The Button Factory, Dublin, October 4th

Started by Eye in Triangle, October 04, 2008, 08:25:53 PM

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Eye in Triangle

Quote from: dijk cheese on October 06, 2008, 04:27:27 AM
still havnt worked out how to put pictures on my screen


anyway

cats, mice

casn anyone help me out with this track? have had what i remember of it runnin through my head since i woke.


I've been lusting after a recording of it too. Kind of dissappointed it wasn't on the Tour EP.

black stallion

Quote from: dijk cheese on October 06, 2008, 09:09:19 AM
cheers for posting,
but a couple of corrections

to say crover spent half of porns set doin nothing but adding the occasional backgorund noise, is well... a lie. there was nothing but quality drumming im my eyes (ears) once he hit the stage.

and the bit about big business blasting through tracks from their two albums... they played 3 new tracks.

anyway


ah ah,obviously i believe in your review dijk,don't worry...i often use to read official(not curated  by fan as us) show reviews ,let me say, "a little bit" imprecise :).for example,you know The Melvins recently played two gigs in Italy and believe me,every reviews i read on internet said Porn were on stage with Tim Moss "on bass", Billy Anderson(the great producer..Kyuss blah blah blah) on various effects and Dale on drum.well,personally if i don't know a band i don't try to make the brilliant guy maybe reading their profile on myspace and saying  bullshits...i would say only,Porn did a great show,stop.
Charmicarmicat:Bastards

bathroom creep

Quote from: Eye in Triangle on October 06, 2008, 09:18:13 AM
Quote from: dijk cheese on October 06, 2008, 04:27:27 AM

cats, mice

casn anyone help me out with this track? have had what i remember of it runnin through my head since i woke.

I've been lusting after a recording of it too. Kind of dissappointed it wasn't on the Tour EP.

I gotta agree, really good song.  There are a couple of live versions floating around..  Check your PMs.
Everything was beautiful, and nothing hurt.

Centripetal core of soul sojourn the field vibrates to absolution. I climb toward the sun to breathe the universal.

Have you seen the bridge?  I ain't seen the bridge!  Where's that confounded bridge?!

welcomeinjam

Quote from: Eye in Triangle on October 05, 2008, 09:42:33 AM
Quote from: dijk cheese on October 05, 2008, 08:41:24 AM
Yeah yeah yeah, that's all well and good, but what we all really want to know is.... What kind of pizza did he order?

Ha I'm not sure I got the last pepperoni and ham slice so all that was left i think was hawaiian pizza and cheese pizza.

Quote from: bathroom creep on October 06, 2008, 04:20:56 PM
Quote from: Eye in Triangle on October 06, 2008, 09:18:13 AM
Quote from: dijk cheese on October 06, 2008, 04:27:27 AM

cats, mice

casn anyone help me out with this track? have had what i remember of it runnin through my head since i woke.

I've been lusting after a recording of it too. Kind of dissappointed it wasn't on the Tour EP.

I gotta agree, really good song.  There are a couple of live versions floating around..  Check your PMs.

Wow any chance of a PM me and my friend can't stop shouting CATS, MICE and we can't remember the rest

dijk cheese

Quote from: bathroom creep on October 06, 2008, 04:20:56 PM
Quote from: Eye in Triangle on October 06, 2008, 09:18:13 AM
Quote from: dijk cheese on October 06, 2008, 04:27:27 AM

cats, mice

casn anyone help me out with this track? have had what i remember of it runnin through my head since i woke.

I've been lusting after a recording of it too. Kind of dissappointed it wasn't on the Tour EP.

I gotta agree, really good song.  There are a couple of live versions floating around..  Check your PMs.

thankyou
i say i can't, but i really mean i won't.

jules

http://totallydublin.ie/music/music-features/the-melvins/

The very sound of the words "sludge metal" is enough to send shivers down any music fan's spine. It's all faux-mystical lyrics, self-indulgence, and cock-rocking, right? Right. But in any genre there are anomalies, and Washington's underground legends The Melvins are one such break from metal's norm. If you've heard the name, but never heard the music, chances are you've heard the whispered in the same hallowed breath as Nirvana, forming in the same town, and being a predominant influence over the entire grunge genre. However, the success their critical acclaim and influence ought to have afforded them has always fallen short. Peg it down to the abrasiveness of the band, their outlandish humour, their daunting back catalogue, or their rather strange hairdos, but now, on this 20th anniversary of Sub Pop and all things grunge, it's about time the Melvins receive a payout on their hard-earned kudos.

The Melvins story begins in a convenience shop in a Montesano, Washington. Lead singer and guitarist Buzz Osborne (King Buzzo to his friends and compatriots) decided to name his new band after his much-detested co-worker Melvin, a sign of the obscuro sense of playfulness the band would come to embody. With seemingly little care for the polarized reviews the band received from the fore, the power trio (being Buzz, other permanent member Dale Crover, and a cast of rotating bassists) ploughed themselves a distinctly unique trough with JCB riffs and a joy in getting dirty. While influences like Black Sabbath and Swans are tangible in the Melvin sound, their distinct artfulness and willingness to experiment, as well as their shunning of the accepted metal template and image set them apart as a Bovril band in the Washington pre-grunge landscape.

However, with 1991 's self-titled album, and 1993's seminal Houdini the band found their critical footing. With incomprehensible vocals, Sensor Excel-sharp guitar hooks (we didn't have Quattro's back in those days, kids) and a knack for meticulously constructed songs, King Buzzo soon earned the band a buzz big enough to make his afro jealous. The major labels came knocking with band's burgeoning success, but Atlantic's release of the band's powerful triptych in Houdini, Stoner Witch, and Stag couldn't match a level of commercial success to meet the critical, and the Melvins promptly found themselves shunted back into the Washington underground. Their subterranean existence has continued today. They're a band burnt by the hot stove of commerciality, but happy to continue spreading their music throughout the world. This year's Nude With Boots has enjoyed success that has been so fleeting to them in recent times, enjoying across the board positive review, and renewed attention thanks to it. No longer one of those pigeonholed bands with the sole validation that they "influenced Kurt Cobain", their vigour seems to have renewed for fresh ways to make fucked up records.

"But I just don't like metal!" To shun the Melvins upcoming Button Factory gig, and indeed, their hefty back catalogue on the grounds of genrefication ought to be a punishable crime. Aside from their crafty musicianship, the band never fail to raise a quirk-appreciating smile. For instance, Buzz's lyrics range from the wittily deranged to derangedly witty ("After giving her the twenty dollars to, uh, have oral sex with me, uh, she looked around the car and she said, uh, for twenty dollars more I can clean this place for you. That's what she mainly did there.") You may well have had your eyes magnetically pulled towards their bizarre album covers, which include cartoons of two-headed dogs and blind children being surprised by spiders, or caught interviews on YouTube of Dale Crover pretending to shave with microphones and Buzz exuding hate vibes on Madonna ("people like buying crap. We've beavered away at being horrible but it hasn't really worked.") The Melvins bring an array of colours and expression to a black, brown, and tangled genre often maligned for its derivative soullessness, and we're looking forward to having the Button Factory walls painted with multi-coloured sludge.

BERZERKER

That`s more like a sum up of their career than a interview. Interesting still, though.