Posts in category

GIGS


★★★★★ Pop music discovering its most visceral and confrontational side in 2-3 minute odes of nihilism inspired by daily boredom and post teenage anger.

★★★★☆ Thurston Moore is one of those musicians who treat a guitar like an appliance of primitive and unconventional noise.

Despite Motörhead having been on the road for almost 40 years, it is still an unbeatable gear of filth and boisterous noise…

What is outstanding about Nisennenmondai is that they could easily bring a show suitable for all those ecstasy-fuelled addicts, but also a disturbing experience that could easily jeopardize Sonic Youth´s walls of noise and drone […]

Review originally published for Gigslutz – Loud as fuck, disturbing and perversely beautiful; that´s the sound coming out of trashed amps when you listen to Dressmaker – one of London’s most satisfying experiences if you are looking for something to outrage your inner peace […]

Marc Ford, Black Crowes´ former lead guitarist sets the tone of a show full of contemplative acoustic Americana at a dark intimate Soho basement […]

Dressed in black and white as a symbol that defines the archetype of Saint Agnes; a badge that floats between the saintly and evil as well as the obscure and the pure. Guitar riffs a la Jack White while Jon´s and Kitty´s vocals define the plot of a dark sonic experience […]

Review originally published for Gigslutz – “Where the heck am I?” I asked myself this question several times during the three-day return of the Hop Farm Music Festival. “Is this a rock ‘n’ roll event?” the answer´s no. Unlike other summer festivals full of tempting perversion, fascinating perdition and auto destruction […]

Review originally published for Gigslutz – Just less than three months ago, Interpol triumphantly left the iconic art-deco walls of Brixton Academy splattered with their sound. Last Wednesday, the New York rockers successfully turned on the bright lights again with a victorious comeback to London´s Electric Ballroom […]

The good news is that the music of Graham Parker & The Rumour – born of the mid-1970s marriage of a notably gifted songwriter and a bunch of all star pub rock alumni – holds up better than most output of the […]