Reykjavík Grapevine - 28.08.2009, Blaðsíða 34

Reykjavík Grapevine - 28.08.2009, Blaðsíða 34
The Reykjavík Grapevine Issue 13 — 2009 22 Music | Live review Music | Live review Skátar's Self Inflicted Death Blow So long, goodbye, auf wiedhersen, adieu To Ride, Shoot Straight... ...and have every one out of three shows kick- ass, while the others leave a lot to be desired Talk about leaving a gap in the Icelandic independent music landscape. Skátar have decided to throw in the towel and I'm not too stoked about that. I could always count on these guys to surprise me when it came to their fried as shit musical ideas. Never a dull moment and in a city of considerable musical preten- tiousness, every Skátar release was a breath of fresh air and every recorded song performed on stage had the po- tential to become something different and twisted, depending on where their heads were at any given moment. This unpredictability and recklessness often lead to some not-so-hot performances, but what would it be this fateful night? The show started with Skátar's frontman Markús playing a humorous yet plenty musical solo performance— him, alone with his guitar and the be- tween song banter got everybody gig- gling. Good for him. I'd been looking forward to Me The Slumbering Napo- leon as they had left a good impression on me earlier this summer. SURPRISED FROM THE SLUMBER So many bands come to mind when these guys play their dirgy, thought-out and surprising take on experimental indie rock (or whatever you wanna call it). It's like the 90s of daring and hectic music never happened, and the scene here is better for it. I'm Being Good, Melvins, Shellac, Metroshifter, Skátar and Graveslime are all points of refer- ence. These guys are oddly surprising to the point that they seem to surprise themselves sometimes while playing. But it never becomes too fragile. Wild stop-and-gos, a nasty Purple Haze cover and a bunch of attention grabbing mo- ments that outnumbered the few not- so thought provoking ones. My rad-o- meter slanted well into the red section, so go see those guys and pick up their stash for further inspection when it comes out. You can say all the jaded shit you want about Sudden Weather Change, but one should be thankful for a young indie band that echoes Unwound in- stead of The Killers and Sonic Youth as opposed to the fucking Strokes. Joy! I've seen them pull better sets out of their collective cute asses but they still made me want to listen due to the sweet connection and f low that seems to be connecting these boys. The bass sound was big and gnarly and their set ran smoothly. Too bad the sound guy didn't realise there were three guys singing. YOUR IRONIC SHOES ARE NO GOOD FOR STAGEDIVING Reykjavík! were up next and it didn't take them long to get everybody over into their realm of jangly, noisy and explosive rock debauchery. They have it all figured out now, to the point one is anticipating a false move or a crappy set but it just doesn't happen. These merry men of grease are oiled up to such an extent it's like a train of fun and out- bursts that cannot be stopped. I'm not gonna bother with naming highlights, but while they were playing all the goodbyers of Skátar were packing the house and things got intimate as shit. Good times. Too bad indie rock kids in their ironic shoes don't know how to stagedive. By this point the house had a large number of malnourished indie heads and normies that just got off from work. A great mix, might I add. We were even graced with the presence of the annoying longshoreman that yelled "SLAYER!!" between every song. Good lord. Also there was a considerable high number of drunk, under aged kids in attendance, which only added to the party-like atmosphere. What about the boy that was crowd surfing with a bottle of Jägermeister in his hands? Guess the security didn't give a damn. Stellar. SWAN SONG There was a lot of love for Skátar in the room and people anticipated their swan song with shining eyes, which is pretty amazing considering it was getting much too fucking late. Skátar began their set with an anti-bang. The drum- kicker broke, and they had to start the song over. Oh well. It was certainly for- givable. The die-hard Skátar fans were eating it up, and a joyous chaos ensued and it was fun to witness. Crowd surf- ing, stage invasions, crappy stagedives and Markús' unpredictable stage antics plus plenty of funny banter between songs. The fact remains that Skátar failed to do their own material, and their last night on stage, any justice. It's rather sad, really. A lot of mistakes were made, the band sounded torn and untight for an alarming portion of the set, and there were way too many awkwardly long pauses between songs that stretched the set to the point where it was almost unbearable to stick around for the not- so glorious end. But hits were played, tons of people had fun, Skátar looked humbled but they were having a fuck- ing blast. I truly am saddened that there won’t be any new Skátar material. Let us all marvel and digest their recorded legacy, 'cause there's so much unique brilliance in their body of work that we will have plenty to sink our teeth into for years to come. A band of nerds for the nerds. You will be missed. Entombed are holed up in their dress- ing room, busy rehearsing a stand-in bassist, as mainstay Nico Elgstrand had a baby just the previous Monday. Not needing the practice, singer Petrov, by his own admission drunk since the AM, is sat on a bench outside Iðnó amus- ing himself with drink and a cell phone recording of himself playing the piano (rather virtuously I might add). Inside, stoner rockers Brain Police are serving a slab of stoner rock in the key of stoner rock. That being the case, it all sounds like an endless stoner rock medley, stoner rock being too damn lazy ever to have evolved to the level of song-writing. The thought strikes that they ŕe perhaps too perpetually