Saturday, 20 February 2010

Live review: Bronto Skylift

Bronto Skylift

Wednesday 17 February 2010
Nice'n'Sleazy, Glasgow


Spoiling the end of a story is a bad thing right? Like if you’re about to watch a film and some ‘friend’ says, "It’s amazing when the giant octopus kills the mega shark." It makes you want to kick them a little bit.

Well if the same rule applies to a gig review then I’m about to do a bad thing.

Bronto SkyliftBronto Skylift finish their midweek noisefest at Sleazy's by taking things down jazz street and picking up a trumpeter on the way.

Their drummer replaces his usual machine gun snare hits with clever flicks of the wrist and light cymbal taps, giving their final song a completely different sound while retaining the power and emotion of the rest of the set.

And somehow it avoids being gimmicky. If anything it shows that the band are a little more diverse than their reputation would have you believe; they can totally jam.

The rest of the set is tight and loud with the band displaying their Lightning Bolt credentials to full effect, sandblasting away at a wall of sound that has the crowd eager for more. Yet on tracks like 'Lioness' and 'Wolf' a real pop element is audible through the decibels: Lightning Bolt’s jolly little brother, if you will.

As a band they’re definitely a little self indulgent, with thrashing guitars and outrageously heavy drumming that’s not to everyone’s taste. But there’s melody and groove at the heart of their songs, and a passion in their delivery that would put most bands to shame.

I leave the gig totally sure that they’re my favourite double act around at the moment (followed closely by Jay Z and Alicia Keys of course).

Words: Aimi Gold
Photos: Martyn Tramaine


Bronto Skylift play The 13th Note, Glasgow on the 19 Feb and Classic Grand, Glasgow on 24 Feb.

Bronto Skylift

Bronto Skylift

Bronto Skylift

Labels: , ,

Bookmark and Share
0 Comments

Friday, 12 February 2010

Radar recommends: 13 - 19 Feb

Unicorn Kid
[Unicorn Kid: giddy techno at Tut's on Tuesday. Photo: Jane Barlow]

Plan your gig-going with our pick of the week's finest live music nights...

The best...

Trampoline: Kid Canaveral, Babygod, Cancel the Astronauts
Saturday @ Wee Red Bar, Edinburgh / 7pm / £5 (£3)
Trampoline is fast becoming one of the capital's most reliable live music nights. See this month's delectable indie-pop menu, for example, featuring local favourites Kid Canaveral and one of our favourite bands around, Cancel the Astronauts.

Divorce, Bitches
Sunday @ Sneaky Pete's, Edinburgh / £tbc / 7pm
Possibly not the wisest destination for a romantic date on the 14th, but anyone who wants to celebrate their singledom in truly anarchic fashion should check out Glasgow nae-wavers Divorce, here with London duo Bitches. Bitchin.
Also playing The 13th Note, Glasgow on Saturday.

Unicorn Kid
Tuesday @ King Tuts, Glasgow / 8.30pm / £7
Signed just this week to Ministry of Sound, it’s unlikely this Edinburgh wunderkind will be playing venues of this size much longer.

Bronto Skylift, Ex Wives, Woodenbox with a Fistful of Fivers
Wednesday @ Nice’n’Sleazys, Glasgow /10pm / £4
Two-piece noise act Bronto Skylift headline this fundraiser for Glasgow art school students that includes DJ sets from Optimo’s Twitch and Men and Machines. Call in sick to work/uni/life now.

Yeasayer
Wednesday @ Oran Mor, Glasgow / 7pm / £10
Touring their new, poppier album Odd Blood, these Baltimore-via-Brooklyn boys hit Glasgow mid-week.

Panda Su, Julia and the Doogans, Sophie's Pigeons
Wednesday @ Brel, Glasgow / 7pm / £4
A night of female-fronted talent in the form of UtR-touted Panda and Julia, plus the intriguingly titled Sophie's Pigeons.
Panda Su and Sophie's Pigeons also play Duke's Corner, Dundee on Tuesday.


The rest...



Words: Aimi Gold, Nick Mitchell

What have we missed? Tell us below, or add it to the calendar by emailing utr.scotsman@gmail.com

Labels: , , , , , , , , , ,

Bookmark and Share
0 Comments

Thursday, 31 December 2009

Ryan Drever: My band of 2009

Bronto SkyliftBronto Skylift, who we first featured in the run-up to their T in the Park show, give rock fans everywhere hope for the future of their genre, argues Ryan Drever...


I've been lucky enough to worm my way into an unholy number of gigs this year, and found myself awestruck and frustrated by the vast number of kick-ass Scottish acts that have previously escaped my attention. Rather than punish myself for being so far off the ball I'm playing an entirely different sport: I took it upon myself to make up for lost time.

