KAGOULE, Idiot King, MAO, 19/8/16
Paul Hobson, director of Modern Art Oxford, is explaining
in a pre-gig talk how pieces in the gallery’s 50th anniversary
celebrations are occasionally moved to create new contexts. Fresh dialogues can indeed be created between
artworks through adjacency, but sometimes transplanting a whole art form from
one milieu to another can reduce it to the status of curio. It takes a while to get over the impression
that Kagoule, a young Nottingham grunge-inflected trio airlifted from a
sticky-floored gig dungeon to the austere MAO basement space, are specimens to
de studied, sprawling on a pin, especially immediately after a short
yam-hacking performance piece by artist Nacheal Catnott warning of the dangers
of cultural appropriation. Then again,
as a pop band on the grindcore charnel roster that is Earache Records, perhaps
the band is used to looking out of kilter.
Perhaps it’s this cultural displacement, but the first
couple of numbers pass us by, seeming to deflate Mudhoney’s dumb scuzzy
zeppelins of marsh gas to create the sort of light, harmless balloons bounced
around by Superchunk. All very pleasant,
but hardly masterpieces to be recalled at the gallery’s 100th
birthday. Then, the paranoid eddy of a
Sebadoh style repeated phrase catches our ear, the anti-mantra honing our
attention on a band with a surprisingly subtle melodic sense. The songs may sound simple, but Cai Burns’
guitar is fascinatingly fluid, seemingly always in transition, eliding notes
and greasily sliding between chords – plus, he makes good use of that deserted
warehouse chorus sound found in the space between new wave and goth. His vocals also repay attention, at first
sounding like a half-arsed sneer, but eventually revealing a delicate reedy
tunefulness that we’re surprised to find recalls Par Wiksten from The
Wannadies. What truly lifts the band,
though, are Lucy Hatter’s basslines, which capture a little of The Pixies’ dark
enormity and a lot of Jah Wobble’s mecha-dub relentlessness.
Kagoule have their faults, they seem uncomfortable ending
songs, and there’s an occasionally sticky lack of rhythmic fluency between
passages, but there are lots of ideas and idiosyncratic pleasures to reward
anyone prepared to give their grubby pop a close listen. Looks like Paul Hobson had the right idea all
along.