Showing posts with label Newcastle Events. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Newcastle Events. Show all posts

Monday, 1 June 2015

Live Fest @ The Globe, 30th May 2015 (REVIEW)

I wasn't going to write anything about Saturday's mini festival at the Globe, Newcastle, but I realised there were a few highlights that just needed to be mentioned.

Starting the line up was a band named Killer Spiders. They are a new three piece hard rock band from somewhere in the local vicinity. As the first band to play they were able to set the standard for the evening, and they set the bar bloody high! It was a great performance. The frontman's vocals were fantastic and he expertly managed to multi-task in his role as vocalist and guitarist. The whole band were lively, enthusiastic and seemed happy to be there which is always good to see! 




Iron Mass, a shock rock and metal band from Consett, put on an absolutely amazing show. Taking to the stage in masks, they really gave the audience something to look at. The opening bassline of their first song was enough to tell you the set would have you hooked. The three piece band worked seamlessly together and their performance was clearly in sync. The drummer gave 100% and you could tell, the songs were energetic and the pace was maintained throughout. The frontman's growling vocals worked excellently with the killer riffs from the bass and the guitar. Mid way through the gig the frontman faked suicide by cutting his throat on stage (with fake blood in case you're concerned), adding to the intriguing theatrical elements of the performance. The whole thing came together perfectly to be one hell of a gig!




Finally, the last band of the night, Velvoir, were unusual and amazing. I'm not sure that anyone knew what to expect when they took to the stage, but from the very start the singer stared us all down and gave it her all! The progressive and psychedelic feel to their hard rock was strangely calming - I could have stood and watched for hours. The bassist was excellent and you could really hear the impact the basslines had on the songs. The singer, wearing a blonde wig, full face of make-up and a fur coat, brought a really awesome vibe to the whole performance. She danced her ass off for nigh on the whole set, using the feather boa clad mic stand as a partner. With elements of Rocky Horror to bluesy funk... the important part was that they performed as if a million people were watching. Truly fantastic. 




The other bands of the night all put on great performances, these were just my personal highlights. Well done to all involved! Including the fab sound guy, photographer and bar staff. You were all fantastic. :) 

www.facebook.com/theglobenewcastle
www.facebook.com/IronMassBand / https://twitter.com/IronMassBand
www.facebook.com/velvoir / https://twitter.com/Velvoir

Thursday, 5 April 2012

Musings on Language Evolution



I'm currently working hard (read: procrastinating) trying to write my undergraduate dissertation. I'm writing on the fascinating subject of language origins and evolution. I'm not sure why i love it because science has never really been my thing, and it is undeniably science, but i do. My focus is on Derek Bickerton's theory of protolanguage. He hypothesises a synthetic, compositional model of protolanguage which lacks syntax and involves single units of meaning being strung together to make small phrases. Some other theories of protolanguage involve holistic utterances, or small units that contain the whole meaning of a sentence. I personally find it impossible to consider that language evolved without some intermediate 'protolinguistic' stage. Yet that is exactly what Chomsky would have us believe... But don't even get me started on that. I'm currently at the stage in my dissertation of looking at all of the evidence available to us for language evolution. There is (as one might expect from something that doesn't fossilise) very little. Just a lot of just-so stories with evidence that does back them up, but also doesn't quite definitively prove anything. So overall, it's very very interesting! I hope to do more work on the subject in future, because it is such a young field, and there is so much more to be found out or discovered. 


One thing i'm wondering though, has anyone bothered trying to teach closed class, grammatical items to a bonobo yet? Because until then we can't rule out that they could learn full language. If nobody else fancies it, maybe i'll do a PhD and give it a shot! 


Kanzi the bonobo with Dr Sue Savage-Rumbaugh


As a side note, if anyone is interested, Northumbria University are hosting the 10th Symposium on the History of English Syntax  on the 21st and 22nd April. I know one of the organisers is Dr William van der Wurff of Newcastle University, so it promises to be a fascinating and enlightening event! 


Thursday, 30 June 2011

The Rise of A Thousand Lies (INTERVIEW)

The Rise of A Thousand Lies


Newcastle metal band A Thousand Lies talk past, present and future.




