Thursday 22 August 2019

Supernormal 2019 Pt 3

After that Cocaine Piss are a mild let-down, a sneery NY punk clatter with Melt Banana yelps which would fine in The Library, but seems a bit thin for a headline set (not to mention short).  We preferred Viridian’s improvised set, with warm woodwind and projected slides of dried insects, perhaps in homage to the spider looking over the field.

SUNDAY

The final day starts quietly, with David Bramwell’s The Cult Of Water, a magical realist lecture, in which a time-travelling pedestrian touches on psychogeography, etymology and riparian religions.  Bramwell is the creator of The Odditorium, see locally at Wilderness and Irregular Folks...though, after a day at Braziers, he may need to recalibrate the first syllable.

In the Barn Sarah Angliss’s Air Loom is possibly the highlight of Sunday, redolent of vintage horror soundtracks with tiny bells, theremin, electronics and some sort of keyboard dulcimer or micro-spinet (the full description is available backstage, allegedly, though that feels like a trap), and Sarah Gabriel’s glorious soprano.  There’s a folk element to the vocals, but an arch concert hall distance to them too – ideal for anyone who wish The Wicker Man soundtrack had more Shcoenberg.  And then there’s a drum solo over a recording of a building being demolished, which criticises our new PM, and a wistful song about the moon.  Perfect.   

Not many could follow that, but John Butcher is amongst the few.  This solo set finds him visiting every space in, and outside, the Barn, faultlessly imitating, in turn, the birds that live there, a bubbling alembic, and tapes rewinding, before exploring feedback without going anywhere near the mouthpiece.  Extended technique on its own is only diverting, but with a true musical sense it can be joyous.

Sadly, Jamie Bolland’s Satie performances on the house piano are too approximate for our tastes, but the walk back to the main field brings a magical moment, where a lad tries to entice younger children onto the adventure playground netting with the line “Come on, kids, living is over-rated”.  Or is it a performance called “Existential Jungle Gym”?

Oxford’s Basic Dicks welcome us back to the main stage, their hardcore downpour swift but invigorating.  “I Am Man, Hear Me Bore” is a standout, though with that in mind we should perhaps not elaborate.

We learnt a lot in Nightshift boot camp – fifty ways to enrage bar blues soloists, how to spell Xymox, what that pyramid is on the front of The Pleasure Principle – but not how to make notes in a packed dark Vortex filled with dry ice whilst manhandling a glowing umbilical cord and dancing like a loon. Bodyvice, Natalie “Lone Taxidermist” Sharp’s features glowing vertebrae, anatomically accurate viscera unitards, slowly ramping avant-techno, and a faceless giant playing clarinet.  This ecstatic carnival has an undertow of eldritch horror, drawing morbid fears from a medical imaging consent form.  MRI James, be born, be born.

One final trip to BEEF is required to cool off, where Bell Lungs gift us with Broadcast dream pop, concluding with a wonderful number that’s like an incursion on an Irish wake by someone fixing bad transistor radio wiring.  They are followed by an unexpected encounter between a tap dancer and a sewing machine, not a collaboration between Comte de Lautréamont and Lionel Blair, but Tap Sew (someone please book them for Tap Social, just for the euphony).  The close-miked Singer in the band chugs as expected, but sounds are also sourced from apertures being opened and threads being plucked, whilst the tap shoes are used, not so much for dancing as pawing and scraping the floor, like a lackadaisical toro.  Together they make fascinating chitinous rhythms unlikely to be found in any other festival field this summer. 

 

Newcomers to Supernormal are often gleefully astonished by what they find, and the old regulars are always welcoming.  There’s no better example than our last act, Italian prog-skronk rockers Zu.  Halfway through their set the drummer stands up and shouts exultantly, “This festival is fucking freaking weird!”.  The crowd returns a vast cheer, and the math-honk headbanging begins afresh.  We’re already looking forward to Supernormal 2020: set the controls for the heart of the spider


Supernormal 2019 Pt 2


Rashad Becker’s woozy techno sounds like a drum machine on a choppy ferry crossing, and Zad Kokar has a vocalist like a tantrum toddler Jack Goldstein, and both are good, but the night ends with two powerful sets.  Lia Mice in the Vortex, a sort of driftwood chapel perfect for immersive performances, proffers supple electro, abetted by a Space: 1999 extra whacking what looks like a neon road sign and sounds like electric church bells falling down a synth well.  New Jersey’s Dälek closes the main stage.  Underneath an industrial crust, their take on hip hop is surprisingly old-school (well, alright, early new-school if you’re going to be pedantic), tightly wound but simple raps over kicking rectilinear beats.  And that is more than enough.

