[kj] article/review in german VISIONS mag
Brendan
bq at soundgardener.co.nz
Fri Oct 8 17:22:57 EDT 2010
Ausgezeichnet, dankesehr!
> Hi there,
> this is from the german alternative rock magazine VISIONS.
> Sorry for the shitty translation, my english has seen better days. The
> only thing I can say in my defence is that some of it sounded already
> pretty awkward in the german original. :-)
> I'll scan the thing when I get the chance...
> btw, does anybody know what he got the grammys for?
>
> Marcel
>
> Killing Joke -- Visions 211 /10.2010
>
> Nature has the last word
>
> Three decades of Killing Joke -- and something special for the
> anniversary: The first album by the original members in 28 years. With
> this one the old heros are reaching new heights -- Absolute Dissent is
> the most thirring in at least a decade. In the interview band-boss Jaz
> Coleman describes the journey to a monster turned into music -- and
> explains why the world is in for apocalypse soon.
>
> /Jaz, no matter if one likes or dislikes you (the band), no matter if
> it's a strong or a weak KJ-period, one thing's always the same: There is
> a subtle feeling of dark matter (sic) in your music, like claustrophobia
> turned into sound. Why is that?/
>
> When we're together in a room something happens. These boys are my
> lifelong education; there is nothing in my like that's not connected to
> them. I've spent more time with these three guys then with my whole
> family.
>
> All of us wouldn't exist without Killing Joke, there would be no
> conscience.
>
> This is not a band, this is a way of life, a worldview/view of life.
> Everybody who has recorded an album with KJ speaks of it as a traumatic
> experience. We literally go through hell every time. And that's what you
> hear on the finished record afterwards; something that you've described
> as claustrophobia quite fittingly. It feels similar to me, however it's
> more of an inner claustrophobia than an outer claustrophobia.
>
> /As if you'd rather run away from yourself?/
>
> Not run away, but to gain more distance. It's such an inner pain to go
> through it every time, you'd rather be an observer of the process and
> not a person concerned. At the same time I know: It's only because I go
> through it the music that we're looking for can be created. But it fucks
> us up every time.
>
> /No idea how to change that?/
>
> No idea, no. We don't know how it evolves, but it's there. We're
> shouting at each other until we lose our voices, throw around stuff and
> get to the borders of our capacities. With this comes what we call the
> "unforeseeable". Not one KJ album even begins to come close to the
> concept I thought about beforehand. Obviously this band is also about
> the constant destruction of all of your beliefs and ideas.
>
> /No way to compromise without intern struggling?/
>
> No, that doesn't work for us. Especially this time I wanted to focus on
> - and follow a few things, to stick to some ideas. One had been to have
> the better part of the album with precomposed structures. I had written
> about ten of those as a basis beforehand. Now there are two structured
> songs left on the album. The rest of them are jams. The unforeseeable
> has occurred once again. As a matter of fact all the songs that we think
> of as being the strongest in our career have been the result of such
> jams. It seems that we are on top of our game when we achieve a
> collective spontaneous combustion (sic) of our egos and personalities.
> Into disaster without preparation: That's the way KJ-music emerges.
>
> /Desaster is pure chaos. Your music on the other hand brings structure
> to chaos -- where does the structure come from?/
>
> We have two antipodes whenever we work creatively: At least one of us
> takes the revolutionary point of view, another one the reactionary one.
> That's not planned or a conscious decision, these parts aren't always
> assigned in the same way. But there are always these two points of view
> about a piece of of music. When we manage to combine them we get a song.
> When we don't - we get noise, nobody has uses for. The structure comes
> from these contrasting opinions that we have to find a common ground for.
>
> /Well, it remains amazing, how stabilized you keep your agressions even
> beyond the age of 50. So you're not getting milder?/
>
> Not with KJ. It's the audible face of all that is evil and dissatisfied
> within me. It's the channel that allows me to get rid of my demons,
> without having to hurt others.
>
> /What exactly is pissing you off, that it brings out your pure
> aggression./
>
> There are a lot of battlegrounds /unnerving topics for me. It only takes
> a picture of the Rockefeller family in a boulevard magazine to ruin my
> mood in a catastrophic way for days. Or the profit report in the
> quarterly period of one of these banks, that have just cost us billions.
> Or a picture of african landscapes that have been contaminated by
> Oil-barons. Hardly a day passes without me coming across something that
> drives me crazy. It's this unbearable injustice of the distribution of
> chances within the human race.
>
> And this mindless destruction of the basic fundamentals that's growing
> faster and faster.
