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King Khan interview

Tarot photo by Matias Corral.
Words and interview by Jono Coote.

 Hide Arish Cartas Tarot Jodoroski by Matias Corral

Last week was a belter of a music session at the Brudenell Social Club, starting on Monday with Tommy Guerrero and then continuing through the week with Mike Watt on Wednesday and the over the top rock ‘n roll, soul extravaganza of King Khan and the Shrines on Friday.

Working a long shift on Friday alongside a couple of writing sessions well into the night on the previous couple of days hadn’t left me at my best, but I’d heard too much about the band’s stage reputation to write a night off and the chance to interview the man himself was the icing on the cake.

I arrived at about the same time as the band’s curry order so after some time spent eating, acting out scenes from the movie Kingpin, discussing the health problems arising from soft drinks and decrying the flagrant false advertising of the magazine Uncut (a cover mount CD with a Ramones photo but absolutely no Ramones tracks contained within is not an acceptable way to carry on, we agreed), we headed to the van to talk about where Khan was currently at.

For those who don’t know, who is King Khan and who are The Shrines?

My name is King Khan and I play psychedelic rhythm and blues music with the Shrines. I put together the band in 1999 and yea, we play revolution rock…and soul!

You’re in the midst of a far ranging European tour at the moment so, as someone known for intense live shows, what’s the strangest thing to happen so far on this one?

I guess maybe not one of the strangest but one of the greatest was when we played in Athens. Our promoter invited us the year before to this festival and I was doing a lot of chanting and getting the audience to chant against the Golden Dawn, the fascist party there. It turned out the security were from the Golden Dawn so then he got death threats for that show…he was happy though, it meant that it was hitting them where it hurts. We played again this year and things got pretty crazy, the reaction of the young kids was really beautiful. I dedicated the whole set to Killah P, a hip hop artist who was murdered by the Golden Dawn. It was pretty wild to see kids ready to fight against the police and try to do something…especially nowadays when it seems that most people are very lazy and try to revolt against the system through the internet. Which I guess does work in some ways!

It’s got its place, but I suppose sometimes you need real action.

Yea, sometimes you need to hit the streets. I mean I come from Montreal which was notoriously a riot town when I was growing up. It was funny, they would riot if they won the Stanley Cup or if they lost but the punks would also take the opportunity to riot. I remember seeing a riot when the Exploited didn’t make it across the border, and I saw maybe 5,000 punks just tear into the streets. I remember seeing a toilet bowl ripped out of a bar and thrown into a cop car, it was great. So I really admire cities that still have the riot gene.

Carrying on from that thought, there is a running social commentary throughout the new record. How important do you think music is to raising political awareness? I once saw Billy Bragg say to a crowd that music can’t change the world, but I took that as bullshit.

I definitely think they go hand in hand, especially the music which inspires me the most, the music inspired by the civil rights movement. Free jazz as well – I’ve been thinking about this a lot, the whole idea of Black Power, it’s a very strong and beautiful thing which people misunderstand. You can’t compare it to white power; black power has much more to do with…

I guess for a start, it’s born of oppression…

Yea, but also there is a very big spiritual aspect; it comes out of oppression, but also out of freeing yourself from that oppression through other means. For example Sun Ra, Art Ensemble of Chicago and a lot of free jazz artists at the time, they found an almost alchemical way of freeing their souls from the shackles of being in America. They tapped into another universe that was waiting to be discovered. You know, music is ultimately the universal language, a mystic language and it can take you to far places within your consciousness. I think people forget that, especially because of the way pop music numbs the masses and praises mediocrity – that never changes and seems to get stronger and stronger. But there will always be that 1% of people that are creating. I can also see with my two daughters and the way me and my wife have raised them, they have great taste in music and they understand the roots of revolution. They’re gonna be great human beings and it has to do a lot with just teaching them the right things – and I know there’s enough parents out there who are doing it right to counteract the majority of parents who are doing it wrong. So in summary, I guess you’d say I disagree with Billy Bragg on that one.

Me too! On the subject of the Black Power movement you are also working on the soundtrack for The Invaders, a documentary about a militant black power organisation – how did that come about?

