// RED SKY IN MOURNING //AN INTERVIEW WIH DISJOY //

DISJOY COVER

Cardiff band Disjoy have released an album containing sound content of rare violence and disorder. Red Sky imagines the forefathers of punk and in doing so reacts to the injustice of society and political farce. Speaking to Disjoy in transit to Berlin Quiffed Owl learnt that this album was inspired by a specific event that directly effected the band – one member in particular – and the ensuing struggle to cope with traumatic loss.

Disjoy are the reincarnation of their former band LUVV. Vocalist and guitarist Matt Short and bass guitarist Ben Mainwaring salvaged the ethos and back bone of LUVV when other members left. Mainwaring tells me, “for the most part we have found ourselves in this position through necessity, as members of our former band had to commit full time to their band [Chain of Flowers]. So I wouldn’t say it was a conscious choice.”

Yet from LUVV’s ashes a robust desire to succeed has forged Disjoy, and with it a profoundly different punk sound than what preceded it. Mainwaring expands by pointing out that when the four became a three piece, with a brand new drummer and Short adding to his vocal responsibilities by claiming Lead guitar, their direction was forced some what. “ I wouldn’t really say we’ve done anything differently to our former bands. Since we’ve got together we’ve always written the same way, it’s always been very raw and from the heart but I think the added influences from former members obviously added something to the songs we were writing. So I think Disjoy is just us at our most stripped down, pure and natural.”

Disjoy were in their early stages as a band when disaster struck. The album is devoted to Mainwaring’s late father who died suddenly and in tragic circumstances in 2016. It is to Mainwaring’s credit that Disjoy have even been able to carry on at all in the light of such tragedy and emotional turmoil – let alone release a record of such focussed energy.

“He [Mainwarings father] was helping a collective we were involved in to try and create a new DIY space in Cardiff when the accident happened”, Mainwaring recalls. “Red Sky is from a funny phrase he used to say to me when I was growing up. So this record is dedicated to his memory”.

Red Sky explodes from a Peter Hook like bass line, low slung and unholy. The first track and first single from the album, Divided, is an unstable and violent lament to the disenfranchised. Short spits and sneers his Carmarthenshire propaganda around a tight reoccurring rhythm, Divided is a genuinely fine punk single and the most accessible on the record. Asked about the process of writing their songs, Mainwaring explains “we usually start with a riff that Matt will come up with and bring into practice. Then we usually play along and try to arrange it as best we can”.

The records second track Control cements the direction of Red Sky: no nonsense will be tolerated here. Your ears will bleed and your heart will race. The distorted buzz and electric prayer fizzes through the track. Matt Short elaborates on the records overall anarchic tone, “there’s a lot out there that I don’t think we agree with…that factors into any darkness that we might have in our music. The political climate at the moment is a big factor in the anger and just the trials and tribulations of being a human being”.

The title track is a contradiction of classic post-punk with visions of Joy Division’s Shadowplay – yet here Disjoy introduce a paranoid and distorted anguish cloaked in hate, where rhythm section and home-made pedal samples grate against Short’s possessive shrieks. This album is designed to be heard live and that is reflected in the raw production from start to finish. This is not an easy listen – Red Sky is not sugar coated for wider accessibility. This is undiluted punk music made for punks.

Red Sky will be released by the label that Ben Mainwaring has recently founded. Pretty Hate Records will release the album on cassette and vinyl as well as an online format – this DIY approach is defining the course of alt-rock today, and as more and more alternative music venues are closing it may be the only way that people can keep alternative music alive in an increasingly main stream society.

Speaking about the threatened closure of Wales’s most iconic venue, Clwb Ifor Bach, Disjoy emphasise the vital role these small clubs have to play in nurturing and supporting new music and young musicians. “It’s hugely important that we don’t lose Womanby Street. We’ve lost a lot of venues in Cardiff & Newport (Lepub and TJ’s) over the years and I think it’s extremely important that we stop the rot before it’s too late. People need music and new bands need places to play”.

Disjoy have begun a busy live period this spring and play with, amongst others, Sarcasm, The Violent Hearts, The Wolf Hounds and Japanese outfit Melt- Banana; and along with allies such as Cardiff’s Chain Of Flowers, we can expect a continuity of  boundary prodding, raw punk coming out of Wales’ capital for the immediate promising future.

Words by Jimmy Gallagher

// ANTI-POSTER PUNK // A look at the variety in trans-Atlantic post punk //

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Chain Of Flowers in their home city of Cardiff – Buffalo Bar 2016

Some would suggest that punk music was over by the beginning of 1978, this revolutionary development in music culture containing only three chords in a two and a half minute package of guitar angst and anti-establishment verbal’s. It could surely only have a limited shelf life because of the formulaic constraints punk applied to itself. The use of any instrument other than drums, guitar and bass were forbidden and anything that resembled progression would have been seen as a U-turn to treachery and an admittance of conformity to the music of the ruling middle classes. Yet punk does remain in ethos, style and sound. It is an evolution of the purists version in 76-77 but the same rules do not apply. This is post-punk.

