Reykjavík Grapevine - 17.10.2008, Side 11

Reykjavík Grapevine - 17.10.2008, Side 11
The openers, Tonik, were promising – a vibrant pairing of synth & bass, and they played with enthusiasm and panache. Unfortunately, as the evening started there were (at most) ten people in the bar and with the best will in the world we couldn’t muster the mood that these guys deserve. A little later, as the venue started to fill, Yagya took his place and began to produce the most beautiful music of the night. Electro-rhythms verging on Astral Projection levels of psytrance cre- ated a mood of sublime sweetness. Tentatively, in pairs and small groups, people began dancing, eyes closed, half-smiles of pleasure across their faces. Sadly, the evening lacked continuity as the next art- ists, Skurken and Frank Murder, achieved the unexpected result of completely dispersing the gathered crowd. This was a shame because the people here have obviously come to get down and dance: tapping feet, bobbing heads, they are ready to go... but the opportunity has gone... Skurken played a set that is delivered with enthusiasm but lacking in originality. His tracks reek of Malcolm Middleton and are just not the right sound for this bunch of people on this night. Frank, by contrast, epitomised the problem of poor sound balance and too much bass marring the evening. The screen displaying the visuals was a great contribution to the ambience but positioned exactly where the sound engineer should sit in order to hear what the rest of us do. Even the ‘salsa dancers’ that had been determinedly sashaying around the empty f loor were driven away by the thrumming vibra- tions. By a happy coincidence, however, exactly as 22 filled up at late o’clock, a superb combination of MC-ing and hard breakbeat got everyone moving. Suddenly, the venue suited the sound that was be- ing produced and by God was it well-received. Finally, when Biogen took his place, this old hand showed the youth how it was really done. Building up from a techno base, he increased the both tempo and the mood, finally dropping some dirty, dirty baselines that had us simply writhing with pleasure. If only we had him all night. HeatHer rosemary Harrison PHilliP Upstairs at the Reykjavík Art Museum, a black plastic skull revolves on a turntable. Fifties rock ‘n’ roll seeps out of the attached head- phones. The piece is called ‘Doppelgänge’. Across the room a large, red cushion gives birth to a trail of smaller, pink cushions. This piece is called ‘Zeitgeist’. Downstairs a quintet of male, thirty-somethings play stodgy blues-rock that echoes across the almost empty main hall. Let’s call this piece ‘Wrong Place, Wrong Time’ AKA Esja. The hall is no less empty come Sprengjuhöllin’s arrival, but begins to fill slowly to the sound of the lovable-as-they-come Reykjavíkian’s stir- ring indie-pop. They possess an indelible charm that hangs around even when they’ve announced the start of their “six-minute murder ballad” ‘Konkordia’. The song’s sinister subject matter is wasted on us – even with the cue – because of the beaming smile on bass player Georg’s face. It was murder, I tells ya- murder most cheerful. From a killing to an aggravated assault of the eyes, thanks to the disco king get-up of Dr Spock’s aging lead singer. He’s matched a see-through shirt with a fur coat and improbably tight leggings – haute couture that only a man who’s auditioned for Eurovision (the Spocks came second in this year’s Icelandic heats) would feel truly comfortable in. Musically they’re System of a Down shed of the politics, sincer- ity and a degree of ability but, after 24 hours of watching mournful singer-songwriters, we’re ready to admit that a grown man with his cock cling-wrapped in pink spandex might be just what the doc- tor ordered. Eurovision’s loss is our considerable gain. Seabear’s singer doesn’t look like the sort who’d appreciate the humour in Dr Spock’s act. He’s a miserable little so-and-so, which is a shame since his band – six of them, on all manner of bells, f lutes, keys and clangers – couldn’t look happier to be here. At their best they con- nect with the audience like a heyday Flaming Lips. Unfortunately, the door I’m leant against – shaking with the vibrations of the band’s anthemic playing – moves more than their singer does. In contrast it near rattles off its hinges when Hjaltalín start up, all four-to-the- f loor drum pounding and bass playing as heavy as a sonar pulse. Their grandiosity unites the crowd, which has somehow swelled to fill the hall and is stamping the f loor in approval. There’s a reason why the strobe light stays on for most of their set as, like MGMT, this is disco-rock for hippies with rhythm. The exuberant arrival of Páll Óskar, for lead vocal duties on their closing number, gets them the roar of the night from the now adoring crowd. Danish doom-rockers Munich have a tough job following them. A long setup time doesn’t help and the room’s half empty by the time they’re on stage. Singers Mikael Kærsgaard and Karin Nielsen do their best with those that are left, but by now we’re all looking a little spent. Parts of Munich’s set may sound like the world falling apart (due to some battleground drums and sonorous guitar work) but for the most part they’re un- able to stir us from our post-Hjaltalín haze. Henry Barnes Reykjavík Art Museum 22 ICELAND AIRWAVES SCHEDULE IN OUR BOOKSTORE Your source for Icelandic music Saturday 17:00 Ólafur Arnalds 17:40 Benni Hemm Hemm 18:20 Ane Brun Emma Emma

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