SATURDAY

As we enter the site on Saturday, a druidic figure invites us to “come into the centre of the spider”.  Nah, you’re alright.  Nothing good is likely to come from that invitation, surely.  Said spider is actually a vast wooden Louise Bourgeois affair, which is ritually paraded around the field on Sunday.  Thankfully the first act is inviting in a more winning manner.  Jacken Elswyth’s set of banjo tunes and pedal-controlled shruti drones is simply lovely.  Although they share some stylistic space with Gwennifer Raymond, there is none of her mercurial grace, just simple, limpid melodies played without a fraction of ego.  There’s no grandstanding, no tricks, and no criticism we can make of this charming, hypnotic set.

Charming not being an accusation to level against Isn’t’ses, who collar us on the way up from the Barn, dressed like Lia Mice’s robocrew after a hard night on the Castrol GTX spritzers, howling “we will invade your personal space” over cheap electronics.  Well, that prediction’s rather late, Nostradamus, but top marks for being a memorable act, when you’re not even on the bill.  Then, off they go to find another listener/victim.

Most things at Supernormal are alternative in some fashion, but occasionally they’re just alternative to “any good”.  We get very little from Stanfeld, a generic punk act only singled out by how badly they play (“They sounded better in soundcheck,” confides a volunteer, “mind you, they played one at a time then”), but they are followed on the Red Kite stage by No Home, a solo punk whose songs sound at first like fragments of grunge demos, but whose steely, bellicose intensity is spell-binding (though where the similarities to Kate Bush, Oneohtrix Point Never and Nina Simone come in we can’t fathom; perhaps the programme writer spent the day on the super-strength Brainbiter cider, a few of which would doubtless melt our commemorative reusable pint skiff).

Back in the Barn, where things tend to be more sedate, Copper Coims, a duo of duos, is making a chthonic clatter, all echoing rhythms and distant, reverbed tones, like far-off rolling stock.  If hell is a tube train that never arrives, then Lucifer is the son of Mornington Crescent.

People say Steve Davis is boring.  Oh, and that’s a bad myth.  Whilst his snooker peers make us think of pub carveries and The Sunday Express, Steve thought (pot the red and) screw that, became a respected prog DJ, and played synth in The Utopia Strong, a trio featuring Monsoon Bassoon and Cardiacs guitarist Kavus Torabi.  Even if you don’t admire Davis’s influence on the modern safety game, you can admire this set, which makes nods to early Tangerine Dream and Labradford’s stately drifting.

On the main stage, Mesange impress with their portentous Current 93 pronouncements and violin drone euphoria, making a far bigger impact than when they supported All The Pigs at the Bully recently.  Hen Ogledd, who follow them, are a less streamlined proposition, a harp-led maximal pop band who, at their best sound like Prince played by Bis, or a striplit chipmunk chart act, but who are sometimes annoyingly scrappy.  By contrast, the Netherlands’ Lifeless Past are honed and varnished, a tight syn-drum and guitar duo in thrall to The Cure and Joy Division, who succeed in being the right band at the right time, and energise our flagging old limbs.

Comedian John Finnemore has a sketch about football commentators applying national stereotypes to all the players, observing how often we hear of a “clinical German defence” or an “exuberant Brazilian striker”.  With this caveat in mind, we still feel that Japanese psychedelic bands who make it to the UK tend to be masters of the slow, steady build, and Qujaku’s monumental set is no exception.  They start subtly, with sax like 808 State’s “Pacific” over scowling rock, before tumescing slowly over 40 minutes until someone is twatting what might be a satellite dish to pounding, cloud-seeking rhythms, and the sound becomes nebula-huge, and swallows us all.

Back at BEEF we can’t see The Funnel at all, but we hear excellent sounds: swannee whistles in purgatory, shawm of the dead, dessicated B12 electronica, austere Russian vocals.  We’re told they’re wearing broken iPad tabards.  Sounds legit.

Having been amazed by Giant Swan at a previous festival, we have to check out Mun Sing, one of their number playing hobbled techno. His jerky moves in veiled headgear make him look like an apiarist mummy, but the music is glorious.  Like much of Autechre, no matter how abstract it threatens to get, there’s an electro groove kicking things forward.

Speaking of kicking things forward, Petbrick’s double-pedalled bass drum must have a concrete block in front to stop it sliding.  There are electric hums and spin cycle rhythms in there, but the drumming is improbably brilliant – we’re standing far too near the kit to hear a balanced sound, but can’t bear to move. Sepultura alumnus Iggor Cavalera is beast on the skins, yet no matter how punishing the beats become, there’s a secret swing to the rhythms.  Maybe that’s his Brazilian heritage (leave it, Finnemore).  Tracks could develop further, but that’s like complaining a boulder doesn’t have enough corners.  Just admire the boulder.  Even if it just fell on you.


