Reykjavík Grapevine - 28.08.2010, Side 44

Reykjavík Grapevine - 28.08.2010, Side 44
Open: Mondays-Saturdays 11:30-22:30 Sundays 16:00-22:00 Now offering catering service! 32 The Reykjavík Grapevine Issue 13 — 2010 I love free shit. If there is something that I can get for nothing, then my grasping mitts are all over it. And when Iceland’s premier death metal monkeys, Severed Crotch, are having an album release concert that’s FREE, then it’s definitely a date! As I arrive, Manslaughter are setting up. They’re looking relaxed compared to the cack-handed debacle of the Thule Rocks festival a couple of weeks ago. Tonight they piss venom and crap thunder with a set mixing sludge metal with roaring hardcore. In fact, why they don’t just ditch the metal and be pure hardcore is beyond me, as they do it brilliantly and it’s something Iceland has been seriously missing the last couple of years. I feel the call of the wild as I launch into a moshpit that contains... err... two other people. Everyone else is just standing there in their posed nonchalance and won't take part in the fun. I’ve said this before and I’ll say it again: when it comes to hardcore music, Icelandic crowds are pussies. At first glance Angist look an interesting prospect. And when the vocalist starts to sing, it’s with a mighty guttural growl that reminds me instantly of Thorrs Hammer and Arch Enemy, which brings a cheer from the crowd. But by the second song, there is something seriously fucked with their sound. The guitars are inaudible and everything is just completely swamped by the kick drum. It gets so that I ask the sound engineer if he can sort it out, only for him to say that their sound is ‘a mess’ and he can't do anything with it. This completely ruins the performance, which is also not helped by all their songs sounding pretty much alike. Perhaps it’s a lack of experience or just a general fuck up, but my first thought when they finish was ‘must try harder’. The place becomes seriously packed as Gone Postal start fubbing around on stage. However, they take forever to set up so I imbibe several drinks and take the piss out of a friend for dressing up like a groupie for Endless Dark. Now GP are a classic marmite band in that you either love them or hate them. This is only the second time I’ve seen them and I’m very much coming around to their style of death metal, which only seems to have two settings, kill and bring it back to life (then kill it again). But singer Tobbi is surely a sight and voice to behold. Whether it’s his nuclear shrieks or fearsome hair windmills, the real secret to his success is that he has the cheeks of the cutest hamster you’d ever want to own. It took all I could not to storm the stage and pinch them. Now it’s time for the big boys. There’s a tinge of sadness tonight as Severed Crotch’s drummer, Gunnar, is leaving Iceland and there will be no more Crotch for a year! This is a shame as they’ve finally created some real momentum and recognition by releasing their album ‘The Nature of Entropy’. As they explode into their own brand of complex death metal that no one else does better in the country, the crowd (finally) go completely apeshit as I get some musical questions answered (the dog barking sounds on ‘Breeding Failure’ actually come from bass player Þorður). It builds up to a pretty glorifying spectacle as SC morph into the house band for some old forgotten pagan god (you know, the really nasty, gory one). It certainly feels like an old god has skullfucked me forever. As it ends, I need to sit down and wonder how far they could go if they had been Swedish of German. Probably would have booked them as headliners for Eistnaflug 2012. —BOB CLUNESS Films | Review Music | Live Review Music | Album Review Technically, Rökkurró makes no mistakes with tuning, rhythm and production; however, “Í annan heim” fails on a larger level. The album lacks musical intuition—every song sounds formulaic and bland. The finger-picked guitars never expand into something shimmering. Instead, the same simple, slow-moving guitar phrases and chords are recycled throughout each song. The lead singer’s voice, much more suited for background harmonies, lacks original style, range and energy. Everything about the percussion: the flat production, heavy down beats followed by slow drum rolls, and extreme repetitiveness, follow the formula for a typical Christian rock song (you know, that genre of music that puts God first and music last). The strings follow predictable swell progressions, landing on tonic notes, and weigh down the songs rather than pushing them The ambient moments fail to create grandeur and the folk moments lack intimacy. “Í annan heim” falls short on