Saturday, December 5, 2009

Null Friction - Madras (IRMP3)


Arguably the strongest band to come out of the south since Motherjane, the trio known as Null Friction has taken a gigantic leap in focus and consistency since their EP .World Wide Quiet. Even though their sophomore album doesn’t include songs as emotionally involving and popular as ‘Somehow’ or ‘Reason to Rise’ featured on the 4 song EP, their new album Madras still has all the makings of a classic. It is the sound of a confident modern rock band drawing from a plethora of influences while at the same time coming into their own. This album is a slow grower with repeated listens revealing a set of guitar driven hard rock with enough experimentation to keep the listener on his toes.
Throughout the album the band clearly wears its influences on their sleeves be it the charging opening track ‘Mud’ with its tactful RATM scratching or Silverchair post grunge structure in ‘Sailor’. The band knowingly delves into more darker territory with the almost metallic ‘The Pind’ while calmer songs like ‘Inside Jokes’ and the title track itself provide the album with a much needed slow down. ‘Bahrain’ is a mid tempo track that despite a dynamic riff that draws out, never really delivers on its promise. Albeit a mixed bag, the weaker tracks on the album are easily compensated for by passion, drive and involvement of melody on the standout songs.
A tight rhythm section with bassist Abhishek and Ansh on drums provides guitarist and vocalist Shreyans enough leverage to meander onto untested pastures. The most experimental track on the record comes in the form of ‘Discreet’, an atmospheric instrumental number where guitar and bass float over a distorted sampling of Al Pacino from the Devils Advocate bringing forth an unnerving yet dreamlike state.
Overall the album ultimately succeeds in its purpose and for all of the elements it gathers from, appears as solid and cohesive as the band itself yielding a life of its own. The band has proven themselves to be wise beyond their years, crafting an arresting album that transcends the local scene and positions them to be heard in the near future by a much bigger audience.

Sunday, October 25, 2009

Jayce Lewis Live At HRC



Vh1 ‘s global music express initiative to bring a new artist to the stage every 45 days had its initiation so as to say, on the 21st of October at the lofty Mumbai Hard rock cafe. The first international act in Vh1’s arsenal to broaden the tastes of Mumbai’s fickly audience turned out to be golden boy multi instrumentalist Jayce Lewis whose single ‘Icon’ has been storming up the charts lately making him vh1’s artist of the month. He has come a long way since his four year tenure beating skins as the drummer of the Cardiff experimental metal band Losing Sun, a band which had a tendency to breeze through drummers, rivaled only by Pearl Jam and Spinal Tap, until their break up in 2008. Over his year as a solo musician he has developed a formidable sound, a dark and brooding tone that ebbs and flows with a seething electronic undercurrent that has become his trademark.

Fortunate enough to be opening for Jayce was local act Blue Blood, who in their own words were playing their first gig after 15 years together as a band. Despite being provided an incredible stage, they all but failed to deliver with an incessantly loud lower end and predictability that would probably benefit from brevity and delving more into experimentation saving the song structures from such monotony. Playing eight songs out of favor off a future album, they did manage to warm up the crowd for the main attraction who permitted the rise in anticipation, going on at exactly midnight.

Accompanied by a bassist, guitarist and a sampler equipped with the most advanced high end gadgetry, Jayce Lewis started off the adrenaline charged set with the previously mentioned Icon, a song characterized by choppy riffs complemented by catchy synth sounds and soaring vocal hooks clearly reflecting the influences of Prodigy, Depeche Mode and Killing Joke.

On stage he demonstrated why he was a force to be reckoned with within the rock world with indomitable stage presence and virtuosity as the performance saw him occasionally switching between instruments as he went through drums, guitars both acoustic and electric and keyboards during the course of a succession of songs off of his upcoming album ‘Chapter’.

Owing a debt to artists as diverse as Brian May of Queen and Kirk Hammett of Metallica, all the songs possessed a down and dirty feel with an underlying dark electronic touch a la the Deftones, still however retaining the ability to reach anthemic levels which perhaps hints at his crossover potential into stadium rock.

Lewis followed the show in Mumbai with performances in Delhi on 22nd, Bangalore on 23rd and Pune on 25th of October joined by home bred bands Circus, Bhoomi and Junkyard Groove respectively.

Friday, October 23, 2009

Grunge Reunion

2009 had been an exciting year for alternative music already seeing performances by a plethora of acclaimed reunited 90’s bands. The Pixies, Jesus Lizard, My Bloody Valentine, Built to Spill and Helmet to name a few.

But for a child of the alternative era like me, the most exciting moment undoubtedly came during Pearl Jam’s show in Santa Barbara, L.A on the 7th of October promoting their latest album Backspacer. I mean it’s not everyday you get to see Jerry Cantrell and Chris Cornell playing with the legendary PJ. After a blistering set of career highlights, Eddie Vedder introduced his old friend and Seattle comrade Chris Cornell on stage to take the lead on the classic Hunger Strike briefly reforming their short lived supergroup Temple of the Dog. A performance that brought back the nostalgic thoughts of an era gone by also brought with it another cause for celebration. The fact that former Soundgarden members Kim Thyail and Ben Shepard were backstage watching, making this the first time all four members were in the same place at the same time since Matt Cameron became the official drummer for PJ. Could we be gearing up for a full fledged Soundgarden reunion? Keep your fingers crossed!

After this incredible performance, PJ had yet another surprise for the crowds in attendance as Jerry Cantrell, guitarist of the recently reformed Alice in Chains walked on midway through the anthem that is ‘Alive’ to shred out the solo while a keyed up Mike McCready cheered on. Mike and Jerry have always had a close friendship with Mike playing guitar in the late AIC front man Layne Staley’s group Mad Season.


After a performance that brought down the house, all of Pearl Jam along with their special guests took a bow bringing the surprised filled evening to a deafening cheer filled close.

Thursday, August 27, 2009

Punk Lives!


“Their tour is cancelled, the cops are after them, and their label has no clue where they are. But it sounds like they had fun!” - Black Lips' Manager.

To say that Atlanta’s psychedelic punk band Black Lips’ tour of India was wild and unpredictable would truly be an understatement. When these garage rockers smash beer bottles over their guitars or piss in their own mouths onstage in the U.S., the worst that usually happens is that they get banned from another venue. But when they brought that anarchy to their tour of India, they but naturally incurred the wrath of all sorts of authority figures.

Notorious for their on stage antics, the self described ‘Flower Punk’ band has made a reputation of playing shows where few bands have played before. So when they decided to bring their brand of unruly drug induced punk to this conservative country where few have even heard their music, they were just asking for trouble. The tour was going off smoothly with respectable shows in Delhi and Mumbai until the band reached the college town of Pune, where they were scheduled to headline the Battle of the Bands show. After being subjected to 6 hours of head banging metal bands, the audience did not take kindly to Black Lips’ three chord danceable punk and pelted them with bottles for the entirety of their set.

When it came time for their show at the annual Campus Rock Idols in Chennai, the positive reception the band received there made them a little feisty. That evidently was not a good thing as the band performed one of the most chaotic sets in the country’s history. According to audience members present at the gig, guitarist Cole Alexander proceeded to make out with fellow band mates mid set before stripping down and attempting to play the guitar with his exposed man parts. Although this enthralled the Chennai crowd, it did not sit well with the promoters of the show who soon kicked the band off the bill leading to the rest of the tour being cancelled. The promoters also filed charges against the band citing ‘indecent exposure’ and ‘homosexual acts’ causing the band to flee the country to escape arrest.The band issued the following statement,

Dear fans,

Unfortunately, we have had to flee the country of India due to having our whole tour canceled and having to escape being held by police for indecent exposure during our most ruckus set in Chennai at the Campus Rock Idol showcase.After the fiasco, which the kids seemed to like, the financial backers of the event were furious and threw us off the tour. They tried to get security to restrain us until the Tamil police arrived. We
locked the door while they were kicking and banging on it. Meanwhile, we slipped out the other emergency exit. When we got to the hotel our tour guide informed us that the Campus Rock Idols sponsors were pressing charges and that the police would make their arrest. At that point our tour driver informed us we would have to drive six hours to get to the next town and cross state lines where we would be out of the Tamil authorities’ jurisdiction, because apparently the jail in Chennai is no joke. Word on the street said that it was teeming with tuberculosis, violence and live maggots so instead of risking going there we fled the scene. The drive ended up taking 10 hours because of a horrific accident on the road. We were also informed that all of the shows on our tour had been canceled effectively fucking all funds for the trip.When we got to the next hotel a mysterious man and someone who worked for our Indian booking agency tried to run off with our passports they got to the car when we caught them. We surrounded them until they gave back our passports. After that we booked the first flight to Berlin. We would like Rana Ghose for helping us get through these enormous trials and tribulations, and for future reference we really enjoyed the people of India and we hope western rock bands will be able to tour there in the future.
- The Black Lips

The weird thing is that the Chennai show was fairly low-key as far as Black Lips shows go. Some called it a clash of cultures, some called it a mess....in the good old days they just called it rock n’ roll.