I was asked by the founder of the Invaders, who were a militant black power group from Memphis in the late 60s…it was a couple of guys who were working for government programmes, but at the time the FBI was basically getting newspapers and journalists to write articles against people who were helping the movement with community work, stuff like that. I won’t go into the whole story now but the director played my music to John B Smith, the founding member, he loved it and asked me to do the soundtrack so I got to do all the music supervision and write some original score and that was really beautiful, a great experience.

The Invaders is an untold story, these guys got all the youth in Memphis, all the teenagers and all the young adults, to fight the police. They got blamed for a lot of riots but it wasn’t there thing; they were organising the youth, feeding children and helping them with their homework. They were an amazing team who managed to unite all the gangs, north, east, south and west in Memphis. Martin Luther King was impressed by their whole organisation and asked them to be a part of the Poor Peoples’ Campaign, then the day after that he was shot. This was an untold story for a long time.

So they were within an inch of becoming part of the mainstream history of the civil rights movement?

Yea, and King knew that he needed to work with the militants and this was one thing that the ministers wanted to keep hush hush, because they didn’t want King’s name to be tarnished by militants or something similar. So there is a huge untold story that is finally being told and I’m really proud to be a part of it. I think it’s coming out later this year or maybe next year.

That sounds fucking awesome! (I’d woken up a little by this point). Going back to the new record, what influenced its sound and has that differed much to what has influenced previous work?

I think that the influences pretty much remain the same…to be able to combine soul music, punk and psychedelic elements, some free jazz. I was never a purist, I like to record in an old fashioned way maybe but in terms of song writing and stuff I like to be really free

I guess with each of your bands you’ve combined similar, but noticeably different musical elements from group to group.

Exactly, with me and Mark for example we’re so inspired by doo-wop and old rock n roll but at the same time we also love GG Allin and punk rock…which is also totally revolutionary. Yea, the elements are all earth, wind, water and fire, they never really change! (Laughter)

Moving on, who makes up the Kukamongas Death Cult, and what are its aims?

It started off in the beginning when the Deadly Snakes asked the Spaceshits to go on tour with them around the States. I was booking the tour and I told them there wasn’t gonna be any money and they had to fend for themselves and find somewhere to stay. We wound up, there were twelve of us on tour and it was like a roving gang. This was when we were teenagers, maybe 19 or 20 years old, it was then that we most started enjoying a gang mentality. We wanted to be the Kukamongas MC – not motorcycle club, but musical club! That later evolved in to a death cult when the Black Lips joined the whole thing and it became a little bit more cultish.

At the time I’d started using tarot cards so we mixed in all these weird, mystical ideas. I remember it was the tour with me, Mark Sultan and the Black Lips in the South, doing two weeks or something –we went to Memphis and Jackson, we went to where Robert Johnson met the Devil, the crossroads…Clarksdale, Mississippi. Me and Cole went to the crossroads, I had my tarot cards and Cole grabbed them, threw them on the floor and started mixing them in the dirt. The game was to try and find the devil, we kept flipping cards on at a time but after about twenty times we hadn’t found him. But then later, every morning Cole would grab my cards, focus and try and pull the devil out of the pack and I swear every day for the next four days he did it…and Cole I guess in some way is pretty connected to Beelzebub. That became a game, if people wanted to be a part of the death cult then we’d put the card out and see if they could pick out the devil card, which they never really did [laughter]…sometimes maybe!

It’s basically just a family, a chosen family and there have been people all over the world. In some ways I think of it as a lost tribe of rock and rollers, although I haven’t really been initiating new members or anything like that. I guess it had to do with growing up too, when you experience these things when you’re young, then you don’t need to add more people. It’s not about spreading it like some kind of club, it’s more just a cool family of great people. Right now we’ve got The Spits, the Gris Gris were in it, Jay Reatard, great people who are still brothers and sisters.

(This is followed by some comedy Khan flatulence!)

Cheers to the death cult!

Oh god, it stinks, sorry! It’s gunna leave a stain on the windows!

Pre gig curry will do that! You mentioned the Spits, who I know skate. I think the first time I heard you was via the Creature video Hesh Law where the BBQ Show song Zombies was used on the soundtrack. Do you or any of the members of your bands skate?

