Live show reports / comments

Started by FreakAnimalFinland, July 25, 2011, 09:35:36 AM

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k.p.g

Played a show last Friday in New York City at Fringe Records with Jazzhand, Max Julian Eastman & Jackson Kneath.  It was a great time!  A small but dedicated crowd came in together to witness some serious sounds at play...

Jackson Kneath, one of the newer New York transplants, kicked the show off.  The state of New York noise is odd at this point.  Hospital is in its own stratosphere, even if New York IS its backdrop.  The likes of Dead Gods are elder statesmen by now.  What they did to make NYC relevant to the live circuit should not be understated, but they are focusing mainly on showcases with their wheelhouse of artists right now.  Ende Tymes is certainly a fest that happens.  But what really defines New York currently?  Is there really a "scene?"  I can't see it if there is, but I will say that there are those who operate outside any sort of community structure doing great things with noise.  Kneath is one of these people.  Tasteful arrangement of tape, junk and mixer feedback every time I see him!  This time around, some percussive elements began to creep up.  Perhaps since shedding the YU//F persona, new elements will be appearing in future works?  Good stuff either way, here is a name you should keep your eyes peeled for.

Max went for the dark and harsh this time around, as opposed to more recent ventures into sound collage and absurdity.  Do not be mistaken, this is just some downer, good-time Americanoise on display.  Anyone who sees him in Europe next week will surely be in for a treat!  Fists will be pumping!

Jazzhand closed things out with a sound tour through Finnish scenery, captured entirely within tape loops and personal field recordings.  Despite using a lot of borrowed gear, Jakko was still able to carve out his distinctive sound for an audience delighted to hear.  Perhaps not as harsh as any of the sets that preceded it, but a great reminder that restraint and introspection can be just as powerful as a row of pedals being smashed at 100mph.  Great stuff.  Can't wait to see the man in his home territory shortly...
Dead Door Unit
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k.p.g

I have been busy since returning from Europe, but my plan has always been to write some "daily thoughts" of each gig down here after my return.  Still being busy though, I am dividing things up show by show.  So, we start with Helsinki Gray Ritual --

Atrophist opened up Helsinki show with a violent and murky set.  Pretty appropriate, as I had a rather violent and murky day post-binge drink the night before.  Hah.  But back to the noise -- for as much harsh noise as there was in this set, the artist also had some sort of sounds that reminded me of psycho crackhead babble underneath.  It really brought out the mind of a painfully eroding from the inside.  Where we played was this sort of dingy tire shop that Janne found, and I think that this sound was very appropriate for the face.  I could imagine the faces and places that inspire this stuff, and somewhere like this is fitting for it.

Absolute Key went for some very entertaining, loop-based work.  Big metal bang 'n clang was presented as the backdrop for synth noise slaughter that had me reminiscing on more "minimal" Merzbow releases like Hybrid Noisebloom at points.  But then suddenly, I hear some vocal loops; chanting perhaps?  Oh yeah, it is!! Bring it on.  This is the kind of material that made me follow the project after a Tribe Tapes release last year.  Set ended with Antti smearing ash on the crowd.  Good Friday indeed.

Vigilantism felt like a series of songs style PE that normally I am not a fan of.  Here, it worked though.  Simplicity beats all, and Vigilantism knew that.  So primal were all the sounds here that when some new element was introduced, it felt like you were getting sucked further into the industrial turmoil.  This was my first time hearing the project too, and I really enjoyed!

Triptych guys tell me before the gig that they enjoy the likes of Bizarre Uproar & Grunt.  It makes sense where they start playing!  Deep synth work pairs with this violent scrap metal sound to add as a backdrop to the vocal anger.  Similar to the DDU set of this night, I felt like Triptych would be getting their feet wet with this gig, and were maybe not performing at full power.  The skeleton of the set was there, but it is just a matter of feeling comfortable/tour nerves.  Still, they still managed to put together a very good set from it!

Not much to say on the personal front of performances.  I will leave that to the audiences who saw the Dead Door sets to decide.  All I know is that next time, I will have a better power supply for all equipment.  Hah!

Turku thoughts tomorrow.
Dead Door Unit
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etc.

