Archive for Godflesh

Damnation Festival @ Leeds, UK – 5th November 2011

Posted in Gigs, Travel with tags , , , , , , on November 19, 2011 by Noise Road

Winter in the UK is grim.

After a full Glaswegian day immersed in a thick fog, the sun set at 16:23… and it is only the start of November.

The days are shorter in northern Scandinavia, but there is a beauty in their winter.  Bright sunny days with crisp, dry air break the brutal cold in smaller, less dense towns.  You are never too far from bays covered in thick snow or frozen forests.

In contrast, the UK winter is grey and damp.  The air is never dry.  As the kids in Govan throw rocks at the bus on your dark commute to and from work, forests and lakes seem a long way away.

Last winter I found myself in Southampton, UK, with a bank balance of zero and a sh!t job.  You’ll never get out of this townYou’ll never get out.

The snow and cold remained a novelty for this kid from a desert continent, but the short days bummed me out.  You stomped to work in the dark and you stomped home in the dark.

Southampton is much smaller than Birmingham, Glasgow and even Leeds, but it is as grey as any of those towns.  WWII left many UK towns flattened.  In the post-war scramble to house the displaced population, a grey, bland skyline arose.  In winter that grey skyline of the industrial port town blends into the grey of the daylight hours.  The sun is rarely sighted and a wet chill hangs in the air.

The grimness of a Southampton winter is what it took to understand Godflesh.  For years I just did not get Godflesh or Jesu or any of Justin Broadrick’s projects.  In 2009, I even caught Jesu at the Primavera festival in Barcelona…  But Broadrick is not the music of Barcelona.  Broadrick is not the music of sangria on a 30-degree-celsius day with the beautiful people on a Mediterranean beach.  Justin Broadrick is the music of cold, wet, grey winters in the dense, urban industrial centre of Birmingham.  It is the sound of Southampton in winter when you have a sh!t job and no way out.

I caught the trouble-plagued Godflesh reunion set at Hellfest last year, and then the awesome performance of Streetcleaner at Roadburn this year.  The set at Damnation Festival in Leeds was incident-free but its almost like Broadrick is uncomfortable when there is not a wonky wheel.  It seems that he has to recreate the tension of the song on stage.  Towels were required under the excessive lighting.  Awkwardness and tension are what make Godflesh.  Benny holds down that machine beat on stage-left, while Broadrick wrenches out pain from his guitar and from the throat.

When you are too poor to leave your industrial town, there seems no way out.  No relief from the soul wrench of the mechanical city….  but the truth is…  Southampton is half an hour from the New Forest.  Glasgow is half an hour from Loch Lomond, and a little further on is the incomparable Scottish highlands.  Leeds is on the footstep of the Yorkshire Dales.  It is eternally dark and damp in the UK winter, but you need to remember that beauty is never that far away.

I’m not sure if beauty is the right word to describe Ireland’s Altar of Plagues.  They are far more organic than Godflesh, even if they also deal in dark energies.

The Irish are amongst the friendliest people on earth.  Within minutes of arriving in Ireland on both my trips there I had new friends.  As a sole traveller you can feel isolated from conversations of any depth.  This is never the case in Ireland.  Walk into any Irish pub and you’ll never be short of conversation.

However there is a sadness to the Irish people below their immediate friendliness.  The Irish history is one of trading invading masters.  The population of Ireland today is still less than before the 1840s famine, where death and emigration destroyed the country.  Fresh economic woes have hit the country in the last couple of years.

I do not think that every Irish band is weighed down by the moroseness of their history.  I do not know if the less claustrophobic, but equal dampness of Ireland is significant in their sound. However I think that it is a factor.

In any case nature and moroseness is a strong theme musically and lyrically in Altar of Plagues.  The previous album, White Tomb, speaks of man’s civilisation falling into nature’s grasp.

We built our towers in the sand

And now they collapse around us…

…for your children have no place to grow their bones

 - Through the Collapse: Watchers Restrained

The latest, Mammal, talks of death as an artificial creation of man:

Birds know nothing of this

it is our vanity

we create death

we create this entity

 - Neptune is Dead

Altar of Plagues played the smallest stage of the festival.  Nursing a pint of carlsberg, at the back of that stage for Talons’ preceding set, I could barely distinguish the two violins from the rest of the band.  I needed to head straight down to the floor for Altar of Plagues.  The odd shaped room, with punters packed in to get a decent sound, added to the sweaty atmosphere.

