Nighshift Magazine - December 2011
Nighshift Magazine - December 2011
Nighshift Magazine - December 2011
net
website: nightshift.oxfordmusic.net
NIGHTSHIFT
Oxfords Music Magazine
Free every
month.
Issue 197
December
2011
NEWS
Nightshift: PO Box 312, Kidlington, OX5 1ZU
Phone: 01865 372255 email: nightshift@oxfordmusic.net
Online: nightshift.oxfordmusic.net
taken control of the building three
years ago after Solarview, the
company that refurbished it after
years of neglect, went into
liquidation.
Trouble at a couple of club nights
in the past had earned The Regal a
bad reputation in certain sections
of the press, but more recently the
building looked like it was set to
fulfil its potential as the biggest
dedicated live music venue in
Oxford.
feature on a cover-mounted CD
with Chinas SoRock! magazine next
month, along with an interview with
the band. Visit www.myspace.com/
thegracefulslicks to hear the
song.
FOLK IN OXFORD is a new
website dedicated to the local folk
scene, covering everything from
folk concerts to morris dancing,
celidhs, community choirs and
more. The site has been set up by
local folk singer Cat Kelly. Visit
www.folkinoxford.co.uk.
DONT FORGET to tune into
BBC Oxford Introducing every
Sunday evening between 9-10pm
on 95.2fm. The dedicated local
music show plays the best Oxford
releases and demos as well as
featuring interviews and live
876084
nurture some of the best bands on the planet. Its also been a year that proves how well that scene continues to flourish and throw up so much fantastic
music. Compiling Nightshifts end-of-year Top 25 has always been fun, but lately its become increasingly difficult to fit everything we love in, even as
we limit each act to a single song. A dozen or so acts could feel justifiably aggrieved not to feature here, but we gotta draw a line somewhere and 25
felt like a suitably arbitrary number. RADIOHEADs sublime Lotus Flower is their fourth table-topping achievement since we started doing this
almost twenty years ago and confirms their standing as the greatest band Oxford has ever produced, while the fact they pipped FIXERS by a mere
couple of votes from the Nightshift scribes shows just how exciting their future is. Anyway, enough waffling. Here it is, Nightshifts essential guide to the
best of the best in 2011. Makes you proud to be part of something so special, dont it?
The Beach Boys reincarnated as a
post-punk electro-pop band. Better
known for their characteristically
caustic lyricism and artfully angular
musical approach, with `Ornaments
and `Glasshouse in particular, Young
Knives proved that pure, unadulterated
pop suits them just fine. Joyous.
4. THE CELLAR
FAMILY:
Father Michael
2. FIXERS:
Swimmhaus
Johannesburg
Iron Deer Dream; Crystals;
Majesties Ranch: Fixers littered
2011 with exuberant psychedelic
pop gems, each of which was good
enough to top most Best Of Lists,
but it was Swimmhaus Johannesburg
that so many people went for. Partly
because it demonstrated just how
brilliantly unpredictable Fixers could
be, as they momentarily ditched the
lysergic partying and cooked up a
magnificent J-pop anthem, and
partly because it managed to be both
cheesy to an almost criminal degree
and so HUGE as a song, it near
3. YOUNG KNIVES:
Glasshouse
Shes my daughter, shes the apple
of my eye / Hear her laughter, fills
me up like shepherds pie. Just one
reason to love this closing number
from Young Knives `Ornaments
From The Silver Arcade album
unreservedly. Others might include its
insanely catchy Ba ba ba ba ba
chorus, a lyrical shout out to hornbills
and a gleefully bullish sense of
purpose that makes them sound like
5. CHAD VALLEY:
Now That Im Real
By stark contrast to Cellar Familys
excoriating musical surgery, Chad
Valley was blissed out in some Ibiza
beach caf at sunrise, residual pot
confusion informing Hugo Manuels
soft-focus, gently euphoric blending
of 80s pop and chilled 90s house.
Now That Im Real opened Julys
Equatorial Ultravox EP, although it
was Kraftwerk and Ryuichi
Sakamoto more than Ultravox that
informed this shimmy through
Trans-Europe Express-style
grooving, middle-eastern motifs
mottling the sleek lines, leaving
everyone in the vicinity with a smile
on their face and a sudden craving
for pizza and chocolate biscuits.
6. DIVE DIVE:
Ape Like Me
Given that three quarters of the band
seem to spend more time on tour as
Frank Turners band, its easy to forget
just how bloody great Dive Dive are.
7. SPRING
OFFENSIVE:
A Stutter & A Start
While Youthmovies influence
continues to cast a long shadow over
Oxford music (and beyond), Spring
Offensive are the band who have
done most to take that influence and
move it into somewhere new. After
the thirteen-minute conceptual single
that was The First Of Many Dreams
About Monsters, A Stutter & A
Start found them back in poppier
territory (even supporting The Go!
Team), dinking like a diminutive
winger through a static back four
before nonchalantly placing the ball
in the top corner while appearing to
make no real effort at all. Lucas
Whitworths voice similarly conveys
fraught emotions while forever
sounding like he doesnt care two
hoots. Making great music sound
effortless is a rare talent indeed.
8. LITTLE FISH:
Wonderful
A year of no little upheaval for our
fishy friends as they were cast adrift
from their record label, seemed to
settle into their permanent threepiece formation before drummer Nez
left the band. Somehow in between
that they managed to record a new
album with Gaz Coombes set for
release next year write a book
about their experiences in the music
industry (pledge online, folks) and
release this new single, accompanied
by one of the cutest videos weve
seen in a long old while. Nothing, it
seems, can stop Juju writing awesome
pop songs, while her voice is now so
powerful theres an entire
government department
investigating if it can be used as a
source of renewable energy.
9. THE ROCK OF
TRAVOLTA: Last
March of the Acolytes
Over a decade on from their
inception, The Rock Of Travoltas
elegant brutality remains a thing of
wonder. Fine Lines, their first
album since 2003 Uluru, found
their searing fusion of powering
electronica, classical structures and
pure rock bombast unbowed, this
stand-out piece suggesting someone
in Hollywoods missing a trick not
getting them to soundtrack billiondollar budget sci-fi battle scenes.
12. JONQUIL:
Fighting Smiles
Always difficult to pin down, with
their last mini-album, One Hundred
Suns, Jonquil nutmegged everyones
expectations once again, going proper
tropical and hi-life, bleached-out
psychedelia and sea shanties cast aside
in favour of high-end township guitars,
sunbeam synths and Hugo Manuels
reverb-drenched, blissed-out falsetto.
Fighting Smiles sounded like a beach
party hosted by Animal Collective but
gatecrashed by Vampire Weekend,
everyone present too merrily
intoxicated on acid and coconut-based
cocktails to care what time it is.
13. DUBWISER:
Power Up
Twenty years after they formed, the
local reggae godfathers got round to
releasing their debut album. Given that
fact it was amazing just how fresh A
14. DEAD
JERICHOS:
Please Yourself
Going into the studio with former-Test
Icicles man Rory Atwell proved as
fruitful as youd hope for Dead
Jerichos who built on last years
Mountains debut with this wiry,
laddish updating on early Cure, all
twinkling, reverb-heavy guitars and
Craig Evans set-jaw proclamations.
