Media Archive

Interview: Bloedskande

Sunday, 11 April 2010

Source: Scarlet Tryst (Underground Press – 11 April 2010)

Bloedskande - Bloedskande album cover

Bloekdskande

After Having Bloedskande “Almal doen net wat hul wil” Music video on UNDERGROUND PRESS and watching the success of the view rates, we decided to catch up with the children of night and ask anything but the typical questions,

Firstly striking band name any connotations to the true meaning of the origin of “BLOEDSKANDE”? And If so can you transcribe or inherently translate to English for the fans definition of “BLOEDSKANDE”


The name Bloedskande is about being critical of the perceptions and social norms we all hold so dearly. It’s not a blatant controversial or antagonistic name, but one you have to think about.

Rebellion, like fire in the night, is there intelligence within the statement of describing yourselves as “intelligent Rebellions of middleclass”? Is that the correct interpretation I perceived?


I think there is both intelligence in the statement and in approach. For one, I think we are trying to show we are not ‘sheeple’, but recognise also that we are all subject to some form of control – ours is the middle class even if we are trying to break free from thinking middle class. At the same time, we are intelligent, especially after red wine.

You just had a successful launch with a lot of big names backing you, that’s rather a side-ways approach to the children of night, how was the launch?

The big names backing might be coincidental as a result of us being children of the night. The launches were incredible and a great success – a big thank you to everyone involved.

In a  society of mediocrity where would you say “BLOEDSKANDE” stands out or in?

Bloedskande fits in where ever you want us to, just perhaps not in the way you would want us to. I guess that’s how we stand out.

Multi diverged artists would you say that?

Not sure what this means exactly but we a comfortable with our differences and probably do have different backgrounds.

Inspirations – the almighty Typical question – let’s twist this – where do you NOT get your inspirations from?

As soon as any form of music, art or film forces itself into genre it is not inspirational. I can safely say I was not inspired by Billy Ray Cyrus, but his daughter is growing on me.

Day dream believer?

Dream much, wish much or just do what you want? “Almal doen net wat hul wil.”

So how long have the band been together and who is who in the band?

From 2007. Shaun ‘Dr. Khupcake’ Ruysenaar plays them drums. Siff dances, plays bass and vocals. Jan Smart plays the guitar and vocals.

Not meaning to generalise here but any band worth mentioning that may have brought you to your decision to become an artist?

According to Shaun, in terms of S.A. music the Nude Girls was his inspiration and internationally the rock solid Screaming Jets. Jan would like to thank Black Sabbath for their wonderful groove.

So where Do we get the albums from?

From One F Music – www.onefmusic.com , live shows and it will be in the shops soon.

(Interview by Scarlet Tryst)

Posted in Interviews, Media Archive Tags:


Bloedskande And Footnotes

Friday, 2 April 2010
Bloedskande

Bloedskande

Here comes a band of musicians to redefine the word and make it their own, or not?

When I asked how the band redefine words and what it takes to make it fit a concept which isn’t even remotely linked to incest – Jan Smart frontman of Bloedskande answered…

Lyric-wise we don’t redefine words. The power of the word is in sentences, we don’t try to redefine words, but redefine ideas in sentences. We make our observations of the ‘real world’ and that’s the extent of any attempt of redefinition. If you are referencing the name of the band, we have chosen the term Bloedskande as it is open to interpretation. We don’t aim to make it our own, but we want people to think about their interpretation.

So this is not a concept album in terms of the lyrics, like Pink Floyd for instance have done in the past. The name is the concept and it is open to interpretation.

Bloedskande are a group of artists who banded together to fulfil their personal ideals and to challenge the public and what they think – I suppose to test the market, its pabulum and its fickle nature.

I really had to think hard about what I thought of this band of young men hailing from a middle class, suburban setting and coming up with the idea of leaving their name completely open to interpretation, inevitably redefining words, and employing the use of sentences to enabling them to side-step the original meaning – obtuse, I was immediately intrigued.

According to Jan Smart their music is in most parts social commentary. In their approach to writing songs they needed to sit back and observe the social dynamics in the world – including their own interactions with people and situations. Some of the content (of the music) ended up dark, but isn’t a negative message. It’s a realistic observation about the life they are subjected to, said Smart.

I decided to get the opinions of the people they have worked with, the people who put this vision together.

And so my journey in to Bloedskande began: Firstly Bloedskande are Jan Smart – guitars and vocal, Siff – Bass and vocal, and Shaun ‘Dr Khupcake’ Ruysenaar – on drums.

The 9 track self-titled album is ‘n c.d vol ‘Wroeg’ (agony). In the cover booklet there are photographs of the band members in various locations in and around Johannesburg. Shadowy figures against alley walls and under bridges, stencilling their existence on our every day and how many of us noticed? I asked the band how these really striking paste-up’s were associated with the music.

Jan Smart commented thus: “The photographs and the paste-up campaign was used to emphasise the idea of observers…” So, the band pulled a Cassius (The Great Observer) on us. Did they presume to know what life was like for me, by observing me and writing my life? Okay I’ll take the bait, I am slightly paranoid.

So I went a spoke to another paranoid soul like myself – Drikus Barnard – as he is inextricably linked to the band. I asked him to comment on his experiences and his impressions:

“I recorded (Bloedskande in Lekker Rus Studios, Johannesburg) in the winter and spring of 2009.

Working with the band was fun, intense and at the odd interval, frustrating, strong wills came to the fore and, to quote Ian Curtis, “Our vision became a bit blurred”. My duties as a producer were suspended and (the result is) I simply recorded the guys, safe in the knowledge that it would end up in the very capable hands of Paul Riekert (One F Music). We (Drikus and the band members) managed to finish this with a firm handshake and the friendships remained intact.

The concept of the album to me (Drikus), is that of an Afrikaner staying in Joburg and having this love/hate relationship with the city. He explores the inevitable demise of his language and culture, and takes solace in rock and roll. He also aknowledges a universal feeling of loneliness, hence the stirring finale, Almal Alleen; my favourite track on the album. Reflecting this (concept) in the recording was easy: Make sure the angry young men don’t tweak the vocal mics.

I (Drikus) would describe Bloedskande as a classic example of the power trio filling the gaps with a lot of good old aggression. They have an excellent stage presence, and most importantly, they growl. If I see one more band that whines I’m gonna top myself.

With the right crowd bouncing the bands energy right back at them things will lead to a nice little moshpit and a partykie will be had by by all, but us South Africans, we love to just stare, dont we?

As for the content, some heavy shit is spoken so it may not be every baby’s chocolate.

Advice to artists: Be exactly who you want to be, audiences know if your faking it, and very important: your profession is no more or less important than that of a plumber, so save the god illusions to professionals like Mr Malema. Studios are not rehearsal rooms so be prepared, and become intimate with a metronome before you learn to walk. Oh, and fire your producer when your visions get blurred, it is your product after all.

I recorded Bloedskande because I believe in them, I saw them grow over the last year and it’s my sincerest wish that they continue to do so.

Can I go now?”

Last stop before the session with my friend the Ipod, a talk with Paul Riekert, head of One F Music Studio. Paul mixed and mastered Bloedskande from the tracks he received from Drikus Barnard.

Paul’s impressions of the music are, “At the core of Bloedskande’s debut album are rage and frustration.

Fortunately, they express this in an intelligent way, without surrendering any of the intensity. This album could only have come from Joburg, it couldn’t have come from anywhere else, that cynical fast moving culture, they sing about Joburg. There is a lot reference to urban decay and the beauty that comes with that. If you look at the photos they use for the cover and video that hints at that and ties it together, so you know what you are in for. What is nice is the ambivalence of opposing the culture of urban decay and praising it. The negativity expressed comes from exposure to this decay and they want it (Joburg) back. Also amidst all this negativity they crack some jokes, cynical but funny. ”

Bourbon? Check. Kitty Cat? Check. Ipod? Check.. Lets go listen then shall we?..

The first track Joburg Terug starts with a crack of thunder and proceeds to let us in on the secrets held within the album.

The visuals are that of a godforsaken glue-sniffing Joburg Child Of The Night who found his faith in an alley. An intoxicted body to still the soul and his life’s wishes are that which rob him of everything. Sleeping with the dead and dreaming with the gods, wanting nothing more than to have Joburg back tonight…. this Sodom so dark and bad.

Using author Daniel Levitin’s guidelines for bullshit-detecting I surrendered to Bloedskande, and smelt and felt the haunts and spaces I had all but forgotten, as I once again ‘missioned’ around Johannesburg’s inner city streets to the great libraries, sat in bars in Yeoville, danced and got wasted in the alternative nightclubs of the time, bought books and music in Braamfontein and Hillbrow and generally explored this Joburg information mecca.

Wandering thorough the album in the dark morass of my mind as I continued to decipher what they are on about conceptually and being completely immersed in their music, the penny finally dropped – when track 5; entitled Die Skip Wat Sink played. In this track the band speak of the Afrikaans language hanging on the gallows – “lets party while it dies”, they say. Suddenly I was able to interpret the name Bloedskande and it became a reality, Bloedskande to my mind was about all stigmas and strife of Afrikaans artists as well as Afrikaans youths especially have to live with in South Africa.

