Saturday, April 17, 2010



This Friday!






The Swan Lounge, North Fremantle becomes a heady den of light, sound and bedlam in which to set your imagination loose. 




FEATURING LIVE MUSIC PERFORMANCES FROM...


THESE SHIPWRECKS 

Connoisseurs of lush and swirling psychedelic drone/rock, These Shipwrecks will bring their astounding enveloping live dreamscapes to the stage for a very special show - one of the band's first performances in six months.

SEAMS

Seams, true to their volatile nature, perform a show entirely unlike any they've attempted before. The Seams sound will be reshaped and reimagined, but rest assured the key ingredients remain: beguiling experimental pop, light, mirth and chaos.

FROZEN OCEAN

One of the most enigmatic yet instantly impressive groups in Perth, Frozen Ocean are two guys with the energy of ten. Their sound is a juggernaut that trailblazes through the realms of sludge, doom, blues, math-rock and garage without ever setting up camp in any one. Frozen Ocean must be seen to be believed, and heard to be disbelieved again.

PREDRAG DELIBASICH

Predrag - commonly known as Pex - has been doing astounding things within the Perth music scene for nearly a decade, having played in the likes of Bamodi, Soviet Valves, Abe Sada and solo as bassta!Pex and Gutter Guitar. Mild-mannered Art Gallery curator by day, Pex becomes an aurally inspiring guitar-fiend by night, creating instrumental pop songs and hulking sonic structures with his trusty loop pedal.  

Monday, April 12, 2010

Hi saucy people,

Next Tuesday (April 20) at Mojo's - SEXY BAND [feat Chris(es) Cobilis and Hudson of The Tigers and Claire "Fur Chick" Pannell) return the the stage for the first time in donkey's years to sex up your ear holes.

Seams will be supporting, debuting two new songs: "Opossum" and "Cabinsong." We intend to have loads of good clean and also dirty fun. Also playing is the immeasurably beatific Craig McElhinney and those local princes of unstoppable vintage psych-riff groove party, Sonpsilo Circus.


Tuesday, March 30, 2010

WARP CHAMBER

Poster: Theo Eastwood.

WARP CHAMBER -- noun (SPACE) 
/wɔːp/ /ˈtʃeɪm.bər //-bɚ/ n 
[C] an enclosed, specialized environment in which sound and vision take full control of the senses.
[see also:] surround-sound audiovisual theater, psychedelic arena, synaesthetic cascade.

With the inception of Warp Chamber, the Velvet Lounge will be converted into a fully-fledged audiovisual theater, with windows facing the street entirely blacked out, couches rearranged in rows facing the stage, two additional speakers set up to create a surround-sound environment, and an array of visuals displayed over projectors and TV monitors, as well as oscillating light rays and slowly morphing clouds of smoke. 

Four musicians will be performing, including

KYNAN TAN, who composes music through a combination of instruments, electronics, computers and improvisation. His live performance works are based on a combination of scored and improvised instrumental parts and real-time manipulation with Max/MSP, the latest shows featuring vocals processed into slow moving ambient textures, with schizophrenic no-input mixer and extended guitar, often in multi-channel speaker environments. (www.myspace.com/kynanmusic)

SALAMANDER manipulates sounds via a laptop, FX pedals and an electronic sampler, shifting through a variety of twisted, sense-distorting soundscapes that either bubble and simmer in a digital-organic ooze, or else escalate violently in layers of manic tribal-electronic percussion and industrial noise. Recently he has been adapting beat patterns from dubstep and ambient house music, turning these familiarities on their head by filtering them through what could best be described as the sonic equivalent of a space-station emergency siren pooled in cosmic radiation. (www.myspace.com/salamander85)

SOLAR BARGE was conceived in 2009 as a musical representation of the mythic journey of the Egyptian sun god Ra and his crew aboard their celestial boat. Each Solar Barge performance or recording is a unique permutation of this concept, embellished and reimagined through improvisation and fluctuating arrangements. Musically, the project evokes epic krautrock jams, interspersed with abrasive noise interludes, guitar-loop ambience and minimal polyrhythmic grooves. WARP CHAMBER presents a setting for Solar Barge to expand into its intended form - as a venture that conflates experimental rock music with performance art and sonic installation. (www.myspace.com/solarbarge)

ADAM TRAINER uses laptop, field recordings and various organic and electronic instruments and with these forges a hypnagogic, mind-lifting ambience, often intersected by bursts of noise. Although his approach to solo composition is constantly changing, he is interested in the intersection between texture and melody, between the musical and the non-musical, between sound and space. (www.myspace.com/adamtrainermusic)

ENTRY is $8
DOORS OPEN at 7pm, with the show starting at 8pm SHARP – please try to arrive on time. The environment will be fully seated, and once those seats are filled, the doors will close. There will be an intermission between the first two acts at around 9pm.

