Thursday, November 17, 2016

NASTY RUMOURS - Powerpop punk rock in Petersham!

NASTY RUMOURS
Bald Faced Stag Hotel, Petersham, Sydney
Monday 20 October 2016
Review by Derek J. Huckel

Live

NASTY RUMOURS were great to witness on a Monday night in downtown Petersham, Sydney.

This four piece powerpop-influenced punk rock from Switzerland gave their all to this sadly teeny crowd, consisting of the two support bands and a few friends  - so it seemed (well it was a Monday night) - and fed the energy they had to the crowd who in turn were starting to give some back. Some bands feed off the crowd for energy for their gig but NASTY RUMOURS were one of those wunder kind that are the other way round, natural oerformers.

These Bernians, that's Bern, Switzerland, not Mel-bern (sic) played in the vein of the BUZZCOCKS, RAMONES, THE VAPORS, and SWINGIN' UTTERS and did it very well indeed, making it seamlessly their own and not looking like a bad rip-off of the style.

Among the tunes in their set were, All AloneBecause Of You, a great cover of THE VICTIMS Television AddictGirl Dressed In Black, and the clap-along I Need You!

Sadly I missed the support bands DIRTBAG and SALTY TENDERS but they need a mention for supporting this great band, and on a Monday night too.

Merch

I bought their split 7" single EP with the NUMBSKULLS from Adelaide, Australia, and both sides - four songs in total - totally rip!! 

The 'Nasty  side' belongs to Nasty Rumours which contains buzz saw sugar pop tale of love no more in Because Of You and the addictive Under Your Spell. And on the flip side - the 'Numb side' - the Numbskulls play Brain Freeze, and the total ear worm Car Park Pot, its dark and you might even think it smells good. 


You'll have this platter on constant rotation for a while (or the downloaded version on repeat), and in your head for some time!

Check them out... 

To learn more about them and check out their tunes fer yerself (sic)... 

- Check out the more about them on the Nasty Rumours Facebook page

- Check out their music on the Nasty Rumours bandcamp page.



NASTY RUMOURS - WANNA BE ON TOP live at N.B.N.N. Festival


Thursday, November 3, 2016

Review of Roundtable, Hawkmoth, Summonus, DAWN, & Netherhell - Sydney, 29 October 2016



Roundtable, Hawkmoth, Summonus, DAWN, Netherhell

The Factory Floor, @Marrickville, Sydney

Saturday, 29th October 2016

Review by Derek J. Huckel



Roundtable were hitting Sydney for the first time, on their second date up from Melbourne. They were planning to get Medieval on our asses, literally, with their Medieval brand of stoner doom. Their concept album Dread Marches Under Bloodied Regalia, reviewed is said to be visceral in its use of mythology. They caught my interest only a weeks back and I was looking forward to seeing what they were like live as I like similar bands like Boltthrower, who create worlds, fact or fictional, landscapes and emotion.

First up were Netherhell. This was two guys, drummer and guitarist, dooming out. They sounded great and if more people were here, I’m sure a pit might have started to go off. Plenty of the present people here loved it, dutifully nodding heads.

DAWN
DAWN were great as a support act, they seemed to have some sound technicality problems but creating a hypnotic wall of sound was their aim and were doing well. The space sound effect background in the first song was super cool. The Halloween theatrics were very good and welcomed, with the corpse bride guitarist, candy striped drummer, and other gothic gals. In their genesis, with some more volume, I'm sure DAWN will rule more.

The Game kicked off the Summonus set. The Journey was third with its brooding slow burn intro, its sludgy bass and guitars. They kick in with the opposite of a breakdown, the tight riffs building up with the stage prowling vocalists’ menacing growl vocals, and drums, all building – until a grind madness ensues! A killer rendition of Burning Times closed their set ‘Strike a match, burn it down, burn it downnn...’ Sublime.

Hawkmoth were up next - a band I'd been wanting to see as I’d seen their name on gigs happenning in Melbourne for some time. They took those present on a ride, from periods of ambience to big heavy riffs that were effect-laden. There was lots of craft here, but I was left not engaged while many loved their tunes. 

Meaty and visceral is Roundtable. The drumming initially wasn’t heavy, folk-like but it provides atmosphere, an earth for the guitars & bass to build and layer, to create the kingdom of olde on. Corpulent Warlord did harken back, the modern take was made to sound well and tales of Arthurian time regaling. The bands were running late so sadly Roundtable’s time was to be cut severely, only having time for three tales. But they played on. Their last two tunes, including Abarath Pass, were more meaty and heavy. Vocalist Rhys Walmsley’s voice is suited for their tunes, sounding like a throaty bearded knight but isn’t, not in person

The encore Encircling Demons was mesmerising, unusual for a closing number but it was a winner!

Roundtable manage to take several styles and merge them into stoner/doom, folk and prog rock, just in the right portions and make it sound brutally honest and somehow proper.

DAWN
DAWN

DAWN

DAWN
Summonus

DAWN


Hawkmoth
Hawkmoth
    

Hawkmoth

 Hawkmoth

Roundtable
Roundtable
Roundtable

 
Roundtable

Their music and profile:





Netherhell

Saturday, October 1, 2016

Review: Acid King (USA) - 2016 Doomsday Festival

Acid King (USA), Isaiah Mitchell (Earthless) with Seedy Jeezus, Los Hombres Del Diablo - 2016 Doomsday Festival
Newtown Social Club
Friday 30 September 2016


Isaiah Mitchell (Earthless) with Seedy Jeezus, and Los Hombres Del Diablo had gone down well with the punters by all reports – details are coming so stay tuned.