(Check out the band's adventures in the controversial videos titled 'Black Lips in India' at http://www.punknews.org/article/32653)

Friday, August 7, 2009

Google Earth

So here’s the scenario. Its Friday night, I’m just one of the millions of zombie like figures in front of their computer screens which has all the usual pages opened up, you know....orkut, blogspot, youtube, gmail, etc, etc ….it’s while deleting those annoying spam mails that it actually hit me...everything I was using was owned or controlled in someway by google….all google…..google, google, google …a word you’re going to hear a lot in the following article so get used to it.

Google, a word synonym with knowledge, information and money, the impact that the brand has had on the present generation since its inception in 1998 is staggering. We no longer search the internet, we "google it”, because a simple "Google search” brings back almost two billion sites. No wonder google was included into the oxford dictionary in 2006. However what most people don’t really realize is how much power the company actually has over the general public. But before we start the random paranoia, let’s take a look back at the history of the phenomenon known as google. Formed by probably the two biggest geeks on the planet, Sergey Brin and Larry Page met in the science program at Stanford and soon dropped out of school to start Google from a friends' garage. A decade later, Brin now serves as president of technology at Google while Page heads product division with an estimated net worth of $18 billion each. It’s easy to understand what drew us to this search engine, with its decorated landing page logo, in the first place. Google totally understood us, what we meant or what we wanted even when we couldn’t spell it ourselves: “Do you mean “Prisoner of Azkaban?” Why yes, Google! Yes I do! They learned by watching Microsoft just how far you can push before you are broken up by the government. Google knows where its bread is buttered… It’s all about putting as many ads in front of people as possible. That’s where the so called ‘evil’ of google started. Even though google makes donations of upwards of $200 million to Mozilla per year and Mozilla innocently enough picks google as its default search engine in Firefox. But that’s probably because the other search engines don’t measure up right? Right….Then there are the claims that google reads all the mails in your gmail account. But surely that couldn’t be happening, it’s probably just a coincidence that the ads that pop up in your gmail always have something to do with your mail info. I’m sure two Mensa geniuses with billions of dollars at their disposal couldn’t possibly hack into your account. Moving on, if you’re an average Joe like me, who hits google for his daily need for information, one thing you probably should know is that google stores all your information indefinitely,whether you like it or not….don’t believe me? , ask the 17 different privacy rights cases currently pending against google in the courts. That’s where things start to get interesting. Through acquisitions of a few thousands of the world’s best engineers available, the company knows more about you than you might be aware of. Google originally placed a cookie on each user's computer, which can be used to track that person's search history and that cookie was not set to expire until 2038. Though google claimed that these were necessary to maintain user preferences and give users a better experience, evidence has turned up suggesting that Google turns over all information to the FBI or the NSA causing web nerds all over the world to cry foul.


In lieu of this information and my ever present desire to do something stupid, I decided to perform an experiment, one in which I would boycott everything google related from my life for as long as possible. In the 20 minutes that I lasted I realized two very important things…

(1) How annoying minesweeper gets after a while and,

(2)I can’t imagine my life without google!

Despite all my bad mouthing, all my tirades against the big evil corporation, I’m just as addicted to google as any of you out there. I mean it; it wouldn’t be possible to function in day to day life without it. Anything imaginable is present on here within the time it takes to click a button. If it is online, Google has it. I admit it; I am a slave to google!! I’m a slave to YouTube, Orkut, google video, google street view, google maps, google earth, Blogspot, google mail, Picasa ….and anything else they might have bought in the last 5mins. How can you not love a company that spends amounts per day, which could possibly run a small African country, voraciously acquiring every worthwhile thing on the Internet?

Going by the latest news on google, after the release of their operating system google chrome, google is all set to make public their very own google PC fully equipped with google applications and an android operating system which could very well take over the Iphone market as well. This comes just weeks after their acquisition of popular content site Digg and claims of release of an information medium ‘Knol’ which could possibly replace the beloved Wikipedia…unthinkable I know! Though their representatives have repeatedly assured the public that google hasn’t bought out competitor’s yahoo (yet), it does nothing to stop the rumors that google is slowly but surely taking over. All we can do now I guess is hang along for the ride and pray for our continued existence on this Google Earth.


(Information courtesy Google).

The Bands That Made Nirvana


It was 1992; in a smoke filled basketball gym, tattooed cheerleaders with anarchy symbols on their jet black uniforms twirled their pompoms, while a dirty blonde guitarist with unwashed hair and a striped sweater strummed vociferously at his black and white Stratocaster. With the help of this iconic video Nirvana’s second album ‘Nevermind’ had just topped the charts, ushering in a cultural phenomenon known as grunge. Seattle would soon become the music capital of the world as the media and the world descended upon this previously ignored city, now home to some of the biggest names in rock. Often credited with restoring authenticity, meaning and passion to the music, Seattle’s favorite sons, were indispensable in establishing the cultural and commercial viability of alternative rock, which had unexpectedly captured the attention of Mtv and the disenfranchised youth, the world over. Although true for the most part, the point where most people falter is reducing the revolution to an individual (or a trio), forgetting that Cobain and company were merely key regiments in the motley alt rock army. The true unsung heroes of alternative rock were bands of the 80’s American indie underground. Bands united by a desire to crowd into a van, careen from state to state, winning over fans one filthy venue at a time, gradually building up an audience large enough to make record labels and critics take notice, so that ‘Nevermind’ and other 90’s albums could have a shot at mainstream acceptance. For anyone who thought that alternative rock was a revolutionary music style, this ‘new’ sound actually sprang from almost 15 years of innovation by hundreds of bands who remained below the radar of the corporate behemoths. Before the music industry conspired to make it commercial and marketable as a commodity and before it became just another generic category, another household word, alternative was simply, an attitude.

The story begins in the Regan era during the early 80’s. In a landscape littered with massive hair, synthesizers, and monster riffs; before the Internet and Ipods provided far-off music fans with information and communities -and before Nirvana- kids across the world grew up in relative isolation, dependent on mix tapes and self-created art to slowly spread scenes and trends. It was under these conditions that a movement began to stir unbeknownst to the mainstream, uniting a wide variety of bands who shared the same independent spirit, circumstances and fierce determination to make it on their own terms and who would ultimately prove to be the missing link between 70’s punk and 90’s grunge. After the initial punk explosion of the late 1970s had come and gone; the Ramones, Talking Heads, Television, the Patti Smith Group, and all their New York City contemporaries, had made an abortive and failed run at commercial success. The few people who had picked up on those groups’ albums though, had sensed the opening of a previously hidden side entrance into rock, and were beginning to shove their way through. Linked under the loose genre ‘indie rock’ bands like Black Flag, Sonic Youth, Minor Threat and the Replacements languished in the musical minor leagues because they were too experimental for commercial radio, made unfortunate career decisions or eschewed mainstream success. Yet these bands formed the nucleus of a new youth movement. All across America a whole generation of alternative bands came off age in venues as eclectic as the bands themselves. Unable to fill arenas and ballrooms they had to create their own improvised circuit. The bands often worked together, informing one another of venues hospitable to their new, seemingly unpalatable music. They vouched for one another to upstart labels looking for artists; they took each other on tour. In many ways, the music was a community. America’s youth, whose palpable frustrations and sense of dislocation were not represented by the studio polished glam rock prevalent on Mtv and who wanted something more out of their music would seek out the little college radio stations to the left of the dial featuring this separatist community categorized as ‘college rock’.

