dimanche 28 février 2021

Lumpen

 

Just a few words today about this new band from Barcelona, Spain, which released a great EP on bandcamp first mid-2020 but also on tape in south america thanks to Educacion Cinica and then on vinyl thanks to Discos Enfermos from Barcelona early this year.
 
I guess the band's name comes from the concept of Lumpenproletariat (lumpen means rag in German) which, incidentally, then gave birth to a generic term to designate "scrounger, riff-raff, hoi polloi, white trash, bogan, or yobbo" and more generally a class of misfits in Spanish and other languages. The Lumpen was also the name (for the same reasons probably) of the "The Black Panthers' official house band" which wrote a famous song praising the liberation of Bobby Seale.
It is thus an inspiring word which has been taken up by several musical formations and the band I'm interested in today should not be mistaken with the Italian Oi! band or the mexican metal band of the same name.
 
 So let's come back to our Rag...
I don't know much about the actual line-up except that the band features mostly Colombian punks living in Barcelona and includes in particular Mateo Correal who is known for his graphic work (especially covers' artwork like the Impulso second EP's and the Lumpen's one of course).
 
 
  Despite being based in Catalonia, Lumpen's Desesperación 7" got the raw side of Colombian punk bands... I've talked about a few of them here but I think Reacción Violenta is probably the closest to Lumpen (especially their first EP). Let's not forget Muro of course which conquered the whole punk world to their furious hardcore punk / D-beat during the couple of years before the pandemic.
  I'm also thinking of Pobreza Mental (from NYC but singing in Spanish) which got the same kind of speed and rawness... anyway I could go a long way looking for influences, from 80s scandinavian hardcore / D-beat to modern Spanish raw punk / D-beat bands like Totälickers or Irreal through the old classics like IV Reich...
 
 
But where D-beat usually bores me quite quickly, Lumpen manages to keep jumping around all along their five tracks... It's the linearity of the d-beat that tends to put me to sleep (that famous beat... I never could stand Discharge anyway), but the guys from Barcelona manage to inject something moving, lively, catchy into their songs and it works like a charm!  
 
I hope it's not a one time thing and that I will hear more from Lumpen very soon! 
 
 
 You can listen to Lumpen on Rien à Faire #19.
 
 

 
 

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