CHANNEL ISLANDS

Archive for the ‘music’ Category

Asylum All Ages, September 25th – latest news

In all ages, asylum, bands, jersey, live lounge, music on September 21, 2009 at 16:02

We’re very excited about the All Ages show at Live Lounge this Friday. All musicians remember the bands they were in when they were teens with great fondness. In many cases the experiments undertaken, styles absorbed, and alliances forged when young remain lasting influences throughout the rest of a musician’s career. We promote the importance of music among the youth of Jersey as a means of unmediated expression and social organisation. There is something about music culture that thrives in situations where young people are in other ways marginalised. Asylum is celebrating the remarkable creative achievements of some of the best bands on the scene with this unmissable show.

The line up for the evening, with set times, is published below.

5.00 Doors open
5.30 Demise of Sanity
6.10 Clockwork Sodomy
6.50 Patrick Star
7.30 Ashley Aziz
8.10 Whitechapel Murders
8.50 Wasted Youth
9.30 to 10.00 Too Many Humans

Demise of Sanity are Sam, Yannick, Dan and James. They describe their music as being like the sound of a baby being crammed into a duck! With razor-sharp riffs, powerhouse drumming and lyrics of bombastic fury, they’ll be opening the show with a big metal bang.

Clockwork Sodomy are Jordan Delap (vocals and guitar), Harry Gilbo (guitar), Ben McCarthy (bass), and Mikey Phillips (drums). They were booked for this show after Asylum saw them incredulously report on Junior Battle of the Bands 2009. Competition judges commented upon ‘inaudibility on an extreme level’, which is promising, but their name alone would have sealed the deal.

Patrick Star

Patrick Star

Patrick Star are Adam Bouteloup (vocals), Joe Hutchinson (guitar and backing vocals), Piers Le Moignan (bass and backing vocals), and Josh Renouf (drums). Their song Molotov is an impressive punk epic with exhilarating shifts of dynamics, febrile pop energy, and terrific, impassioned vocals.

Ashley Aziz

Ashley Aziz

Ashley Aziz are a ska/punk band with Ollie Crafter (vocals), Matthew Donoghue (guitar), Simon Sergeant (bass) and Robin Greatbatch (drums). They also feature Joe Hutchinson who plays some sweet saxophone on some of their ska songs. They all love each other dearly and Simon’s cupboards are always left open and empty after every garage practice. They take great inspiration from young Jimmy who is the band’s biggest fan along with Charlie Burgis.

Whitechapel Murders are a two basses and drums trio. This is their first ever show since forming in late 2008. With membership comprising players from Falenizza Horsepower and We Bury Our Own, they are no less than a Jersey supergroup. Themes tackled in their literate compositions are serial murder and state-directed thought control, and their sound is dense, dark and very heavy.

Wasted Youth

Wasted Youth

Wasted Youth is a four piece punk band with ‘Sexy’ Joe Richardson (guitar and vocals), Chris ‘Dave Fitzgerald’ Daniells (guitar and vocals) Max ‘Mickey Rockenstein’ Burgenson (drums), and ‘Captain’ Eddie le Miere (guitar). There is a charming lo-fi aesthetic at work in their recordings with titles like Fuck Salt and When You Fucked Grandpa exhibiting plunderphonic impulses and queasy wit. They are clearly a band who work to their own rules and that is to be applauded.

Too Many Humans

Too Many Humans

Too Many Humans, a hardcore punk band sounding like ‘an old school slap in the face’, are Justin (guitar), Ben (bass), Seb (drums), Josh (vocals), and Jelly Man (media direction). They were banned from Live Lounge at one time but all is forgiven now. Seb Gilmore’s commitment to the youth music scene and his insistence are what inspired the Asylum All Ages concept in the first place. They are worthy headliners of this historic show.

The show starts at five, so leave work early, skip tea, do whatever you have to do, just be there for all the bands. Please remember no alcohol allowed in the middle floor (stage area) and over-18s only allowed in the downstairs bar.

Thanks to Sam Mézec, Jo Walker and James of Foogie Brothers for their help with this promotion.

Jersey Evening Post, September 19th 2009

In all ages, asylum, bands, jersey, live lounge, music, press on September 19, 2009 at 01:30

Asylum All Ages, Friday September 25th 2009

In all ages, asylum, bands, jersey, live lounge, music on September 15, 2009 at 15:10

New wave order - Poster designed by Jo Walker

All Ages shows are mainly about showcasing talents of bands whose members are younger than the age usually allowed in licensed clubs, and welcoming all their fans. The manager of Live Lounge, as well as Asylum, supports all good music in Jersey and this All Ages show featuring six young bands, plus one more mature outfit playing their first ever gig.