Post punk came in new waves in the UK and U.S.A throughout the late 70’s, 80’s and 90’s each washing up an added defining feature onto the punk landscape. These were shared by and built on by the next flag barers. Garage punk, hardcore-punk and Anarcho-punk are immediately identifiable from each other but are unmistakably punk; The Fall for instance, could not be mistaken for Black Flag and Napalm Death are a stark contrast to Conflict, but never has this form of music been so diverse and eclectic as it is today.

In Canada and the northern states of America a wealth of bands have adapted what punk is capable of, and in doing so have inspired its advancement with innovative design. The catch is that the majority of people won’t recognise the names of the bands who are creating an era defining sound in a truly golden age of punk. None are the same but all are alike, and that is in keeping with the post-punk tradition.

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Parquet Courts at Trinity Centre – Bristol 2016

Parquet Courts from Brooklyn, New York City are a prime example of what post punk has become, or invariably, what they have made to be post punk. In 2012 their album Light Up Gold bared all of the energy and uncleanliness as The Clash’s Give Em’ Enough Rope did but the undeniable optimism in rhythm momentum and lyrical content seem a world apart. Not to say it’s better or more informed, it is not as consistently political. Just listen to Stoned And Starving or Dust for clarification of that point. However the Ted Heath/Maggie Thatcher revolutionists would spit out there fried spam sarnies in shock to the enlightened new age of punk music, but perhaps they wouldn’t make the connection between the two periods due to lack of exposure to it and a subconscious lack of empathy with a more privileged generation. The truth is there are socio-economic issues today and there will forever be, therefore a constant well of injustice and revolt can be tapped into for generation after generation of punks.

The Clash themselves were castigated for the use of horns and  a general eclectic approach to multi-genres on the great London Calling in 1979 (Although released in 1980). What would they have thought of the recorder solo Parquet Courts included in You’ve Got Me Wonderin Now from the 2013 EP Tally All Of The Things That You Broke? Although that was under the pseudonym Parkay Quarts, a thoroughly punk concept in itself.

The reality is that what is happening will go largely unnoticed by music history. The quality of the output is not reflected in sales but buying habits have changed and media coverage a mere fraction of that their ancestors enjoyed in the late 70’s. Fortunately the likes of Big Ups from New York don’t allow themselves to be phased by that. Verging on new wave hardcore, Big Ups are a tongue in cheek savagery made for the sweaty underground. This particular carnation of punk is a simmering undercurrent of disassociation with capitalist mediocrity mirrored in tight bass and reflecting drums erupting like a geyser every so often. Big Ups are an image of the 80’s anarcho-punk scene reminiscent of Conflict or Fugazi but sparkling with a chrome finish. Then there is Preoccupations (formerly Viet Cong), they are a punk for all seasons encompassing Pretty Vacant chords with In Utero blasts of dirge. They travel the timeline of punk stopping at new wave synths and bleak goth in a jigsaw puzzle of noise.

It seems that the hotter the music the colder the city it derives from, Canada is a hotbed of boiling punk in many guises right now. In Montreal you have two bands brandishing very different punk projects. Ought are a Talking Heads meets Pulp progression of high brow, high velocity high jinks, lead singer Tim Darcy is a slender and charismatically apologetic conductor of progressive and infectious punk compositions like More Than Any Other Day and the incredible single from their second album Beautiful Blue Sky. Solids on the other hand, much like Metz from Toronto, are a reincarnation of the Seattle sound of the early 90’s. A distorted wall of energy and adrenalin with a galloping thrust.

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Ought @ Clwb Ifor Bach – Cardiff 2016

There seems to be a punk for all nowadays. Yuck are the epic anthemic punksters, The Cloud Nothings are multi dimensional band of tuneful pain, and the remarkable Thee Oh Sees are as experimental as any prog rock band. What is for sure is punks don’t feel obliged to conform to type, in music and in fashion. Punks don’t have to wear black ripped leather as was their want and they don’t sport safety pins through their septums; on the contrary, arguably the most complete post punk band of all are the least alluring, but then that is punk by evolutionary design. Protomartyr from Detroit are the anti-heroes, the un-hipsters – but they ooze a bleak topical power that blows anything in the billboards to smithereens.

Talking about Protomartyr’s lead man Joe Casey at 2014 SXSW Festival, The Los Angeles Times wrote – “In an industry that thrives on image, heat and pretty singers who wouldn’t tuck a button-down shirt into belted pants unless with irony, Protomartyr was unafraid to tackle ugly topics that most fame-seeking acts avoid.”

