[kj] Times gig review.
Rob
rob at westwoodassociates.co.uk
Mon Feb 28 08:36:27 EST 2005
pity this was Thursday's gig..........
-----Original Message-----
From: gathering-bounces at misera.net
[mailto:gathering-bounces at misera.net]On Behalf Of nicholas fitzpatrick
Sent: 28 February 2005 12:41
To: gathering at misera.net
Subject: [kj] Times gig review.
Copyright 2005 Times Newspapers Limited
The Times (London)
February 28, 2005, Monday
HEADLINE: Killing Joke
BYLINE: David Sinclair
BODY:
Killing Joke. Shepherds Bush Empire, W12. ***.
AFTER their latest hiatus in a 25-year career, Killing Joke returned with a
show of daunting extremes. Their business affairs may be in permanent flux,
but they remain masters of a miscreant strand of apocalyptic rock'n'roll
that has influenced artists from Nirvana to Slipknot.
Radiating an air of ageless malevolence, they took to the stage on Thursday
with a typical flourish. While the guitarist Geordie, bass player Raven and
drummer Ben Calvert hammered out the thunderous, martial rhythm of
Communion, the singer Jaz Coleman arrived bearing a huge cross on a pole.
Dressed in a black boiler suit, his face painted blood red, and with his
bulging eyes peering out from great welts of charcoal make-up, he roared the
chorus -"All who die" -as if exhorting an army of the damned into some last
great mythical battle.
Ramping up both tempo and volume, they launched into Wardance. As Geordie
carved great wodges of sound out of his big, hollow-bodied guitar and
Calvert slammed his tom-toms with frenzied movements, it became clear that
the veneer of co operation between the musicians masked a violent power
struggle.
With the demagogic Coleman ranting and foaming, his body quivering as if in
the grip of a seizure, the battle to see who could make the most impact was
joined on all fronts, including the sound engineer, whose efforts to balance
all the instruments seemed to lead, with each successive number, to more of
everything.
For a while they maintained an unbelievable pitch of intensity that peaked
with a sequence at the end of Frenzy, when Coleman, illuminated by a
flashing strobe, seemed about to shake himself apart, while the musical
sequence accelerated to a speed that surely approached the limits of what is
humanly possible.
But having reached this moment of supreme existential agony, they had also
arrived at the point of no return. With the volume now well over the pain
threshold, and the lighting engineer joining in with a visual cacophony of
blinding flashes and chaotic, swirling spots, the contours of the show
became increasingly blurred and melodrama gradually gave way to monotony.
Coleman delivered a brief, troubled monologue about killing sparrows before
Bloodsport and outlined the group's plan to record their next album in
various war zones. But if their energy was not entirely spent by the time
they navigated a rambling sequence of encores, including Sun Goes Down, Are
You Receiving? and Pandemonium, your reviewer's enthusiasm most certainly
was.
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