Before alternative music existed as a market classification, it was commonly used to describe a band that melded the sound of Black Sabbath with that of the Beatles, mixing aggression and tunefulness. Formed in Boston in 1985, the Pixies crafted a minimal sound based around the simple dynamic of quiet-loud and variations of the same. They played bitingly melodic miniatures, little spasms barbed with noise and surrealistic lyrics. With an immediately recognizable sound, opposing forces often fit together, a bouncy yet firm bassline joined to a quirky choir of punky guitars, Black Francis’s harsh primal scream besides Kim Deal’s coy and smoky harmonies, explosive grating riffs in songs crafted from prime bubblegum accompanied by Francis’s playful and inscrutable lyrics about slicing eyeballs, grunting whores and waves of mutilation. Their unique sound owned as much to the bands raw untrained musical imagination as it did to a desire to avoid the usual rock clichés. With modest but steady sales, a murky legacy and no clear school of descendants, the Pixies represented a peculiar pinnacle in the art of rock n roll. An archetypal college band, they played sold out gigs festooned with critical praise but were unsurprisingly aborted from the top of the charts. Throughout the 90’s their posthumous legend grew and grew as they emerged as one of the most admired and name checked bands of the alt rock decade. Influenced equally by the Beach Boys and the 1984 Metallica album ‘Ride the Lightning’, Dinosaur Jr. were the definitive noise guitar indie band of the 80’s, with a tendency to get lumped in with the grunge crowd, even though they were playing their brand of hard melodic songs with powerful hooks several years before the Seattle scene kicked in, as their effects laden guitar had a major influence on the shoe gazing scene that preceded grunge. With a myriad of dynamic shifts, soaring solos and crystal clear jangles, they combined the guitar fetishism of Sonic Youth, hard rock elements of hardcore and speed metal with mind blowing rhythmic and textural assault of psychedelic pop. Drumming often bordered on hardcore while melodies and hooks flew in every direction, complemented by vocalist J Mascis nasal drawl lethargic vocal style, a watershed style in shifting the scene from purposeful hardcore to ambivalent grunge. Dinosaur Jr set the standard for convulsive indie rock guitar fireworks with heavy use of feedback, distortion and a classic rock charisma to become the cornerstone of a new set of bands.


Black Flag, the first band to rise out of the ashes of punk rock to spearhead the hardcore movement built up a fearsome reputation for staging shows that frequently descended into violence. They played an adrenaline charged brand of punk known as hardcore, a sound that captured the frustration and rage of the 1980s youth into short bursts of music which would thrill and inspire a whole generation of misfits and outcasts. By being resolute to their philosophy of ‘touring the hinterlands and bringing the message to the people’ Black Flag eschewed mainstream success in favor of independent creditability simultaneously pioneering the indie DIY ethic through the incessant touring that was instrumental in setting up of an alternative circuit and through SST, the label the band founded which would go on to become arguably the most influential independent label of the 80’s.

Hardcore legends Bad Brains started off as a funk and jazz fusion band in 1977, but within a few months of playing transformed into a punk rock band also adept at reggae, having adopted the philosophy of Rastafarian. Though influenced by the Sex Pistols, they considered the music too slow and as a result subsequently invented the genre of speedcore. As an all-black rock band they were often subject to racism while incendiary lyrics along with rowdy and unpredictable shows resulted in them being banned in the state of Washington. Together with Black Flag and the Dead Kennedys, the band became pioneers of punk's hardcore fringe, influencing nearly every subsequent hardcore or quasi-hardcore outfit as well future hardcore front men Henry Rollins and Ian Mackaye. The unlikely pairing of clamorous yet emotional music with melody and harmony would make Husker Du one of the best and most influential underground bands of the 80s. Starting out as a fast and furious hardcore band like Black Flag, Husker Du eventually started writing more melodic material, inspired equally by the original wave of punk and 60’s pop of the Beatles and the Byrds with the more lyrical, expressive sound of folk music. Their 1984 magnum opus ‘Zen Arcade’ now considered an alternative rock classic, delivered angry/sad reflections on politics, society, and the human soul without sacrificing a shred of their intensity and soon broke into college radio. Song-writing/singing duties were often shared between guitarist Bob Mould and drummer Grant Hart, each having a distinctly different voice and attitude. With a sound featuring loud distorted fuzzy guitars, pounding drums, and passionate frenzy instrumentals, the band always struck a balance between high energy riffage and a melodic sense which future bands like Greenday would borrow heavily from. While Black Flag toured relentlessly across the US inspiring scenes wherever they went, Minor Threat kept their hardcore message more parochial and specific. The straight edge stance that preached abstention from casual sex, drugs and alcohol was developed furthest by band leader Ian MacKaye in the Washington dc scene with the song ‘straight edge’ , a 45 seconds long blast of pure energy best experienced while jumping up and down erratically in a sweat drenched mosh pit. Their songs were typically speedy with fast punk drumming, two guitars, and a few more chords. Following its split, Ian experimented further with the hardcore sound until he formed Fugazi, a band which retained the indie ethic with blasts of emotion often found in songs of Minor Threat. Distributed by Ian’s own Dischord label Fugazi played a strain of post punk that never catered to fashion and constantly pushed the envelope of what punk rock could or should do, attracting a large fan base and a monumental place in punk rock’s history in the process. In Fugazi, the guitars got more angular and choppy, drums adopted different patterns, stopping and starting to create different sections or moods within individual songs. Over the top raw and emotional vocals, intertwining guitar parts, nervous energy, oblique yet sing along melodies gave them the distinction of being one of the tightest bands in history.


The Minutemen, a southern California trio whose sound though inspired by punk and hardcore, stands as the most unique, organic and unclassifiable of any band active during the '80s. The band worked without the aid of boundaries to express both an acute sense of humor and a distinctive social and historical consciousness. The late, great D. Boon whose distinctive guitar playing, which runs through a gamut of styles and sounds, sang and wrote thoughtfully independent songs in ways not seen before or since. Along with his childhood friend Mike Watt’s conspicuous, inventive and unpredictable bass playing Minutemen songs were usually short bursts of creativity jammed full of music in the standard two-minute rock song. In attitude they are very much a punk band, though one which possessed enough vision to create music that is visceral and rebellious beyond the punk ethos. The Replacements, frequently described as having a friendly rivalry with Husker Du, blended post punk angst with pop melodies in an alcoholic self destructive manner. Raucous in the vein of their idols the Sex Pistols, they built a career on uneven performances with music which was full of contradictions, sloppy and majestic at the same time. Westerberg’s self deprecating painfully honest lyrics mixed with hook laden endearing riffs and a solid rhythm section made these eternal underdogs one of the most creative and compelling rock n roll bands of the decade. With a mix of complexity and immediacy, Mission of Burma occupied a special place in the post punk world. The band swerved seamlessly from chugging beat and jangly guitar to off-key chords and off-kilter rhythms. Influencing a series of bands in the past decade with their integration of musical experiments and anthemic rock, Mission of Burma's music has held firm, unaffected by fashion, unsullied by imitation, and undiminished by the passage of time. Despite being most well known for their appearance on Nirvana unplugged, The Meat Puppets have always been one of the most underappreciated voices of the alternative underground helping expand the limits of hardcore, bringing in more elaborate musical techniques and classic rock styling’s without losing its punk edge.

