Highlight Gigs Tagged ‘gig’

Maps & Atlases at Festsaal

People keep calling these guys a math rock band, but the connection between the genre label and their actual sound is tenuous, at best. The confusion is easy to understand though, there is a complexity throughout the tunes, and the arrangements are both delicate and compelling, there’s notes of neo-folk and psych, as well as being at times a little experimental, but at the end of the day, it really does all come together within a definate pop package. Maps & Atlases are a progressive pop band if nothing else, putting them in the same vein as classic bands such as King Crimson or Peter Gabriel’s Genesis. Which is a very good and worthwhile thing. to work at. Here’s a track:

Maps & Atlases – Solid Ground

With the new album from Maps & Atlases, Perch Patchwork, in stores in the arse end of June just gone, you can expect that when they hit the stage at Festsaal we’re going to be treated to a demo of the new material. With a lot of bands that would be somewhere between a-bit-concerning to really-quite-shitty, after all, the phrase “their old stuff is better than the new stuff” isn’t a cliche for no reason, but the new album is good, really good, so you and I should be looking forward to it all. As if you weren’t already anyway.

The Black Angels at Comet Club

http://www.myspace.com/theblackangels

http://www.theblackangels.com/

All hail the dark side of the force, this night shall go down in Berlin rock history as the Blackest of all. It’s all gone black. Black Mountain at Festsaal, Black Angels in Comet Club…….rage black-out at Blitzgigs HQ. This is ridicerous.

Why? you ask. Well kids, it’s like this, The Black Angels are one of the finest psych-rock bands around, just think back to how much you enjoyed Wooden Shjips and you’re on the right track, and not only do they unfortunately come to town the same night as Black Mountain we’ve also discovered that these two bands are actually touring together later this year with a double-headlining show of cosmic psych-rock legendariness in London before a tour through the US and Canada ending in Black Mountains’ hometown Vancouver. So, naturally the only question is who’s got a van and secondly, I reckon we can take in a few Guided By Voices shows along the way too. This could be the best winter ever.

The Black Angels release their 3rd album “Phosphene Dream” on September 13th, check out the artwork on that one, phew, these guys don’t just pretend to be into the cool of psych-rock and all it entails, cool record covers, posing looking spaced out and interesting, the website is all wobbly and liquidy and nothing is as it seems, the edges are soft and…….ooh, it’s not what you need to look at with a gigantic hangover. My tummy feels funny. But if you’re feeling fine it’s just the ticket. It’s psych-rock of the highest quality, literally. Dark and brooding and trippy and wibbly and slightly sinister. Perfect.

I’m going to get in training. Why? you ask. If I’m going to take in Black Mountain and Black Angels in one night, or at least some parts of both, it all depends on who has the better merch table really (or the cuter merch table girls ;) ) then it’s no more booze and kippen for this boyo.  Me, wagon, it, on. Over and out.

Black Mountain at Festsaal Kreuzberg

http://www.blackmountainarmy.com/

http://www.myspace.com/blackmountain

The first time I heard this band was at the end of their support set to an, at the time, much better known Canadian band and all I could think was damn that’s loud! And then it ended. People came out looking stunned, shocked, bewildered, I was intrigued……momentarily anyway.

It wasn’t until someone played me their tour only 12″ E.P. a few years later that I remembered that I almost saw this band and realised why those people had looked so bemused that night.  So now that I’m a huge fan and know the records inside out you can imagine how excited old Bazz is getting about this and there’s still 3 months to go……..so for homework kids, digest “Black Mountain” and “In the future”. This is one band you won’t want to miss.

Blonde Redhead at Festsaal

http://www.blonde-redhead.com/

http://www.myspace.com/blonderedhead

This trio of Milan-born heartthrob brothers Amadeo and Simone Pace and sexiest female guitarist-ever Kazu Makino from Tokyo come to Berlin to our favourite venue to plug their new album “Penny Sparkle” out soon on 4AD.

Last time I didn’t see them cos I sold my ticket like an idiot but that was in another place, another time, another continent even. This time though, this time.

The sophistication of their records is what attracts the most about Blond Redhead. Dreamy female vocals atop a mess of spacey guitars and drums, somehow they manage to never make the same record twice.

