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Thursday 25 February 2016

Savage


I went to see Savages on Monday night at Manchester's Albert Hall, a late offer of a ticket. I bought their Husbands single and the first album but hadn't got around to the new one yet. The venue is a dream gig venue and the sound is beautifully clear- the drums are mic'd up perfectly. Clad all in black and lit in bright white Savages are sonically separated too, into hard hitting bass and ringing treble. Gemma Thompson's guitar is viciously trebly and capable of crunching noise and sparkling picked notes. Ayse Hassan's bass playing is superb, bouncy, aggressive and rolling. Musically it's easy to spot the influences- Siouxsie, Joy Division, early Bunnymen, PiL- but they do it very, very well. Savages are an intense band and singer Jehnny Beth has presence. She enthuses about the crowd between songs but switches straight back into serious mode for the songs, stops Husbands part way through to check on a injury down the front, tells us one of the songs is 'the sexy one' and at the end walks on the front few rows hands into the crowd. No encore. The ten minute closer Fuckers is all that's needed to send the crowd home sated. If I were a seventeen year old girl- and unless I'm very wrong about reincarnation that's never going to happen- I'd have spent Tuesday looking for three like minded souls to start a band with.



The support act were jaw dropping. Bo Ningen are a four piece long-haired Japanese noise rock band. Their sound is incredibly tight. I can hear Black Sabbath, Sonic Youth and Can. They are tightly drilled and precise, creating a thunderous, ear splitting noise but can stop it dead in a heartbeat. Singer/bassist Taigen Kawabe plays with miniscule finger movements flanked by a pair of long-haired acid rock guitarists and a bang-on-the-beat drummer. When not singing Kawabe moves to the edge of the stage, feet spread apart, making faces at the crowd. In their final song he swings the bass behind his head and ends playing it neck first, body pointing out away towards the crowd. The guitarist on the left swings his guitar around his head by the strap while the one on the right freaks out. Drummer Monchan Monna keeps hitting the beat. I'm not sure how often I'd listen to them at home but seeing them live was a pleasure.

7 comments:

Charity Chic said...

Sounds like a gig Adam

Unknown said...

Savages first album was very good and like you I haven't gotten around to listening to number two. Bo Ningen's influences make them sound like a band worth listening to!

Anonymous said...

I'm not sure about 'Savages'. I know that they are trying hard with the Anton Corbijn monochrome but i'm getting 'Southern Death Cult'/Xmal Deutschland'. The lyrics are corny too.
Ian Curtis

The Swede said...

I thoroughly enjoy every Savages tune that appears on the radio, though curiously I've never felt the need to investigate further, your excellent review has got me thinking though.
Bo Ningen have played a couple of memorable sessions for Marc Riley - they make a glorious racket don't they?

Swiss Adam said...

I think Savages are a good radio band Swede- over the course of an album they can get a bit samey.

Ian Curtis (!)- I know what you mean about the lyrics. I wonder if its because she's French writing in English.

Echorich said...

I'm thoroughly convinced by Savages.

jim said...

i saw them last week at bexhill – and i agree with every word you've said – it was an incredible gig – one i wished i'd taken my daughter to

i love this band – i bought the album on the day of release and it's a real grower