samedi 19 décembre 2020

Red Red Krovvy

 

picture by Kyle

 

 Red Red Krovvy started as a high school band around 2007 in Cairns, Australia.
Three friends fond of punk rock decided to get together and play the music they love (it always starts like that right?). I don't know if they were the only three into punk and/or they could not find a bass player but in the end RRK is guitar + drum + vocals.
 
After graduation the three aussies quickly moved out of North Queensland and the band is now scattered between Sydney and Melbourne if I'm not mistaken.
The important thing to understand is that RKK is probably the first band of these three now deeply-involved-in-the-scene guys and became more a side project for old friends than a "main" band.
Ben (guitar) has played in Bed Wetting Boys and The Baby; Adam (drums) has played in Smooch, Drunk Mums, Reaper, Rubber Room, Grotto and is running Pissfart Records and Pissfart Studio; Ash (vocals) has played (drums) in Little Desert, Synthetics, Pop Singles and Masses but most importantly is the singer of the amazing Ubik.
 
Oh and the name of the band comes from Clockwork Orange in case you were wondering.
 
Ok presentations being made, let's have a look at their discography!
 

From the "early" years and the 2012 demo few traces remain online. There is a video on Youtube entitled "The Early Years" and a few tracks available on compilation CSs you can find on bandcamp here and there (Tandang Records having the strange policy of not making their music available...).
Anyway as described on bandcamp in 2016, these tracks "were recorded eight and a half years ago to a microphone on the floor", that gives a good idea of the quality of the recording...
 
Let's jump to the first proper releases!
 
 

Released in 2013 on R.I.P Society Records, this first 7", which will be later named I, was a little blast in the aussie punk rock scene at the time. Ok the recording is not great and they are not so clean in their play but the energy and anger are absolutely ripping.
In tracks like EZ Video or Desire you can hear behind the imperfections of a first release the greatness of a band in progress. 
 
The absence of bass is actually not so much of a problem as Ben is furiously filling up the space with raging riffs. Great work between the drums and the guitar!
Ash is still a bit hesitant in her screaming vocals but the energy is there.
A very promising start. 
 
 
Simply entitled II, this second 7" released on Helta Skelta Records from Perth in 2015 delivers 5 new songs of straight forward, mid-tempo, female-fronted punk rock.
 The recording is still unfortunately not very good and doesn't do justice to the energy delivered by the band (especially for the vocals) but on the other hand gives a a cool "low-fi" punk atmosphere.
    
 To be honest I am less excited by this 7" than I am by the first one, both sound pretty similar but, except for Desire II and New Year maybe, it lacks a bit of the contained anger and energy which were making the first 7" a success.
I don't know, it just doesn't seduce me as much.
 
As Ben explained in his interview for Vice, the two 7" were rushed and the band didn't really take much time to practice before recording and I can really feel it. It sounds like they're not completely ready and lack the maturity of a mastered song writing.
 
 


RRK's first full length is released on Helta Skelta in 2017 and is probably their first release with a proper recording. It finally sounds good!
It looks like the band took more time to practice and think about the songwriting and production this time but, and unfortunately, I feel like the anger and energy of the first releases got a bit lost on the way...



Same formula as on the 7" yes: pure mid-tempo straight-forward punk rock but I don't hear the bursts of anger, the explosions of energy there were in songs like EZ Video or Desire... ok I agree RRK has always been about contained anger and "heavy" simplicity but this time it just doesn't work really well. Don't get me wrong though, it's not a bad album but it's not a very good one either, no song really sticks out and it just feels like a silly little fight about to start but never happens... which is frustrating!
 
 
 
  But there is some greatness in super tensed songs which never explode, here it never really reaches that point actually, it's just a bit too soft, a bit not-catchy-enough to really go from "average" to "good".
Maybe the absence of bass (which forces the guitar to almost never stop and to support the melody all along) reach its limit on a LP and in the end it's just too many songs for the ear to not be bored by this formula...
 
  Anyway compared to what Ubik managed to deliver in their EP, we are a few steps behind here...
 
 
 

 
  In 2017 RRK left 'stralia for a big south-east Asia / Japan tour with the Japanese fast punk band Milk.
And they seized the opportunity to seal their friendships with a split tape released on the Japanese label Black Hole.
With four songs each this tape is a good occasion to discover the two bands for those still not familiar with them.
And it's actually a good release to start with if you are discovering RKK! Yes I feel more energy than on the LP, especially on tracks like Dead Cat and Micromanager which are, in my opinion, among the best tunes written by the band.
 

 
The Australian side is concluded by Real Estate, a "long" track for RRK which gives a glimpse of a no-so-explored aspect of their punk rock, and it's not an uninteresting one in my opinion. 

 
 
 

 Three years after their last release the three friends are back with a new LP on Helta Skelta, once again. But don't think they have been lazy during all this time, if you've read the beginning of this post you know that they all have been extremely busy indeed...

Anyway here is finally some cover artwork with a bit of color, good!

 From the first seconds of Before You Die (which intro makes me think so much of Red Lion from The Young Ones, yes I know it's just a totally different thing) Managing tells us a lot about what our eardrums will live during the next 10 songs... Some very angry punk rock, some very good punk rock which is a big step above everything the band has released so far!
 
 
  Ash has never sounded so confident, so angry and so in total control of the power of her singing; once again, Ben holds it all together with his guitar work, perfectly managing the perilous balancing act of maintaining a constant sound power while providing sufficient rhythmic and musical variation so as not to tire our poor brain.
 
Yes because the big improvement of this record is the effort the band put in the songs construction, diversity is the key here.
From classic RRK mid-tempo punk tracks like the great Despise The Rich, Another Great Tragedy or My Father's Dream to almost-hardcore fast songs like Company Job or I Just Got A Dog, RRK keeps us attentive and alert, even taking the risk of surprising us with a touch of synth (which sounds a bit like saxophone) on Micromanager, Real Estate, Despise The Rich and My Father's Dream.



There is also this intro on I Just Got A Dog which gives us just enough time to take a last breath before the barking fury explosion of the song or the heavy, sad and violent "ballad" called Real Estate which unsung parts are punctuated by ghostly voices and demented but anguished laughter.
 
Did I forget to use the adjective angry ? I hope I didn't because that's what Ash, Ben and Adam are on these ten tracks... angry against modern life, modern world, inequalities, capitalism and so on... Despise The Rich, Company Job, Before You Die, Real Estate, Micromanager etc... and so on... are real calls to reduce the modern world to ashes, to free ourselves from the straitjacket of the modern, urban wage earner in which triumphant Anglo-Saxon capitalism has imprisoned us all. Yes there is a lot to be said...



Managing is, whitout any doubt, the best RKK record so far. The three friends have improved their game a lot in the last few years in their other bands and musical projects and the result is really good. This album is not perfect though, I would have put the guitar way more upfront to give more power to the songs and the drums also sound a bit weak in my opinion. 
RKK has grown on me with the evolution of their discography but compared to the Cold Meat LP for example there is still this little something missing to take me from "a very successful album" to "a total killer"...
 
picture by David Forcier
 
  You can listen to Red Red Krovvy on Rien à Faire #17.
 
 
N,J'Oi! 
 
 
 

 
 
 

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