Drikus mentioned his ideas on the concept and by far that made the most sense to me. I am in the business of music and audio, so all the pretty pictures supporting music mean nothing to me if the music doesn’t hit me sonically or lyrically. What is the point of music then? I often say that when I close my eyes, pour a drink and listen to something that has passed my desk, I want a private audience with the band. THAT experience is the one that will sell me on the product or makes it fail, One F Music is a company based on listening to the emotions of others and not censoring these – I want to feel something gudammit, and I felt the Afrikaans language die in that song. I stood up to fight the fight to keep it alive, and I was surrounded by a great sadness for these boys and the truly innovative Afrikaans musicians I work with daily – the fear of falling in to the cracks was very real. So not only are we attending the funeral of the Afrikaans language, but so too have cultures changed, the X Generation has seperated itself from the Y Generation and we sit with a new breed of musicians and artists that aren’t hanging on to political timeline and yet they pay still for that political timeline. Their message is the same and vastly different.

I haven’t been inside the actual inner city for a good long while now, I am now miserable but comfortable living on the perimeter in suburbia and longing for the Yeoville days and its folk. It was great to walk those streets in my mind again with Bloedskande. If music’s role is emotional, I went through a rung of emotions listening to the music. I held in my minds eye the faces of the paste-up’s of the band members all over Joburg in random locations and they were familiar, like old hats and friends. I loved being manipulated in to visiting those memories again and experiencing universal truth through the eyes of another, for as much as The Observers observe us – we witness them – in my opinion they passed the bullshit detector test.

Get this album – for me they have redefined the meaning of the word through music that makes you sit up and listen, music that is both meaningful in its effect on ones psyche and a has within its lyrics sentiments shared by many who love Joburg and Afrikaans…These young men should be heard!

(the Album is available through all good independents and One F Music directly – www.onefmusic.com)

Footnotes:

* Daniel Levitin in his book This Is Your Brain On Music speaks of what music does to one physiologically and why is it so powerful a medium to use to penetrate the private world of the music fan (a must read for anyone interested in music). His concept is based in Neuropsychology, on how music affects our brains, our minds, our thoughts and our spirit.

* The role of music is emotional.

* Advertising agencies create the ‘look’ of music and the hipness. This is how we become aware of fashion in music, and it creates an idea of one being better than the other.

*Music is manipulation, and we enjoy being manipulated and ‘made’ aware of the need to feel things through the eyes of another.

*For the artist, the goal of painting or musical composition is not to convey literal truth, but an aspect of a universal truth, that if successful will continue to move and to touch people even as contexts, societies and cultures change.

*On the Bloedksande look and feel:
Marketing concept and graphic design – Eras Gous and Moira-Gene Sephton. Eras has been there right from the start with Bloedskande. I remember seeing an early Bloedskande poster designed by him. The design is easy on the eye, visually enticing and somewhat spooky all at once, he did a fabulous job on the logo. A bloodsack and a booze bottle, linked by a cord that reads on the left – ‘Bloed’ and on the right, ‘Skande’, the perfect image for the ‘Y Generation’.

* On Mariska Ison:
..and speaking of images… the photography was executed by Mariska Ison for the paste-ups, and so I thought I’d have a little chat with her too…
I asked Mariska how she created the visual moodiness of our voyeurs The Observers according to the brief she had received, she replied: “Bloedskande is a hard-rock band with a strong message. Using the brief, I decided to use strong sidelight to create contrast and mood, because they are all photogenic , it worked perfectly”, and indeed they are strong photographs to match the message, I thought. Mariska has been in the photographic world for a number of years, and has been involved with many interesting photographic artists and projects she says, “I qualified at the University of Technology in the Vaal Triangle. After which I assisted Nick Boulton full-time for a period of four years. Then I was a freelance photographers assistant to Shane Rowe, the late Crispin Plunkett, Francki Burger and other inspirational photographers”. Most recently she has had Die Brixton Moord en Roof Orkes under her lens and assisted Pol Ramalheiro shooting The Parletones, you can view her work on Facebook search her by her name ‘Mariska Ison’, her photo galleries are awesome.

* On Drikus Barnard:
The last we saw of him for two years was the end of Die Brixton Moord and Roof Orkes. Today the band is back on the map and ready to make waves once again. The frontman for the aforementioned band, Andries Bezuidenhout released his latest solo offering entitled Bleek Berus and Drikus had quite a bit to do with that album, for more on this read: http://www.facebook.com/notes/clair-cantrell/andries-bezuidenhout-bleek-berus-his-second-solo-offering/155652658420

* Alternative nightclubs of the time:

  • Le Club
  • The Doors
  • Alcatraz
  • Sub Zero
  • The Fridge

* Bloedskande launched their self-titles album at Prosound on the 17th March 2010.

They are included in the Prosound / One F Music sessions – live recordings done on world-class equipment by a world class sound company. What more could a band of cult-status ask for? Not much with such generosity….
Thanks Prosound – thanks Jon Penreath who mixed the band, set them up on the stage and engineered the recording -

want to know more on how to get these – contact lisa@prosound.co.za or myself on Clair@onefmusic.com

Words and Photo by Clair Cantrell

Posted in Media Archive, Releases, Reviews Tags:


Met Jou In My Kop, a page out of the book of Bittervrug

Wednesday, 24 March 2010

Source: Underground Press (Met Jou In My Kop, a page out of the book of Bittervrug 24 March 2010)

Nick Cave said in his “Secret life of a love song”, “It is no wonder sadness is so sad, melancholy hates haste and sits in the back of the class”. He was referring to a state of mind that Garcia Lorca coined in his writings, and what the Spanish call “Duende” - ( Duende (art), a difficult-to-define phrase in the Spanish arts that connotes emotion and authenticity.)

Charles Badenhorst is duende personified. One cannot put this artist in to a box and label his music in genre specific terms. Very seldom in life does one come across artists like these for they are often denied their rightful place in the compulsive modernity of the music industry. True raw emotion is tamed for airplay and tamed further – to market an individual who will invariably slip through the cracks that are so well formed by industry-heads.

Bittervrug

Bittervrug

Charles Badenhorst aka Bittervrug is an artist that endures across genres and across linear marked selling-time. Charles Badenhort is an emotional artist, he speaks from a very personal view of the world around him and himself. Bloed Vir Ontbyt, his debut offering released by One F Music in 2007 saw Charlie jumping off the deep end and learning to swim in torrential waters. With Bloed Vir Ontbyt Charles immersed himself not only in the underground music scene, but also the visual side of Bittervrug. He is an animator by profession and his visual art through his animation company Fopspeeen Moving Pictures compliments his content brilliantly. You have to surrender to him or miss the point completely. Bittervrug’s music video Hoppelpertjie and the album Bloed Vir Ontbyt received a Huisgenoot Tempo-Toekenning nomination in the Kopskuif catagory in 2008. Check out the Bittervrug channel on Youtube.

Charles launched his second offering on the 4th of March 2010 in Johannesburg at Prosound – The Shop. Just before Daars Wolke Buite was to be born, it poured with rain, ‘soos die harde nat trane val’, the mood was set for a performance by an artist who hits you intimately with his emotional gestures. His falcetto voice weaves in an out of pain and love, and the concequence of those emotions, leaving you somewhat fixated on the humanity you see and hear before you upon the stage, likened to Tom Waits, who always sees the human behind the mask – you are stripped of your mask in the face of Bittervrug.

It was absolutely necessary to document this moment for it is a rare occasion to see this man perform. Prosound provided the sound gear to record his launch for digital media, and so too the Prosound and One F Music Sessions were born. Jon Penreath was so kind as to offer his services for the evening’s event as sound engineer and he also engineered the recording. Charlie got to use all of the best gear money can buy. You will get the chance to get your paws on these recordings in a bit – we’ll keep you up to date.

Charles Badenhorst aka Bittervrug

Charles Badenhorst aka Bittervrug

It is rather ironic that a multi-million rand company would take a chance on an artist like Bittervrug. One of the driving forces behind One F Music is to document rare quality music and the people at Prosound understand that. Check out the impressive list of gear at the end of this article used for the recording and the live performance. Oh the truth be told, I have it on good authority that you may book a session and go and try out the gear. Get a hold ofLisa@prosound.co.za and book your session now.
Oh and Charles did play. Daars Wolke Buite was born to the media, that unique and special moment captured for eternity, thanks again to Jon, and the rain you ask? We all thought that was the universe’s blessing in the end..
www.onefmusic.com
www.prosound.co.za
www.fopspeen.co.za/content/cv.html

Vocal Mic: Electro-Voice ND767 Dynamic super-cardioid
Guitar Mic: DPA 4099GTR instrument mic
Into a Midas Venice 160 mixing console

Front of House: Electro-Voice TourX 15” Loudspeakers
Run by Electro-Voice Q-Series amplifiers

Monitoring: Electro-Voice TourX 12” Floor Monitor

Processing: TC Electronic M-OneXL Reverb/Delay

Recording: TC Electronic Konnekt 24D interface (taking direct outs from Midas)

FOH Monitoring Headphones: Sony MRD7506 (recording) and MDR7509HD (FOH)

All cables made by Prosound.