With many bands that aim to create a mood, technical difficulties can take the crowd out of the atmosphere.  As guitarist, James Kelly, tried to isolate his equipment issues, the rest of the band looped through a quiet section of a song for several minutes.  However it did not taint the set.  Altar of Plagues are not creating another world.  They are dudes in jeans and Deathspell Omega t-shirts.  Their performance in based in the real world.  Technical difficulties occur in the real world.

Altar of Plagues energy is dark and weighty in depth.  But its dark energy is a sadness rather than the usual black metal evil.  There can be no doubt that the band are putting all their energies in, as members yell at the mic from metres away.

Something of this weight without pretension is a rare find.  Go see Altar of Plagues.

Earlier in the day, I found myself lost amongst the hospital buildings and the various Leeds University faculties.  Inside the student union, Shining started their set.  Every time I have previously caught Shining they have been billed as Shining (Nor).  So I made the rookie mistake of looking for the nihilistic black n roll of Sweden’s Shining, only to walk into the spazzy metal of the Norwegian band of the same name.

As I waited for the slowest, worst poured beer of my life (seriously how does a man reach his twenties without being able to pour a beer?), the buzz of Madness and the Damage Done filled the Jagermeister stage.

I was back the Jagermeister stage for Dragged into Sunlight.  Dragged into Sunlight’s sound was thick of sludgy riffs and the evil aesthetic of black metal.  However the presentation of the set distracted me.  The band spent the entirety of the set, save the last half minute, with their backs to the crowd.  I do not know what the intention is, but it comes off as if the band are in a rehearsal space.  The band obviously do care about image with candles as props and the stage bathed in red.  Each to their own I guess, but I think Dragged into Sunlight’s worthy music might be served better by turning around a little earlier.

After a 5-hour train down from Glasgow and a beery day of bands, Ulver’s wall of keyboards and computers did not grab me.  It was time to get in a couple of hours kip before the train back up through the Yorkshire Dales.

At £29 for bands of the quality of Godflesh and Altar Plagues, Damnation Festival is surely a cure for the winter greyness.  The stone walls separating the autumnal hills of the Yorkshire Dales remind me that I have to escape the urban grimness on weekends.  As I emerged from the mysterious fog that seems to hover on the English side of the border, the winter ahead looked a little less grey.

Hellfest @ Clisson, 18-20 June 2010, Day One: the Evening

Posted in Gigs with tags , , , , , on July 13, 2010 by Noise Road

This is part 3 of Noise Road’s review of Hellfest 2010.  Click here for part 1Click here for part 2.

The evening of day one was one for reformations and veterans.  It was also an evening for the 16-year-old inside this jaded, 30-year-old shell.  Along with Pantera, Sepultura and Fear Factory’s early to mid nineties albums were the first real heavy music that I got into.  It’s fair to say that both Sepultura and Fear Factory aren’t the creative powerhouses that they were back then.  But my inner 16-year-old needed to hear the songs that brought him to the dance.

Sepultura

As the sun was falling, the first big decision of the festival arrived.  Who do I watch next?  Underground metal’s buzz band of the moment, Watain?  Or a past-their-prime Sepultura?

Watain are known for speaking the rhetoric of the black metallers of old.  None eviler.  Read Invisible Oranges interview with the band here.  Watain are also known for playing with real blood splashing out into the audience.  Call it gimmick, atmosphere or ritual – it still would have been a pretty cool experience.

But I chose Seps.  Sepultura were the first genuinely heavy band that I liked.  And despite what everyone else says, I like the first 2 post-Max albums.   I’ve seen them twice in the post-Max period, and they’ve both been great gigs.

Live, Seps still bring it.  They opened with Arise.  16-year-old Moods had to scream “I see the world old! I see the world dead!!!”.  The crushing opening riff of Refuse/Resist quickly followed “Chaos AD!  The tanks on the streets!”

The new thrashy songs don’t seem out of place.  They’re just not memorable like the old classics.  I wouldn’t call them interludes as the boys fully try to give them the sell – Derrick, the frontman, works the auxiliary percussion, Andreas wails like a rockstar in his power stance.