Atwell swept away the clutter and
punk raucousness of the bands live
sound to reveal the surprisingly fleetfooted pop band beneath.
17. UNDERSMILE:
Crab People
21. PROSPEKT:
Moving things along at almost
Shroud
tectonic pace, Undersmile were, from
a certain angle, brutality incarnate.
Relentless galley slave beats, riffs so
coated in tar they could pollute entire
oceans, and fronted by duel vocalists
Hel Sterne and Taz Corona who
24. RICHARD
WALTERS:
Mattress Fire
Richards `Pacing album may have
been over-egged in parts but when he
stripped the production back on tracks
like `Mattress Fire, he revealed the
tundra-cold magic hes always been
capable of, a characteristically desolate
ode to lost love metaphorically
recounted as a house fire. Crack open
the whisky and chuck another log on
the fire, eh?
25. THE
GOGGENHEIM:
Ah Sabina
Referencing acts as strange and
diverse as The Residents, Renaldo &
The Loaf, The Slits and This Heat,
The Goggenheim were a joyously
deranged breath of fresh air, utterly
unlike anything else in town or some
distance beyond. A shiny, plastic
space-cake disco in Siouxsie Siouxs
wildest dreams, `Ah Sabina was, in a
word, mental.
Sponsored by
RELEASED
FIXERS
Imperial Goddess Of
Mercy
(Own label)
(Vertigo)
And then, when you think Fixers cant surprise
you any more or improve on what they just did,
they bloody well go and do it anyway.
The bands show at Truck Festival back in July
was a phenomenal spectacle, a euphoric
celebration of musical invention, madness and
pure pop pleasure. Majesties Ranch, the lead
track on this five-track EP, feels like an
encapsulation of all of that, a vast slab of party
pop, a planet-sized anthem constructed from
euphoric, chanted vocals, alternately twinkling
and searing synths, monster beats, tambourine
and, well, just about everything else the band
could get their hands on. Throw it in the blender,
make it dance and see what happens. If youre
not leaping about the room drunk on life and
planning a trip to Saturn by the end of it, youre
not coming round our place for Christmas and
thats final.
Of course Fixers are contrary on an epic scale, so
they follow such a pop treasure with Selinah, a
glowering, disorientating clutter of disembodied
voices, gloomy, staccato beats and clanging
electronics, and then Evil Carbs, a monstrous
electro dream-pop stomp that sounds like Ryuichi
Sakamoto dropping a couple of Es and forcing
LISTING SHIPS
The 100 Gun Ship
(ASC)
Although they describe themselves as post-rock,
Listing Ships frequently share more in common
with The Rock Of Travoltas decidedly rockist
tendencies. No bad thing really when the power they
generate across this debut album is so tangible.
Opener The 100 Gun Ship is a scowling electroheavy dirge, riding on an undulating metallic bass
line, textured guitars and discreetly menacing synths
working together towards an explosive crescendo
that cries out for the biggest rock stage to make its
presence best felt. Similarly the elegantly beastly
Equus Ager, a guitar storm with pockets of quiet
contemplation to catch your breath.
Perhaps the one thing wed hope for from Listing
Ships is to occasionally ditch the pretty or more
pensive moments and simply ride one of their
great all-consuming grooves for a solid ten minutes
until brain matter starts to seep out of our ears.
Melusine Romance is a case in point, sounding
too ponderous despite its obvious muscle. By
contrast Skippers Daughter is glorious when it
hits full steam, an unstoppable outpouring of sonic
weaponry worthy of the battleships which lend this
EP its title.
To be honest the term post-rock does Listing
Ships no justice since, these days, it suggests
indulgent showboating, whereas this album, at its
best, is too busy trying to start a war to bother with
pretty pattern making.
Victoria Waterfield
CROZER BROTHERS
Christmas Time Again
DEER CHICAGO
Lantern Collapse /
`Rolling Of The Ocean
(Own label)
With the demise of The Winchell Riots Oxford
lost a band of heroically epic scope, one who
adhered to the cathedrals of sound ethos and
seemingly wanted to make music that was bigger
than any venue that could house them. Anyone
missing The Winchell Riots though, should
immediately check out Deer Chicago, a band
thats been lurking around the opening slot
section of the local live circuit for a year or so
now but whose debut single should by rights launch
them to a higher standing.
Lantern Collapse is self-consciously grandiose,
reaching escape velocity at that point where Ride
and Slowdive meet My Morning Jacket, all
shimmering guitars that snowball or fireball if
youd prefer into a turbulent plateau of skytouching/shoegazing noise, waiting til you think it
cant get any more epic before becoming, well,
more epic. It could easily be bombastic and
overwrought but instead its elegant and majestic.
B-side Rolling Of The ocean would, in normal
circumstances, be an impressive slice of oceanic
indie rocking but, despite clocking in a good
minute longer than Lantern Collapse, it cant
match it for all-consuming splendour, good,
rather than great. But never mind that, this is one
hell of a debut single.
Dale Kattack
ALPHABET
BACKWARDS
British Explorer EP
(Highline)
Its increasingly difficult to listen to an Alphabet
Backwards song without wanting to give singer
James Hitchman a big hug and tell him
everythings going to be okay. Not that he ever
seems like things are getting him down, however
often he sings his sweet, plaintive pop songs about
heartbreak and that old staple of seeing an exgirlfriend out and about with a new partner. No,
hes like a bush baby, wide-eyed with wonder at
even the most mundane minutiae of the world,
never quite letting it get him so down he cant lope
along the street surrounded by warm, bubbling
synths. Right up to the point he mentions
erections and you cough nervously and suggest he
takes up internet dating. Lead track Big Top here
is an old-fashioned honey-dipped summer love
song seemingly infused with an almost pathological
naivety, like Noah & the Whales glorious Five
Years Time. You could stick it on the top of your
Christmas tree maybe and fill the whole house with
love, love love. Alphabet Backwards make fools of
cynics the world over.
Dale Kattack
gig guide
THURSDAY 1st
CATWEAZLE CLUB: East Oxford
Community Centre Having celebrated its
seventeenth anniversary last month, Catweazle
remains Oxfords finest open mic club, showcasing
singers, musicians, poets and storytellers every
week.
WORDPLAY: The Cellar Hip hop and dubstep
club night with residents Geenee and Kid Fury and
tonight featuring a live set from Ohios Stalley,
signed to Rock Rosss MMG label and over in the
UK for a short tour in support of his new album
Lincoln Way Nights.
PARASITIC EARTH + HAUNTED
TRANQUILITY: The Hobgoblin, Bicester
Jambox metal night.
SHATTERED DREAMS + THOM MUDDLE +
RYAN MITCHELL & JOEY COHEN + KARL &
SAM: The Wheatsheaf, Banbury Jambox
acoustic night with punk-popsters Shattered
Dreams playing an unplugged set.
