donderdag 9 januari 2014

INTERVIEW WITH TREVER KEITH & SCOTT SHIFLETT, FACE TO FACE, AMSTERDAM, AUGUST 6th 2013

Two years after their glorious return on Dutch soil, Face To Face once more came to Amsterdam’s Melkweg club to perform in support of their new Album : Three Chords And A Half Truth, out on Rise Records.

The report on that show, can be found here : http://punkrocker-rockclimber.blogspot.be/2013/08/face-to-face-melkweg-oude-zaal.html
But there was more to it.  I had the chance to talk to Scott and Trever prior to their show, and here’s what they had in store for me.

Q : How is the tour going so far?
TREVER : Well it’s only been a week, and it’s been all over the map, so it’s hard to say.  It’s been a combination of festivals and clubshows and they’re very different from eachother.  But I think they’ve all been really great in their own way.  The clubshows have been small and sweaty and hot but they’ve been a lot of fun.  A lot of really good people are showing up and we’re having a really good time.  At festivals we get a bigger audience, and festivals are great because they have nice soundsystems and great backstages and good food and all that.  But you have to roll in early and set up real quick, and hurry to do your show, so they’re a bit more stressful.

Q : Did you guys actually see anything of John Coffey’s set earlier this week? [@ Free&Easy festival]
TREVER : No we missed that… We hung out with them for a while backstage though, because we shared a room together.

Q : I’m just asking because they are a promising Dutch band, and they are a bunch of crazy guys, who are awesome to see live.
TREVER : They do have fantastic moustaches…

Q : Can we talk about 2011 for a while, when  you guys played Belgian’s Pukkelpop festival, before the horrific storm came in?  I’ve been wondering ever since, how did the news reach you, how did you guys experience that?  Were you still on the festival grounds at the time?
TREVER : Oh yes, we were going to watch the Foo Fighters, and when the storm hit the festival, there was a total lockdown, no-one was allowed to leave until really late that night.  It was a really crazy thing, Scott, why don’t you tell it from your perspective…
SCOTT : The actual event, the storm, came on real suddenly and took everyone by surprise.  And when something like that is going down, you know, wherever you are, you’re just bunkering down and kind of riding it out.  You don’t know the extent of the damages then, and afterward it really took awhile, even the next few hours, for the extent of what had happened to really sink in.  Then the rumors start coming in.  You hear about maybe one person that died, or maybe just got injured, and all of that while we were just wandering around as we couldn’t leave or couldn’t use the main roads because they were obviously needed for ambulances and firefighters.  So we were basically just trying to get ourselves together, and our stuff together.  And then bit by bit the tally keeps rising and it really dawns on you, the extent of what just happened, and it was shocking and horrible.  Especially considering we had only played a set an hour and a half prior to that event and it was calm blue skies.  So it wasn’t even one of those days where you think : “ooh, this could get a little dicey…”.


TREVER : Yeah it really came out of nowhere…  But you wanted to know how we found out.  Just word, rumor, travelled around and passed by everyone who was still there, and of course everyone also wanted to find out what had just happened.  So after a while when we felt it was safe, we went around, to see if we could help, and it was all just, you know, really crazy…
SCOTT : I’d been in contact, texting back and forth with my brother [Chris Shiflett of Foo Fighters, who were supposed to headline that day of the festival] because I wanted some tech supplies once he got there.  So when the event happened I just texted him that, if they weren’t already there, they didn’t have to bother coming at all, because there was no way the festival would continue.

Q : Okay, thanks for giving us your view on that tragic day…  Trever and Scott, the two of you did an acoustic tour a while ago, how did that turn out?
TREVER : Yes, just two acoustic guitars, and it went really well, it was fun and a bit nerve wrecking, because I had never performed acoustic for an audience before.  Also because we didn’t rehearse a whole lot for it.  It started off as just an idea but before we knew it shows were booked and we were out there.  But once we did two or three shows and kind of got into the swing of it, it was fun.  It’s a very different emotion to play that kind of music live and have that kind of experiences from the crowd, which is also really cool in a totally different way from a regular, energetic Face To Face show.

Q : Did you play songs off your solo record, or just acoustic versions of Face To Face songs?
TREVER : No we only played the Ignorance Is Bliss record, from the first track to the last.

Q : Any plans of doing that again on, let’s say a second leg of that tour?
TREVER : Never say never, but we don’t have that kind of plans at the moment.  But it was a good experience, and if I feel like we could do more of those, I wouldn’t say no…

Q : Concerning the new album, first one on Rise Records, where you are on the roster next to Dave Hause, Bouncing Souls, Hot Water Music, Polar Bear Club,... that’s some good company…
TREVER : As a matter of fact, that helped us make the decision to do the record over there.


Q : Did Rise Records actually approach you guys, with some sort of a deal?
TREVER : Well, this is how it went down : We were talking to our manager about what labels we could go to, and we were exhausting our options, and he said : “What about Rise Records?”  Because he had someone else working with them, having a really good experience.  So he knew the guys that ran it, said they were really cool and that they knew what they were doing.  So I said we’ll do it like this, just email over there and find out if they’re fans of our band, and if they are, then that’s where we want to be, it doesn’t matter what the money is.  So he emailed, and they wrote back, like fuck yeah we want to have you over here on our label, we are longtime fans, and that was that.

