Monday 22 October 2012

Review: GOAT Live at Star And Shadow Cinema, Newcastle 20th October 2012



I don’t go to many concerts these days, probably due to expense/laziness, but mainly down to the fact that there aren’t too many good bands out there that warrant the effort. I’ll support my friends etc and check out those word of mouth recommendations from time to time, and this is how I came across GOAT, an obscure Swedish outfit that were playing only 3 shows in Britain recently, and what a stroke of luck that one of those 3 shows happened to be in Newcastle. Most bands these days bypass Newcastle, probably due to there being a fairly moribund scene here – no-one seems to get that excited here, all too cool for school methinks.

I came across GOAT when a friend of mine sent me a link to one of their videos on you tube and I became slightly obsessed with it, with it’s dirty bass line and freak out guitar married to a tribal chanting and video featuring South American indigenous people falling prey to white hunters.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=keAwK766Ek0  
Now I had heard that this band hail from an obscure part of Sweden and, despite having known each other since childhood, had never really played live, instead concentrating on jamming, and more recently recording an album called “World Music”, which is superb. So, with this in mind, could they cut it live? Were they going to prove to be a mighty disappointment? Not on your Nelly!

Like The Residents GOAT prefer to let the music do the talking and therefore regale themselves in masks and outfits belying their interest in tribal accoutrements ranging from African to Venetian, from Witchcraft to Voodoo, painting themselves in a variety of guises like a tribal Halloween party. The two female singers, who, like Abba, sing all their chants in unison, were dressed like middle eastern dancers at a fancy dress ball, with Venetian masks and feathers, entering with bells and incense and dancing throughout like Sufi dervishes.

Their music is hypnotic, tribal, intense, and heavy, reminding me of so much ethnic, mainly Jungian African/Moroccan music, but also more Western stuff especially Can and This Heat and some of the more hypnotic Krautrock.

The place was packed, dark and hot and, due to the amount of tall people standing towards the front, it was difficult to see everything, which I think added to the mystique, catching glimpses of the band as they played. The sound was intense, and mesmerising as they lurched from one dark vibe to the next, like a voodoo dance party. Each part played added up to more than the sum, creating a chanting looping rhythm that forces the body to move to the pulse of the percussion which crashes and throbs with the bass (a red Rickenbacker 4001 no less), while the 2 guitars intertwine and stab and occasionally let rip with dirty lead breaks, intermittently holding down the beat like chains on a slave.

I found my head and neck pulsing with a life of their own whilst my legs and feet stamped on the ground with Beefhearts floppy boots while I was transported to a time when there was nothing but life coursing through our veins and out of our hands in celebration that there was nothing but to be alive.

GOAT is a celebration, but not necessarily a happy one. They are life-affirming and death-affirming. They shake your soul out of it’s body and carry it away on Mayan pyres with dreams of ancient bones rattling, and dark drums beating somewhere out there on the ‘vast and subtle plains of mystery’ (Joni Mitchell). I don’t know if they intend playing live again, but if they do please check them out. You may never be the same again, and you’ll be all the better for it.

Monday 19 March 2012

The making of "Play ForToday"

Kick-started by our love of Tim Smith and the Cardiacs, which is where we came in initially right back in the early 90’s when we all first met and the whole thing came into being in the first place. And after years of living together and playing together, busking for coppers, splits and spats, falling in and out of love, starving on the streets of London and our eventual rise in the late 90’s, only to drift apart for years to be brought back together by the man who started it all in the first place. We always knew we had something extraordinary, and if something’s worth doing, it’s worth doing again.

So there we were in a café in Stoke Newington, like nothing had changed since we first played here 15 years before. Still scrimping and starving, 5 impoverished souls with a bloody great yearning and no way of knowing just how we can all make this work. Hanging everything on a simple naïve optimism we decided to do it again. Just how do 5 people from different parts of the country, with no money and no contacts and no hope, with a reputation like ours, set about making an album? An album that they hope one day will be lauded as the greatest piece of art, the most stupendous piece of work, that will stand the test of time and be heralded the world over and bring peace to the world (or something). It’s not going to be cheap, they thought.

Don’t ask me – I guess you operate on the principle that if you want something enough it will happen. I still can’t see how that’s possible, but lo, 3 months later there we were in Snap studio in North London, with Guy Massey at the controls, embarking on our mission impossible and recording the first two songs in a 3 day session. Contacts were pulled, and deals were made. Old friends and new pulled together to make it happen. Dave Bedford and Andy Mcleod and Simon Williams – thank you.

Of course you don’t get anywhere without a bit of hard work and a lot of inspiration, and we’d put in the hours writing and rehearsing, and playing, until we had a set of fine songs that we could be proud of, and that we hoped would set the world alight. The writing of “Sovereign” alone was fraught with Dostoevsky style candlelit scribbling in the wee small hours, whilst slotting rehearsal spaces around our busy schedules, and crawling up and down the M1 sleeping on floors, hoping that one day it’d all be worth it.

Cut to the end of the strange summer of 2011 – did that actually happen? And there we were at the Bull & Gate playing two glorious sold out nights, showcasing some of the new songs that were rolling off the presses ready to be recorded for posterity. Andy Mcleod had been having secret meetings on our behalf and had come up trumps with a deal to record the rest of the album. 15 days.

15 days…15 days! That’s less than 2 days per song. How will we manage? It took Pink Floyd 8 months to record “Dark Side of the Moon”. These were our worries when we approached the recording (not bad worries to have though in the big scheme of things), and the sessions weren’t all plain sailing, but Vanessa did cook us some lovely food to keep us all going, and thanks to all the time spent rehearsing and playing, the songs were laid down fairly quickly, and despite Guy sustaining a broken rib resulting in the wonderful Marco Pasquareiello stepping in to desk duties for a while, we almost managed it. I say almost. We did have to negotiate another 3 days, but that’s certainly not bad considering what we were up against. Vanessa, in between cooking duties and of course laying down some magnificent bass lines, managed to capture some stuff on her flip cam, despite the sometime hysteria of Richard and the reluctance of some parties to be captured on film!

And so we reached the end of the year with an album in the can. Despite all the odds we had achieved what we set out to achieve. Unfortunately we couldn’t record everything we had written, and with more songs to come, I’m afraid before long we’re going to have to do it all again. After all, songs are like babies. They cry and cry and keep you awake at night, and you have to clothe and feed them and send them out into the world when they’re old enough. Will this ever end? Probably not. We are like proud parents right now watching their progeny crawl off to their first day at school, hoping they’ll do alright, and not get bullied.