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Review: NuL and Wysdiman at Shivas Rock 24 August

Source: Lamb (www.darkside.co.za)

This was an interesting gig. The interior of the venue makes me expect to see Fake Palm Trees. and fake rocks. I think it’s the lighting or something. Odd. Anyway, first up was Wysidiman, an afrikaans rock band. They started off by doing a really chilled acoustic set, very nice, which allowed their vocalist to really shine. He’s young, but definitely going to develop into an excellent vocalist. The rest of the band did a competent job of doing  what they’re supposed to do. Nothing too flashy, but then it’s not really required in this sort of set up.
Their second set was much more of a rock thing, with the guitarist pulling out an electric, and their vocalist suddenly appearing on stage with red stripes painted on his face. Things suddenly got a lot louder and a lot more chaotic. In fact they do a very good impression of a punk band on the verge of total meltdown, in some ways a lot more authentic than the some much more successful bands out there, with their vocalist truly leaping around like a mad thing, as if possessed by some chaotic punk demon. Very impressive.
However, I feel they need to be careful of that chaos, as it can overwhelm the musicality of their songs, so they degenerate into a group of people banging stuff, while one of them yells a lot.
Another gripe I have, is they almost come across as two different bands, the nice acoustic set up, and the raging punk band. However, this is not necessarily a bad thing, it’s just that they may end up alienating fans, who show up at gigs expecting one thing, and get something else entirely. Overall, though, a most impressive, and highly enjoyable show.

Then, after them was NuL. They were, as usual, excellent. They’ve expanded the visual aspects of their show, so there are now a whole bunch of computer monitors standing around flashing images. They also played a new song which I’ve not heard live, which was great, although, I have to say, a little rough around the edges. I’ve already stated elsewhere that I’m not going to focus on NuL in these reviews, as I’ve already written reviews of NuL. Suffice it to say, that they are an excellent live act on the up and up, and if you haven’t seen them yet, they’re definitely worth the effort. They combine great songs, with an excellent live show, including live VJing and loads of energy. Personally, they’re the best thing to come out of SA that I’ve seen in a long time.

Oh, if you’d like to see them, they’re playing at Cafe Barcelona in Pretoria, along with their guitarist’s other band, Thys Nywerheid, this Saturday, the 15th of September .


Sweaty night at the armpit

Source: Lloyd Gedye (Mail & Guardian, 2007.08.03)

The Bohemian in Richmond was the setting for a night of mayhem last Friday that had been dubbed Die Donderende Doodsnag (The thundering night of death). Regular punters would have noticed that Tshwane’s industrial rockers NuL, along with sidekick Thys Nywerheid, have been heading south once a month to bring their pounding live show to the armpit of Jo’burg, otherwise affectionately know as the Bo. This particular Friday the boys from the north had roped in eccentric Afrikaans singer/songwriter Riku Lätti and new electro outfit Devil’s Cartel.

The evening kicked off with Thys Nywerheid, the side project of NuL guitarist Dawid Kahts and DJ Jamie Sharpe, who describe their band as the “original big-beat rock spider”. Ultimately, what that sounds like is a fusion of Propellerheads/Chemical Brothers’ beats with psychedelic Hendrix/Pink Floyd guitar and insane political rants in Afrikaans. Although the band’s sound can be rather unsettling, I think that might just be the point — an Afrikaans version of Britain’s cultural noise terrorists Pop Will Eat Itself, if you will.

The faithful Bohemian crowd was then treated to a rare Radio Lava gig.

Radio Lava is the name given to the bunch of musicians Riku Lätti surrounded himself with last year to complete an album released under the same name earlier this year.

Alongside Riku Lätti on stage stood ex-Battery 9 guitarist, current Diesel Whore Arnaud van Vliet and mad genius composer/producer Jahn Beukes, who took care of the sampling. Lätti had the crowd wrapped around his finger with his brand of alternative Afrikaans pop music, as he and the band worked through the tracks from Radio Lava. The added guest appearances from Jim Neversink on lap-steel guitar and Battery 9’s Huyser Burger, who rapped his way through Sneeuwitjie se Partytjie (Snow White’s Party), added an extra dimension to this great show.