Ugly topics is what Protomartyr do best, with a cavalier disregard and a full blooded body punch of shuddering sound. 2014’s Under Colour Of Official Right was an unsanitized masterpiece tackling government corruption and social inequality in lyrics and the rules of engagement in guitar music. Last year Agent Intellect confirmed them as a true force in rock, with its sometimes squalid and shadowy atmosphere a surprising beauty unveils itself at key intervals – I Forgive You boasts a simplistic key change transforming the feel of a fast tempo ‘Cribs’ like romp into something far more profound and lovely. Pontiac 87, Dope Cloud, Why Does It Shake? and Clandestine Time all have moments of delicious magic mixed with a tinge of grief and discouraging anguish – accessibly inaccessible Protomartyr are a vice of dark proportions that you can’t do without.

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EAGULLS/PROTOMARTYR Tour poster

This age of anti-poster punks is not confined to North America, in Britain post-punk bands arguably cover a broader range of music diversity in their punk music. Drenge, Wytches and Eagulls are loud and aggressive but are versatile enough to visit areas of post rock , grunge and metal. British punks are undoubtedly influenced by American bands but are as equally open to the artists of their own land but from another time.

Cardiff band Chain Of Flowers are one of those groups taking the best parts of the music they have studied and loved and redesigning the blue print to suit themselves. Elements of The Jesus And Mary Chain, Iceage and Joy Division intermingle in their sound and as a result Chain Of Flowers music is being enjoyed on both sides of the Atlantic. They have recently returned from a successful U.S tour via Europe and Scandinavia. Lead singer Joshua Smith tells me that they were as gratefully received by the public as they were to be there – “We were out there for a month, touring both the West & East coast of the USA before finishing up in Canada, playing Montreal and Toronto respectively. It was an overwhelming pleasure”.

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Big Ups @ Louisiana, Bristol

 

 

Chain Of Flowers appeared on the famous Seattle radio station KEXP, squeezing in a live session performance in between dates on their tour – “That was a really cool thing to be asked to do” Smith tells me, “Even at 9am in the morning on next to no sleep. They’re great people who have been very supportive of us”.

Noticeably, many of todays post-punk bands tour together, much like they did first time around. Metz and Protomartyr toured the UK last year and the latter supported Eagulls a few months ago. Discussing the sheer number of high quality bands coming out of North America at present, Smith suggests a more logical explanation than a mutually beneficial support network for this – “I think the reason for so many good post-punk bands coming from the same place is more a matter of size and geography. The U.K. at the moment is most definitely blooming on its own terms. We’ve just got back from Static Shock Weekend in London and the weekend was testament to it all”.

It is true that the U.K is blossoming in this field, bands like Sievehead, Sarcasm, Misc, Fex Urbix and another Cardiff band – Disjoy are all pushing the boundaries of post-punk in this country reinforcing Smith’s enthusiasm for his own bands direction –  “I enjoy more so the blurring of lines and crumbling boundries of genre on lineups that we’re lucky enough to be a part of”.

Joshua Smith is surely not alone in the industry with his awareness of the impact this music is making amongst students of good guitar music -“Post-punk will never go away but it seems to be sliding back into the light for a minute both over here and overseas. It’s a very broad, all-encompassing tag that is also used to describe a vast amount of bands that are very removed from what we do. A lot of the time, it means not a great deal, but that’s also fine”.

For the time being it is important to celebrate the variety we are being treated to within post-punk today.

Words and photographs by Jimmy Gallagher

 

 

 

 

 

// BACK TO THE BEDROOM // An Exclusive Interview With OLIVER WILDE //

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The stereotype once associated with the singer/songwriter was that of a disillusioned young person with an acoustic guitar strapped around their shoulder penning laments of alienation and social injustice. To a degree, some of those traits will always exist but a new generation of pioneering D.I.Y artists have adapted song writing and more specifically song production with a savvy digital approach that has injected a new lease of life into the music and has begun to change the perspective of the art of song writing. One such trail blazer is Bristol based Oliver Wilde. Quiffed Owl met up with him for a long over due talk. “I have been promising you an interview for months so we can talk about anything you want to” Wilde kindly offers. And I duly accept.

After a bowl of soup each in Stokes Croft’s The Canteen, we escape the bustle to take sanctuary in a quiet real ale pub over looking the famous Gloucester Road area of Bristol where so many musicians have cut their teeth. Oliver Wilde’s rise took a different path to many in that his critically acclaimed first two albums were made and completed in his bedroom using a mic, a couple of tape machines and a drum machine before his label Howling Owl approached him for a release.