OPEN MIC SESSION: The Half Moon
Friday 2nd
FIONN REGAN:
St. Barnabas Church
The grand, ornate setting of St Barnabas
Church is made for a singer like Fionn Regan.
The folk-pop troubadour from County
Wicklows songs are too tender to get
swallowed up by the chatter and beer-sodden
stickiness of your typical gig venue. Heres
where his literate folk tales of dangerous
women, forests and horses can best blossom,
though what the parishioners might make of
his allusions to al fresco sex on new album
100 Acres Of Sycamore is anybodys guess.
Having emerged six years back with stark,
Mercury-shortlisted debut album The End Of
History, Regans lost boy dusky romanticism
has made him, if hardly a household name,
then at least a cult favourite: critical favour
has come from the States as well as the UK
and Ireland and his list of celebrity fans
includes Ellie Goulding and actor Rhys Ifans.
Having moved into more electric territory for
second album Shadow Of An Empire, Regans
latest opus finds him back in more
comfortable acoustic terrain, mining a rich
seam of dewy-eyed nostalgia, tinged with
enough menace to keep him very much at the
darker end of the folk-pop spectrum.
DECEMBER
FRIDAY 2nd
WIRE + TALK NORMAL: O2 Academy The
punk-era innovators return to town see main
preview
FIONN REGAN: St. Barnabas Church Darkhearted folk-pop from the Irish troubadour see
main preview
KLUB KAKOFANNEY with THE FAMILY
MACHINE + BLACK HATS + PANTHEIST: The
Wheatsheaf Great mixed bill at this months
Klub Kak, with local faves The Family Machine
adding their wry, lachrymose indie-pop to Black
Hats Who and Jam-inspired power-pop and
Finlands dissonant, mournful funeral-metallers
Panthiest.
JUNE + THE GRACEFUL SLICKS +
SHATTERED DREAMS + MILLION FACES:
The Bullingdon Its All About The Music local
bands night with indie rockers June; psychedelic
garage rockers The Graceful Slicks and feisty punk
and grunge types Shattered Dreams.
PHIL KLINES UNSILENT NIGHT: Radcliffe
Square et al Oxford Contemporary Music
reprise last years revelatory musical tour of
Oxford landmarks to the accompaniment of Phil
Klines Unsilent Night piece. Anyone can join the
tour for free, but youll need to bring your own
music player along ghetto blaster, laptop or
whatever you prefer. Call 01865 488369 to find
out how to join in.
SKYLARKIN SOUNDSYSTEM: The Cellar
Count Skylarkins monthly celebration of all things
reggae, dancehall and hip hop, tonight featuring a
live set from Leeds East Park Reggae Collective,
co-founded by Gentlemens Dub Club and
Submotion Orchestra chap Tommy Evans,
plugging their newly-released debut album, Three
Stripe Science. Theyre joined by reggae remix
institution and Outlook Festival mainstay DJ Jstar
as well as The Count himself.
CARETAKER + KOMRAD + ECONO: The
Port Mahon Seriously eavy noise with
Hampshires abrasive alt.rockers coming on like
The God Machine at times. Progressive hardcore
somewhere twixt Dillinger Escape Plan and King
Crimson from the mighty Komrad.
FUNKY FRIDAY: The Bullingdon Classic
funk, soul and rnb every Friday.
WHO DO YOU LOVE?: The Duke, St.
Clements Alt.rock, 60s garage, soul, new wave,
punk, surf and eletro-pop DJ session with Jim, Jen
and Grizilla.
GENERALS & MAJORS + MONTANA GOLD
+ YELLOW FEVER: The Swan, Wantage
Local rock bands showcase night.
SATURDAY 3rd
THIS TOWN NEEDS GUNS: The Jericho
Tavern The local melodic math-rock faves play
their first hometown show in some time, fresh
from a tour of Australia and having said goodbye to
founding member and singer Stuart Smith, whose
place in the band has been taken by Henry
SUNDAY 4th
ADAM BARNES + FLIGHT BRIGADE +
CHRIS AYER + LELIA BROUSSAND + MATT
SIMONS: The Jericho Tavern Good mixed bag
of folk-leaning artists tonight with soulful local
troubadour Adam Barnes leading the line with his
emotive balladeering, not far from Ed Sheeran at
times. Joining him is Hampshires Fleetwood Mac
Friday 2nd
WIRE: O2 Academy
After last years astonishing showing at the
Jericho Tavern as part of Audioscope Festivals
tenth anniversary celebrations, Wire return to
town, and to a venue big enough to house all
those who missed out last time round. Wire
emerged from punks revolution pool but were
always beyond the nihilistic rage of the Pistols
et al, and continued to mutate and innovate at
every turn. The quartets opening gambit,
Pink Flag, had all the energy of punk but was
more ambitious and eclectic than its
contemporaries and over the next couple of
albums, Chairs Missing and 154, Wire
became increasingly eclectic while keeping that
raw, stripped-down edge. Disbanding in 1980
they reformed in the late-80s with a poppier
sound for A Bell Is A Cup (Until It Is Struck)
but have become increasingly experimental
over the years, while original guitarist Bruce
Gilbert has now apparently departed for good.
Frontman Colin Newman, bassist Graham
Lewis and drummer Robert Gotobed still remain
from the original line-up though and if you can
judge a band on those they inspired, Wire have
few equals: REM, The Cure and The Manic
Street Preachers are huge fans, while more
recently Bloc Party, Franz Ferdinand and
Futureheads have quoted them as a chief
influence. Across the Atlantic Big Black and
Minor Threat took up arms after hearing Wire.
As ever, exactly how tonights show will pan out
is anyones guess; Wire are notoriously antinostalgia, though last years show found them
revisiting Pink Flag, Drill, Kidney Bingos
and The 15th alongside tracks from their new
album, Red Barked Tree. Whatever they play,
here is a rare thing: a band that completely
defied catagorisation and still sound cutting edge
even well into their fourth decade together.
MONDAY 5th
THE MARCUS BONFANTI BAND: The
Bullingdon Return to town for the rising star
of the UK blues scene, the singer and guitarist
having recently been nominated for two gongs at
the British Blues Awards, winning fans for his rich,
earthy voice and versatile guitar playing that
ranges from Jimmy Page-inspired electric riffage to
more considered acoustic folk and country picking.
TUESDAY 6th
JAZZ CLUB: The Bullingdon Free live jazz
every Tuesday, tonight featuring guests Alvin Roy
& Reeds Unlimited.
OPEN MIC SESSION: The Port Mahon
SPARKYS FLYING CIRCUS: James Street
Tavern Weekly open mic club with Sparky, Hugh
McManners and guests.
WEDNESDAY 7th
SHATTERED DREAMS + ROBOTS WITH
SOULS + TRAPS + BALLS: The Wheatsheaf
Moshka club night with pop-punkers Shattered
Dreams kicking it out in the vein of Penetration
and L7; support from Robots with Souls, the new
side-project from Steve from Phantom Theory,
and local punk newcomers Traps and Balls.
