| Supersonic Festival [Digbeth, Birmingham] 22 - 24 October, 2010 |
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| Reviews - Event | |||
| Written by Sarah Moass / Images: Doka Chapman | |||
| Friday, 05 November 2010 15:16 | |||
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The end of last month saw the return of Supersonic Festival at Birmingham's Custard Factory, an illustrious, thought-provoking urban festival, taking a full-frontal look into the realms of outlandish, sporadic and unconventional forms of audio excellence.
Despite the sub-zero temperatures performances were embraced with exuberance across four stages; Old Library, Space 2, Outside Stage and the Theatre. With various DJs firing up the crowds between performances and numerous stalls featuring an epic collection of vinyl, music and of course vegan cake.
Vocalist Yasuko Onuki dressed in white appeared like a crazed but angelic goddess, with reverberation ranging from bewildering piercing shrieks during songs such a ‘We Love Choco Pop' and ‘Some Kind Of ID' to a cutesy rendition of ‘Happy Birthday' performed entirely out of feline meows; with audience participation. Melt Banana, already celebrated for their miniature-length songs thrashed this concept by their performance of ‘Nine Short Songs' featuring chants just seconds in length with each politely introduced comparable to a pre-school recital before being catapulted into a dimension of pure bizarreness. With Yasuko manoeuvring round the stage completing rag doll-esque convulsions emulating the energy of the crowd it was no surprise when the audience demanded for an encore, pining to fuel their Japanese noise infatuation further.
Another top contender for a highly rated performance was that of Drumcorps. The dreaded Aaron Spectre's combination of American hardcore and electronic music production was mixed methodically to create a sound to grace the ears of fans of a variety of different genres. Raw vocals unified perfectly with thunderous bass drum effects combining elements of chillout with the energy of industrial metal bands comparable to Fear Factory. Handling his responsibility like a true master Spectre reassigned himself to live guitar, contributing shredding, grungy and southern style riffs in addition to vocals resembling stereotypical garage punk bands. This amalgamation created an enchanting apocalyptic resonance. Crowd gratification of Drumcorps composition emerged in the form of a forceful mosh pit presenting a collision of bodies hurling themselves provoked by Spectre's formidable ambience. Finishing with song 'Grist' in dedication to "Anyone who has left home in search of a better life" parallel to Spectre's own journey of leaving his home in the US to embark on a music career in Germany a few years ago.
The distant drumming of Black Sun Drum Corps (nothing to do with Spectre's outfit, mind) could be heard by festival goers amongst the four walls of Space 2. With two forbidding figures already present on stage covered in black and white corpse paint and relentless guitar distortion in the background contributing to both the fascination and bewilderment of the audience. A parade of similar looking characters appear, orchestrating a variety of percussion and everyday items to add a rhythmic and tribal take to sludge and experimental metallers Black Sun.
Not many bands can boost the use of their own dreads as a featured instrument within their music, however avant-garde, industrial metal band OVO can certainly live up to this testimony. The Italian duo dressed in hand made paper and wrestling masks created an electrifying scene with frontwoman Stefania Pedretti's versatility; combining death metal growls comparable to a feminised version of Deicide, to sweet sounding squeals. Tribal-style moments were included with drummer Bruno Dorella, additionally utilising a traditional instrument to add to their unique style.
Pedretti's superlative moment was undoubtedly her "dread-playing", simulating a distorted version of DJ mixing scratches echoing out onto the crowds before her. Moving on to brothers Caleb and Ashton Bird, who formulate the grunge-fuelled stoner sound that is Tweak Bird, presenting atypical layers of psychedelic and jazz thrown in for good measure. With "occasional third band member" saxophonist, John McCowan adding a fingered frenzy of added curiosity.
After initial incense burning to cleanse the stage and remind them of the familiarities of home Khyam Allami and Master Musicians Of Bukkake present: Bosphorean take a somewhat belated appearance to the stage due to technical difficulties. With the sheer level of world instruments on stage including violin, gong and Ud (lute) this forecasted something special. The band, clothed in traditional Turkish attire stride on to face the audience, spiritual in character with the band motioning prayer positions and stage lit in midnight blue to add to the mystique. With an intricate performance described as "Turkish-influenced fuzz rock, dessert motorik pulsations and eastern-tinged psyche folk". Khyam Allami, mixed the traditional with contemporary playing ‘Iraqi Maqam Nawa' invigorated with boho-styled melancholy and Ud and violin improvs. Likened to a high energy paradigm on the traditional ‘Call To Prayer' with a haunting vibe made this performance one of the most enigmatic of the festival.
Godflesh were another band to cause a stir prior to performance with eager comments circulating. One of the pioneers in industrial metal and influencing many including Metallica and Faith No More they went their separate ways in 2002, with Supersonic Festival being one of their long-awaited performances since reforming in 2010. Executing themselves with their renowned intermittent bass, powerful variant guitar and Justin K. Broadrick's characteristic death-core yet melodic legacy Godflesh were back. Despite the positives, compensating for the lack of a live drummer with a pre-recorded drum track and exhibiting a slight cyclical sound made Godflesh not live up to expectation.
Voice Of The Seven Thunders provided a concoction of psychedelic and acid rock to meditative attributes. Vocalist Rick Tomilinson, charges along with an almost divine performance, the band positioned in a circle facing each other as if executing a connection within a pagan ritual. There is something particularly enticing about this lot as they provide a magical yet trippy serendipity.
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