Tuesday, March 23, 2010

ALBUM REVIEW #1 - MENTAL POWERS























Mental Powers - Untitled
[Badminton Bandit, 2010]

If there’s one band in Perth who like to tread the road less travelled, it’s Mental Powers. They eschew stages in favour of atypical performance spaces. They hand-draw their gig posters and painstakingly craft their album covers one by one – never caring, mind you, to name the record. And all the while, they create sound which inhabits only the very fringes of what might be called pop or rock music, and which in any case renders the use of such terms redundant. So in truth, it was fitting that, in order to acquire their debut longplayer, I had to brave the apocalypse, grinding along anarchic streets on semi-submerged buses, assailed by black-green skies, hemmed in by flailing whips of lightning and pelted by ice-chunks the size of small mammals. We slithered desperately through sodden five o’clock darkness until, upon reaching my album-bearing destination, the sun surged out in smoldering orange and pink.

 

So I’ve eventually arrived home with the attractive brown-paper-and-paint packaging mostly dry, dimmed the lights, affixed the headphones and set the disc swirling. 

But no sooner had I escaped the tempest than I was bombarded with the hailstone-on-tin percussion that announces ‘Contador.’ An eight-note saxophone fanfare pipes purposefully like so many restless car horns, leaps an octave, then vanishes. The hail subsides to a half-tempo drizzle bestrode by repetitious, eastern-scented guitar twang. Before long a dull trickle of vocals is wrung out of a sopping shirt, but sublimates to a steamy howl and rides the throbbing beat into the firmament – higher and stronger, fueled and punctuated by rhythmic pirouettes – then suddenly, a deep clang resounds and the writhing hubub is wrenched into oblivion.

 

‘Ology’ finds us instead miles below, claustrophobic in some subterranean chamber. Rusted pipes clink, tectonic plates grind like teeth and dark shapes lumber in the gloom. The metallic resonance of the ensuing few minutes is reminiscent of Einstürzende Neubauten at their most ominous and ambient. But the sense of dread and despair is eventually mitigated by a steel-drum pebble-bounce groove, a life-affirming firefly in the dark. About half way through the twelve-minute track a seething do-re-mi bassline joins the firefly on its journey; it drags too heavily behind its beat to feel like a release however, and not until an Apache-esque vocal chant starts up does the track seem to peak.

 

If ‘Ology’ was underground, third and final track ‘D+D’ is an enraged armadillo’s frantic burrowing towards the fiery centre of the earth. It races feverishly across the record’s most accessible chord progression, melodic but unrelenting, narrated by asphyxiated half-singing and screeching sax. Don’t bother listening to this while you’re playing Dungeons and Dragons, you’ll just freak out. Listen to it whilst driving fast, or tenderizing meat. Inevitably though, the track does mellow somewhat, letting your ears take a breath. And at last, with little warning, it fades to black.

 

On fourth listen, the album is still entirely enjoyable – but one feels wary of treating the disc as too definitive. It doesn’t seem like a monolithic, standalone, cohesive piece of art. No; you feel almost like a voyeur observing a suspended fragment of time – the frozen immediacy of some killer ideas being pounded out in a room full of creative energy. Mental Powers’ brilliance exists in the moment; in the sparkling chance and contingency of every performance, every tumultuous groove. Without a doubt, you’d do well to acquire this record, but good luck working out where in your collection you ought to file it. In fact, best to just give Mental Powers their own shelf. Remember – the Powers that be do things a little differently round here.

_______________________

Visit the Mental Powers Myspace.

Purchase the album from the Badminton Bandit Store.




Seams / Thursday March 25, UWA

This thursday





Also featuring the fresh tones of duo Farthing Woods
And the hotly anticipated return of THESE SHIPWRECKS


Tuesday, February 2, 2010

Live Review from the CPN Files: Fabulous Diamonds




If you enjoy this review, please volunteer your email inbox to the Cool Perth Nights mailout (www.coolperthnights.com) - and get one delivered fresh out the oven, straight to your doorstep, every Wednesday; plus a whole heap of other goodies.