In my valiant quest I saw so many great bands that truly blew my mind that it would be difficult to pick just one, but in terms of the most fun I had and perhaps the most ridiculously over the top show I've had the privilege to be a part of, I would have to nominate Bronto Skylift.

Tearing up stage after stage from festivals to caravans, sometimes playing Glasgow three or four times in the same week and nearly always ending up on the floor, in the crowd or on the tables, Bronto spent 2009 scaring some, charming others and deafening most with their brilliant, pounding noise.

It's perhaps not always the easiest thing to listen to on record - though the band's EP The Bearded Fish and The Jackalope gets a good step closer - but there is no denying the draw of the band's audacious live presence and home-spun artwork.

Not to be confused with a two man novelty act, this pair possess enough chops to charm (or rather, melt) the ears off anybody yet to be convinced. Well, it worked for me.

Bronto Skylift: Danny Glover Isn't Dead


Bronto Skylift: Eagle Falcon

Labels: , ,

Bookmark and Share
0 Comments

Friday, 6 November 2009

Radar Recommends: 7 - 13 Nov

Japandroids
[Japandroids: heating up Edinburgh on Friday]

Avid readers of this blog may be confused. Yes, this is Radar Recommends, but no, it isn't Sunday. Better than that, it's Friday evening, and you still have the whole weekend ahead of you. Hurrah.

To make things clear, we've moved the gig guide forward as a trial this week. We'll see if it likes its Friday slot enough to lay down a deposit and move in.

Aberdeen
sound festival
Until 22 Nov @ various venues
This festival aims to 'broaden your musical horizons'. A grand ambition, if it works.

Meursault, Holy Folks, Debutant
Monday @ The Tunnels / 8pm / £5
Edinburgh's Meursault mix up delicate banjos and searing beats to great effect. But you knew that.

Broken Records
Wednesday @ Café Drummonds / 8pm / £8.50
Earnest love songs and Balkan-folk gestures from these Edinburgh lads done good.
Also playing: Perth on Tuesday, Inverness on Thursday and Glasgow on Sunday.

Dananananaykroyd
Thursday @ The Tunnels / 8pm / £tbc
Are you man enough for the 'wall of cuddles'? Find out at one of Dana's typically anarchic shows.
Also playing The Ironworks, Inverness on Friday


Edinburgh
The Go Away Birds, Adam Stafford & Louise Hendry
Saturday @ Henry's Cellar Bar / 7.30pm / £tbc
Side projects ahoy! Catherine Ireton, also one half of God Help the Girl, joins up with Zoey Van Goey guitarist Michael John McCarthy. And you might know Adam Stafford from his YiFi exploits.
Also playing Brel, Glasgow on Sunday

Citizens, Hosemox, Munchkins
Sunday @ Henry's Cellar Bar / 8pm / £4
We bigged up Citizens last month, so check out their post-hardcore racket in this intimate, potentially deafening setting.

The Proclaimers
Tuesday & Wednesday @ Usher Hall / 7.30pm / £22.50-25
What kind of a Scottish music blog would we be if we didn't mention Fife's finest musical twins? I ask you.
Also playing Aberdeen on Saturday, Perth on Monday and Glasgow on Friday

The Specials
Thursday @ Corn Exchange / 7pm / £32.50
Another group of veterans that definitely ain't Scottish. Priced at, cough, £32 quid, this is probably one for the die-hards.

Cuddly Shark
Wednesday @ Henry's Cellar Bar / 8pm / £4
90s slacker rock from this Glasgow trio.

The Graham Coxon Power Acoustic Ensemble
Thursday @ The Queen's Hall / 7.30pm / £16.50
Blur guitarist goes all mellow on us, with help from Robyn Hitchcock and chums.

**UtR's gig of the week**
This is Music: Japandroids, Super Adventure Club, Bronto Skylift
Friday @ Sneaky Pete's / 8pm - 3am / £3 (members free after midnight)
The monthly gig/club regulars have pulled out a corker of a line-up this time, with Vancouver duo Japandroids leading the charge.

Glasgow
Take a Worm for a Walk Week, Hey Enemy, The Ballad of Mable Wong
Saturday @ Nice'n'Sleazy / 8.30pm / £tbc
Love metal riffs and don't mind having your personal space invaded? Take a Worm are the delicious noise you're looking for. And they have a great name.

Action Group
Sunday @ The 13th Note / 9pm / £4
Synth, keys and violin all thrown together - in a funky pop way, it works.

Meursault, Barn Owl, Brother Louis Collective, Olympic Swimmers
Tuesday @ The 13th Note / 9pm / £tbc
How nice! Not one nor two nor three but four bands who've been featured on UtR all playing together. And a chance to hear Meursault's new Nothing Broke EP live too.

Jay Reatard, Paper Planes
Wednesday @ King Tuts / 8.30pm / £8
UtR-tipped Paper Planes pick up a sweet support slot with the scruffy punk from Tennessee.