Clair Cantrell onefmusic ©

Posted in Media Archive, Releases, Reviews Tags:


Album Review: Andre van Rensburg

Thursday, 7 January 2010

Source: Scarlet Tryst (Underground Press – 07 Jan 2010)

Andre van Rensburg

Do we deconstruct the music in an elevator that’s the thought that occurs when I think of Instrumental albums, are we a gang of thieves who shun the non-lyrical content of an album that has no words but has meaning in the evanescence of a din that denotes an emotion that could have encompassing substance? When imagery comes to mind but only the composer can wield the illusive thought provocation that he has had in mind and the transference then onto the audience, I’m referring to Andre van Rensburg With his two solo albums layered with heavy cognitive breakdowns of constructs that could easily be on track with Angelo Badalamenti; this is an Odyssey.

Concrete

Concrete (2007)

On opening the beautiful encased disc “Concrete”; Black & White tones would lead one to believe that only misery would prevail but alas merry folk if one listens there is a sense of all sorts of yellow-and-blue and a hint of tender. Easy to the ear then at a leap a surprising opus will have at the core of your being jolted to the sensory that is a simulacrum of what is to be heard. After listening to the Album I have to say I found humour yes I did in all the beauty of the Strings, Horns, Piano, Life, Guitar, Was that a building falling? Yes industrial music for the restless soul my song from Concrete Is indeed “end credits (my funeral)”, then there is “lynchmop”. The titles versus the music can make you ponder or the notes and clamber can either way it’s thought provoking music.

Unfinished Cities

Unfinished Cities (2008)

Muted colour tones I stares at the cover that’s colour of the sleeve, the disc has chards of glass. Muted. Songs are titled as Parts 1, 2, 3, etc. The music is more technically and feels more organised than last album “Concrete” but the deconstruction is still to be felt forever being built and broken. Heartfelt, something missing something found. Some songs have a Danger element Part 6 in Particular I could relate the strings leave you feeling like a violin spider on a bass drum all shook and on edge. Then there are songs that one could use as a serenade very scattered very much in one’s mind’s eye a theatre of masking parades. This is Easy Listening Industrusial.

Scarlet Tryst.

To order any of Andre’s work contact Clair at clair@onefmusic.com

Posted in Media Archive, Reviews Tags:


It takes a lot to laugh, it takes Bleek Berus to cry; Andries Bezuidenhout interview

Tuesday, 1 December 2009

Source: Fred De Vries (Fred De Vries – 01 Dec 2009)

Modest is the best word to describe Andries Bezuidenhout. Throughout our two hour interview he constantly tries to downplay the importance of his work as a singer/songwriter, as someone who carried the Voëlvry spirit into the 21st century. But for me Andries is one of the most exciting and versatile characters in the alternative Afrikaans scene. Many will know him as the singer of the now defunct Brixton Moord en Roof Orkes. But he’s also a sociologist at Wits University and a columnist for Rapport, while last year he published his first volume of poetry, Retoer.

It took him five years to come with a follow up to his first solo album Insomniak Se Droomalmanak. But the recently launched Bleek Berus was well worth the wait. Largely produced by Andries ex-band mate Drikus Barnard it has a bleak, almost tinny sound and songs that tell tales of leaving, murder and ecological disaster. Discomforting tunes for an uncertain age, but always with a touch of humour.

We meet at a Thai restaurant in Cyrildene, Johannesburg, not far from Observatory where Andries lives. He says he’s not very hungry and orders rice and tom yam. I choose green curry with fish. We finish a bottle of Chardonnay. And let it be known: Andries laughs a lot – and loud.

The songs on Bleek Berus seem to fit together quite nicely.

“The theme is dry places, the Kalahari, the highveld as a desert. It’s about where I feel at home, places without people.”

How did the theme come about?

“I really love the Namib desert and I love the Karoo and the Kalahari. And also, to be a bit pretentious, it’s the only place where Afrikaans is really rooted, in those dry places. That’s where Afrikaans is mostly spoken. Parts of the Karoo, parts of Namibia. If you think of Afrikaans as a South African language, that’s not the case. There were Afrikaners in Angola. The history of the language is not the history of South Africa, it’s a much more regional process. Die dorsland trek, the people who trekked through the Namib into Angola. Also in the Karoo you can’t pretend Afrikaans is a European language, because there it’s rooted in the landscape and the Khoikhoi people.”

Die Laatste Brandwag is your ecological song. It’s based on Bobbejaan Klim die Berg, which over the years has become a bit of a controversial tune. How did that one come about?

“Die Laatste Brandwag was for a tv-programme about traditional Afrikaans music and where those songs come from. They told me I had to use Bobbejaan, a traditional song. So what the fuck do you do? I swapped the meaning around. No one knows what the original is about, but I wanted to get away from the racist connotations. This one says: humans should never have lifted their hands off the surface of the earth.”

It has nothing to do with Ossewa Brandwag?

“Not at all. Baboons have brandwagte when the troops move around. They have one baboon constantly on the lookout for lions. That’s my reference. It’s about baboon telling people that they’re fucking up the place. I had an interesting email from Koos Kombuis about that song. He said he only understood it after the fourth listening. It first sounded like gibberish to him.”

It references Koos Kombuis and the FAK parody he did on Ver Van Die Ou Kalahari. But the rhythm and melody remind me of De La Rey.

“Well, it also has a rolling tune, I guess. But it was recorded in 2004, way before DeLa Rey. I worked around the tune of the original song, but turned it into a waltz, which is the first change. And then I turned a lot of the major chords into minor, to make it a sad song. We also did a great video. It was very tongue in cheek, with a doom prophet. He kind of mocked it. He had a poster that said ‘Die einde is naby’. And one that said ‘Wanneer kom die einde nou?’ And one: ‘Die einde moet nou naby wees.’ You have to send it up, you have to put the tongue in the check somewhere.”

You often strike me as a romantic, in the best way. A bit like the old Germans like Novalis, with their Sehnsucht and melancholia or the Swiss born Jean-Jacques Roussou with his deep love for nature. A bit heavy too…

“Well, there’s less humour here than on Insomniak. But I hope people see the humour in the arrangements. Like Die Ritme Van Chaos, which is a dicey song about white fears. We send it up completely with the arrangements. I love the arrangements. It’s tacky, computer based, a complete send up. The drums are so Leonard Cohen tacky 80s style. That’s all intentional.”

For a listener it’s not so easy to get all that irony.

“That’s fine.”

I thought: the man is depressed. I mean, look at the cover with its spooky, silver blue picture of an empty shack and a leafless tree.

“I love the cover.”

Me too, but it did give me the wrong impression. I took it too seriously. Most people will.

“Jaaaa. I’m not bleak about life here, I’m bleak about life. Living in South Africa, you feel more alive than you do in other places. Yes, shorter, that’s the ‘berus’ part, haha. But when you make peace with that… Look, the lyrics are kind of serious. And you have to counter the seriousness with a bit of humour. And on this one I had to do that with the arrangements. And Drikus understood it. He did it really well. I love the job he did on it.”

Bleakness is usually not a great selling point.

“I don’t expect to sell thousands of copies. I like a song with a good tune, a good solid structure and interesting lyrics. Folk songs, that’s what I do. Anyone can play my songs. I learned to play the guitar to Koos Kombuis songs. He said he only know five chords, and I figured them out. I know a bit more than five now. But I have no ambition to become a jazz musician.”

Two songs (Dis Net Werk Toe Wat Ek Nog Deur Hillbrow Ry and Die Sprinkhane Se Begrafenis) are about people emigrating. Do you blame those who emigrate?

“No, I don’t. I can perfectly understand. It’s fine, as long as they can live with that decision.”

You sound sad.

“Well, it’s tough when your drummer emigrates to Canada, hahaha. I have a sister inAustralia and a drummer in Canada. But they both didn’t emigrate because of fear, but to live there with their partner. I also have a good friend in London. It impacts on your life, the fact that people make decisions about where they live.”

Which song was the hardest to do?

“Vernichtungsbefehl. It’s 12 minutes long. That was either going to be a roaring disaster or it was going to work. And I think it works. I changed the original poem around on order and I worked a bit more on rhyme. But generally it doesn’t rhyme, and it has a strange metre. It was a huge challenge. Also because the melody is repetitive. I never worked on melodic change. I sometimes do bridges. But that one has to roll, like a dune, it has to keep going. The variation is more in the rhythm. It works because it doesn’t bore me yet. I’m sure it will, but I can still listen to it. For me that’s the criteria.”

It’s based on a poem in your book Retoer. How did that poem come about?

