some seedy bars and so forth). Both serious about their sound and light hearted about life (on the surface) , they’re also convincingly self-deprecating(on the surface), citing the ‘pop’ genre instead of going into the sort of sordidly lengthy, lyrical explanations I am guilty of. (in sushium absentium, mostly. and it could be worse. much worse.)
What their fistful of fine fans know (along with the gloating GolumGirl aka yours truly) is that they're going into studio this Friday to record their first EP. What the world doesn't yet know is that it’s been waiting for this for a very long time.
No, wait, you can’t, yet. But come their Spring launch, you can. In the interim, wish them luck in the studio, and
Sunday, December 30, 2007
Kids and Larks
30 Dec. 07
Independent Armchair Theatre, Cape Town
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!)
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.
Wednesday, July 18, 2007
chameleon and the king
this year the G-spot boasted perhaps a slightly overfull bill of theatre, and the fringe was thick with it. i managed to catch one good gig in between nits and knitting (don't ask; i was there in a domestic capacity which was hardly festive)
Chris chameleon and Neo muyanga live and loving it at de taphuis
take two talented men, let them sing their songs, then make them sing together and you've got a night of great entertainment.
thing is, nothing guarantees chemistry between performers. luckily both have it in abundance, and it bounced well together. Neo is supercool, chris is crazy cool. their wit is poles apart, and it made for some lovely faux pas's and a little light sparring. and they never missed a beat. neo did chris, chris kissed Neo's bits (uh, beats), and i hope to high heaven (coz the low one seems full) that Old Mutual's efforts will inspire them to collaborate further.
imagine the lulling lullabies from blk sonshine's key man hummed by the former Boo! man. imagine the reposed Neo doing his versions of Chris's edgy everything. (he tries to tame it, he really does, but nothing can swaddle the things that man juggles in the back of his throat)
we were wowed. and the G-spot got hot enough to call itself by its full name : gig town.
bring it on, old mutual. we like your style. (they did it with other artists too, you know. ... well, yes. you know what the music scene is like...)
http://www.oldmutualencounters.co.za/INDEX.HTM
Monday, June 25, 2007
tonight we die_farewell gig
it was poignant. Because everything about their music says more. And now there will be no more.
it was powerful. unconsciously keeping with this weekend's spate of double bills (there was taxi and sleepers back to back friday), they did a double set of their own: acoustic and plugged. what a treat. a chance to hear both sides of their sound, and nod your head because they're good. and bow your head,because they're gone.
the music video they screened is breathtaking. a tightly edited love story that projects itself as a horror. of sorts. it works because it's simple. love stories rarely are.
this night. we cried.
(all the more reason to get out there and expose your soul to live sound. you never know when something is going to change.)
Monday, May 14, 2007
raw and boundless : taxi violence in belville
it was an acoustic set at Kuns Kafee in Belville Saturday night. between the backend of nowhere and the beginning of beyond ("behind the boerewors gordyn"), where old school meets new wave, the boys blew us away.
everything about them is understated and sexy.most of all the naturalness with which they live their passions and give it all to the music.
this time, louis (drums) strummed a geetar. they rearranged the songs to suit the scene. it might have been acoustic, but it was more powerful than anything i've yet heard from them - a tempered intensity. the guitars that sing. stop. drop. climax. a vocalist whose whole heart is in every breath. vocal harmonies that blend perfectly to court the guitar. drums that underscore the earth and fire in everything, that punctuate and perforate the harmony enough to move it from vibrating though your flesh down to your bones to redesign your blood. a steely crescendo that takes you higher and higher and deeper until
until?
it's like drugs. like love. it's the finger of the sun breaking into a dark vacuum.
Taxi violence is the consequence of synergy
Josh Grierson (Mercurial)
I don’t think there are words. But I will pull some together anyway. Considering profanity is my profession.
I have never been belted by beauty. I think. Disarmed, distended, upended; yes. But belted, no. Not until Josh (performing variously as Mercurial, Emokidjosh, and Josh Grierson, and often grabbing a mic during Taxi sets). As a precursor to its magnitude, I was knocked over by his voice during sound check - blasting though two doors and three walls over every other plugged instrument. With no mic. Thank heavens I was sitting already.
Then he came on stage, unassuming, warm, easy. And slaughtered us with the sweetest sounds. One man standing.
If you’re old enough (and no I’m not, but) think human rights concert 1987. A girl with a guitar. Captivates the whole crowd. (that was Tracy Chapman). Only, this is a guy. And we’ve got our rights. Or so it says in the constitution. This is a guy, with a guitar, and the voice of a vengeful angel.
This is what they call dumbstruck. Never mind the thunder.
It’s dry lightning with a kiss at the end. Just like last night’s almost-storm.
Josh Grierson's voice made my soul cry.
Use your rights. open your ears. and let him sing the sin out of you.
Sunday, April 22, 2007
Once upon a time, in a cabin in the forest…
Many months ago, The modelesque Andy leaned over to me in the dim light of an armchair night and offered a precarious wisdom. ‘Band names with narrative, I tell you,’ he smiled enigmatically before i disappeared into the smoke, ‘it’s the next level.’ (ok, so I’m paraphrasing; his exact intonations have seeped through the holes in my whiskeyed memory into the cracks of forgotten conversations at various parties from two seasons ago, but that’s the gist of what he said. It was interesting, then, that I’d only I heard him playing once, and was still pretty dubious. Now I’m a fan. As far as integrity goes, theirs is a musical story unfolding. Here’s my progression for a pair of pretty talented boys that have really grown together over time, the way good wine matures and becomes inexorably magnificent:
1st time yonks ago, mildly unimpressed. Yeah, whatever. Pretty boys. Acoustic noise. Sigh. trying too hard to look like they’re not trying. Somebody buy me a drink.
the Second time, last week, captivated by the crescendos..
Third time, truly and positively entertained by their evolution. and hooked. Can I buy you a drink?
Fourth time, two days later, swooning. Spinning in the Spanish plucks and brilliant vocal synergy. *(gary, sing more) nevermind the drinks. This is swallowing ME!
Dem be
And they will tell the story their way, so I’m just here to say :
it’s
almost emo, but dusted with gusts of pretty angst and gutsy punk notation that keep it real.
It’s white linen guitaraganza. Two men and four voices learning to complement each other. fullstring progressions whose perfectly incensed crescendos carry on for a lovely, long time. The way good climaxes should. And then a sudden silence
exhale.
(notice how a lot of novice bands struggle to start and finish songs ?)
open your whole soul to their sound, coz when they’re done, they’re gone.
Cabins keep pushing themselves into new territory. Their notoriety has attached itself to their fans by now - their signature sound gets a round of applause in the first bar, but the new things they’re coming up with are not anything we’ve yet heard from them, nor really have names for. And I like it that way! If you dare to let music challenge you, you might too. Lend them your ears. But hang onto your heart.
On a sliding scale of musical evolution, these boys are picking up momentum. I’m excited for them. And well pleased for those of us who like them. There’s a lot more to come.
Bring it on.
(o. and happy winter. Even if it’s a little too early. Good time to stock up on firewood and longjons, kitlings, if you don’t have a fire of your own. Or a long jon of your own, for that matter.…)
(and no doubt this season will give Cabins a lot more to sing and play about.
Sunday, February 11, 2007
the sleepers - men in skirts
Nice to hear a full sound stripped down. an Acoustic set at Zula. This one was raw, and beautifully imperfect.
Check them out.
www.myspace.com/thesleepersdreamspace