A lo-fi band that challenged the accepted punk image but still made uncompromising music, Beat Happening thought of themselves as a punk band despite their gentler and sensitive approach. Musically haphazard, they often shared and swapped guitar and drumming duties and as a result a gig would often involve almost as many lineup changes as songs. Sticking to the DIY ethic with bare minimum production and instrumentation, often just guitar and drums, their songs were trashy in feel and were typically about pop oriented subjects – crushes, going out, none of the serious dark stuff beloved of the hardcore bands of the time. The band with likeminded musicians Pastels in the UK and the Vaselines in Scotland defined the genre which would soon be known as indie pop, bands wanting to play loud and discordant but can’t help writing pop songs.
Undoubtedly the most significant underground band of all time, crystallizing the importance of indie rock and New York in the music world while proving to have immense staying potential is Sonic Youth, a New York band influenced by punk rock but rarely sounding like it, choosing instead to explore dissonant sonic landscapes at the expense of traditional song structures and melody. Guitarists Moore and Ranaldo became known for propping up a dozen guitars behind the band during performances each tuned unconventionally and some containing objects such as screwdrivers and drumsticks jammed between the strings and fretboards. From uncompromising avant rockers in the No Wave scene to indie guitar pop trailblazers, they have often been anointed the kings of the alternative scene with wild dissonant experiments, pop gems and passionate thrash seizures, seeing them cover the limitless possibilities of an electric guitar. A band formed in 1980 in the small university town of Athens Georgia, R.E.M. produced some of the most consistently fascinating, successful and honest music of the past 20 years, combining lyrical and musical experimentation in ways that nonetheless are accessible to mainstream rock. However before they became the poster boys for alternative rock, they were critic darlings and the most popular college rock band of the '80s marking the point where post-punk turned into alternative rock. With a musical blueprint of chiming guitars, an energetic rhythm section and Michael Stipe’s enigmatic, mumbling vocals, the band underwent a steady, decade long rise from underground heroes to bona fide superstars. Along the way, they inspired countless bands, from the legions of jangle pop groups in the mid-'80s to scores of alternative pop groups in the '90s, who admired their slow climb to stardom. Though there were no overt innovations in their music, R.E.M. had an identity and sense of purpose that transformed the American underground. The quartet's arty mix of punk energy, folky instrumental textures, muffled vocals and introspective and oblique structures is believed to have brought guitar pop back into the underground lexicon.

By the time Kurt Cobain committed suicide in April of ’94; alternative rock had changed from an independent community of fledgling musicians that thrived on competition and cooperation to a fully fledged commercial enterprise. The late ‘spokesmen of a generation’ during his life, often publicly acknowledged the influence of these bands in his music and held them in great regard. In the wake of Kurt’s death, the rise of post grunge and the scene being flooded with hordes of Nirvana imitators, the legacy of these indie bands was lost in the process; bands who never got media coverage while they were doing their most innovative and vital work, who never made any real money but still managed to get by on meager earnings and small cult followings. While Nirvana’s success proved that an independent idea could become a big business, changing the life of bands that had sought out a humble living on the road just a few years before, it also made one believe that somewhere out there could very well be brilliant rock bands nobody's heard of, about to change the musical landscape just one more time.

Thursday, August 6, 2009

Myspace Secret Show Review (RSJ July 2009)

It was two weeks before the show that the buzz started. Rock communities and friends started to discuss about a not so ordinary concert that was to take place in the city. Rumors abound about which bands would be featured in this concert, I was as intrigued as the legions of rock lovers in the city. The anticipation among the rock fans had built up to a fevered pitch when it was finally revealed that that the show would be headlined by cult rockers Motherjane from Cochin; supported by Mumbai’s very own seminal hardcore band Scribe along with up and coming alternative rockers Black. The show of course was the MySpace secret show, which after being extremely successful in various countries over the world, was finally being introduced in India. Tagged as ‘disclosed locations, undisclosed bands’ the series of free concerts provided MySpace users with the opportunity to see bands as wide ranging as U2, Slayer and Neil Diamond. On paper the bill seemed extremely strange, pairing up the acclaimed progressive rockers with the hardcore giants but after observing them in person, it seemed like an obvious choice. Both bands had gained a wide reputation of attracting audiences in droves, wherever they played and by associating them with Black, it would only add to the Mumbai band’s fan following.

The venue chosen for the event was the Bandra amphitheatre which despite its lack of popularity seemed like the ideal location for a concert of this magnitude. When the gates opened, surprisingly on time, a mass of black T-shirt clad rockers as far as the eye could see showed up at the venue with print outs of their MySpace profiles in hand, which in all likeness were created the night before. With the famously bearded members of ‘Bhayanak Maut’ also in attendance, the already high levels of excitement climbed a few notches.


Often acknowledged as one of the most underrated bands in the city, Black took the stage first starting off the show with ‘Bitten’, a short instrumental featuring incredible breakdowns and a great interplay between the drums and the bass, setting the mood for a great evening of music. The group sounded tight right off the bat immediately grabbing the crowd’s attention with their take on early alternative rock. One thing however lacking in the band’s performance was the sheer gusto. Even though the frontman had great energy and rolled around stage often interacting with their very own cheering section, the remaining band seemed too sober to get the crowd in frenzy. After breezing through the mediocre ‘Somewhere in the Night’, the band shifted gears with the funky rock n’ roll number ‘Newspaper Boy’ highlighting Roop’s bass playing and Shawn’s vocal skills. A true gem in the bands repertoire, this song was played with a true alternative spirit and is destined to be a classic. After a promising start the band unfortunately strayed into the generic modern rock territory with two lackluster, run of the mill rockers ‘Rift’ and ‘Blacklisted’. Although not bad songs per se, they lacked some of the same qualities as their earlier more dynamic songs. Soon enough though, they settled back into their niche with their last couple of songs. On ‘Field of Thought’ another track indebted to the 90’s; Shawn channeled grunge vocalists of the past and as one of the guitarists rushed in on stage mid song, jokingly remarked “We don’t need that boy!” ‘Dreamcast’ a song promised to be featured on a future album, proved that the band could hold their own even in the company of the more notable bands. A post grunge anthem with riffs straight out of classic rock and a mighty chorus, it seemed like a song built for radio. An exciting group in their own right, the band seems primed to take the next step forward in their careers.


With the omnipresent MySpace logo behind the stage at all times, talk during the interludes between the sets predictably steered towards promotion of the brand, with AV’s screening the bands take on the networking site’s new musical venture in India. By the end of the first set it had become pretty clear that the organizers had pulled out all the stops with high end quality sound and lighting. Another notable feature, which I’m sure the crowd appreciated was the minimal time for sound checking between bands, which as anyone who’s ever been to a concert before knows can be a real buzz kill.

The next to hit the stage were the ‘torchbearers of hardcore’ Scribe, who took over exactly where Black left off. A volatile combination of musicians, with unquestionable chemistry, the band pummeled the crowd into submission, dishing out one crushing rocker after another. Now I had seen Scribe live before, I had heard each of their albums, ‘Confect’ was and still is on my regular rotation but I believe that in that performance the band was at their absolute zenith. Maybe it was the thrill of playing the first ever secret show in India, but the band performed with great fervor, enthusiasm and familiar on stage banter. Playing songs off their latest album ‘Confect’, which takes a quantum leap in focus and consistency and attacks with scientific precision as compared to ‘Have Hard Will Core’, the band got the crowd off their asses and into the moshpits with the one of the weirder named songs off the album ‘Pomari Begattari’. Despite the vocals being lost within the sonic blare more often than not, the emotion of the driving anthem still seemed to seep through. Following was a cover of the ‘Earth Crisis’ track ‘Slither’, which judging by its aggressive riff, would seem more at home in a Slipknot album. Conformation of their status as one of the best live bands around came when they brought out fire breather ‘Mak’ mid set turning the show into an out-and-out entertainment spectacle. The antics didn’t end there though. When the time came for album opener ‘Analyze This’, the band invited seemingly random audience members on stage including one who oddly enough resembled an older version of Vinay from ‘Bhayanak Maut’ affectionately titled ‘BM Uncle’. After going through a couple of hilarious moves with the band which had the crowd in splits, ‘BM Uncle’ stepped offstage to a round of applause as Scribe delved into another cover, this time a track from the Batman soundtrack. Despite the music being heavy and unforgiving, it is not without its sense of humor, as established by ‘Ate a Banana’ which, people owning the album would perfectly well know, has one of the most hysterical beginnings and ends to it. In addition to Vishwesh’s biting lyrics and vocals, the rest of the band helped fuel unquestionably one of Scribe’s most vicious and venomous rockers. Breakneck guitar riffs battle with sledgehammer drumming turning the song into a headbanger’s wet dream. As Scribe ultimately concluded with their explosive set, they left behind a sea of rock enthusiasts with grins on their faces, horns in the air and from my personal experience, an extremely sore neck.

