• Tuesday Twenty: My top 100 tracks 2000-09 Pt.04: 40 to 21

    Out 6 2009, 17h19 por amodelofcontrol

    And now, onto the next instalment of my tracks of the decade. Next week will see the top twenty...

    Previously:
    My top 100 tracks 2000-09 Pt.02: 100 to 81
    My top 100 tracks 2000-09 Pt.02: 80 to 61
    My top 100 tracks 2000-09 Pt.02: 60 to 41

    40
    Landmine Spring
    The Jaded And The Eager
    Elephantine
    2001

    51 seconds of metallic hardcore fury, tearing out of the speakers like a pack of slavering dogs from the off, somehow stuffing in two verses, a lot of screaming, and then the last ten seconds preparing to rip into the second track (which is pretty fucking good, too). Not sure what happened to this lot, but just for a short while they were awesome, like Helmet on a force-fed diet of steroids that weren't quite as reserved, either, as this track proved nicely.

    39
    Interlock
    Further From Reason
    Death by Design
    2002

    Older than this, but it only ever got a proper release in 2002, so I believe it counts, and anyway, I set the rules for this! Whatever the date it comes from, this remains Interlock's finest moment. Somehow balancing perfectly the chugging metal, industrial electronics and dual (male/female) vocalists who both had (and still do) have incredible range, from screams and snarls to melodic passages, this was a track that in some hands could have been a mess due to the sheer amount of ideas contained within...but instead became Interlock's greatest moment by far.

    38
    Everything Goes Cold
    I've Sold Your Organs on the Black Market to Finance the Purchase of a Used Minivan
    Prepare To Be Refrigerated
    2008

    For one, one of the best song titles ever, and the song itself is awesome fun, too. A sneering, raging blast of industrial rock with great lyrics, samples, and a sense that nothing is being taken too seriously. The rest of the EP is great fun, too, and the album - due at last in December - also sounds like it is shaping to be just as good.

    37
    Dragons
    TocarHere Are the Roses
    Here are the roses
    2007

    One of the latest in a long line of bands I was really late in catching up with, and even more remarkable in that this was the band formed from the remnants of Dark Star, one of my very favourite bands from the end of the 90s. This band are a very different beast, though - rather than the dreamy, proggy rock that Dark Star made their own, Dragons are firmly rooted in muscular, driving gothic rock. While at points making their influences a little too clear - one song sounds almost exactly like Interpol, another nods towards Depeche Mode, while the spectre of Joy Division is never too far away - there are some tracks that are just simply astonishing. And the opening, title track is certainly that. A swirling, roaring rush underpinned by David Francolini's powerful drumming, it's peak is saved for near the end, when it does a melodic about-turn in a similar fashion to the change that worked in such incredible fashion in Alice in Chains' Would?.

    36
    Assemblage 23
    decades
    Meta
    2007

    This track was initially released - in an early, apparently incomplete, version a year before, but it was the majestic album version that opened Meta that is the one featured here. Opening with the sound of a ticking clock, which continues in the background for much of the track, it's a lengthy track that - appropriately, perhaps - is about taking the chances that come your way and making a difference before time runs out, and not a second is wasted. No matter what the subject, it also happens to be one of the best A23 tracks ever, if not perhaps the best.

    35
    Covenant
    Tour De Force
    United States of Mind
    2000

    United States of Mind may have had two dancefloor monsters in Dead Stars and One World One Sky, but the rest of the album was pretty handy too, and indeed Tour de Force for me was by far the best song on it (although Afterhours runs it close, as the best ballad Covenant ever wrote). Comparing the gambles taken in life to those taken on a roulette wheel, it's freewheeling melodies make for a marvellously thrilling, fast-paced track that has never seemed to get the credit it deserved in the band's now-lengthy back catalogue.

    34
    In Strict Confidence
    Emergency
    Holy
    2004

    This album was where ISC changed direction a little more, from the ultra-dark industrial-electro of before to a more-darkwave sound that seemed to suit them so much better. Adding permanent additional vocalist Antje Schulz was a masterstroke, too, as tracks like this proved. Her beautiful, crystal-clear vocals were pushed high in the mix above a deceptively simple beat to make probably the closest to a perfect pop song that the band ever made. A new - much delayed - album is coming very soon, and I've got my fingers crossed that they can scale the heights of this again.