It was with trepidation that I drove to Sunderland to join A Thousand Lies at their band practice. Not because of the band, but because of the location and my awful sense of direction. Chris Nesbitt met me outside and led me and my photographer through a maze of corridors in quite an intimidating building. “It smells in there, I hope you don’t mind” he warned us. It turned out he wasn’t joking.

The room was so dark that it took a while for my eyes to adjust, and so humid and moist that my shirt was damp when I left. In such a small room I felt conscious of being entirely in the way. Beer cans littered the amps and cables snaked all over the hideous carpet. I couldn’t help but think that I wouldn’t feel too safe in the event of a fire. The band seem used to all this though.

A Thousand Lies is made up of five guys with a shared passion for the music. Drummer Dave McQuillan, guitarist Steve Barclay and bassist Stephen Bagnall are all from Sunderland, whilst guitarist Andrew Bright and singer Chris Nesbitt call Newcastle home, but living on different sides of the Tyne doesn’t seem to affect them any. There have been a few changes over the years before A Thousand Lies became the band they are today. Stephen Bagnall says “It was originally me, Brighty and Dave, with Dave on guitar and singing, Brighty on guitar and me on bass, when we were about 13, so [the band started] about 12 years ago now, just doing Metallica covers and what not.”

“Just learning how to play” adds Andrew Bright, “the four of us went to school [together], just not Chris”. Steve Barclay joined the band when he was about 16 years old, and started playing guitar for them, at which point Dave moved to drums, but they were still just playing covers. “Then they started playing fucking cock rock, and I went in to death metal, and eventually we all came back as A Thousand Lies but I was off for a bit, and they had two other piece of shit drummers before me!” Dave McQuillan says, causing everyone to laugh for a while.

“We were always trying to find a singer though, even when Dave was in the band doing it, it was just kinda, he sang because nobody else was there to sing. We found a singer! Eventually! ” Barclay laughs. It was only when they found Chris Nesbitt that their old band disbanded and A Thousand Lies was officially born. Although there is some confusion over the timing of all these events, “That was 2006” asserts Bright, and is met by a chorus of “five”, “end of 2005, aye”. “Start of 2006 one might say...” he insists and everyone laughs. “The 13th month of 2005” is the final agreement! “We’ve all had a bash at doing bass, drums, guitar, but we’re kinda settled now on what we like.” Bright reflects.

One of Chris Nesbitt’s first acts within the band was to come up with the lyrics to their very old song ‘Should Not Be’. One of the first songs that they did as a band, Bright comments that it’s a song they never play anymore.

A Thousand Lies have an individual sound, and despite being influenced by other bands they don’t compromise themselves by sounding too much like anyone else. Every song has a similar theme, but every song is different, and Bright feels that they’re becoming “heavier and more melodic”. With regards to the writing process, Bagnall comments that “it’s a lot more united now”. He draws reference to their old days as Stronger than Death, “We used to have songs that were written by [Steve], songs that were written by Brighty, and they were just so different! There’d be a thrash one, a groove one, an epic one and then a kinda other one...” Song writing is now a joint effort and in my opinion it’s working for them, damned well. Apparently they can be highly critical of each others’ ideas though, “You cannot be in this band unless you can handle some fucking grief like!”


Having been gigging on the local music scene for some time, fans at their shows tend to know all the words to their most popular songs. So the band were quite anxious when they tried out some new material at a recent gig at Newcastle rock bar, Trillians. Lead singer, Chris Nesbitt (lounging across the room looking quite comfortable, “I’m not posing I just have bad posture!”) thinks they may have played too much, but as Bright says, with that sort of stuff it’s just trial and error. “Been working on nothing but new material at the moment, cabin fever is setting in!” Nesbitt jokes. “We’re not really gigging as much as we’d like” Bright adds. They currently have two new songs recorded for their forthcoming album, and they’re working on another six. The plan is to get them recorded by June, then gig as much as possible. One of the new songs they played at Trillians was a complete change of pace for the band, and a surprise for the audience of loyal fans. A ballad, called ‘Dies in Me’. “The rest of [the set] was pounding, then there was just this nice fucking melodic ballad thing in the middle of it!” McQuillan laughs. Barclay thinks that the audience weren’t sure how to take it, because it was a completely different style for them. However, from where I was standing in the audience, it seemed to go down very well.