YOUNG KNIVES + THE FAMILY MACHINE +
CAT MATADOR: The Rotunda, Iffley - First
of Beard Museums shows in the formerDollshouse museum - see main preview
PHAT SESSIONS: The Cellar Full band open
jam session with The Phat Session Collective,
plus Kid Fury spinning a mix of funk, soul, hip
hop and house.
ACOUSTIC LOUNGE: Fat Lils, Witney
WEDNESDAY BLUES: James Street Tavern
THURSDAY 8th
DJ SHADOW: O2 Academy The genresplicing instrumental hip hop maestro plugs new
album, The Less You Know, The Better see
main preview
DOGS DAMOUR + LUCKY STRIKES: O2
Academy The formerly hirsute glam-rockers
keep on keeping on, frontman Tyla the only
remaining original, having employed a revolving
door attitude to bandmates over the years, the band
having reformed three times now and now set to
release a re-recorded version of 1988s In The
Dynamite Jet Saloon.
MALCOLM MIDDLETON: The Jericho
Tavern The former-Arab Strap chap returns with
more of his joyous gloom. Having previously
described himself as a fat child throwing a Casio
keyboard down a flight of stairs and hitting an old
man at the bottom whos playing Verve songs
badly on an overpriced guitar, its fair to say he
ROTUNDA SESSIONS:
The Rotunda, Iffley
Village
Having previously hosted pop-up restaurant
feasts and teamed up with club night Yoof! as
well as opening a permanent caf on Magdalen
Road, Oxfork this month continue their love of
unusual venues by putting on three nights of
shows in a former dolls house museum in Iffley
Village in conjunction with the mighty fine
Beard Museum people. The cast of players over
the three nights is mostly local but its a pretty
peerless cast nonetheless. On the Wednesday
Young Knives make a rare foray into local
gigging with a slightly stripped-down set; their
first Oxford show since Truck. The trios
Ornaments From The Silver Arcade earlier this
year proved theyve not lost their way with a
magic, twisted pop gem, while a supporting cast
of The Family Machine and Cat Matador
provides a fine mixture of darkly-inclined
melody and wry humour. On the Thursday night
Richard Walters proves yet again he is
possessed of one of the finest, most stunningly
fragile voices ever to come out of Oxford as
well as a skill with a tragic, romantic ballad that
has few equals. Ambient chamber-pop ensemble
Message To Bears and singer-songwriter Ed
Laurie provide support. On the Friday its a
first chance for local fans to see Gaz Coombes
in his post-Supergrass solo incarnation. Hes
currently recording his debut album with I
Should Coco producer Sam Williams, due out
next spring, and youd hope for a handful of
Grass faves along the way. As an added bonus
Spring Offensive are the support, having
staked their claim to be one of Oxfords most
promising young bands of the year.
doesnt take himself too seriously, even as he
explores the dark nights of his soul. Hes also a
master of underplayed observational pop, almost
nabbing the Christmas number 1 spot back in 2007
with his wry, `Were All Going To Die ditty.
Having threatened that 2009s `Waxing Gibbious
might be his last offering, hes back out on tour and
just in time to spread a little festive cheer.
RICHARD WALTERS + MESSAGE TO
BEARS + ED LAURIE: The Rotunda, Iffley see main preview
BLACK POWDER + NUCLEAR SKYLINE +
COCAINE COWBOYS + THE BIG SOCIETY:
The Bullingdon Hardcore thrash-punk action
from local behemoths Black Powder at tonights
Its All About The Music show.
FRIDAY 9th
Thursday 8th
DJ SHADOW:
O2 Academy
Following up one of the most epoch-making
albums of the past two decades was never going
to be easy, but 15 years on from
Endtroducing, DJ Shadow remains a musical
perfectionist, and if not the scene leader he
once was, still a talent others aspire to emulate.
Endtroducing was the first wholly sampled
album, a restless fusion of hip hop, funk, soul,
ambient electronica, jazz and rock and probably
created a dozen subsequent genres all by itself.
Having spent the intervening years
collaborating with U.N.K.L.E, Cut Chemist and
Dan The Automator, as well as creating his own
solo work, the man born Josh Davis returned
with his fourth album, The Less You Know,
The Better last month, a similarly genresplicing effort that showed greater adherence to
conventional song structures as well as longer
samples. From old skool hip hop to full-on
metal, via dub, and featuring vocal
contributions from Tom Vek and Little
Dragons Yukimi Nagano, it has the feel of a
mixtape, but its with his recent live shows that
hes most impressed, using intricate light shows
and special effects to create a genuine spectacle
that goes well beyond what youd expect from a
DJ set. The man has still very much got it.
SATURDAY 10th
BURIED IN SMOKES CHRISTMAS ALLDAYER: The Wheatsheaf (2pm) Ten solid
hours of molten metal to grind your festive spirit
to dust see main preview
ELECTRIC SIX + BLACK HATS: O2
Academy Back again for Christmas, just like
Santa, Dick Valentines garage-glam crew continue
to knock out Danger! High Voltage and Gay
Bar alongside a surprisingly extensive catalogue
of songs, playing it deliberately dumb with their
tongue-in-cheek garage-rock disco bombast.
URIAH HEEP: O2 Academy The seminal 70s
heavy rockers plug 23rd album Into The Wild,
only Guitarist Mick Box remaining from their
classic incarnation whose often operatic fusion of
prog, classical and proto-metal helped them sell
over 30 million albums.
Friday 9th
WARM DIGITS /
LISTING SHIPS /
THE WORKHOUSE:
The Wheatsheaf
A simply stunning triple bill of (mostly)
instrumental soundscaping at the Sheaf
tonight for what is ostensibly Listing Ships
EP launch gig, although the star turn is bound
to be Newcastles Warm Digits. Duo Andrew
Hodson and Steve Jefferis recent debut album,
Keep Warm With the Warm Digits is a
revelation, fusing the classic electronic
krautrock of Neu! and Kraftwerk with Giorgio
Moroders gleaming disco and My Bloody
Valentines snowstorm guitar assaults. Add in
some Silver Apples-style wild drumming and a
little of Holy Fucks wild-eyed motorik
electronica and youve got a simply
astonishing band. Listing Ships should be able
to hold their own in such elite company mind,
their electro-heavy take on post-rock filled
with nautical references and capable of kicking
out some Dreadnought-heavy firepower,
partway between Billy Mahonie, Rodan and
Holy Fuck. The Workhouse, meanwhile, now
settled in London after leading the field in
elegantly incendiary post-rock locally, remain
a band by whom all others must be judged.
SUNDAY 11
MONDAY 12th
THE ROCK SOUND RIOT TOUR: O2
Academy Quadruple dose of hardcore spleenventing courtesy of rock mag Rocksound. New
York States Every Time I Die headline the bill,
bringing some technical angularity to the hardcore
blueprint, while Sacramentos Trash Talks raw,
often dissonant hardcore thrash has seen them
working with Steve Albini and Black Flags Keith
Morris. Bostons Defeater up the political activism
quota on their raging punk squall while Watfords
Spycatcher fly the flag for British post-hardcore,
having supported Get Up Kids.