stoned to realise they ŕe over. The audience though—by dint of not showing up— must have. Next, please. Dr. Spock, proud purveyors of nov- elty and nonsense, are first and fore- most a raging live act, and as such truly a sight to behold. Two singers strong and armed with gimmicks galore, the band rip the near deserted venue sev- eral new ones. Moustachioed string bean vocalist Óttar Proppé looks like he´s leading a Bavarian hoe-down while his squealing counterpart, recovering fat fuck Finni, looks like the live perfor- mance cardiovascular workout burns more obesity per hour of vocal outburst than any fiery furnace in hell. Their drummer, armed with more chops than the entire Icelandic lamb farming industry, regularly paces the stage as if never having been taught his proper place. The band often lapse into what might be called a more main- stream version of early D.E.P mixed with any random Patton project, and only stray from their path of aural transgres- sion when launching into bluesy Beach Boys laden fare and the odd, bizarre, passage of left field reggae renderings. Sororicide, legacy and legend wrapped in a neat brutal bundle, are performing tonight with something resembling the original line-up for the first time since... since pretty much the first couple weeks of the Icelandic death metal scene. Their shit being an- cient, I fear the material could be merely a heap of over-hyped lore. Seldom have I been so wrong. Uncommonly tight and old school as a all hell, they pull out a show so fluid and utterly groovy that the sheer technicality and hairpin turns of modern death metal seem by comparison oh so boring. Leaving En- tombed with a fuckload of work cut out for them, Sororicide turn back time to the blastbeat’s heyday, all the while bewildering the audience by featuring a guitarist dressed and coiffured such that egregious Britpop ought to issue offensively from his strings. Entombed, plagued by awful sound and minimal atmosphere, disappointed horribly. As this Friday show’s slow fiz- zling burn gave rise to harsh criticism, and the sold out Saturday performance exploded like a series of clusterbomb blasts, we’ll pretend Friday night never happened and launch right into a re- view of their incendiary Saturday night onslaught. Stand-in bassist Victor Brandt of Satyricon and Totalt Jävla Helvetes För- bannat Svart Skit Mörker För Fan, now three gigs deep and hitting his stride, contributes his fair share of damage to the all consuming obliteration per- petrated by the band, and the stellar sound production lent added force to the gravity of frightening doses of death n’ roll riffage cast in lead. The sold out venue teems with aural orgasm and a pit erupts like equal parts violence, chaos and mayhem reaching a boiling point. Life and limbs flail every which way and from the depths of a rapturous melee of ecstatic flesh and bone, spread with a layer of hell-bent crowd surfing, bod- ies are randomly and unexpectedly catapulted at chairs, tables and fellow citizens. Keeping drinks safely confined to glasses becomes akin to a herculean feat, as liquid spurts everywhere like high velocity splatter born from colli- sion atop jarring collision. Entombed, sitting on a huge dis- cography, run the gamut of releases, pulling off a masterful balance act of a set that combines old with new with raw with crushing. Opener “Chief Rebel Angel” kindles more audience passion than most numbers, but tracks off of DCXLXVI: To Ride… fall like a rain of bricks and satisfy at least your humble narrator. Interspersed with early Left Hand Path era material the barrage cul- minates with “When in Sodom,” a track all the more potent tonight when be- ing wielded at a club bearing the name Sódóma. Music | Review Irony is definitely my cup of tea. If it's discordant, I’ll usually like it. If it's homogeneous, I generally won't. Therefore Húðlitað Klám, being a discordant and diverse album, worked out pretty well for me. It is an impressively varied album, so much that I'm not even going to try and slap a label on it. LastFM describes them as a 'five piece rock/comedy outfit', but even if you don' t understand the lyrics or the jokes, it's easy to appreciate the light-hearted approach they bring to a heavy sound. It gets intense at times, but the whole album is really worth a listen whether or not intensity is your thing. And if you don't like one song on it, it doesn't mean you won't like some of the others. So, if you are open of mind and pure of heart, listen and enjoy. -BERGRÚN ANNA HALLSTEINSDÓTTIR “I’ve come to say exactly what I mean,” sings Pug on the statement- of-intent opener, Hymn #101, “And I mean so many things.” That tale of stubbornness, love and adventure showcases the 23-year-old’s inherent knack of framing a raw and emotive acoustic-country with often self- searching lyrics. It’s poetic, too: Call It What You Will’s resonant imagery and matter-of-fact descriptions of life-changing experiences are simple, brilliantly observed and shruggingly fatalistic as you like. The influence of Springsteen’s expansiveness reigns supreme in Nobody’s Man and the excellent I Do My Father’s Drugs, whilst the blues harp-driven Hymn 35 sounds a lot like Fields Of Gold as sung by Bob Dylan. The fact that the harmonica is probably deliberately flat (as it is on the EP-ending title track) adds atmosphere. Emotive and naked, independent and occasionally hard-eyed, Pug’s uncomplicated arrangements give him authenticity and power. -JOE SHOOMAN Skelkur í Bringu Joe Pug Húðlitað Klám (2009) Nation Of Heat EP (2009) skelkur Discordant and diverse, in a cool way thejoepug Country-blues from the Dylan/ Springsteen stable. Nothing new under the sun, but the sun shines still. + +- Entombed Sororicide Dr. Spock Brain Police Iðnó 21.08.2009 Sódóma 22.08.2009 BIRKIR FJALAR VIÐARSSON JULIA STAPLES BOGI BJARNASON HÖSKULDUR HÖSKULDSSON

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