Make Love, The Ballad of Mabel Wong, Lyons, Monoganon, Mr Peppermint, Fox Gut Daata
Thursday @ Stereo / 8pm / £6
Monoganon is the fantastic John B McKenna playing tunes with some pals - and the rest of this night is a lovely mix of acousticy-to-noisy electro goodness.

A Place to Bury Strangers, Japandroids
Thursday @ Captain's Rest / 8pm / £6
Total sonic annihilation promised from New Yorkers APtBS, plus two-piece fuzz fun from Japandroids.

The Cave featuring: Black Rat Death Squad, Russell and the Wolves, Suicide Party
Friday @ The Flying Duck / 8.30pm / £5(£4)
Raucous riffs from the theatrical BRDS, kicking off a new garage/surf/punk club for the Duck.

The Fall
Friday and Saturday @ The Ferry / 8pm / £25 (for two nights)
Can you handle two whole nights of Mark E Smith and his latest incarnation of a backing band? Sounds like hell to me - but heaven to plenty.

Words: Elaine Liddle, Nick Mitchell


What have we missed? Tell us below, or add it to our gig guide by emailing utr.scotsman@gmail.com

Labels: , , , , , , , , , ,

Bookmark and Share
1 Comments

Wednesday, 5 August 2009

Our picks for Belladrum Tartan Heart '09

Tartan Heart
[Seating is optional at Belladrum]

With RockNess, T in the Park and Wickerman finally out of the way, the Tartan Heart Festival at the Belladrum Estate near Inverness this weekend is the last major open-air event on the Scottish summer festival calender.

Now in its sixth year, Tartan Heart is a family-friendly alternative to its beer-soaked cousins further south. Not that copious amounts of drinking are by any means ruled out, but segregated 'family' and 'quiet' camping areas and free admission for children under 12 hint at a more relaxed atmosphere.

The music's not half bad either. While big names like Ocean Colour Scene and Toploader might not exactly set pulses racing, there's more than enough Scottish talent across the festival's six stages to make Tartan Heart well worth a weekend jaunt into the Highlands.

Broken RecordsEdinburgh's Broken Records are experiencing something of a second wind of late. An exuberant set at T in the Park last month revealed a band eager to let their scintillating live performances speak for themselves. Definitely one not to miss at the Garden Stage on Friday evening.

Bronto SkyliftTwo-man noise onslaught Bronto Skylift return to their northern homeland to appear on the HAIL Seedlings stage on Friday. What exactly Belladrum will make of their grungey racket remains to be seen but Bronto are indisputably one of the most visceral acts on the live scene at the moment.

Play: Bronto Skylift - Danny Glover Isn't Dead


DananananaykroydDananananaykroyd's legendary 'Wall of Cuddles' should prove a somewhat more enticing propect for those who like things a little less 'rawk' at the Hothouse Stage on Friday night. Despite their "fight pop" stylings, the undeniable feel-good factor surrounding the Glasgow outfit's anarchic live show will lend itself well to the laid-back vibes of Tartan Heart.

Since the time of writing, Dananananaykroyd have announced via Twitter that they have had to cancel their Belladrum appearance due to a stage-diving injury incurred by John Down Under. We wish him a speedy recovery.

parrow and the WorkshopSparrow and the Workshop have the unenviable task of opening the Hothouse Stage for business on Saturday afternoon but the Glasgow-based trio are well up to the task. Sparrow's ethereal, electrified folk rock is just the thing to soothe sore heads after the inevitable excesses of Friday night.

Unicorn KidAlso on Saturday, 17-year-old wunderkind Unicorn Kid, aka Oliver Sabin, brings his 8-bit electronica to the HAIL Seedlings stage. Sabin is something of an anomaly in a music scene dominated by guitar-driven acts of all shades but in a live setting his pulsating synth-pop crashes through genre boundaries in a frenzy of hyperactive euphoria.

Tartan Heart 2009 takes place on Friday 7 and Saturday 8 August at Beauly on the Belladrum Estate in Inverness-shire. Click here for ticket information.

Words: Jodi Mullen

Is this year's line-up good enough to tempt you to Belladrum?

Labels: , , , , , , ,

Bookmark and Share
3 Comments

Saturday, 25 July 2009

Tweet Nothings, feat. Errors, Bronto Skylift, Edwyn Collins

Tweet NothingsSwine flu, golfing grannies, poolside cocktails and Refreshers all crop up in this week's Twitter round-up. It's enough to make you sick...


Errors catch a roadside virus...
@weareerrors: At tebay services. If I didn't have swine flu already then I've just caught it at this granny festival

... while Bronto Skylift drummer has a bout of leprosy...
@brontorawks: has anybody got a new pair of hands for our drummer?