The band room was comfortably full and the crowd was eagerly awaiting the arrival of Acid King… As soon as the hit they stage, the crowd was in tune and swaying with their music. Like a Jodorowsky movie, Acid King are a stoned experience you can have while straight. Their music takes you away to a new world, an experience. The aural world Acid King create envelopes you like Alice in Wonderland, or the Matrix. Take the blue pill, or red one (perhaps both??) and you’ll be transported. Each tune was nearly ten minutes so you had time to experience their world.

The backdrop of the images and film footage of outer space, burning buildings, blurred landscapes, and burning planets further takes the sub bass sounds deeper into your psyche to fuck you up.

These scene veterans were fresh off a bunch of US gigs and the three day Psycho Las Vegas before coming to Australia, you could see and feel that the their tunes are well honed and crafted, played and lived in. Singer Lori’s vocal is a wailful call, like a gently mournful but ominous sounding wind which you might hear coming through the trees in the wilderness. She simultaneously makes her guitar gently mournfully weep, and espouse other evocative sounds. Bassist Mark Lamb looks like he’s seeking redemption, or enlightenment, as he wrings his instrument, sweating and plays a sonic sound as though it’s a torture rack, one’s stretched out on, and the screws are tightened and wound tauter as their opus' progress. Joey Osbourne pounds his drum in a hypnotic measured heavy rhythm, beating them strategically, to create these aural dreams (or nightmares to some). Mind expansion was in full effect!

Amongst the five or six tracks they played tonight were 'Red River' off Middle of Nowhere… LP, and their encore was ‘Sunshine and Sorrow’ from III

I was new to the band, and upon witnessing their mostly instrumental faire proves a dose worthy taking, for the mind and body. The near tribal pounding, drawn out and thought out tunes giving one time to sup them up and savour them fully. It’s worth taking the trip.



*********
They are playing tonight, Saturday 1st October, in the Northcote Social Club and the last show of this tour in Australia is tomorrow night, Sunday 2nd October, in Melbourne at the Cherry Bar. Catch them if you

Acid King 'Red River'

Wednesday, May 18, 2016

Review: Hostile Objects "Negative Space"

Hostile Objects
Negative Space
Arrest Records
Release Date: 6 June 2016
Review by Derek J. Huckel
After three super tight EP’s under their belts and a split single with fellow Sydney siders The F*ck Outs (RIP), Hostile Objects have submitted a scorching opus by the name of Negative Space. The intensity and urgency of their live show has been accurately captured on this album. Vocalist, Rod Hunt’s raspy,Accused-like splatter vocals leave you battered and broken … but smiling.
Gloom, has a doomy Sabbath-type opening riff that soon halts and suddenly ratchets up several notches. It proceeds to wring you out like a roller coaster ride, piling you incessantly through highs and lows and has some cool driving breakdowns to top it off. The title track, Negative Space, pulls it back a gear, but loses none of the feverish pace. Hunt sings of the sad hostility that permeates society, your workplace, and the street, questioning why does it even exist?
This album is the culmination of the band pulling together their experience through past and existing bands, EP recordings and the multitude of live shows they’ve played. It nicely blends their influences of Poison IdeaCircle Jerks and beyond into their own aural nightmare.

Friday, March 11, 2016

Buzzcocks + HITS + White Dog - 11 March 2016

The Buzzcocks + HITS + White Dog
The Factory Theatre, Sydney
Friday 11 March 2016

Upon walking in we caught the second half of the set of Sydney's White Dog. Their tunes were like an amalgam  of early Black Flag and OFF. They were controlled chaos. I'd look forward to catching them again. The drummer and singer were the necessary unhinged components of this group whilst the buttoned shirted guitarist and bassist Stodden their stoic ground.

HITS from BrisVegas (Brisbane) were the filthy dose of rock the night needed. It upped the ante with swagger, and some filthy attitude - in a good way of course.  The five piece have been around for a few years but this is only my second encounter and I was excited for it. They're kind of like an 80's scuzzy rock. The singer is a great frontman, a good dude who'll offer you a kiss if in range, while chat about Bunnings. The two women well n truly kick out the jams, and the drummer and guitarist give what for too. Bitter and Twisted, and Take yer Pills were amongst HITS tunes tonight

The tension was building rapidly for the Buzzcocks. Due on in 15 minutes, they took 40 minutes. Later it was found out they had equipment difficulties. Not rockstar-itis as some at the time Boredom kicked off their set tonight. All their pop punk hits were here for this sold out crowd on the bands 40th Anniversary tour - Autonomy, How Could You Ever, Noise Annoys, Ever Fallen In Love... And of course Orgasm Addict!! The band were 'tight as'  tonight! ...Apart from Steve Diggle's - resplendent (sic) in coloured jeans and pastel top - amp malfunctioning about four tunes from the end. He was loving the crowd, 'surfing' his guitar, and doing Pete Townshend windmills whenever he could, and Pete Shelleys laconic wit was as dry as ever per his songs.  On What Do I Get, ironically, you could hear him in his northern dry wit and Manc accent mumble 'not a bloody amp for sure'.

It was a great night. All bands fitted the bill well together and were on their A-game. The crowd left the Factory happily buzzing tonight.