Q : You probably also know that some ’fans’ I’ll call them, of ‘typical’ bands on the Rise roster before they signed Hot Water Music, The Souls, … were a bit suspicious about the new direction Rise Records was taking, which I think is for the better.
TREVER : Yeah well, we are also not huge fans off a lot of those like Warped Tour style bands…  The company you’re in is sort of important on a label, but it’s much more important that the label people themselves are a fan of your band, and your record.


Q : So Three Chords And A Half Truth is your first effort on Rise, are there plans for like two, three or more albums?
TREVER : Can’t really say, don’t know…  There’s no contract signed for more, it was just a one record deal.  But the feeling is good, I would do more records with those guys, they’ve done really well with getting our album out there.

Q : Lyrically, I sense a lot of criticism towards religion in its, let’s say, most ugly shapes and forms.  Was that a choice, a conscious decision?
TREVER : I don’t really know, I don’t think so.  But one thing that wàs a conscious decision was the sound of the album that Scott and I, on our acoustic tour, were talking about the whole time, while driving the car.  We were always on about what kind of a record we were wanting to make.  And it was all about how we wanted it to sound, not what it would be about.  The approach I took was, I would come up with a bunch of song titles, I told Scott, and then he took the initiative, sort of emailing me, well and how about all these…   And since we live in opposite sides of the country, we would both demo songs up, individually.  Scott would send  me his, with a few words in them, sometimes a sentence, that I use to form the rest of the lyrics.  And I think because I’m a little bit older, I pay some more attention to the news and what’s going on in the world.  I’ve become slightly more politically minded, but I’ve never been one to take up a cause, we were never a political punk rock band, it’s always been more about personal stuff, overcoming my own personal struggle.  This record does have some more politically minded stuff, but they’re still vague…

Q : About the setlists of your shows, how are they formed?  Is it a joint decision with all the members?
TREVER : Oh yeah! Always.

Q : Because, and this is purely personal, I am an old days fan, I started out listening to the first couple of albums, and I’m glad you always play a lot of songs off those records.  But I would love to see more of the new songs being played.
TREVER : That’s great to hear, and we would love to play more new songs.  But it’s our experience that people who have your sentiment are a minority.  The fans always want to hear the old stuff.
SCOTT : We will periodically pull something out and try it out, even for a few shows.  But sometimes we feel that it creates a low, or a dead spot in the show.  And we really don’t just go out there and play what everybody wants all the time, but we do still love to play all the old songs too.
TREVER : I think it’s relatively balanced among the whole discography.  We don’t do Ignorance Is Bliss, but we do a few songs off Reactionary, and Laugh Now Laugh Later, actually every other record is represented at least by one song.  And we now have three songs off the new record in our set.
SCOTT : We had four, but we took one down…
TREVER : Maybe it’ll be fine here, people here seem to react to the new record better than in The States.

Q : Something else, is Face To Face for you guys your most important ‘occupation’, do you have anything else going on jobwise?
SCOTT : This is it!
TREVER : Well it’s not entirely, to be fair.  It’s our most important one, but we do other stuff.  Scott plays in Me First & The GimmeGimmes.  I have Antagonist Records which takes up some time.

Q : you surely know Dying Scene, they recently published a list of the richest people in punk rock, with the usual suspects like the three guys in Blink182, Dexter Holland, Billie Joe Armstrong, …  And there was one comment that caught my eye, from a guy who wondered why the guys in Face To Face weren’t on the list.
SCOTT : Oh, because we’re the poorest people in punk rock!
TREVER : Well we have been successful in this business, in the way that we have been able to do this for a living without having to supplement it with other work, which already is amazing to us.  But at the same time, let’s be real, we don’t have songs on the radio, no videos on MTV…

Q : Punk rock has never been gone, but my feeling is that a was a bit quieter in ‘the scene’ for some time.  And I have the feeling that these last few months, things are firing up again, and some bands try to take advantage, trying to catch the train, but for the wrong reasons.  Trying to earn some money off some kind of revival that’s going on, fighting eachother with lawsuits…
TREVER : [whispers] you mean Black Flag…

Q : Yeah.
TREVER : [laughs out loud]

Q : But also for instance Save Ferris, starting again, and having former members going mad saying they can’t use that name…
TREVER : Oh I barely notice that…

Q : Well it bugs me that some of those bands take up all the attention that could and should go out to other bands, like you, who were in it, and still are in it for the right reasons.
TREVER : I don’t look at it like that, I mean, if a band succeeds in capitalizing off punk rock, it means they have a lot of fans, and then that’s fine by me.  I think the first reason for bands reforming or coming out of a hiatus, is because they feel their fans demand it.