Regular Asylum audiences and especially musicians who have played at past Asylum shows are very welcome.

The night is being co-promoted with a Facebook event by some of the bands here

The show starts considerably earlier than a regular Asylum show. Doors open at five and the last band finishes at ten. In between, seven bands will be performing in what is surely the freshest and most exciting Asylum night to date. Fans of new music shouldn’t miss this.

Entry is a sweet £3. Strictly no alcohol allowed.

Too Many Humans
Too Many Humans MySpace

Wasted Youth
Wasted Youth MySpace

Whitechapel Murders
Whitechapel Murders MySpace

Ashley Aziz
Ashley Aziz Facebook page

Patrick Star
Patrick Star MySpace

Clockwork Sodomy
Clockwork Sodomy Facebook page

Demise of Sanity
Demise of Sanity MySpace

Friday September 18th – Asylum four band show

In asylum, bands, jersey, live lounge, music on September 14, 2009 at 18:13

This Friday, Asylum at Live Lounge welcomes four bands of excellence and diversity.

Hold Your Fire! have been closely involved in the promotion making sure that fans of all the bands on the bill have up-to-date news about the event. Follow them on Twitter: hyfjersey is ranked 10th (most followers) in Jersey by twitterholic.com

Also performing on the night are

the-underground

The Underground

Gorey Inbreds

Gorey Inbreds

Latest news about their CD from Gorey Inbreds via Facebook

if our e.p. isn’t done by Friday its Ryans fault, so don’t post anything on here complaining

The Revolt

The Revolt

t-r-adam t-r-jack t-r-max t-r-tom

The Revolt live photos by Chelsea White

Asylum at Live Lounge, September 18th 2009

In asylum, bands, jersey, live lounge, music on September 2, 2009 at 12:17
High score - Poster designed by Daniel Allman

High score - Poster designed by Daniel Allman

On Friday September 18th, Asylum at Live Lounge presents another brilliant show featuring four bands of quality and distinction.

Hold Your Fire! is a five-piece rock band with influences such as Rise Against, Strung Out, Ten Foot Pole and A Wilhelm Scream. They are currently recording their album entitled Ink Ribbon which is due for completion by the end of 2009. Hold Your Fire! are James Pallot (vocals), Chris Day (bass and vocals), James Day (guitar), Daniel Allman (guitar) and Chris Reed (drums).

Gorey Inbreds are psychedelically informed explorers of a dubious realm where hip hop, funk, country, and wanton carelessness meet. The results are the most fun it is possible to imagine. Gorey Inbreds, as their name suggests, come from a wild, backward zone of Jersey known as Gorey, and their membership is Sir Oliver Andrew Clark Kent, Lord Ryan Alexander De Jersey Douglas, Harry, BB … possibly some special guests too. They claim that anyone who lives in the Gorey area, and isn’t ginger, can be a part of their group.

gorey-inbreds

The Underground were started in late 2008 by Liam Coles and James Perchard. Harry Bartlett joined the band to form a classic triumvirate. They say their aim is to put on a good show and have a laugh. In August 2009 they announced they are recording their EP at Wavesound Studios and the tracks on it shall be called Kick It, Blackjack Dealer, Pulse, and Giving It All.

The Underground won the final of Jersey’s Junior Battle of the Bands 2009. Read about their success in that competition at BBC Jersey Introducing’s Dirty Rock ‘n’ Roll at Battle Final.

The Revolt is a punk band that sets itself apart from what is seen to be a dominance of emo and metal bands in Jersey. The track Do 1, an eight second long micro-anthem of alienation, is an example of their uncompromising approach and possibly an expression of dissatisfaction with a scene that has often prized hipness over integrity. The Revolt are Adam Bouteloup (lead guitar and backing vocals), Jack Pallot (drums), Tom Videira (vocals and rhythm guitar), and Max Wiltshire (bass and backing vocals).

Friday August 28th – Updates

In asylum, bands, jersey, live lounge, music on August 25, 2009 at 15:58
Brobots poster version 2 designed by Brobot 2

Brobots poster version 2 designed by Brobot 2

Ahead of an eagerly anticipated four-band concert at Live Lounge this Friday, here is some news about the promotion and the latest activities of the bands taking part.

