mercredi 17 mars 2021

Public Body

 

Public Body is a British band from Brighton, UK, which has probably started at some time in 2018.
The four civil servants are accustomed to musical tasks and have been spotted behind the desks of various indie / rock / jazz bands over the past years (Skinny Lister, various solo projects, Ebi Soda, Birdskulls, The New Tusk, Broadbay) and Public Body seems to be by far the closest office to the punk (or at least post-punk) department they have ever been assigned.
And that's probably the reason why I'm gonna blather a bit about them today. 
 
 

 Digitally released on Permanent Creeps and physically (tape) released on Hanger Records in April 2019, Public Body's debut EP is a refreshing shower of joyful and upbeat post-punkish art rock. Heirs of the late 70s arty New York scene (Talking Heads, Television etc...) and their brit (depressed) counter parts from a few years later (Wire for some parts, etc...) I would put the Brighton based band between clean sounded modern post-punkish bands like Bench Press, Stuck or Lithics... and more indie art rock bands like Parquet Courts, Omni or Yard Act.
So yes we're talking about nice, civilized, polite and educated music for once (a little breath of fresh air in an ocean of apocalyptic darkness, to put it without any excessive melodrama).
 
   The band delivers a high pace kind of music, which sharp and jerky guitars keep a certain level of tension that, paradoxically, never becomes unhealthy or anxiety-provoking, but, on the contrary, keeps the atmosphere mostly cordial and rather pleasant. The singer nevertheless applies himself to look detached and a little cold (especially on Office Environment and Hard Concentrate which drip with boredom, sounding like a tribute to Lou Reed's early years) but in the end what really sticks to the brain is an overall feeling of upbeat energy.
In a nutshell it's a pretty enjoyable EP.
 
 
 

 After that, mostly in 2020, Public Body released a few digital-only singles.
 
 Presenteeism is a catchy upbeat post-punk hit which takes us back to the late 70s, in front of the telly, when our imaginary alter egos were stuck watching the colourful Top Of The Pops appearances of the first "new-wave" bands, as they were all called at the time. 
Once again Public Body manage to take the "joyful" parts of the post punk patterns and include them in something I struggle to define but lead us exactly where we're supposed to be right here and now, a "sound of today" if I may say... 
A great track!
 
   Naughty On My Bike keeps the same idea with a more art rock approach. But it's also a stand "against" the ridiculous increase of the price of public transport (if you've ever been to London you know exactly what I'm talking about...) as Theo, the guitarist, explains:
“It’s a song dedicated to the humble bicycle. Naughty On My Bike openly criticises the public transport system as being over priced and sluggish. Walking, being the green option, is slower still. In cycling we find balance between speed and convenience.” 
Velorution! 
 
 Public Body does not reject its Krautrock influences and even pays tribute to Kraftwerk with the cover of Pocket Calculator. A cover that I find pretty cool (and it's definitely a compliment from a guy like me who finds Krautrock dull as dirt).
 
 
 

 But let's get to the point, which happens to be their latest EP, the Ask Me Later/Table Manners 7" released on the French label Six Tonnes De Chair earlier this month.
 
Ask Me Later: At first listen one is struck by the healthy, positive and almost bouncy energy radiated by the four guys from Brighton. The rhythm is sustained, but not so much more than in the previous tracks, above all the singer has decided to clearly position himself in a vocal approach that is less post-punk, more playful, a playfulness strongly supported by the "colourful" synth layers that are much more present than in the previous tracks (it could be expected after the Kraftwerk cover).
Honestly, in my opinion, it sounds a bit too much like an attempt to give birth to a nice pop-art rock hit and I find it hard to appreciate so much sympathetic musical benevolence in a single song (probably because I'm not used to that kind of stuff). The band's approach seems closer to describing the life of a young working man "undergoing" the modern life of a young English hipster and the impression I get from the song is most probably unfair (but as I don't understand all the lyrics, that's how I, and probably most non-native English speakers, feel about it).
 
   Table Manners is slower, calmer, closer to what the band was delivering in their first EP. Less energy then, but more depth ? It's a relaxing, and quite nice track to be honest, that helps digesting the "excessive" enthusiasm of the first track.
I'm still not really convinced by the synth layers though (never been) and the overall vibe leans toward something I can only enjoy at very small dose, I've been fed with hardcore punk for too long... 
 
