Posts Tagged ‘Brighton’

TIGERCUB – ” Pictures Of You “

Posted: December 10, 2015 in MUSIC
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Tigercub. are a three-piece band from Brighton whose dynamic (soft to hard, quiet to loud) grunge rock recalls Mansun more than it does Nirvana, something to do with singer Jamie Hall’s keening croon, the tone of which is similar to Paul Draper’s. It is a voice dripping with feeling, but also ideas. Repressed Semantics, their latest EP, features a burning bin and the phrase, “Something that you can do today, dispose,” in German on the sleeve, which has an air of situationist slogan. Preorders, meanwhile, come with a zine. Tigercub create a self-contained world for you to discover and get lost in “as a refuge for anyone who feels a bit fucked over by the current state of affairs”, says Hall, who was somewhat stung by the results of the 2015 general election and fully intends to vent his frustration on their tour. “There’s a lot of things I want to get across,” he says. “I want to try and create an ideology, something that people can really get behind, rather than just writing fucking pop songs.

Tigercub: After breaking through into the music industry's consciousness in 2014 thanks to a support tour with Royal Blood, Tigercub have had a brilliant 2015. The release of their EP Repressed Semantics has buoyed them out of the confines of being predominantly a support band and a ‘Brighton band’. Last month they set out on a full UK tour and sold out the Barfly in Camden. Hopefully 2016 will also see the release of their debut album that’ll be the start of even bigger things - we certain think so.

 

Brought to you by the promoters behind last year’s Wire curated DRILL festivities, Mutations is a new multi-venue event described as “a creative mass of genre hybrids and expression, delivering some of the most inspiring, creative and interesting music the world has to offer”.
One of the most striking aspects of Mutations is its intimacy, with a range of small venues, providing an altogether more personal experience. Another special feature is the festival’s programming approach: as the day progresses, stage numbers decrease, eliminating the worry of clashes and ensuring a stress free weekend of “constant music from doors open until festival close”.
And then, of course, there is Brighton and Hove, with the latter half of the city playing host to the majority of Saturday’s proceedings, while Sunday punters will enjoy more of Brighton.

Music highlights: Chastity, Jane Weaver, Josh T.Pearson, Kagoule, Lightening Bolt, Lowly, Metz, Natalie Prass, Ought, Plastic Mermaids

Tickets and full line up information: http://www.mutationsfestival.com

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There must be something in the water in Brighton as they seem to be producing new bands faster than we can write about them.

The latest are Our Girl will release their debut single “Sleeper” through Cannibal Hymns on Friday December 11th. The single, which features “Level” on the flipside, is a luscious array of sounds: rhythmic drum and guitar hooks make dynamic jumps to thick garage-rock riffs then cut suddenly to beautiful, intimate moments of just guitar and reverb hugged vocals.

Demob Happy – Dream Soda
For every histrionic ‘Rock is Back!’ headline coined in the wake of Royal Blood’s anomalous chart success, there’s a band like Demob Happy, to whom it never occurred that rock was ever anywhere but in the marrow of their bones. Like the first, best, Queens Of The Stone Age record, the Brighton group’s debut album is a riotous, vomit-crusted affair. Rocks & reminds us a bit of Nirvana – both excellent qualities!

Armed only with an arsenal of guitars and northern chips on their slender shoulders Brighton’s rising garage rock force Demob Happy have this year asserted themselves as one of the UK’s most exciting new bands. Drawing on the likes of Nirvana, Queens of The Stone Age, Melvins, The Beatles, The Stooges and Kyuss for source material, their off-kilter pop music constantly stretches beyond their genre to create a spontaneous clatter of fresh and exciting sounds. They have retained accolades with recent single ‘Wash It Down’ and lived up to NME’s declaration that the band are delivering “some of the most riff-heavy songs of recent years”, having also been championed by the likes of The Independent, DIY, Best Fit, The 405, BBC Radio 1, 6 Music and XFM.

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The seaside might be clearing of tourists as the winter’s chill approaches, but Brighton’s creative juices show no sign of drying. Tigercub are one of a myriad of new hopes set to erupt from those pebbly beaches as 2016 approaches, and to get you in gear their new single ‘Pictures Of You’ below .

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Sharing much of the same tainted blood as fellow South Coast dwellers Demob Happy, the track deals in an eerie, haunting tone before it erupts, all screeching guitars and demolition-ready drums. As Jamie of the trio (he’s joined by a Jimmy and a James, just to confused things) explains, the track “started as an experiment that went really well and ended up being the first single. It would be really easy to go crazy on the arrangement but we wanted to keep it simple and as true to what we could pull off as a three-price as possible – the limitation meant we had to try to get the most out of our instruments.” It’s a self-imposed challenge that’s reaped huge rewards, ‘Pictures Of You’ replicating the barely-restrained chaos of Tigercub’s fine-tuned live show perfectly.

‘Pictures Of You’ is the first track to be taken from the band’s Venn Records debut, ‘Repressed Semantics’, set for release late November. the band’s mammoth upcoming tour schedule see them come to Nottingham Rock City Basement.

Tigercub get spooky on new ‘Pictures Of You’ single

 

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Black Honey have capped off the week in style by unveiling their excellent new single ‘Corrine’.

Twinning Western-spiked guitars and femme fatale vocals, Black Honey are Brighton’s brightest hopes for 2016. While singer Izzy B Phillips’ stage presence has led to lazy comparisons to Wolf Alice’s Ellie Rowsell, in reality she’s a different beast altogether, obsessed with Nancy Sinatra, Debbie Harry and Lana Del Rey.
The Brighton quartet, have had quite an elusive existence to date, which included selling their early double-a-side single, ‘Madonna’ on Ebay themselves – but after a couple of spins of their hook-heavy new single ‘Corrine’ – the feeling is it has all the hallmarks to catapult them deservedly into the spotlight.

 

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Brighton quartet Demob Happy – formed by lead singer and bassist Matthew Marcantonio, drummer Thomas Armstrong and guitarists Matthew Renforth and Adam Godfrey they are looking 2015’s zombified, Apple-branded generation dead in the eye and attacking them with their own biting, invigorating and antagonistic creative solution.

“We’re concerned about banality and apathy,” says Marcantonio. “You see people who have no proactive bone in their bodies sitting there moaning on social media going, ‘Oh my god, the Tories’ and I just think, imagine if all this energy was directed into something positive.”

It’s a lofty comment to make, but Demob Happy walk the walk. Formed in 2008, the quartet spent the interim years not only honing their sound (think Queens Of The Stone Age sleazy riffs meets early Kings Of Leon’s way with a skittish, rattling hook) but creating a grassroots DIY manifesto in their backyard – or, more accurately, back-of-the-van.

The Demobile – a customised bus which sleeps seven including two hammocks (“It’s an engineering masterpiece; it’s the fucking Golden Gate Bridge of vans,” grins Marcantonio) – has hosted multiple impromptu street gigs around the town, much to the police’s chagrin, while Demob also recently helped open a cafe-cum-venue-cum-rehearsal space called Nowhere Man. The scene of the most feral and sweaty party in recent memory at annual Brighton new band festival The Great Escape, the venue’s entire ethos is geared towards making something communal, creative and positive for the area. “We were a band for five years before we got signed and that whole time was just spent going, ‘How do we improve ourselves and get into people’s heads?’” continues Marcantonio. “Brighton is where 20-somethings go to retire so you’ve got to stay focused there,” adds Armstrong. “You’ve been to a million gigs in your local bar and no matter how good the band is, you’re still in the same local bar watching a band. We want to do something more interesting than that.”

As well as creating their own tiny empire, the band have managed to get an album under their belts. Following this year’s ‘Young & Numb EP‘ and recent singles ‘Succubus’ and ‘Suffer You’ – backed by AA-side ‘Junk DNA’, premiered above – they’re readying ‘Dream Soda’ for release on October 2nd. A heady mix of grungy riffs, careering melodies and an ever-present melodic backbone, it’s confident and confrontational but in the most playful of ways. “You get these bedroom producers coming through who spend hours and hours trying to find the perfect snare sound on an EDM track and never consider trying to just write a good fucking song,” says Marcantonio. “If you ask what’s gonna push guitar music forward then maybe we have the potential to do so because we’re actually writing tunes rather than trying to be part of some aesthetic. If you want it, then go and make it happen.” See Them soon

The band head out on a UK headline tour, starting December 2nd at Nottingham Bodega

Brighton rock n roll prodigy Theo Verney releases a brand new EP. The distorted joy that is the five track ‘Brain Disease EP’ is released on Mount Olympus Recordings. The ‘Brain Disease’ EP, written and recorded entirely by Theo in Brighton earlier this year, is a honed, fuzzy pop progression from the looser psych jams of last year’s much acclaimed EP ‘Heavy Sunn’ released on Hate Hate Hate Records

 

NME’s Secret Guests At The Haunt
Show: The Haunt 15th May Midnight
We’re putting on Radar shows every evening at our out’n’out favourite venue in Brighton, The Haunt. The bill has been handpicked and features the best breaking bands around. Deep breath…

– Courtney Barnett’s touring buddy Fraser A Gorman
– London DJ bros Formation
– Sydney trio Little May
– Former Late Of The Pier man Sam Dust (Eastgate)’s sublime new project LA Priest
– UK indie’s most messed-up and exciting new band Yak
– Canadian Velvets-obsessive’s Heat
– XL/Godmode Records wonderkid Shamir
– and Gengahr, who’s guitarist John Victor plays like he’s Graham Coxon’s surrogate son

Friday night at The Haunt, though, is one I’m particularly looking forward to – a mammoth seven-band bill comprised of America’s absolute best garage bands right now (The Garden, Bully, Wand), Copenhagen grungers Yung, all-girl London newbies The Big Moon and ‘the new Jamie T’, Rat Boy. Heading it up and playing at Midnight are a total a-list band who you don’t want to miss out on. In previous years, we’ve had Palma Violets, Fat White Family and Peace play this slot and every gig has been crazy. This year is our biggest band yet, so get down early.

See all the details of who is playing when at NME’s two stages at The Great Escape 2015

 

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Theo Verney’s formula has always been rooted a combination of absorbing riffs and wild abandon. So when it comes to new track, ‘Brain Disease’, it’s little surprise that the Brighton-based rocker hasn’t taken a detour.

Following lead trackMountain Rose, the title-track of Verney’s new EP takes some of the brief thrashing power of its predecessor, dropping a jerky melody in favour of straightforward, all-out garage-rock. Both tracks stay true to Verney’s original dark and heavy roots, only now the lyrics are frightfully paranoid and his voice shines through with confidence and assertion.

Ahead of three performances at this year’s Alt Escape in Brighton, Listen here to Theo Verney’s ‘Brain Disease’. ‘Brain Disease’ is out via Mount Olympus Recordings on 8th June. You can pre-order the new EP here and catch him at the Great Escape this coming weekend.