Preview: In The City
Posted: 03/09/2010 Filed under: Music | Tags: American Men, Andreya Triana, Angel, band, Beaty Heart, Breton, Bright Light Bright Light, Brown Brogues, Chad Valley, Crystal Fighters, Dog Is Dead, drugs, Eagulls, Ellen and the Escapades, Factory Floor, Fiction, Hype Williams, In The City, Is Tropical, Ital Tek, John Weise, Kisses, Lissi Dancefloor Disaster, Live, lounge, Male Bonding, manchester, Mazes, Moho, Mount Kimbie, Mujeres, Mz Bratt, Night & Day, No Age, O Children, Oh No Ono, On, oOoOO, Porcelain Raft, Roadhouse, ruby, Ruff Diamondz, Skepta, Sky Larkin, Slow Motion Shoes, Spectrals, Team Ghost, Teeth, The, The Bewitched Hand On The Top Of Our Heads, Wall, White Ring, Youthless, Yuck Leave a comment »
For the esoteric music snob, a festi such as In The City (13th-15th Oct) sounds like a very appealing prospect indeed. Not only does it take place among Northern Quarter venues bereft of mud, tents and feckless morons wielding ‘Free Hugs’ signs, but it incorporates the important – albeit oft vilified – strata of the industry who ply their trade in the shadows: managers, A&R men and label bosses, oh my.
This year, In The City sports a simply mouthwatering line-up, including: No Age, Sky Larkin, Mount Kimbie, Male Bonding, Yuck, Crystal Fighters, Factory Floor, oOoOO, White Ring, Skepta, Spectrals, Kisses, Ital Tek, Teeth, Andreya Triana, Mazes, John Weise, Is Tropical, Mazes, Porcelain Raft, Oh No Ono, O Children, Chad Valley, Team Ghost, D/R/U/G/S, Hype Williams, American Men, Fiction, Breton, Brown Brogues, Ellen and the Escapades, Dog Is Dead, Slow Motion Shoes, Beaty Heart, Eagulls, Lissi Dancefloor Disaster, The Bewitched Hand On The Top Of Our Heads, Mujeres, Youthless, Bright Light Bright Light, Mz Bratt, Ruff Diamondz, Angel and Maverick Sabre. As if that’s not enough, more acts are due to be announced.
Couple with this live talks from Jay Brown (President and co-founder of Roc Nation), Mike Pickering (MD, Deconstruction Records), Jho Oakley (Founder, Jho Management), Caroline Protheroe (Manager, David Guetta) and Bertis Downs (Manager, R.E.M) and you’ve got yourself a orgasmic three days of music.
Venues participating include Night & Day, Roadhouse, Band On The Wall, Ruby Lounge, Moho Live and a few more.
- Wristbands are £29.
- Hostel and wristband package is £72 for 3 nights stay at Hatters.
- Hotel and pass packages available at £450 for 3 nights stay at City Inn (ITC main
conference venue).
Everything else you need to know can be found on the ITC website.
Pantha Du Prince – Tuesday August 3rd @ The Ruby Lounge
Posted: 09/08/2010 Filed under: Music | Tags: August, Black, come, Du, duck, lounge, manchester, noise, Pantha, Prince, ruby, Saturn, see, Strobe, The Leave a comment »
I may have made some misplaced assumptions about tonight. Speculations such as all German’s are cold, and sticklers for precision. The Ruby Lounge has a questionable sound system. DJ/producer/computer types live, are always tepid, obvious and repetitive affairs.
The main support is D/R/U/G/S. Now, they are a little repetitive. For a short while I’m unaware they’ve even started. It takes moment to discern that the duo casually hunkering over a laptop are performers, and not just two fellows defragging a hard drive. Maybe the nonchalance is part of their shtick. The music certainly doesn’t warrant air punching, or that smug grimace that lots of laptop-knob twiddling types are doing these days. Nevertheless, even with a non-performer such as say, Gold Panda, you know he’s started at least; there are quite obvious visual clues. Not here. The music isn’t bad, it’s just not particularly very good.
Next up a rather humble gentleman is on stage with a wine glass, some ice, and a couple of bottles of water. He taps and runs a metal wand around the innards of the glass, and a shrill tone bellows echoing through the soundsystem, it now having been transmogrified into a swirling, reverberating cacophony of noise. Instead of keys on a keyboard, he adds an ice cube and the tone and dynamic change. Two cubes, three cubes, some water, circulating the rod round the glass, each time creating a new texture of sound. Eventually he presses play on his machinery and a new set of noises whir into their own. It’s common now for the music producer to do this, bop in time to his pre-programmed bars, but you get the impression that Pantha Du Prince doesn’t subscribe to this mode. His esoteric tampering seems earnest; each track is fresh, organic. ‘Saturn Strobe’ is just as vast in its scope, well beyond the aural confines of the Ruby Lounge. The same can be said for tracks from Black Noise. It’s a rare thing when a musician in a live setting can successfully recreate the minutiae of music as complex as Pantha Du Prince, but somehow, very little is mislaid.
I’m always apprehensive about music makers who rely on computers when they play live. I understand that there are noises no piece of wood or brass or string can produce. It’s the way the musician strums or hits or blows that makes the performance. The DJ taps and twiddles. What’s crucial about live performance is the crowd reaction. All musicians live for the response of a crowd, and it’s this element that links every performer together, no matter what their instrument. Pantha Du Prince is working the crowd into a state somewhere between awe and frenzy. Then there’s the sound. Very pristine. Throughout the night there’s a fellow toward the back of the stage whom I’m sure is on sound duties. Maybe I’m wrong. Maybe that’s Herr Hendrik, and the patsy at the front of the stage is a fake.
Either way, tonight Pantha Du Prince, whoever he is, is borderline superb. It’s Tuesday, and working an audience into anything other than a reserved shuffle is a hard task, a task that’s accomplished to perfection.
Band of the Day: From The Kites Of San Quentin.
Posted: 28/03/2010 Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: band, day, from, kites, lounge, manchester, of, quentin, ruby, san, The 1 Comment »
I’m crap at remembering band names. I recoil to think how many bands have slipped into the ether owing to my inability in remembering their long-ass name. From The Kites of San Quentin is one such name. However, Friday’s performance at Manchester’s Ruby Lounge had me dashing to find a pen.
FTKOSQ blend deep, menacing dubstep basslines and trip-hop beats among a heady ruckus of glitchy synth. I’ve heard critics fire disdain at the masculine overtones dubstep encapsulates, not here. Singer Alison Carney cuts a sharp feminine line through a dark melee of noise. A voice more powerful tonight than on record, she rocks gently and smiles like a cheshire cat. Their songs are a moody broth that unfold into euphoric gorgeousness. It’s a mix of just enough disparate musical elements that make FTKOSQ quite awesome. Masterfully effecting, and engaging the audience far more than first support and the night’s headliners.
More about The Kites Of San Quentin can be seen on their Myspace.