THE HAMSTERS: The Bullingdon Final tour
for the British blues-rock veterans, well into their
third decade having served the blues circuit well in
that time with their Hendrix and ZZ Top tributes.
TUESDAY 13th
FRANZ NICOLAY: The Wheatsheaf The
former-Hold Steady multi-instrumentalist returns
to town after his show at Caf Tarifa last year, his
versatile skills put to good use as he incorporates
elements of gypsy folk, jazz, punk and world
sounds, vocally akin to Nick Cave and Tom Waits
and a flamboyant entertainer in the Vaudeville
tradition.
SAXON: O2 Academy Easily the pick of this
months plethora of classic heavy rock bands
coming to town. Leaders of the New Wave Of
British Heavy metal in the late-70s and early-80s,
Saxon have sold something in the region of 13
million albums around the world, including genre
classics like Wheels Of Steel and Denim &
Leather. Incredibly, theyve never split up, Biff
Byford and Paul Quinn keeping the roadshow
rocking around the world over the decades and, like
many of their generation, theyve lately found
favour with a new audience, playing both
Sonisphere and Download recently. Mighty stuff.
THE FLOATING WORLD ENSEMBLE: The
Warneford Chapel Ethereal traditional
Japanese music from Koto player Melissa Holding
and shakuhachi flautist Clive Bell at tonights OCM
outreach educational show.
JAZZ CLUB: The Bullingdon Free live jazz
from The New Jazz Collective.
WEDNESDAY 14th
THE CELLAR FAMILY + GO ROMANO +
BEAVER FUEL: The Wheatsheaf Skreeling
angular hardcore brilliance from this months cover
stars at tonights Moshka club night.
FREE RANGE: The Cellar Old skool jungle
special with Niki Blackmarket and North Base.
WEDNESDAY BLUES: James Street Tavern
THURSDAY 15th
VINTAGE TROUBLE: O2 Academy Vintage by
name, vintage by nature as the Hollywood-formed
quartet recall the tough, soulful rnb of the 60s,
with frontman Ty Taylor drawing comparisons to
James Brown. Theyre considerably better live than
on their debut album, The Bomb Shelter Session,
a raucous old-style revue thats won them an army
of fans at various festivals as well as supporting
Brian May and Bon Jovi.
ELLA + WHOS FELIX: The Bullingdon - Its
All About The Music gig night.
CATWEAZLE CLUB: East Oxford
Community Centre
OPEN MIC SESSION: The Half Moon
AVENGE VULTURE ATTACK + GRINDHOUSE
+ KINKY BOOTS BEASTS + YUNGSTAR: The
Hobgoblin, Bicester Jambox rock night.
FRIDAY 16th
CHIPMUNK: The Regal Tottenhams popfriendly rapper comes to town after the
postponement of Octobers show here, a slew of
radio-friendly hits under his belt after early grime
singles like Oopsy Daisy.
THE WINTER WARMER: The Wheatsheaf
First night of Gappy Tooth Industries annual preChristmas shindig, tonight featuring Hot Hooves,
Secret Rivals and this months Nightshift cover
stars, The Cellar Family see main preview
THE ORIGINAL RABBIT FOOT SPASM
BANDS CHRISTMAS KNEES-UP: O2
Academy Never mind warmed-up classic rock,
which seems to be the theme of this months gig
guide, heres the real way to get into the Christmas
spirit, with a proper jazz riot. The Rabbits, as well
call them for brevitys sake, have been the local
go-to act for serious party vibes for the past couple
of years now and with damn good reason, kicking
out a raucous update of 30s and 40s New Orleans
speakeasy jazz with some serious punk attitude.
Great rocknroll support from The Long Insiders,
dancing a fine line between meaty rockabilly and
smooth lounge-surf, plus top swing and jump blues
party tunes from Count Skylarkin on the decks.
DUOTONE + JESS HALL + MATT
CHANARIN: The Bullingdon
Cellist and musical experimenter
Barney Morse-Brown plays a solo set
under his Duotone guise, joined for the
night by Devonian folk singer Jess Hall,
whose wistful style recalls Laura Viers
and Eva Cassidy. Tonight shes
launching her Red Jumpers EP.
WE ARE ELEMENTS: The Cellar
Garage, funky and dubstep club night,
with special guest Mosca, recently
nominated for breakthrough act by DJ
Mag.
THE STONES: Fat Lils, Witney
Rolling Stones tribute.
Saturday 10th
BURIED IN SMOKE
CHRISTMAS ALLDAYER: The Wheatsheaf
Since Nightshifts metal special last yea, the
Oxford scene has continued to cement its
foundations even further with Skeletor and
Buried In Smokes regular shows giving the best
local heavyweights a decent airing, while also
attracting some excellent emerging out-of-town
bands to the Academy and the Wheatsheaf. So
its great to see Buried In Smoke celebrating
Christmas in the most unseasonal manner
possible. Todays all-dayer features a dozen
bands many of whom tend towards the sludgy,
stoner end of the spectrum. Hosts and
headliners Desert Storm are ferociously
psychedelic in their metalling, with an almost
Deep South Baptist preacher edge to their
groove-heavy sound, and with two albums
already under their belt they continue to lead
the local scene. We would say that Undersmile
are catching up fast, but so tectonically slow is
their form of uber-sludge doomcore, that
wouldnt be appropriate. Taking a cue from
Melvins, Swans and Flipper and adding some
seriously spooky vocal incantations to the mix,
theyre this years star local metal turn. Theres
more sludgy, stoner riffing from the likes of
Caravan Of Whores, Beard Of Zeuss,
Mother Corona and St Albans Trippy
Wicked, while Komrads technically esoteric
math-core and Mutagenocides progressive
thrash offer a different angle. A pretty
unrelenting way to spend the build up to
Christmas, but if you rate Satan above Santa in
the fun stakes, the Sheaf can be your very own
grotto of pleasure.
SATURDAY 17th
SUNDAY 18th
THE WINTER
WARMER:
The Wheatsheaf
Last years Winter Warmer coincided with the
heaviest snowfall in Oxford in over 30 years
and saw Nightshift walking home to Kidlington
from Cowley Road, with only a bottle of brandy
for company. An unavoidably disastrous ending
to one of the best mini-festivals on the local
calendar, a high-quality, decidedly uncommerical
escape from the pre-Christmas riot of
consumerism. Jointly organised by the monthly
Gappy Tooth Industries club and indie
promoters Swiss Concrete, The Winter Warmer
takes different forms each year; this time round
its three nights at the Wheatsheaf and features
one of its strongest line-ups so far. Friday night
is topped by Hot Hooves, the band formed by
former Talulah Gosh and Heavenly guitarist
Peter Momtchiloff and legendary Jericho
Tavern and Point promoter Mac, together
kicking out a splendid fuzzstorm in the vein of
Husker Du and Teenage Fanclub. Joining them
are double-caffeinated electro-indie starlets
Secret Rivals (pictured) and this months
Nightshift cover stars The Cellar Family,
along with Adam Beckley and Arthur
Sawbridge. Saturday finds consummate party
band The Vicars Of Twiddly donning their
ecumenical garb for some serious shimmering.