His latest record Long Hold Star An Infinite Abduction saw Wilde take to the studio with intentions of collaborating with a producer and other musicians “I wanted to try and widen the screen a little bit. I guess the idea was to try and break out of the cycle of making bedroom records as an attempt to exhibit some sort of trajectory of progression”.

Along with his band Wilde moved down to a place near Land’s End on the very tip of Cornwall where they built a cabin studio with a panoramic view of the ocean.

Wilde identifies the reasons for his different approach to the recording of Long Hold Star: “I think my music is quite simple and repetitive and it is more about the words, the emotion and the atmosphere as supposed to a musical expression so working with people who are primarily musicians and less artists was what I wanted to do”.

Despite his very best intentions Oliver Wilde encountered numerous difficulties at the time of recording Long Hold Star including unrest between the band and a mental breakdown. He reflects on that time less than fondly and sites a lack of motivation at the time to contributing to, what he perceives as being, a poor record which he is keen to move on from.

It was just after Loose End Womb and as we started Long Hold Star I had a full blown melt-down which lasted about two years and I only really started coming out of that at the beginning of this year so my attachment to that record is negative and I feel as though my heart wasn’t really in it because I didn’t feel comfortable with what we were doing.”

As if to exacerbate the psychological and emotional stress Wilde was experiencing, it was his body that was deteriorating due to a serious heart defect that he has been admirably living with since childhood.

“I was really ill with my heart condition and it made it quite impossible to do anything. But we had just signed to the label and things were moving along and there were some external pressures forcing that record through.”

By the time the album was finished Wilde immediately returned to hospital for a few weeks and whilst there he had an epiphany. “I was lying there and decided ‘I don’t like this album and I don’t want to put it out at all’ – which got me in quite a lot of trouble”.

Wilde remembers having to be convinced by Howling Owl to release the material recorded in Cornwall even though his personal attachment to the recordings were so negative. It was Wilde who decided to shorten the tracks from the original 16 to just 7 and make it an EP rather than an album to follow on from Red Tide Opal In The Loose End Womb.

In hindsight Wilde identifies some realisations born as a result of those dark times he experienced that has culminated in a new album due out in the new year. “You have to trust your judgement” He tells me, “My Life was so dishevelled with my health and everything that for a moment I lost my confidence in my judgement”.

It is fair to say that “His judgement has returned”, and the yet unnamed album is ear marked for a release in February. It is a return to the low-fi approach that he is far more comfortable with. “After wasting all of that money on an album that wasn’t even released properly I am returning back to the bedroom so to speak and I have recorded the material on really basic equipment again”.

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So, what can we expect from his new stuff? Wilde suggests it is a continuation of the first two albums containing familiar woozy experimentation, for that is how he arrived at his sound in the first instance. “I consider the new record to be my third album proper. It is more of a personal statement and although musically and atmospherically it is moving forward, contextually it is still in a realm of comfort to me”.

What sets Oliver Wilde aside from other artists today is his trademark atmospheric sound and in his upcoming album he returns to his DIY roots but has tweaked his approach resulting in a record he is very proud of.

“I have always wanted to experiment with synthesizers and I have somehow found a way to get that to fit in with my world of constant repetition and what I call ‘skips’ but what others call ‘glitches’, these bit-crush sounds and all the things that characterise my music. The new record, like the first two records is fraught with imperfections but it is perfect to me but it is those imperfections that I strive for”.

When you listen to Oliver Wilde’s music you cannot help but notice that beyond the sound decoration there is a human resonance in his words that he intends for people to relate to and be challenged by. Wilde discusses a slight variation to his first two records as they were not originally intended to be heard so are by his own words – “More self absorbed”. Wilde is challenging what subject matter is appropriate for the traditional pop song.

“I try to convey a sense of truth whether it be a true story or if it resonates truth with anyone but I think in the mainstream, pop music tends to shy away from the more important subjects, especially in Britain and as a result we don’t tackle things like mental health, suicide, rape or racism because they are big scary words”.

When listening to Oliver Wilde’s music you are transported to an atmosphere that the music itself creates. The dense layers of sound and effect build a world around the words so I ask Wilde to comment on this and whether this is influenced by places or something more than just other artists. “I get influences from places, more conceptual things, from stories and literature and my experiences of the world. I know when a track is finished when there is a world to invest in, to go to, when there is a pallet of sound and an atmosphere intense enough for you to go to and get lost in”.

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The Cover of Red Tide Opal In The Loose End Womb

Accompanying Oliver Wilde’s dense, woozy soup of sound, the ethereal album sleeve artwork and magically innovative titles empower Wilde’s vision of a dreamscape world. This is all part of the process for a man who considers himself an artist before a musician.