Q : Where do you see your band in let’s say five to ten years from now?
TREVER : In a retirement home, sitting in a rocking chair… No seriously, I can see myself still playing in five years, ten might be a little bit of a stretch…  It’s hard to say.  And I can only speak for myself, there are of course other members in the band to consider.
SCOTT : I see myself in five years answering the phone, with Trever calling : We’re hitting the road again!!
TREVER&SCOTT : [laughter]



Q : Final question maybe, in 2014 Big Choice will celebrate its twentieth anniversary.  I know you’ve said on a few occasions that you were never really satisfied with how the sound on that recording turned out.  Isn’t it a good moment to re-release it?
SCOTT : You had it re-mixed, haven’t you?
TREVER : Yeah, but we never re-released it.  But, we have plans to do some stuff, just not only with Big Choice…  We’re looking more at, what is it, in two or three years we will have been a band for 25 years.  So I was excited about the idea of possibly re-releasing every record on the catalogue, in a 25th anniversary edition, including Big Choice.  All albums would at the very least be re-mastered, and include a couple of rarities, or previously unreleased tracks.  And I’d like to roll all of those re-issues out maybe one every six months when we approach that 25th anniversary.

Q : That’s actually a great idea!  I’m looking forward to that…  Another something about Big Choice, that has been bugging me, personally, for almost twenty years now.  At the end of the record, there’s this bit with voices, people talking to eachother, what’s that about?  Is that truly a secretly recorded thing?  And who is it that’s talking?
TREVER : No that’s totally set up! [laughter]  No, I’ll tell you, it was at the time, a totally different time in the nineties.  People don’t really seem to give a fuck now, but in the nineties everyone was really, really paranoid in punk rock about being called a sellout, or going to a major label, or you’d have people judging you for charging too much for a ticket or a t-shirt.  There was a very kill-rock-star attitude in the nineties, and we were sensitive to it, probably hyper sensitive to it.  So we did go to a label that was, not a proper major, but it had major label distribution, Victory Music, and we did get some criticism for that.  So, what happened was, we released Over It, that EP, with them first.  And when that was released, Disconnected started to get airplay in Los Angeles.  But that created a problem for us, because Big Choice was ready to come out, and the record company suddenly wanted Disconnected stripped off it.  And I was kind of okay with it, because it was already an old song, but then again, we also didn’t want to kill the airplay we were getting with it…  Anyway, we were touring when that became an issue and it caused a huge fight in the band, in our Fun Seeker we were driving around in.  So the way that we came up with to solve this, was to say, we’ll add a second bonus track, so that Disconnected isn’t the only thing.  Cause we wanted to make it clear that it’s not part of Big Choice, so it’d be Big Choice, plus bonus tracks, Disconnected and Bikeage, a Descendents cover.  And then the other thing is, when you’re on tour, driving a lot, you spend a lot of time together, and you think of the stupidest things that all of a sudden can become the funniest things if you repeat them often enough.  So one of our brilliant ideas as we were in tour mode, was, why don’t we come up with a skit, and that ended up being the thing that it is.  So that we could kind of maintain some integrity, and everyone will think that we didn’t really want to do it.  It was a bit of a joke at the beginning, but because we had a little bit of power at the label, and we had them over a barrel, they agreed to do it.  And that is in fact the president and the A&R guy from the label on that recording!  We were actually still in the studio finishing the record when we told them, look if we’re going to do this, yóu have to come in the studio and we’re going to do this sketch.  And they said, well we don’t care, okay we’ll do it.  And we weren’t reading from a script or anything, it was all recorded ad lib, but we gave them a setup, like, you got to come in here and tell us that we have to put Disconnected on the record, and then we’ll react.

Q : And who was the one saying, there’s no way this song is going on the record?
TREVER : Well that was Matt [Riddle, former bass player], because he truly didn’t want it on the record anyway, so he didn’t have to act very hard.

Q : Okay, so finally, anything else you guys want to add for our readers?
SCOTT : Yes, our album Three Chords And A Half Truth, out now on Rise Records!
TREVER : Yeah, check it out!  That’s what we’re out here promoting now, so give it a listen, it’s a bit different.
SCOTT : We like to throw you a curb ball every now and then…  We don’t want to make the same record over and over again.  So sometimes, maybe, we get a little adventurous for our fan base, and then sometimes we hit it straight on the nose.  But we have to always feel like we’re engaged in what we’re doing.

TREVER : I think the Europeans are really open to the new record.  We got a lot of criticism in America that it isn’t a fast enough album, for whatever reason, but we hope a lot of people enjoy it.

woensdag 8 januari 2014

My top albums of the extraordinary year 2013... yes it was.

Did not make the top-10 by one or two hairs, but in a year like this one, that is not a shame.  Here are, for starters, my numbers 11-15 in no particular order :

Adrenalized – Tales From The Last Generation : Technical skatepunk from outer space.  Really.


Face The Fax – Basic Human Wrongs : Satanic Surfers revisited.














Broadway Calls – Comfort/Distraction : What Green Day should’ve sounded like, had they not found their mom’s eyeliners and lipsticks.














Asado – Equipped To Fail : Yet another really exciting Canadian skatepunk outfit.














ASG – Blood Drive : By far the very best non-punk album I’ve come across this year.













All of the above are definitely worth checking out!!


But now, here’s that top-10 for you!!