Throughout the show it had become pretty clear that the other two bands along with the audience held Motherjane in the greatest of regards. So when it finally came time for the iconic rockers to go on, the crowd was on their feet and rearing to go. Starting off with the classic ‘Mindstreet’, the captivating, bombastic song had the crowd reaching for their air guitars as the band performed choice songs from both of their critically acclaimed albums. Coming off with half painted faces akin ‘Kiss’ but fortunately with talent, the visitors from the south had mastered the art of taking classic and progressive rock influences and filtering them through their own Indian sensibilities. This trait couldn’t have been clearer on the track ‘Fields of Sound’ which after opening with a shredding guitar intro morphed into a breathtaking guitar part worthy of a classical raga. The high point of the set, exemplified by Clyde’s thumping bass line, Suraj’s soaring vocals and a moving solo by Baiju, was ‘Blood in the Apple’ off the new album ‘Maktub’ which showed them worthy of the ‘Best International Rock Act Award’ at AVIMA (Asia Voice Independent Music Awards). ‘Maya’ shimmered and shuddered beneath a creeping melody as the title track from ‘Maktub’ featured one of the album’s many hook filled choruses. Another brilliant track off Maktub ‘Broken’ began with a beautiful, uplifting guitar line, peaked with an extremely emotive vocal delivery and ended with an all out riff extravaganza. As is the case with most rock shows in the city, the policemen arrived in the nick of time to ruin the event by threatening to shut down the show. But following some sweet talking by Suraj, the band was allowed to play one last song which they sardonically dedicated to the men in brown. ‘Karmic Steps’ got the crowds grooving one last time as the band bid farewell to the Mumbai audience with a short outro of the national anthem, a very nice touch. Although a well thought out set list, I wish they could have also included the ever popular ‘Soul Corporations’, a personal favorite of mine, but as they say there’s always the next time and hopefully this next time is not in the too distant future.

The first of many secret shows planned for the city, this concert was, in hindsight, an extremely successful event with a few kinks that were worked out in time, a well chosen selection of bands who put in their heart and soul to entertain the over 1200 fans in attendance and a show which goes to prove that the Indian rock scene is healthier and more diverse than ever before.

Saturday, July 18, 2009

BRMC - Howl Review (RSJ June 2009)


I saw the best minds of my generation destroyed by madness, starving hysterical naked, dragging themselves through the negro streets at dawn looking for an angry fix.
---Allen Ginsberg ‘Howl’


The Black Rebel Motorcycle Club, mainstays of the San Francisco rock scene took the name for their 3rd album released in 2005, from this defining poem of the beat generation written by fellow San Franciscan Allen Ginsberg. Like the beat generations characteristic pattern of poetry, BRMC have also had a distinguishable sound with wide ranging influences from the neo psychedelic Brian Jonestown Massacre to the guitar fuzz of Jesus and Mary chain. However in this album it all takes a backseat to the Americana, folk and country influences as the trio trades in their distortion pedals for acoustic slide guitars. BRMC’s songs have always had a bluesy undertone to them but in this album they delve deeper into the delta blues and gospel sound by employing organs, harmonicas and tambourines making the album sound grander than it really is. While the remaining so called ‘garage rock revivalists’ still play brash, aggressive rock with fuzz driven feedback and amateurish song structures, BRMC have taken a different path, one not frequently visited by modern day rock bands. A stripped down sound with arrangements that favor the lighter, more acoustic side of their music, this album would not seem out of place in the 60’s. While a departure for the band who are famous for albums filled with drug induced feedback and rock n’ roll anthems, its still an earnest and compelling record chalk full of gospel Americana and muscular country blues along with lyrics about Jesus and the government that would make Dylan proud.
Songs like ‘Promise’ and ‘Complicated Situation’ written in the vein of 60’s Dylan folk and ‘Devil’s Waitin’ a southern ballad tribute to the styling of Johnny Cash shows the band embracing its roots, while the most popular song off the album ‘Shuffle Your Feet’ begins with an acapella gospel choir and leads into a honky tonk stomp. The title track with its heavy church organ acts as a divine melancholy mood piece for the album. ‘Ain’t No Easy Way’ is another raucous rocker full of acoustic guitars, harmonica solos and foot stomping country rock rhythm while ‘Weight of the World’ with its Oasis like harmonies is a low key gem in the bands repertoire. Fans of the bands first two albums might not appreciate the bands dive in this new musical spectrum but in time this album will be appreciated as a sincere effort by the band to reinvent their sound.

The Bloody Essential Guide To Metal (RSJ June 2009)


A genre that has been discredited, disillusioned and just plain dissed by critics since it rose from the ashes of the blues, incorporating passion and aggression like no genre before or since it. A genre that has been tossed in and out of mainstream culture, despised by some and revered by others, like the music itself the reactions it draws are always extreme. However a genre that keeps coming back irrespective of the criticism it is dealt, it is the beast that can never be killed.
The origins of metal lie in the blues which initially influenced rock n’ roll itself. Songs like ‘Helter Skelter’ by the Beatles and ‘You really got me going’ by the Kinks are considered prototypes for metal songs. Early British acts like The Who, Cream and Jimi Hendrix, are often regarded as monumental in metals development by creating a uniform sound on which most metal bands built upon.
Iron Butterfly’s ‘In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida’ is often considered to be the first metal song attracting the attention of the media and inspiring legions of bands to play this style of rock.

Heavy metal
In the late 60’s and early 70’s bands like Black Sabbath, Deep Purple and Led Zeppelin gave birth to a loud, aggressive genre of rock known as heavy metal. Featuring a unified bass and drum sound and distorted guitars, this style of music soon gained a monumental fan base.

New wave of British heavy metal
After decline in popularity of the metal originators, a secondary group of British bands collectively known as NWOBHM were responsible for re-popularizing metal by toning down its blues influences and introducing metal to America. These include metal legends Iron Maiden, Saxon, Diamond Head and Tigers of Pan Tang which influenced a new breed of American bands.

Glam metal
Described by critics as ‘hair metal’ due to the flamboyant nature of the bands playing this style of hard rock popularized by Mtv, glam metal originated in the early 80’s influenced by Twisted Sister, Aerosmith and Van Halen along with the make up and stage dynamics of bands like Kiss. Popularized by bands like Motley Crue, Poison and W.A.S.P, this radio friendly genre was soon overtaken by the more abrasive thrash metal.

Thrash metal
The most popular form of heavy metal, thrash metal was pioneered by the ‘big four’ Metallica, Anthrax, Megadeth and Slayer by combining fast shredding guitars and fast tempos with aggressive and blunt vocals indebted to hardcore punk.

Death metal
A subgenre of metal with perhaps the most devoted cult following and lowest mainstream acceptance, death metal is characterized by complex song structures, fast tempos; blast beat drumming and growled ‘cookie monster’ vocals. Spawning off of thrash metal bands like Slayer and Kreator in the 80’s, death metal bands Death, Possessed and Morbid Angel pioneered this genre.

Black metal
The most sinister of all metals subgenres, black metal is often associated with church burnings and Satanism. Prominent Norwegian bands like Mayhem, Burzum, Darkthrone and Emperor influenced by Venom and Celtic Frost display tremolo picked distorted guitars along with high shrieked vocals creating a dark and menacing sound.

Nu metal
Beginning in the late 90’s nu metal was a genre that emerged by combining alternative metal and groove metal with hip hop influences. Bands often had dj’s in addition to the usual line up and featured rapping in most of the songs. In this style, power chords are often played in syncopated patterns and drop d tuning to put the emphasis on the mood and texture instead of the melody. This genre had widespread popularity in the early 2000’s featuring bands like Deftones, Korn and Slipknot.

Funk metal
Influenced by Jimi Hendrix who popularly incorporated funk rhythms into his brand of metal, modern day bands like Primus, Red Hot Chilli Peppers and Faith No More have had widespread popularity playing this style of metal.

Metalcore
The most popular form of metal in the 2000’s, metalcore is a punk-metal hybrid owing its origins to crossover thrash bands such as Cro-Mags and Stormtroopers of Death. The first wave of metalcore bands began with Cave In, Converge, Hatebreed, and led to a new group of bands collectively known as the New wave of American heavy metal. It included bands such as Lamb of God, As I Lay Dying, Killswitch Engage and Trivium, all of which played characteristic metalcore with emphasis on breakdowns conducive to moshing.