“That’s the army. Ferdinand was with me in the army. He was one of my friends. The poem talks about Namibia and the Herero genocide and the Vernichtungsbefehl (the destruction order). We once drove through the desert and came across skeletons. It’s interesting how you bury a person in a dune and the dunes constantly move, and how the skeleton was arranged in a much longer pose. The feet come out first, and as the dune moves it leaves the skeleton almost strung out. That’s an image that stuck. The song is basically about what the dunes hide and what they reveal. And in the end it’s about die skuld van onskuld. If you go into the army you’re 19, 20 years old. You don’t really know what you do. That goes for the German troops who were there when they massacred the Herero. It’s the same for the South African soldiers who were there (during the Border War). That’s why they want them young. They follow commands and orders. That song has the most of me.”

Why did you choose that particular poem?

“Again, it’s a strong theme in my life: taking responsibilities for things that you did that you don’t maybe… (voice trails off). Look, also it’s an important balance. It’s the only song that really introduces a political theme, tired old South African politics. But I hope it doesn’t do it in a tired way. I have mixed feelings about the place, because it’s also where I had to face some… Let’s put it this way: I started to develop my own personality for the first time in my life there, in a very late stage. I was 19.”

Who was Ferdinand?

“A friend of mine who was also in the army, a bit older. He was a big influence in my life at that time. He had studied before joining the army. He was at a different place in his life and questioned things, whereas I as a youngster from school just accepted what people told me. So that’s part of the theme. The song also refers to his attempted suicide. He drove around with the hosepipe in the back of his car for the time when he had enough courage to do it. One evening he got enough courage and went to Lovers Hill in Walvis Bay. He parked the car and took out the hosepipe, but it was too short to reach out to back window, hahaha. So he told us about this the next morning at breakfast, and it was interesting to hear the responses. Someone said: but Ferdi you have a hatchback, why don’t you just put the hose into the hatchback? He hadn’t thought of that. Maybe that was the right response, that no-nonsense response. That was the end of the conversation about the attempted suicide. No, I’m no longer in touch with him. I don’t even know if he’s still alive.”

Tell me about the story behind Dis Net Werk Toe Wat Ek Nog Deur Hillbrow Ry.

“That was another commissioned one, for a show we did at the Nelspruit Arts Festival, a Kerkorrel tribute with Stef Bos, Amanda Strydom, Jan Blom, Valiant Swart and I.They all had songs about Kerkorrel, so I wrote that one and decided to do it about the Voëlvry Generation, about where we are now. I reference (Kerkorrel’s) DonkerDonker Land. He was very important, but not more than Koos. James Phillips was the first one really, with Hou My Vas Korporaal. He’s the original and he inspired Koos, who listened to Wie Is Bernoldus Niemand?, and then realised where he had to go. So James started the whole thing. Koos agrees with that.”

How did he react to your Hillbrow song?

“His first response was: heimelik es ik bly ek hoef nie door Hillbrow werk toe te ry. Hahaha.

Does it still evoke those feelings of melancholia and nostalgia when you drive there?

“Hillbrow is interesting these days. A lot of it is picking up and picking up really fast. There’s a lot of renovation going on. In fact the Chelasea Hotel has already been renovated, so the song is already dated. So the song a bit more swartgallig than reality. There’s also a tacky ending to the song, a naïve kwela that all these guys used to do in the 80s.”

How do you relate to the Voëlvry generation?

“Voëlvry was the first movement. A lot of people feel part of it, even though they didn’t play in a band. But they were there. It was a sort of collective ‘fuck you’ to the Botha’s. I was 19 when Voëlvry happened in 1989. I was in the army. I saw Bernoldus Niemand live, playing with Koos Kombuis, but I never met him. Kerkorrel moved into a different circuit when I met Koos and Valiant. [Brixton Moord en Roof Orkes] were the third wave, after Valiant and Joos Tonteldoos. I’m just a blip on the cultural scene.”

You’re so self-deprecating.

“No, honest. It’s not that I made a big impact music wise, people know me more as a newspaper columnist than a musician.”

What do you listen to these days for inspiration?

“I know it’s a cliché but still Leonard Cohen. I listened to New Skin For The Old Ceremony before I came here. I love girly backing vocals, especially with a boring voice like mine. You have to soup it up a bit.”

Leonard Cohen writes lots of love songs. There’s a lack of those on your album.

“My greatest fear is to be corny. I have tried, but I just abandon them. The love song is the most difficult one to write, especially in Afrikaans. That’s the strange thing about Afrikaans. English are more willing to be corny. Afrikaans comes across as soetsappig. It’s a gritty language and when you move away from that the contrast is just so stark.”

You now also study poetry at Stellenbosch University. How does writing song lyrics and writing poetry differ?

“I started writing poetry in order to get away from the discipline and the strong, fixed metre in writing lyrics. But there’s a bit of a snag there: if you do use metre in poetry it has to be more fixed there than in the song, because when you sing a song you can smuggle a bit with how you sing it. My approach to poetry is generally more free verse, so for me that’s an escape.”

Is there poetry in your lyrics?

“Die Sprinkhane Se Begrafnis is there purely for the line: ‘En die sprinkane hou begrafnis op my kar se voorste ruit, muggies as confetti vir die dood se bruid’. I was driving at night and stopped and wrote down the words. I often stop to write when I drive. Look, (he points at the lyric sheet, at the words of Hoëveld-Utopia), the same happened with Nigel and Balfour in winter, I love the highveld in winter. I so disagree with Toast (Coetzer, who wrote a song called The Highveld (Is A Shit Place To Be In Winter)). I hate the highveld in summer, I love it in winter, that’s when it’s beautiful, really really beautiful. The blue gums, the dry grass land, the broken fences, the smoke, the mine dumps. What more do you want? Fucking Table Mountain? I appreciate it when I see it as a desert. That smell of the veld fires. When you arrive from overseas and drive home from OR Tambo invariably there’s a veld fire that welcomes you back. That veld fire is home. Bleak? That’s who we are, a bloody mine town with poison in the soil.”

Posted in Interviews, Media Archive Tags:


Andries Bezuidenhout – Bleek Berus Press Release

Wednesday, 21 October 2009

Source: Underground Press (Andries Bezuidenhout – Bleek Berus Press Release 21 October 2009)

Album: BLEEK BERUS
Artist: ANDRIES BEZUIDENHOUT
Label: ONE F MUSIC
Release Date: OCTOBER 2009

bleek-berus-front2

Bleek Berus

English Version:

One F Music announces the release of Andries Bezuidenhout’s second solo-CD, Bleek Berus (roughly translated: ‘Bleak Resignation.’) Andries is a leading Afrikaans singer-songwriter.

Bleek Berus contains ten brand new songs, most of which were recorded by former Brixton Moord & Roof Orkes (‘Brixton Murder and Robbery Band’) member Drikus Barnard from 2007 to 2009. Also on the album is “Die laaste brandwag,” (‘The Last Sentinel’), which was recorded by Paul Riekert in 2004 for KykNet’s programme “Die liedjies wat ons ken.”

Thematically most of the songs draw on the theme of deserts and other dry places, be it the Namib, or the Highveld as a human desert. “Vernichtungsbefehl,” the last track, with its references to the Herero genocide in Namibia in 1904, is also available as a poem in Andries’s book of poetry Retoer. As in his previous work, themes such as identity and emigration are explored, but in new ways.

Musically speaking Bleek Berus is recorded in the style of contemporary Americana and alt-country, but with a strong local flavour – acoustic outlines filled out with subtle electronics.

The album follows Insomniak se Droomalmanak (‘Insomniac’s dream diary’) (2003), as well as Spergebied (‘Restricted Zone’) (2002) and Terug in Skubbe (‘Back in Scales’) (2005), which he recorded with the now disbanded Brixton Moord en Roof Orkes. His debut book of poetry Retoer was published by Protea Boekhuis in 2007.