Boycotts take a lead from Talking Heads and stop making sense...
@Boycotts: We're back from tour and all i'm saying is there were no Dolphins with Jetpacks and no-one's arsehole was turned into a footprint x

Edwyn Collins spills the beans on his sporty ancestry...
@EdwynCollins: watching the golf. My Granny won a ladies tournament at Turnberry in the twenties. Yes she did.

Glasvegas are happy to be a rock'n'roll cliché...
@Glasvegas: watching four sexy spanish girls play beach volleyball is the perfect pick me up after a night of sinking cocktails and trashing hotel rooms

And Dananananaykroyd live it up with the oldies down under...
@dananananaykroy: Relaxing morning in/by the pool. Same for The Specials. We saw them relaxing by the pool.

Cast of the Capital tweet from the playground...
@castcapital: Love Hearts or Refreshers? I want a serious answer.

Yahweh get into the Pagan spirit at Wickerman...
@Yahwehtheband: HEAAAAAATHENSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS

And Epic 26 reveal their tasteful reading habits...
@Epic26: @under_the_radar, great links to great bands and interesting reading. Follow follow...

Words: Nick Mitchell (and Twitter)

Spotted any other tweeting gems we've missed out on? Share your favourite weekly tweets with us below...

Labels: , , , , , , , , ,

Bookmark and Share
0 Comments

Tuesday, 14 July 2009

T in the Park review: Saturday

Broken Records
[Broken Records on stage at T. Picture: Su Anderson]

The Radar-mobile raced up the M90 on Saturday morning (without breaking the speed limit, officer) to scope out the best new music at T in the Park this year. Already a bit miffed that we'd missed sets by Ming Ming & the Ching Chings and Dead Boy Robotics the previous night, we were determined to make amends over the two days by going where the tabloid hacks fear to tread. And what a day Saturday turned out to be ...


The French Quarter
T Break Stage, 1.40pm

With rumours that the band had broken up floating around Balado earlier in the day, it's both a pleasure and a relief to see Stirling's The French Quarter take to the stage.

Awash in swathes of blue light and shimmering guitars, the band play a sublime set, taking the emergent song structures of post-rock and adding melancholic vocals and elaborate layers of instrumentation, from keyboards to xylophones. The brave decision to play new material, recorded with members of Mogwai, whets appetites for what will surely be great things to come from the band.

The majestic 'Time to Leave' closes the set, its ethereal keyboard and slide guitar intro gradually giving way to a steady, pulsating rhythm and leaving no doubt as to why The French Quarter are regarded as one of Scotland's premier unsigned acts. [JM]


Sucioperro
T Break Stage, 2.30pm

Having secured a timeslot clashing with Lady Gaga on the main stage, Sucioperro were always going to prove a draw for punters hungry for substance over spectacle, but the Ayrshire alt rock outfit have surpassed all expectations by packing the T Break tent to capacity.

The band's enthusiasm is somehow surpassed by the crowd's, with a circle pit forming within seconds of the first chord of opener 'Tem V Com' ringing out, in spite of the baking heat. Though somewhat hampered by muddy sound, Sucioperro's eight-song set delivers choice cuts from new album Pain Agency as well as a sprinkling of older material, with penultimate song 'The Final Confessions of Mabel Stark' a particular highlight. [JM]


Unicorn Kid
BBC Introducing Stage, 3.30pm

Just 17, Unicorn Kid (AKA Oliver Sabin) isn’t even old enough to sip the nectar that sponsors the Balado shindig. But that doesn’t stop the electro-bending prodigy kicking up one hell of a storm on the BBC Introducing stage.

Adorning his obligatory lion-shaped headgear, the Leith-born prodigy blurts out reams of Gameboy-inspired bleeps and wonky synth notes to an insatiable contingent of similarly aged hip-flingers. Teasing the crowd into a Haribo-induced frenzy, Sabin struts his hyperactive stuff as if playing to a house party of Skins worshipping teens and not one of the UK’s largest music festivals.

Once the last deranged beat drops into the ether, a sweat-soaked Sabin greets his adoring masses with full moonbeam smile and a triumphant shake of the fist. Perhaps next year he can celebrate with something a little stronger than Orange Juice? [BH]


Young Fathers
BBC Introducing Stage, 5pm

Lauded throughout the blogosphere’s hype-driving microcosm, Edinburgh’s Young Fathers have a right to feel disappointed in the sparse turnout for their TitP showing. Maybe it was a question of scheduling or perhaps their glam-hop fare just didn’t fit with Balado’s alcohol-intense disposition, but as the psychedelically garbed trio took to the stage the polite smattering of applause was telling.