Minus1

Quote from: k.p.g on April 20, 2026, 06:25:03 PMI have been busy since returning from Europe, but my plan has always been to write some "daily thoughts" of each gig down here after my return.  Still being busy though, I am dividing things up show by show.  So, we start with Helsinki Gray Ritual --

Atrophist opened up Helsinki show with a violent and murky set.  Pretty appropriate, as I had a rather violent and murky day post-binge drink the night before.  Hah.  But back to the noise -- for as much harsh noise as there was in this set, the artist also had some sort of sounds that reminded me of psycho crackhead babble underneath.  It really brought out the mind of a painfully eroding from the inside.  Where we played was this sort of dingy tire shop that Janne found, and I think that this sound was very appropriate for the face.  I could imagine the faces and places that inspire this stuff, and somewhere like this is fitting for it.

Absolute Key went for some very entertaining, loop-based work.  Big metal bang 'n clang was presented as the backdrop for synth noise slaughter that had me reminiscing on more "minimal" Merzbow releases like Hybrid Noisebloom at points.  But then suddenly, I hear some vocal loops; chanting perhaps?  Oh yeah, it is!! Bring it on.  This is the kind of material that made me follow the project after a Tribe Tapes release last year.  Set ended with Antti smearing ash on the crowd.  Good Friday indeed.

Vigilantism felt like a series of songs style PE that normally I am not a fan of.  Here, it worked though.  Simplicity beats all, and Vigilantism knew that.  So primal were all the sounds here that when some new element was introduced, it felt like you were getting sucked further into the industrial turmoil.  This was my first time hearing the project too, and I really enjoyed!

Triptych guys tell me before the gig that they enjoy the likes of Bizarre Uproar & Grunt.  It makes sense where they start playing!  Deep synth work pairs with this violent scrap metal sound to add as a backdrop to the vocal anger.  Similar to the DDU set of this night, I felt like Triptych would be getting their feet wet with this gig, and were maybe not performing at full power.  The skeleton of the set was there, but it is just a matter of feeling comfortable/tour nerves.  Still, they still managed to put together a very good set from it!

Not much to say on the personal front of performances.  I will leave that to the audiences who saw the Dead Door sets to decide.  All I know is that next time, I will have a better power supply for all equipment.  Hah!

Turku thoughts tomorrow.

Dude! How come your PS was wrong?

😂

I love your posts / reviews. I read all. I rarely respond / comment. But...thanks!
Give Me CDs Or Give Me Death.

k.p.g

Continuing into today with Euro diary, this time in Turku, Finland... If you have heard the Noisecast report, I doubt I will offer much different of insight than they did.  Still, we must press forward!

Rautakymi kicks off the evening with a reckless set after the artists enjoyed some surprisingly good pizza.  Who would have thought the Finns make good pizza?  Hah.  Sorry, I needed to put that in somewhere, but back to noise!
What I mean by reckless is that the artist just had an air of "fuck you, I do what I want" attitude to his demeanor.  Playing with the Nintendo 3DS, belting out these manic yells, swigging from some of the nastiest, bottom of the shelf vodka I have ever had (and if you are reading this, Rautakymi, I salute you for putting down as much as you did).  It was all pretty glorious.  Reminded me of more psychedelic moments of Masonna.  As I understand, previous performances and recordings contain more use of junk or broken tape.  If this is new direction for the project, I say bring it on.

Jazzhand played next.  Having experienced his set in New York City previously, I had some idea of what to expect.  The difference here though is that the man felt totally in control of his rig the entire time.  No issues of borrowed gear or anything here.  I watched from the side of the stage with awe as the confidence in material permeated into the audience.  Jazzhand wrapped the audience in a blanket of cold embrace through his tape sound, bringing us for a march through the Finnish countryside.  At the end, Jaakko stood up with wool socks in hand, pumping his free fist in defiance of those who oppose the sock.  Hah!  Nice.  I just learned about all that nonsense with the socks, and if Jazzhand is really wool sock noise, then I guess I am a fan of wool sock noise.  Oh well!  Great set.

Invagination started his set off with a difficult battle between the PA monitors and intended sounds he aimed for.  I saw some of the junk table start falling onto the ground, but knew that salvaging the set was possible.  My instinct was right; after 5 minutes, the rest of the set took off without an issue.  Searing harsh junk battles against the mutant mixer feedback and synth rays to produce a wild palette of psychedelic bliss.  I was curious to see how this project would progress after the first disc, as it seemed like it was just a pretty blatant Merzbow-worship deal. 