Brobot 2 has created the poster and flyer campaign for the night. As well as two variants of the full colour poster, the second of which is at the top of this post, he has adapted the designs to make two monochrome flyers which will be handed out to humans by the Brobots themselves in King Street, St. Helier, on the afternoon of Friday 28th August. If you’re in town around lunchtime, and you want to find out what it’s like to meet actual Brobots, then keep a look out for them, have a picture taken for posterity, and your life may never be quite the same again.

brobots-flyer-1

Brobots will also be playing at The Camden Head in London on Saturday September 5th, alongside Black Daniel and The Boicotts. Information for Facebook people here: Hotaru Gig 7

Amazing dance-punk superheroes Marvel have recently given their MySpace a spruce-up. It is now possible to download their classic EP Marvel At This Fiasco for free by following a link on their page, and to hear some samples from their latest studio sessions in the form of clips from two songs: Get Scared? and Carry On Reaper. First impressions indicate their talents for lusciously melodic, sonically adventurous pop music continue to develop, while the sheen and punch of these new productions is very impressive. Check them out here: Marvel at MySpace

Crowne continue to demonstrate a seemingly boundless industriousness. Barely three months since the release of their masterful debut EP, Nothing Can Stop Us Now, they have announced that they’re back in the studio working on its follow-up, a new set with the title The Walls Are Coming Down. Visit Crowne at MySpace where photos from their recording sessions can be viewed and a commercial tie-in with Dr. Pepper is suspected such is the proliferation of cans seen littering the studio.

crowne-the-walls-are-coming-down

Progressive, electronic rock band Banquet recently played at Rock In The Park, an outdoor event at Howard Davis Park in St. Helier, and a photographer from the Jersey Evening Post took an amazing photo of Scott and Brett from the band which was published in yesterday’s edition. I hope the band gains rights to the image and then I’ll hopefully be able to reproduce it here.

See you on Friday. The show starts at ten. As we’ve got four bands on the bill the live entertainment starts early so please get down there on time to avoid disappointment.

Jersey Evening Post, August 22nd 2009

In asylum, bands, jersey, live lounge, music, press on August 22, 2009 at 01:28

Art or trash? Poster archives

In asylum, bands, havienda, jersey, music, pesos, posters on August 13, 2009 at 17:38

Stephan of BBC Jersey Introducing recently asked me for my opinions on flyposting and the mooted possibility of permanent sites in St. Helier for display of material by events promoters.

The issue of what place in the town promotional imagery is allowed isn’t only to do with the illegality of putting posters on private property without property owners’ consent. It is a fact that finance companies are invited to display staggeringly large adverts on the sides of public town buildings, the car park in Sand Street for example. Money doesn’t talk, it screams in six foot high lettering at people scurrying from office to sandwich bar. Is that more or less offensive than an A3 poster on a hoarding or bus shelter?

I hope the proposed poster sites are built and not just debated briefly then forgotten, and they’d better be large. If they are situated wisely they could become a focal point for the island’s music scene and a kind of improvised, constantly shifting exhibit. Various poster designers and promoters could use them to engage in a friendly, competitive battle in which visual impact and originality of style will be devices of success.

I am intrigued by opportunities to introduce political, social and poetic significations into the daily lives of town denizens. In my view, a good poster is one that doesn’t just tell you who, when, where, and how much, but also creates a frisson, or disturbance, in contrast to normative social activities. By doing this, ideas of what in culture ought, and ought not, to occur, can be challenged and explored.

Here are a few of my gig posters from the period 2001-’02. They were made with help from friends more skilled in image manipulation than I was at that time. A couple of them contain sexual images. Interestingly, the From Two Cities poster featuring stick figures engaging in an ambiguous act that might be fellatio was one that parish authorities complained about to the club’s manager while the poster for the Dubliminal show, which is much more explicit, was not remarked upon.

from-two-cities-may-31-2002

face-off-march-31-2002

face-off-december-19-2001

dogliminal-august-10-2001

bubblebrain-may-30-2001

dubliminal-march-9-2001

Six years later, with a surer grasp of digital image editing, I made the posters for the short run of Havienda events. Here’s a few I consider to be the best of that bunch.