Yet what ensued over the next half-hour was worthy of a more illustrious and appreciative platform. By battling the initial ambivalence with a spate of Outkast-like beats and tongue-knotting rhymes, the band’s party-time ethos rose to the fore; stirring the attention of curious waifs and strays making their way back from the Main Stage

And if their hook-heavy tunes weren’t enough to convince that this is an act on an upward trajectory, their perfectly choreographed dance routines and pistol-quick quips, surely, remove all doubt.

Today’s TitP show might have been lightly-attended, but this time next year Young Fathers should be preparing for much, much bigger things. [BH]


Broken Records
BBC Introducing Stage, 7.45pm

It’s been a tumultuous 18 months for Edinburgh’s Broken Records. After an inaugural baptism of praise, the instrumentally-endowed septet’s debut LP, Until the Earth Begins to Part, was shredded by the sharpened claws of the UK’s music press core.

Champing at the bit to prove they’re more than just a flash in TitP’s airfield-sized pan, the group storm through a set brimming with the same feral intensity that made the early day showings such breathless propositions.

Breakneck renditions of live favourites ‘If the News Makes You Sad...’ and ‘A Good Reason’ fizz the crowd into a sea of flailing limbs and sweaty torsos that verges on utter discord. Thankfully, closing candle-burner ‘Slow Parade’ restores order; uniting punters and band via the glory of heart-struck song.

The slog’s been troubled, but on this performance Broken Records prove they’re more than up to the challenge. [BH]


Bronto Skylift
T Break Stage, 8.20pm

Confounding all logic, Glasgow two-piece noise rockers Bronto Skylift somehow manage to be the loudest band to grace the T Break tent all weekend. On stage, the secrets behind Bronto's massive wall of sound are revealed quickly enough, with frontman Niall Strachan jacking into no less than four amps at the same time and wielding an impressive array of pedals.

It's all too much for some people to take, with a few casualties staggering out clutching their ears as Iain Stewart's snare drum hits reached ear-splitting levels. Those who do stay, however, are rewarded with a breathtaking set and an impromptu jam session with the band, as Strachan takes his guitar into the crowd to close the show, paying no heed to minor details like instrument cables and panicking stewards. [JM]


Trapped in Kansas
T Break Stage, 9.10pm

After only a year in existence, Trapped in Kansas are headlining the T Break stage. That’s no small feat, but could the West Coast band back up their billing? At least they don’t seem nervous, cheekily announcing themselves as The Killers.

Aside from a few sound problems early on, the aplomb with which they take such complex musical wares to the live table casts any doubt aside.

An enthusiastically vocal crowd – most of whom seem to be cheering on guitarist Gregor – obviously appreciate their brand of yearning, icily melodic post-rock, and by the end of set-closer 'The Idiot' they have grown into their headliner status, delivering a set that turns out to be much more killer than filler. [NM]

Words: Billy Hamilton, Jodi Mullen, Nick Mitchell

Our verdict on Sunday will be online later this week...

Labels: , , , , , , ,

Bookmark and Share
0 Comments

Thursday, 9 July 2009

On the radar: Bronto Skylift

Bronto Skylift

Play: Danny Glover Isn't Dead


Rockstars aren't known for having a firm grasp of mathematics. Perhaps that's why, every now and then, one of the simple equations of music fails to balance: to get a bigger sound, you need more musicians, right?

Wrong. Over the last few years, a succession of two-piece acts, from Rhode Island's Lightning Bolt to venerable Norwegian black metal crust punks (no, really) Darkthrone, have defied convention to prove that a drumkit and a single guitar can make all the noise you'll ever need.

Bronto Skylift, Glasgow's own two-pronged noisemongers, are reluctant to shed light on the eldritch mysteries surrounding how such a small ensemble manages to create such a huge racket. "We could never reveal our secrets!" laughs guitarist and vocalist Niall Strachan. "I think it's a combination of Iain hitting the drums really hard and me hitting my guitar really hard and brushing our teeth three times a day!"

Originally hailing from the north - Strachan is from Inverness while drummer Iain Stewart has roots in Orkney - Bronto Skylift formed in Glasgow in early 2007, quickly earning a reputation as energetic live perfomers. Though the band originally featured a bassist, three soon became two, and Strachan and Stewart have carried on as a duo ever since.

The Bronto Skylift sound is difficult to pinpoint, but there's nothing wrong with that, the band say. "The music maybe sounds familiar," says Strachan, sagely, "but at the same time you can't put your finger on it."

Falling somewhere in the nexus between grunge, sludge and noise rock, Bronto's songs are laden with driving, jagged riffs with plenty of opportunity for Stewart to demonstrate his virtuoso drumming skills. A comparison with Lightning Bolt is certainly valid, though Bronto's brand of noise is perhaps a little less chaotic and a bit more focused.

