Wednesday, April 16, 2008

Gig review: Kills/These New Puritans



Edinburgh Liquid Rooms, April 15 2008

These New Puritans are one of those names that I've heard of and heard bits of but nothing had prepared me for this. Very loud, no extremely noisy and excellent. My mate compares them to Squarepusher and Hard-Fi having a punch-up in a dustbin (thanks for letting me use that, Gordon!) with Primal Scream circa XTRMNTR and Peter Hook pitching in as well.It's bass heavy and utterly wonderful. Music to lose yourself in. They have so much echo on the vocals that you cannot make out what they say. This does not matter one iota. the final track features the bass player helping out on drums while the singer ramblings sound 'dubbed out' over white noise. This band are something special.

We wait ages for the Kills but the DJ or whoever plays pretty much the entirety of It Takes A Nation Of Millions To Hold Us Back, and let's face it, that's an album you can never hear enough. This evening, as I wait for the Kills to come onstage is time to reflect: the first time I saw the Kills they were the support act to Primal Scream (Edinburgh Corn Exchange, December 1992) and one of the most amazing acts I'd ever seen. The debut LP Keep On Your Mean Side appeared six months later and did not disappoint. Two years later the band dropped No Wow. Not as acclaimed as their debut but by now the band were as likely to appear at fashion shows as scuzzy gigs. They played a good set at the Liquid Rooms that night, but at the time, the future Mrs. 17 Seconds and I were exhausted, slumped across the tables upstairs as we listened. And three years later, the band have released Midnight Boom. In the interceding years, Alison Mossheart has contributed vocals to Placebo's fifth album, the band have recorded a version of 'I Call It Art' by Serge Gainsbourg...oh yes, and Jamie has a celebrity girlfriend.

But enough of that. Tonight The Kills deliver on every promise and hint of greatness and slay the audience (given half a chance, I bet they'd actually do that, too). They tear into Midnight Boom's opener 'U.R.A. Fever' and then into 'Pull A U.' If you'd ever forgotten why you liked the Kills then a show like this slaps you around the face and reminds you exactly why, dammit. 'No Wow' bristles with what I can only describe as gorgeous tension, while 'Kissy Kissy' is as bluesy as ever. As for 'Fried My Little Brains' and 'The Good Ones...' these guys are intense, in the best possible way. Hell, their encore 'Love Is A Deserter' manages to incorporate what sounds like the riff to 'Funky Town' and just explodes.

To watch the Kills on stage as Alison and Jamie do things that go beyond description with their instruments and sound, still just the two of them and a drum machine, is to understand that rock'n'roll lives, pouts and sneers still. They may sing that they're tired of being cheap and cheerful, and really, they are so much more.

Ignore these bands at your peril.

*****

These New Puritans -'Navigate, Navigate.' mp3

Kills -'Cheap and Cheerful.' mp3


The Kills' official website/The Kills' MySpace

These New Puritans official website/These New Puritans Myspace

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

typical, you wait for days and then three arrive at once, love the joolz song, never heard her recorded work before, just familar with her other half's output and a smattering of her poetry, what's wrong with being a punk poet? sounds good to me. Got the kills album, it needs time to grow on me although hook and line is a belting tune
A.J

Ed said...

A.J. -glad you like the song it is indeed absolutely fantastic. There is nothing wrong with being a punk poet, I was just trying to avoid pigeonholing her!

Ed