Theyre joined by alternately jangly and
raucous indie newcomers Dallas Dont and
elaborate ambient soundscapist Seabuckthorn,
among others. Sunday rounds the weekend off
neatly with recent Nightshift demo of the
monthers Vienna Ditto, whose seedily exotic
dream-pop sounds like Portishead soundtracking
a Tarantino movie. The wonderful Family
Machine join them, mixing wry, romantic
lyricism with darkly pastoral indie and countrytinged rock. Atmospheric alt.folk songsmith D
Gwalia and Hollox complete an exceptional
bill.
MONDAY 19th
THE FAMOUS MONDAY BLUES
CHRISTMAS PARTY: The Bullingdon
Roadhouse, Debbie Bond, Alamo Leal and Cherry
Lee Mewis all put in a turn at the blues clubs
traditional festive knees-up see main preview
TUESDAY 20th
GO WEST: O2 Academy The 80s pop duo
return with a new album, 3D, doubtless set to
give old hits like We Close Our Eyes and King Of
Wishful Thinking another airing.
JAZZ CLUB: The Bullingdon Live jazz from
New Jazz Collective.
CHRISTMAS CASUAL CLASSICS: The
Cellar Live music from grungy popstrels Kill
Murray; punky indie noise from Beta Blocker &
The Body Clock and lo-fi trash-pop from recent
Demo Of The Month winners Poledo, plus classic
tunes from the 80s onwards.
Monday 19th
THE FAMOUS
MONDAY BLUES
CHRISTMAS PARTY:
The Bullingdon
After 25 years bringing the blues to Oxford,
The Famous Monday Blues clubs annual preChristmas knees-up remains a highlight of its
calendar and tonights shindig is a
characteristic mix of old and new. In the
former camp are UK electric blues-rockers
Roadhouse who, since their 1991 inception,
have played over 2,000 shows and released 11
albums, while performing at every festival
going. Gary Boners crew kick it out in the
style of Creedence Clearwater Revival and
Lynyrd Skynyrd, while sticking close to their
blues roots. Joining them is Alabamas Debbie
Bond, whose soulful southern backwoods blues
is inspired by Bonnie Raitt and Janis Joplin,
taking in elements of jazz and country along
the way. Rio de Janeiros Alamo Leal has
been a regular visitor to the FMB over the
years and provides a laidback Delta and New
Orleans-style counterpoint to Roadhouses
high-octane approach. Potential highlight of
the night, though, is Wales Cherry Lee
Mewis, who debuted here back in the summer,
rising fast through the ranks with her powerful
old-time blues voice and fresh, soulful takes
on the likes of Blind Willie McTell, Koko
Taylor and Memphis Minnie alongside her
own songs.
WEDNESDAY 21st
FREERANGE: The Cellar
Dubstep, drum&bass, UK garage and
grime Christmas party.
WEDNESDAY BLUES: The James
Street Tavern
THURSDAY 22nd
THE RELATIONSHIPS + THE
CELLAR FAMILY: The
Bullingdon Local pop godfathers
The Relationships burnish their
psychedelic sweet suburbia, alongside
this months Nightshift cover stars.
CATWEAZLE CLUB: East Oxford
Community Centre
IZZI STONE + WHERES BILLY +
THE LIGHT DIVIDED + CJ
QUINN: The Hobgoblin, Bicester
Jambox rock night.
WORDPLAY: The Cellar
FRIDAY 23rd
BORDERVILLE + MARYS
GARDEN + DEER CHICAGO: The
Wheatsheaf The Wheatsheaf
eases itself into Christmas in
considerable style with vaudevillian
concept rockers Borderville taking a
Ziggy Stardust-shaped axe to Kafkas
Metamorphosis, while Marys Garden
return to action in suitably winterish
fashion. Epic shoegazing indie
rocking from Deer Chicago in
support.
GLAM ROCK CHRISTMAS
PARTY: The Bullingdon Double
bill of glam-rock from Its All About
The Music, with Wigwam and Martini
Rockers.
SHEPHERDS PIE: Fat Lils,
Witney Rock covers.
BERSICKER + CIRCUIT CHASE
+ DIGGING FOR PEDRO +
BRANDON KING: The
Wheatsheaf, Banbury Jambox
metal and rock night.
FUNKY FRIDAY: The Bullingdon
MONDAY 26th
Ooh football.
TUESDAY 27th
SPARKYS FLYING CIRCUS:
James Street Tavern
WEDNESDAY 28th
FREERANGE: The Cellar
WEDNESDAY BLUES: The James
Street Tavern
THURSDAY 29th
THE BLACKOUT + ATTACK
ATTACK + REVOKER + SAVE
YOUR BREATH: O2 Academy
Merthyr Tydfils post-hardcore
heroes celebrate their most successful
year yet as they continue to tour new
album Hope. They began 2011 as
support to My Chemical Romance
before going on to play the main
stage at Reading and Leeds Festivals
as well as supporting Funeral For A
Friend. Keeping it welsh, theyre
joined by Caerphillys Attack Attack.
BLUNTED: The Cellar A return
to the Cellar for the vintage hip hop,
funk and soul club night, with DJs
Fabulous Hand, Fu, Grande, Unia et al.
REIGN UPON US + A TRUST
UNCLEAN + CIRCUIT CHASE:
The Hobgoblin, Bicester Jambox
metal night with thrashcore monsters
Reign Upon Us.
FRIDAY 30th
FUNKY FRIDAY: The Bullingdon
FOUNDATION REGGAE: East
Oxford Community Centre
Reggae and roots soundsystem.
SATURDAY 24th
SATURDAY 31st
SKYLARKIN SOUNDSYSTEMS
REGGAE CHRISTMAS: O2
Academy Count Skylarkin
continues the tradition of welcoming
in Christmas with some serious reggae
action, tonight featuring a live set
from fast-rising dancehall starlets
Laid Blak, whose recent singles Red
and Bristol Love are already
considered modern day classics of the
genre, plus a soundclash between
Desta*Nation and House Of Roots.
YOUR SONG: The Bullingdon
Classic covers and moments of
inspired genius from Hot Hooves,
The Mazarati, Black Powder, Komrad
and more local acts to be announced.
SUNDAY 25th
Having discovered that Sainsburys
stock chocolate-flavoured wine,
Nightshift is planning to see exactly
how much of the stuff we can
consume before we vomit our
chocolate-infused livers all over the
DECEMBER
Every Monday
THE FAMOUS MONDAY NIGHT BLUES
The best in UK, European and US blues. 8-12.