    33
    Rotersand
    TocarDare To Live (SR Version)
    Dare To Live - Perspectives on Welcome to Goodbye
    2006

    The original version of this track - along with the intro track - opened breakthrough album Welcome to Goodbye, and it's condensed version, with elements of the intro merged in and removing much of the lengthy buildup, made it into a much more dancefloor and listener-friendly track, finally making just about everyone realise that this was Rotersand's best track all the long. Everything that is great about Rotersand is in this one track - it's anthemic, melodic, very heavy on the beats but with an emotional heart that is sometimes missing from their peers.

    32
    Esa
    TocarPrincipals Of A Paradisic Resolve
    How Pure Would Your Utopia Be?
    2008

    Three albums of astonishing industrial-noise have been supplied so far by the seemingly never-ending well of creativity that is Jamie Blacker, and he has lent his talents to various other acts in the form of guest appearances or remixes (some of which have been astounding, too). The track chosen here, though, features a guest of it's own - Nikki from Prometheus Burning, who lends her evil-sounding vocals to the churning maelstrom of noise later in the track. The electronics bubble, churn and then explode like a looming volcanic eruption, and the climax, when it arrives, it jaw-dropping. The video, by the way, is not worksafe...

    31
    The Dresden Dolls
    TocarGirl Anachronism
    The Dresden Dolls
    2003

    Not the first DD song I heard - like many, that honour falls to the quirky TocarCoin-Operated Boy - but this was certainly one of the more striking tracks on their impressive debut. Being fast and punky is some feat, when all the band have is drums, piano and vocals, but the band manage it, with it all sounding insanely chaotic and on the verge of falling apart at any moment. Much like the girl Amanda Palmer details in the lyrics - the kind of girl that you probably should think twice about getting involved with, and is somewhat out of time...

    30
    Apoptygma Berzerk
    Starsign
    Welcome to Earth
    2000

    Stefan Groth and Apop may have left the industrial/EBM world far behind in search of poppier planets nowadays, but it's perhaps telling that their live shows are still stuffed full of the older, bleepier tracks. A good number of older Apop songs - some of which are nearing their teens in age - are still dancefloor staples, and with songs the quality of Starsign, it's perhaps a mystery that they didn't become pop megastars long ago. Opening with urgent beats and sweeping synths, and a gloriously euphoric, hands-in-air chorus that still packs dancefloors nine years on, it's outwardly-positive sound masks the yearning of Groth to go and investigate somewhere "where no-one knows [his] name".

    29
    16Volt vs. Cyanotic
    AmericanPornSong (Glitch Bitch Mix v1.0)
    h0rd3z ov thee el33t
    2006

    The "studio" version of this track has finally landed - a good many years since the first live version surfaced on the "best of", and three years since this monstrous remix/retooling. It's still a great song underneath the reworking - proved by the recently-released album version - but the work that Cyanotic did with this, treating the vocals, crowding in effects and samples, beefing up the beats, giving the chorus even more ooomph, adds up to one of the best remixes of the decade.

    28
    Leechwoman
    Tool
    Three Zero
    2001

    Opening with an uncompromising sample source - from the vicious Scum - sets the scene perfectly for this band's most brutal moment (which really is saying something). Pure industrial power that consumes everything before it, live it turns into a wall of noise that can get quite uncomfortable, but then, that's the way I suspect Alex and the band would like it.

    27
    Lucidstatic
    Blackout
    Gravedigger
    2008

    An album I picked up on spec, without hearing a single second of it - something I rarely do nowadays - and I made the right choice. In fact, I knew I'd made the right choice all of about ten seconds into this, the opening track as it exploded out of the speakers at me. Four-and-a-half-minutes of mental, angry breakcore riddled with samples, breakdowns and more breakcore - it's almost daring you to even try and dance to it. The rest of the album is great, yes, but really, it never reaches the dazzling peak that is this track.

    26
    Modulate
    TocarRevolution
    Detonation
    2008

    It might be TocarSkullfuck that took all the plaudits, and indeed was the track that brought Modulate to a big audience by being played to death on industrial dancefloors everywhere, but my favourite track is about as old as it. TocarRevolution is the rabble-rousing, sample-heavy call to arms that sounds absolutely immense live and on dancefloors, and somehow has never quite caught on like TocarSkullfuck.