Afrikaans Version:

One F Music kondig met genoegdoening die vrystelling van Andries Bezuidenhout se tweede solo-CD, Bleek Berus, aan. Andries is reeds bekend as een van die land se mees toonaangewende singer-songwriters.
Bleek Berus bevat tien splinternuwe songs, waarvan die meeste deur Drikus Barnard tussen 2007 en 2009 opgeneem is. Dit bevat ook “Die laaste brandwag,” wat deur Paul Riekert in 2004 opgeneem is vir KykNet se program “Die liedjies wat ons ken.”
Tematies sny die meeste van die lirieke by die tema “woestyn” aan, hetsy die Namib, of die Hoëveld as menslike woestyn. “Vernichtungsbefehl,” die laaste track, is ook beskikbaar as gedig in Andries se digbundel Retoer. Temas soos identiteit en emigrasie word weer ontgin, maar op nuwe maniere.
Musikaal is Bleek Berus in die styl van baie van hedendaagse Americana en alt-country opgeneem, maar met ʼn plaaslike inslag – sterk akoestiese buitelyne wat subtiel met elektronika ingekleur word.
Die nuwe album volg na Insomniak se Droomalmanak (2003), asook Spergebied (2002) en Terug in Skubbe (2005), wat hy saam met die nou ontbinde Brixton Moord en Roof Orkes vrygestel het. Aan die einde van 2007 het sy debuutdigbundel Retoer by Protea Boekhuis verskyn.
Interview:

CLAIR CANTRELL FROM ONE F MUSIC ASKS ANDRIES A FEW DIFFICULT QUESTIONS ABOUT BLEEK BERUS:

  1. Why did it take you so long to release another solo album?
    Most of the songs and the concept for the album were ready a few years back. I had initially planned to record and release it shortly after the last Brixton Moord & Roof Orkes album Terug in Skubbe. Since the band’s first CD Spergebied was followed by a solo one, Insomniak se Droomalmanak, I thought it would be a productive rhythm. Kind of like band, solo, band, solo, and so on. But things didn’t work out that way. The band was in a bit of a crisis because of a shortage of new material, so I decided to suspend the solo project and to use the songs for the band. And then that also didn’t work out. I guess the songs were too introspective for the band, which was a rock band after all. When the band finally disbanded, I focused on poetry for a while, but the songs nagged to be recorded. Now, finally, after many years, I can release them.
  2. The album is imbued with a sense of loss. Do you think it is time to, “Vat jou goed en trek Ferreira”?
    For many it is, but not for me. My answer to that question is in the song “Dis net werk toe wat ek nog deur Hillbrow ry.” I’ve given far too much to this country and I’ve taken far too much from it to pack up and leave. But many of the songs deal with those decisions, and friends and family who decide otherwise.
  3. You chose Drikus Barnard, who is a relatively unknown producer. What sparked that decision and what was the experience like?
    Drikus, also known as Brixton Barnard, started recoding the songs for the Brixton Moord & Roof Orkes album, as bass player and co-vocalist. It made sense to continue working with him on the songs when the band project didn’t work out. He knows my songs well and is the right cynical antidote to the little bits of sentimentality that sometimes creep into my songs. In the end the recoding process took two years and I think he did a wonderful job. I hope people sit up and take notice of his work as a left field music producer.
  4. Tell me more about your book in relation to this album and also the book launch you are attending on the 21st?
    The book is called “As almal ver is”. It is a collection of essays about Diasporas and South Africans abroad, edited by Afrikaans poet Danie Marais. I contributed a piece on my visits to my sister in Australia and to Ockert (the former drummer of the Brixton Moord & Roof Orkes) in Canada. The book also contains comic strips and a beautiful lyric by David Kramer about a man, who emigrated to Canada, who visits the South African town where he grew up. Danie asked my to sing some of my songs that deal with the issue at the launch. But I must say, my album is more about staying than it is about leaving.
  5. “Bring die buie, bring die reën, laat die wolke hulle trane oor droë grond ween” – has it happened yet? It has a response almost Nick Caves “Weeping Song” with a beacon of hope and also the “Ship Song”, with a bit of “1000 kisses deep”, this is your Bittervrug, “Ek sien jou in my drome”. You tell me…
    The inspiration for the song comes from Lüderitz in Namibia. The town gets its water from deep under the surface of the desert; age old fossil water. The water tastes pure and feels soft on your skin. The Afrikaans poet Wilma Stockenström wrote a beautiful, but cynical poem about this called “Koichab se water.” My song about water under the desert’s surface is an attempt at a love song. I’m not very good at writing love songs, or declaring my love, so it is filled with trepidation. I can only hope that it works.
  6. Explain the themes intrinsic to your album, and the relationship with Joburg – do you hope she misses you?
    I initially wanted to call the album “Dorsland,” but that title had been used by someone else. Most of the songs are about the desert. I love the Karoo, the Kalahari, and the Namib. That is where I feel at home. Those are also the parts of southern Africa where Afrikaans is mostly spoken. In the Karoo Afrikaans cannot pretend to be a European language, it is unashamedly indigenised. Like the landscape, it is a tough, barren language, filled with sand and dust. I don’t feel I belong in Johannesburg, as if I’m just one of many immigrants from across the world who scrape a living here. But the Highveld also has its own beauty, especially in winter. That is what the song “Hoëveld-utopia” is about, where the album’s title comes from – bleek berus – bleak resignation. Even though the Highveld is a cold human desert, people seem to find beauty and warmth here. When I think of the place as a desert, I do too.
  7. Do you make the same statements with your visual art as you do with music and your written word projects, do you speak the same ‘language’ in each medium? Not necessarily a written but emotional language?
    I’m currently working on landscapes, or rather cityscapes of Johannesburg as seen from the balcony of my apartment. So I guess so. But painting allows me to escape words. When I paint I stop thinking in language and go numb. Without it, I think I’d go completely mad.
  8. Making an album is making something and letting it walk its own road, Nick Cave likened his songs to being sad eyed children, your poetry, music and visual art – what is your relationship to these?
    The problem with recorded albums and printed poems is that, unlike people, they can’t grow further. It’s final. So they’re not children. But some psychoanalysts argue people make art because of a fear of death. Apparently they also have children for this reason. So art and children are both attempts at immortality. Since I’ve never been in therapy, apart from the occasional session with Jack Daniels, I’m not sure about this. I’m happy to live a life that is only examined in lyrics. Who cares about immortality? That is the joy of working in a dying language. You know there won’t be people who speak or read Afrikaans two centuries from now, so Afrikaans songwriters and poets can never have pretentions of immortality. I hope this doesn’t sound too melodramatic, but at least we’re allowed to give our language a decent funeral.
  9. This is certainly your most eloquently written album – tell me how your studies have broadened your ability to communicate what it is you wish the listener to “see”.
    Thanks for the compliment. I guess you’re referring to the course in creative writing I’m doing with Marlene van Niekerk and Willem Anker? That is more for poetry, but I hope in future it will improve my lyrics as well.
  10. Why are your comments on life so ‘bleak’ – why the dry, dark, ironic side of life – comment?
    I don’t know. I don’t think I’m a particularly depressed or depressing individual. I hope people hear the humour in the lyrics and appreciate some of the tongue-in-cheek arrangements as well. After all, a little light makes you see the dark even better.

MEDIA COMMENTS ON PREVIOUS ALBUMS

    Spergebied, Brixton Moord & Roof Orkes (2002)

  • “Firmly in the middle of the new wave of Afrikaans rock bands, BMRO plays driving folk rock – kind of like Koos du Plessis had he ever heard Nirvana… Their debut album is uncomplicated in sound and filled with great songs (good lyrics is one of their hallmarks) about women, drinking, Jo’burg, yuppies, road rage and life in general… On the whole, music that will make you feel better the morning after you did something reprehensible.”– Toast Coetzer, SL Magazine, December 2002/January 2003
  • “This is not a very cheerful album on the lyrical side, but the music really rocks. So, to mis-quote Syd (Kitchen, not Barrett), this CD is not for sissies, but the brave listener who ventures into this Restricted Area will be rewarded with some very unrestricted Afrikaans Rock.”– Brian Currin, South African Rock Digest
  • “Afrikaans music in the folk or folk/rock style has been around for ages, producing excellent song writers like the superb Koos du Plessis and Koos Kombuis, reflecting many aspects of life in South Africa. This album carries on in that fine tradition… No-go areas of the human psyche, despair, hope, deterioration, love and violence are confronted with humour, anger, irony and sensitivity using brilliant imagery… Don’t let me give you the impression that this album is all doom and gloom. There is a great balance and serious fun, some great lines and good music that will leave you wondering when the next Brixton Moord en Roof Orkes CD will be coming out.”– Etienne Creux, Pretoria News, 21 August 2002
  • “Hierdie is woordemusiek, maar nie daai kak soort wat traai diep wees nie. Lyrics gaan oor gewone stuff soos die lewe in Joburg, hoe kak yuppies is, armgeid, en road rage. En wie sal ooit weer kan stry dat daar meriete is in dronkword op mens se eie?… Doen nou julself ‘n moerse guns en gaan kry die CD of check die ouens live. Die CD het 12 befokte tracks op, dis bedonnerd gerecord met ‘n lekker cover en dis meer as die moeite werd. En moenie by ons kom huil as jy jou broek natpis na “Geraamtes in jou kas” nie. Sterk wees vir daai song.”– CHopper CHarlie, watkykjy? Augustus 2002
  • “Afrikaanse rock het liriekskrywers soos hierdie nodig.”– Pieter Redelinghuys, Insig, Junie 2002
    Insomniak se Droomalmanak, Andries Bezuidenhout (2003)