10 Implants – From Chaos To Order
These fine gentleman are to the nineties Fatwreck punkrock, what Them Crooked Vultures are to stoner/rock.  A superband, both literal and metaphorical.














09 Touché Amoré – Is Survived By
Truly belongs in this list.  I’ve experienced how this album got better and better as I was playing it several times to prepare for their show in my town.  And what a show it was...  Get ready to be  blown away!














08 The Slow Death – No Heaven
Very enjoyable ‘gruff-punk’ album for fans of Off With Their Heads and such...  No points for the artwork though.  WTF.
















07 Iron Chic – The Constant One
Released towards the end of the year, but definitely top-10.  Maybe even a higher spot after a few more weeks of listening time.  I should say, however, that for now I don’t hear an awful lot of evolution compared to ‘Not Like this’.  But if that album would’ve been released in 2013, it would also be in this list without a doubt.












06 RVIVR – The Beauty Between
Hailing from Latterman, should probably say enough already.  An extra female set of vocal cords guarantees for a couple of lovely lines.  Great band, great melodies, great album!















05 F.O.D. – Ontario
Hooray!  Finally another top-notch, non-pretentious, melodic punk record .  And not an overproduced, trimmed and shaved itty bitty 10 or 11 track album, no no no, here are 16 songs for us to enjoy, of which some will make you laugh and chuckle because of the simple good clean fun they’re made of.  Check such tracks as ’20 second song’ or ‘counting numbers’ (a favourite to my 5- and 7-year old kids).  And next to those, a whole bunch of really great tunes.  Songs that would effortlessly fit in some NOFX or Bad Religion albums, written by a contemporary of mine, telling us about his love/lust/home/family/work/responsabilities and worries.  Which makes it all the more enjoyable to me.
The lovely vocal harmonies between Hans and Stijn, and the fact that they easily pull off covers of songs by NOFX, Frenzal Rhomb and Undeclinable, should already have you googling for their next gig in your town or somewhere nearby!!



04 Dave Hause – Devour
The Loved Ones seem to be dead and gone.  Sad really.  On a positive note, it gives Dave Hause the possibility to invest all of his energy into his solo-career.  And that pays off.  What a lovely album this is, and Dave has that ability to let you feel every word he sings in every single hair on your skin.
Right after the release, in some comment on Facebook, I referred to Devour  as more of a storytelling kind of album.  I still think of it that way, and that is also the reason why I like it better than ‘Resolutions’.






03 Face To Face – Three Chords And A Half Truth
When Laugh Now Laugh Later was released early 2012, their first post-hiatus effort, I was pleased.  But now, with this next album, becomes clear how much LNLL was still a re-boot exercise, a non-risk album, as if all members had to get to know eachother all over again.  Few songs on it stand the test of time.  With this new album, its totally different, a few really experimental things are going on, Jazzy, Bluesy stuff, The Clash and The Stranglers influences, ... and so on...
Awesome artwork, and the fact that they still pull off one hell of a live-show, might also have contributed to their ranking in my list.  Anyway, Face To Face has definitely risen from their ashes, and I’m really looking forward now as to what they will bring next.


02 Restorations – LP2
One of the most impressive punk/alternative outfits around.  Three guitars make for a very layered sound, yet always with a ‘basic’ feel, and never over the top.  So many instruments and still a less is more kinda feeling to it, that’s pure awesomeness...  Carried by the drummer the band succeeds in performing unbelievably smooth changes in pace and bridges of unimaginable virtuousity.  Please go check out their live-session on Audiotree.tv!!  That’s some jaw-dropping shit...
However, don’t expect to find stomping and steaming punk rock anthems, nor hyper-technical skatepunk fiddly diddly, these guys are told to play ‘punk for old(er) people’...  The album does take a few spins to really catch your ear, but after that it won’t let go of it.  Give it a couple of chances, you won’t regret it, and this band deserves it.  And go see them perform it all live at Groezrock!






01 Off With Their Heads – Home

Is it possible to explain this in a brief description?  No it isn’t...  If you’re really interested in finding out why this album deserves this spot more than any other 2013 release, check it here : http://punkrocker-rockclimber.blogspot.be/2013/03/album-review-home-by-off-with-their.html
Home can’t be anything else but the album of the year, and it is also a giant step forward as a band.  They keep getting better and better.  It makes me wonder what they have in store for us next.  That is if they still exist as a band after their current tour...  Find out with me later.




Also a few really great EP’s saw the light of day in 2013, here are some of them, in random order :
Muncie Girls – Sleepless
A Hero Build – Prospects
Call It Off – Lovers
Title Fight – Spring Songs
So Many Ways – Seer
John Coffey – Unstached
NOFX – Stoke Extinguisher
Lonely The Brave – Backroads
Ellesmere – Bail City
Moonward – s/t

maandag 7 oktober 2013

Funtime Fest 2013 report : Aarschot september 28th


 
Right, so whether you’re a regular reader of this blog (which I doubt…), or you just stumbled upon it by accident this time, let me warn you first…  Funtime Fest is my home game, on my turf.  I could piss out of my front door, and hit ‘De Klinker’.  It’s that close.  Take in account the fact that every crippled old punk, more or less connected to the Funtime label, crawls out of his couch on this occasion.  Plus, thanks to this amusing blog-thingy, and visiting a shitload of festivals and smaller gigs this year, I’ve met quite a few (to me) new people along the way.  And don’t you believe it, they all decided to pay Funtime Fest a visit last Saturday…

So here it is, my everything bút neutral, completely biased, slightly troubled, beer-soaked Funtime Fest 2013 review!