    25
    Goldfrapp
    TocarCrystalline Green
    Black Cherry
    2003

    Goldfrapp's breakthrough, this - a dirty electro album that was a fun, and at times x-rated, tumble between the sheets for forty-five minutes, opening with this slithering, pulsing track whose lyrics suggest a night of fun under the stars. While Goldfrapp have perhaps moved onto greater success since this album, it - and this track, for me - remain career highlights.

    24
    Katatonia
    TocarEvidence
    Viva Emptiness
    2003

    A band that have always seemed to be hidden in the shadows of their peers, both in reality and metaphorically, just for a moment they took a little of the limelight here and created their best song full stop. A song about dark obsession, gently simmering fury and ice cold revenge, it's such a tense song that you can almost hear Jonas Renkse shivering with anger as he calmly delivers the devastating vocal. The song, remarkably, simply gets better and better before it fades out - the repeated refrain that closes the song out is just heartstoppingly sad. A new album is imminent, but the band are never, ever, going to top the clout of this.

    23
    Drumcorps
    Botch Up and Die
    Grist
    2006

    Take old grindcore and metal tracks, put them in a blender with very, very angry breakcore, and you end up with something that we were amazed hadn't been tried before. The album is reasonably short, exceptionally heavy, and surprisingly listenable, too. Part of the fun, of course, is working out the tracks that he sampled from, and good luck trying to headbang to most of it. This track in particular is the mighty opening track, with appears to start in mono, get quieter for a moment and burst into stereo (and about ten times louder than before) with no warning like a JCB crashing through your lounge wall. In other words, it's fucking awesome, and if played loud enough is pretty much guaranteed to annoy the neighbours.

    22
    dEUS
    TocarBad Timing
    Pocket Revolution
    2005

    Some six years or so since the last album, dEUS reconvened for Pocket Revolution, and while I wasn't a huge fan of all of the album (the album since, Vantage Point, is much better overall, IMHO), this opening track was quite possibly one of the bands very best moments - seven minutes that gradually, and almost imperceptibly, builds to an astonishing climax that creeps up on you in glorious fashion. Sadly, this band have never had the mainstream acceptance that they always deserved, but all that means in my view is that those of us who have kept the faith simply hold them as ever more precious.

    21
    Mind.In.A.Box
    What Used To Be (Short Storm)
    What Used To Be CDM
    2008

    My track of the year for 2008, and with good reason - the first time a single MIAB track was successfully seperated out from the lengthy narrative that has tied in all of their songs so far, making them, in the main, a far better "album" band rather than a "single" one. That all changed, though, with this edited release. Dispensing with the lengthy buildup that the eight-minute album version has, and by polishing the production somewhat - more than anything by removing much of the effects on the vocals that have long been the band's sonic trademark - it turned this into a glittering dancefloor-friendly track that I'm pretty sure gained the band a whole host of new fans.