innovation, intricacy, movement, energy and surprise. People who like Sixpense None The Richer, watered down Evenescence or Christian rock radio might like this album. If you are not one of those people, then you should probably stay away from “Í annan heim.” —EMILY BURTON Ms. Burton Mr. ClunessTwo critics. One album Rökkurró Í annan heim rokkurro Flat-Pack Post Rock. « » Not suitable for music therapy...or anything else for that matter. Ok, first of all let’s get one thing out of the way. Í Annan Heim is by no means awful. It’s a competently put together record containing nine tracks of soft, ethereal glacier rock. But ironically, the sound is also the main problem with it. Í Annan Heim comes across as the product of a life spent being developed in a genetics lab with the sole purpose of creating music that would only be enjoyed by backpacking tourists. Like a purebred Touristcore with four asses. With child-like female vocals, apologetic drumming and winsome picked guitars, it feels like other Icelandic bands mixed together, only not quite as good. Even when they wake up and put some fizz into it, as on ‘Sjónarspil’, it just sounds like Sigur Rós’ ‘Glósóli’ sung by Mammút. So while it ticks all the relevant boxes for a person travelling the golden circle, for the rest of us the sheen can’t disguise that there is a lot better out there. —BOB CLUNESS – Manslaughter, Angst, Gone Postal, Severed Crotch Sódóma, August 14 Farewell, but not goodbye, to the House band from Hell.... Talking About The Next Generation Georg Bjarnfreðarson is a fucked up, middle aged lunatic. And he’s in prison for murdering a woman. But, after Georg implements some “prisoner- friendly” changes – mandatory daily fitness and the first smoke-free cell block in Scandinavia – guards and inmates form an unusual alliance to get Georg paroled. Starring Reykjavík’s esteemed mayor, Jón Gnarr, as the eponymous hero, “Bjarnfreðarson” tells the story of the child behind the man that no one likes. Young Georg was made to wear a girl’s coat to school, attend get-to-know-your-vagina sessions and listen to his mum shitting in the bathroom, which is missing a door. Thanks to Freud, we know that where there’s a screwed up male character there’s a mother to blame. And, yeah, in this case there really is! Trying to make life better for everyone and everybody hating him for that, the struggle of Georg continues. Out of jail, in the real world again, Georg finds himself living with two former acquaintances: lethargic family man Daníel and lady killer Ólafur. This odd trio, rounded out by Pétur Jóhann Sigfússon and Jörundur Ragnarsson, appeared together in a series of TV-shows previously. Watching Næturvaktin (Night Shift), Dagvaktin (Day Shift) and Fangavaktin (Prison Shift), Icelanders came to love Georg Bjarnfreðarson and his sidekicks. The result is 20% of the Icelandic population seeing the Ragnar Bragason directed “Bjarnfreðarson”, in cinemas. The DVD, released in May of this year, offers English subtitles, so now everyone can get a taste of Icelandic humour. Focussing on situational humour, “Bjarnfreðarson” is clearly a comedy show spin- off. The characters do experience a personal development, but they don’t develop beyond being clichés: the hippie with the goatee, the wannabe cool-guy in buffalo-boots and the shy guy stuttering. This movie isn’t the best movie ever made, but that’s not what to expect. The humour balanced between melancholically subtle and directly brute, this film does what a good comedy does: it gives you a real good time, but leaves you with bitter taste in your mouth. And don’t forget that there’s one added bonus: you are going to see Reykjavík’s mayor completely naked. —WIEBKE WOLTER Bjarnfreðarson DVD release, 2010 A collection of the atonal yammerings of a weird, deluded shut-in, Hátindar has mostly only novelty value. The songwriting is fairly formulaic and perfunctory, and the delivery method—one dude with an acoustic and a harmonica (except for the couple of songs which make good use of the ‘auto-accomp’ feature on an electric organ)—doesn’t offer much variety. Like most musicians who’ve opted for this format, Insol’s focus is on his lyrics and their elocution, and they’re by far the most interesting bit. Direct, eccentric and random to the point of sounding stream-of-consciousness, they detail the musings and sensibilities of a marginalised, self- styled poet with a slightly skewed view of everyday life, and if you’re into that kind of thing, fine, but listening to this album made me damn near as crazy as this guy sounds. —SINDRI ELDON Music | Album Review Like being the only sober person at Woodstock. Insol Hátindar Insol –

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