Actually you know what, there was actually a board company that made graphics out of my paintings, Lurkville out of San Diego. I always wanted to skate, my parents got me a banana board and I dunno, I just never really got into it. I hung out with a lot of graffiti kids as a teenager. When I was with the Spaceshits, a lot of us were into doing graffiti, and they all skated but I’m…I’m very clumsy.

Me too! (Brandishing my bandaged and cast covered arm) I was going to ask about the collaboration that started to happen with the GZA – did anything more come of that?

I played two shows with him, NXNE and at a Texas festival in Austin, playing guitar for him. The way we met was really cool actually; I was playing in Toronto with Mark and the BBQ Show and Fab Five Freddy was in the audience, he was freaking out and then the next day he invited me to go and meet him and GZA at a press conference. I went there, they were discussing the history of hip hop and that was amazing to just watch. During the conference Fab Five Freddy gave me a shout out, he was like ‘Yesterday I saw a great rock n roll band, King Khan and the BBQ Show’.

It doesn’t get better than that!

I know, it was badass! Anyway before the conference we were drinking Bloody Caesars, me and GZA and Fab Five Freddy. We were talking about all sorts of stuff, GZA invited me to his hotel room and I took my guitar so we were hanging out jamming. Then he asked me to come and play on about five songs from Liquid Swords so that was really badass. Unfortunately we talked a bit about doing some kind of collaboration stuff then, I dunno, all sorts of stuff happened with my brain. I went through a breakdown and stuff, and never got back in touch about doing stuff. I got a Wu name though, which is Lord Khan!

Right, as I can hear the first band starting to play, let’s have the final question – how did Lindsay Lohan take getting a face full of arse at the Cannes Film Festival?

That was really hilarious, because shortly afterwards she invited us all up to her hotel room. Me and the Almighty Defenders were all hanging out, I did her tarot cards up there, it was funny because she got the card…it was an old deck I used to use and it was a woman, covering her face in a boat sailing far away, which actually kind of happened to her – she got arrested not long after that. She was really nice actually and we were having quite a lot of fun. It’s kind of sad when people like that are turned in to targets. I even saw it with Jay Reatard, people used to go to his shows to do something bad just to make him angry and see him explode. It’s so sad when that becomes a trademark of your existence; you wind up getting in a lot of trouble all the time. I’m glad I have nothing to do with that…I think if you approach music in a certain way and are open about who you are, what you are, there’s no mystery about you…a lot of people, especially in music hide that their married, or have families and stuff and it’s so idiotic. That’s one thing I’m happy about – I’ve been so open about my life so I don’t get these crazy stalkers and shit like that.☮ ✌

King Khan & The Shrines have a killer album out right now on Merge Records that you should check out. Khan has re-united with long time partner in crime Mark Sultan to record a brand new King Khan & BBQ Show album which should be released later this year.

Look forward to that with bells on, but in the meantime, indulge yourself into this ‘Road Tape’, stacked with a bunch of amazing tracks that King Khan & The Shrines play whilst on tour. Miss them at your peril at the Scala in London tomorrow evening 24/4/14.

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Album Reviews Buzz Chart

Cloud Nothings

Cloud Nothings
‘Here and Nowhere Else’
(Wichita)

cloud_nothings_here_and_nowhere_else_sleeve_artOver the last few years, Ohio’s Cloud Nothings have built a reputation for raw Sub Pop style punk rock with quality tunes and plenty of youthful hunger. This is the follow-up to 2012’s excellent ‘Attack On Memory’ (produced by a certain Steve Albini, no less), and an indicator that Cloud Nothings aren’t mellowing with age (thank goodness).

Certainly, the likes of ‘Quieter Today’ and ‘Giving Into Seeing’ belt along with typical effervescence; singer/guitarist Dylan Baldi sounding increasingly unnerved as the pace quickens. A more melodic side comes to the fore on ‘Just See Fear’ and ‘Psychic Trauma’, which start with a languid Dinosaur Jr-esque jangle, but manage to grow some pretty fearsome musical teeth along the way.