The recent buzz on facebook surrounding A Thousand Lies has been talk of an upcoming DVD. And there’s the fact that I’ve had a camcorder shoved in my face by Bright at every one of their gigs I’ve been to recently. (He laughs as he finishes my sentence for me). It’s been in the making since December, and has taken until now to complete. Bright takes full credit for this one, putting his hands up and saying “that’s all my fault - Basically all the footage has come from last year. We went up to Shetland to do a thing called Vunk fest. That was really cool. There were loads of bands from Holland, England, Ireland, and Scotland. We did loads of big gigs last year. Full Throttle festival was really cool. It’s just us being stupid and pissed, and all you guys coming to the gigs and having a laugh. It’s all on video!” Barclay compares the DVD to the Pantera home videos. It’s a look at what goes on behind the scenes (which I can only imagine is hilarious debauchery), and Nesbitt sums it up as “30 minutes of stupidity really”. Well I for one can’t wait. It’s due out with a live CD in June before they take off to play Vunk fest again, so “stay tuned!”

Touring the country sounds like an intimidating feat for a relatively small band from the North East, but A Thousand Lies have done it and plan to do it again. At the end of June they will embark on the “road to Vunk tour”, hitting Manchester, Leeds, Newcastle, Edinburgh, Aberdeen then on to Shetland. They’re touring with a band called Semperfi from Aberdeen who they’ve played with a lot in the past. When on tour, Nesbitt finds that the crowd “don’t know [the songs] but they love the shows”, and apparently the Scotland crowd are awesome. They’re “nuts” and they “love buying merchandise”, sounds like what every band needs. One of the factors that comes into it is that in some areas of Scotland there’s not much going on, whereas in Newcastle there’s a few bands playing everyday. “We had one gig up in Elgin, Scotland, it was us and Ten Tonne Dozer from Shetland, and we had a local band on first. It was like 5 quid a ticket, and it was packed, and the crowd were like “oh yeah, we heard there were a band on so we just come down [sic]”, it just never happens here”, Barclay explains, “it was rammed, they were swinging from the rafters of the building! We didn’t think there were that many people in Elgin!”

On the opposite end of the scale, they don’t have as fond a memory of gigs in London. “It’s hard going like, they’re a bunch of cunts” McQuillan says, only half joking. Bright thinks that “it’s not really a metal town, it’s a glam town”. One of the problems being that there’s just so much going on there. On the same night they played in Camden, there were seven other gigs going on just in that area. Vying for attention against that many other bands when you’re metal heads from the north must be difficult. “It’s all about making money down there”, Bagnall says, “They gave us a load of tickets and expected us to sell like 40 tickets down in London, when we knew about four people down there!” Despite these setbacks, they’ve played The Underworld, which is a renowned venue and fairly impressive in my opinion. Down south they’re often the heaviest band on the bill, but people still love them. They tell me that venues in London often say “yeah you can play, but it’s £500 for the room”, which Bright explains is a problem... “We’re just not the best looking guys to fill a place full of fucking people like” he laughs.

Back home, their favourite venue is Trillians, and that’s probably the consensus amongst most local bands. “The O2’s awesome, but it’s nothing compared to Trills”. They played with an American band called Tesla on the main stage of the Academy a couple of years ago, and absolutely loved it. However, they still consider Trillians to be the hub of the Newcastle rock scene. “When you get a group of people who really want to be there, and love music just for what it is, not about anything else, they’re the best gigs” says Bright.