“I am meticulous with the artwork and very particular with whom I like to do it for me. There is a small team I rely on – Robin Stewart from ‘The Naturals’, Harry Wright from ‘Giant Swan’, Adrian Dutt from ‘Spectres’ and James Hankins. Between the five of us, we have enough skills to do pretty much what we want. For instance Adrian is a great illustrator and Robin did the first album collage from some old National Geographic magazines. James had the idea for Red Tide Opal, we wanted a foetus, not a human foetus so as there would be questions about it. It is actually a wolf”.

Howling Owl Records are an influential institution for music lovers, especially if you are from, or familiar with Bristol. Galpal, The Naturals & Giant Swan are all signed to the label that Spectres member Adrian Dutt is 50% of. There is certainly a sense of community in certain factions of music makers in the city.

“When I was growing up I thought ‘a scene’ should have quite a clear label or mutual direction but in somewhere like Bristol, because the music is so diverse you have to think of it in a different way. For example, in strictly music terms I can’t be compared to Spectres and they can’t be compared to Giant Swan, so what keeps us so close and such good friends? It is because we make art out of necessity”.

I wonder whether that is exclusive to Bristol or can be said for any city, “It is not a London type scenario where there can be a moulded market for the music”, Wilde explains -“We tell people what our culture is rather than us being told what our culture should be. We are allowed to grow organically rather than being formed from an embryonic beginning”.

It is his label whom Wilde is keen to adorn praise on. “It is not that we are resigned to not making money but we all share the same aspirations and that is to create music and art we think is great. The artistic freedom we have is down to how facilitating the label is, they are not money driven like a major and it completely liberates you from what others are probably expected to be”.

Wilde talks passionately about his city and the people and venues that go to creating this constantly vibrant and artistically progressive place. He identifies The Malthouse and musicians such as Beak>, including Geoff Barrow (Portishead), as being central to the sharing of ideas and development of unique art in Bristol. Oliver Wilde is the epitome of an artist and with good health willing, his industry and unequivocal imagination will take us on many more adventures into his world of sound.

Words and photographs – Jimmy Gallagher

//POETRY IN MOTION // MARK GWYNNE JONES & PSYCHICBREAD // WIRKSWORTH FESTIVAL// 21-9-2016//

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Situated deep in the Derbyshire Dales, Wirksworth is as deeply imbedded in the arts as it is in lead and grit stone. Only truly accessible since the opening of the Ecclesbourne Valley Railway in 1867, in this small, tranquil town there is access to as much art as you like, and some of it is quite outstanding.

The Wirksworth Festival is curated carefully within and around its scenic surroundings and numerous resident artists, musicians and painters. Yet a man from Matlock Bath (not ‘Barth’) may well be the gem of not only the festival, but of the Peak District and poetry as a whole on this side of the Pennines.

Mark Gwynne Jones is a spoken word poet of much critical acclaim. He is an advocate of spoken word poetry and this summer performed at Latitude Festival. “I was amazed that the poetry stage, which is big at Latitude, was so close to the main stage. They could have put us in a quiet corner but I was on when New Order were on. One part of me thought ‘I wish we didn’t have all this noise coming through the walls’, but the other part of me was proud. I thought ‘we are the poetry tent and we are here’ – we were in the centre of it all and taking them on a bit”.

He is a poet with as much humility as he has rhythmical grace and although recently returning from an enlightening tour of India, he has somehow found time to reform Psychicbread, offering a musical backdrop to his poignant and observational rhyme after a five year absence.

“If you have nothing or no one to bounce off, then it is harder to be creative. But it isn’t just getting together with friends to make sounds and music, it is the conversations that inspire the material and content as well”.  Mark Gwynne Jones is of the same ilk as John Cooper Clarke in that he uncovers social and moral meanings from seemingly absurd aspects of life, and magnifies relevance in common place events to drive his multi-layered, laughing laments of life.

Mark Gwynne Jones performed his solo poetry in the first half of the show, weaving humorous anecdotes and jokes into his set before seamlessly orating his predominantly more recent material to the full Wirksworth Town Hall. Apart from Who’s Common Now?, the poems included were written in the last year or so. His theatrical vocalisations and expressions are as exuberant as they were years ago, when Plastikman cast the limelight over his otherwise slightly awkward and nervous demeanour. Gwynne Jones openly admits that he suffered terrible shyness and anxiety as a boy, and he confronts this anxiety head on with the magnificent Toad. “A lot of the poetry comes from the immediacy of experience and not being tied down to a linear line of time or place”. Mark Gwynne Jones has, to a great extent, overcome his anxieties by approaching experiences in his life from a new direction of thought. “When you can tap in to what is right here rather than in the room next to you, either behind you or in front of you, you are able to focus on the immediate experience and appreciate it. Then your anxiety dissolves”.