It seems appropriate that, around the 20th anniversary of Mr Cobain’s sad demise, Cloud Nothings are marrying plaid-shirt melodies and fuzzed-up guitar noise in a way that frequently doffs its cap to Seattle’s finest, yet also injects fresh vitality into old sounds. Oh, and they’re great live too.

Alex Gosman

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Album Reviews Buzz Chart Music

Silo

Silo_WorkSilo
Work
Novennial Paralysis

Silo are a three piece band from Denmark, and together they concoct the most captivatingly obscure music you’ll hear this side of the solar system.

If you haven’t seen nor heard of Silo until now, be aware that this is by no means the first time they’ve made some noise. The last time Silo were an active band was some 13 years ago with barely a handful of releases on WIRE frontman Colin Newman’s label, Swim Records, before the band sadly faded out of music and into the perils of ‘real life’.

Thankfully, Silo have ended this vow of silence, and reconvene to bring us a brand new album, Work. This is a particularly obscure body of music and often intensely monotonous, applying the pressure straight form the off. Glancing at the artwork, it’s plain to see where the inspiration for this one has come from.

Fading into brooding instrumental opener ‘Filaments’, you can sense it’s going to be an eventful journey. The first three tracks on Work are as warped and twisted as they come, each built on a sturdy industrial rhythm and a cacophony of clashing guitar frequency. These tracks swing into each other like a relentless pendulum of noise until the bottomless bass hook of ‘Stationary’ gives way, cascading into an interlude of synthesised sensations.

After coming up for air, Silo pick up where they left off with hiphop infested curveball, ‘Cabinn Fever’. The heavy grooves and broken beats of which feature album guests High Priest and M Sayyid, coating this track with their rap verse spat all over it.

Offering itself up as a musical sedative to the chaos that came before, ‘O’ is one of the more mellow tracks on Work, but undoubtedly one of the finest. The droning bass line, shattered rhythms and synth inflections all melt into something deeply twisted and far beyond the norm.

As this journey comes to a close, you’re left with what’s probably the bleakest song title ever. ‘The Inexorable Sadness of Pencils’ chimes on infinitely, shedding a new light on the meaning of monotony.

If you like it loud and left field, Work is an album to get fully immersed in. Silo harness the endless capabilities of effects and computers and run wild with them. Digitally reshaping their guitar hooks and broken beats to make disturbingly futuristic sounds. It’s uncommon to hear music bearing these unexplainable, ultramodern qualities coming from anywhere other than the Turquoise Hexagon Sun studios, until now.

Work is available from April 14th via Novennial Paralysis.

Dave Palmer

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Music News

Watch Nirvana with J Mascis playing “School” live

Ph: Keith Marlowe

j_mascis_nirvana-saint_vitus_keith_marlowe-photo

If there was one legendary musician you would want to see up there alongside Krist Novoselic, Pat Smear, and Dave Grohl playing Nirvana tracks in a hot sweaty club, J Mascis would most probably be at the top of the list.

This phone footage from last night’s secret show after the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame ceremony at a 300 capacity bar in Brooklyn called Saint Vitus has just hit the web. It’s an absolute treat!

Joan Jett also played….

As did Annie Clarke….

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Music News

Nirvana with Joan Jett, Lorde and Kim Gordon

Last night’s Hall of Fame ceremony with Nirvana as guests turned out to be a talking point. Joan Jett was picked to sing Nirvana’s biggest hit ‘Nevermind’ and crushed it in the process. When was the last time Jett reached notes this high? Her version filmed at the Saint Vitus club (230 capacity secret show after the awards) was much better. Lethal Bizzle would have been a better choice.

As for Lorde. Yuck. Amazed she was even invited. Thankfully Kim Gordon’s contribution made it worthwhile, but I bet Kurt would have been stoked on the fact that all three tracks were fronted by females. Good call.