FABULOUS DIAMONDS @ 208, FRIDAY JAN 29 

On an unlikely street corner was an unlikely house. Sat soberly behind slouching pickets, its façade appeared inauspicious – but it was, after all, only a façade. The domicile was a diamond in the rough, a gem more precious than its exterior disclosed; and perched before it in dwindling daylight this balmy Summer evening was an unlikely abundance of gentlefolk, glowing with muted anticipation – waiting for ignition. The house, a musical manor, sucked us in like slippery strings of spaghetti. Within we were chewed up, mashed into the redolence of a hundred sweaty moonbeams… there, in front of the fireplace, the enigmatic Pex (Predrag Delibasich) stood brandishing his 335. As per his recent custom, the solo Pex performance was a trundling jukebox of lean, loop-based instrumental pop, punk and folk, twangled melodies surfing over rhythmic chugs and stabs. What is perhaps most enthralling about a Pex set is its mystery; without lyrical or visual clues to provide a conceptual compass, one can only guess as to the music’s conveyance; whether it is simply aesthetic, or if its unique style and dynamic carries a theoretical agenda. Pex gives nothing away, and finally dissolves the set into a tremendous pot of thick, custardesque noise and glaring feedback.



      Tyrannosaurus Pex. Click here for more.


After Pex’s climatic fuzzsplosion I needed to chill out somewhat, and in my repose gladly toked on the swirling peace-pipe that was Wigwam. Local drone-king Craig McElhinney and reverb-demon Dave Egan (Carbuncle, Triangles) formed this eerie duo, who rode in on a lonely pulsating wash, eagle wings in desert night-chill air. After some time lounging on the plateau, however, I suddenly noticed a green light overhead and was sucked up like sago in a bubble-tea straw by its mighty traction beam. Commander Egan’s voice had warped to an otherwordly, ring-modulated warble, the deranged croak of a crazed robofrog as it primed me for a probing. Craigos McMartian leered over the control panel mashing buttons and extracting ferocious whumps, whirrs and booms. In the middle of the darkened warp-chamber there sat a glowing earth-globe, an omen of the pair’s fiendish plans. I can’t lie, I was pant-pooingly petrified by the sounds of Wigwam. In a very good way. 


Wigwam's website is located here!


Jettisoned from the mothership I stumbled across the plains for days on end until encountering an unlikely jungle gym climbing into a febrile sky. Ascending its steely tangle, I chanced upon the members of Mental Powers swinging hither and thither, clanging out marble-rattle percussion grooves, blaringly erotic saxophone solos, treacle-organ jets and bowel-bothering basslines. Their paradoxically taught-yet-loose jams ground to a rather somber midpoint; and beguiling though this was, it was a rejuvenating shift to the last couple of tunes, bolting party numbers with infectious and persistent beats. Providing the musical highlight of the evening, Mental Powers’ puzzling brilliance shows no sign of waning; their forthcoming LP, then, should be a tasty little treasure indeed. 
 

Mental Powers at play. Click here for more.


Fresh from the embrace of a subterranean African chasm (or indeed, a plane), Fabulous Diamonds were in town to support those other merchants of keys-drenched gloom, The Horrors. Perhaps it was post-travel fatigue, perhaps the diminished size of the crowd, perhaps the intimate rather than ethereal setting, but the Diamonds were simply nowhere as Fabulous as the last time they graced our coast to deliver a stellar set at the North Perth Chapel space. The ingredients were the same – thick, delayed keys, crisp, angular drum motifs, repetition and monotone vocal chants, but the resulting pie seemed half-cooked, more tedious than hypnotic. The last track, at least, hinted at sublime repetitive immersion, with an intricate, relentless drum line and catchy but incessant Schulzesque synth loop for over ten minutes. The Fab D’s didn’t sow any seeds of doubt as to their general excellence – they seemed merely to be having a dullish night. 


Feast your ears on some rather Fabulous Diamonds.



The unlikely gentlefolk drained out of the house of unlikely tones, trickling down the suburban arteries and into the dark. No passer by would have guessed, as the door swung shut and the lights were extinguished, of the whirlwind of sonic kickassery that had just stormed through this unlikely little gem of a place.

Blue Tongue


I've been working on some sample-based hip-hop type stuff for a couple of months now, and have decided it's time to let a few tunes out of their cage and into the big blue sky that is the internet.

Tip: Making beats is a seriously fun way to waste time!