"Ah yes, the disc art looks like the Merzbow disc.  Perhaps a fun jam session."

Well I'll be damned.  I see this project has some staying power now.  The set was a great deal of fun overall.  My personal hope is that it maybe inverts its formula to make it a primarily junk-heavy project with some peppering of synths overtop. 

Triptych were far more dialed in on this night than night 1 in Helsinki.  Technical difficulties and pacing were figured out.  The group delivered a pretty commanding set over the audience, which was a good thing to see before I had to step up onstage.  I felt like we both had our trial by fire the night before, so rounding it out on night 2 seemed to be the move.  While the show in Tampere would bring about my favorite Triptych performance, it is hard to deny that this night was probably the closest to what the project's mission statement is.  Good stuff.

Similar to the Triptych crew, I feel like Turku proved to be the most "proficient" set for Dead Door Unit.  Sound was firing on all fronts, the firemans helmet had me feeling a bit more confident than usual and the added surprise of tons of glass and metal junk proved to make the improv portion a violent one.  The microphone I traveled over with ended up being busted, so it was a relief that Mr. Umpio was there with some of his contact mics, and was looking to settle a trade with me. 

Fun time overall!  The convent I slept in had Easter breakfast the next morning.  I didn't realize how big Easter is over in Finland.  I also didn't realize you guys eat cake that looks like poop for it.  I've loved showing that photo to people back home.  Hah!
Dead Door Unit
French Market Press
etc.

k.p.g

Today's entry is regarding the Tampere show.  I feel as though this was the most aggressive and ambitious show from all performers on this run of Finland.

Opening set came courtesy of Monocyclocybercilia.  Debut set of the project, and it sounds like a seasoned veteran at play.  When first hearing the project's name, I thought "is it a project about a motorcycle?  Very interesting."  Of course, that was me misreading the title, but portions of this set do remind me of revving one up!  While harsh cut-up portions were great deals fun, I enjoyed those quieter, mechanical moments the most.  All fantastic, and probably the best artist I saw on this tour.  I think his energy was very infectious too, as performers after this point started to feel more unhinged than on previous nights.

Absolute Key set tonight had less Merz-style electronics, but plenty in the way of metal destruction to lash onto.  Antti bashed his scrap with a ferocity that was not felt quite the same in Helsinki.  As I watch this set, I found myself taking into account how awesome the Finns all are at this scrap abuse style.  You guys have a knack for it, undoubtedly!  So many variations on a theme too.
Vocal loops used tonight were more aggressive than in Helsinki too. The better of the two Absolute Key sets I saw this weekend.  Perhaps a homefield advantage?

Triptych, as I stated yesterday, put on their best set of the Finnish shows on here.  While previous nights clearly had a "build up, come down" structure, tonight was just all caution thrown to the wind.  Angry scrap metal and vocals roared.  I think the synth use was pretty minimal, which is more than fine to me.  Sometimes, all you need is just the primal sound like this to cut through.  Love these crazy guys, great set.

Dead Door Unit set came was probably the most unconventional thing I have done to date.  Inspired by the extremities of all performers that night, I decided to also be extreme...ly unentertaining. 
Jokes were tossed around before my set that I had an hour to play and that maybe I should try my spoken word routine.  Ok - very well - let's do both!  Played for about 50 minutes, which comprised of spoken word, rude n crude harsh noise, and then a breakdown of all gear in near silence, as tapes played from unamplified Walkman players.  Cleaning up beer cans I had thrown around were also in play.  I do not like to talk too much about my own performances, but I must speak on this one as a great example of the Finnish noise heads being patient and observant with what sets they are given.  In America, a set like this might be met with some walk-outs; not in Tampere though.  Appreciate that.  Fun times. 

And with that, Finland was over.  What a wonderful place for noise to thrive.
Dead Door Unit
French Market Press
etc.

Heppakirjat

Quote from: k.p.g on Today at 04:52:42 PMIn America, a set like this might be met with some walk-outs; not in Tampere though.

I loved your set at Pethaus. Both the tape degeneracy and performance. You don't really get sets like this in Finland, even though most people always seem to enjoy the more performative or unconventional stuff very much!