Alternative metal
A genre which achieved fame in the 90’s comprised bands that played traditional heavy metal with an experimental edge using odd time signatures, unconventional technique and lyrics. Jane’s Addiction and Tool are the most well known bands in the genre which influenced further nu metal bands.

Sludge metal
Sludge is the infusion of slow, heavy doom metal with the aggressive hardcore punk along with hints of southern rock influence. Contrasting tempos with heavily distorted instruments and vocals sets this subgenre apart. Crowbar and Eyehategod play this style of metal to great acclaim.

Doom metal
This style of heavy metal has a characteristic dark, paranoid and apocalyptic feel to it. Taking inspiration from the slow, low tuned guitars of Black Sabbath, early 80’s bands like Saint Vitus, Candlemass and Cathedral played dense riffs with an atmosphere of despair. With a minimal but devoted following, this type of metal still is popular in most European countries.

Stoner metal
A subgenre indebted to the use of recreational drugs, stoner metal is bass heavy metal centered on repetitive riffs. Influenced by psychedelic and blues rock, Kyuss was the definitive stoner band playing a style of heavier and slower metal.

Post metal
Post metal is basically atmospheric sludge metal producing less aggressive atmospheric metal with a more experimental style consisting bands Isis and Pelican.

Gothic metal
Melancholy of Goth combined with the aggression of heavy metal pioneered by bands such as Type O Negative and popularized by bands such as Lacuna Coil and Evanescence.

Groove metal/Post thrash
This brand of metal relies on some innovative drum work along with the use of chunky, distorted guitars that provides a ‘groove’. Though an extension of thrash metal, it is not as riff oriented and considerably minimalist, characterized by mid tempo riffs in drop d tuning, dissonant bridges or breakdowns and heavy use of palm muting. Bass riffs are more prominent than in other metal genres often filling in the gaps. Highly influential on the nu metal genre, it didn’t achieve the same popularity and was phased out in the late 90’s. Sepultura, Machine Head, White Zombie, Fear Factory, and Pantera are some bands that exemplified this genre.

Speed metal
A genre influenced by NWOBHM and hardcore punk, it eventually gave rise to thrash metal. Origins of the genre lie in bands like Motorhead and Judas Priest.

Power metal
An attempt by bands such as Blind Guardian, Iced Earth and Gamma Ray to return back to metals original sound, power metals popularity has been on a rise in most countries. Putting the emphasis back on the riffs and vocals, this subgenre is a straightforward attempt to recapture metals original appeal.

Progressive metal
With an array of bands as famous as Pink Floyd, Rush, King Crimson and Dream Theatre, progressive rock is an indulgent subgenre of metal consisting of concept albums, highly trained instrumental skills and complex song structures.

Viking metal
Viking metal is a subgenre that aims to create an epic sound centered on Norse mythology with a bombastic, anthemic sound and keyboard effects demonstrated by Swedish band Bathory.

Drone metal
Also known as art metal, this underground phenomenon blends drone with doom metal to create a soundscape of reverb and feedback. Sunn o))) and Earth are the most acclaimed bands in the genre.

Industrial metal
Blending of industrial music with metal by artists such as Nine Inch Nails, Ministry and Godflesh became common practice in the 90’s as they mixed guitar riffs with distorted synthesizers and vocals leading to formation of a subgenre valued especially in Europe.

Neo classical metal
Yngwie Malmsteen, a guitar virtuoso borrowed techniques from classical music and incorporated them in to metal to create neo classical metal which hit its peak in the mid 80’s.

Rap metal
The basis for the nu metal explosion of the 90’s, rap metal infused hip hop elements and rapped lyrics into metal which was the basis for bands such as Limp Bizkit and Linkin Park.

Pop metal
Bon Jovi and Def Leppard popularized this style of metal along with glam metal by employing radio friendly pop melodies in a heavy metal context.

Avant-garde metal/Experimental metal
Favoring experimentation and non standard ideas, avant-garde metal which includes bands as diverse as Naked City, Oxbow and Sleepytime Gorilla Museum uses unusual sounds and instruments to break down musical conventions.

Folk metal
This little known style of eclectic metal prevalent in Europe integrates folk music into metal territory by making use of traditional folk instruments like accordions and harmonicas and folk’s melodic style as made famous by the band Skyclad and further built upon by Fintroll and Moonsorrow.

Grindcore
A genre which draws influence from death metal, industrial metal and hardcore punk and features down tuned guitars with blast beat drumming creating the grind which gives the genre its name. Known to have some of the shortest songs – less than 2 minutes, this style includes bands Napalm Death and Carcass.

Christian metal
Metal artists who identify themselves as Christians often play metal laced with Christian themes and lyrics giving rise to Christian metal. In contrast to the anti-Christian themed black metal, this subgenre has also been come to known as white metal including bands like Saint and Stryper.

Technical death metal/Jazz metal
The most complex of all metal subgenres, technical death metal combines the brutal nature of death metal with complex jazz drumming and irregular time signatures as demonstrated by bands such as Cynic, Atheist and Meshuggah.

Melodic death metal
A more accepted form of death metal, it combines harmonies and melodies of NWOBHM with death metal vocals and drumming. At The Gates, In Flames and Dark Tranquility are the most recognized bands in this style.

Symphonic black metal
Integrating keyboards and orchestral element into traditional black metal and adding operatic vocals give rise to this symphonic style popularized by bands such as Cradle of Filth and Dimmu Borgir.

Mathcore
The dynamically complex math rock genre united with metal gives rise to mathcore, a subtype of metalcore. Not high on popularity, this style is played especially by Dillinger Escape Plan and Protest the Hero.

Deathcore
Metalcore bands like Job for a Cowboy and Through the Eyes of the Dead crossed metalcore with death metal to give birth to this form of underground metal featuring palm muted riffing and dissonance.

Crossover thrash
The first genre to experiment with combining metal and punk, this genre featured bands such as D.R.I and Murphy’s Law and was also known as thrashcore.


Similar to several forms of art, music must be evaluated objectively with all preconceived notions set aside. Metal though divided into numerous styles, still retains the underlying passion and drive behind the music in all its forms. Reminiscent of a painting which appears a mess at first glance but begins to show the preciseness and difficulty of its creation on further inspection, metal draws listeners in, to explore itself beneath the loudness, beneath the chaos to the creativity which must be judged on its own merits.

Wednesday, July 15, 2009

Indian Rock (Maelstrom 2010) (IRMP3)




No other genre or style of music, one could argue has had a greater cultural impact or been able to capture the imagination of people the world over as strongly as rock. Born out of the resonating notes of American blues accompanied with an insistent backbeat, rock n’ roll has been worshiped, ridiculed, satirized, loved, hated, brought about riots, protests and induced unconditional devotion among the masses, all within the span of 60 years.
This popular style of music came full circle when bands like the Rolling Stones, the Beatles and the Animals collectively known as the British invasion originally influenced by American rhythm & blues and early rock n’ roll itself became popular in the states.
Even though the U.S and the U.K were and still are the epicenters of the rock revolution, the sound quickly spread to all corners of the globe in the subsequent years with bands nascent in Europe and Australia. This new sound was introduced to India in the mid 60’s when the Beatles at the height of their popularity took the now infamous Indian vacation. It became an even trade of sorts, as the fab four also borrowed sounds and instruments from the country which featured prominently on the ‘White Album’. With the modernization of the newly independent country, it didn’t take long for western influences to seep into the already rich and varied musical spectrum of India.

Initially devoid of any genuine rock acts even in the major cities; by the late 70’s the only source of rock music for the starved public came in the form of radio stations like AIR featuring an hour or two of the raging Beatlemania and the occasional concert by visiting groups on their way through the subcontinent. Long forgotten Indian bands like The Savages and Atomic Forest, instrumental in sowing the seeds of rock n’ roll were ostracized in the classical and Hindi music driven 1970’s India as lack of a proper audience and absence of record deals, became the obvious reasons for their premature demise. The foundation of what came to be known as Indian rock and which inspired innumerable future bands was laid arguably in the mid 80’s by bands like Indus Creed, which like most groups of the time started off as a cover band, later developing their own sound and presence within a few years of playing. Indian Ocean attracted considerable media attention as well as a solid fan base by being the first band truly recognized as ‘indo-fusion’. More often than not, these bands would incorporate Indian sensibilities and instruments into the western song structures, as in the case with Delhi based Parikrama who gained wide acclaim with the style. 13AD with their bluesy take on hard rock were also able to establish themselves as the premier Indian band of the 80’s.
Other groups like Moksha and Orange Street also gained popularity within this period with their differing styles. Moksha, with influences drawn from the British metal giants Iron Maiden along with the eclectic nature of the latter seemed to indicate the coming of a new age in the rock scene.