>
> /Another fighter for these values is the writer T.C. Boyle who has
> turned to fatalism by now once said: There are simply too many people on
> this world to save it. We are bound to fall down./
>
> That's a scenario -- it's realistic, but too hopeless for me. I
> represent the thesis that there will be apocalypse in the near future.
> Not a religious one, but a natural one, that will reduce mankind at
> least by half. That's our chance to start over, so to say the hardest
> form of a purging thunderstorm.
>
> Off course it won't be easy to bury 3 to 4 billions of corpses at once,
> but those who will survive will come out purified -- most of all morally
> and ethically. They will then understand that you cannot force the
> existence of a race against nature. Nature always has the last word.
>
> /Is it correct to assume that you are able to stand all of this, because
> you find your peace of mind in classical music by now?/
>
> Yes, that is correct. It reflects the other side of my personality, it's
> the realm where I can express all the beauty and the sublime I
> experience. Just because of that it is such a very different world, that
> I can't draw any parallels to my work with KJ. Both of it is music and
> that's about it. Apart from that these two worlds have nothing in
> common. Still -- I don't necessarily need classical music as
> compensation. My compensation is the humour I find in KJ. It's the
> blackest humour you can imagine. More black than black. That's what
> builds me up.
>
> /What advise do you have for younger people on how to create socially
> responsible art?/
>
> I wish for more anarchy and uprising in the younger generation -- not
> only in the arts, but in general. This generation is still under the
> influence of the last effects of the blooming world economy, that
> doesn't exist anymore. This safety of wellbeing and education has made
> them sleepy -- while their chances are a lot worse than those of their
> parents. They haven't realized that yet and I wish that the young rise
> up before they are forced to do so. Because then it's usually too late,
> society is much too deep in shit. The last time the world saw a
> situation like this the 2^nd WW broke out. And we all certainly don't
> want a 2^nd Hitler as an alleged savior from the crisis, do we? So --
> rise up and take care of yourself, before others do it. Interview:
> Sascha Krüger. Shitty translation: Marcel
>
> A classic: Already as a teenager Jaz Coleman won numerous prizes for his
> violin-playing and enjoyed classical training. Later he studied arabian
> music and lengthily studied Klezmer- and Maori-music. Through this
> occupation with world-music he returned to classical music. At first he
> interpreted the work of the Rolling Stones, Pink Floyd, Led Zeppelin or
> the doors with symphonic orchestras in the nineties, before his first
> own symphony was staged with the Prague symphonic orchestra in 1999, for
> whom he remains the composer in residence and conductor until today.
> 2001 saw his first Opera "The Marriage At Cana" in the Royal Opera House
> in London. By now he has received 4 grammys for his classical work and
> works with the big orchestras of the world on a regular basis as well as
> soloists like Nigel Kennedy, Sarah Brightman or the Kroke Trio. Coleman
> writes operas, symphonies, chamber music, pieces for choir and
> solo-pieces, but also filmscores.
>
> Review:
>
> For their 30st band anniversary KJ came together in their original
> lineup and present themselves less compromising than ever.
>
> Mellowness due to coming of age is not Jaz Colemans kind of thing.
> Beside all his projects, the choir- and orchestra arrangements,
> compositions for others, books and soundtracks the charismatic-excentric
> fan of experimentation still has enough wrath to present an album with
> his band, that not only captures all facets of three decades of Killing
> Joke, but also displays the ongoing relevance of the Brits in a modern
> and varying way. There are influences of all periods of the band to be
> heard on Absolute Dissent: the raw Postpunk from the early days,
> Pop/Wave disco-tunes like in the late eighties, the industrial-Metal and
> Alternative-Rock, with which KJ have paved the way for countless bands
> in the nineties and that has the biggest part here, too - and with the
> final Ghosts of Ladbroke Grove there's also a Dub-song. The rich
> guitar-work of Geordie Walker, who beside Coleman has been the only
> constant member of KJ has to be stressed once again: sometimes
> extensively supporting the strong choruses like in the title-track or in
> Fresh Fever From The Skies, with simple and concise hooklines in The
> Great Cull or staccato-like monotony in Depthcharge that reminds of
> Fugazis Waiting Room. Coleman adds all kinds of singing, he sounds like
> Lemmy Kilmister or John Baizley of Baroness at times, and then comes
> across with innocent melodies and delivers some the most catchy Choruses
> of his career. Cult-status sustained -- and that with an average age of
> 50. 9 of 12 possible points -- review by Arne Jamelle
>
> The review sounds more like 10, 11 or 12 points to me, but these guys
> are known for their greediness concerning points.
>
>
>
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