Elements of this review are to be found in Nightshift's Punt mega-article.
THE
PUNT, Purple Turtle/ Cellar/ Duke’s Cut/ Junction/ Wheatsheaf, 16/5/12
Ostensibly, The Punt is a showcase for
Oxford music, but secretly might not be.
Sounds like an idiotic observation, but in fact the annual night-long,
multi-venue event isn’t a glossy advert for local sounds, or an aural taster
menu to invite putative new listeners, it’s more like an initiation test for
potential recruits to the scene. In its
duration and complexity The Punt is a challenge, not a night out – the musical equivalent
of Atomic Burger’s Godzilla meal, the sonic sister to an episode of Takeshi’s Castle. And if proof were needed curator, Nightshift’s
Ronan Munroe is a puckish trickster as much as a promotional ambassador, we
need look no further the presence of Tamara Parsons-Baker as the opening
act. She is a performer of some talent, with
a powerful voice, but her dark vignettes of wispy intensity are a deliberately
perverse introduction to the night, barbed lines left hanging portentously in
the room, wintry guitars providing the lovelorn backdrop . It’s a strong set, but she’s at her best when
she comes over as a more animated Leonard Cohen, and at her worst when she just
sounds like someone bitterly sniping at their ex-partner.
Secret Rivals are a perfect foil to this
opening gambit, with their melodic, 6 Music friendly pop nuggets. On record we just keep on finding more to
love in their scrappy indie pop flurries, but live they’re still a smidgen
sloppy. In a way that doesn’t matter,
the joy of the band is that they toss the Mentos of pop into the Diet Coke of
indie with gay abandon, and let the sugary mess explode across the venue.
Undersmile are a geologically-paced
sludge metal band fronted by two atonally chanting ladies who look as if the
creepy twins from The Shining have
grown up listening to Babes In Toyland.
It all sounds horrifyingly like half-orc mating calls played at quarter
speed, and is absolutely brilliant. And
also pretty rubbish. But mostly
brilliant.
The Duke’s Cut is a new Punt venue, and
one where the fact that the performers are completely invisible to all but
about ten of the audience is balanced by the decent ale and the cosy
camaraderie. Toliesel sound at first
like The Band with some pub rock elements, and are perfectly pleasant, though
they seem to be pushing too hard, turning sweet vocals into rough hollers. But, we decide to stay for their whole set,
and soon the music makes perfect sense, revealing winning melodies under the
murk. Even the crackles from a slightly
overstretched PA add to the natural warmth of the music. In a reversal of Punt logic, Toliesel win us
over with slow increments of quality songwriting, rather than flashy
bandstanding, making us glad we stayed the distance. Although it was mostly because it was too
much effort to push our way back out of the crowd. We sincerely hope there was one random person
sitting at one of the pub tables in the early evening, who was hemmed in and
forced to listen for the entire night.
Simple probability dictates that there’s
always one Punt act that gets an underservedly small audience, and this year
it’s Band Of Hope. Mind you, the fact
that they’re playing in the cavernous Junction club compounds the problem. Incidentally, the venue turns out to be a
pretty good addition to the night, although we’re not sure a pile of rocks and
road signs is a great decor choice, it makes the room look like a student’s
back garden. The band is a lush ensemble
playing relaxing country and folk, with excellent flourishes from fiddle and pedal
steel. At times they have a lackadaisical Sunday jam session air that erases
some of the character form the songs, but “Baby You’re A Mess” is a solid gold
winner.
We catch the end of Deer Chicago, and
their sound, which can often seem unnecessarily bombastic and forcedly epic,
works far better in a cramped sweaty Duke’s Cut. Sadly, as things are running late we only
catch a fragment of The Old grinding Young.
They sound a little like parent band Ute, but with Radiohead twitches replaced
by expansive rootsiness. Too early to
tell whether this will prove a good move.
In contrast to the sludge avalanche of
Undersmile, and the doomy prog of Caravan Of Whores, Mutagenocide proffer a far
more traditional brand of metal. There
are elements of the post-Pantera stylings of previous Punt stars Desert Storm,
but most of the set consists of resolutely old school chugging rhythms, twiddly
guitar solos and growled vocals that are probably all about large-breasted elf
duchesses in the Hades branch of Games Workshop. There’s very little to set
Mutagenocide apart from a vast roster of metal acts up and down the count(r)y,
but they’re enjoyable enough, the penultimate track pulling off some good aural
pummelling.
When you see LeftOuterJoin expending vast
amounts of energy playing live syn drums along with some pounding trance, you
have to ask what the point of it is. It
would sound just the same (and fractionally more in time) if the rhythms were
programmed. But, artists don’t have to
dwell in a world of cold logic, and in many ways the victory of this act is its
very redundancy. The set veers from
excellent techno to cruddy Euro cheese pretty haphazardly, but the sheer
spectacle is a euphoric joy. The fact
that he’s also brought trippy projections and two lasers into the Wheatsheaf,
Oxford’s least rave-friendly venue, is worth as many extra points as you can
tally. Plus there are some over-sized smoke machines, that trip the pub’s fire
alarm, and cause the venue’s windows to be opened for the first time this millennium. A set to remember.
Into the home straight at The Junction
with rapper Half Decent. His delivery is
truly excellent, and the backing tracks are chunky but he does share a fault
with nearly all live hip hop: paradoxically, what should be a match of visceral
rhythms and intimate poetry, generally drifts into empty gesturing. Half Decent spends a lot of his set asking us
to dance and sing along, when he would do better concentrating on delivering
some very wry, insightful fast-paced lyrics (and dumb fun lines like “Making
girls wetter than a washing machine”, for good measure). He puts on a good show to a gaggle of
exhausted music fans, but we’re sure the rapturous stadium gig happening in his
head was even better.
Manacles Of Acid is watched by the
hardcore, the shell-shocked and those unbeatable party people who may live to
regret it. We started the night with a
harrowingly bleak preacher disguised as a nice acoustic singer, and we end it
with unforgivably niche electronica dressed up as a bright clubber’s
party. Using only vintage hardware
(including a TR606 worn round the neck) the man named Highscores produces a
seemingly endless string of classic acid house and Detroit techno which thrill
s the faithful, but is clearly a closed book to half the room. We fall into the former camp, loving the
beautifully crafted layers of mutated basslines and crisp drum patterns. There are confetti cannons and some sort of cross
between a fly and a character from Starlight Express running round the room,
who may or may not officially be part of the show, and it’s an uncompromising
conclusion to the night.
And so we leave The Junction, dazed and
deafened, feeling as though we’ve split the past five and a half hours equally
between enjoying, working and speed drinking.
The Punt feels even more like a twisted musical hazing ritual as we wait
woozily for the late bus home. Thank
you, Sir, may we have another?
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