  • “It has taken more than ten years, but at last there is a proper follow-up to Koos Kombuis’ seminal ‘Niemandsland’. On ‘Insomniak se Droomalmanak’ singer/songwriter Andries Bezuidenhout has taken Koos’ knack for melody and bittersweet Afrikaans lyrics and catapulted them into the new millennium. The fourteen songs tackle life in Gauteng, with its suburbia, yuppies and old lefties now living behind huge walls. There’s irony, protest and literary references. And not a single trace of Afrikaner nationalism.”- Fred de Vries
  • “While some idiots give Afrikaans music a terrible name with their badly produced songs about rugby or Rooi Rok Bokkies, at least there are some artists like Koos Kombuis, Kobus! and Piet Botha to save the genre from becoming a line-dancing joke. Andries Bezuidenhout subscribes to the introspective, thought-provoking school of minimalist philosophical expression, commenting on life and the world, from the little things to the bigger picture. The poetic themes of the dream world, the waking dream, sleepwalking existence and the reflection of South African city and suburban life, changes, angst and being white these days may be a heady mix, but it works. There are reflections on idealistic student-type causes and ideals, on hope, longing and the current dispensation – not merely politically but socially, economically and everything else. While it is quite obvious, the only really accurate comparison to be drawn would be with Andre LeToit (better known as Koos Kombuis), both in style and some subject matter. Bezuidenhout loves the language and uses it expressively…”– Paul Blom, Cape Argus, 27 October 2003
  • “Daar word baie gepraat oor ons land, sy probleme en die mense wat in hierdie omstandighede vasgevang is. Wanneer hierdie kwessies deur rym en sang getakel word, kyk jy weer op ‘n ander manier na die vreemde en wonderlike land waarin ons woon. As kunstenaars nog oor die moeilikhede kan sing en humor in situasies raaksien, kan dit jou help vrede maak met elektriese heinings en sekerheidsmaatskappye wat moet sorg dat vriende veilig kan kuier. Andries Bezuidenhout (van Brixton Moord & Roof Orkes) se kommentaar op die hedendaagse Suid-Afrika is skerp, op die man af en hartverskeurend mooi. Die lirieke vir sy CD Insomniak se droomalmanak maak vir elkeen sin, of hy uit die generasie linkses van ouds kom, of ‘n produk van die reënboog-situasie is… Soos die titelsnit aandui, is die saambindende tema wakkelê(wees) en droom van rus. Die ironie van iemand wat die wêreld juis in die donker nag duidelik sien, blyk uit feitlik al die lirieke. Op die meeste albums is ‘n snit of twee wat minder indruk maak as die ander. Selde gebeur dit dat elke snit op sy eie manier onder die luisteraar se vel kruip. Sonder om opdringerig te wees, maak Bezuidenhout ‘n sinvolle stelling in elke lied…”– Mariana Malan, Die Burger, 6 Oktober 2003
    Terug in Skubbe, Brixton Moord & Roof Orkes (2005)

  • “To bring out a great first album is wonderful but to sustain that growth and creativity and come up with an even better second album (albeit more than two years later) is impressive… With all the social commentary and insights of their excellent first album Spergebied, the new album is much tighter, with a harder edge, in music as well as the lyrics. The brilliant imagery, which is at times cutting, humorous or cynical but never bland, explores the human psyche, especially the darker side… While the powerful poetry of Brixton Moord & Roof Orkes’ lyrics is probably their best feature, it is the beautiful tunes and arrangements with great vocals that complete the whole package to make this very fine album.”– Etienne Creux, Pretoria News, 20 April 2005
  • “BMRO extend their survey of South Africa’s psycho-geography with Terug In Skubbe. With their driving garage blues rock blow-outs (“Vis”), pastoral luisterliedjie pit stops and gothic rock overhauls of Koos Doep ballads (“Dagboek van ‘n Swerwer”), the cult Afrikaans rock outsiders percolate a potent post-Voëlvry brew.”– Miles Keylock, CD Wherehouse, Mei 2005
  • “ ‘Wie wil nou ‘n mens wees?’ vra Moord Greeff in ‘Vis’, die eerste lied op die Brixton Moord & Roof Orkes se jongste album, Terug in Skubbe. Daar sal sekerlik stemme opgaan van skepsels wat mens wíl wees juis omdat dit vir óns ore is dat die musiek van hierdie album bedoel is. Dis net ménse wat sal verstaan waaroor die seer en die soet in die lirieke gaan. Visse, honde en voëls het voorregte, maar musiekwaardering is nie een daarvan nie. Hierdie album laat ‘n mens opnuut wonder oor rockers se intense kennis van die lewe… In die geheel het hierdie (die groep se tweede) album se musiek meer verskeidenheid as die eerste, wat hoofsaaklik folk-rock bevat… Hul aanslag wys kennis en begrip van poësie en kombineer dit op unieke wyse met die musiekgenre wat hulle gekies het.”– Mariana Malan, Die Burger, 11 Maart 2005
  • “Terug in skubbe is ‘n tema wat gaan oor omgekeerde evolusie. Soos die meeste songs op die album gaan dit ook oor persoonlike verval en agteruitgang, terwyl die tunes terselfdertyd die mooi daarin probeer raaksien. Gekompliseerde songs wat smag na die ongekompliseerde. Dis min of meer die uitgangspunt. Wanneer jy na dié band se goed luister, gaan dit nie anders kan as om te dink aan ‘n besonderse eiesoortigheid nie. Dit is ouens wat weet hoe om te jol, maar ook weet wat hulle uit hul musiek wil hê. Sover soos true school gaan, is jy hierso op die regte pad.”– Angola Badprop, Beeld, 18 April 2005
  • “Die verskillende stemme is wat die CD laat werk. Nie noodwendig sangstemme nie (maar dié is daar ook). Eerder stemme wat iets te sê of te vertel het, iets wat nog nie tevore gesê of vertel is nie. Terug in skubbe is ‘n lieflike CD. Die grootste gros in hardekoejawel-rock. “Vis”, “Spoed”, “Sussie se sweep” en “Terapie” staan uit. Maar daar is ook dié wat die vrug van folk en country pluk. Bowenal soek ek die Afrikaanse tunes wat vanjaar by songs soos “Lisa Forward” en “Trane van ‘n terroris” kan kers vashou. Terug in skubbe is ‘n juweel.”– Pieter Redelinghuis, Insig, Mei 2005
  • “Die manne van die Jo’burg Afrikaanse underground het weer gedilver en ‘n CD uitgebring waarvoor heelwat ander moet terugstaan. Terug in skubbe is ‘n tema van omgekeerde evolusie, maar dui eintlik op ‘n hunkering na eenvoudigheid in ‘n goor samelewing… Ander Afrikaanse bands gaan beslis ‘n paar tips in songwriting kan vang.”– Angola Badprop, Beeld, 2 Mei 2005
  • “Brixton Moord en Roof se musiek dra ou, afgeleefde Cats; groet jou met ‘n ghrieserige hand en ruik effens na sweet en ou whiskey. Dis liedjies oor middelklas- en minder-as-middelklasmense in middelklas- of minder-as  middelklasbuurte en die middelklas- of minder as middelklasdinge wat hulle doen. Die liedjie waaruit die CD-titel kom, Vis, verwys na ‘n gedig van D.J. Opperman waarin dit gaan oor die vrees om die evolusieleer mis te trap en ‘n paar trappe te gly… Kry dit as jy nie bang is vir musiek wat ‘n effense ghriessmaak in jou mond laat nie…”– Jaco Jacobs, Volksblad, 9 Mei 2005
  • “Brixton Moord & Roof Orkes haat dit as mens hulle die Afrikaanse rockgroep met ‘n gewete noem… Maar dis waar. Terug in skubbe is hul beste album tot dusver, hoofsaaklik vanweë die baie afwisseling wat produksie en musiek betref… BMRO rock hier harder as ooit tevore. Maar onthou ook om te luister wat hulle sê.”– Dirk Jordaan, Beeld, 11 Mei 2005

Posted in Interviews, Media Archive, Releases, Reviews, Uncategorized Tags:


Battery 9 2009 Tour dates Announced

Monday, 21 September 2009

Source: Underground Press ( Battery 9 2009 Tour dates Announced 21 September 2009)

TOUR DATES ANNOUNCED FOR BATTERY 9 TOUR 2009

Battery 9

26 September ‘09
PTA – VAMP Full Moon Lounge
B9
Plasticoma
Hexotericka

29th October ‘09
JHB – Pienk Kerk
B9 Unplugged
Bittervrug – Unplugged

4th November ‘09
Centurion – Steak and Ale
B9 Unplugged
Drikus and Gerhard Unplugged

7th November ‘09
Bloem – Aasvoel Klub
B9 Unplugged

31st October ‘09
PTA – Kasteel
B9
TBC
NuL
Ankst

Battery 9

Posted in Media Archive, Miscellaneous Tags:


One F

Friday, 18 September 2009

Source: Underground Press (Underground Press 18 Sept 2009)
One F logo

One F Music was started in 1994, by Paul Riekert, he is still at the helm of One F, 15 years later. The name One F stems from a Pixies song – Jefery “with one f”.

After much turmoil in the existing framework for music distribution and production, the underground music industry especially that in the alternative genre and Afrikaans language were getting a raw deal, and so the motivation was sparked to get something together to help these artists. To this day it is still the same difficult struggle, albeit that there is a platform for artists who are shoved to the fringe, that being One F Music.