Every Tuesday
THE OXFORD JAZZ CLUB
Free live jazz plus DJs playing rnb, funk and soul until 2am
6th ALVIN ROY & REEDS UNLIMITED
13th / 20th THE NEW JAZZ COLLECTIVE
Thursdays
8th BLACK POWDER / NUCLEAR SKYLINE / COCAINE
COWBOYS / THE BIG SOCIETY
15th ELLA / WHOS FELIX
22nd THE RELATIONSHIPS / THE CELLAR FAMILY
Every Friday
FUNKY FRIDAY
Funk, soul, boogie and R&B. 11pm-2.30am; 3.
Saturdays
3rd SIMPLE House & techno with JULIAN BASHMORE.
10-4am; 10adv
10th VIBED R&B, house, garage and pop. DJs DEE &
VARCHEZ. 3 B4 11pm / 5 after
17th SIMPLE House & techno with WILD SWIM /
CUBIQ
Sundays
11th EMILY SPIERS / FLUER / MUNDANE SANDS
Join us on Facebook: Backroom @ The Bully
LIVE
PROFESSOR GREEN
O2 Academy
Hackney rapper Professor Green is at his career
zenith today, with the current number one, a
second album just out and a reality TV show now
available on 4OD. Theres certainly a lot to latch
onto - the singsong delivery, the humour, the
cheekiness... charm discernible to people who
dont usually stray into his territory.
The Professors earliest chart successes Just Be
Good to Green and I Need You Tonight skip
along at a jolly pace, with Green bounding around
and furiously polishing the air; and its all about
him, his backing band efficiently rendering his
chart-friendly guest stars unnecessary. But the
morass of politeness.
To be honest, we far prefer the first
half of the concert. Tribute To
Nature is a piece for drumkit
augmented by elemental wood and
granite percussion, but the roughhewn instruments offer more than
earthy novelty. The click of stone
on stone is a Neanderthal telex, and
a Jews harp passage sounds like a
Tuvan version of Aphex Twins
Didgeridoo; at times the windswept
stillness is Biosphere unplugged, at
others the frenetic crackling
rhythms are bebop played by a huge
insect. A Max Roach, maybe? No,
no, youre right, were sorry.
Tribute To Nature may be too
long, and the shamanistic groove is
too Howard Moon (Coming at you
like a jazz narwhal!), but the piece
is hypnotic and evocative, and
Isungset is modest enough to break
the sonic spell and make people
giggle by creaking his drum stool: ice
is nice, but sometimes a musician
finds their best material in jokes and
accidents.
David Murphy
DANANANANAYKROYD / NAIROBI
The Bullingdon
Nairobi take their lead from the
African pop music that seems to have
been bizarrely adopted by indie bands
like Vampire Weekend, and from the
precision and pseudo-polyrhythmic
approach of Foals and their ilk. What
this means is very clean, unaffected
and uneffected guitar melodies, and
catchy, memorable songs. Without
realising it, after seeing Nairobi a
couple of months previously, Id
absorbed a couple of their tunes,
which tonight seem pleasantly
familiar. They are sparse in
arrangement, with that clean guitar
sound spidering around white-boy-funk
bass and skittering drum patterns, but
theyre taken a step beyond
mundanity with a couple of twists and
turns of rhythm and construction. On
top of of this, vocals are delivered in
a bizarre Robert Smith-style yawn,
which whilst somewhat out of tune, is
confident enough to charm. I like
Nairobi; theyre an odd combination
of recognisable influences and strange
quirks.
Liking them sets me up perfectly for
Dananananaykroyd, who I really like,
but who are unfortunately about to
split up. They remind me of how
audience.
Theyre positively lightweight compared to
Necro Deathmort, mind. The clue is in the name,
dear readers. Here is doom, more doom and an
extra side portion of doom with chocolate
sprinkles on top. Dark chocolate, obviously. Like
an unholy (what else?) collision of Sunn0)))s
funereal black mass metal and Salems vicious
electro-cum-drum&bass attack, Necro Deathmort
are like experiencing an aural enema and are
positively the bleakest thirty minutes of live music
weve witnessed in years. They make Wolf Eyes
sound like happy hour at a school disco.
After which Spring Offensive feel like sunshine
after the storm, particularly when they take to the
middle of the floor for an acoustic four-way
harmony workout thats one step removed from
The Housemartins Caravan Of Love. Elsewhere
they can be abrasive, as on closing number Every
Coin, but maintain a simmering emotional edge to
everything they do, while its easy to forget amid
some of their tightly-angled moments just what a
fantastic voice frontman Lucas Whitworth has.
Alexander Tucker is a bit of a disappointment,
all pensive Steve Reich-style drones that dont
really go anywhere. Given that its gone dinnertime
we wander up to Peppers Burgers; we ask if it got
any better when we return. Were told it got a bit
louder. Not the same thing, is it.
Fujiya & Miyagi (who are neither a duo nor
Japanese) threaten to be similarly dull for the first
half of their set, sounding worryingly like Chris
Rea trying to cover Talking Heads Psycho Killer
at one point and a lounge jazz remodelling of The
Prodigys Breathe at another. Something clicks
halfway through though with a superb Electro
Karaoke thats pure Neu!-like grooving.
Against such high quality opposition though, its
The Victorian English Gentlemens Club who
perhaps steal the show. Other than a couple of
songs where we try to pin them down bizarrely
between the Breeders and Alien Sex Fiend, theyre
virtually unclassifiable, a spasming, grating, atonal
but deceptively melodic set of songs that all sound
like theyve been twisted out of shape by some evil
toymaker.
In fact they kind of sum up Audioscope as much as
any band ever could a world away from the
mainstream with no hope of ever being invited to
join in. Its a genuine pleasure to encounter such
wilfulness and, as ever, Audioscope brings such
pleasures right to our doorstep, while, at the same
time, raising money for those who dont have
their own doorstep.
Dale Kattack
AUDIOSCOPE
The Jericho Tavern
Audioscope begins almost as it ends today with
local stoner-metal titans Desert Storm making
damn sure no fucker gets eased gently into
proceedings. Brutal they may be, a sympathetic
sound in the Tavern ensures the many subtleties in
their sound, from psychedelia to something almost
gospel, arent buried in sheer riffage.
At the end of todays mini-festival in aid of
Shelter, West Virginias grizzled rockers Karma To
Burn reprise the no-frills, no-prisoners form of
stoner-metal they helped pioneer in the 90s in
front of a bank of Marshall stacks and bring the
day full circle.
In between these monolithic musical bookends is a
bill thats almost universally excellent, each act
uncompromising in their own unique way, from
Listing Ships gracefully malevolently electrorock that sounds ten times as vital in these
DOOM
O2 Academy
The inexhaustible longevity of hip hop owes
much to its ability to mutate and evolve, even if
that often seems to bring it around in some kind
of circle. Diehards claim it to be the only truly
new musical form since rocknroll but Chuck D
may be more on target when he described it as
the black CNN; 24-hour rolling news rather than
carefully considered documentary. This view is
supported by the current trend for distributing
new music via mixtapes, MP3 collections of
often exclusive material, freely available from
websites like Datpiff and often superior to
officially released product, Drakes So Far Gone
a prime example.