There is always a certain pause between the poet’s last syllable and the moment you put your hands together to acknowledge the completion of a Mark Gwynne Jones poem. The reason being that beyond the evident hilarity in his commentary there is an ambiguous and thought provoking underbelly that arguably sets him apart from his contemporaries. A realisation that his ingenuity with words are designed with more than just entertainment in mind. He subliminally forces us to consider greater meaning in the simplistic. But entertain he certainly did. The Town Hall doubled over with laughter at tales of a tortoise’s lustful encounter with a plastic shoe, and his boyhood tricking of a one- eyed deaf colleague into sucking fudge made of clay.

It was the second part, however, when Gwynne Jones took to the stage with Psychicbread  that the show took on a more significant sense of occasion, as this was the first time the band had appeared in the five years since the death of drummer John ‘Beano’ Thorne in 2011. Gwynne Jones was visibly excited by the prospect of playing as a band again. From his position at the mic, he fidgeted and turned, wide grinned, to watch his friends play their psyche-ambient-prog-rock around his narrated words. Speaking after the show, Gwynne Jones spoke about Psychicbread and what the music added to his lyrics:

“When I am doing solo performances I have to rely on a lot of humour to sugar the pill the whole time, whereas when I perform with the band I have the music there as a vehicle and a soundscape so as I don’t have to be calling on the comedy. The words have a new vehicle to be transported”.

When speaking of presenting poetry with music, Gwynne Jones pinpoints rhythm as a common denominator. “One of the secrets that make Psychicbread work is that I sometimes speak across the rhythm, sometimes I deliberately try and hit the rhythm, but I will try and free the voice from the rhythm. When people sing in bands they are always within the rhythm but suddenly, when you do spoken word, you can be free of that and it can create a greater sense of theatre”.

Impressively, Psychicbread had written completely new compositions for this performance. In only two months the band have invented an eclectic variety of atmospheric and theatrical pieces, compromising of reggae, Spanish style guitars, afro-beats and experimental percussive psychadelia. “I think because Nick, Deb and I have been together so for so long that there is a chemistry and we can slip back into jamming and something will come out of it”. Gwynne Jones continues, “I think what makes it non-generic is that Deb and Nick will listen to the poem and then soundscape the poem rather than saying “Oh, lets do a reggae number or something”.

Psychicbread are Deb Rose, Nick ‘The Hat’ and new drummer and percussionist Alex Ivanov. Guitarist and long time friend of Gwynne Jones, Nick ‘The Hat’, adds “I wouldn’t say it comes easy but we are so comfortable with each other that it comes naturally and we don’t try and emulate anybody, we just do our own thing, and just try and empower the words and get the message of the poems through to people – and it can take poetry to a bigger audience. I think the strength of it is a result of being so at ease with each other. You see the words are everything, we just react to the words and get a feeling of what music will fit them.”

Mark Gwynne Jones acknowledged absent friends and in particular former Psychicbread drummer, the late John ‘Beano’ Thorne. “I think Beano is up there looking down on us and smiling” said Gwynne Jones after a rather rousing drum solo from the newest member of the band, Alex Ivanov. Psychicbread are back making music and delivering sublime poetry once more. Tonight they showed Wirksworth exactly what words are worth.

Words by James ‘Jimmy’ Gallagher

Photo by Susan Mulroy

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

TRANSCENDING MUSIC – MORE THAN LIFE AND DEATH. LUVV & DISJOY BASS GUITARIST – BEN MAINWARING OFFERS A GLIMPSE INTO PERSONAL TRAGEDY.

This year my world changed… Last night I watched the new documentary “One More Time With Feeling” about the creation of the new Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds record “Skeleton Tree” and the circumstances surrounding its creation and it resonated with me to such a degree that I felt compelled and inspired to write […]

via Red Sky in the Morning. — A Red Sky

THE LOGICAL PROGRESSION OF ‘ERA’

THE LOGICAL PROGRESSION OF ‘ERA’

Gone are the days of the legitimacy of the question “This music is a bit before your time isn’t it?”

At the click of a button we can access all there is to hear from any musician that may come into our consciousness due to Spotify, YouTube and Shazam, however here are a passionate section of purists, collectors and obsessives who will have nothing to do with the fore mentioned technological shortcuts. They pride themselves on their first hand adventures into the annals and depths of musical history, which enables the formation of their own tastes and knowledge. A history of evolution so fascinating that the subject has, and forever will, spark debate and discussion – at least amongst those who really care.

This poses the second inevitable question “What is an era?”

We all know the definition of ‘era’, but an era within the context of popular music is not as clear cut. It can be argued that this can only be measured as a wholly personal experience. An era for one may not constitute the same for another. It must also be pointed out that a genre is separate to an era. An era is a specific time period of a direction within one specific genre. It is not one without the other.

