Reviews Coming Soon

Album Review: TBA

Thursday, September 10, 2009

Album Review: The Drift - Memory Drawings

It’s been three years since The Drift released their debut album, ‘Noumena’, but this is purely down to the number of pies that each band member have had their sticky fingers embedded in - one of these includes Danny Grody’s ultra-prolific post-rock band, Tarentel. The boys did, however, manage to fit in an extensive tour across North America and Japan which has inspired a ruthless efficiency for song-writing that is apparent on this new release. Recorded directly to analogue tape with producer Jay Pellicci at the helm, the mix is used as another instrument to shape each song, channeling the mythos of late 60’s jazz and late 70’s dub classics.

Full of ethereal charm and sweeping instrumental soundscapes ‘If Wishes Were Horses’ features a soft, fluttering trumpet, replacing the need for a vocal, rising and falling to form the track’s heartbeat. ‘Uncanny Valley’ introduces shades of afro-beat and disco-soul that weave their way to the surface injecting new life to a recurring pattern. Much of what is on offer winds its course down the same eroded river bed and considering its gentle nature it could easily be viewed as repetitive ephemera. For me, however, it could just be the perfect album to wash away the stresses of a hard day as it floods your senses with its miasma of intertwining strands of ambience. All you have to do is simply allow yourself to drift along.

Also online @ Subba-Cultcha =  http://www.subba-cultcha.com/album-reviews/article.php?contentID=5416

Wednesday, September 9, 2009

DVD Review: Iron Maiden - Live After Death

Its taken Iron Maiden a whopping twenty-two years to release visuals to accompany what is regarded by many fans as the finest live metal album of all time. Live After Death was recorded over four sold-out nights at Long Beach Arena, California during the middle of their epic World Slavery Tour. The tour itself was to promote the 1984 Powerslave album and took in 193 shows and took the best part of a year to complete. Included is the second part of The History Of Iron Maiden (the first part is on The Early Years DVD release) providing excellent insight into the details of the tour; Behind The Iron Curtain charting the remarkable story of how Maiden became the first major Western band to play the Eastern Bloc at the height of the Cold War; Rock In Rio where they played a gig to a staggering 300,000 people; and tour programme artwork, photo stills, videos from the album and other tour-related ephemera. Its quite a package then!

From the very beginning and the opening lines of Churchills famous war-speech the hairs on the back of my neck are going haywire. Comparing what the band are doing now with what they were doing back then its amazing to see how little has changed. The current line-up is virtually the same with only guitarist Janick Gers missing. Its lycra and leather, studding and sweatbands - check out drummer Niko McBrains garish Flash Gordon gym kit - and is all looking a bit glam, with vocalist Bruce Dickinson sporting an 80s school-girl fringe, but once the band blasts into Aces High and he starts belting out that soaring, vibrato vocal this all pales into insignificance.

The lighting rig and rest of the stage set has been superbly designed to fit equally well into a stadium or a small club and comprises richly-coloured hieroglyphics and pyramids to match the albums Egyptian theme. At one point Dickinson appears on the amp-stack wearing a feathered-mask, which he confesses to having bought from a shop selling homo-erotic paraphernalia! There is flames and fireworks, dry ice and sweeping spotlights and whenever their mascot, Eddie The Head, makes an appearance, wrapped in bandages, it whips the crowd up into a frenzy.

Bassist Steve Harris spends most of the gig in a classic metal pose, one foot up on the amp, determinedly gunning down the crowd with his bass-head. Guitarists Dave Murray and Adrian Smith trade mind-melting solos whilst jumping about the stage, but its Dickinson whos the most active, running tirelessly around like a maniac. Drum-riser to crowd to amp-stack, he introduces each song with a roar, yelling out alternately the name of the city, the state or the venue - “Scream for me Long Beach, screeeeam for me Long Beach!” Compared to the album, there are small additions to Dickinsons interplay with his audience between songs which only serve to increase the feeling of actually being there. Theres also an extra track, Sanctuary, to enjoy.

The cameras have total stage access with front and back shots, a drum camera and a sweeping arm that swings back and forth over the fans. Close-ups, long panoramic pans and views from the pit, its all there. The epicentre of this awesome show is the 13-minute masterpiece, Rime Of The Ancient Mariner, adapted from the drug-addled mind of Samuel Taylor Coleridge. Somewhere mid-song the stage is flooded with a swirling mist which rises to waist-height before pouring off the stage-front. The three guitarists stand motionless centre-stage, captured in beams of moonlight, gently picking out the rhythm as a deep spoken voice intones the poems lyrics to the sound of creaking timber echoing off the walls of the arena. The bass lifts, Dickinson returns to the stage and the crowd roar their approval at the ultimate combination of theatrics and heavy music.

The only things I can fault the DVD for are the occasional repetition of visuals, due mainly to the sheer volume - four hours worth - of material on offer, and the differences in quality between the main show and the extras which throws the poorer product into a harsh light. Without these extras though you wouldnt know about the time Dickinson got a face-full of guitar; you wouldnt know that the band played Smoke On The Water at a Polish wedding; and you wouldnt know about the time when McBrain went swimming mid-song before returning to his kit dripping wet. I could go on about why you should be parting with your hard-earned cash but, to put it in simple terms, you simply wont find a more compelling chronicling of a band on tour, a band so at ease with themselves, and a band at the ultimate peak of their powers.