Which brings us to DOOM, aka MF Doom, in
the game since 1988 and as famed for his
ADAM ANT
O2 Academy
Listening to the radio on the way
down tonight, the BBC are crowing
about their Children In Need Rocks
concert, boasting about a line-up that
features Coldplay, Kelly Rowland and
Michael Bubl. And we ponder, sadly,
how they dont seem to make pop
stars like Adam Ant any more. Only
Lady Gaga on that bill has anything
approaching the sense of theatre that
the man born Stuart Goddard brought
to the charts in the early-1980s,
dressed variously as a pirate, a
highwayman and a fairytale prince.
Serious mental illness as much as the
tides of fashion finished Ants career
but lately hes recovered some of that
old form and tonights show, while
not without its pitfalls, is a reminder
of the genuine star quality he once
possessed, as well as being a seriously
great songwriter.
We couldnt have hoped for a better
set-list. While he could easily have
hacked out the big hits and a load of
new material, tonights near-two-hour
set is packed with songs from Adam
& The Ants superb Dirk Wears
White Sox debut. Most of it still
sounds incredible Car Trouble and
Cleopatra in particular; the latter
dedicated to Elizbeth Taylor. Dog
Eat Dog, early in the set, suggests
Ants voice is shot; it sounds awful,
but its easy to forget how much of
the big hits were down to Merricks
production and thirty years on Adam
is never going to hit those high notes.
Theres something of the ageing
DOCTOR SHOTOVER
Render Unto Caesar
Well, dear boy, its all about TRIBUTES this month. More specifically,
TRIBUTE BANDS though I will take a Bulmers and tomato juice off you,
if you are offering to render unto Shotover some form of liquid tribute
from the bar Ah, thats better [gulp-o] Meanwhile, older readers of this
column may recall, and resonate with, my long-held theory that the more
tribute bands there are, the better - since they help keep the newer and
more self-indulgent (aka moan-y) Young Peoples bands off our stages.
Even if it does mean that we have to put up with all those amusingly
misspelt names appearing weekly at the O2 Laughing Academy The
Smyths, The Jamm, Sandi Thom Yorke. (Laugh? I thought Id never start
etc). We here at the East Indies Club are generally more partial to the ones
which include a nationality and/or location in the name, e.g. The
Australian Doors The Danish Blue Oyster Cult The Isle of Wight Stripes.
Still with me, Junior? Now, what about another liquid tribute? Well, since
youre asking I wouldnt say NIET to a large vodka and Cherry Blossom.
Try and keep up at the back its from my days in a Russian Gulag, when,
in the absence of other stimulants, we used to melt shoe polish on the
radiators and spread it on our bread. Bedingfield our trusty bar-steward
knows the drill Why,
thank YOU, comrade
[gulp-ovitch]. Thats put a
new shine on things!
While were on such lofty
cultural topics, heres a
couple more tribute bands
for you the Russian
RUSH the Canadian
CAN not to mention
Harold Buddy Holly and
The Italians whats
that? Youd rather go and
see This Town Needs
Guns? Oh suit yourself.
Just get another liquid
tribute in, and then you
can f*** off.
Next month: Caesar
Sisters
Bohemian Crapsody The Queensland QUEEN
Intr
oducing.
Introducing.
Nightshifts monthly guide to the best local bands bubbling under
Deer Chicago
Who are they?
Deer Chicago are Jonny Payne (vocals / guitar), Dan Newton (bass) and Tris
Griffiths (drums). They formed late in 2009 to play a gig at Fat Lils in
Witney and were immediately offered the chance to play at Charlbury
Riverside Festival the following year, so thought it would be a good idea to
stay together. The trio have continued to gig locally since, including a stint
of gigs around Scotland last winter where they apparently did more snow
shovelling than gig playing due to the weather. Theyve recently been
recording with Ben Lloyd from Dive Dive and have their debut single
Lantern Collapse / Rolling of the Ocean to show for it this month
What do they sound like?
In a word, epic. Maybe even majestic if Lantern Collapse is anything to go
on, all shimmering guitars that that snowball into a turbulent plateau of skytouching/shoegazing noise, waiting til you think it cant get any more epic
before becoming, well, more epic. There are elements of post-rock in there,
but tempered by more structured melodies and an adherence to the contrast
between light and soft bits and more grandiose bursts of noise.
What inspires them?
Music that has the ability to pull you in certain ways. There are particular
live gigs weve all been to where the band/artist manages to create an
atmosphere or mood in the room, and completely captivate the audience.
Career highlight so far:
The Upstairs with BBC Introducing show at the O2. We grew up going to
see very influential gigs at the Zodiac, and although its very different now it
was still the first time wed played in that building.
And the lowlight:
Playing the Box in Glasgow where we got heckled a huge amount for things
as small as dropping a plectrum. The banter began when we said we were
from Oxford. Mistake.
Ye Olde Days
20 YEARS AGO
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Sponsored by
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RECORDING AND REHEARSAL STUDIOS
*
VERA GRACE
Witneys Vera Grace pile into proceedings
with no little bombast, all thundering drums
and anthemic guitar volleys, before the
singer screams, belches and rasps his way
into the ceremony and its all set for the
thrilling spectacle of Iron Maiden battling it
out with Gallows and were hanging on to
their coattails for the duration of the party.
And then. And then they go and do what
every other bloody metalcore band seem to
do bring in the melodic counterpoint
vocals to try and prettify everything. Like
nasty, brutish hardcore mayhem ever needed
prettifying. Not only is it a clich, its like
the barman at a Viking feast suggesting
everyone stop for a sweet sherry because all
that high-octane mead and axe-throwing is
getting a bit beastly and might upset that
nice lady sat in the corner. Not realising that
the nice lady is actually Boudicca and shes
the biggest party animal in the room and
wants bloody axe-related mayhem as much
HALF NAKED
While rather less ferocious than Vera Grace
on first inspection, Half Naked sound more
convincing overall for not upsetting their
particular punk apple cart with anything
unnecessarily nice. Seemingly coming from
the post-Blink 182 school of pop-punk,
theyre all fizz and bluster, the singer
chewing up his words and spitting them out
with a decent amount of attitude, the guitars
all staccato stabs of fuzzed-up belligerence.
An Offer You Cant Refuse finds them at
their spikiest, all stop-start dynamics, while
Broken Arrows is far poppier, managing to
find a good balance of melody and fiery
intent, careering through an entire skipful of
Stateside punk at a determined canter. Just as
youve got them pegged down as slightly
two-dimensional noisemakers, they close
with the seven-minute Our Future, slower
and more densely textured. Its probably less
fun than whats come before but
demonstrates an admirable willingness to
change things around a bit and while theyre
hardly an original band, they kick it all out
with some serious vim and vigour and are in
no immediate danger of being mistaken for
poetry-reading softies.
MATT FINUCANE
THE DEMO
DUMPER
CLEPSYDRA
FIVETHIRTYONE
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