The early 90’s brought about a transitional period in the progress of the genre, as more and more bands seemed to shed off the notion of playing covers and focused more on original material. Rock was highlighted more often with monthly publications like Rock Street Journal and JAM as it started infiltrating Bollywood music territory in terms of fan base. Motherjane and Pentagram, remnants of the old guard took over exactly where Indus Creed left off to become favorites of the college festival scene. But not everyone fared as well; as the era produced its fair share of casualties, wiping out majority of the original pioneers of rock in the country with perhaps Parikrama being the lone survivor. Also the advent of annual festivals, Independence rock and Great Indian Rock beginning in 1995 along with a surge in the magnitude of college festivals, saw a barrage of new, fresh bands creating waves.

Following the relative high of the 90’s, the scene seemed to cool off in the first half of the new millennium with an apparent lull in the number of shows around the country. With minimal activity in the new decade, by 2004 an entirely new breed of bands had started to rise out of the woodworks, limited not only to the metropolitan parts of India but to different corners of the country not usually associated with rock. The rise of independent labels like Demonstealer and Counter Culture records gave an opportunity to the abundant thriving musicians of the country to make available their albums to a mass audience along with a sense of community and brotherhood among the label mates. This generation of rock lovers also saw the rise of channel V launch pad which proved to be a juggernaut in discovering and establishing bands to a nation which seemed primed for the globalization of its rock community. With obvious monetary benefits in minds, the media and people who previously had no relation with music soon descended on the rock scene which brought its share of benefits and pitfalls. In the early 90’s an Indian band that wasn’t playing covers was far from being considered commercial but that all has changed in the new millennium as bands started playing gigs and releasing cd’s of original material with increasing regularity. The quality of studio produced material as well as live performances also improved tremendously while the easy accessibility of the Internet, free downloads; free music uploading sites and music-swapping sites has given Indian bands a new medium to express their music and has considerably made a huge impact on the Indian rock scene.

The most popular and distinctive bands of the scene include the likes of Thermal and a Quarter; a Bangalore based band formed in ’96 was the first to play original material in a scene flooded with cover bands. Often regarded as one of the finest bands of our time, this jazz/funk trio has released four albums to date and opened for the likes of Jethro Tull and Deep Purple while influencing the 2005 band Junkyard Groove. Skinny Alley, a true super group in the sense, with members involved in the rock circuit since the late 70’s were also a part of an experimental quartet Pink Noise, which by combining jazz, electronic and Indian classic, has been gaining momentum in terms of public appeal. Zero, often proclaimed as the one of best Indian bands of all time were certainly at the top of the heap when they decided to call it quits at Independence Rock XXIII. Formed in the late 90’s the band with multiple awards to their name unified the Indian scene around their sound.

Kolkata has always been a key centre for rock with the ever popular Fossils and Cactus at the forefront of the city’s rock community. The latter’s practice of blending psychedelic blues with Bengali music has inspired younger bands such as Five Little Indians formed in ’07.

Formed in 2001, Menwhopause were alternative rock’s first true incarnation in the country and one of the few bands able to get radio play in foreign countries. A band with a huge cult following, they started the trend of distributing music free through the net, a technique which is still prevalent today. Delhi crowd favorites and winners of channel V launch pad; Them Clones have been a breath of fresh air in the metal dominated rock scene with unrivaled pop/rock melodies and hard rock tendencies. Colorblind a short lived duo, rescued Indian rock which seemed to be stuck in a rut of classic rock and metal, by bringing a more contemporary flavor to the scene with traces of industrial rock. Another rock duo Dream Out Loud broke out in 2006 as one of the most commercially feasible bands of the decade.

Metal has always had a distinct voice in the Indian rock scene as early as 1985 with Bangalore metal giants Kryptos and Millennium opening for Iron Maiden and Megadeth respectively and inspiring the next generations of bands. As Indian bands grew heavier and heavier, Mumbai became a prime hub for metal with Bhayanak Maut and Pin Drop Violence becoming the quintessential death metal bands. Demonic Resurrection, the flagship band of Demonstealer records with the Demonstealer himself at the helm, within a few years of its formation would become the figureheads of a new movement of metal and at the same time, the most successful metal band of the country. Dense guitar riffs, diversified tempos combined with an aggressive vocal style set Narsil and Acrid Semblance apart while the thrash metal powerhouses Sceptre and Decibel with their celebrated version of the classic naagin, gained notoriety by means of their explosive and unpredictable live shows. The country saw one of its most intense death metal bands in 3rd Sovereign from the north eastern state of Mizoram, proving that metal is not only limited to the major cities but has a national appeal with a diverse palette as revealed by Blood and Iron predisposed to progressive and power metal stylings, Lucid Recess, an alternative metal formed by two brothers from the hinterlands of the country namely Guwahati, Joint Family representing Nu metal in their home town of Delhi and Extinct Reflections, a band from the south playing their brand of melodic thrash. The evolution of Indian metal came with bands like Undying Inc and Myndsnare moving the genre into uncharted territory, firmly rooted in technically precise and brutal metal albeit with modest progressive rock flourishes. In the current scene, Inner Sanctum, trash metal’s newest rising stars have been winning contests left and right while Scribe, the sole torch bearers of hardcore from Mumbai have been anointed as the best live act of the country.

Punk rock has been represented mostly by Tripwire, who were rewarded for embracing the style when it seemed most out of fashion in the form of mass critical acclaim. The 90’s also had a major impact on the Soundgarden influenced Split and the grunge inspired Indigo Children (originally The Superfuzz) who are presently considered to be the essential Indian band and for good reason. Another Vertigo Rush formed by the bassist of the above mentioned band showed an intelligent use of production and what it can do to enhance the sound of a band. Among the dozens of alternative rock acts that dominate the scene, Delhi’s Cyanide with Mumbai’s Blakc and Zodiac have been stand outs in the recent years while Rosemary, the up and coming Nirvana or at least Indigo Children wannabes have been the one to watch as they move from grunge to more psychedelic territory.

The distinctly Indian Jalabee Cartel along with Shair & Func revolutionized the techno and synth genre which encouraged a wide variety of bands like Medusa, Frequency and Skincold to incorporate electronics in their brand of hard rock akin Deftones.

Eclectic bands that don’t seem to be defined by genre constrictions encompass Helga’s Fun Castle, a jam band with traces of reggae, alternative, metal undertones and impromptu performance skills; Something Relevant equipped with a saxophonist, a pianist and a percussionist covering genres as far ranging as jazz, blues, swing, reggae and rock; blues bands Galeej Gurus and Half Step Down; and lastly funk driven Human Abstract and Aftertaste. 2003 saw Level 9; a rock band with pop leanings and a female vocalist proving that rock n roll is not just a boys club while in 2005 India’s solitary post rock band Lounge Piranha played their version of ambient rock to an ever increasing fan base. Red Cube, pop/rock outfit which to Bhayanak Maut is what Stone Sour was to Slipknot, an outlet for some members of the band to display their softer sides.

Channel V launch pad’s latest season saw another project by the infamous Demonstealer, a metal band mixed with large doses of humor called Workshop. Crowd favorites included The Circus, a New Delhi group of teens with an ever evolving sound with bits and pieces of every genre imaginable thrown in and Cassini’s Division, the most pompous band to come out of the woodworks since Pentagram but with enough creative ability to back it up and bring a modern take on punk rock. However none of these bands were able to compete as the winners of the show turned out to be Reverse Polarity, metals new kids on the block injecting youth and energy into the tired art form.

Regardless of which country it’s from, rock is about expression: expression of the self, expression of having a voice and unleashing those buried emotions without hindrance to do so. Thus it can be concluded that Indian rock n roll is something of a sleeping giant – bearing immense potential, but little so far in the way of international commercial success. However, things are developing, slowly but surely. It is a matter of reducing the stereotype and raising the rock scene out of its ambiguity, thus making it recognizable across the world as a viable form of music.

