Black Cab
Friday 19
February 2016
Great
Hall, National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne
$30
Pop Art - Art Pop
The National Gallery of Victoria, or NGV to the
locals, hosts Friday night museum entry during big exhibitions, with drinks,
dining and local bands playing in the Great Hall.
There has been a good line-up of bands to coincide
with the Andy Warhol / Ai Weiwei exhibition. Having been out of town when Norwegian
singer, and one time Melbourne resident, Jenny Hval, played, I was keen to
catch Black Cab. Black Cab are local purveyors of what is known as ‘Krautrock’
– a somewhat racist term originally invented by the English music press to describe
German experimental and electronic music, but which has come to encapsulate
pretty much any German music or music displaying hints of German influence.
While terms like Latin music or middle-eastern music
are vaguely descriptive, I’m not sure that rock genres can necessarily be
divided along national lines, particularly as Germany has produced bands as
diverse as Kraftwerk, Einsturzende Neu Bauten, and even Boney M. After all, it’s
not as if Beethoven, Mozart, Wagner and Bach’s music is clumped together under a
banner called ‘Krautclassical.’
My friend Ralph, who has a keen instinct for
discovering little-known bands that play innovative music, introduced me to
Black Cab recently, and joined me at the NGV for the exhibition and gig. If the
throng coursing through the gallery was any indication, however, Black Cab is
anything but little-known. Though I suspected Warhol and Weiwei were the main
drawcards.
Andy Warhol is well-known as an innovator and art
world subversive and Ai Weiwei is a Chinese dissident artist and activist who
works in a similar tradition. The exhibition displayed their works side by
side, highlighting the moments where they complement each other, but also
contradicted each other. It was a thought-provoking and creatively curated
exhibition.
At first there may seem to be little connection
between the work of these two artists and the music of Black Cab, however, all
three comment on authoritarian regimes. There is Warhol’s Mao and Stalin
portraits – included in the exhibition alongside his celebrity portraits – and
Ai Weiwei’s own Mao portraits, which of course carry a different connotation given
his political activism and imprisonment in China.
Black Cab, on the other hand, has an abiding interest
in the authoritarian regime of the former East Germany. Their 2009 album Call Signs was about surveillance by the
East German secret police, the Stasi. Their latest album, Games of the XXI Olympiad, concerns itself with the East German state
sponsored performance enhancing drugs program at the 1976 Montreal Olympic
Games. It may seem unlikely source material for a concept album, but perhaps no
more so than Rick Wakeman’s The Six Wives
of Henry VIII (the most common response to hearing that album is overwhelming
relief that Henry only had six wives, mixed with surprise that an enraged
populace didn’t rise up and drag Wakeman himself off to the chopping
block.) Having said that, you can
imagine someone turning the Essendon supplements saga into a concept album,
even a musical – Hird Mentality
perhaps, or See the Bombers Shoot Up.
Black Cab’s album dispenses with the drone guitar
sound of some of their earlier work and instead features pulsing up-tempo electronic
music with crisp, metronomic beats and anthemic flourishes – as if Kraftwerk have
had heir drink spiked.
The Great Hall was packed as the buzzing drone of Closing Ceremony introduced the show. Black
Cab’s principal players, Andrew Coates and James Lee looked suitably serious as
they stood at their respective workstations fiddling with knobs and flicking
switches to program sounds and electronic beats on their laptops. At least
that’s what I assume they were doing – they might simply have been catching up
on their emails after pressing the ‘Go’ button. Drummer Wes Hall, however, was
head down, wrists flexing as he kept up a steady rhythm at the kit.
Black Cab fans or not, the crowd was getting into it.
It didn’t matter that the vast majority of the audience were unfamiliar with
the material, for everyone understands the meaning of a running beat and a big
bass drop. Whether stimulated by the art or just the wine and beer, a general
air of abandon took hold as the disco thump of Supermadchen and Combat Boots
propelled things along.
Despite the theme of the pieces, the music is quite
joyous at times, capturing the fanfare nature of the world’s biggest sporting
event. There were families with kids, older art enthusiasts, attractive twenty-somethings
and Black Cab fans all bopping away while Coates intoned his snippets of Teutonic
sporting supremacy. As the beats pumped and the synths swirled, you could easily
imagine yourself at a nightclub. As an habitué of Studio 54 in the 1970s,
Warhol would have felt right at home.
They ran through most of the Olympiad album, running one piece into the next with only the
slightest pause in between. As befitting their general demeanour of cerebral
detachment – or perhaps they were just concentrating – there was no audience
interaction. To be honest I’m not even sure they knew we were there. But then
the music didn’t lend itself to shout outs and banter.
Instead they programmed some diverting visuals on
three big screens – mainly geometric shapes and patterns, but also a video of
two silhouetted figures with fierce red eyes.
It was a good gig to accompany the exhibition and the
audience stayed right until the end, which meant there was a good reception for
the rousing Sexy Polizei with which
they concluded. Overall, it was a good value $30 cab ride.
We can now look forward to seeing what they make of
the 2016 Rio Olympics, particularly if the zika virus runs amok.
Setlist
(more or less)
Closing Ceremony
Supermadchen
Combat Boots
Kornelia Ender
?
Victorious
Opening ceremony?
Sexy Polizei
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