To start of, a stroke of bad luck.  Road construction works in and around our town, combined with a huge bmx-happening in the area, caused me to arrive seconds after El Mirage had already finished, bummer.  So I got to hang out in some lovely sunny weather, looking at some skaters in the park, and seeing the first familiar faces.  We drag ourselves inside the venue to check out Toxic Shock, who are also a bit delayed.  I saw them at Brackrock earlier this summer, so I knew I could expect some screamy trash/hardcore, related to Suicidal Tendencies.  But what the hell went on in the singer’s head this Saturday, I don’t have a clue, and I don’t know if I want to find out.  He was angry, or should I say furious.  Abusing microphones, and not making any friends with his quote “Not a lot of fun time going on!”, which we heard two or three times…  Next please!

Then Off The Charts take the stage.  It is still early afternoon, but a decent little crowd has gathered nevertheless.  And rightfully so!  We were treated to a very satisfactory performance by a young band, about to release their debut album on Funtime Records.  We’ve heard people compare them to the likes of Iron Chic, Nothington, Leatherface, …  but this Saturday I couldn’t help but think about Hot Water Music during their set.  Especially when it comes to the vocals, even though the sound people needed some time adjusting the drummer’s microphone level.  You should all really look into this band, and definitely check that release in november!

F.O.D. is next on the line-up, for their final performance before hitting the rehearsal space, to work on some new, and without a doubt lovely, songs for all of us.  As a temporary goodbye-show, this was another good one.  The songs they play are really starting to get recognizable, and it doesn’t bother me one bit.  In fact, I’ll probably miss some of them once there are new ones finding their way to the setlists.  As far as I could see, no one else had a problem with it either.  People were clearly enjoying the show, and even worldfamous festival-friend, Roger, was spotted dancing in front of the stage.  If you don’t know who I’m talking about, check the following Facebook-page : “Roger Van Loon is a hero”.  Chances are that you have come across him before…  Any resemblance with F.O.D.’s second voice, Stijn De Waele, is said to be coincidental, but we’re not quite sure about that yet.

I skipped A Strength Within for the biggest part.  It had by then already become impossible to fully pay attention to the band without getting distracted by people saying hi, bringing beers, hanging out…

The Priceduifkes on the other hand, did make a mark!  I can’t say I’ve seem them perform a lot, but lately I’ve seen them a couple of times, and I think I can safely say that they did their very best to make this a ‘special one’ for Funtime Fest.  And how!  They turned up on stage in Hawaï-outfits, complete with flower-necklaces and all!  Beach balls were thrown into the audience, along with some other inflatable items if I’m remembering it all correctly.  And all of that whilst delivering an appreciated show!  Think Ramones meets Queers meets Teenage Bottlerocket…  There was indeed a lot of fun time going on!!

The Generation 84 crew, once again, does not disappoint either.  I was singing along to all the lines I know (or think I know), but I’m afraid I wasn’t paying as much attention as I should’ve been…  Because I found out later, that Teun had been singing the entire set, suffering from a cold, and I can’t say that I noticed any of that… J

I completely let The Rocket pass by me then… (hah!)  Out of curiousity, I went inside the venue towards the end of the show, to check out the new singer.  Can’t say he left much of an impression.  Sorry.

So it’s time for the Octopussys then.  As a Funtime band, they can’t risk to let us down.  So they don’t!  Really good stuff from Thibaut, handsome Mark & co.  The party by then was already well on the way, so I suppose they’ve enjoyed themselves on stage.  I do urgently need to play that record a few times again, so I can also sing along to these fine gentlemen the next time around.

Singing along…  That ain’t no problem at all during a Skin Of Tears show.  Having lived their finest moments as a band, like what, fifteen years ago?  But I was completely over the moon when they decided to start performing and even touring again a couple of months ago.  This was such an incredible party, we danced from the first to the last note, I ran out of breath a couple of times, but I wouldn’t give up.  It was that kind of a show.  Is that only sheer nostalgia?  No it isn’t, Skin Of Tears has some undeniable qualities, and their joy for playing a punk rock show just radiates into the crowd.  Let’s say there is a young skate-punk fan, that has never heard of Skin Of Tears, and you play him one of their songs.  I bet he’ll react in enthousiasm, rather then saying, mèh, what kind of old outdated stuff is this…  Up The Cups, Need A Beer!