When asked to pick a favourite song they all pause for a few seconds thought, then decide that there is no collective favourite song, however they do agree that a song they pretty much always play is ‘And So The Story Goes’. Another is ‘Become How We Were’, which is about “epic things”, or so I was led to believe. Apparently it’s actually about being hung-over. They woke up one morning lying next to an unopened kebab, a bottle of Southern Comfort and a bottle of cider, and wrote a song about it. “Chris’ lyrics make very mundane things sound cool! We spend ages on the lyrics, and they’re all about getting pissed”. McQuillan loves to play the outro to ‘Become How We Were’, describing it as “epic” and “awesome”. Nesbitt’s favourite song to perform is ‘Last of the Believers’ because “it’s a rip-roaring kick to the nads”. He adds, “it’s a good song you can look at people with and just fucking stare at them in the face and go “I will kill you!” Bright’s favourite song is ‘Gripping Ice’, because it’s “fast, groovy with lots of shred in it” and has elements of pretty much everything they do as a band. They then turn on me when I admit my favourite song is ‘the Hound’, “Interview time! Why do you like the Hound?” [laughs]. All I can tell them is that it got stuck in my head for weeks, and I never got sick of it. I can see why it’s so hard to agree when they have so many awesome tunes to choose from. There’s something special about each of them that could make it a potential favourite.

For such talented musicians (yes we were treated to a private performance!), there has to be a future. A Thousand Lies jokingly envision a future in which they’d still be in this very room working on these new songs. Bright says “In all seriousness, every band would answer that the same, we just want to be bigger than we are now. We want to be still doing this, still getting sweaty and writing songs, hopefully with bigger gigs, bigger stages”. Barclay would like to be able to afford to not have to work (“not Axl Rose loaded” [laughs]), so that they could just focus on the band. “When someone asks you what you do, to be able to go “I’m in a band”, how cool is that?” Bagnall adds. “Living the dream!” This seems like a humble ambition, and one that with all their talent, hard work and charisma, they are so deserving of achieving.

A Thousand Lies and Semperfi are playing at Trillians Rock Bar on Friday 1st July.



Wednesday, 30 March 2011

A Thousand Lies @ Trillians, Newcastle. 25/3/11. (REVIEW)

Having seen A Thousand Lies perform a few times, I've come to expect great things from them - and i certainly wasn't disappointed on Friday. They are a group of amazing musicians and fucking rockstars. The awesome guitar and killer bass lines are only part of the band's massive appeal. The frontman's vocals are exceptional, with such a huge range, from dark and gritty to soaring and melodic. The band work so well as a unit; they truly captivated me at their gig.

A Thousand Lies @ Venue

The singer interacted with the crowd in a way that all frontmen wish they could. He exuded confidence and talent, and filled the venue with his immense stage presence.
Their performance was so full of life and energy. The guitarists' exhilarating riffs and gigantic solos were mind blowing and the steady infectious rhythms were consistently blasted out by the drummer and bassist.

A Thousand Lies @ Venue

What makes A Thousand Lies special is that, on top of their incredible music, they like to have fun. The frontman played this gig wearing a kilt (not to insult, he may not have been trying to be funny, but i was amused by the sight of a man in a skirt...)! Their new t-shirts, for sale at the gig, carry the slogan 'sesh on' on the back, something which their guitarist exclaimed multiple times! They also took a break mid set to give out free shots to their fans! It's nice to see that a band as talented as A Thousand Lies can still have a laugh and not take themselves too seriously.

A Thousand Lies @ Venue

Their combination of heavy metal and melodic rock really works. There was a damn good turnout on Friday, and A Thousand Lies' new songs were received very well by the hooked audience. Everyone at the front was headbanging and generally having a great time. This really was live music at its best.

I'd also like to mention that Convolution and Theia put on a really good show too. I just can't remember enough to write anything of substance. Brilliant bands all round.

7 Pence Mix Up @ Trillians

The special surprise of Friday's gig was the debut performance of 7 Pence Mix Up, a band consisting of members of A Thousand Lies, Convolution and Fyreon. They performed two songs, covers of Pantera and Damageplan. What a spectacle! It was such an amazing way to end the night. It was slightly difficult to fit 7 people on the stage in Trillians, but they pulled it off, and were bloody entertaining!

7 Pence Mix Up @ Trillians

Overall it was a fantastic gig, with brilliant local bands, who keep getting better every time i see them.
See ya at the next gig!


(I was too busy recording A Thousand Lies' performance at Trillians to take photos, so I have used some from the Ex-Fest Showcase at Venue).