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Live Reviews Music

True Widow live at the Islington Academy

True Widow / Broken DC
Islington Academy
9th April 2014

Set in the middle of a shopping centre in Angel, the Islington Academy hardly has the history that many of London’s venues have, however a band worth its crust should be able to transcend any potential limitations of its venue, right? And did True Widow? Well that’s we’re about to find out…

First on the stage was London’s Broken DC with their seismic blend of 90s indebted alt. rock and crushing post-rock. Though their influences may be clear (from Slint to Trail of Dead to Russian Circles), they’re far from being slaves to them, with enough varied instrumentation and time signatures to truly enrapture the growing audience. The two duelling guitars truly play off each other, before coming together for some of the night’s heaviest moments.

Dallas’s True Widow know exactly what they want to do and how to do it exceptionally. Their minimal setup is all fuzz and stomp, creating longingly drawn out slow burners. They are essentially the innovators of this particular craft, so much so that their entire set (unsurprisingly to those who know them on record), never deviates from this template.

Heavy on tracks from last year’s sublime Circuambilation record, particular highlights included ‘Four Teeth’, where bassist Nicole Estill takes the lead vocal duties, with its yearning drone forcing the audience to sway in zombie-like motion. Throughout the set, the band are completely on point, it seems almost effortless.

As note perfect as each track was, at times it felt like the music was simply not quite loud enough. Where I wanted the bass heavy tracks to reverberate in my chest, it did not. I wanted to be pummelled by the sound. The band play on the tag ‘stoner-gaze’, though the stoner element was definitely more at the forefront on this occasion. Live reviews of shoegaze bands over the years have bemoaned and praised the volume levels of these shows, so I appreciate it is a fine art getting it just right, while being able to appreciate the song-craft – however True Widow’s tracks are in essence far heavier than most shoegaze bands and would have surely been heightened by a few extra decibels. This is perhaps where the venue could have played a part. A smaller basement venue could have housed the band’s sound perfectly.

The band are clearly progressing and picking up new fans along the way, but here’s hoping larger venues that are opening up to them doesn’t diminish what makes them truly powerful.

Augustus Groove

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Features Music

Once Upon a Time in Shaolin: Are you having a laugh?

wu_tang_clan_$5m

Remember that scene in the Lost Boys where Sam goes into the comic book shop? He’s looking for a copy of Batman #14. He’s politely informed by the Frogg brothers that there are only five in existence. His response is priceless: “[There are] Four, actually. I’m always looking for the other three.”

Now, depending on how much you fetishize one-offs, limited editions, misprints and other purchase-incentive collectables, you will either see this as harmless collector braggadocio, or serious asshole syndrome.

By flexing his collector muscle in such a grand fashion, he will either remind you of Poison Idea (Record Collectors Are Pretentious Assholes) or your own sick hunger for commercialist trinkets. Some of us fall on both sides of the fence – we rabidly collect things just to have them, and we fucking hate other people for doing the same. I’ve got my hands up – I’m guilty. I love ‘deluxe’, ‘limited’, ‘super deluxe’… all that stuff. But if I see someone else bragging about how hard-to-get their own collection is, I feel sick.

You know the Wu-Tang Clan. Shit, we all know the Wu. We know what they’re all about. So it’ll come as no surprise that we had to mention this particular news story:

Wu-Tang Clan’s legendary spokesman, leader and resident genius The RZA (the artist formerly known as Bobby Digital) is causing the music world a whole heap of grief on this topic with his announcement of a new Wu-Tang Clan record that will be limited to ONE copy. That’s right, one, uno, un, eins… a single fucking copy.

But that’s not all – the record, handily titled The Wu – Once Upon a Time in Shaolin will be toured across the globe as a ‘pay to hear’ spectacle, which is essentially a gig without the performance aspect. The details aren’t finalized, but it would appear as though closely-guarded headphones will be installed in museums across the globe, and folks can pay $50 to sit for two hours to listen to the record. Once. All two hours of it.

So after that tour is over, the album will be sold to the highest bidder. Be it a banker, a car salesman, Alan Sugar, Rob Dyrdek,… whoever the fuck is rich enough and stupid enough to buy it will surely be deserving of the scorn sent their way by a public who aren’t guaranteed to ever be hearing it.

This, of course, raises many questions. Amongst them are:

“What happens if I need to piss/smoke/eat/cry/call somebody? Can I pause the record?”

“What happens if the album is shit? Do I get a refund?”

“Just how big of a mug do you think I am?”