*The end of apartheid has meant a loss of government support for Afrikaans, in terms of education, social events, media (TV and Radio), and general status throughout the country, seeing as how it now shares its place as official language with ten other languages. – wikipedia*.

We are A political, A religious, and A language – we like the language of music – because written word like the wikipedia quote I have just used as reference are still out there on the net and we still have Nicholis Louw’s in our midst this has to be mentioned. Having said that One F Music does not give a shit about the above. We do not care if you speak the English language, are Afrikaans speaking or if you speak Swahili – we are in it for the music! Not the politics surrounding music! and the exploitation of artists works in a sheep-mentality society that stands in wait for the next big thing! We also don’t care for the artist who fall in to the trap of sounding like any one else – all our artist are unique across genres.

Paul Riekert - One F

Paul Riekert - One F

One F Musics mission is to facilitate the production, distribution and manufacture of those artists products who would ordinarily be overlooked by the mainstream music market – for use of language some deem offensive (we do not care what you say) – for use of tones that are deemed to be unfriendly (we have enough friends) – and those that speak from a point of self not saying what “my friend” likes but what they personally feel. One F Music is not out there to make fistfuls of cash on the general pabulum that is spewed across our radio airwaves, we prefer a more intelligent approach.

Clair Cantrell - One F

Clair Cantrell - One F

So we are smaller – but our artists endure across fashion, and unlike other record labels we do not sweep them to the side when budget runs out, or people tire of the marketing strategy.
We are not genre specific either – what is good is good and doesn’t have to be put in a box – we are also not psychologists so your angst is welcome here – we quite like it.

We believe in those that believe in making good music – because music is so emotional – it is cathartic and it always astounds me that music is marketed in a visual fashion, but I can close my eyes I can still experience it, and because it is so personal nobody is going to experience it the way others will. So there again I am shtoomped with why people make music that will serve the mass hypnosis of idiots!

You may ask yourself at this point why we do it, my reply – because we deal in music that matters! That will never change and even if we don’t shift a million copies of an artist we will create awareness and you will still be able to get any artist from One F Music directly at any time, via postal order – we do not discontinue runs because they do not sell as fast – we keep them on the shelves for people to procure and appreciate always. If the corporates won’t take it we damn sure will. Screw them!

One F official Site: One F Music
One F – Postal address – P.O.Box 84250, Greenside, 2034 – Physical – By Appointment Only.

Music Genre type supported: We deal with any kind of music, as long as it it unique – we like it, it stays – we don’t it doesn’t. Don’t even think of sending Mp’3’s they will be deleted off the server, if you want us to listen – send to the postals!

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8 OUT OF 9 DENTISTS PREFER STICKY ANTLERS!

Wednesday, 9 September 2009

Source: Underground Press (Underground Press 9 Sept 2009)

From 25 September to 4 October, Sticky Antlers will be doing their first mini-tour through Cape Town. This exciting news comes in the wake of the recent release of their début album on the KRNGY Logo (with help from One F Music).

Despite the fact that the album isn’t available in any of S.A’s mainstream music shops yet, requests for the group to play in the Mother City flooded in over the last few months. When Jarred Figgins, the owner of Club EVOL, offered a big organizing hand, Sticky Antlers jumped at the opportunity to graze on some fynbos.

Sticky Antlers are one of the most interesting and hard working groups to have emerged from the dry, dusty land of Pretoria. This is one band which does not give you more of the same, of anything.

Sticky Antlers

Sticky Antlers

Their fiercely unique music is impossible to pigeonhole, but has been described as an amalgamation of experimental rock, pop, noise and alternative. Individual songs vary from mellow drones through transcendental grooves to earth-shattering distorted bliss.

Live, they are one of the most energetic and intense groups around. Wild and desperate, each band member milks every drop of expression out of their instrument(s), often to the extent of beating them into submission. Art SA magazine voted Sticky Antlers their “Second Young Bright Thing” for 2009 and the band has been the subject of numerous articles in various publications, including the Mail & Guardian, The Weekender, Pretoria News, The Star Tonight and A Look Away Magazine.

Confirmed shows in Cape Town are:

  • 25 September: Club EVOL
  • 30 September: The Assembly
  • 2 October: Club EVOL
  • 3 October: The Corner Bar

The tour will not only be a fantastic way to spread the Stickiness across our nation, but also acts as a great opportunity for the group to introduce the “KRNGY Logo”, which has been rumbling underground for some time now.

The KRNGY Logo seeks out musical oddities all across SA and does not work for profit or fame. In fact, the regular paradigm of music distribution is disregarded entirely; the aim being to find interesting musicians and groups who are truly passionate about creating original music instead of focusing on commercial concerns.

The label hosts a wide range of offbeat and limited edition merchandise items, entirely hand made by the band members themselves. Silk-screened T-shirts, CD-R’s (from as little as R10), CD’s, badges, Slime-O-Saurs and posters are only a few of the items available, all at very low prices!

The merchandise changes often, and editions can end at any time so you have to get whilst you can. KRNGY stands firmly on the foundation of the “do it yourself” ethic and has a strong “hands on” approach. Every part of production is handled in-house; even music videos are covered by KRNGY’s exceptionally creative video and animation department.

The KRNGY logo will also be launching “Taste Nightmare” on the tour. Taste Nightmare is a limited edition illustrated “zine” with original art by South African artists coupled with two CD’s focusing on local bands with strong DIY ethics and a limited edition silkscreen poster.

The KRNGY Logo Corporation Ltd.

The KRNGY Logo Corporation Ltd.

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St. J – Prophesy Project

Thursday, 27 August 2009

Source: Dawid Khats (Underhround Press 27 August 2009)

Dawid Kahts on ST.J

Making a guitar album is a daunting task. Firstly, you need some solid guitar chops. Secondly, you need to have a solid understanding of music as a universal language because in the absence of vocals and lyrics, you need a strong sense of composition in order to entice the listener. Thirdly, instrumental guitar music is not renowned for having pop sensibility. I bet my sweetest Fender Stratocaster that most people who own Joe Satriani, Yngwie Malmsteen and Steve Vai records are plectrum yielding maniacs themselves.

I salute anyone who undertakes the arduous task of creating an album where the guitar rules the roost with no other strings attached. (Excuse the pun). Does St. J – Prophesy Project succeed with this offering? Well he can certainly hold his own to the big guys. With wailing solos played with the ferocity and speed of Bruce Lee kicking ass and taking names, St. J can certainly use this album to acquire a teaching position at the GIT guitar university.

St J - Prophesy Project Beginnings cover

St J - Prophesy Project - Beginnings

The spiritual philosophy gives a welcome theme to the album and serves as a narrative in an almost Stravinsky-like fashion. There are a lot of different moods on the cd and it ensures that this instrumental guitar music does not fall into the trap of becoming yet another soundtrack for an extreme sport program on TV. A pleasant surprise is the use of keyboards. The tracks “Repentance” and “Forgiveness” features some very intelligent keyboard playing to add different colour to the compositions.

There is a very strong Joe Satriani influence in this album which both a good and a bad thing. It is a good thing because if you are likened to Satch it means that you can really play the instrument damn well and that you heeded Mr. Zappa’s advise to “Shut up and play your guitar”. The downside of having such a strong influence from one artist in particular is that you are in constant danger of sacrificing your own individuality. Not that St. J has no voice of his own but at times the Satriani influence is perhaps a wee bit too strong. Well I guess being an artist is like walking a tightrope and there needs to be a balance between acknowledging your influences and giving something of yourself. I am really interested to hear where St. John will take his music from here and anticipate the follow-up to this album.

In a nutshell: this really is a nice album and highly recommended to anyone who loves guitar music. If you don’t like guitar music piss off and go and listen to Lady Gaga.

St. J - Prophesy Project

St. J - Prophesy Project

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NuL – Pretoria

Wednesday, 19 August 2009

Source: Underground Press (Underground Press 19 August 2009)

NuL is more than a band. NuL is part of a revolution, rising from the undiscovered underground of the Internet to surface randomly all across the worldwide web. It exploits the greed of the modern commercial Music Industry, by placing itself in the ever-widening cracks in the Music Industry’s draconian marketing strategy. The music of NuL does not adhere to any formula. It is raw, pure, and from the gut. NuL is musical guerilla warfare.

All of NuL’s music is freely available as high-quality downloads, and being Creative Commons licensed, NuL allows the music to be freely copied and distributed by anyone for non-commercial purposes.