And by then, the grand finale is still to come!  The Cornflames!  No need for an introcuction, this is thé band out of the Funtime roster everyone remembers, and was whining about to have to reunite until they did last year.  Let thàt attention go to Five Days Off from now on…  But we’re wandering off, this bit was about Cornflames.  Charisma-machine Eppo Janssen and his crew had clearly set out to end Funtime’s label night in a memorable way.  And did they?  Boy did they ever…  I myself am not that familiar with a lot of their material.  But then again, witnessing this show, watching this crowd of dedicated fans, in a completely filled up venue, going berserk throughout the entire set, does leave an impression.  And what a great sound!  Along with some kind of a magic vibe that was going on, the band seemed to play under a divine glow, or were that just the beers taking over??  There is in fact one song I do know very well.  The Speakers.  So I want to take this opportunity to officially say thank you to the Cornflames to make that their last song of the set, and thus ending this year’s Funtime Fest with an unforgettable highlight!

And last but not least, I want to put the entire Funtime-crew, led by the ever present Johan Quinten, in the spotlights here.  They succeeded in making this an extraordinary great day!  We all left wanting a lot more, and so I suppose I’m not the only one looking forward to next year, when Funtime Fest will celebrate its fifteenth anniversary…
 
P.S. : F#cking awesome pictures by Dieter Dejonghe !! 
 
 
 

zaterdag 7 september 2013

Skatefest 2013 report : Olen, saturday august 31.


One day prior to the festival, there’s a negative weather forecast.  And I accidentally have a conversation with a visitor of one or more previous Skatefest editions, and he isn’t really positive either.  So, early in the afternoon, I get in my car with all but high expectations, a bag of spare clothes, and even a raincoat just in case…

Right after a couple of hundred meters of driving through a forest, a wide open space looms, a giant concrete flat, in the middle of a pine forest, and all of that, at the time, under a blue sky with shattered white clouds.

And it’s only seconds later, when I spot the actual festival-site at my left, like it’s a scene out of an old world war II movie.  About five huge hangars, of which I can still imagine Spitfires rolling out.  In front of those hangars, an open space that’s fenced as open air festival area, with two stages.  It immediately strikes me as an impressive sight, and there’s more : you park your car, and twenty seconds later you’re inside!!  That’s an awesome advantage…

 
And sunshine with a few clouds throughout the day, not a spot of rain.  This was a lovely summer festival to visit!

I’m gonna skip my blablablaaaah about all the bands I saw, they were all Belgian or Dutch bands anyway, so y’all go and read the full Dutch report I wrote for the amazing rockblog.nl !!  http://www.rockblog.nl/live-recensies/24395/skatefest-olen-2013  Don’t come complaining you couldn’t find it…

Highly anticipated after the release of their masterpiece “Home” in april, Off With Their Heads take the stage.  And that truly was worth the wait, even if I have to admit the first couple of songs sounded rubbish…  There really is no other way of saying it.  Ryan Young’s voice was really off, nothing sounded clear, we couldn’t hear the bass, nor the second guitar.  And there are quite a few songs that really can’t go without.



But!! The sound engineers succeed in straightening everything out, and from that point onwards there’s only awesomeness left.  OWTH will end up playing for over an hour, and with Ryan not being of the talking kind, we were treated to a lot of songs…  That also means his voice does gets warmed up properly and he delivers a magnificent set.  The audience is clearly enjoying the show, a small but dedicated bunch of fans scream along to every word, and the frontstage turns into a crazy, hot, punk rock party.  Only four or five songs off the new album if I’m not mistaken, where personally, I had hoped for a couple more.  But that ‘shortage’ gets amply compensated by the rest of the setlist.  They do play Janie, which is actually a really old song, and almost the entire ‘Hospitals’ EP!!  Also a large selection out of the ‘In Desolation’ album, for instance, Clear The Air and Drive still resonate through my spine…  In that song, Ryan might even provide us with the best advice we’re ever gonna get for those days we’d rather not get out of bed…

So I just drive
It doesn't matter where
I put my foot to the floor let the wind blow through my hair

I'll never stop
There's nothing for me out there
I'll be on the roads less traveled while it all fades in the mirror


To sum it all up : Skatefest’s festival site is top notch, and holds a real potential for growth!!  The combination of punkrock and hardcore does work, and provides a decent audience showing up.  The hangar with indoor skate-park is also perfect ‘gimmick’ to make this festival stand out in the crowd.  So I for one am really looking forward to their next edition!
 

zondag 18 augustus 2013

FACE TO FACE @ Melkweg Oude Zaal, Amsterdam - august 6th 2013

By means of introduction, let me explain what Face To Face, to me, stands for : Nothing less than thé benchmark that every other band carrying any kind of punkrock ambition should use to check their own credibility.  Not soundwise of course, we don’t need any Face To Face clones!  As a matter of fact, I’m all for originality and variation.  What I meant was, the ‘vibe’, atmosphere, style, the general ‘we don’t give a shit’ attitude when it comes to the unwritten rules of how any punkrockband should look nowadays.  Thàt’s what they are to me.  Now even more than back in the early days, because they are my favourite band ever since someone let me listen to Don’t Turn Away, somewhere back in 1994.  Long before the days of internet, facebook or twitter.  Long before hair straighteners and mascara found their way to a lot of so called punkbands…