After a disappointing set from Devil’s Cartel, NuL took to the stage in the early hours of the morning, bringing the show to a pulsing climax with their powerhouse blend of killer beats, driving guitar riffs and stabbing synthesiser. NuL frontman Adriaan Pelzer is a man possessed on stage, the focal point for NuL’s dynamic show.

NuL effortlessly blend social commentary with healthy doses of humour to create a challenging yet thoroughly enjoyable live show. Musically they blend varied influences ranging from Battery 9 to Aphex Twin and Rammstein to Frank Zappa into their sound, which they have dubbed elektroniese revolusiemusiek (electronic revolution music).

Their second album aptly titled Twee is currently available at gigs, or you can download the entire album for free from the band’s website (www.nul.com.sg).

The Bohemian can be found at the corner of Park and Menton roads, Richmond, Johannesburg. Tel: 011 482 1725. Visit: www.thebo.co.za

Risky business

Lloyd Gedye chats to Nul frontman Adriaan Pelzer about giving music away for free

What led to the decision to publish your music using a creative-commons licence and to make it available for free downloads?

At the time, I was looking for a license similar to the Linux GPL, but with more freedom, and more geared towards music. Creative Commons met those needs exactly, especially with the freedom it gives you to decide exactly how restrictive you want your licence to be.

To answer the second part of the question, we as NuL believe music is inherently free, and there’s nothing anyone can do about it. It’s like air. So, it’s not our decision to make it free.

In a new music industry that is geared more and more towards the free download, how do bands make ends meet?

With the music market being in the transitional phase that it is in today [paid-for music to free music] gives bands the unique opportunity to get a jump-start on marketing themselves by providing easy access to their free music, since many bands don’t realise the importance of that yet. That said, I think producing music in South Africa remains a high-risk, long-term investment, mostly done not to make money, but barely to survive, and enjoying the hell out of it! All the members of NuL have day jobs.

Your album and live show both have moments that are reminiscent of Frank Zappa, so to put to you a question that Zappa once posed rhetorically — Does humour belong in music?

That’s a big compliment, thanks! Yes, humour indeed belongs in music, and this is explored far too little in modern music. To quote Frank Zappa again, people think humour in music is where the trumpet goes: “Fwhaap, Fwhaap, Fwhaaaaap…”

How important is a band like Battery 9 to you as a band and to the SA music scene in general?

I think they opened the South African [and especially Afrikaans] music scene to a lot of variety by establishing a boundary quite far out, thus opening a lot of creative potential between what they did and the norm.


untitled

Source: Cornelia le Roux (Huisgenoot p. 90, 2007.07.12)

Die alternatiewe Afrikaanse groep NuL se tweede CD, Twee, is by www.nul.com.sg (klik op die bossie geld) beskikbaar. Dié van julle wat ‘n bietjie uit die vorige geslag trek as dit kom by blikbreine — skiet sommer reguit deur na www.nul.com.sg/koop en klik op die regterkantste rooi kol.


Somerfaan and retro-futurism nostalgia

Source: Fred De Vries (Fred De Vries)

Somerfaan killing an Alien

The undercurrent of Somerfaan’s second album KykOfSyKyk is a yearning retro-futurism that goes hand in hand with approaching middle-age and looking back. At Nel, a.k.a. Somerfaan has turned 39. Recently he has bought a house in Melville, where he lives with his new girlfriend, a huge Alsatian and a screaming bird. Nel has entered a new era. The hard drinking and partying days, which included doing tequila fuelled Hunter S. Thompson impersonations in a redneck bar in Warmbad, are over. “I leave the extremes now for my music,” says Nel in his home/studio on 2nd Avenue, with KykOfSyKyk cascading in the background.

