Friday, October 29, 2004

Arabian nights

Street Music Arabe, Queen Elizabeth Hall, 27 October

“Streetmusic Arabe is an irresistible strike against segregation, cultural purity and imperialism” - the flyer promised. Nettle began the mission. The percussionist and violinist/oud-player were extremely good, but Rupture (himself no slouch) arguably crammed a bit too much into each short track (electro/jungle/industrial clatter and the rapid twisting of every available FX knob), making the whole slightly less than the sum of its parts. The combination occasionally lost focus – as instrumentals the sound might have benefited from elongation, introducing the elements with more clarity. Nevertheless there were passages of thundering energy and astonishing beauty (mainly from the violin) and the sum was never less than compelling. An appropriately jolting entry-point into the night. One lady behind us muttered something about not liking the clatter.

Next up were the treat for the Arabists and the Arabs, the reason why many were here. Traditionalist Moroccans Nass el-Ghiwane were extremely affecting (even if we couldn't understand a word of their songs). Songs often began with the melody on a decidedly non-Deliverancy banjo sometimes accompanied by thrumming on the huge Kleenex-box bass, then the lead vocalist would start drumming and we'd be off, the four rich voices soaring in unison, punctuated with guttural consonants and call and response sections – with many songs unexpectedly speeding up in the middle for added exhilaration. Though we’re sure a downtempo version of one or two songs would have worked, chillout clearly wasn’t their game.

Rupture's solo turntable set after the break was dense, dissonant but all too short, and rather more appropriate for Fabric than a South Bank concert hall. Along with the lumping together of diverse acts, this highlighted the relatively underground nature of Middle East music in the UK, apart from Graham Norton’s Turkish tune and the motifs of modern r&b of course. The ‘heart’ of his sound, supplied in Nettle by the two musicians, was in his dj set provided by the found sounds – recorded vocals and ‘real musicians’ (doubtless from at least three corners of the globe), which he superimposed over the grimey and glitchy beats ’n breaks. These included, played over but not otherwise connected to the chirpy beats, the acapella domestic violence song off Tracy Chapman's first album, but not the acapella rape song off Tori Amos’ first album (he might want to drop that one in next time). Difficult to say whether he picked the former because he loves it and thought its message would be enhanced by scuttering electro, or was it just because it was a soulful voice with no drums behind it? Careful deterritorialisation of diverse sonic phyla, or cynical po-mo juxtafest? It might help to talk to Rupture to find out, and happily we’ll have the chance at NOISETHEORYNOISE#2. A starting point for info on both Nettle and Rupture can be found here.

The last lot, Clotaire K, did get the crowd going, despite the best efforts of the bouncers to get everyone to go back to their seats (apparently at a recent Jeff Mills RFH gig, some groover fell out of one of the boxes and broke his ankle – but not before continuing to attempt to dance around while dangling from the box). Clotaire K were fronted by a polyglot rapper (perhaps a French beur?) and supported by a drummer, dj, crusty bassist and a Bez. The dancers must have been the already-converted, because for the first five songs what our ears heard was a fairly unpleasant rock-rap dirge, reminiscent of 90s bands like Senser, token Arabic samples and scratching choruses. Bad noise. Not even made better by denunciations of Bush and testimonies to John Peel. Luckily things improved as variables were introduced such as the rapper’s plaintive oud-plucking and Bez-one’s natty bodypopping and beatboxing. Yet the drumming remained stodgy, that samey slow thud so beloved of hip hoppers gone metal. Mr Clotaire himself has sufficient talent to take his Lebanese-American influences onto the next stage.

A diverse night – modern acts with classical influences, pure tradition followed by next-level turntablism, Clotaire’s “clash of the civilisations” and much of it secular in character (countering the impression of an Arabia wholly succumbed to demagoguery) . As a primer this was good but, enshallah, the acts should be able to find their own British audience to sustain return visits without the need of South Bank curation.
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Wednesday, October 20, 2004

I can see for Mylo

In-store show
HMV Oxford Street
20 October 2004

This Culler is no rapacious record buyer, but I do like to check what’s hot and what’s not, what new sonic porn the tastemakers are pushing us. So I turned up at ‘my’ major West End phonic shop to see the back end given over to a live show from Mylo. The Scottish islands artist is making a name with himself with memorably titled singles such as Destroy Rock & Roll (American guy rants a list of acts to be destroyed, with pleasing emphasis on sealing Duran Duran’s fate) and readily identifiable luminous spray-painted stencilled logos flyposted all over, seemingly done by Putsch if the Breastfed label is anything to go by.

Joining this freebie gig in the positive column were a good turnout, excellent acoustics (better than most clubs) and an emphatic sound. Myles MacInnes himself played guitar accompanied by a full band and backing tracks. Like many others, Mylo seems to understand the disposable pleasure of his art, that he is just one more variant of the relentless Tesco Finest production chain. Hence the desire to distance himself from being precious about the art, with the cheap branding and knowing lyrics.

But all this regurgitated Jackson bounce-beat, these clinical 80s exhortations to dance that he and fellow Breastfed artist Linus Love and many, many others unable to get off the jaunty bandwagon peddle, it HAS TO STOP. It’s making some stuff on the far edges of house seem like pure Marinetti business by comparison, and that genre in itself is 20 years old. A nod and a wink is not enough when the rest of the package is so bog standard.

Comments: [skip] [hide]

apropos of nothing, I just heard Verve's Bittersweet Symphony being played at a Democrat rally in a Newsnight piece...

[ murray 21/10/2004 04:04:32 :: web]

The majority of people who will be buying this record, will probably not have heard this 'sound' before. Their album and singles have been out on promo for almost a year - so this sound is already a year old from when it was created.
Also, Mylo had to find a new distributer as 3mv went under.

[ Steve 21/10/2004 16:25:14]

also apropos of nothing.....

saw Selfish Cunt on Friday (Leeds Cockpit) - pretty good especially the singles & a cover of My Perogative, had a chat to them later and mentioned the Cull review - they took down the address and said they'd take a look.

also saw Bloc Party last week - the PA was way to quiet (often is at the Cockpit) and the crowd largely full of people who thought they should be there and onlyrecognised the last single. Good set all the same.

[ Stickboy 25/10/2004 18:30:16]

The Selfish Cunt review is posted on the web link below: Martin Tomlinson is distinctly 'on message' in dissecting Britkapital's sickness but I just think the sonic trappings of the Cunt's lyrics need considerable improvement, or else it will drown in its art-rock irrelevant netherworld and that would be a shame. Mylo's sound, however, is primarily propelled for dance clubs and though engaging could not be recorded as a progression (though of course each individual track is a novelty in itself)

nice ones for prompting the need for clarification in our often sketchy reviews...

[ murray 25/10/2004 19:40:41 :: web]

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