    Next week: My top 100 tracks 2000-09 Pt.05: 20 to 01
  • top50 albums

    Set 15 2008, 20h38 por Lauroo

    Lauroo's top albums

    Automatically generated based on number of plays.
    1. Placebo - Meds (319)
    2. Snow Patrol - Eyes Open (241)
    3. Sufjan Stevens - Illinois (225)
    4. Bloc Party - A Weekend In The City (223)
    5. Arctic Monkeys - Whatever People Say I Am, That's What I'm Not (210)
    6. Queens of the Stone Age - Songs For The Deaf (203)
    7. Air - Moon Safari (191)
    8. The Fratellis - Costello Music (184)
    9. The Beatles - Abbey Road (162)
    10. Muse - Absolution (157)
    11. The Arcade Fire - Neon Bible (149)
    12. Editors - An End Has a Start (146)
    13. The Kooks - Inside in Inside Out (145)
    14. Arctic Monkeys - Favourite Worst Nightmare (140)
    15. Kings of Leon - Because of the Times (134)
    16. Muse - Black Holes and Revelations (133)
    17. Fleet Foxes - Fleet Foxes (131)
    18. Snow Patrol - Final Straw (129)
    19. Herman van Veen - Rode Wangen (128)
    20. Dragons - Here are the roses (127)
    21. Cold War Kids - Robbers & Cowards (127)
    22. Muse - Origin Of Symmetry (122)
    23. Porcupine Tree - Deadwing (121)
    24. Eels - Daisies of the Galaxy (120)
    25. The Arcade Fire - Funeral (117)
    26. Depeche Mode - Music for the Masses (116)
    27. MGMT - Oracular Spectacular (116)
    28. Pearl Jam - Rearviewmirror (Greatest Hits 1991-2003) (115)
    29. Placebo - Without You I'm Nothing (113)
    30. The Beatles - Revolver (113)
    31. Kings of Leon - Aha Shake Heartbreak (107)
    32. Depeche Mode - Playing The Angel (107)
    33. El Pino and the Volunteers - Molten City (103)
    34. Röyksopp - The Understanding (101)
    35. Tool - 10,000 Days (101)
    36. Maxïmo Park - A Certain Trigger (100)
    37. Bloc Party - Silent Alarm (98)
    38. Interpol - Antics (98)
    39. The Beatles - Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band (97)
    40. The Cranberries - The Very Best (96)
    41. Kings of Leon - Only by the Night (92)
    42. Foo Fighters - There Is Nothing Left to Lose (92)
    43. Air - Talkie Walkie (91)
    44. Cut Copy - In Ghost Colours (89)
    45. Andrew Bird - Armchair Apocrypha (87)
    46. Editors - The Back Room (84)
    47. Radiohead - The Bends (83)
    48. Queens of the Stone Age - Lullabies To Paralyze (82)
    49. The Shins - Chutes Too Narrow (82)
    50. The Beatles - Rubber Soul (80)

  • Tuesday Ten: Tracks of the Month (April)

    Mai 6 2008, 17h39 por amodelofcontrol

    Here is my usual run-down of ten tracks that I think are worthy of mention from the past month. Some might note a lack of "metal" in this list: mainly because there is little new stuff that I have heard that has inspired me to write about in any way. So, here goes:

    Portishead
    TocarWe Carry On
    Third

    Really, who'd have thought that a comeback over ten years in the making could be this good? Somehow standing out alone, sounding almost totally unique in their approach, it's nice to have them back. After the shock of the retro-electronics of single Machine Gun, there are number of other treasures on the album, and the album centrepiece We Carry On is most certainly one of them. Built around a simple, driving, drum beat, and odd, almost alien-sounding electronics, Beth' voice floats ghostlike through it all. And bizarrely, the guitar effects remind me of recent Nine Inch Nails tracks...

    Mind.In.A.Box
    Stalkers
    Crossroads

    It really has taken a while for me to get into this band, but at long last I've had the chance to listen to their latest album in detail, and it's staggeringly good. The detail of weaving a coherent theme (and story) through all the songs on the album (creating a long story-arc) really works well, especially as all of the tracks flow so well into each other. For some reason I utterly love this mid-paced track, which in some respects reminds me of Stromkern in the use of near hip-hop vocal rhythms, particularly in the chorus.

    Mindless Faith
    I'm Pretty Much Fucked
    Medication for the Misinformed

    Another I'm amazed I missed previously, this US industrial band are probably the closest I have heard any band come to the ideas that Cubanate were exploring a decade or more back. Heavy beats and heavily treated guitars, but perhaps with less of the brutal aggression that fuelled much of the older band. Still, with tracks as good as this one, I'm happy for now...

    Dragons
    TocarCondition
    Here are the roses

    I've already posted on my LJ about my radar missing this lot previously, and getting hold of the album has revealed that it wasn't just the singles that were worth a listen. This - the second track - is brilliant, building and building until it explodes into the chorus, and then takes it up another notch or two when it comes back around again. A track driven, seemingly, on pure adrenaline, this is wonderful gothic rock: and a band that might just make me interested in a Spa ticket at Whitby in October if they were to be added to the bill (unless they play somewhere more local first).

    Manufactura
    TocarLive by the knife, die by the knife
    We're Set Silently On Fire

    Quite how I've managed not to pick up on this artist previously is something I've been asking myself a lot since I picked up this album a couple of weeks ago. I've heard a number of people saying many good things about them (him) for a while now, and happily this album has not disappointed. A mix of unsettling atmospheric pieces and some seriously savage industrial noise, the entire album is really, really good. For me this track - a mix of both approaches - is six minutes of pure hate and spite. Manufactura sits somewhere in between Terrorfakt and Converter, if you are looking for reference points...