“Is this Alcoholics Anonymous?”

It supposedly features all of the Clan, some FC Barcelona players and a string of unannounced guests. Exciting? You betcha. Worth the hassle? Probably not. I didn’t even know Xavi could rap, and I certainly wouldn’t want to hear Dani Alves’ bars, they’re probably wack.

Of course, this concept is, technically, revolutionary. The fact that all recorded music is free nowadays is not lost on the RZA, who wishes to put the ‘art’ back into ‘artist’ and ‘asshole’ back into ‘money grabbing asshole’ with this grand plan of his. It wouldn’t be the first time.

If you’ve heard any Wu-Tang album, especially the first one, you’ll know that they’re capable of brilliance. No, they are capable of making a perfect record. How close Once Upon a Time gets to that level is beyond a guess.

Of course, my guess is that this is actually a Funny Or Die hoax to promote their actual new album A Better Tomorrow. The site that’s marketing the album is called ‘Ezclziv scluzay’, which sounds a bit like Exclusive Clues Ay. Don’tcha think? I call bollocks. He might be having a little dig at Jay-Z, who sold $5,000,000 worth of his latest album to Samsung in some marketing shenanigans. Who knows?

I, for one, hope it’s one big joke and Funny Or Die will come out soon to claim the credit for this shit-heap (like the comedy terrorists they are) much like they did for the Flaming Lips’ announcement of a companion piece to Dark Side of the Moon. If it’s not a hoax, then the joke is on Wu-Tang Clan, I’m afraid.

In any case: RIP ODB.

“PS: EZCLZIV SCLUZAY = Easy clues I’ve schooled you’s ay?”

I think I’ve worked it out – if it’s a hoax.

Ross Horton

Categories
Buzz Chart Single Reviews

Thee Oh Sees

Thee Oh Sees
‘Penetrating Eye’
(Castle Face)

Thee-Oh-Sees-penetratingeye8John O’Dwyer threatened a hiatus for Thee Oh Sees after last year’s ‘Floating Coffin’ but despite flirting with electronica with his Damaged Bug project he wasn’t ready to hammer the nail in that wooden box yet. He did move to LA from San Fran, but other than that it’s business as usual.

The new album is called ‘Drop’ and it’s about to ahem drop on Record Store Day. It was recorded in a banana ripening warehouse and the banana skinny on this record is that the quality has not slipped. ‘Penetrating Eye’ is the wince inducing intro track, part Ty Segall part Led Zep, as shredding an opening as you could hope to witness, it scared me shitless.

Nick Hutchings

Categories
Features Music

Crossfire Buzzbombs: 11 new tracks for April

Sleaford Mods – ‘Tied Up In Nottz’ (Harbinger Records)

Like seventies New York electronic art punks Suicide but from the streets of Nottingham, Sleaford Mods are pure street poetry set over a clanking bass and minimal rhythms. Like John Cooper Clarke but with twice the venom and acidity, vocalist Jason Williamson’s way with words and lyrical rhymes are powerful, thought-provoking and at times, totally hilarious. He also swears better than any other f**ker I’ve heard. Believe the hype. – James Sherry

Human Eye – ‘Gettin’ Some’ (Goner Records)

When life serves you human sized bugs, exterminator’s and gunge in garage rock format from Detroit, you should thank your lucky stars someone spent their weekend up to their guts in it and then dive in head first. Human Eye released this filthy bug jam last week from their ‘4:Into Unknown’ album and it’s utter filth. You can also thank King Khan for sending this one over to us. – Zac

Thee Oh Sees – ‘Penetrating Eye’ (Castle Face)

John O’Dwyer threatened a hiatus for Thee Oh Sees after last year’s ‘Floating Coffin’ but despite flirting with electronica with his Damaged Bug project he wasn’t ready to hammer the nail in that wooden box yet. He did move to LA from San Fran, but other than that it’s business as usual. The new album is called ‘Drop’ and it’s about to ahem drop on Record Store Day. It was recorded in a banana ripening warehouse and the banana skinny on this record is that the quality has not slipped. ‘Penetrating Eye’ is the wince inducing intro track, part Ty Segall part Led Zep, as shredding an opening as you could hope to witness, it scared me shitless. – Nick Hutchings