In a nutshell: to me Public Body is, and will remain, a sympathetic breath of fresh air in the thrill of a cyclone, but I'm definitely more seduced by the post-punk side of their first releases than the bit-too-cheerful arty side of their last EP (tastes and colours you know). Which is not at all a good reason to bypass this band!
 
 
 
 
 
You can listen to Public Body on Rien à Faire #20.

 
 

dimanche 14 mars 2021

Turquoise

 

A short one today about this new band from Paris, France, called Turquoise.
Consisting of members from the past and present Krigskade, Rats Blood, Barren?, Going Away Party, Ansiax and High Vis, these guys have decided to go soft and pop and play some fast and ripping scandinavian D-beat.
The band's frontman is Romain who runs the excellent Terminal Sound Nuisance blog (most probably the closest thing of a PHD in crust and D-beat you'll ever see, check out his post about 90s swedish D-beat) and is also a regular contributor to the DIY Conspiracy website (which published a very thorough post about Turquoise from where most of my information actually comes from). 
 
 

 Turquoise's debut LP is called Hantise (meaning haunting in an obsessive way) and is a joint released of the two French labels Les Choeurs de L'ennui (from Paris) and Symphony of Destruction (from Brittany). Within eight tracks sung in French (good move guys, I am strongly in favour of bands singing in their own languages), the four French guys deliver top class D-beat which energy and anger will definitely rip you apart.
Stomping drums, killer fast guitar riffs, screamed heavy vocals... the recipe is perfectly respected! D-beat is a genre which is, obviously, extremely conservative from a musical point of view and I am not so much into it but from time to time a band catches my attention, and it usually means that this particular band clearly flies above the average.
 

And Turquoise is one of them.
On top of the obvious scandinavian influences (Totalitär, Skitslickers and their spanish fans Totälickers) I think also of other French D-beat bands like Deletär, Bombardement, Diktat (that I discovered on the very good compilation Bordeaux Boredom Vol.2) and of course Gasmask Terrör. As I was saying I'm not in expert of the genre so that's the few bands I found worthy of interest.

What I like in Hantise is, first, the sound which is at the same time extremely powerful and overwhelming but not metallic or polished and second the music of course, which takes all the good side of the genre and leaves aside all the bad taste that can sometimes be inherent to a too great proximity with Metal (thank you for that guys). 
And finally I like it because it's in French, but don't get me wrong it's almost impossible to understand anything of the angrily screamed lyrics but it sounds good to my Frenchman ears anyway. I love in particular the "quiet" part on Si Uniques? (So Unique?) where Romain's words can finally reach my brain to deliver its message about fake human empathy in a doomed capitalist world.
ah and that haunting (but somewhat obscure) sentence repeated over and over again on Lâcheté: "crevé par la vie, trop peureux (trop heureux?) pour mourir" which could be translated into "exhausted (or killed) by life, too scared to die". 
 

Well obviously Turquoise doesn't approach existential questions from a very optimistic or positive angle, I guess the genre limits the answers to a rather catastrophic vision anyway, and catastrophism becoming more and more the rational forecasting, I suppose that's part of the reason why I'm more and more attracted to the genre...
With songs named Détestable (Obnoxious), Hantise De Vivre (Fear Of Living), Lâcheté (Cowardness) and Apocalypse for example I think it's safe to say that the overall tone of the album is quite dark (ahah it would be really fun to make a super raw D-beat album with only super positive and cheesy lyrics). 
 
In the meantime, jump into bleakness and depression, make yourself a favour and listen to Hantise (probably one of the best punk album to come from France in the beginning of this new year), it gets better and better with each spin on the turntable.
 
 On the other hand, there is one negative point that must be addressed... the artwork. Ok it's a good idea to not have another black&white cover with piles of bones and skulls in a nuclear holocaust scenery (thank you for that guys), but this one is just... I don't know, there is something missing here... it doesn't do justice to the record to be honest. 
Well it had to be said.

Keep up the noise and fury guys!
 
 


 
 

You can listen to Turquoise on Rien à Faire #20.

jeudi 11 mars 2021

POGO : A look at the French punk scene (Roland Cros)

 

After the Punk Rock Jesus comic book, here is my second post about a paper-and-ink-only object, and it's a photobook this time.
 
Indeed I've decided to write a few words about Pogo (A look at the French punk scene), published in 2019, because I feel it's the kind of book which is probably completely unknown outside of the French speaking world and that for two reasons:
- first and the most obvious: it's in French and published in France, OK.
- second: it focus on a part of the 80s French punk scene which, to my knowledge, has been mostly ignored by the wide world of non-French speaking punk (and for understandable reasons). 
 