    Ladytron
    TocarBlack Cat
    Velocifero

    At least for now the entire new album is up for listening on their myspace page, and this opening track (and the first track publically aired) is not as much a red herring as I had thought it might be. The new album is more of the icy electronics and shimmering pop that they do so well, but the quasi-industrial textures of this track don't seem out of place at all, as 80s-industrial and electronics sounds abound elsewhere too (particularly on the fabulous TocarRunaway). I'd love to know what they are on about on Black Cat (it is sung in Bulgarian by Mira), though...

    Mindless Self Indulgence
    TocarBomb This Track
    If

    While the new album is not half as good as previous albums, seemingly playing it rather safe in many cases, there are still moments where the old lunacy shines through: and perhaps none more so than with this track. An almost hip-hop intro, before it suddenly picks up pace - and good luck keeping up with Jimmy's lyrics, which as usual appear to be ripping the piss out of just about any target going. It's still not quite reaching the heights of the last album, though, and as they edge closer to the mainstream, will they ever?

    Nebula-H
    TocarFreaks
    r-H
    Alfa-Matrix promo

    This is unexpectedly great stuff from a band I have always thought were only so-so: a pulsing dancefloor track that has everything (the beats, the hooks, the cheesy synth lines) to keep everyone moving. More than likely kinda disposable EBM-pop, too, but it's great fun while it lasts.

    Angelspit
    TocarSkinny Little Bitch
    Blood Death Ivory

    If you liked the previous Angelspit album Krankhaus, there is nothing to suggest from this teaser for the forthcoming album that you will be disappointed by it. Musically and stylistically, there is nothing that has been really changed - still thumping beats and sneering vocals, but done in such a way that it still sounds fresh. And I love the "la la la" in the chorus...

    Rabbit Junk
    TocarBlack
    This Life Is Where You Get Fucked

    One of those wierd things about the age of internet promotion for music is that when you follow band's moves closely (say on their blog), when something gets announced and pushed back, as happened here, it makes the wait for it feel even longer. Still, the happy news is that This Life Is Where You Get Fucked is fantastic, and even it's concept and split into three distinct sections works. The most fascinating tracks - and probably those that were ones we thought were the biggest risks - are those from the middle section Ghetto Blasphemer, where the stated aim was to bring together the genres of hip-hop and black metal. And boy, does it work. Pick of the tracks is the opening track from this section, Black - that seamlessly switches from lolloping beats to blastbeats in a flash, building on the idea of TocarDemons from Reframe and turning it all up to eleven. A full review of this album will follow once I've given it a good few more listens...
  • EDITORS & MOBIUS BAND & RED LIGHT COMPANY - Krefeld, Kufa (14.03.2008)

    Mar 19 2008, 20h18 por SparklingMicha

    Fr., 14. Mär. – Editors
    Die Editors wurden im Herbst 2003 in Birmingham gegründet und bestehen aus Tom Smith, Chris Urbanowicz, Russell Leetch und Ed Lay. Alle vier haben dank abgeschlossener Musikstudien ihre Hausaufgaben gemacht und sind nun die Speerspitze des angesagten Indierocks dieser Tage, ein Genre dem auch Bands wie Interpol, Bloc Party und die Dragons angehören. Allerdings scheinen sich die Editors auch dank ihrer beeindruckend-intensiven Konzerte mehr und mehr von der Konkurrenz abzusetzen. Hilfreich stehen ihnen dabei ebenso ihre durchweg von hoher Qualität geprägten Songs zur Seite, die sie bisher auf zwei Alben und einigen EP's veröffentlichten.