My early childhood memories contain a constant musical score. Backseat return journeys between Birmingham and South Wales were made all the more bearable due to Fleetwood Mac sing-a-longs and Elton John duets. My twin brother and I innocently forming the foundations of our future musical interests as a result of our parents own tastes at that time. As a captive audience our early interest was enforced but now, 30 years on, gratefully appreciated. Neil Young’s ‘Harvest’, Paul Simon’s ‘Graceland’ and lashings of Zeppelin and Dire Straits exposed us to the joy that popular music can catalyse.

With age comes independence and free thinking and as my record collection grew, so did my wider understanding of music and the importance of its history. Punk happened well before I was old enough to realise its existence, but as I approached secondary school the exponents of the movement soon became my favourites. The Stranglers and The Clash dominated my thoughts and my ears.

The categorisation of an era and its branding is by definition synthetic, however Punk is widely accepted as an era – and an important one at that. As quickly as punk came it went, melting away into different forms as commercial success and capitalist marketing opportunity devoured the seed from which it came. ‘Here today, gone tomorrow’, is that a characteristic of what an era in music is?

Although bands like The Damned, The Buzzcocks, The Jam and The Undertones claim they were punk, was the real punk era over before those bands were aware of it and inspired to be a part of it? Many argue that the movement was over by the summer of 1977, as The Sex Pistols’ Bill Grundy appearance 6 months prior introduced them to the censored and over sensitive disgust of the public majority. Is an era a fleeting moment in time that requires a number of factors to be present simultaneously?

Punk has evolved from itself. Not just the sound but the ethos. When the early nineties arrived I was swept away by grunge music and the whole Seattle scene without ever having been there. On hearing ‘Go’ by Pearl Jam in 1993, my hair instantly grew into an undercut of curtained blonde capping off a ripped and  baggy corduroy look. This, I thought, was my time. But was it? Grunge encapsulated the authenticity and integrity that punk did, just as it housed the youthful angst against the mainstream. Based on this, an era is opposed to the majorities acceptance. It is alternative and stands against pop culture. But as is the case of western capitalist culture, the media and money makers are quick to pounce on a potential gold mine, and the exploitation of it renders that era obsolete within the blink of an eye.

Nirvana’s global success with 1992’s ‘Nevermind’ album catapulted them to stardom and therefore signalled the beginning of the end for grunge. Or, more appropriately, the end of the beginning. What we can take from this is that the integrity of an era is paramount. It must be lived without the threat of the awaiting mainstream; the major label vultures and their high street consumer cousins. A real era is not a marketable product: when it becomes such, it will contradict itself. An oxymoron must be starved of oxygen and when the heart of a movement is robbed of its life-blood then the body will die. Some will endeavour to continue but they must then evolve in order to exist.

To this day I adore the likes of The Melvins, The Meat Puppets, Soundgarden, Alice In Chains and  Mother Love Bone, but it is apparent to me that that was not my era. I only knew about it because of its popularity. A suburban kid in South East Wales can rock the look and rock to the songs, but when under your parents guardianship then how is it possible for one to be fully involved? To belong to an era one must be in some way involved before the media frenzy robs you of its essence. It must also be a subconscious happening, only seen as such in hindsight because if one was aware of it then the integrity of the era would be directly compromised. Does that mean that to be genuinely involved in an era you must be ‘coming of age’ at the precise time that that musical movement is on the move?

There has been no more blatant example of  exploitation of an era than the desperate media construction of Britpop in the mid nineties. The NME and the tabloid newspapers seized upon the success of Oasis and Blur in an opportunistic and cut throat fashion. They succeeded in convincing the public to buy into an exaggerated war between respective camps. As a result a yobbish terrace like culture was born. You were either one or the other. It suddenly wasn’t about the music any more, it was overtaken by a mainstream identity of acceptance. At least in the late 80’s, in the playground it was us, the 8 year olds who constructed the same hypothetical battle between Iron Maiden or Guns ‘N Roses. I was Maiden.

The media’s tiresome and incessant coverage of Britpop eventually bored the public and it soon became evident that few bands, especially those with any substance, wanted any part of it. The likes of Pulp, Suede and Primal Scream were listed under the banner with acts that had no right to be mentioned in the same breath. These bands had been going for years before, but the ignorance of the Britpop concept ignored this ‘indie’ branch of the rock/pop family tree. Suddenly anyone from the UK who held a guitar was Britpop and thus, the taste filter was removed and prolific sales substituted output with credibility and quality.