Nearing forty, settling in, that’s when you start remembering your young and innocent days, and wondering about the journey. How did you end up where you are now? So if KykOfSyKyk, with all its references to science-fiction and comic strips may initially seem a bit childlike, it’s not. It’s a light hearted take on the loss of innocence and dreams, not unlike the recent Flaming Lips albums. It tries to capture a time when the world looked pleasantly strange and full of promise, when events hadn’t closed in on the endless possibilities that life seemed to offer. Despite all its beats and bleeps it’s essentially the musical equivalent to the plaasroman.

“I made this album picturing myself back in the seventies, when I was sitting on the farm. I was ten or eleven and just getting into all this weird rock music,” says Nel. He recounts how, when he was a laaitjie growing up in Heidelberg, he met this much older guy with an incredible record collection, an encounter which we may file under ‘epiphany’.

“His name was Nols de Bruin. His father was a famous ventriloquist who worked with two dolls: Tommy Thompson and Jacky Jackson. His son was this rebel smoking dude who agreed to lend me two albums a week on the condition that I didn’t scratch them. So I drove off on my bicycle with this stuff, back to the farm, and I would put on (David Bowie’s) Ziggy Stardust for the first time, or Black Sabbath. Eish! I liked the heavy shit, UFO those kinds of bands.”

And then there was the growing awareness of a bigger world outside. “On the farm we had this radio set and we just couldn’t get it right. Trying to pick up a signal on medium wave or short wave, you would sometimes stumble upon Russian stations, and it sounded like space to me. I spent quite a bit of time fooling around with that idea. And I think this album has quite a bit of short wave sci-fi sound to it. Sci-fi was my escapism growing up in a conservative place. My favorite? Spiderman, hahaha.”

KykOfSyKyk is lo-fi electronica with vocals. It uses the vintage synthesizers, dance beats and the odd rap, mixing it with looped real instruments, ambient passages and Nel’s own shaky voice. “When I was growing up I only liked music with a heavy guitar in it. But then somebody played me Gary Newman’s Tubeway Army, an album called Replicas. For the first time synthesizers sounded as powerful as, no and even more exhilarating than the heavy guitar.”

The album features a couple of At’s outsider friends, including actor Frank Opperman, Diesel Whores guitarist Arnaud van Vliet and his old Battery9 buddies Huyser Burger and Paul Riekert, with whom he played during the second half of the nineties. Riekert’s deep, foreboding voice can be heard on Wilde Ganse, one of the essential tracks, and one of the few that doesn’t quite fit the light retro mood.

“I had this song and asked him to add something to it,” exlains Nel. “I wanted something like Nick Cave. So Paul came back with this weird poem about somebody parking on the stoep, and they’re drinking whiskey, and he’s got fragments of memory coming through of somebody, and he can only remember her fingers and the smell of malt on her breath. He says: some people are like that, they don’t get wiser but dissolve into these fragments like the ice in his malt. And also the malt he’s drinking didn’t benefit from ageing. So the people, the memory, the fucking whiskey, the whole thing just fragmented.”

It took Huyser Burger almost sixty takes to get the rap on Wet n Vibe right. But finally, after gargling vodka in the morning, he managed, belting out the lyrics about the struggle of finding your place in a hostile world. “Ek’s moeg van sukkel, sukkel en probeer, dis guerilla oorlog, fokol gaan my keer.”

The multi-talented Huyser also made the painting for the cover, which depicts Somerfaan as some kind of action hero, knife in hand, fighting an octopus. This harks back to the days of Spiderman and sci-fi comix. “Somerfaan is in the interplanetary intelligence service,” says Nel, grinning like a little boy. “And there’s a specific song on the album where he says goodbye to his girl Soetelief. She leaves for Venus and he stays behind on Mars. But as he takes off in his spacecraft, Mars is attacked. There’s even a little newspaper clipping about it (on the inner sleeve). So Somerfaan is travelling the planets looking for Soetelief. He doesn’t know if she’s alive or not.”