Saturday, July 4, 2009

Paradox


The bars of the jail cell echoed in fright,
As the prisoner could no longer distinguish between day and night
Huddled in the corner of a long forgotten room,
‘For sale’ he chuckled before his impending doom.

Remorse in abundance, leaking through the pores
Closing in on him - those great metallic doors
Gasping for air, he burst into tears
Wrapped in a blanket soiled with his fears

Darkness took hold, sounded like depression
The shrink pointed it out in the subsequent sessions
Atheist he was, no place for him in heaven
Temper tantrum he threw when he was around seven

Not socially inept, not the devil incarnate
Out of body experience when all of it started
A torch in one hand and a motive in the other
To escape from this world before it ends in smother

Flames announced the end had come
For he knew not the religion of the life term
Remains of the poet, screams on the rocks
Poetic justice of the final paradox

Sunday, February 8, 2009

Post Rock (RSJ March 2009)


Every time rock music gets full of itself and starts getting bloated on its throne, some new, innovative band comes out of no where to break the norms and to introduce a new sound that resonates throughout the rock world. Years ago someone coined the prefix ‘post’ to describe these advancements made in a particular genre and since then its been a catch all term used by everyone from the media to rock critics. Joy Division introduced the world of post punk filled with melancholy lyrics and doom laden music, taking the energy from punk rock and adding their own reflective attitudes. Fugazi, starting out as a hardcore band later added their experimental touch to deliver the ever popular post hardcore genre. Now that rock is in its 6th decade and being overshadowed by hip hop and pop more than ever, it is the apt time for a new tour de force to revolutionize rock music as a whole and bring the revolutionary spirit of rock back to the forefront of society--enter the appropriately named genre of post rock.‘Using rock instrumentation for non rock purposes’ post rock is basically instrumental rock done extremely well with rhythms and chord progressions distinct from those in conventional rock music. Texture and melodies occupy the place of out dated riffs, the objective being to create an atmospheric sound wherein moods reign supreme.Production is generally very tight and precise just like the music leaving no loose ends in place. With the typical song coming in over 7 minutes, it may feel a little tedious but repeated listens always holds the promise of uncovering something new, while lack of vocals allows the listeners imagination to guide itself through a song, telling a story without the medium of lyrics. Post rock is a loose genre drawing influences from kraut rock, prog rock, jazz and dub reggae to name a few and a collective reaction against the belief that rock n’ roll has lost its ability for rebellion. Cool and cerebral, it is the antithesis of rock’s visceral power.
Coined by legendary critic Simon Reynolds of the magazine ‘Wire’, post rock was a term used to describe bands that were indefinable under any other musical umbrella. A way to categorize this extremely diverse group of bands who shared no common musical thread or aesthetic apart from a disdain for tradition. Described by Simon Reynolds as an overall progression for rock and roll, a genre that leaves behind the macho posturing, the testosterone filled rhythms and the cliché pop/rock formula that has been played into the ground. Buried within the sonic blare are layers of musical history, from the birth of the blues, to the rawness of punk, to the relative coolness of techno.
However, the genre is not without its detractors as the bands themselves detested the term which they felt was a constriction of their individuality and musical expression. Critics argued that despite the freedom the artists possessed, the genre had become stagnant with similar sounding bands that made somber music with long, drawn out passages and calamitous crescendos and that the originality of the genre had been traded in for its use as a movie score. Like any other trend in music, the commercial success of a few has drawn attention to the entire genre and the signing of countless, probably less deserving bands by major labels is common practice.
Bark psychosis being first band to be labeled with the term post rock was essential in the development of the genre while Slint’s Spiderland often considered a landmark album, not only in the development of post rock but in indie circles as well is arguably the first post rock album. This underground acclaimed album although largely ignored by the mainstream opened the doors for bands like Tortoise, Sigur Ros, Mogwai and Godspeed you! Black emperor, the last of which played metal inclined atmospheric rock expanding the boundaries of the genre into post-metal bands Isis and Pelican.The definitive album in the genre ‘Spiderland’ shows the band possessing a variety of depressive and beautiful emotions at their disposal as they alternate between serene and intense, with bass-driven grooves, mumbled poetry, oblique structures, and extreme volume shifts. The albums songs flow into each other with ease as the vocalist mummers throughout narrating a carefully constructed story which draws the listener in.‘Washer’ with its subtle guitar lines, ‘Don Aman’ with its inventive chord changes and ‘Nosferatu man’ with its irregular stop-start techniques creates a masterful album while the piece de resistance ‘Good morning captain’ creates ambience with its minimalist double guitar approach and subtle narration until the final cathartic explosion which closes this breathtaking album.

Math rock, a progressive and more complex cousin to post rock is a genre that emerged in the late 80's and that was influenced by both the intricacies of progressive and avant-garde rock - King Crimson, Frank Zappa and 20th century minimalist composers such as Steve Reich and John Cage. Although a different genre it shares most of the aesthetics of post rock and also most of its influences. The music is characterized by complex structures, angular melodies and constant abrupt changes in tempo and time signature. The term math rock grew out of the Chicago scene and the artists working with master producer Steve Albini in an effort to describe their new style. Don Caballero, Shellac, June 44, Rodan, The For Carnation are some of the bands that grew out of the initial math rock scene using the formula laid down by Slint. Punk, Heavy Metal and Jazz also influenced modern day math rock bands Foals and Battles who are favorites of the indie scene.
Although it is certain that due to the genres subversion to the mainstream, its songs wont be played on Mtv any time soon, it still has one of the most devoted and passionate cult following of any genre to date. A reason for this is the exciting prospect of a new musical direction which expresses emotions often put aside in modern rock, bucking stereotypes and never resorting to the prefabricated ideas of earlier sonic icons. Slint and bands similar in approach have achieved rock icon status, wedding masterful playing, thoughtful composing and lyrical expression to a degree seldom reached by popular music. Post rock, the definitive experimental genre of the 90’s has seen its popularity decline in the new millennium due to it acquiring the reputation of sameness and being predictable; however the fact that the new wave of bands like Rachel’s, Do Make Say Think and A Silver Mt.Zion are gaining recognition for their distinctive sounds, proves that this genre isn’t exhausted after all.

Monday, January 12, 2009

Post Hardcore


Of all the genres of rock, one could argue that none have been more influential for the current rock scene than the genre of post hardcore. Itself a derivative of punk rock, it includes groups expanding the boundaries of hardcore punk similar to what post punk did with punk rock. Utilizing hardcore punk’s fast tempo and energetic approach, it built upon it with complex and dynamic song structures and as a result its impact is felt from noise rock all the way to dance-punk.
Though there had been experimentation in hardcore before, the first real band that embodied all the aspects of post hardcore were Fugazi. Incorporating dub and soul into hardcore punk, they were one of the most distinctive and celebrated indie bands of all time. Interlocking guitar parts in the vein of Television, innovative song structures and funk and reggae beats, all became the calling cards of Fugazi.
Fellow rockers Rites of Spring, Embrace, Jawbox and Nation of Ulysses unfortunately gave rise to the emocore genre, influencing a new generation of bands such as Sunny Day Real Estate, Fall Out Boy, Panic at the Disco and My Chemical Romance.
However this era also produced two exceptional bands in At the Drive-In and Drive Like Jehu which were considered the flagship bands of 90’s post hardcore scene. Both these bands produced extremely complex punk rock with art and progressive influences.
Shudder To Think’s pop and R&B influenced post hardcore along with Craig Wedren’s operatic singing voice, technical precision and melodic virtuosity made them a major influence on the budding math rock genre. They also influenced the Dismemberment Plan who by adding rhythmic danceable beats to their music became the fathers of dance punk whose members include the oddly named !!! and Q and Not U.
Probably the preeminent post hardcore bands were the dense and heavily distorted Helmet and Quicksand characterized by by repetitive, syncopated, staccato guitar riffs, often in odd time signatures. A trademark of both these bands is the use of drop-d tuning which has become a staple in modern rock.
Cult indie noise rockers Unwound used jagged angular guitar lines to develop a sound all of their own. Although post hardcore has maintained till the new decade, the new breed of bands like Thursday, Thrice are however not upto the mark of the bands that popularized the genre.