The bubble had to burst and thankfully it did, however the quality of guitar music sank quickly into an abyss and my buying habits changed. I found myself walking out of Diverse Records with a brand new direction in my shopping bag. The nineties saw a revolution in electro music and the evolution of this form was arguably faster and more innovative than any other genre.

From Acid House came a confidence to expand and expand it did. Happy Hardcore, House, Techno and an ambient down tempo flooded the underground in the decades early years, inspiring the greatest exponents of the art to make their own versions providing they had the technological know how and available software.

Orbital, The Orb, Leftfield, Underworld and The Chemical Brothers would soon become house hold names, yet they still retained their credibility and pushing of the boundaries of what was possible in electronic music. The Chemical Brothers in particular were able to bridge a gap between the electro underground and the indie sound, thrusting them to the forefront of an exciting time in music.

One day in 1996 my brother came home with a record that changed everything for us. Ever the pioneer in our musical education, he introduced me to Tosca, The Thievery Corporation and The Peace Orchestra. But on the day in question, he exposed me to an alien life form that would possess me for the foreseeable future.

so far reece

LTJ Bukem’s ‘Logical Progression’ was like nothing I had heard before or since. A concoction of jazz, soul, psyche and dance immediately transported me to another galaxy in which extra terrestrial fluidity poured over my senses. I was aware of drum ‘n’ bass but I had no idea it was capable of this. It was an enlightenment that inspired an exclusive crusade into drum ‘n’ bass. Suddenly all I saw was the possibilities of a music that I had previously scoffed at. ‘So Far’ by Alex Reece, ‘Colours’ by Adam F and ‘Timeless’ by Goldie consolidated my allegiance to an intelligent and spiritual music that seemed so far ahead of its time – of any time.

The factors were all in place according to my perception of what made an era. At 15 I could attend these events – not legally – but I did. I had a job that enabled me to finance my missions into music and I bought as much as I could. More over, this ambient drum ‘n’ bass somehow eluded the mainstream press. Magazines like Q, Mojo and Mixmag were more concerned with Radiohead, U2, The Stereophonics, The Beatles(?) and Trance. It was all mine.

A Radio 1/Slinky Essential Mix in Brighton on a spring night in 1997 brought me face to face with my new prophet who, unassumingly, just introduced himself as “Danny. Pleased to meet you”.

As the main hall throbbed with diluted, regurgitated house music broadcast live to the nation, the twin and I nestled into a dark back room of The Brighton Centre ready to be cloaked in the wonders of our voyage into Bukem’s progression sessions space walk. Peshay, Dillinja and Ray Keith were all present on that night and would soon be familiar figures as I swapped home for London.

1998 and 1999 did contain an acknowledging nod to big beat and a more tribal and deeper house music in the form of Layo & Bushwacka and Jon Carter. But it was the cast list of the drum ‘n’ bass royalty that ruled our evening’s recreation. Fabio & Grooverider at The Velvet Rooms and Home in Leicester Square, Goldie’s Metalheadz promotions at The Blue Note in Angel and of course the pop-up Progression session nights.

Perhaps it was when Roni Size and Reprazent won The Mercury Prize with New Forms that signalled the end of this era. But even now, 20 years later, the music is timeless and never bettered in this particular field.

At no point did I ever consider that a fleeting moment in as broad a category as dance music was my era. But it was, whether I like it or not. A subtly different approach to the production and formation of a fast paced and predominantly urban sub genre chose me, rather than vice versa, to be a part of it.

To this day, dance music has never felt so fresh. It could be concluded that no version of electro music has been as advanced, both conceptually and technically. The seminal albums from this time brought the past and the future together as one – not by accident but by design. Jazz elements of horn ghosted over dense thickets of bass that resonated through your body, especially when encountering it in some dark basement. Impeccably produced and arranged, tracks like Danny’s Song, Demon Theme and Horizons demonstrated the control these producers and Dj’s had on time and space – none more so than LTJ Bukem.

Drum ‘n’ bass has continued on and derivatives of drum ‘n’ bass have followed. UK garage, dubstep and now grime can find their roots in the movement of the mid 1990’s (but that is for another to discuss). Only on reflection can I commit to the fact that Bukem’s inspired intelligent drum ‘n’ bass was my era.

As the millennium came and went, Primal Scream’s ‘Exterminator’ signalled a sea change in guitar music and a new approach by embracing the elements of electronica. This album drew upon influences such as The Chemical Brothers, it was not only highly fashionable but widely accepted as a mechanism to achieve artistic growth and thus have the tools to diversify into a more versatile outfit. Historically, collaborations between music makers in electronic music were common place. This then paved the way for musicians to release the shackles of their scepticism and they followed suit.

In adopting this flexible and unrestrictive style, guitar music again blossomed and its followers will forever more find their true era.

Words by Jimmy Gallagher