    Nachdem ich die Briten im Herbst 2007 endlich zum ersten Mal live in einer restlos ausverkauften Kölner Live Music Hall erleben durfte, und die Band kurz darauf verkündete, dass die zukünftig zu buchenden Hallen wohl eher größere Fassungsvermögen haben werden , konnte ich es kaum fassen, dass es der Kulturfabrik in Krefeld gelungen war, die Editors zu einem Auftritt in Krefeld zu bewegen. Die Kufa ist ja für Konzerte mit guter Stimmung bekannt und vielleicht war dies auch in diesem Fall ausschlaggebend. Einziges kleines Manko aus photografischer Sicht war der angesichts des großen Zuschauerzuspruchs in der natürlich ausverkauften Kufa etwas arg schmal geratene "Sicherheitsgraben", so dass dieser leider nicht als "Fotograben" nutzbar war, aber hätte man dafür Leuten den Zutritt verwehren sollen? Wohl nicht ...

    Doch bevor der Hauptact die Bühne betrat, gab es noch zwei Opener zu begutachten und gleich die erste Band machte klar, dass uns dabei heute keine Quälerei bevorstand, denn die Red Light Company aus London überzeugte mit angenehmen Indierock irgendwo in den Gefilden zwischen den Shins und den Shout Out Louds. Bisher scheint es von der Band kein Album zu geben, aber dank eines Recorddeals mit dem Indielabel "La Volta" ist dies wohl nur noch eine Frage der Zeit und ich werde diese Band weiterhin verfolgen.

    Zweite Vorband des Abends war die Mobius Band aus dem New Yorker Stadtteil Brooklyn. Die Mobius Band kann bereits auf zwei Alben zurückblicken und wurde in Krefeld ebenfalls recht gut aufgenommen. Ihr elektronischer Indiesound war etwas ruhiger, getragener und von Keyboards bestimmt, allerdings wurde hier auch so mancher elektronische Klangteppiche gewebt. Das Gesamturteil in der Gunst des Publikums zwischen den beiden Openern fiel offensichtlich unentschieden aus, wobei die Red Light Company als Anheizer für die Editors etwas besser funktionierte.

    Als dann gegen 22:30h die Lichter erneut ausgingen war es endlich Zeit für den ersehnten Auftritt der Editors und sie begannen auch gleich mit einem der Highlights ihres Debutalbums "The Black Room": "TocarCamera". Der Song ist eine gut gewählte Einführung in das Editors' Universum, denn er kommt zwar noch etwas getragen daher, verdeutlicht aber schon in diesen Phasen die Intensität eines Editors-Tracks. Diese Intensität wurde beim nächsten Song, dem Titeltrack des zweiten Albums "An End Has a Start" sogar noch stärker und spätestens jetzt war wohl jedem im Saal klar, dass es ein ganz großartiges Konzert werden würde.

    Den kompletten Konzertbericht und Fotos vom 14.03.2008 gibt es hier auf Sparklingphotos.de

  • Neuer Konzertbericht + Photos : DRAGONS (Live in Köln)

    Mar 17 2008, 12h46 por SparklingMicha

    Mo., 10. Mär. – Dragons
    Bristol ist eine dieser englischen Städte, denen es gelingt eine Vielzahl von talentierten Bands hervorzubringen und auch die Dragons haben ihren Ursprung in der achtgrößten Stadt Englands. Die Dragons bestehen bereits seit einigen Jahren und veröffentlichten im Jahre 2007 mit "Here are the roses" eines der schönsten Alben des Jahres. Die Band steht für dunkelen Elektrorock und hat ihre Wurzeln ganz sicher auch bei den Urvätern des Waverocks: Joy Division. Auch den Dragons wohnen zwei "Herzen" inne, zum einen das mystisch-sanfte wie bei "Where is the Love", aber zum anderen auch eine gewisse Explosivität wie bei Songs der Marke "TocarCondition".

    Nachdem zuletzt immer mal wieder einzelne Europagigs auf dem Programm standen, besuchten die Dragons im März nun auch endlich Deutschland und wir waren beim Konzert im Kölner Underground zu Gast, das allerdings leider nur recht dürftig besucht war. Vielleicht lag es daran, dass mit den Editors zur Zeit auch andere Vetreter dieses Genres auf Tour waren, aber es kann festgehalten werden, dass diejenigen die zuhause geblieben waren, etwas verpassten.

    Den kompletten Konzertbericht und Fotos vom 10.03.2008 gibt es HIER auf Sparklingphotos.de!