Bronto SkyliftLike a few of UtR's recent favourites, including Hey Vampires and The Whisky Works, Bronto Skylift are full of praise for Glasgow's emerging punk and grunge scene. "There's a great community of bands at the moment, giving each other help and support but all ploughing their own paths," enthuses Strachan, who also acknowledges a musical sea-change in a city previously dominated by indie and acoustic acts. "There seems to be a move away from the twee stuff going about the past few years towards a heavier, more crunchy type of music," he muses.

Summer 2009 is set to be very busy indeed for Bronto Skylift. As well as landing a prestigious Saturday night slot on the T Break stage at T in the Park, the guys will also play at the Wickerman Festival in Dumfries at the end of July and have a spate of other shows lined up across Scotland. They're also recording new material when the opportunity arises and may just be seeking a label to release it on in the near future.

Proving once again that maths and music make for uneasy bedfellows, Bronto Skylift are definitely more than the sum of their parts.

Intrigued? Catch Bronto Skylift live at the following dates:

9 Jul @ Bloc, Glasgow
11 Jul @ T Break Stage, T in the Park
16 Jul @ The Mill (Oran Mor), Glasgow
25 Jul @ Solus Tent, Wickerman Festival, Dundrennan
31 Jul @ Sneaky Pete's, Edinburgh
1 Aug @ Captain's Rest, Glasgow

Play: Eagle Falcon


Words: Jodi Mullen

Would you get in a lift with this band? Discuss...

Labels: , ,

Bookmark and Share
0 Comments

Monday, 1 June 2009

On the radar: Hey Vampires

Hey Vampires

Play: Heartbeats


Reports of punk's demise have been greatly exaggerated. While the genre’s never reclaimed the mainstream notoriety of the late 1970s, a succession of acts have kept the flame burning brightly in the underground. And with bands like Glasgow's Hey Vampires at the forefront of a thriving local scene, it's clear punk is, emphatically, not dead.

Since forming in early 2008, the band have lost no time in getting down to making a name for themselves through good, old fashioned hard work. Within the space of six months they'd established themselves as one of the most energetic acts on the Glasgow live circuit, managing to write and record enough material to release their eponymous debut EP.

Bassist and frontman Chris McGlynn explains the drive behind the band's formidable work ethic: "When we met up, the idea straight away was just to write some songs and get on stage as soon as we could. The whole playing live thing, meeting other people, new friends, finding new music; it's just really appealing to all of us, finding like-minded people who're interested in the same ideas that you are."

Though Hey Vampires label their eclectic brand of noise as 'dancepunk', in truth their sound lies closer to the legendary post-hardcore pioneers that McGlynn acknowledges as the band's main influences. From the mid-1980s, acts like These Arms Are Snakes and Fugazi began to build upon the foundation of hardcore punk, itself a refinement of late-1970s punk, adding extra layers of melody and technical precision to the genre's characteristic speed and fury.

And, while the complexity and creative expression of post-hardcore is all present and correct in Hey Vampires' output, the band loses none of the raw energy that made punk so compelling. Live shows are wonderfully chaotic cauldrons of noise and flailing limbs, as the foursome's enthusiasm inevitably spills over into the crowd.

For Hey Vampires, leading by example from the stage is what it's all about. McGlynn firmly believes the band can "make people realise that they can do it too - pick up an instrument, form a band, book a tour, get a CD out." He adds: "I think that to me is what punk music is all about, that DIY community spirit amongst bands. More than getting famous, getting on MTV Cribs, that's what I'd like to inspire."

And if Glasgow's thriving punk scene is any indication, he may just be on to something. Bronto Skylift, Citizens, United Fruit, Das Filth and Jackie Onassis all share Hey Vampires' DIY ethos, as do the hardened Glaswegian punk fans who brave hail, rain and stale beer to turn out to see these local acts play.

This year has already seen the release of the band's second EP, 'Problems, Solve Yourselves', on Two Tick Records and they recently recorded a live session on the Vic Galloway Show on BBC Radio 1. With a tour of the English east coast lined up in early June, a slew of Scottish shows throughout the summer and rumours of new material being just over the horizon, Hey Vampires look certain to be very busy for quite some time to come.

Words: Jodi Mullen

Play: Why So Forlorn


Did punk ever really die? Did it ever really live? Let us know what you think below...

Labels: , , , , , ,

Bookmark and Share
0 Comments

Sunday, 24 May 2009

Radar recommends: 24 - 30 May

Zoey Van Goey
[Zoey Van Goey: playing The Bowery on Monday]

As sure as a Pope defecates in the woods, the dawning of a new week brings the promise of further ministerial misdemeanours, yet more fall-out from the Pete/Jordan saga and the harrowing realisation that a trip to Stark's Park beckons next season. Oh, and there's a tonne of exquisite gigs across the country to get yer lugs around...