Jersey Evening Post, August 1st 2009

In bands, jersey, music, press on August 1, 2009 at 01:22

Asylum at Live Lounge, August 28th 2009

In asylum, bands, jersey, live lounge, music on July 29, 2009 at 16:43
Brobots poster version 1 designed by Brobot 2

Brobots poster version 1 designed by Brobot 2

Visit the MySpace profile of Marvel and you’ll find the emphatic statement SOLD OUT just underneath the cover art of Marvel At This Fiasco EP. There is a good reason for this. The songs of their EP, produced in 2008 with Jersey-based sound designer Sam Falle at the controls, make for a riveting set of post-punk pomp pop complete with indelible vocal hooks, scratchy funk guitars, breakbeats and booming synthesizers. In their MySpace blog there is a strong sense of their determination to make the best pop music ever heard and to have extraordinary amounts of fun while doing it.

Marvel

Marvel

Marvel are Nicholas Baxter, Samuel Falle, Todd MacDonald and Dominic Quaeck. Recently they’ve been touring the UK, recording with Jason Wilcock of Stakeout Studios in Hampton, doing more recordings with John Hall in Leeds and London, and in their choice words experiencing a ‘creative ejaculation’ in which they have generated a lot of material that will be pieced together to form a set of apocalyptic anthems for the next decade. ‘Everything is ridiculous,’ they say, and they have a point.

3d-brobots

3D Brobots

The origins of Brobots are shrouded in mystery, mainly due to the limitations of human thought and language. A translated, fragmentary myth, in which an alien deity called the Spacemaster Bass directs them to Earth with a flashing blue beam before disappearing, followed by his many naked women, smoking cigarettes, seems only to further obscure the lineage of this most enigmatic of all acts to have worked with Asylum.

Brobots is a duo, Brobot 1 and Brobot 2. They are known to be part of a collective that includes DJ Suc Mei Kock and king Kills. They play instruments that cease to function on this planet so they have modified Earth instruments such as keyboards and guitar to create equivalent sounds. While what is produced may be disorienting to human ears it allows an understanding of the music of their alien culture. This is similar to what happened when African Americans took the instruments of the Western orchestra, with its hierarchical structural traditions and the supremacy of the score, and made something non-hierarchical and distinctly free with them, only with space-travelling robots high on helium.

Banquet - Photo by Jonny The Large

Banquet - Photo by Jonny The Large

Banquet, who are Brett Muldoon (vocals and guitar), Chris Mousdale (guitar, synths, loops and vocals), Paul Holt (drums, percussion and vocals), and Scott Kean (bass), have been writing and arranging at a furious pace these last few months. With the file sharing technology of SoundCloud they have been previewing fascinatingly raw works-in-progress from recent sessions. I don’t know how they feel about such experimental material being made public, but it is certainly an interesting insight into the practices of one of the most adept synthesists of computer audio and live performance ever to be heard in the Channel Islands, so here, have a voyeuristic listen: soundcloud.com/banquet

Chris of Banquet has a musical alter ego, Electrolite, with which he deftly explores abstract electronica, random shattered beats and instrumental, minimalist gospel and blues. Electrolite’s sublime music is worth hearing to understand the electronic impulses at Banquet’s heart stripped to the pristine bone.

Banquet are one of several Asylum-affiliated bands who have keenly embraced the networking possibilities of Twitter. The band’s activities on that site are a mix of music tech notes, rehearsal diary and links for interesting new releases by some great artists. Follow them: twitter.com/banquetmusic

Crowne

Crowne

Crowne are Rory Thun (vocals and guitar), Mirek Lenart (bass), Marcin Lach (drums), James Underwood (guitar and organ), and Christian Dellacher (strings and keyboards). To experience Crowne live on stage is to witness a masterclass in musical grace. Their performance at Live Lounge a few months ago, supporting The Light Streams, was one of the decisive peaks of the Asylum series to date. They’ve just released a CD, Nothing Can Stop Us Now, which contains five songs of immaculate, emotionally epic quality. It will be the first record from an ever-growing stack of discs on my desk that I’ll be reviewing in detail for this blog in the coming weeks.

James of Crowne has also produced some fine recordings as Mystery James. His solo works make up a body of cracked, murky, furtive research into instrumental hip hop and song with the voice inscrutably woven in and out of strange textural surroundings; at times delicately pretty and at others obsessively incomplete and unstable. It’s an absorbing set and a great way to examine one fifth of Crowne’s eclectic, yet profoundly complete, musical identity.

%d bloggers like this: