The MMP March 2013

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MMP

The definitive guide to music in Wales

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SWEET BABOO Exclusive Interview

We chat about; Being recently signed to uber-indie label Moshi Moshi with the annoucement of the release of a new album in April

BEARD OF WOLVES

We Get To Know The Duo

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The MMP March 2013

presents/yn cyflwyno

Join us on Twitter for up to date gig annoucements @orchardent

COMPLETE

THE

STONE ROSES SATURDAY 9 MARCH 2013 CLWB IFOR BACH CARDIFF / CAERDYDD

THURS 7 TH MAR 2013

C LW B I FO R BACH CARDIFF

SATURDAY 9TH MARCH 2013

GREAT HALL 2 CARDIFF UNIVERSITY

PLUS

+ SPECIAL GUESTS . SUNDAY 10 TH MARCH 2013 .

SOLUS

CARDIFF

UNIVERSITY

TUESDAY 12 MARCH 2013

CLWB IFOR BACH

THURSDAY 14 MARCH 2013

CLWB IFOR BACH

ORCHARD SUNDAY 31 MARCH 2013

CLWB IFOR BACH

TUESDAY 9TH APRIL 2013

CLWB IFOR BACH C A R D I F F

SUNDAY 17 MARCH 2013

CLWB IFOR BACH TUESday 16thAPRIL

2013

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Solus

Cardiffuni

sunDAY 14TH april 2013 . ebbw vale . the glee club LEISU R E CENTR E CARDIFF bay SATURDAY

13TH

APRIL

2013

Box Office: 02920 230 130 | For our full gig listings and tickets please visit:

www.orchardentertainment.co.uk


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March 2013

Ready The Horses!

Editors Jonathan Day, Aimee-Jade Hayes Advertising & Accounts Kate James

Light The Beacons! Re-String Those Tennis Rackets! Ladies And Gentlemen, We’re Coming To Mag You! It’s March, the month wherein we collectively celebrate that time St David beat all those dragons at jetpack rugby, rejoice at the day Shaq Fu inventing basketballer Shaquille O’Neal was found inside a meteorite and feast on the blood of our enemies in honour of Pi Day. Or at least that’s what we’ll be doing at the offices... So what have we got lined up for you in this months digitized mago-paper-zine? How’s about an interview with 6 music favourite and recently Moshi Moshied singer-songwriter “Sweet Baboo” about his upcoming album? BANG! What if we were to say we shine the spotlight on North Walian garage noise rock duo/force of nature “Beard of Wolves”? BOOM! How about a witty and irreverent look into some deplorable mistakes made by touring acts in our new semi-regular column “How not to make it in the music industry”? AW YEAH! What if we told you we’re going to give you a batch of free tracks from this months featured artists to download onto your chosen music playing device and listen to at full volume on a bus packed with increasingly irate pensioners? I bet you’d feel really psyched about that

In-House Designer Hayley Price Listings Samantha Bull, Jonathan Day Photographer Kait Mordey Writers Nick Merriman, Hash Piperdy, Joel Dear, Jim Swidenbank, James Tucker, Jo Southerd, Josh z Duncan, Gareth Kitchen, Samuel Legge, Daniel Muller, Sion Lidster, Aubrey Parsons, Jonathan Day.

Plus all the latest news, reviews and non sequiturs you’ve come to expect from this little hunk of music turbo-journalism. It’s dangerous to go alone….. take this!

CONTACT Demos / Releases to be sent to info@ themmp.tv*

The MMP x

Cover Artist danielmorrisdesigns. co.uk

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MUSIC NEWS News and round up of all the musical happenings in and around Cardiff Exlusive interview Meet this month’s featured artists!

exposure Meet bloody brilliant band ‘Draw Me Stories’ Catapult column + charts Simon Thomas discusses the latest news and events.

* Please note we no longer accept physical demos or CDs, only links to stream or download.

music reviews + live reviews The month’s new albums, singles , demos and gigs. mmp extra + DOWNLOADS Get yourselves to themmp.tv for even more reviews, competitions and news!

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Music News Clwb Ifor Bach

Under Threat! Worrisome news for arguably Cardiff’s most iconic venue has recently popped up. Since its opening in 1983 Clwb Ifor Bach has been the go to venue for travelling bands, artists and DJ’s in Cardiff, so much so that it has attained an almost mythical status within not only the city, but within the music industry on the whole. Now, however amidst the ever changing current musical landscape, the behind the scenes team have announced that if “younger” trustees can’t be located before the club’s 30th anniversary in July, it will be sold on to the highest bidder. The venue has seen much change over the years, opened initially as a Welsh language only venue its primary income now comes from English speaking bands and the venues club nights; a fact which is not lost on the current owners. So, fingers crossed that younger trustees with the ability to uphold the venues values whilst outlining a financially viable plan step forward. It would be a disaster to see such a landmark of Cardiff’s musical identity disappear into the fog of history. Clwb.net

Application For Womex Showcases Now Open

From 23-27 of October, Womex (the world music showcase) will be setting up camp in Cardiff. If you’re interested in taking part in the showcase, Womex have recently launched their “Showcase and Conference Selection” procedure. Each year a new group of seven handpicked Jury members dubbed “The famous seven Samurai” select proposals from a wide variety of artists, speakers and filmmakers to take part in the event. The proposals are for a limited number of slots, so if you’ve got something you think might grab the jurors attention. Get submitting! The closing date for applicants is Friday 12th April. For More information visit the website. womex.com/realwomex/

CMW Tutor Course Returns

Following on from the stone cold success story of their course in 2011 Wales leading music charity “Community Music Wales” (CMW) will be engaging another of their 15 week long music tutor training courses later this year The course encompasses a wide spectrum of theory and practice in community music, including practical workshops from professional community music trainers. So what does that entail? WELL HOWS ABOUT SOME OF THESE! Group work skills, assertiveness, devising and adapting workshop material, facilitating client learning and growth, working with soft outcomes and transferable skills, an awareness of child protection, insurance, assessing basic skills, health and safety, equal opportunities and diversity, and best practice. BOOM! This exciting opportunity will be running from Thursday 11th April through until 11th July and involves one full day a week of training. Though it’s taking place in Cardiff, the course is open to all residents of South Wales at the low, low price of £120 (£80 concession) The course is (activate megaphone) AGORED CYMRU accredited and utilizes a unique training structure that effectively acts as a trail run through for the actual job of a music community teacher whilst you train for said job. Like knitting a parachute after jumping out a plane. communitymusicwales.co.uk


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What we’ve been listening to Sam

Toro Y Moi - Say That Like the soundtrack to a Shoreditch based expansion pack for “The Sims”, Images of awkwardly ironic virtual avatars staring into the middle distance and incomprehensibly muttering before you drown them in a pool of PBR because you are a cruel god. All arguments are invalid.

Image: Community Music Wales

UTTERLY ABERRANT FUNDING CUT NEWS NOW In a proposed move that is not only tragic and deeply upsetting in its immediacy but riddled with toxic long term implications, Cardiff city council has motioned to cut funding by 100% to the “Cardiff & The Vale of Glamorgan Music Service’, effectively ending, with extreme prejudice, the public subsidy for instrumental lessons. There’s fears of music tuition simply becoming something only the wealthy will be able to indulge in, crippling the country’s future as a musically rich place and depriving those who can’t afford private tuition of an integral part of the arts. Local conductor David Hutchings has posted the following protest on a petition site in an attempt to draw attention to, and hopefully avert, what many view as a prospective calamity. If a country that draws a great deal of national pride from its music decides to abolish music teaching in schools, you begin to seriously doubt if its politicians have anything approaching a grasp on their national identity “At a time when the arts are being harder-hit than most sectors, a 100% cut to the music service is nothing short of a disaster. Cuts are a sad, often devastating necessity of these hard economic times, but through music and artistic expression, people are empowered to find hope out of adversity. To make a 100% cut in funding for Cardiff & Vale’s invaluable Music Service not only puts in jeopardy such important work, it sends a message to all people that the arts (and therefore work which seeks challenge young people to find hope out of adversity) is simply not worth doing. If we have lumbered our young people with this burden of economic debt, do we not, at least, owe them an outlet through which the hope and motivation may be expressed in art?” www.change.org/petitions

Hayley

Deluxe - Mr Chicken Soul music for the feral kids living just out of frame in every slow motion, open top car tracking shot of sun soaked fun lovers careening through California. Joyous, Rayban clad and sort-of-a-littlebit-freaky

Johnny

Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds - We No Who U R In the history of music, no one has ever been taller, scarer and had quite as black hair. as Nick Cave. Hearing him softly croon that he knows where who we are, where we live and he doesn’t intend on forgiving us over a gentle, and at times ghostly instrumentation; is a fitting reaffirmation of his pants-filling fear capacity.

Joe O’C

Dutch Uncles - Fester After wowing a packed Moon Club in February, Dutch Uncles’ third LP Out Of Touch In The Wild has spent little time off my turntable. A set of minimalist mathy indie, it calls to mind Hot Chip and the increasingly popular Everything Everything with its complex guitar lines, danceable beats and infectious xylophone.

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Sweet Baboo Sweet Baboo (better known to friends, family and moustache twirling

enemies as Stephen Black) has been a stalwart of Cardiff’s music scene for the better part of a decade. Despite cult acclaim for his solo output, tours

and collaborations with the likes of Cate Le Bon, Euros Child and Daniel Johnson, a wider success has somewhat evaded the singer songwriters brand of colourful left-field heart on sleeve sonic splurges.. But having recently signed to uberindie label Moshi Moshi, announced the release of a new album in April, and had latest single “Let’s Go Swimming Wild” played to within an inch of its life on 6 music….you may be about to get a whole lot more Baboo in your ears. Which is a pretty good thing. So we chatted to him about all that stuff didn’t we… MMP: How in the name of (insert hilarious cultural reference) are you? SB: I’m very well thank you, enjoying my admin Monday morning so far. MMP: You’re new album is a concept record inspired by the sea, though previous material of yours is occasionally peppered with references and mentions to the ocean, what’s the context that cemented the topic as the inspiration for this new batch of songs? SB: I’m a big fan of unity in records and I’m also a big fan of the sea. I was brought up on the North Wales coast and have

continuously been influenced by it ever since. Somewhere along the way, the concept for the album got slightly misplaced, inevitably, so now I like to call it a brass heavy part concept pop album about the sea. MMP: Where does this album exist within the spectrum of your previous releases? What different directions have you pushed your sound in? SB: It’s poppier….with a sh*t load of brass on it…. MMP: Singer-songwriters live and die by how willing the audience is to accept the authenticity of their material. There’s a self-deprecating (and often very lyrical) honesty to your songs that marks you out above the current crop, even when the material is a little more abstract or dark it still feels intensely personal. SB: I suppose subconsciously it must be cathartic, but like most artists I’m pretty self-obsessed and so, whether I like it or not, all my songs, true or made up, are written from the first person. I’m too old and lazy to change how to do it now.

MMP: The music you make is very distinctly a product of Wales, it sits up alongside the particular and very obvious brand of idiosyncratic songwriters and music this country tends to produce (many of whom you’ve played or toured with) – where do you think this particular sound stems from? It often seems like a mixture of mythology, nostalgia and an endearing left-field weirdness….. SB: I totally agree, I definitely hear a certain similarity in a lot of music that comes out of Wales. I’m not sure why, I think as a nation we just make the best pop music. There’s always a sense of excitement, playfulness and adventure in the music that comes out which seems to be far removed from what’s cool and on the radio at the time. I suppose, we’re never far from nature and I can hear that through the music that’s made here. I also think, for my generation, SFA and especially the Gorky’s are massively, massively important. Their music and attitude to making music has shaped how I approach everything, and I think that’s true for a lot of other musicians in Wales.


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Words and Interview: Jonathan Day Photograph: sweetbaboo.co.uk

MMP: You’ve been involved with lots of artists and bands in the past, but now that you’ve signed to Moshi Moshi does this mark the beginning of a time more single mindedly focused on your own solo output rather than indulging in collaborations? SB: I hope not. I think I take a lot of inspiration for my own music through

you really excited? SB: It seems to be a very exciting time for Cardiff at the moment. I love what Peski Records are releasing, especially R.Seiliog and Y Pencadlys. Shape Functions (the live arm of Shape Records) are putting on some brilliant stuff. Mount Eerie, I am especially excited about. I really like a band called Mowbird but they are from Wrexham so I don’t know

a three week tour around the album’s release. Then hopefully as many festivals as we can, I think there’s about eight booked now maybe. I’m also hoping to do quite a big tour on my own too but nothing has been booked yet so we’ll see. No plans of another album yet, I have a few songs written but it’s coming together very slowly.

“ ... I think as a nation we just make the best pop music, There’s always a sense of excitement, playfulness and adventure..” playing for other people so, as much as I can, I’d like to continue to do so. It’s my favourite thing to do. Having said that, it’s pretty exciting doing more Sweet Baboo stuff. MMP: What are your views on Cardiff’s current musical landscape? Is there anyone performing at the moment that gets

if that counts. MMP: What are the plans following the album’s release at the end of April? Tour? Festivals? More albums? Domination of the eastern seaboard? A far reaching range of merchandise including lunch boxes and improvised weaponry? SB: Well, we (me and the band) have

My only merchandising idea was to get a man named Chris Fowler, who has a chili sauce company called Red Dragon Chili to make a limited edition sauce. The stuff is incredible and very addictive. I’ve never asked him though so this is me tentatively asking now. sweetbaboo.co.uk

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Words: Nick Merriman Photograph: facebook/BOWOfficial

Beard Of Wolves The last days of Rome were by all accounts one heck of a party. After consulting the abacus I am almost entirely certainly that Beard Of Wolves weren’t present during this momentous time in our world’s great history, and so regretfully the band were probably not the soundtrack to the decadent decline of a once grand civilisation. Why this disappoints me is that if ever there was a time and place that was so perfectly appropriate for the sordid noise-pop that these particular North Walian music makers spew forth, then the frantically frenzied over-indulgence of those that invented central heating is surely it. If your processing of this information to this point has led to you believe that I am advocating the wearing of a chilton to a Beard of Wolves gig then I would like to make it clear that is not my intention, it simply isn’t practical and you will be quickly and justifiably scorned by your fellow gig-goers with only yourself to blame. If you will insist on dressing like a Roman then you would be much better off trying the toga; an item

of clothing synonymous with Bluto, Delta House and, quite appropriately in this case, hard-drinking. Those Animal House scamps dug the seminal and timeless ‘Louie Louie’ way back when, so you just know that they would also approve of the sonic assault wrought by the duo, not to mention the underlying danceable edge that pulsates through the songs. This is music for an insatiable party; it’s infectious and fun, and is laced with not just a smattering of smut but a healthy dose of hedonism too, a patently potent combination by anyone’s estimations. Theirs is a hybrid sound that tenderly coaxes together influences from across the spectrums in both dance and rock before violently regurgitating them as a new multi-headed beast. So it is that allied to the relentless urgency and unrelenting pace that would be expected of garage or drum’n’bass is an indisputable hard-rock sensibility, and it is the seemingly seamless fusion of these sensibilities that suggests the band will go on to become a real success.


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“.. A hybrid sound that tenderly coaxes together influences from across the spectrums in both dance and rock. ” DFA1979 is an obvious reference point, not only because they too were a duo comprised of a bassist and a drummer but they also followed a similar line in creating a warped and distorted form of contemporary dance music before they split, reformed and…did they split again? The influence of QOTSA, and to a lesser extent their offshoot Eagles of Death Metal, is also noticeable, particularly in regards to the vocal delivery, with the occasional brutal passages that the band speed into recklessly bringing to mind the abrasive grind of McLusky and Future Of The Left. Amazingly Beard Of Wolves have taken little to no time to create what is for all intents and purposes a fully formed sound. Having sprung to life about 5 months ago from the still glowing embers of the supremely rocking I Am Austin, David and Adam decided to go it alone and yet together, as drummer and bassist respectively with vocal duties shared. In their short lifespan to this point the band has been a mass of activity, and has been rewarded for their enthusiasm with a great deal of

interest in their music. Since first posting a track on-line (the wonderfully titled My Father Drives The Death Star) they have received airtime on Radio 1, a glowing review from the holier-thanthous over at The Guardian, and a notable feature in the all things alternative magazine Front. With a growing reputation as an awesome live act, as attendees of their Swn show can attest to, and a self-titled EP released via the good folks at Too Pure Records they are gathering fans and momentum at a prodigious rate, and will be recording their début album with Tom Bellamy of The Cooper Temple Clause fame with a release date set for April. For fans of the band the release of the long player cannot come soon enough, for if it is in keeping with the bands progress so far it will confirm their position as one of the most original and exciting new bands to be coming out of Wales.

Beardofwolves.bandcamp.com

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After being uploaded to Soundcloud “Celwydd” received a staggering 30,000 plays in five days

Words: Jonathan Day Photograph: facebook.com/IfanDafydd


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Imitation, it’s often said, is the sincerest form of flattery. I think there’s a fair argument to be made that having the key to a city constructed from ice-cream and videos of David Cameron getting punched in the head repeatedly gifted to you and you alone may in fact be flattery at its most super-conductively sincere. But that’s just me. If the age old adage is to be believed however, back in 2011 James Blake must have felt flatter than Wile E. Coyote after a particularly brutal ACME injury. Indeed, seemingly every facet of the cooler-than-thou inter web digi space was gushing with imitations of Blake’s (now-trademark) combination of quirky, melancholic R & B skewed dubstep. But one voice successfully managed to get heard over all those other reverb tinged snare drums and jazzy piano chords echoing out into empty space. That man would be Ifan Dafydd….and he is a Welshman. With the appearance of his Amy Winehouse sampling “No Good” in 2011, such was the intense similarity to Blake’s musical output, many suspected Ifan may have been a pseudonym for the man. Sonic similarities were always destined to emerge however, Ifan and James were roommates for a year whilst studying at Goldsmiths and such proximity always bleeds the influences of artists into each others work, but the track showed an individuality in Ifan’s production and composition that dragged it far enough away from Blake’s minimalistic dubstep vision to make it appealing in its own right, whilst still retaining many of the characteristics that made the sound so popular. Sure the traces on the snares still rung

Ifan Dafydd out with subtle reverb and there was that inherent lushness to the chords, but there’s an infinitely more upbeat sensibility to Ifan’s music; arguably it’s more melodically rich, more textural and…at times…more cinematically expressive. It would appear that like two men sat drinking in a pub for long enough, Ifan and Blake’s urination cycles have synchronized – Ifan’s next releases since “No Good” comes in the form of “Celwydd” and “Llonydd” for the “Y Record Las” compilation album and Blake recently released “Retrograde” off of his second album. But here’s where things get interesting – because it would appear that during the in between people have in no way forgotten about the potential Ifan laid out on his first release. After being uploaded to Soundcloud “Celwydd” received a staggering 30,000 plays in five days – a figure so large for such a small time period that upon reading it, my head spun with force enough to burrow through the nearest wall. The track is a step forward as well whilst still farming the same creative fields as Blake. It’s less playful than “No Good” – but even more textured, assured, and propelled by a haunting mangled vocal line provided by Alys Williams; it’s woozy like a blow to the head whilst in the bowels of a K-hole. Watching a young producer grow is always exciting, especially when the producer in question is as clearly talented as Ifan. Indeed, his first long player is something to await with eager ears. facebook.com/IfanDafydd

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The MMP March 2013

Photograph: Will Hartley Interview & Words: Jonathan Day

ww.themmp.tv

“ Having the space to explore really helps the creative process, the city can stifle but here there’s is room to wander find a space to yourself and sing with no eyes or ears on you.”


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Little Arrow Maybe you’ve heard of Fredrick Stanley Star? Maybe you’re aware that

once upon a time they were Cardiff’s indie-folk golden kids? Maybe you’re aware that Fredrick Stanley Star sadly no longer exists as a musical entity. Maybe you’re aware that principle songwriter and vocalist William Hughes retreated back to his native West Wales following said band collapse and re-emerged with a new set of songs to once again bare that indie-folk torch. Maybe you’re aware that they have their second album (Wild Wishes) out on 4th March? Maybe you’re aware that this act is called “Little Arrow”…and they’re bloody great. We chatted to William about music and cheese structures ahead of the album’s release date. MMP: How in the name of questionable horse burgers are you? LA: Collectively Nay bad!!! Excited about the upcoming album launch and tour. MMP: You’re getting ready to release your second record “Wild Wishes”. Where do feel this material fits alongside your debut? Has there been an enormous progressive leap since then or is this more of a refinement of your pre-existing sound? LA: Both really; the first record began as a solo mission, midway through I brought in more musicians and directed their parts. ‘Wild Wishes’ differs because it’s much more collaborative; the process was more spontaneous and organic. We recorded the album ourselves so we were able to spend more time trying different things, experimenting and really enjoying the process. MMP: The band seems to draw a great deal of inspiration from

nature. How integral were your formative years in Pembrokeshire to this sound and aesthetic? LA: Living in Pembrokeshire it is impossible to escape nature and so this has a great influence on not just the music but our lives. Living here you really feel the seasons… not always necessarily a good thing, we can go through long periods of gales and rains and just as you’re about to pack your bags and bugger off the wind drops, skies clear and everything is lovely for a while! Having the space to explore really helps the creative process, the city can stifle but here there’s is room to wander find a space to yourself and sing with no eyes or ears on you. MMP: Since the “indie-folk” explosion of late, there has in some places been a mild backlash against the genre. A problem that seems to stem primarily from the perceived inauthenticity of many acts performing the music. Listening to you however, there’s definitely an aura of the authentic about the content. LA: The problem could be because once a genre becomes saturated then it’s no longer ‘cool’ to like it. We try not to worry about genres but instead treat each song as its own story, in its own setting. Everyone in the band brings something different, has different influences, and so the songs reflect that. It just so happens that I grew up with my mother continuously singing. She sang a lot of old folk tunes, but lots of other types of music too. In these modern times there’s no real need to feel any loyalty to any specific area of music.

MMP: How does the writing process work within the band? It seems to be your baby, but has it become more collaborative since the debut? LA: I’ll write an idea and bring it to everyone else. When we get booked for a gig we will get together for a jam weekend and together create a version which feels right and we all enjoy. For recording purposes it is slightly different as you are not constrained by the live aspect, you can have lots of goes and try lots of different ways of fulfilling the same brief. MMP: So what do the immediate plans following the album’s release and the rest of the year look like? And then, peeking ever forward into the future, what are you hoping to ultimately accomplish with the outfit? LA: Following the album release we will be going on a little tour to show Britain what we’ve got going, we will be releasing singles and videos as well. We’d like to be involved in some festivals, produce a live EP over the summer and continue to create music and fun. In the future we’d like to get involved with other artists and spread our collective approach. MMP: And finally, for construction purposes, what’s the most architecturally sound cheese commercially available? And what structure is it best employed for? LA: Parmesan for the walls, although pricey it’s definitely brick like. Emmental is water proof! Good for the roof. littlearrow.co.uk

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Live Reviews Gallops

facebook.com/gallopsgallops Words: Nick Merriman Photograph: Jon Pountney

Support fom Portasound, Buffalo Bar

Gallops have embarked on a twelve-date UK tour following the triumphant release of Yours Sincerely, Dr. Hardcore and on the night of the Cardiff show, there is a real buzz upstairs in Buffalo Bar. Joining Gallops on tour are fellow Blood & Biscuits pals, Portasound. They are a complex set-up and certainly fill the Buffalo stage, with five bodies, two guitars, bass, drums, two keyboards, synth and a laptop (you do the maths). Though in appearance their combination of jumpers, beards, flat peaks, fringes and a vintage Mickey Mouse vest seems a somewhat unlikely mix, in sound they work together brilliantly: their experimental electronic rock has an irresistible sci-fi vibe, a bit like War of the Worlds might sound were it channelled through a heavy distortion pedal. Surrealist soundscapes collide with endearing splashes of pop-punk and krautrock, while space-age synth hooks really drive the songs forward. For their sixth gig in the same number of nights, Portasound deliver a highly charged instrumental performance and leave a favourable lasting impression. Words: Jo Southerd Photo: Gallops

Such a high-quality support set has the crowd thoroughly hyped for Gallops. The North-Walian four-piece build steadily into their set with albumopener Astoroth, before plunging into the brutal crashes of Jeff Leopard. Complex time signatures are no match for this band, who were exceedingly tight and maintained just the right balance of crazy and controlled. With crunching guitars, buzzing synths and basslines that seriously groove, their particular brand of rocktronica almost feels like dance music for a metal crowd. Each song is a sprawling masterpiece in itself, and by the end of their hour-long set it doesn’t feel as though we’ve actually heard that many tracks. Gallops don’t mess around leaving the stage for an encore, but do agree to the crowd’s cheers for ‘one more song’, ending on fan favourite Miami Spider, swathed in layer upon layer of fuzz (not for the first time, the guitarist sinks to his knees in order to control fx pedals with his hands - brilliant). It’s a satisfying end to a brilliant show. What Gallops do is careful and intelligent; they are infectious, angular and wonderfully hardcore. A truly great live band.


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Welsh Music Foundation, in association with leading training consultant Stuart Worthington are now accepting applications for their Artist and Music Management Business Development courses.

An intensive two days offering a crash course in music management.

An advanced-level, ten module course for those musicians and managers further down their respective career paths.

WMF AD

Modules covered include:

• An Overview of Today’s Music Business • Career & Business Development • Collecting Societies • Audience & Fan Base Development • Independent Artist Releases and Live

Modules covered include:

• International Artist & Producer Management & Services • Funding • Music Media, Marketing & Promotion • Publishing • Contracts & Brand Development

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The MMP March 2013

Words: Nick Merriman Photograph: facebook/ racehorsesmusic

More Reviews [themmp.tv]

Race Horses

Final Show: Houdini Dax & R. Seiliog, Clwb Ifor Bach

In a terse statement released last month to an unsuspecting public, Race Horses confirmed that due to the old adage that is creative differences, the band had decided to cease operations and go their separate ways. For fans new and old this decision was both extremely disappointing and quite baffling. If Race Horses were under any allusions as to how much their music really meant to their fans, then this evening will have been a timely reminder that they really did have a good thing going. Opening with the vamp of ‘Furniture’ felt like a poignant move, describing as it does the breakdown of a relationship. The pleading chorus of ‘What Am I To Do’ also seemed to carry an extra emotional weight, and was positively roared back at the band. Race Horses will be remembered as a live spectacle capable of tender moments and touching

harmonies, like those in ‘Nobody’s Son’, but also equally adept at prompting the sort of furious pogoing which greets the demented surf-rock of ‘Grangetown 02920’. For the closing epic that is ‘Marged Wedi Blino’ they are joined on-stage by original guitarist Alun Gaffney, a nice touch yes, but also yet another reminder that is the end of the band, and so as their otherworldly anthem draws to a close it is with a heavy heart that Race Horses are applauded off for the last time. Welsh music is definitely worse off without Race Horses, but you would hope that such a group of talented songwriters and musicians will be back making music before too long, even if it will not be together. facebook.com/Racehorsesmusic


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Mae Sefydliad Cerddoriaeth Gymreig, mewn cydweithrediad â’r ymgynghorydd hyfforddi blaenllaw Stuart Worthington, nawr yn derbyn ceisiadau am eu Rhaglen Datblygu Busnes Rheoli Artistiaid a Cherddoriaeth.

Cwrs lefel uwch, 10 modiwl i WMF AD gerddorion a rheolwyr mwy

Cwrs carlam deuddydd dwys mewn rheoli cerddoriaeth. Modiwlau yn cynnwys:

• Deall y Busnes Cerddoriaeth Bresennol • Datblygu Gyrfaoedd a Busnesau • Mudiadau Casglu • Datblygu Cynulleidfa • Rhyddhau Artistiaid Annibynnol a Perfformio Byw

profiadol yn eu meysydd penodol. Modiwlau yn cynnwys:

• Artist Rhyngwladol a Gwasanaethau Rheoli Cynhyrchu • Cyllido • Cerddoriaeth Cyfryngau, Marchnata a Hyrwyddo • Cyhoeddi • Cytundebau a Datblygu Brand

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The MMP March 2013

Gigs of the Month /////

Constellation Night: Kraftwerk @ Chapter

Swn Presents: Concrete Knives @ Four Bars

Willy Mason @ Glee Club

Friday 1st March

What’s not to love about an evening of music dedicated to everyone’s favourite autobahn enthusiasts played by local bands? Rife with both the potential for brilliance and hilarity.

SATURDAY 2ND MARCH

Youthful exuberance bashes heads with an artful weirdness: resonanting guitars, charging drums and euphoric collective vocals.

The charming American singersongwriter and once upon a time “new Bob Dylan” swings by Cardiff in support of “Carry On”, his first album in five years.

Little Arrow Launch @ Gwdihw

Inc.A @ Four Bars

Howl EP Launch @ The Moon

thursday 7th march

Loads of brass. Loads of strings. Loads of weird costumes. Loads of good times. Instrumental vaguely eastern European party music.

Rollicking blues rock duo unveil their debut E.P. Not to mention support from amazing B-movie garage rockers Heavy Petting Zoo and Stain’s Street Party. Will. Be. Awesome

Draw Me Stories Launch @ The Moon

Hail! The Planes @ Four Bars

Lovely Wars @ Tommy’s Bar

friday 15th march

Much! Loved! Locals! Bring! Their! Euphoric! Post-Folk! And! Love! Of! Exclamation! Marks! To! Dempseys!

The fantastic folkies celebrate the launch of their second LP. Support: Pot bashing anti-folk weirdos Quiet Marauder + Dan Messores.

The impossible to pin down fourpiece will be officially unloading their genre defying behemoth of a debut album in (no doubt) moody style.

friday 8th march

monday 18th march

Tuesday 5th march

thursday 14th march

friday 22nd march

80’s new wave meets spikey 60’s polkadotted melodious via arched eyebrows and waggled fingers.


themmp.tv

Clubs of the Month ///// Audio: Traffic @ Undertone

Ultimate Power @ The Moon

SATURDAY 2ND MARCH

saturday 30th march

Launch of a new club night aiming to bring together the newest and most interesting producers and DJ’s from across South Wales.

An evening of non-stop power ballads. Drop all pretenses, drink loads of lager, and let Meatloaf, Collins and Jovi take you on a journey you never even knew you wanted to go on.

Signature @ Buffalo Bar Every thursday

Night of nothing but forward thinking electronica, house, dubstep, future house etc, etc. If it’s glitchy, twitchy, bassy and danceable....it’ll be played.

Festivals this Month /////

Wales Goes Pop @ The Gate/10 Feet Tall 29th - 31st march

The School and friends bring a host of acts to Cardiff for a weekend long music extravaganza including “Let’s Wrestle”, “Golden Fables”, “Josie Long” and the goddamn “Primitives”.

Juxtaposed Micro Fest @ Gwdihw 31st march

All day micro-fest at the owl room with a stage curated by US RIGHT HERE! May God have mercy on us all! Fantastic line up including “The Keys” “We//Are//Animal”, “Fist Of The First Man” and “Howl”.

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20

The MMP March 2013

For Full Gig & Club Listings Click Here www.themmp.tv


Regular Nights MONDAY

Trojan Boss Sound @ Rockin Chair, 7:00pm, FREE * Jamaican, ska, reggae and funk. Funk yes. Buffalo Live @ Buffalo Bar, 8:00pm * Live music from bands and DJs.

Late Night Live @ 10 Feet Tall, 8:00pm, £varies * Two floors of entertainment, chart hits and the latest bar favourites

Mindie @ Peppermint, 8:00pm * Fancy a bit of indie/ Britpop? Then get on down...

Hangover Cure @ Mocka Lounge, 8:00pm, FREE * What it says on the tin really. Go and massage that sore head!

Ctrl ALT Del @ Solus, 10:00pm, £2 * Eclectic array of genres in this one size fits all club night in the Union The Capital’s Favourite Monday Night @ GLAM, 10:00pm, FREE * Full of outrageous drink deals and killer dancing tunes.

Live DJ @ The Live Lounge, 11:00pm, FREE * Taking you through until 4am with an eclectic mix of sing-along tunes and dancefloor anthems.

Jagerfest @ GLAM, 10:00pm* Every Monday night at Glam. Jagerfest is the Monday night bomb!

Bump & Grind @ Undertone, 10:00pm, £3 * Come let the DJs brush that dirt off your shoulder at Cardiff’s ONLY 90s/00s Hip Hop & RnB BASEMENT Party! Coming at you the 1st Monday of EVERY month.

The Full Moon Monday Club @ The Full Moon, 9:00pm, FREE * Every Monday at The Full Moon, the best jukebox in Cardiff, Juke Nukem provides the tunes all night, while new prospects aim to earn the colours and join Cardiff’s least exclusive MC – Monday Club!

You’re the DJ… @ Bar Icon, 8:00pm, FREE * Every Monday you get to choose what music we play, our Jukebox has over 85,000 tracks so you should be spoiled for choice!

Plus 1 @ Tiger Tiger, 9:00pm, £5 * Hosted at the slickest venue, playing the freshest tunes, and serving the cheapest drinks, Plus 1 Mondays at Tiger Tiger Cardiff is THE place to be on a Monday night for the young and the young at heart.

TUESDAY

10 Feet Live @ 10 Feet Tall, 8:00pm, £varies * New music and party tunes in the bar until 4am!

Buffalo In Session @Buffalo Bar, 8:00pm, £varies * Showcasing the best

promoters, DJs & bands. 1st Tuesday of the month is Bof! 2nd Tuesday of the month is Lindy Hop Cardiff.

Open Mic Night and Karaoke @ WOW Bar, 8:00pm * Your chance to get on stage and show the world your talent.

Salsa Classes @ Live Lounge, 8:00pm * Come and learn some sensual Salsa at a top venue.

Relax and Unwind @ Mocka Lounge, 9:00pm * Loosen up after a stressful opening to the week. Revive @ Solus, 10:00pm * The best party classics from your early musical years in the Union Two Damn Glam @ GLAM, 10:00pm * Expect chart anthems and dancefloor fillers.

DroneBoy Industries Hella Party @ Clwb Ifor Bach, 10:00pm, FREE * Party bass noises showcased from early hip-hop to dubstep to trap to d ‘n’ b.

Live DJ @ The Live Lounge, 11:00pm, FREE * Taking you through until 4am with an eclectic mix of singalong tunes and dancefloor anthems.

ALT. Tuesdays @ The Ladybird, 10:00pm, £4 on the door or £3.50 with an Alt Wristband.* Cardiff has been waiting ages for a night like Alt. and it just so happens, Alt is a night like Alt. Drink, Dance, Repeat…

Kitsch N Sync Collective: Electro Swing Dance Classes @ The Full Moon, 6:30pm, £4 * The lovely ladies at Kitsch N Sync Collective join us at The Full Moon every Tuesday, to teach our customers how to dance to Electro Swing! Learn to jump and jive and show everyone your moves at our monthly Rave Revue, upstairs at The Moon Club! It kicks off every week at 6.30pm. Participation is £4, spectating is free! Therapy @ Bar Icon, 9:00pm, FREE * Jukebox music all night but you have control of what you wanna hear!

WEDNESDAY

Blender @ Buffalo Bar, 8:00pm, £varies * Fashionable midweek hangout with great tunes and great people. Bolt @ 10 Feet Tall, 8:00pm, FREE * Indie, pop, electronic & new music over 2 floors!

Cocktail Heaven @ Mocka Lounge, 9:00pm * Two words that go hand in hand. Make mine a White Russian.

The Lash @ Solus, 9:00pm * Playing the best chart, electro, R&B and a dirty little bit of dubstep all mixed by resident DJ, Scott Kirby WOMP @ The Moon Club,

Regular Nights

live PA’s, DJ’s and weekly themes, Tiki Island is set to take the Cardiff nightlife by storm.

Snap, Crackle, Punk! @ Fuel Bar & Music Room, 9:00pm, £3* Cardiff’s newest and craziest pop punk party.

decks to give you live video DJ, the club room goes off in style!

Ska and Trojan with DJ Potter and Ben Potter @ The Bunkhouse, 10:00pm, FREE * Every Friday (New for January).

themmp.tv

through until 4am with an eclectic mix of singalong tunes and dancefloor anthem.

Roots Rock Reggae @ The Full Moon, 10:00pm, FREE * DJs playing... Roots Rock Reggae! Until 2.30am

Voodoo @ The Ladybird, No Sweat: An Acoustic Smack @ Soda Bar, 9:00pm, 10:00pm* Let us charm you Wonderland @ The Full £4 * Once you try smack. you through our magical potions promoters, 10:00pm Moon, 8:00pm, FREE * Every will be back!! RuiningDJs your& bands. 1st and spells of music* One and Mission and of the month is Bof! c combine Thursday, our pals at No saturdaysTuesday since 2010. cocktailsTraffi to entertain youto provide a 2nd Tuesday of the monththrough is broad church of dance Sweat bring some of the best and entire evening at tunes Flashback @ Bar Icon, Lindy Hop Cardiff . – expect electro, performers South Wales has Kapu Exotic Cocktail Bar, drum ‘n’ 9:00pm, FREE * A different bass, jungle, house and much to offer, toTrojan The Full Moon. Ladybird Night Club and our Boss Sound @ theme every Open Mic Night and Friday, Touring acts oftenChair, come7:00pm, and Rockin FREE Karaoke @house WOWto Bar, VIP suite.more everything from 90’s join the fun as well – It’s a nice * Jamaican, ska, reggae and 8:00pm * Your chance to get Listen @ Clwb Fuel Rock ClubUp! @ Fuel Bar Ifor total classics! relaxed evening to come funk. Funk yes. and on stage and show the world Cardiff * ’s & MusicBach, Room,10:00pm 9:00pm,* £4 Entourage @ talent. Crystal listen to some quality acoustic your longest running Established in 2006, the fiindie nestnight. Buffalo Live @ Buffalo Bar, Boutique Lounge & Club, tunes, and not sweat! full to the rafters, enjoy metal played LOUD! 8:00pm * Live music from10:00pmSalsa @air Live rock andAlways * A redClasses carpet aff current hits, motown classic Boom! @bands The Full andMoon, DJs. * Come and Lounge, 8:00pm Swing and roll with with indulgent Music, Extravaandrock indie‘n’ anthems. 11:00pm, FREE * Electro learn some sensual Salsa at DJaBen Potter @ The gant Drinks in Sensational Late Night Live @ 10 Feet Swing, Ghetto Funk, Dub, top venue. Live 10:00pm, DJ @ TheFREE Live Lounge, Bunkhouse, Surroundings with Exclusive Tall, 8:00pm, £varies * Two Reggae and Party Mashups, 11:00pm, FREE * Every Saturday (New for* Taking you Guests; it’s a place to meet, floors of entertainment, chart Relax and Unwind @ Mocka Great Music Mixed Badly! through until 4am with an network and party9:00pm with * LoosenJanuary). hits and the latest bar up Lounge, mix of singalong The Jazzfavourites Gallery @ Fire friends. Friday will opening toSoiree after anights stressful the @eclectic Sodaand Bar,dancefl 9:00pm, tunes oor anthem. Island, 9:00pm, FREE * The never be week. the same as we aim £5 * Soiree has been Mindie @ Peppermint, Jazz Gallery and Fire Island to entertain and make it a One’s & Two’sthe @ The introduced to manage 8:00pm * Fancy a bit of indie/ Revive @ Solus, 10:00pm * host a weekly series of memorable, enjoyable FREE * demandLadybird, of high end8:00pm, clubbing Britpop? Then get on down... The best party classics from collaborations from local jazz experience each and every all you night (we close inthe CardiffFree , we entry will see your early musical Hangover Cure @ MockaFriday. Entourage... groups and guest musicians Be Part years of inevery at midnight), Saturday night, drinks where between Union Lounge, 8:00pm, FREE *it... from across the UK. £1the andred £2!carpet The perfect place we roll out & What it says on the tin really. Damn Glam forwe your social! Womp &Two Reggae Hop @ @ GLAM, make sure give you a Go and massage that sore * Expect chart night to remember. The Full 10:00pm Moon, 10:00pm, Gossip @ GLAM, 9:00pm * head! anthems and dancefl oor FREE * Two Rooms – One to party with Cardiff Iconic @Want Bar Icon, 10:00pm, GiganticCtrl DJsALT @ The DelFull @ Solus, Big Party.fillers. elite? is the brand the GOSSIP best chart, FREE * All Moon, 7:00pm, FREE 10:00pm, £2 **Eclectic array DroneBoy Industries Hella newand night formusic 2012 & pop, dance club ‘tilTRUST Everything caninimagine, of you genres this one size fits Party @ Clwb Ifor Bach, 3am! ME it really is “The talk of the from bebop to trip hop to all club night in the Union 10:00pm, FREE * Party bass town”. motown to jazz to ska and Vanity - It’s All About You @from early noises showcased electro! The Capital’s Favourite GLAM, 8:00pm * Two floors Soda Live @ Soda Bar, hip-hop to dubstep to trap to Monday Night @ GLAM, 8:00pm, FREE * Every of the hottest The Resurrection The *Old d ‘n’ R&B, b. hip hop, Full of 10:00pm, @ FREE Wednesday Soda Lounge Rock’N’Rolla Disco At @ 10 dance and all in between * deals and Library, 8:00pm, FREE outrageous drink Live DJ @ The Live Lounge, us as *we showcase the Bar Feet Tall,join 8:00pm Playing non-stop supersonic Five Dollar Shake @ The*Full killer dancing tunes. Taking you 11:00pm, FREE very best in live music! industry & retail staff night (all mixes of indie, Brit-pop and * All Moon, 8:00pm, FREE through until 4am with an welcome) – Alternative Party Live DJ @ The Live Lounge, alternative tunes. sorts, from bebop, funk and eclectic mix of singalong Mash-up, Indie & New Music 11:00pm, FREE * Taking you soul to hip hop,and dancehall and Axe the DJ @ NosDa, tunes dancefl oor DJs in the downstairs bar, live through until 4am with an electro swing! weekly 8:00pm, eclectic £TBC * A anthems. bands upstairs. mix of sing-along Armageddon @ The Old event where theand bartenders Me And You @ 10 @ Feet tunes dancefloor ALT. Club Tuesdays The Cardiff’s Library, Sundays 8:00pm * @ Mocka Lounge choose the tunes. Anything * An Tall, 8:00pm, FREE10:00pm, anthems. Ladybird, £4 onMocka Lounge, latest, greatest live* rock and 8:00pm from funk to fusion to German unruly rock ‘n’ roll party til the the door or £3.50 with anWind Alt down metal night. week a chaotic Jagerfest @ GLAM, techno metal. early hours with the coolest * Cardiff has been Wristband. with a visit Mocka 10:00pm* Every Monday OntoThe Rocks @ 10 Feet in town Smash Disco @ Glam. Buffalo Bar, iscats waiting ages for a night like night at Jagerfest the Tall, 8:00pm, FREE * Rock ‘n @ Buff alo Bar, Dance your 9:00pm, Monday £4 / £3 * night Alt. and8:00pm, it just so happens,The Alt HopRoll, Milgi @ Milgi’s, bomb! alternative * A killer blend ofmash-ups, 8:00pm drunken night away to beats is a night like Alt. Drink, Saturday, hear FREE * Every guitar anthems and party riffs rock’n’roll, swing, jive, psych Bump & Grind that are all killer no filler @ world andDance, danceRepeat… tracks. Try untilanthems the sun comes up! & alt classic Undertone, 10:00pm, £3 * their cocktails, Fancy Footwork 10DJs Feet Kitschtoo. N Sync Collective: Come let@ the brush that Mixtape @ Peppermint, Sunday Nite Chillax @ Bar Tall, 8:00pm, FREE Electro Swing Design @ Dance dirt off yourb4 shoulder at Twisted by * Eclectic mix of 8:00pmFREE * Chill Icon, 11:00pm, * Classic 11pm, £5Cardiff / £4 after Classes @ The Full * One ofMoon, Dempsey’s, 8:00pm ’s ONLY 90s/00s Hip hip-hop, out, maxold-skool, out, act out all cool.breaks, funk, soul, old&school disco, 6:30pm,running £4 * The lovely ladies Cardiff’s longest Hop RnB BASEMENT garage, dubstep and DNB party mash-ups atnights, Kitsch every N Sync CollectiveOr simply chillax at this fine alternative Party! Coming at you the 1st establishment. Mocka Lounge Thursday @ Monday of EVERY Milgi @ Milgi’s, 8:00pm * month.fortnight.join us at The Full Moon every Mocka Lounge, 9:00pm * to teach our Live DJ @ The Live Lounge, CelebrateThe a collection of Monday Liven UpTuesday, Your Weekends Full Moon Chilled R&B and customers how to At dance to * Taking you House 11:00pm, FREEout world music played @ Cafe Jazz, Club @ ThebyFull Moon, Cafe Jazz music gallore. Electro Swing! Learn to jump through until 4am with an in-house9:00pm, DJs. Resident DJshow and everyone FREE * Every 8:00pm *and jive and eclectic mix of singalong Signature @ Buffalo Bar, the 1950’s The Full* Moon,great the music TherapyMonday @ Glam,at9:00pm yourfrom moves at our monthlytunes and dancefl£varies oor * 9:00pm, up to theRave present bestdosage jukeboxofinspine Cardiff, Juke Your weekly Revue, upstairs at The anthems.Experimental, electronic, new Nukem provides all MeMoon shaking beats, bright lightsthe tunesPlug Club! It kicks off every In @ Bacchus, eld, dubstep, Sunday music, Projectleftfi @ The night, while new prospects8:00pm, week and sticky dancefl oors 6.30pm.night Participation * Weekly FREEat hip-hop, DJs, live * and a 10:00pm, FREEacts aim to earn the colours and is £4, spectating is free! Ladybird, of banging house tunes with Delete @ Clwb Ifor Bach, ne arrayIndustry of delicious Cardiff’s fifavourite join Cardiff’s least exclusive special guests popping to 10:00pm * Pushing the cocktails. Therapy @ BarinIcon, night, every Sunday at MC – Monday Club! provide their own take barriers of house music 9:00pm, FREE * Jukebox Ladybird.Twisted This is Sunday by Design @ You’re the DJ… @ Bar Icon, forever onwards all night butalo you have Beatboxmusic Ballroom @ Buff project. Dempseys, 9:00pm * The 8:00pm, FREE * Every Bar, 8:00pm control of what youof wanna * Weekly dose The Furnace @ Bogiez, usual, broad mixBar, of tunes Soda Sundays @Soda Monday you get to choose soul and hear! hip-hop. 10:00pm, FREE * Bringing gracing every genre under the 9:30pm, £5 * Join us every what music we play, our the very best mix of old to sun. at Soda for the Sunday night Jukebox has over 85,000 Buzz / Berlin Returns! @ new rock, metal, punk and most talked about event Propaganda @ of GLAM, tracks so you should be So-Lo, 9:00pm * All the great alternative! Anything goes as old school R&B, hip-hop the week,10:00pm, Soda Sundays. £4 * Two rooms of spoiled for choice! long as it’s rawwwkk. Blender @and Buff‘90s. alo Bar, tunes from the ‘80s most popular, Sunday the Mass: The Full dancefloor Plus 1 @ Tiger Tiger, 8:00pm, £varies * Xerox @ Clwb Ifor Bach, anthems with cheap drinks Comeplay @ Solus, 9:00pm, Moon Open Stage @ The 9:00pm, £5 * Hosted at the Fashionable midweek 10:30pm, £4 * Downstairs in a along the way. Party pointing Full Moon, 7:00pm, FREE * slickest venue, playing the£5 / £4 * hangout with great tunes and much loved venue, the party night comprised of The Full Moon’s brand newIfor Bach, C-Y-N-T @ Clwb freshest tunes, and servingSaturdaygreat people. jukebox keeps things a chart, dance, pop, rock and Open Stage night! Bands, 10:30pm, £4 * The original the cheapest drinks, Plus 1 kicking Bolt @ 10 Feet Tall, 8:00pm, artists, singers, emcees, midweek rave keeps Mondays at Tiger Tiger funk music FREE * Indie, pop, electronic whatever!pumping Come down and Live DJ @ The Live Lounge, out the electro, Cardiff is THE place to be Swing on and Rock ‘n’ Roll @ & new music over 2 floors!make use of our stage! all techno * Taking youthe young 11:00pm,aFREE dubstep, d ‘n’ bIt’s and Monday night for The Bunkhouse, 10:00pm * yours! through until with an and4am the young at heart. DJ Ben Potter Cocktail Heaven @ Mocka brings the lushLive DJ @ The Live Lounge, eclectic mix of singalong Lounge, 9:00pm ness of the swing and rock* Two words 11:00pm, FREE * Taking you tunes and dancefloor anthem. go hand in hand. Make era back that to modernity through until 4am with an mine a White Russian. Pop, Bubble, Rock! @ The eclectic mix of singalong 3 Floor Party @ Clwb Ifor 10 Feet Live 10 Feet Tall, Bunker, 10:00pm, £4 *@The tunes and dancefloor anthem. The Lash @ Solus, 9:00pm * * Three fl oors Bach, 10:00pm 8:00pm, £varies * New Most Super Fun Alternative & music Playing theMotown, best chart, electro, mouth-watering Tiki Island @ The Ladybird, and party tunes in the bar of until Pop Clubnight....pretty much dirty little bit of soul and R&B moreand withaVinyl 10:00pm* Accept no 4am! ever. all mixed Vendettasdubstep on the top floor. by resident limitations, there is only one aloLadybird, In Session @Buffalo DJ, Scott Kirby Scratch Buff @ The Thursday night in Cardiff for Bogiez Saturday Mayhem @ 8:00pm, £varies mark the end * Bogiez, 10:00pm, 9:30pm, Bar, £4* To the student elite. With huge WOMP @FREE The Moon Club, * Showcasing the best of the week Ladybird lay Intensely chaotic rock night down some of the best old down in Bogiez – bring the skool beats with the sounds mosh! of ‘KISSTORY’ in the main Live DJ @ The Live Lounge, club room & with 11:00pm, FREE * Taking you UrbanFusion taking to the

MONDAY

10:00pm * One Mission and Traffic combine to provide a broad church of dance tunes – expect electro, drum ‘n’ bass, jungle, house and much more

Listen Up! @ Clwb Ifor Bach, 10:00pm * Cardiff’s longest running indie night. Always full to the rafters, enjoy current hits, motown classic and indie anthems. Live DJ @ The Live Lounge, 11:00pm, FREE * Taking you through until 4am with an eclectic mix of singalong tunes and dancefloor anthem. One’s & Two’s @ The Ladybird, 8:00pm, FREE * Free entry all night (we close at midnight), drinks between £1 and £2! The perfect place for your social!

Gossip @ GLAM, 9:00pm * Want to party with Cardiff elite? GOSSIP is the brand new night for 2012 & TRUST ME it really is “The talk of the town”.

Soda Live @ Soda Bar, 8:00pm, FREE * Every Wednesday At Soda Lounge join us as we showcase the very best in live music!

THURSDAY

Armageddon @ The Old Library, 8:00pm * Cardiff’s latest, greatest live rock and metal night.

On The Rocks @ 10 Feet Tall, 8:00pm, FREE * Rock ‘n Roll, alternative mash-ups, guitar anthems and party riffs until the sun comes up! Mixtape @ Peppermint, 8:00pm * Eclectic mix of old-skool, hip-hop, breaks, garage, dubstep and DNB

Mocka Lounge Thursday @ Mocka Lounge, 9:00pm * Chilled out R&B and House music gallore.

Signature @ Buffalo Bar, 9:00pm, £varies * Experimental, electronic, new music, leftfield, dubstep, hip-hop, DJs, live acts and a fine array of delicious cocktails.

Twisted by Design @ Dempseys, 9:00pm * The usual, broad mix of tunes gracing every genre under the sun. Propaganda @ GLAM, 10:00pm, £4 * Two rooms of the most popular, dancefloor anthems with cheap drinks along the way. C-Y-N-T @ Clwb Ifor Bach, 10:30pm, £4 * The original midweek rave keeps pumping out the electro, dubstep, d ‘n’ b and techno

Live DJ @ The Live Lounge, 11:00pm, FREE * Taking you through until 4am with an eclectic mix of singalong tunes and dancefloor anthem.

Tiki Island @ The Ladybird, 10:00pm* Accept no limitations, there is only one Thursday night in Cardiff for the student elite. With huge

19 21

FRIDAY

SATURDAY

SUNDAY

THURSDAY

WEDNESDAY

TUESDAY


22

The MMP March 2013 The MMP March 2013

Record Charts WELSH

RECORD SHOP CHART SPILLERS

20

1

The Joy Formidable Wolf’s Law

2

Al Lewis Battles

3

Christopher Rees Stand Fast

4

Threatmantics Kid McCoy

5

Funeral For A Friend Conduit

6

Sen Segur Sudd Sudd Sudd

7

Bullet For My Valentine Temper Temper

8

The Blackout Start The Party

9

Datblygu Darluniau Ogof O’r Unfed Ganrif (7”)

10

Samoans Elevated Reflections

GENERAL

1

Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds Push The Sky Away

2

Richard Thompson Electric

3

Eels Wonderful, Glorious

4

Foals Holy Fire

5

Matthew E White Big Inner

6

Veronica Falls Waiting For Something To Happen

7

The Joy Formidable Wolf’s Law

8

Yo La Tengo Fade

9

Bronx IV

10

Ron Sexsmith Forever Endeavor


themmp.tv

RECORD SHOP CHART DIVERSE

WELSH

1

The Vestals Perfect Pain/Seventeen (7”)

2

Give Me Mephis Fore (CD Album)

3

Paper Aeroplanes Time To Be (CD Mini Album)

4

Future Of The Left Plot Against Common Sense

5

Kutosis Fanastical Love (CD Album)

6

The Milk Race Rope Trick (CD EP)

7

Islet Illuminated People (CD Album)

8

The Ash & The Oak Search For The Soft Rays (CD Album)

9

Bedfall Falls Elegant Balloons (CD Album)

10

Peach Fuzz We Are Solid State (CD Album)

GENERAL

1

Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds Push The Sky Away

2

The Bronx The Bronx IV

3

Eels Wonderful, Glorious

4

Richard Thompson Electric

5

Unknown Mortal Orchestra II

6

The History Of Apple Pie Out Of View

7

Matthew E. White Big Inner

8

Pissed Jeans Honeys

9

Ice Age You’re Nothing

10

Trapper Schoepp & The Shades Run, Engine, Run

23


24

The MMP March 2013

Reviews Albums Singles Demos

Our pick of the month Draw Me Stories Cocoon Machina

Not Since the Accident Paved With Gold

4*

Do you remember Capdown? Notsincetheaccident certainly do… that’s not a veiled accusation of plagiarism. Nope, they’re keeping the punk-rock flame alive for their long-defunct forefathers. The EP starts by fly-kicking you in the face. Furious drumming, guitars that get straight to the point and the subject matter that’s all vigilantism and rebellion. There’s clearly more than a nod to the Clash here, not least in the vocal mannerisms of lead singer Rhys. Like Capdown, they toy with your expectations, not only melodically but with song structure. Case in point, ‘Nothing Left to Hate’, hits a jolting mid –verse rest, halves speed into a malevolent metal riff and slows to a halt before abruptly crashing into a Cobain style non-chord.By the final track, ‘Run For Your Life’, a concentrated two minutes of panic that collapses frantically on top you, there is no doubt that notsincetheaccident know exactly what they were made for. Just over 18 minutes, every tune gets exactly what it needs and nothing more. Sure, the singing could be a little more tuneful and the production a little warmer but then this is punk and either would detract from the intended rawness of the finished product. Gareth

reverbnation.notsincetheaccident

Spirit Level 4*

What we have here is a highly percussive (at times industrial sounding) collection of songs that deftly evade genre pigeonholes by being a bit bonkers’. There’s a dreamy vibe to quite a lot of the music, often feeling very much like a journey through someone’s fevered unconscious. ‘Animals’ introduces the aforementioned industrial element which work well alongside the dark lyrical content. Splashes of acoustic guitar and Hammond organ along with the slightly distorted vocals reinforce a sound heavily indebted to the ‘Doors’. “IIII’ is an instrumental that could easily slot into the soundtrack for 28 days later before ‘Black water cave’ (Part 1 & Part 2) takes things on a more experimental jaunt. Final track ‘Blood follows grain, Grain follows blood.’ begins with a thematic link back to the albums opening number. There’s a strong sense that this is a band who appreciate structure, which is refreshing. Ultimately the album succeeds on its relentless originality, even if at times it appears almost antagonistic in its wrigglesome defiance to stay put in one genre or mood, the sheer depth of imagination and intrigue it conjures up are constantly enthralling, with subsequent spins revealing more and more nooks and crannies to get lost in/freaked out by. AP.

drawmestories.bandcamp.com

Sounds Of The Insect World

2*

Swansea’s Spirit Level are an anomaly, unless I missed the Great British Prog revival they are as far removed from current trends as could be. Unlikely to bring about a change in attitude towards the P word; if Crimson is your King then there are worse things you could do than give it this record a listen. Musically it’s teeming with ideas. ‘The Roman Games’ starts slowly before building to an interlude that sounds like it was beamed in from the court of a long dead medieval monarch. The guitar riff to ‘Alone on a Mountain Top’ is a scorcher, and sounds all the more powerful as it appears after a delicately picked intro. If it’s extremely drawn out instrumental passages that you’re looking for then ‘The Water Boatman’ and ‘Lands’ End’ should satisfy; wig-outs weaving complex patterns for what feels like forever. Lyrically, there are quite a few clunkers on this album and sadly neither vocalist really has a strong enough voice to properly command the music. You have to admire Spirit Level for their approach and commitment. There’s good music on the album, but unfortunately it’s often lost beneath the records unrefined approach. NM.

spiritlevel.bandcamp.com

The Lay-Lows Happy Family EP

Your Old Best Thing, fistpumping anthemic rock is the order of the day, with the bands musicianship and song-writing abilities really being brought to the fore. Big, and I mean BIG, choruses are clearly where at it’s at for The Lay-Lows, Chino Amigo and Ride are the best example of this, with both sounding like they were written with a festival field full of devotees in mind. The band clearly has an aptitude for dynamics, with the atmospheric verses of Chino Amigo and Ride paving the way to the aforementioned gargantuan choruses. Drums boom, guitars wail; it’s an eminently enjoyable listen. It’s not all plain sailing though. Aside from a frantic finish Curse doesn’t quite manage to hit the heights of the opening salvo, and Keeper sounds far too much like poodle-haired 80’s rockers Def Leppard fronted by Bryan Adams…shudder An undeniably talented bunch; they make a polished and accessible sound which for the most part is just about rough enough around the edges to keep things interesting; eagerly anticipating a full album release sometime in the not too distant future. NM..

soundcloud.com/the-lay-lows

The Joy Formidable Wolf’s Law

thejoyformidable.com

Various Artists Dragon Era 3

3*

The Lay-Lows are back with their second EP Happy Family, and as with last year’s well received

4*

The Joy Formidable have their eyes trained on rock superstardom, and with their second album they’ve outlined exactly why they deserve it. Named after a 19th century theory that bones adapt to the stress they’re under this is an album marked by the confusion and compromise of relationships; offering a gritty insight into the bands personal experiences. The tracks are primarily stompy and energetically charged, with pounding drums and guitar topped with Ritzy’s soaring angst-ridden voice. Opening track, “this ladder is ours”, sets the tone with a grandiose string section that segues into huge riffs and a catchy as hell chorus. It’s easy to hear why Muse chose them as recent tour support. After the boisterous first five tracks some more forgettable songs whiz by in something of a noisy blur. Luckily “Silent Treatment” comes along as an oasis for the ears. It marks an interesting expansion of the band’s sound into more folksy territory Highlight Maw Maw Song just shouldn’t work. On paper a chorus that consists of the word Maw repeated 14 times sounds like a pretty dull listen. But thanks to an Oriental style riff and a dynamic song structure it’s possibly the albums most impressive and ambitious track.. LT

3*

‘Dragon Era’ is a compilation of some of the key names in the Cardiff underground drum and bass scene, unfortunately (as is often the case with compilations)


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a lot of filler sits amongst this dub-dozen; the music isn’t bad by any definition, but at times there’s just too much repetition; I found myself clicking back to work out which track I was listening to. ‘Mon Man Cymru’ deserves some special praise, Lembo takes a Middle-Eastern sample and creates that quintessential drum-and-bass track – simple riffs over frantic beats without too much deviation over the track. Contrast that to something earlier like ‘Whooo Can Draw’ by Stereoripe which is the obligatory “Bad Man” track which didn’t really add anything to the album except a sense that maybe I’ve heard this all before. It’s an album of extremes, the bemusing and the brilliant lying next to each other. For all the moaning about the lack of variety, I would happily recommend ‘Eagle has Landed’ for it’s lo-fi industrialism, ‘Memento Mori’ for the ambition and Kinetic Monkey’s ‘Death March’ for making me feel like I worked in a forensic lab as a professional sunglasses wearer. The rest are only recommended to those with a serious love of the genre. HP.

soundcloud.com/dragon-era

The Boo-Hooray Theory Follow The Gleam

2*

theboohooraytheory.bandcamp Three Sides Blind

soundcloud.com/chris-pattemore

Y Record Las

Recordiau Lliwgar

Just how rubbish must it be to be known for ONE overarching thing? Not like, Felix Baumgartner, but like Adam Scott’s character in Party Down, a one-liner or theme that follows you like a stray dog for the rest of your life. The Boo-Hooray Theory is one of those groups that are going to have that designation. You see, the fathers of two of the members wrote the Fireman Sam theme, which is both epic and really sad at the same time that I have to tell you that, less than a hundred words in. And that knowledge affects the album a bit. Despite opener ‘Empty Chair’ sounding a bit like the Small Faces, it lapses into kids TV theme central – all primary colours and a token sax solo while they run through the credits. ‘Chill Wind’ has some excellently produced backing vocals over the lead, with a female voice complementing everything nicely. Another unnecessary guitar solo doesn’t add much, although there are shades of Gerry Rafferty. The problem is, that for everything this record is trying to accomplish (some kind of lavish jazz, pop-rock orchestra), it just relentlessly sounds like Radio 2 filler music – there’s just nothing to get inspired or excited about on display.HP.

Chris Pattemore

for his Americana influences, it’s clear Chris has made something special. He then proceeds to power through 11 tracks of perfect song writing, clever chord changes and vocal mastery without putting one foot wrong. Standout tracks include the album’s namesake which evokes the kind of sound peddled by Turin Brakes, and “Life to Burn” which positively teems with southern American style and wily, impossible to second guess, chord changes. Certain tracks fall by the wayside as nothing more than unnecessary filler “Tailspin” and “Can’t Wait” sound like something Robbie Williams would embarrassingly hide away at the end of an album. The one two sucker punch of “23” with its convulsive major / minor chord switching deftly followed by “Soul on Fire” with its Lionel Richie crooned chorus and soulful keyboard are two of my favourite tracks from this near perfect example of talented artists debut..JZ

Nine months ago Chris Cornell and Norah Jones shared a particularly weird and steamy absinthe fuelled evening in each other’s company and this collection of songs is the by-product. Despite how potentially…strange…. that may sound on paper, in practice it’s apparently a rather good thing… From opener “Great Height”, draped in expressionistic lyrics and a sense of reverence

facebook.com/StalinsStreetParty

Howl

Lonesome Road 3*

It’s fair to say that contemporary Welsh folk/pop/indie music has quite a distinctive and recognisable style, heavily influenced by the free and permissive psychedelic ideals born into British folk music some fifty years ago. On offer here is a compilation album consisting of a selection of tracks from four different artists claiming that it “represents the best in contemporary Welsh design and music”. Unfortunately the music contained within simply doesn’t seem to be able to carry the weight of such a bold claim. The opening acts – Ymarfer Corff and Llywbr Llaethog – are decidedly upbeat and the latter offers up some interesting funk inspired bass on Ofergoelion which actually offers something a little different to the usual take on the genre. H Hawkline presents some pleasant traditional folk tunes with Ifan Dafydd taking a more trance-inspired path. It’s not bad, it’s just that all of the tracks share a common flaw in the deliberately cheap-sounding psychedelic production values applied to allow them to conform to the constraints of the genre sounding a little forced, ill-fitting and unoriginal at times.Possibly a release principally for fans of contemporary Welsh music, although it does serve as a good introduction to the artists involved and is worth investigating by those curious about our current national music scene.JS

recordiaulliwgar.com 4*

(something akin to Wes Borland’s huge intro to ‘Take A Look Around’ Mi2 theme by Limpbizkit - a guilty pleasure!). Sauntering along come the rhythmic vocals reminiscent of Jake Bugg performing some kind of sleazy monotone 60’s garage rap. Which is nice. The next track ‘Grumble Foul’ is slightly more upbeat whilst keeping the bands calm, apathetically cool vibe. Combining infectious dance drums with shimmering 60’s effervescent guitars it could be compared to a B-side by 00’s dance/psych band The Music.. And finally finishing with the hypnotic and off-kilter mood of ‘Who Said Mary Was A Saint’ with the repetitive first half descending into a trippy spiral of reverb encrusted drums and unsteady tempo shifts: It’s a box of tricks indeed! Pretty, uneasy and shamelessly hip. An intriguing act! H’pl’P

Stalin’s Street Party

Who Said Mary Was A Saint EP 3* First impressions with the opening track ‘Ain’t Done No Harm’ lead to a feeling of a promising and instrumental electronic project with shimmering synth sounds. It sounds slick and smooth with creeping drums. It becomes apparent that there is something rather different to follow as the spacey sounding guitar melody comes in

4*

Being a Blues based band in the modern age could be considered a daunting prospect to some. A traditional genre, where the music of the greats of old is readily available, plus you have recent über-success stories like the now ginormous Black Keys and before them The White Stripes. What’s clear is that to stand out and succeed in this genre you must have something about you, Howl most certainly do. The energetic exuberance of their gigs hasn’t been lost in translation; this is evident throughout as the band tear through the material with unwavering commitment and unbridled enthusiasm. The anguished ‘Hold. Pain. Sustain. Release.’ stands out immediately as the EPs highlight, with its excellent dual vocal and some truly thrilling riffing it is a banger, and a bugger to get out of your head once it is in. For ‘Solid Ground’ and ‘A Place To Be Born’ the band slow things down without losing any of the impetus created by ’Hold. Pain. Sustain. Release.’ and ‘Marla’ the EPs other jaunty rocker. Both of the slower paced songs show that the band are capable of a deft touch whilst retaining their power, and the honky-tonk piano that features in ‘A Place To Be Born’ is an inspired and authentic touch. NM.

soundcloud.com/howlsound

Clear The Auditorium

Outbreak 3* What we have here is effectively a tune cast in the same mould as the Enter Shikari and Blackouts of the world; intense, aggressive and anthemic electro-emopunk backed by the inevitable plethora of synth and guitar driven noise along with multi-tracked vocals and tight harmonies. It’s really not bad stuff, the issue is it sounds so damned outdated. There’s a lot to be said for merely doing what you do well and Clear The Auditorium certainly are more than competent in their execution and delivery; unfortunately from a stylistic perspective

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there’s just not enough originality on display to differentiate themselves from their already established counterparts. If they can tap into an edge or find an angle not yet plundered by the genre’s current crop these guys threaten to be quite formidable; on the evidence of this track, however, they’re just not quite there. JS.

cleartheauditoriummusic.bandcamp.com

Capitol Confusion Hide Or Hello

ghostcarriagephantoms.bandcamp

Julia Harris

Home 4* 3*

Remember grunge? The musical movement that made it ok to close your bank account, stop doing your laundry and stick it to the man, maaaaan. Most involved now wrap themselves in a suit and work in insurance Such is life…Competing in a presumably ironic way for the presumably vacant title are Cardiff’s Kings of Grunge, who from their sound, were too young to be around the first time. ‘Hide or Hello’ is from their first album ‘Response Ability’ and isn’t the best track from the LP. That said, there are some positives – the guitar loop evokes Soundgarden at their most aggressive and it’s clear that they’re confident in what they want Capitol Confusion to stand for. However, they ground my gears a bit with the faux-American accented vocals. I’ve never really understood that trend and could we end this? Now, please? In some ways, this isn’t grunge at all; on repeated listens it drifts into Southern-rock territory. A sped up Orange Goblin with traces of Metallica in there. Imagine if Doves suddenly went in a new direction and randomly chose to turn into Nirvana Mk II? That’s what this sounds like. A bit too PG. For a genre known for defining counter culture, this isn’t bad as such, it’s just a wee bit…safe.HP.

reverbnation/capitolconfusion

Ghost Carriage Phantoms Videotape/Mixed Emotions

placed on any indie-film for the lovelorn. It’s single that doesn’t so much as reach out and pull you in, but rather, simmers with a subtlety that bubbles just below the surface. Oh and the B-Side is great. SL.

4*

The A-side to this single from electro two-piece Ghost Carriage Phantoms opens with an enticing sub-woofer drawl that comes across sounding like a subdued Squarepusher. This low end is met with honest and original lyrical matter that explores the nature of loneliness and self-confidence with a Bowie-esque tone. Despite definitely growing on me over the course of a few spins, there was a nagging… something… lacking as the song ends. It sounds like a grey sky on the horizon, all clouds that look like they’ve been in a fist fight with each other …but the thunder you’d expect as crescendo to such a sound arrives as more a murmur. The B-side is a pretty ballsy re-working of The Rolling Stones’‘Mixed Emotions’, and these may be bold words, but I think I prefer it to the original! It’s an instantly alluring and euphoric take on the classic tune. It’s the dream-pop underscoring to sequence that would be well

Ten-year veteran Julia Harris is something of a local celebrity, despite jetting off to exotic locations like South Africa or the Seychelles, the Harlech Globetrotter (actually from Cardiff, but I liked the joke, dammit) has been back in the Welsh capital since 2007. From her first studio album ‘Colour Bomb’, ‘Home’ sees Harris sweetly sings about love and loneliness in a comparable way to Damien Rice (who she’s supported in the past) or Imogen Heap, understated strings and backing vocals adding to a strong delivery. It sounds one step away from swooning and saying ‘I Love You’ to an anonymous suitor. Although she’s settled back into Wales, this belongs near a campfire on the West Coast of America with Zach Braff narrating all of the key points of the past half an hour into a fuzzy ball. For someone well-versed in leaps of faith into the unknown, this is really quite assured and, unlike a lot of lead tracks, actually had the desired effect of a lead single and made me want to investigate her wider body of work.HP.

juliaharris.net

Behind The Line

Hold Us Down Like Anchors

Seconds From Ruin

Mayday 3* Seconds From Ruin are trying to make something new and interesting and this must be applauded. Though Mayday does not fully succeed in this pursuit, it is a valiant attempt. Lead track, ‘Big Yellow Monsters’ rushes at you with the type of unrelenting, neatly contained guitar rock that was once referred to as Nu-Punk and shows marked proficiency if not stacks of innovation with vocalist Chris Clark having touches of The Offsping’s Dexter Holland about him. Praise must be given to Craig James’ deeply satisfying lead guitar work here, echoing the fine axe mastery of Mr James Dean Bradfield. At their very best, as on Midnight Drive, the band evoke Mike Patton era Faith No More; making optimum use of a few sustained synth keys over chugging metal rhythm guitar and offering up a short instrumental, riff-driven portion. There are missteps though; final track “442” is an unimaginative Lost Prophets-esque pop-rock track featuring a massively incongruous keyboard solo. This EP is a grower, showing real depth at times and, though not always hitting the mark, is polished and reeking with potential. A mixed bag is always better than a sack of mediocrity and proves the band’s commitment to experimenting with what they can do. Keep it up. GK.

facebook.com/Secondsfromruin

Brothers

Demo 3* 3*

It’s always a pleasure to hear from a group of young guns who are carrying the musical torch. It’s this fire inside of them that separates those who do and those who do not, and it’s something that should be encouraged passionately, despite any musical differences. This is the case with Behind the Line, a Cardiff four-piece all aged in the general region of “really god damn young” (15 or 16). This, their latest single is a four minute pop journey led by vocalist Luci Vernon, who carries the track with an inherent and immediately likeable innocence...Stemming no doubt from the fact that she’s not legally allowed to watch “Alien”. The chorus hits in with an expected power chord crescendo before dropping down again to offbeat drums and walking riffs. The song takes an interesting turn as the second half morphs into a prog-pop breakdown. Complete with conversational vocals and streaming solos, this section definitely separates this track from many of its pop-rock counterparts. It’s great to hear a young band who are willing to stray from the pack and create something with more creative merit.SL.

What do you get when you put two sets of brothers together in a darkened bedroom, with a laptop, a myriad of guitars, a distortion pedal and the Beatles back catalogue on repeat. Not the music from the ballroom scene in the shining that’s for sure, but rather a band banging out classic psychedelic rock with solid lyrics and sixties style bass hooks. “Pretty Devil” Is a riotous drum party with lacklustre lyrical delivery which adds to the likeability of the song; shame that It ends just as it’s getting rolling though. “I Am Your Man” and “What You Gonna Do” follow suit with driving bass lines and drum happy hooks. The rhythm guitar takes something of a side-line often, which is a pity because as the Kasabian inspired “Gun Runner” shows, the band can really pull it off when everything operates as a cohesive whole. With a little development, they’ll likely begin to practice what they preach (“To reinvent the 60s and 90s style rock with more complex structures and experimental aspects.”) as it stands, this is a fine selection of demos from a young band with great promise.JZ.

soundcloud.com/brothers-bandcardiff

soundcloud.com/behind-the-line

All reviews have been edited down for publication for full length reviews and details visit: themmp.tv


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How Not To Make It In The Industry MOSTY IDIOTS

[ // Reports From Our Man On The Inside ]

It’s difficult maintaining positivity for your line of work when that bedraggled

line is an industry that caters for oversized egos and money hungry robots. I’m talking about the big bad world of live music promotion, the glitz, the glam, the shim, the sham... There have been moments warning me away from this walk of life, unsympathetically screaming ‘get a real job’ at me as I’ve worn an inane smile on my face and marched blindly down a path signposted ‘Mostly Idiots’… This job often involves feeling nervous… in bars… My memories tend to get, shall we say…jumbled. When I was a mere open mic host, eager as I’ve ever been to break into gig promotion as a full time job, I was having a cup of tea in a promoter’s living room who did just that. As he lay slumped on a sofa, staring lifelessly at Noel Edmunds hosting Deal or no Deal on TV… I noticed a huge box of CD’s over the other side of the room; so naturally I went to investigate... ‘Whoooaa!…’ I proclaimed, ‘…where did all these come from?’, perusing the collection of amateurish looking CD wallets, ‘oh them?...’ he replied, briefly taking one eye off the box opening gnome, ‘…they’ve been sent to me from all over the place, bands looking for gigs’… ‘WOW!’ I yelped, pulling out handfuls with excitement, ‘…are any of them

good???’… ‘I dunno…’ he said, ‘…haven’t listened to any of them’… It felt like the audience on screen were groaning in time with the sinking of my heart; as he went on to explain that ‘when you put on gigs for a living you don’t really feel like listening to music at home’. Confused as to how something so exciting could seem like such a chore, I asked ‘so how do you pick what bands play your nights?’, and as £250,000 was lost to the sound of boos, he said ‘I just check to see if they have a Myspace’. That was it, not ‘I take a listen on Myspace and see if they’re any good’, no, just IF they had a profile on a website that was FREE to use, they were gig-ready for some leading live music venues… To my knowledge, this promoter is no longer putting on gigs; I guess there’s just too many websites to check nowadays… The second memory goes back to a sell-out gig I was working in an incredibly rundown and understaffed venue… We had The Blockheads playing, and as I ran around lighting joss-sticks to hide the fact that we couldn’t afford cleaners, I couldn’t help

but notice some rather block-headed behaviour… Having presumably grown accustomed to an assistant who ran around picking up after him, the person in question wandered the venue that I’d been cleaning for 6 hours, discarding food wrappers and fruit peels all over the tables and floor. Not wanting the place to look any worse than it did, I went round cleaning up after him. Even when he noticed me doing this, all I got was thermonuclear disdain from the guy. He took to the stage 2 hours late for soundcheck (a huge queue had formed outside in the cold), adorning his instrument and taking a half second swipe at a chord, he threw his hands up in the air and theatrically shouted ‘Well that’s quite simply the worst guitar sound I’ve ever heard in my life!!’, before berating the sound engineer in a manner I imagine a king would treat the courtroom jester… All I could think at that moment, watching this cartoon character of a man, so distant from any sight of the real world around him, was ‘I hope Ian Dury really was as nice as they say he was…’ Words: Spun Tongue


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.MPFREE! @THEMMP.TV

At the risk of sounding like one of those god awful Spotify adds where the robotic voice berates you for your song choices and you end up hurling your computer through a window....you really should mix up your song playlists a little from time to time... And what better way to do it than via this buttery little selection of FREE musical intravenous injections? Download and soundtrack the hurtling of technology through glass thanks to some of our favourite artists generosity!

HOWL • JULIA HARRIS • LITTLE ARROW • STALIN’S STREET PARTY • • THE LAY-LOWS • BROTHERS • JEMMA ROPER • BEARD OF WOLVES • THE GENTLE GOOD •

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The MMP March 2013

Cardiff Music Map

01 Clwb Ifor Bach 02 Gate Theatre 04 10 Feet Tall | Undertone 05 Buffalo 06 The Coal Exchange 07 O’Neills (Little) 08 Kama Lounge

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09 The Globe 10 O’ Neills (Big)

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11 Shot in the Dark

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13 Students Union 14 Tommy’s Bar

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15 The Promised Land 16 Koko Gorilaz

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17 Gwdihŵ

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18 Dempsey’s 19 Owain Glyndwr 20 The Bunk House

BUTE PARK

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21 Bacchus

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22 The Vulcan Lounge

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23 St David’s Hall 24 Nos Da

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25 The North Star

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26 Cafe Jazz 27 The Pot

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28 Rococo 31 Bar 147 32 The Live Lounge 33 Mocka | Peppermint 34 Pen and Wig 35 The Claude 36 Cardiff Central Library 37 Motorpoint Arena

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Don’t see your venue listed? Contact Us info@themmp.tv

38 The Old Library 39 The Yard 40 GH2 41 The Full Moon / Moon Club 42 Bogiez


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