Zoey Van Goey
Mon 25 May, The Bowery, Edinburgh. Doors 7.30pm, £5
Zoey Van Goey create the type of delectable indie-pop ditties a Tigermilk-era Stuart Murdoch would give his corduroy cardigan for. Which is hardly surprising really, given the Belle & Sebasian frontman had a hand in producing the Glasgow-based trio's scrumptious debut single Foxtrot Vandals. Having built up a fervent reputation for their ebullient live shows, The Bowery's warren-like cove is the perfect setting for Zoey Van Goey to finally move in to the spotlight. [BH]

Nacional
Wed 27 May, Sneaky Pete's, Edinburgh. Doors 7pm, £5
Despite not yet having an album under their belts, Glasgow-based Nacional have already played live at Glastonbury and this year's SxSW festival in Austin, Texas. Though the band's guitar-driven indie pop shows clear nods to a range of acts like Sonic Youth and The Stone Roses, their most obvious influence is The Smiths. Having already attracted the attention of trendsetters down south and with a UK tour lined up early this summer, it's only a matter of time before Nacional go stratospheric. [JM]

Silvermash
Wed 27 May, Bannerman's, Edinburgh. Doors 8pm, £tbc
Wednesday sees the return of Fife drone-pop worshippers Silvermash after a lengthy hiatus. Having toured most of the world with The Wedding Present, drummer Graeme reunites with his former cohorts for a night of both delicate musicality and bone-shuddering walls of guitar, with a doff of the cap to the likes of My Bloody Valentine and Sonic Youth. [NM]

Thurs 28 May, Captain's Rest, Glasgow. Doors 7:30pm, £free
The cream of Glasgow's grunge and punk talent lines out on Thursday to celebrate the launch of United Fruit's latest EP, Mistress Reptile Mistress. Guests-of-Honour United Fruit have been favourably compared with Sonic Youth, among others, and the new EP looks set to herald in another gloriously noisy chapter in their increasingly illustrious career. Underground grunge rockers Hey Enemy recently returned to the live circuit after a lengthy hiatus and will be keen to dust off their chops ahead of festival appearances at goNorth and Rockness this summer. Despite being a two-man outfit, Bronto Skylift are one of the most abrasive bands on the bill, with a sound reminiscent of classic Mudhoney, though post-hardcore punks Hey Vampires will give them a run for their money every step of the way in the loudness stakes. [JM]

Live at The Mill: Cryoverbillionaires, Action Group
Thurs 28 May, The Mill @ Cabaret Voltaire, Edinburgh. Doors 7:30pm, free
Glaswegian experimental rockers Cryoverbillionaires have established themselves as one of Scotland's premier unsigned acts in recent years. The band's enormous wall of sound goes far beyond what one might reasonably expect a three-piece to produce, with swirling, psychedelic guitars, soaring vocals and superb musicianship the order of the day. Also on the bill are eclectic Edinburgh pop outfit Action Group, winners of Under The Radar's prestigious single of the month award for April. [JM]

Play: Action Group - Look At That Ass


Ablach, Step On It, Black Sister, Gusto Mastivo
Thurs 28 May, The Tunnels, Aberdeen, Doors 7:30pm, £tbc
Local grindcore upstarts Ablach join Hungarian thrashers Step On It for the Aberdeen leg of their ongoing tour of the UK and Ireland. Formed by alumni of the now defunct Filthpact and members of death metal titans Bonesaw, Albach have already established themselves as one of the most brutal acts on the Aberdonian scene. They're joined by half-Scottish, half-Hungarian thrash metal outfit Black Sister and Gusto Mastivo, obnoxiously offensive purveyors of grindcore from the depths of Morayshire. [JM]

**UtR's gig of the week**
The Skinny Dip: St Deluxe, The Gothenburg Address, Bronto Skylift
Thurs 28 May, The Bongo Club, Edinburgh. Doors 7.30pm, £5
These days, it's usually best to ignore anything coming out of Alan McGee’s cakehole, but for once the former Creation Svengali is right on the button. Nae quite the Scottish Nirvana he makes out, Glasgow's St Deluxe are still a blistering scab of slash and burn guitars built around guttural, tight rhythms and fuzz-box vocals. Backed by The Gothenburg Address's magnificent post-rock soundscapes and the aforementioned Bronto Skylift’s lug-blistering racket, this Skinny Mag-associated showing is going to be L.O.U.D. [BH]

Play: The Gothenburg Address - The Lesser Coming Home


Oscar Charlie
Thurs 28 May, Blackfriars Basement, Glasgow. Doors 8.30pm, FREE
Glasgow-based Shetlanders Oscar Charlie, who we featured on the blog back in the early days, kick off the first of three monthly summer shows at the tiny Blackfriar's Basement. The quartet make complex, accomplished math-rock that reels off into epic choruses when you least expect it. DJs will follow the band, it's free entry, and everyone gets a complimentary bottle of Krusovice on arrival. Need any more reasons? [NM]