 As Romain from Terminal Nuisance explained briefly in the introduction of his 2019
French DIY Punk Scene: The Definitive Guide for DiY Conspiracy, the 80s French punk scene was divided in several sub-scenes which were not always mixing. The one covered by Pogo was the most "successful" and "popular" in terms of media coverage and records sales, the one called "punk alternatif" or "rock alternatif" sometimes, the one lead by the band Bérurier Noir. A band whose social and vindictive songs, veritable slogans and hymns to rebellion, continue to accompany numerous demonstrations throughout the country, animating the march of thousands several generations of agités. Far beyond the punk movement, les Bérus became an immovable component of the revolt folklore in France, until now and probably for a long time. 
In fact Les Béruriers Noirs were probably the only band which shook down a little bit the youth and music industry of France in the 80s (the proper earthquake would come a bit later with the explosion of French hip hop / rap and bands like N.T.M (Nique Ta Mère, literally Fuck Your Mother, but that's another story).
 

 This scene had a quite original approach to punk rock (quite unique to my knowledge I would say) in a sense that it was not trying to stick to standards established by the British or American scenes but, while getting heavily inspired by all of them of course, to use it as a doorway to "more open" musical ways of expression (reasons why drunk French punk purists may tell you that all this scene had nothing to do with punk in the first place; an old and boring debate...).

Anyway, so this "punk alternatif" scene was at the same time, open, arty, minimalist, radical, messy, burlesque, festive, spontaneous, violent, fun, silly... and a lot of other things as well of course...
I'm talking about bands like Bérurier Noir, Lucrate Milk, Ludwig Von 88, Washington Dead Cats, Nuclear Device, Parabellum, les Wampas, les Garçons Bouchers, OTH, les Shériffs, les Cadavres etc... Some very diverse kinds of bands, not all of which are good and interesting, to say the least...
 
But this lack of a common artistic line was also an opportunity to welcome a wider audience from a youth that didn't need to adhere to the rigid codes of an elitist and closed punk scene, which partly explains its success. Independence, commitment and revolt were more important than aesthetics.


But enough with the history lesson, let's come back to the book and its author.

Roland Cros could be described a self-taught artist who started as a photograph and spent years, in the beginning of the 80s, in the worlds of bullfighting, Rudby and body building before jumping into the Bérurier Noir punk scene. 
As he explains at the beginning of Pogo, his "photographic strategy" has always been the same (for all the subjects he's covered): only one camera setting (Leika, 35mm, 24x36 format, no flash, 400 ASA film, no cropping on the print run) and most importantly to spend as much time as needed in the "field" to become "invisible" and be able to "catch the real thing"... and Roland spent 5 years with the Bérurier Noir and their friends...
To his credit, the mind-blowing pictures displayed in this book are an undeniable proof of the success of his method.
 

 Because Roland, in addition to capturing the startling explosion of energy that each concert of the "Bérus" was, also succeeded in portraying the powerful symbiosis that the band has always managed to create with its audience. You can catch a glimpse of it watching Viva Bertaga, the video footage of their last concert in 1989 (before they came back together for a short period twenty years later).
 As we all know it, punk rock was built on the destruction of the band/audience border and it was important, in the idea of a thorough "scene coverage", to give a decent space to the audience in a book dedicated to a specific scene.
 

On top of all the deeply beautiful black and white pictures of Roland, a few "important personalities" of the scene deliver their little write up about the old days.
The two most interesting ones in my opinion (to be honest most of the others are not essential) being the one from Roland, who explains really well his approach and the circumstances of his discovery of the scene, and the one from Marsu, the famous manager of Bérurier Noir (and Lucrate Milk), who knows the story from start to finish.
On top of "thrilling" anecdotes, they both have merit in placing this whole "movement" in a very specific French social political context, the end of the illusions created by the arrival of the left in power in 1981, a policing policy of security and repression, the rise of the national front etc... 
Context which is important to keep in mind to understand the specifics of the 80s punk movement in France.
 

In a nutshell it's a beautiful book (printed on a thick, matt paper, unlike all these books on glossy paper which give a "magazine" appearance), whose pictures talk enough for themselves (they're full page pictures without any text), delivering a moving and powerful testimony on a scene which, I feel, remains quite ignored outside of the French-speaking world borders...
And I can't recommend enough all the punk geeks from around the world to get themselves a copy!

You can check it out here, on the Bérurier Noir label distribution website (Folklore de la Zone Mondiale) or here, on the publisher's website.


After his years in the "punk alternatif" scene, Roland Cros quit photography to focus on other kinds of art expressions.
He draws, sculpts and carves wood.
You can check some of his work HERE.


If you're interested about French punk history, the most thorough (and beautiful) book on this subject is Nyark Nyark, which I strongly recommend (it's in French though...).
It focus on the rock alternatif scene but not only.



lundi 8 mars 2021

鏡(KAGAMI)

 

The other day, as I was religiously listening to my recently purchased bootleg version of the first two Stalin's LPs (the excellent Stop Jap and (Mushi)) and as the outside world looked colder and gloomier than ever through my window, I decided to have a look at what Japan was offering in terms of hardcore punk nowadays (Ok I've talked about Milk a few months ago but that's all)... well at least try to have a look, because it soon became clear that it's quite difficult to dig properly into the Japanese scene without speaking the language at all...
 
Anyway I found this nice new Demo by a band called 鏡(Kagami which means Mirror) from Tokyo and it was not very difficult as they were nice enough to write almost everything in english (thanks!). And I quickly understood why when I realized that the band members are strongly connected with the international world of punk and that Kagami is not their first attempt to make it noisier.
I know I miss many information and may mix things up a little bit (still that language issue) but from what I understood Zie, the bass player is also playing in Klonns (they just released a 7'' on Black Hole) and has several solo projects, the singer played in bands called Yep and Do Not and the guitar player, named Kohei, played in Rashomon (a US band based in D.C) and is also a visual artist who's worked on several punk bands' artwork (Fried Egg LP's cover artwork for example). 
 
 
   One thing's for sure, the Tokyo quartet knows their US hardcore classics on their fingertips! Within six tracks (including a Government Issue cover) the band shows all their love for this era and it works out well (because I love it too!).
The structures, the energy, the raw sound... everything is there to take us back to the hardcore punk "golden days". 
Ok you'll tell me that there are dozens of bands which drop the same kind of shit on bandcamp everyday (and you'll be right)... but I don't know I like this one...
Maybe because this demo really sounds like a young band demo, not like all these perfectly played American demos which pop out every other week and are just another side project of "semi-professional" members of the US hardcore scene...  
No... here I hear the hesitations of a band which begins, the approximations of young musicians who are still a bit "clumsy" with their instruments... so yes it lacks "sharpness" and "cleanliness" sometimes but it has nevertheless all the charm of a sound in construction...
 
 
  It's a demo after all. The beginning of something which could be soon extremely enjoyable...
A work in progress in fact... and what's cuter than watching it grow?
 
 
You can listen to 鏡(KAGAMI) on Rien à Faire #20.

 

vendredi 5 mars 2021

Taqbir

 

This one is going to be quite short unfortunately as I'm a bit short of information.
Taqbir (or Takbir or تَكْبِير) is a mysterious new band from Tangier, Morocco, which self-released a 4-track tape in January and has made many people talk since.
 
African / middle-eastern bands are quite unusual in the punk scene, especially the ones coming from religious countries. Morocco is definitely not the most conservative of all Muslim countries but freedom of speech (and of the press) is not really the priority of the actual king Mohammed VI... (to put it nicely).
 
And Takbir is going super harshly against the rules here...
First, their name: The Takbir is the arabic phrase Allāhu akbar (الله أكبر) meaning "God is The Greatest" and which starts every call to prayer recited (quite loudly) by the muezzins five times a day, so it's something really sacred... and it's an understatement to say that it's inappropriate to give that name to a punk band...
 Second, the cover artwork: in the middle of the front cover stands the Kaaba or Ka'bah (ٱلْكَعْبَة ) which is the final goal of the main Muslim pilgrimage, the one to Mecca in Saudi Arabia that every Muslim has to make at least once in their lifetime (called the hajj), and this site, the most sacred one in Islam, is pictured here as being destroyed...
The drawing of the girl with the studded burqa standing next to it is quite cool though.
On the left side is a chopped head that a boot (doc martens?) crushes, my very basic notions of Arabic don't allow me to decipher the sentence next to it... but you get the whole picture, it's another strong statement against Islam or at least against the most fanatics of its defenders... (so I would say that the taqwacore hastag on their bandcamp is probably just a way of taking the piss).
 
Just for you to understand how risky it is to publish this kind of cover in Morocco, it's important to remind that caricatures of Islam or the royal family are illegal there and that "in 2012, Zakaria Zine Al-Abidine, a 22-year-old atheist from Casablanca, was sentenced to 5 years in prison, as well as a fine, for publishing cartoons and comments on Muhammad, the prophet of Islam, on his Facebook account" (source here). 
In one word, blasphemy can send you to jail and put your life in danger...
But as the cover states: "Victory belongs to those who fight for a right cause" 
 
I guess you now understand why the band prefers to remain discreet.
Some even suggested that the band, although actually composed of Moroccans, was not physically present in Morocco, as the magnitude of the "religious offences" and risks involved appear disproportionate.
I will just assume that they're actually based in Tangier and salute their courage which should be a fine example of the importance of safeguarding the right to caricature and blasphemy, right which has caused so much controversy and problems here in France.
 
 
Thinking of an offensive "arabic" punk band, Haram immediately comes to mind, but it's quite different as it's actually an American band from NYC with an Arabic background (for the singer at least).
The most relevant reference would be the cassette label A World Divided from Tunis/Montreal which has released many tapes from Arabic speaking bands (but not exclusively) over the past years and which should actually release Taqbir's tape in the coming months.
A 7" should also be released by La Vida Es Un Mus in the coming months!

Let's have a quick look at the lyrics, I can only try to translate the songs' titles anyway.
So that gives us: 
  Sma3 (سمع) which means Listen, according to a translation on youtube it would roughly say something like "Listen I’m telling you, Mind your own business"
Aisha Qandisha (عيشة قبديشة)is a female mythological figure in northern Moroccan folklore.
 (تفو عليك) Tfou 3lik is an insult literally meaning "I Spit On You".
Al-Zuki Akbar (زوقي اكبر) well I'm not sure about this one, it's something like "My taste is the greatest..." which seems to be a play on words between taste/ass (the spelling of taste is slightly different in literary Arabic / MSA though).

Ok what about the music then ? Let's not forget that it's still our main subject of interest here.
Taqbir delivers some powerful female-fronted fast punk / hardcore punk which guitar and bass sounds fuzzy enough to give a low-fi (demo?) touch. While the drums remain in the background, the singer's clear, high-pitched voice emerges from the ensemble to directly, and violently, project screamed words, which I imagine vindictive, against your poor eardrums...
 

It's powerful, straight-forward... it's punk and effective!
It reminds me a bit of the Krimewatch's demo, Leather Daddy and the first Exit Order EP.
 
In a nutshell it's a great debut release from a band which will make a lot of keyboards click...



 
You can listen to Taqbir on Rien à Faire #20.

 

mardi 2 mars 2021

VA - Rien à Faire #20 - Punk, Hardcore, Post-Punk... new stuff only! March 2021

 


Be reassured young fans of noise and fury, the new delivery of hot punk and hardcore has just arrived! 
This time, and from now on, I've tried to include as much killer songs from bands based in non-english speaking countries as I could. I feel that the UK, US and Aussie scenes are already well known and covered and the rest of the world deserves our attention too. Of course that doesn't mean that I'm going to deprive you of the best of the English-speaking scene.
So RAF#20 features bands from the US and the UK as usual but also from Japan (three bands!), France (two bands), Morocco, South Korea, Vietnam, Portugal, the Netherlands and Mexico...

So many good releases over the past month or so! It was hard to keep it as short as usual so this compilation is a bit longer with not less than 22 tracks!
 
 N,J'Oi!
 
 
 01 - Taqbir - Sma3
02 - Headcheese - Talk To The Therapist
03 - Escumalha 714 - Data fascistas
04 - Peacemaker - See You Dead
05 - Fairytale - Device of Panic
06 - Slant - Enemy
07 - Youth in Pain - Love Letter
08 - Education - Juvenile
09 - Gỗ Lim - Cac ban đung nghiem
10 - Sarcasm - Digital Colony
11 - Public Body - Ask Me Later
12 - The Smog - Set In Stone
13 - Anti-Feds - Warmongers
14 - Tizzi - All Day I Work For Little Money
15 - Erieza Royal & The Summary Lynch - 征服されざる者 The Unconquered
16 - 鏡(Kagami) - Inside Me
17 - Prision Postumo - Isla De Vagabundos
18 - Turquoise - Arbeit
19 - Trash Ferraris - Don't Need It
20 - The Stools - Life's Hard Lover
21 - Liquids - You're a Punk
22 - Dyatlov - Wound Man
 
 
And you can of course listen to all past shows on Mixcloud!
 
Download the full compilation HERE