Fist City – ‘Let’s Rip’ (Transgressive Records)

Girl gangs are taking over the world, well, in Canada anyway. This latest gang bang was shot in a bar whilst the owner was out and the band got away with it. Fist City just cruised through the UK last week and played a bunch of sold out shows that were awesome. Get some of their punk inspired malarkey on the re-issue of “It’s 1983, Grow Up” out on May 19th, you will not regret it. – Zac

The Skull Defekts – ‘The Known Unknown’ (Thrill Jockey)

Abba are from Sweden, you know? So are rabid, krautrock-flavoured noise-rock miscreants The Skull Defekts. Their new album is likely to be busting a lot of houses down when it drops this month, you’d be doing yourself a favour by making your house one of ’em. The Known Unknown is like the groovy offspring of a junkie robot and a broken amp, highly recommended. – Ross Horton

Black Bananas – ‘Physical Emotions’ (Drag City)

Snake-hipped pillow-lipped Venusian Goddess Jennifer Herrema made her triumphant return to the world of ‘pop music’ with this absolutely monstrous groove-thang. Like all of her work with (my favourite band) Royal Trux, RTX and beyond, this track totally defies genres and will warp your mind if you listen to it loud enough. Go go go. – Ross Horton

OBN III’s – ‘No Time For The Blues’ (TTT Records)

Austin Texas band OBN III’s third album ‘Third Time To Harm’ is a party record that reminds me of the much underrated Lee Harvey Oswald Band. ‘No Time For The Blues’ is like Andrew WK doing Iggy doing the ‘Spaghetti Incident’, a party record with monster riffs where you can feel free to check your brain by the door and flex your neck up the front. – Nick Hutchings

Protomartyr – ‘Come & See’ (Hardly Art Records)

Welcome to the world of Protomartyr who fit somewhere between punk and post-punk, shunning the noir-ish drama of the latter without losing the fervor of the former. Despite this being one of the more restrained tracks on their new album Under Color of Official Right there’s an clear darkness to ‘Come & See’, all held together with a delicious groove. – Joe Parry

Greys – ‘Guy Picotto’ (Car Park Records)

‘Guy Picotto’ is the first track to emerge from punks Greys forthcoming debut album, coming out in May. A slab of tongue-in-cheek hardcore with some Jesus Lizard ingenuity clashing with fellow Canadian’s Fucked Up’s ear for melody. – Joe Parry

Kevin Drew – ‘Bullshit Ballad’ (Arts & Crafts)

Kevin Drew, one half of Canadian super group Broken Social Scene, has just dropped a brand new solo album. Darlings is expectedly full of synth slurs and instrumental murmurs, atop which sit Drew’s ever suggestive vocal, laced with subtle sleaze. A mellow album certainly worth listening to, highlights come in the form of ‘Bullshit Ballad’. – Dave Palmer

Violent Reaction – ‘Dead End’ (Painkiller Records)

Let’s end this on some excellent shit-kicking Oi! influenced hardcore from Merseyside, Violent Reaction are pure musical thuggery. Think Negative Approach meets Sham 69 and the 4-Skins biting your nose off. They’ve just been snapped up by legendary hardcore label Revelation so expect to be hearing a lot from these boys and their Dr. Marten’s boots this year. – James Sherry

If you would like to contribute tracks next month or write for us then don’t be shy, get in touch.

Categories
Music News

Public Enemy Announce June UK Shows

Rap legends Public Enemy have announced a UK tour today and will be bringing their steez to the UK this June. Let’s see if Flava Flav can stay out of trouble long enough to make the trip and if so, the masters of politically charged hip hop should be worth your quids. Flava Flav will join Chuck D, DJ Lord and The S1W at the following dates below as well as headlining Tramlines Festival and Stockton Weekender on the weekend of July 26th and 27th.

Wed June 04 2014 – LEAMINGTON SPA Assembly
Thu June 05 2014 – LOWESTOFT Aquarium
Sat June 07 2014 – LONDON Electric Brixton

Public Enemy Tickets are on sale from 9am on Friday April 11th priced from £23.50 and £35.