Play: Oscar Charlie - Vandals:


Meursault, Honey Trap, X-Lion Tamer
Fri 29 May, Sneaky Pete's, Edinburgh. Doors 7pm, £5
Meursault hardly need an introduction for readers of this blog. Defying the unspoken mantra that a laptop and a ukulele should never share a stage, the Camus-inspired Edinburgh outfit are arguably Auld Reekie's pre-eminent 'buzz band', their powerful folktronica and Neil Pennycook's yearning vocals singling them out from the crowd. Support comes from rowdy Londoners Honey Trap and local electro-popsters X-Lion Tamer. [NM]

Words: Billy Hamilton, Nick Mitchell, Jodi Mullen

Labels: , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Bookmark and Share
2 Comments

Saturday, 18 April 2009

Radar recommends: 19 - 25 April

Meursault
[Meursault: playing support at Sneaky Pete's on Wednesday]

Compared to last week's meagre pickings, we've got a banquet of quality giggage coming up over the next seven days. But with great choice comes great indecision, so which delectable aural treat are you going to tuck into? Go on, be gluttonous, you know you want to...

Haight Ashbury, Suplex the Kid, The Works and Chris Crosbie
Sun 19 Apr, Maggie May's, Glasgow. Doors 8pm, £5
Haight Ashbury don't just wear their influences on their sleeves; they have them painted on their faces (that's still a metaphor by the way), plundering as they do the music and vibe of late '60s West Coast hippy-dom before it turned sour. Expect psychedelic guitars and possibly even some unashamed sitar usage. [NM]

Das Filth and Bronto Skylift
Mon 20 Apr, Captain's Rest, Glasgow. Doors 8pm, FREE
Das Filth are appropriately named, because their music is a grubby, snarling rabble of guttural riffs, incessant synths and spat-out lyrics. Get down and dirty at this their single launch, where they're supported by the equally in-yer-face duo, Bronto Skylift. Rawk! [NM]

**UtR's gig of the week**
Casiotone for the Painfully Alone, Concern, Meursault
Wed 22 Apr, Sneaky Pete's, Edinburgh. Doors 7pm, £7
Yet another triumph for the folk at Sneaky Pete's this week. Casiotone For the Painfully Alone's lo-fi scuffling and morbid tale-telling is sure to appeal to any beard stroking afficionado worth his oversized specs. With support coming from mercurial Edinburgh crowers Meursault (you know, the band EVERYONE's talking about right now?), this night's sure to be a sell out. Best get your running shoes on, then. [BH]

Duty Free presents Popup, Alan Bissett (spoken word), Futuristic Retro Champs, Kirstin Inness (spoken word)
Thu 23 Apr, Cabaret Voltaire, Edinburgh. Doors 7pm, FREE
Narrated by a brogue so dense it makes James Graham seem refined, Popup's fleet-footed ditties remain a sadly unexplored trove on Scotland's rich musical landscape. But, with any luck, this Duty Free showing alongside the retro-tastic Futuristic Retro Champs (aided by an interlude or two from a duo of fine local wordsmiths) will encourage local lugs to finally succumb to the Glasgow quintet's ravishing indie-pop clattering. [BH]

Zarif, Dead Boy Robotics, Popolo, Keser
Thu 23 Apr, Sneaky Pete's, Edinburgh. Doors 7pm, £5
Hotly tipped as a bright eyed chart-topper of the future, part-Scot/part-Londonite starlet Zarif brings her sassy brand of feel good pop to Edinburgh's dankly-lit Cowgate. Already a firm favourite of daytime radio playlists across the land, the Groove Armada/The Rakes collaborator will need to be at her peak to outgun the primary coloured electro-screeching from supporting trio Dead Boy Robotics, Popolo and Keser. [BH]

The Hand & Ichi and Jo Foster
Thur 23 Apr, Tchai Ovna, Glasgow. Doors 8pm, £2
Female singer-songwriters don't come more delicate than Fence Collective member Jo Foster. But what she lacks in gusto she more than makes up for in lyrical and vocal guile. Fresh from her Homegame appearance, here she plays support to Bristol folkie duo The Hand & Ichi. [NM]

Stripped Back for Malawi: The Vaselines, Malcolm Middleton, Aidan John Moffat and Bridget Storm
Fri 24 Apr, Oran Mor, Glasgow. Doors 7pm, £10
OK, a line-up of such established greats normally wouldn't fall 'under the radar', but since this gig is in aid of the Zomba Orphan Project in Malawi, and since the bill includes three of the greatest Scottish acts of recent history, we couldn't resist giving it an honorary mention. [NM]

- Billy Hamilton / Nick Mitchell

What do you think of our selections? (Dis)agree? Comment below...

Labels: , , , , , , , ,

Bookmark and Share
1 Comments