Sleater-Kinney
Ouch My Face
Croxton Park
Hotel
Thursday
10 March 2016
$55
It’s The Weather We Love
It was International Women’s Day just a couple of
days ago and what better way to celebrate than a Sleater-Kinney gig? Okay, I
suppose some pedants may argue that equal pay for women, proportional
representation in parliament, more women on boards of ASX 500 companies and freedom
from sexual oppression and domestic violence might be more desirable, but
failing all of that, three strong women rocking it out loudly at the Croxton is
at least something.
This is the second of three sold out nights for
Sleater-Kinney and my first time at the Croxton Park Hotel. A well-known venue
in the 70s – ‘Rock at the Croc’ was the catch cry – it reopened to bands in late
2015 with The Drones and has some good acts coming up, including The Residents.
The title track from Sleater-Kinney’s latest album, No Cities To Love, declares that it’s
not the cities they love, but the weather. Such a sentiment was being tested, however,
for this was a wet night in Melbourne, with rain falling for most of the
afternoon and into the evening. It didn’t seem to bother the locals, for the outdoor
eateries on High Street Thornbury were crowded with diners and people milled
about in the rain, unconcerned about getting wet.
Ouch My
Face
When I walked in I was hit by a force I had never
previously encountered - the sound barrage of Ouch My Face who were belting it
out on stage. It was not so much music as a force field of noise. Their sound was
explosively loud and had a visceral punch to it that literally set me back a
step or two, like a sonic assault. I thought I’d stepped into a warzone. Any
veterans in the room might have experienced flashbacks.
The band consisted of just two women on guitars, bass
and vocals, and a bloke on drums, although such was the din it sounded like
there might have been upwards of a dozen musicians thrumming heavily away. I
couldn’t actually get close enough to tell. As it was I had to mime Mountain
Goat Steam Ale to the girl behind the bar, a pantomime that tested my thespian
reach.
Never, I suspect, has a band operated under a more accurate
and evocative moniker, except perhaps Throbbing Gristle. But my face was the
least of my problems; I feared mainly for my internal organs. One song called Graveyard the singer dedicated to her amp
that had died that day – I suspect she goes through one or two each week.
Despite the physical discomfort they caused, there
was something joyously cathartic about their sound and their willingness to
make it. And while I have nothing against Dami Im, who was announced this week
as Australia’s entrant in Eurovision 2016, I feel we’ve missed an opportunity
to make a real impression at Eurovision by not sending Ouch My Face instead.
Sleater–Kinney
The crowd had built during Ouch My Face’s set and it
was a long wait to get a drink during the interval. While the expected high
quotient of girls with crew-cuts wearing singlets, denim and combat boots were
in attendance, it was a largely mixed audience of women and men from diverse
age groups.
I’m only a recent convert to Sleater-Kinney’s
particular kind of racket, picking up their album No Cities To Love on the strength of reviews when it came out.
Somehow, not only had Sleater-Kinney escaped my attention in the 90s, but so
had the entire Riot Grrrl movement!
Now I know that a male in Australia entering his 30s can
perhaps be forgiven for not being au fait with neo feminist youth subcultures
developing on the other side of the world. It is still surprising however, that
I missed the growth of an entire musical genre. In my defence, it isn’t that
dissimilar to grunge, fuzzy guitars and shouty vocals, except with women, so I
probably just lumped the sounds together. I wasn’t particularly into grunge,
although I did like some of it, but what I liked most about it at the time was
that you no longer had to iron your shirts. As far as musical movements go, it
was a real time saver.
I felt a little bit better about missing Riot Grrrl when
I read in Carrie Brownstein’s book, Hunger
Makes Me a Modern Girl, that Riot Grrrl operated along similar strictures
to Fight Club, in that participants were not permitted to talk about it. In
fact they had a self-imposed media black ban. So I wasn’t even meant to know
about it…phew! It was more a secret sorority than a subculture. In all likelihood,
they probably didn’t want to be confused with the Spice Girls’ simultaneous girl
power push, which was, let’s face it, more a marketing term to sell merchandise
than a proto feminist movement or a musical genre.
There was plenty of love in the room for
Sleater-Kinney when they came on stage around 9.30 pm and launched into Price Tag, the opening song from comeback
album, No Cities To Love. Carrie
Brownstein stood stage left and provided the tough, angular guitar riff while Corin
Tucker wailed her way through the lyrical agitprop about the cost of consumerism,
and Janet Weiss pummeled the track along with a driving tempo on the drums.
There was also a mysterious blond lurking in the shadows on bass guitar,
tambourine and possibly a keyboard.
Corin Tucker lets loose her larynx |
They followed this with Fangless, in which Brownstein added some vocal contrast in the
chorus. The two frontwomen worked very well together. Tucker is a seriously
good singer – she has an arresting timbre and brings real intensity to her
vocal delivery. She has one of those wailing, shouty voices, but in addition to
being powerful, it is surprisingly tuneful. I thought it might grate over the
course of 90 minutes, but far from it, she had enough variety and maintained
good control of her voice right to the end of the show.
Brownstein bolstered the singing in some of the big anthemic
choruses and took the lead vocal on a few tracks, most notably No Cities To Love, A New Wave, and the final song of the encore, Modern Girl. Elsewhere she added an alternative voice within songs,
most effectively in Words and Guitar
where dual voices sing over each other. On the whole though, it was her guitar
playing that cranked the show along. Her angular, jerky movements, high kicks
and Townsend-esque windmilling playing arm provided a focal point for the
audience, and she was not beyond pursing her lips and pulling the occasional
guitar goddess move.
Where Tucker and Brownstein took most of the
attention, Janet Weiss anchored the sound with powerful drumming. More than
providing the beat, she contributed surging propulsion, adding thrust and
impetus to the sound, and even a touch of lilting harmonica on Modern Girl.
It was a very impressive performance, so good that
one of the security personnel guarding the entry through to the back stage left
his post to ask me the name of the band – I had to type it into his phone.
Carrie Brownstein: modern girl & guitar goddess |
Although I knew some of their older material, I was
most familiar with the songs from No
Cities To Love, so for me the highlights were Bury Our Friends and a soaring rendition of A New Wave. The set however, took in tracks from across their entire
career. The concluding quartet of I Wanna
Be Your Joey Ramone, Words and Guitar,
Entertain and Jumpers built to a suitably raucous sonic climax. The encore
concluded with the sing-a-long folk of Modern
Girl.
Sleater-Kinney may insist that there are no cities to
love, but they recorded their first album in Melbourne 20 years ago, so we’d
like to think we hold some place in their collective heart – even if only for
the weather.
Setlist
Price Tag
Fangless
Oh!
Far Away
One More Hour
What’s Mine Is Yours
No Cities To Love
Surface Envy
One Beat
Bury Our Friends
Was it a Lie?
A New Wave
The Fox
I Wanna Be Your Joey Ramone
Words and Guitar
Entertain
Jumpers
- - - - -
Let’s Call It Love
Modern Girl
Source: www.setlist.fm.com
Encore:
While SK fans sweated it out at the Croxton, Madonna fans queued in Hosier Lane
waiting for Madonna’s one-off club show, Tears
of a Clown, at The Forum. It was invite only for fan club members and free,
but fans were kept waiting in the rain until after midnight while Madonna
rehearsed inside. Her show was a curious
mix of songs, circus tricks, stand-up and even unsworn testimony in her custody
battle for her son, Rocco.
No comments:
Post a Comment