Last album “23″ is a modern classic which will be rediscovered and hailed as a lost classic in a few years, mark my words but please don’t remind me if i’m wrong. That, like the new album, was produced by Alan Moulder, legendary shoegazer producer who has produced everybody from Jesus and Mary Chain to My Bloody Valentine, Ride,  Nine Inch Nails, Smashing Pumpins, the list goes on and on. In the presence of greatness, it’s a nice place for a band, or a producer for that matter, to be. Enjoy.

Ninja Tune XX at Astra Kulturhaus

Celebrating the rich and varied 20 years of the Ninja Tunes label, the Ninja Tunes XX Tour hits Berlin with a massive lineup of forward thinking electronica, hip hop and future-jazz artists.

Allow us to illustrate through moving picture:

…and allow us to illustrate through song:

Cinematic Orchestra – To Build A Home

Andreya Triana – ‘Lost Where I Belong’ (Flying Lotus Preview Edit)

Wild Palms at Comet Club

British indie pop as taken a bit of a back seat recently in favour of all this New York hipster shit, but to be honest, US bands try too hard. As a metric: American bands only celebrate success when they’ve sold a million records and done an endorsement deal with a trouser company. A British band is happy enough with getting on the cover of NME and playing enough pub gigs to stave off starting at the steel mill where all their dads work (but not the drummer’s, he’s dead from an accident).

Wild Palms are a British band who, while perhaps not contracted or duty bound to ever work in a dockside steel mill, are definately worth your attention, bouncy angst pop with just enough new-wave to keep the nostalgists at bay. You’ll find them playing at Comet Club on the 23rd of September, playing their small repertoir of hits with special attention paid to their standout single:

Wild Palms – Over Time

This Will Destroy You at Magnet

Texas post-rock group This Will Destroy You might be a bit slow in getting their new album out, the one that was finished in January this year and still doesn’t have  a release date, but what they lack in forward momentum in that department, they certainly make up for in touring stamina. 54 dates across the U.S. and Europe, starting beginning of august and stretching to the middle of October. What does that level of travelling do to a person? Do you even remain a person? Do you become some kind of fetid half beast that lives by absorbing sunlight and licking moisture from the eyeballs of young groupies? Do you even require nutrients at all, your god-like rock&roll intensity having reached such a peak to make a 54 show tour physically possible? Scary stuff.

The gig is at Magnet club.

Here’s part one of a two track single just released called Moving on the Edges of Things:

This Will Destroy You – Woven Tears

The Chap at Festsaal

London experimental pop outfit the Chap make it to Berlin for a spot of gigging at Festsaal.

Famous not only for a stage show that often features exploding violins and cellos, and how we’ve all so very often wanted to blow up a cello, but also a very decent back catalogue of five albums going back to 2003. The newest one from them, Well Done Europe, came out last May and got a very reasonable review from Pitchfork, gaining a 7.7 (but they also thought the appalling new album from Arcade Fire was worth 8.6, they’re very bad recommenders).

A single from them, clip inclusive:

Circle at Bang Bang Club

A Finnish prog-metal four piece? In my Bang Bang? It’s more common than you think!

An ever changing lineup through a massive catalogue of releases since their formation in 1991, Circle make it to Berlin for a show in Bang Bang Club supported by [Project] Transmit, for one big night of live loop experimentalism. If there’s a gig this year that you bring a joint to, then this should be that concert. Not that you need drugs to enjoy music, it’s just that sometimes music needs drugs to enjoy you.

Here’s a track from Circle, a cover of Syd Barrett’s Rats:

Circle – Rats

…as well as something a bit more indicative of them:

Circle – We Must Breathe

And a number from [Project] Transmit, just since we think they’re really fun:

PVT (Pivot) at Magnet Club

Signed to the slightly infamous Warp label, Sydney kids PVT (formerly Pivot) make it to Berlin for a night of glitch electronica post-pop antics.

The brand new album from them, Church With No Magic, was released early August this year in Australia with an international release expected soon, if not already by the time you read this. Here’s the clip for the first single, Window:

If you enjoyed that track at all and wanted to hear more from the PVT people, head to the website where they give you the MP3 for free in exchange for your  email address. Which I’m sure they use only for good purposes.

The new album follows on from their last album, their first international release, the very awesome O Soundtrack My Heart. I mention this only for your benefit. It’s important to know since the track In The Blood comes from this album and In The Blood is adorned by, what I would say is, the greatest film clip ever to grace late night television. Check it out:

Blood and puppetry, together at last.

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