[kj] Positive Edinburgh Review: From the Scotsman
Brendan
bq at soundgardener.co.nz
Mon Oct 18 20:01:58 EDT 2010
Fuck that, I say we release B. Oliver Sheppherd on him.
>
> Don't give the Demon Pigeon guy too hard of a time. Based on the rest of
> his blog, it appears he only listens to / reviews the kind of sad-sack
> gargle metal that we all find risible. KJ's latest choice of label have
> pointed many of these unfortunates in our direction, and many more have
> turned away, confused and disheartened. I imagine Tears for Fears were the
> only non-metal band he could think of at the time.
>
> There are a large volume of people for whom KJ only exist since 1985, or
> 1994 or 2003.
>
> Anyway, here's a nice live review of the Edinburgh show. Yes, it really
> does say "Killing Joe."
>
> http://news.scotsman.com/arts/Music-review-Killing-Joe.6585426.jp
> Music review: Killing Joe
> By Fiona Shepherd
>
>
>
>
> KILLING JOKE
>
> PICTURE HOUSE, EDINBURGH
>
> ****
> To this day, Killing Joke are still the only band to ever really scare me
> with a performance. Thirty years into their career, they remain a fierce,
> potent proposition, playing with an almost intimidating intensity to
> outstrip any of their peers and most of their punk/metal progeny.
>
> Following the untimely death of bassist Paul Raven, they have come full
> circle with their line-up, reforming the original gang of renegades:
> bruiser drummer Big Paul Ferguson, Loki-like frontman Jaz Coleman by day
> a respected classical composer/arranger, by night a demonic shaman and,
> flanking him, the unflappable six-string alchemist Geordie and
> bassist/world renowned producer Youth. He's the balding, grey-haired guy
> in the golf visor, by the way.
>
> Together, they generated a piledriving force and inexorable momentum which
> was by turns thrilling and exhausting.
>
> The majority of this set was plain brute force, with much of the subtlety
> of Geordie's distinctive guitar sound lost in the totalitarian assault.
>
> These guys could whip up a mob so easily with declamatory calls-to-arms
> such as Wardance and the monolithic majesty of Requiem, not to mention
> Coleman's brief sermons on the economic apocalypse and other philosophical
> matters rarely addressed by a rock band.
> But they could equally incite the none-too-sprightly audience to dance
> with the underlying funkiness of Love Like Blood and the pagan stomp of
> Eighties.
>
> Long may they light fires and rage hard.
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