Pardon? At times the album does feel like it that has been made by someone who for the final time had been allowed to live out his teenage fantasies. The brief introductory opening track has Frank Opperman announcing the arrival of our hero in a boxing ring, hysterically shouting “Somerfaan! Somerfaan!”. Even the album’s title is a nostalgic nod to days gone by. Kyk of sy kyk (‘see if she’s looking’), is a reference to the adolescent game of push and pull eye contact in a disco or a bar.

But, again, the (pre-)pubescent fun is deceptive. There’s always something ominous lurking in the background, an uncontrollable outside force that destroys the moments of innocence and bliss. Haaie Onder Ons could almost be taken as a metaphor for the mood of the album. “It’s about me and a girl skinny dipping in the sea,” says At. “It’s all about the danger and thrill of it. Because you can’t see, and there’s no moon, just all these stars that verskiet. And all of a sudden there’s lightning in the air and you can feel the shark circling beneath you.”

At times the humor seems a bit too juvenile, like on the outsider’s anthem Ons Gaan Almal Hemel Toe, where he uses a sample from a chat line. “I called a phone sex chick, trying to get sleazy samples. I wanted to combine the chorus ‘ons gaan almal hemel toe’ with sin. So I called one of those numbers, but didn’t have a real good way of recording it. Therefore I held a mike to the phone speaker. But then I couldn’t hear what the chick was saying. So I’d just go ‘ja, ja, ja.’ And meanwhile she’s playing with herself and goes: ‘Are you watching it darling? Are you watching it sweetheart?’ That’s what I recorded.”

In his daily life Nel is a sales rep for Puma, driving highways and byways to bring the sporty stuff to the shops. The road, the trips past the endless veld and small towns with their ubiquitous general dealer, is an excellent place for letting the mind drift. “It’s a fantastic job,” says Nel. “I service the platteland. I go to Potch, up north all way to Messina, east to Malelane, in my Volvo, a fast one with a fantastic sound system. So I get to listen to cds quite a bit. I think I listen to more than anyone else because of all these trips. Meanwhile you check out all these wide open spaces. Dis befok.”

Given this landscape and his love for Americana bands like Wilco and Iron and Wine, one would expect his music to have more of an alt-country feel to it. He nods. “I would like to make an earthy album,” he says. “In rugby terms, with the first album I played for the Curry Cup, the second is Super 14 and with the third I must be a Springbok. For that one I’ll be far more serious about singer/songwriter stuff while keeping it interesting with loops and samples. I’ve made some new songs and they sound much bigger, vet, like a techno Tom Waits.”

Just as he seems to get more serious, talking about lyrical and musical experiments and risks he gets up to fetch more beer in the fridge, and says. “But I also like to make people laugh. It would be great if they’d all be singing ‘Ons gaan almal die hemel toe’, poesdronk, while stomping around the fire.”

Indeed, it would be a nice change from De la Rey.

CV

1968 Born in Heidelberg

1987 Does his army stint and meets Paul Riekert

1989 Moves to Ponte City, Hillbrow, and works for a textile company

1991 Moves to Springs to work for his father in a school uniforms/sports/fashion shop

1995 Works for Puma as a sales rep

1995 Joins industrial band Battery9

1999 Starts dj’ing

2000 Leaves Battery9

2003 Releases Somerfaan

2003 Wins Geraas award for ‘Best electronic album’

2004 Releases Uiters Geheim, a remix of Somerfaan

2007 Releases KykOfSyKyk

Heroes/influences: Writers: Charles Bukowski, Harry Crews, Hunter S. Thompson; Music: El-P (“Hard on the ear, iron galaxy hiphop, harsh and nostalgically beautiful”), Captain Beefheart, Tricky, Tom Waits, Iron and Wine; Artists: Salvador Dali; Afrikaans: Takuza (“Homo-erotic Tarzan styled photographic novel”), El Debbo (“Comedian who rolled his eyes around”), Jacob Pierneef, Etienne Leroux, Voëlvry Movement (“But laaitjies like Fokofpolisiekar don’t impress me that way”).