 
Damn right I was happy as a child on christmas eve when rockblog assigned me to go to Amsterdam to report on that show.  Added to that already great news, I also got a confirmation for an interview with Trever and Scott!  That is something to look forward to, as it will appear on rockblog in Dutch, and a bit later in English here.
It was a bit awkward though, seeing Face To Face without a support band.  I was told it was venue-policy.  Don’t ask me why, because I’m quite sure that some young, local band would happily jump on the possibility of opening for an iconic band such as Face To Face.  If I were in a band, I definitely would…

I saw this band in the same venue, Melkweg’s ‘Oude Zaal’, two years ago, so I knew the soundsystem was of excellent quality, and the remaining question was in what kind of shape the band was gonna be in.
As it turns out, the venue fills up nicely by the time of the mentioned starting hour.  We have to be a bit more patient though, and around and about 9 PM they enter the stage.  Trever Keith, Scott Shiflett and Danny Thompson, accompanied by Dennis Hill filling in for Chad Yaro.

During the pre-show interview, I noticed a slight hoarseness in Trever’s voice, and he also mentioned the song Disappointed had been skipped on previous setlists because of vocal problems.  Truth be told, when he greets the audience, and introduces his fellow Face To Face members to us, it is obvious he is suffering either from a cold, or a bit of voice-fatigue.  This phenomenon remains the same throughout the first couple of songs, leaving us a little bit unsatisfied, even though musically, the show kicks off solid as a rock.

By coincidence, there suddenly is a little break, because Dennis is changing his shoes, as his first pair turned out to be too slippery on the stage floor.  That was a perfect moment for Trever to make a bit of harmless fun of his partner in crime, and at the same time, get a few laughs from the audience.
And believe it or not, that very moment was the spark this show needed to really set off, ever since then, everything ran smoothly.  Trever’s voice is back in shape, the new shoes are much better, and the party can finally start.

 
Danny Thompson on the drums, and Scott Shiflett on the bass.  That is a feast for ears and eyes.  In fact they took over from respectively Pete Parada, now in The Offspring, and Matt Riddle, NUFAN member… Not the least of names I think?
But without any problem, they make us forget about their predecessors, and they take the entire rhythmsection to a completely new level, where most bands, punk or other, can come and take a few lessons from.  On purpose, I had positioned myself with a view on Scott, and that is a decision I am still glad about!


 
Danny on the other hand, is the motor, directing the entire set into a scorching pace.  Some of the classic songs, A-OK, You’ve Done Nothing or Walk The Walk, to name but a few, don’t actually need to be sped up. 
But the three songs we get to hear off the new album, really benefit from such a tight pace when performed in a live set.  One of my fellow travelers even decided that this way, Bright Lights Go Down is in fact a really great song.  Other outtakes from the latest record are 123 Drop, which is one of  the biggest surprises on Three Chords And A Half Truth, and the deliciously rhythmic Smokestacks & Skyscrapers.  Furthermore, we get to hear a set full of classics, that features at least one song off every album, except Ignorance Is Bliss, and all of that with an obvious focus on the first three albums.  Personally, I wouldn’t mind hearing more of the newer songs in their set, but then again, if I would live to witness ten more Face To Face shows with exactly the same setlist, I wouldn’t complain either!
 
The atmosphere in the audience is great from the first song to the last, and for all I know, I think the crowd seemed more keen than two years ago.  Was the turn-out also a bit higher?  I think so.  From reactions gathered immediately after the show, and online in the next few days and hours, I conclude that everyone left the venue thoroughly satisfied.  And I’m already looking forward to the next opportunity to catch this far from rattling punkrockmachine live again!
 
(note…: this report featured the rockblog.nl online zine, but as a matter of fact I took an even longer trip to Paris a few days later to see my second Face To Face show this tour…  And that was also a memorable performance!  And Trever specifically promised the French audience they’d be back within six months, so there again is something to look forward to…)

dinsdag 23 juli 2013

Kloemprock 2013 report : friday july 12th 2013





For weeks, no mónths, had there been a ‘buzz’ around and about this year’s Kloemprock bill.  Then the Implants had to cancel.  Bummer…
So The Setup got added as replacement, and the running order got rearranged.  Aight.
Another stroke of bad luck when longtime punk icon Kevin Seconds injures himself, causing 7 Seconds to have to cancel too.
Finding another replacement band at such short notice turns out to be impossible.  So the Kloemprock crew decides to offer both Mute and Strike Anywhere a bigger slot, as they will be this year’s headliners.  And they combine this measure with a decrease in beverage prices, as to offer some compensation for those who had bought their tickets in advance.  A truly heroic gesture it turned out to be!!

I myself couldn’t arrive really early, so sadly enough I had to miss a couple of performances.

The Fellows got the honour of opening the festival, so I only heard about their stand-in drummer in the shape of an adult blow-up doll later that evening.  As a matter of fact, I spotted her at the merchandise tables that night, but when I asked her for her thoughts on the festival and her performance, she failed to utter anything, besides a long, yet silent ‘Oooooooo’…

I also just didn’t make it in time for Antwerp’s In Clear Sight…  The first gig I díd attend, was Orange Apple.  I had never heard of them, but I found out they’ve been around since 2006.  What I remember from their show is a really powerful duo of vocalists, and I’m looking forward to seeing them again.