Weekend at Bernays'

Here's my review of the amazing Supernormal festival.  It's in the latest Nightshift, but you can read some extra stuff here that there wasn't room for.  Even bearing that in mind, there are some acts I saw but didn't write up - there's just so much to experience at SN, you need a whole magazine to capture it.  But, if by some miracle any reps from Grigg, Kelly & Sneddon, Bellies!, Kinlaw & Franco Franco, Jon Collin, Steph Horak, Handle, Roman Nose or Golden Oriole are reading, I enjoyed your sets; if anyone involved with Secret Power or Jessica Higgins are reading, sorry, not so much.

To get the pun in the title you'll need to visit the site and keep your eyes peeled.  My advice is to visit Supernormal next year regardless, it really is ace.



SUPERNORMAL, Braziers Park, 2-4/8/19

FRIDAY

We’ve attended our share of festivals, but Friday at Supernormal is the most delicate wristband application we’ve ever experienced.  There’s also a nice programme for £1, “or whatever you’ve got”.  Yes, once again, despite featuring acts that scream at us as vehemently as Wackford Squeers guest-hosting Infowars, and despite a queue to meet Satan in a caravan longer than that to meet Santa at Macy’s, Supernormal has proved itself to be the friendliest festival in existence.  Staff are constantly helpful, even the gloriously stoned barman who finds the names of all the drinks unfeasibly hilarious, and we’re treated as welcome guests rather than walking wallets.  In return, as if to prove that decency engenders decency, the audiences are some of the most receptive we’ve been part of.  Sarah Kenchington’s bike-propelled instruments, including ping-pong ball bagatelle percussion and aquatuba, are received so rapturously she visibly blushes, even considering malfunctions (her set mostly sounds like a Wookie in labour, which may or may not be the desired effect, but is quite an experience).  Similarly, we witness Ugandan wedding party musician Otim Alpha arrive on Sunday afternoon, clearly uncertain about the tiny shed onto which they’re unloading, only to see them beaming thirty minutes later as their Casio bangers instigate one of the most rapturous receptions of the weekend.

The performances begin on Friday afternoon with a slightly sparser crowd for late additions Nape Neck, whose mantric rants are no wave, but without the wave.  We especially enjoy their bassist marching on the spot like they’re in an am dram reading of Kipling’s “Boots”.  Rather more refined, but still intermittently serrated, is Bug Prentice, featuring Oxfordshire’s own Ally Craig on vocals and guitar, and guest bassist, Jenny from Lucy Leave.  The music is often twitchy and angular, but the true glory is Ally’s voice, a wry crooning rasp, like warm wind through ironic pampas.

Sealionwoman in the Barn brings forth waves of crepuscular jazz-folk, from just voice, double bass and all the reverb, finishing the set like Cocteau Twins at a funeral in a culvert, but it’s HAQ 123 who bring our first visual treat.  Despite two of their members being too young to get into most gigs with their ages combined, they play a sterling set of Sabbathy metal, enlivened by the presence of a fully berobed Death and some sort of rave Kermit.  They then announce an official stage-diving section after the set has finished, a revolutionary step forward in gig efficiency only a genius could come up with; these kids will probably be billionaires by the time they’re 35 (or underwater, depending on which predictive model is correct).

Sexton Ming’s Porridge Van, an act even more baroquely stupid than their name, ups the ante by starting with a doom glove puppet show we christen Punch & Jud0))), and moving on to full inscrutable mumbling noise panto, but set of the day award goes to Gwenifer Raymond, who, in sitting on a stool head down in concentration, has zero theatrical presence – unless you count hilariously swearing like a dyspeptic docker between numbers  -  but her beautiful tangles of guitar and banjo notes are stimulating enough on their own, conjuring images of Appalachian chase scenes and crazed blues arachnids spinning downhome Mandelbrots. 

Henge’s reverby stoner psych, with a whiff of classic longform rock as hinted by a Neil Young T-shirt, are probably the band most in the Supernormal wheelhouse, and are strong, with bonus points for an unexpected shakuhachi solo, and the singer’s white powdered face, instigating a game of Ghost Or Baker?  File them with Norwegians MoE who turn in a dirty chunky set we originally think of as amphetamine doom, before realising that’s just rock music –not everything needs a new genre name, even at Supernormal.  However, we’re not sure what to call Mark Vernon’s melancholy collage of old cassette messages and ambient tones, something like an 80s Scanner who could only pick up conversations by stealing answer machines and dictaphone tapes. He also adds some eerie Sea Devils dictats by talking whilst deflating a balloon into his mouth.  Sift on the tiny BEEF stage are equally spectral, telling a fractured tale of Northern Ireland border crossing ghosts, but the macabre atmosphere is undercut by the amusement of watching them squint at their scripts and remember that night time is generally dark.