Richard [K] Morgan's News and Views


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Thursday, 3 December 2009

Black Rebel Soul


Very happy right now - my obsessively pre-ordered Black Rebel Motorcycle Club live CD/DVD package showed up this week, and in between zipping in and out of the country, I finally managed to grab the time to sit down and watch the DVD in full.

Fuck me, I'd forgotten how good those guys are.

I saw this tour, back in 2007, though I had to drive four hundred miles to my old hometown, Norwich, to see it and the gig itself was a little soured by segments of the audience who evidently considered themselves way too cool to show any real enthusiasm. (It also featured drummer Nick Jago storming off part way through - something that Peter Hayes and Robert Been handled with remarkable aplomb and an achingly good accoustic set). And all those things considered, it was still one of the five finest gigs I've ever seen. My only regret is that I didn't make it to the one in Glasgow - I was down with flu that night, had to give my tickets away to friends - which is one of the three dates, along with Dublin and Berlin, that feature on this DVD. Because by the look of it, those gigs were everything the one I saw was, but turned up to eleven.

So you have barking, snarling guitar and bass riffs, the likes of which you have to go right back to the early Stranglers to find comparison for. You have Wall of Sound power reminiscent of the very best of the Jesus and Mary Chain, but somehow tighter and more energised as a result. You have a striding, throbbing lope to the music, a strength settled into like a freight train building speed or a high performance engine when you drop a gear. You have the genuinely soulful interludes - Been's rendering of Ewan MacColl's sixty year old anthem Dirty Old Town, complete with crowd support, Hayes's flawless performance of the band's own sheerly poetic O/D accoustic lament Faultline, the skyline aching chords and moan of All You Do Is Talk.....

But most of all what you have here is consummate musical talent. Peter Hayes and Robert Been - these guys are capital M Musicians. You watch them swap bass, lead, rhythm, back and forth across the front space of the stage like it's nothing, and carve up the vocals between them, the way you'd share the driving on an overnight long haul; you see them roll out piano, harmonica, fucking trombone (I kid you not), and a cello bow to stroke in the opening of the aforementioned All You Do Is Talk......... And throughout it all, you see the steady flame of a genuine passion for the music, an attention to the songs that brings them out fresh and changed for the occasion. You see an intensity of engagement that not one band in a hundred can bring off.

And when it's all over, you can feel a little package of emotion lodged solidly there in your chest and throat, transmitted to you entire with all that passion and sound over the two hours of your life just gone by.

That, my friends, is Soul. It's the shape of life, captured and made to sing. And there are no finer exponents of that dynamic working in music today.

Black Rebel Motorcycle Club are putting a new album out in March next year and will tour in support, February to April in North America, April to May in Europe.

See them if you can possibly can.

6 Comments:

Almost feel like I've missed something. I have no idea who these guys are and, worse still, never heard of the people you compare them to.

I'm beginning to think I really am getting old.

Nice to see this kind of passion, in any event. Feel that way about a few bands myself, though, sadly, they are for the most part no longer extant, so it's more the memory of the feeling. ..er, something.

Say hey to Tak for me.

By Blogger Rich, at 4 December 2009 14:20  

This post has been removed by the author.

By Blogger Rich, at 4 December 2009 17:50  

A post deleted that I didn't write. MAO giggles.

By Anonymous MAO, at 6 December 2009 05:10  

My short anaylsis is that you have some justified anger to work out. For further in depth analysis I charge $200 per hour. Unless you unsuit.

By Anonymous Dr. Chase Meridian, at 6 December 2009 06:20  

So it's one in the morning on Saturday night and my lover (not Lucifer, the other one, like Jesus) is not home yet.

I'm sitting here with my Virginia Slims, with my new copy of Steel Remains, wondering why Ringil had to begrudge that whore Erli Bashka's purse. She left him satisfied. "Best Padrow's Ever."
Ringil was more concerned with Bashka's financial situation that the whores. Not all things should come freely, RKM.

After combining several mixed drinks with the typical after bar coffee, I'm wondering which character in your novels you identify the most? My personal favorite was the bastard that gave USSR Black Widow a bloody nose, making his phermones futile.

That's where the confusion comes in. One killer bled Black Widow's nose to spare her life, then died by her hands. Yet Ringil begrudges a whore her fair share, willing to bare sword.

Maybe Ringil was just prepping for warrior mode? I shrug.

All right. Now time to go to my other job: making sense of world religion. Not sure what's going to help more: the booze or the coffe. Grin.

I'll bet the bastard killer from Black Widow wishes he would have killed her...at this point. Sulky Frown.

By Anonymous Anonymous, at 6 December 2009 07:21  

hmmmmhhh... you mentioning the stranglers made me curious, gotta check these guys out...

By Blogger madrotter, at 15 January 2010 09:14  

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