  • De gespleten persoonlijkheid van Dragons

    Mar 14 2008, 19h18 por basbrouwers

    Thu 13 Mar – Dragons

    Recensie voor LiveXS


    Een schamel applaus bij opkomst en een groot gat voor het podium als Dragons hun intrede doen op het podium. Enthousiasme is niet direct van toepassing op het verlegen publiek dat in de schaduwen van de zaal verscholen staat. Aftrappend met “TocarCondition”, wat nog niet hélemaal overkomt.
    Een enkele twijfeling aan hun muzikale vlam, maar die is van korte duur. Als de drummer met zijn harde inslagen de ruggengraat van de band versterkt is Dragons al snel opgewarmd en spuugt Anthony Tombling zijn donkergrijze teksten met een vleugje vuur de zaal in.
    Zijn robotbewegingen transformeren langzaam naar wispelturige danspasjes, in spanning gezet. Danspasjes die toch wel erg doen denken aan een persoon genaamd Ian, maar verdere vergelijkingen ga ik niet maken.
    Na het bitterzoete “TocarLonely Tonight” blaast “TocarEpiphany” de lichte nasmaak weg alsof het er nooit was geweest. En Dragons scheurt uit zijn vel... vervellend tot een band die er bij het eerste nummer nog niet stond.
    Tot slot doen ze de vers geplukte rozen hun eer aan door ze op hun plaats te wijzen met “TocarHere Are the Roses”. Afsluitend met “TocarWhere is the love?” wat uitmond in een muzikale gitarenmassa, bevrijd door de stilte, en erkend door de publieke waardering verscholen in het applaus.
    Bij hun terugkeer maken ze af wat al compleet was, maar een ongenoegen is het zeker niet. De gespleten persoonlijkheid van Dragons waar ze even de draak mee lijken te steken met “TocarObedience” waarna ze de avond afsluiten.


    http://muddslut.blogspot.com/
  • Giggity!

    Fev 13 2008, 19h04 por AnxiousSilence

    We've got a couple of gigs coming up featuring the lovely Line Out bands. First one is the 1st March @ The Camden Underworld, Earth Loop Recall are playing alongside Dragons, Ulrich Schnauss and The Fluids. Tickets can be got from earthlooprecall@gmail.com.

    Next up is the Line Out showcase on the 15th March, at The Joiners Arms in Southampton. Up on stage will be: Earth Loop Recall, Trauma Pet, I Am Immune and ANON. Tickets are available from OnLineOut here: http://www.onlineout.com/browse.php?showitem=183

  • Giggity!

    Fev 13 2008, 19h04 por AnxiousSilence

    We've got a couple of gigs coming up featuring the lovely Line Out bands. First one is the 1st March @ The Camden Underworld, Earth Loop Recall are playing alongside Dragons, Ulrich Schnauss and The Fluids. Tickets can be got from earthlooprecall@gmail.com.

    Next up is the Line Out showcase on the 15th March, at The Joiners Arms in Southampton. Up on stage will be: Earth Loop Recall, Trauma Pet, I Am Immune and ANON. Tickets are available from OnLineOut here: http://www.onlineout.com/browse.php?showitem=183

  • Giggity!

    Fev 13 2008, 19h04 por AnxiousSilence

    We've got a couple of gigs coming up featuring the lovely Line Out bands. First one is the 1st March @ The Camden Underworld, Earth Loop Recall are playing alongside Dragons, Ulrich Schnauss and The Fluids. Tickets can be got from earthlooprecall@gmail.com.

    Next up is the Line Out showcase on the 15th March, at The Joiners Arms in Southampton. Up on stage will be: Earth Loop Recall, Trauma Pet, I Am Immune and ANON. Tickets are available from OnLineOut here: http://www.onlineout.com/browse.php?showitem=183

  • Giggity!

    Fev 13 2008, 19h04 por AnxiousSilence

    We've got a couple of gigs coming up featuring the lovely Line Out bands. First one is the 1st March @ The Camden Underworld, Earth Loop Recall are playing alongside Dragons, Ulrich Schnauss and The Fluids. Tickets can be got from earthlooprecall@gmail.com.

    Next up is the Line Out showcase on the 15th March, at The Joiners Arms in Southampton. Up on stage will be: Earth Loop Recall, Trauma Pet, I Am Immune and ANON. Tickets are available from OnLineOut here: http://www.onlineout.com/browse.php?showitem=183