If you don’t buy their new records, fair enough.  I didn’t buy their latest.  But their gigs are still worth checking out.

I had to leave the jungle rhythms of Territory, for the first Godflesh reunion show.

Godflesh

Godflesh’s much anticipated first performance in 7 or 8 years was a series of technical feck ups.  First of all there was 20 minutes of main man, Justin Broadrick, trying to remove the feedback from his mic effects.  The non-believers were increasingly leaving the small Terrorizer Tent.   Then there were issues with his drum electronics, and even a rogue guitar strap held up proceedings for several minutes.  Things were not going smoothly.  And Broadrick looked rattled.

I am by no means a Broadrick super fan.  Last year, before catching his other project, Jesu, at the Primavera festival, I was schooling myself on Jesu.  I enjoyed what I heard on the net – but live, I found his vocals distracting.  He was clearly trying to sing beyond his range (at least on that day, anyway).  As Mrs Eastwood’s little boy always told me “a man’s got to know his limitations”.

So even with the high praise from my favourite bands, Broadrick, was a little tainted in my books.  I’ve tried to get into Godflesh a few times – but it hasn’t happened for me.  And this trouble plagued gig didn’t seem like it was going to be the place for it to happen, either…

Godflesh is a similar live set up to Jesu – Broadrick on guitars, vox and electronics, with a more than capable partner on bass.  But Godflesh was a far different beast to Jesu.

The programmed drums have a cold and stark industrial feel, with plodding bass lines to match.  In contrast, Broadrick wrenches out riffs and noises out of his guitar.  His voice is aggressive, but it feels tortured.  There is human frailty and pain fighting the cold machine behind it.

What I heard, I really enjoyed.  I have been checking out Godflesh in a new light since.  But its such a shame that half of the hour set was lost to technical issues.  If nothing else it has turned me on to the records.

Fear Factory

From the Godflesh brand of industrial to the slicker Fear Factory take on the genre…

I have fond memories of my first awkward steps into metal. Fear Factory’s first two albums, Soul of a New Machine and Demanufacture were a big part of that.  I listened to Demanufacture in its entirety the other week, and I stand by my teenage enthusiasm for it.  The man-vs-machine lyrics match the machine-gun music…  Unfortunately after those first two solid albums, Fear Factory descended into a Nu Metal world of shyte.

So I sat my weary body down in front of the main stage, open-minded despite the better part of a decade of shyte from the Fear Factory machine…

I really dug hearing Demanufacture, Self Bias Resistor and Martyr live again.  They are great songs that translate well on a big stage.  And you can’t fault the performance abilities of the band.  Gun-for-hire, Gene Hoglan, is a monster behind that kit, Dino has that huge guitar sound and Burton C Bell still has vocal chops.  Both 16-year-old and 30-year-old Moods cathartically yelled with Burton “I’ve got no more godd@m regrets!  I’ve got no more goddam respect!”…

Unfortunately they didn’t shy away from their nu metal material.  The album Digimortal was represented with multiple tracks…  This material wasn’t raising my enthusiasm so much.

An interesting break in the music occurred during the set.  A fan boarded the stage and proposed to his girlfriend.  As far as I know, this is at least the third time this has happened on a Fear Factory stage in the last few months…  So is this a gimmick?  If so it’s some out there, performance art gear.  A metal band that has a proposal every show…  Burton C Bell smiled “how beautiful” and then the band immediately followed that act of love with a song that includes the lyrics:

There was no love,

There was no love for me,

There was only hatred…

I am r@pe. I am hate…

Well played, Fear Factory.  Well played.

So while I enjoyed a large part of the set, it was more of a nostalgic enjoyment.  The new material does sound solid, but I don’t think I would go out of my way for Fear Factory 2010.  There are so many bands today doing new, exciting things, that I don’t need to dwell in the past.  But for what it was worth, my inner 16-year-old was pretty d@mn pleased with the evening.

By the end of Fear Factory’s set, I was done.  I was curious about Marduk – but the body failed me.  I successfully passed out in my tent despite Biohazard thundering from the main stage, and my tent being encircled by partying Frenchman until daylight….

Click here for Noise Road’s review of Hellfest Day 2, and for words on performances from the likes of Alice Cooper and Carcass.

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