Face The Fax themselves arrived at Kloemprock after an exhuasting trip from Germany, where they supported Mute the night before, ánd they had to make sure to leave Kloemprock in time to get to Slovenia for a show at some little festival over there!  I indeed have seen them deliver fresher performances, but for showing such dedication alone, they deserve a huge thumbs up!

Then it’s F.O.D.-time, the band that, after receiving great critics for their album ‘Ontario’, and recently even booking a short tour in that part of Canada, must be over the moon right now.  It’s exactly that feeling they send out into the crowd today, it’s absolutely obvious they’re enjoying their time on stage.  Their shows are getting tighter every time I see them, people are getting familiar with a couple of songs, there are a decent amount of singalongs, and even a bit of dancing!  And it wasn’t just me alone…
It’s common knowledge that Australia’s Frenzal Rhomb were truly flattered by the fact that the song ‘Frenzal Records’ is dedicated to them.  But have they heard F.O.D. covering their song 5000 Cigarettes yet?  Oh boy that sounds just like heaven every time I hear it!
Than all of a sudden, I find myself in the spotlight…  To make a long story short, they play a really successful cover of Holland’s legends Undeclinable (Ambuscade, whatever…), and Kloemprock can (partly…) thank me for that.  Sorry, you are saying?  Ah, thank you…  You’re welcome!

(I’d like some more of that Hans!  And about those high notes in their other songs : have you tried tighter pants?)
When that party was over, my thirst, combined with the sunshine, made me miss out on The Setup’s show, which I’ll make up for soon, hopefully!

Is it OK to call Skin Of Tears one of this year’s main crowd-attracters?  I think so.  It was the new, and this time very much wanted, German invasion on Belgian soil.  And they celebrated it with a supercool show, Toto’s voice is outstanding, and that’s a relief, because at the end of their ‘first career’, that sometimes was a little bit of a problem.
None of that at Kloemprock though!  They treat us to favorite classic tracks such as ‘Joking Apart’ and ‘Up The Cups’, so I felt obliged to go apeshit for a while.  They also play a short (orchestrated?) encore with ‘Boys Of Summer’.  It all was mighty fine by me, and I for one cannot wait until Funtime Fest in september!

Gino’s Eyeball were summoned to continue the party, and they do pull that off, in great style, too!  I’ve only seen two or three of their shows, but even if it’s the first time around, you’ll have a hard time standing still.  Their set is stuffed with humour, handstands, tumbling, polonaises, partycovers, punkrockcovers, singalong anthems and great own material.  Any festival in this niche could benefit from inserting this band in their roster.  I think I’ll have it stated in my will, that they have to come and perform after my funeral service.  Along with hamburgers and beer, instead of sandwiches and coffee, I don’t believe anyone will be left sitting on their chairs mourning over me!


After Panique d’O, I’m at my second Mute-gig this summer, and they sure live up to all my expectations.  Drummer/Vocalist Etienne Dionne is even more awesome than I recall him being at their gig in Sojo club two years ago.  He already was awesome then, but he’s really taken it a step further since!  Also the global band’s image and performance is 100% correct now, they truly are a well-oiled blistering skate-punk machine.  Should there still be nitwits out there, saying punkrock guitarplayers can do with three chords, or punkrock bassplayers only need one string, let them come and witness a Mute-show from up front.  My bet is that jaws will need to be picked up from the floor afterwards…



Then it’s up to Strike Anywhere to play the final notes, and close the Kloemprock party.  The entire crowd is in a great punkrock-mood, and I do believe expectations regarding this show were skyhigh.  Does Strike Anywhere deliver?  Boy do they ever!!  Thomas Barnett, short figure, great voice and abundant energy.  How he’s able to do that, for over an hour, out of such a fragile body, fed with fruits and vegetables only, is a mystery to me.

We were treated to a tight as fuck set, stuffed with songs covering the entire Strike Anywhere catalogue, and everyone screamed them along at the tops of their lungs.  It was raw, pure and entertaining at the same time, first song to the last.  Lovely also to witness such a show, where the band gives it their all, song after song, and ends without an encore.  You get your time appointed for your set, and you fill it right up onto the last second, that’s Strike Anywhere.  Dedication to the bone!
Without a doubt they’ll have enjoyed themselves getting such a response to their performance, and I’m quite sure, having been away for so long, they will get similar reactions from crowds all over Europe.  And don’t we all hope they won’t wait that long to get back over here…

To sum up this edition : BRILLIANT!  The venue was a way better location compared to the tent the years before, and without a doubt the rescheduled date was also a good idea…

Keep it coming Kloemprock!  And I for one hope you’ll get to organize next year’s edition without cancels (Voodoo Glow Skulls, Left Alone, Implants, 7seconds) and without bigger festivals waving dollars in front of bands, luring them away from Kloemprock, demanding exclusivity! (No Use For A Name L, Bouncing Souls, …)



Werner Pauwels.