NuL

NuL

History

Adriaan Pelzer and Simon Kruger have been working together since helping to form the avant-garde rock group Nothing in 1996. After Nothing broke up in 1998, they started experimenting with electronic music on a Pentium II 350 Mhz. Using mainly Soundforge, Fruity Loops and Cool Edit Pro, the machine was barely capable of keeping up with their immense creative drive. During this time, they often resorted to Open Source tools on the Linux Operating system, like Csound, ECASound and raw programming to generate sounds and noise with often very random results. Their style of preference during these early days was mainly glitch and drum ‘n bass, inspired by artists such as Aphex Twin, Autechre, Squarepusher and even Sigue Sigue Sputnik. These early works resulted in their first CD, EeN, released by themselves in 2004. This release is in itself an interesting case study, as all of the music on the CD as well as the CD artwork are available as free downloads, allowing anyone to create their own CD. This is marketed as the “Please Pirate” campaign, aimed at attracting the Pirate CD market of Southeast Asia. In 2004 Pelzer moved to Singapore with his wife, Mareli Minnaar, and together they started developing a more hard-edged industrial sound. They also started experimenting with vocals on most of the music. In 2005, while in Singapore, they created the NuL website, http://www.nul.com.sg, which acts as the central seeding point for all of NuL’s media online. In 2009 the total downloads have reached an astounding 50000 on the website alone.

When Pelzer and Minnaar returned to South Africa in 2006, they found an overwhelming awareness of NuL, mainly as a result of their online endeavours whilst living in Singapore. They subsequently started NuL as a live show, together with Kruger and two new members, Dawid Kahts (guitar) and Niel de Lange (video jockey). The live show has been a huge success, and incorporated for a time the shocking though energetic live video mixing of Niel de Lange. The number of fans is still growing with every gig, and NuL plans to grow its live show accordingly.

The second CD, Twee, was released in 2007. The band has been joined by Gerrie Roos, who does full-time sound, and Chris Erasmus, who handles Cameras and Lighting.

In 2007 NuL signed a distribution deal with OneF Records, run by Paul Riekert of the first ever, hugely successful Afrikaans Industrial band, Battery 9.

2009 saw an increase in activity for NuL following the launch of their third album, Drie, In June. 2009 also brought about some changes in the lineup with the departure of VJ Niel De Lange. The band, opting not to try and replace his artistry, compensated by focusing on introducing a more organic and dynamic feel to their live shows utilising Chris Erasmus’ phenomenal ability as a lighting technician.

NuL is:

  • Adriaan Pelzer – Keyboards and Vocals
  • Simon Kruger – Bass Guitar
  • Dawid Kahts – Guitar
  • Mareli Minnaar – Analog Synth
  • Gerrie Roos – Sound Engineer
  • Chris Erasmus – Cameras & Lighting

Influences:

Combichrist, Rammstein, Aphex Twin, Autechre, Front242, NIN, Kraftwerk, Skinny Puppy
Einsturzende Neubaten, Frank Zappa, Tom Waits, Pink Floyd, Iron Maiden, Mr Bungle, John Zorn

Discography:

NuL Een cover

Een

Een (2004)

  1. Wakkerslaap
  2. Op die Spykertafel
  3. Rina
  4. Die Gatsometer
  5. 280g
  6. Atari
  7. In die Aand in die Spens
  8. Die Ysterkoei met Beet
  9. Cancancancancancancan
  10. Hie Haai Hie Haai Hou
  11. Don’t mock the Animals
  12. Somer III
  13. Guy W Brush
  14. Nooit op Mars
  15. Die Generiese Ooms met die Ligblou Windbreakers
NuL Twee cover

Twee

Twee (2007)

  1. Online Superstar
  2. Vrees
  3. Swart
  4. Pyn
  5. Kokainekop Kosie
  6. Kaper
  7. Rina
  8. Kontaminasie
  9. Gerome Djimbovski
  10. Hardcore Rina
  11. Utopia
NuL Drie cover

Drie

Drie (2009)

  1. Elektro-Berzerk
  2. Über-Rampokker
  3. Mystic Bohemia
  4. Die Man Van Telkom
  5. God red die President
  6. Hoëveld
  7. Utopia
  8. Vloek
  9. Kokainekop Kosie (kom af)
  10. Vloek dub mix
  11. Elektro-Berzerk (refleksie)

Unreleased (But downloadable from the website)

  1. Laan van Smarte
  2. Plek

Nul’s official website: Nul
Other sources: OvertonePowerzoneReverbnationMogVampire FreaksMusic AlleyLast.fmiLikemxitmusicFrozen MusicFacebookAlternative Music

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NuL: Drie

Monday, 27 July 2009

Source: Clair Cantrell (Underground Press 27 July 2009)
Is there anyone who doesn’t love NuL?

The band NuL have now released their third offering!!!!
Aptly titled Drie.

I remember sitting in my office, come lounge, come kitchen, for the first time (no it is not true, that all things hurt for the first time) listening to Twee, NuL’s previous album, and jumped up and down at the prospect of getting this band involved with One F Music – if I had to abduct them myself this was going to happen – I know people who can make this happen but as it turned out my task was much easier. So Paul and I went to the Bohemian and saw them – fell in love with what they were doing live and invited them to tea / bourbon party.

NuL Drie cover

NuL Drie

We became immediate Rampokkers and will be to sepulchre. This album Drie courses through my alcohol filled veins with the fury of an atom bomb!

If you do not know NuL – what planet do you live on? They are just about as revolutionary as they come. Not just the stance they take on guerilla tactics by giving their music away for free to whomever wants it for download off their site, but also the industrial sound they have which is seriously lacking in the scene in South Africa.

And so we soldier on….

I listened to Drie for the first time yesterday – no pain again, just pure joy – it rings true with my own levels of anger, and lard knows I like venom. Their social commentary cannot be missed – so you freak out with anger that you feel about the state of the nation, the stupid people in it and the love of South Africa with the Aloe Mandala printed on the c.d itself, the Aloe is a theme throughout the cover design.

As much as I appreciate the download thing making music more accessible to people I love hard copy and Drie contains the brilliant artistic design of Niel de Lange – the Video Joggie.

There is a remix on Drie of Kokaine Kop Kosie, which features on Twee, a favourite among NuL fans world wide. The instrumentation is brilliant and Adriaan (front man) tells me that there was very little messing about with the final takes on the songs on the album – some of them are the original takes not like we all know can take up to 30 tries to get right if the guitarist is pissed – Dawid certainly wasn’t – he cooks like Satan, to get his stuff done just right, hardly any takes through processes that take away the autehnticity of the take, theirs are the real thing. The answer remix of Kokaine Kop Kosie, the original incarnation, is called Kokaine Kop Kosie – Kom Af, and cuts right through you – no salf te smeer. If you have ever come down – don’t on this song…otherwise please send photos.

Hierdie is ‘n klomp bitter bliksems but you dance you ass off. Great beats – great sound, great guys and girl.

Mystic Bohemia track three on Drie, is a powerful song with bass that hits you – well you know where, we are all adults, no need to elaborate – with a guitar sound to boot, F**k it is so good.

Pissed off as it is – gotta love it – I agree with every word spoken on this song, damn bastard cops!
It took me right back to the club raids we have had in the recent past.

O wee, o wee die SAPD, het ons verskree in ons local Kafee, my baby betas, en haar ontklee, my ‘n back hand teen die oor gegee

They go on to say that there was a small bust by the cops for two joints with jat rolled in them (poor people who can’t afford chronic, hee hee ) while –

In die loop van die selfde nag, is vier mense vermoor, 18 vrouens verkrag, die arme polisie se hande was gebind, hulle was doenig met die dinge van ‘n kind…

damn if that doesn’t say it nothing will. I love that about them – they are not afraid to say exactly what they want to, stuff people feel but are afraid to say have a voice with NuL.

Track 11 on Drie, titled Elektro-Berzerk speaks of the same, and one of my “personal favourites” – says she climbing out the Strepsils ad –

Adriaan’s deep voice is a sensual playground –

Se my, my vriend as jy vandag moet sterf, het jy jou lewe self geleef?

Het jy jou tyd geslyt aan ‘n ander se jolyt, of het jy op die hoe wind gesweef?

Was jy die hoof karakter in jou eie bestaan?

Of was jy net ‘n ekstra op jou stel?

Wys my al jou stories, laat ek deur hulle blaai.

Wys my jou geheime, laat ek hulle bietjie oorvertel.

Vernietig jou remote, verskeur jou koerant, buite jou vensters le ‘n ongerepte land, trek aan jou pantserdrag, jy is niemand se klerk, vaar die wereld in,

Elektro berzerk.

Elektro berzerk,

Elektro berzerk.

So for those of us who’s genes are made up of english mad dogs and South Africans, we can with all sincerity say we love them – and now is your chance to hear the insurrection, get some anger out and become an ardent fan. Drie will stand out in South African music as something to aspire to, not the usual mediocrity we are dished up to accept.

The rest I am afraid you will have to check out yourself – I have already let the cat out the bag.

Whoo hoo!.

Indeed! Another Bourbon down.

www.nul.co.za

Clair Cantrell – onefmusic

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“We have all had them” Cut out Collective

Sunday, 14 June 2009

Source: Clair Cantrell (Underground Press 14 June 2009)

Cut Out Collective

Cut Out Collective

We have all had them – those days when life seems too hard to handle. Those existential crisis days where the only thing that is going to make you feel f**king alive is music with balls.
So there I was, in exactly as I have described – what is it all about? Where does it all come from? Why are we here? These things can never be answered with just clarity.

“Enough is proverbially enough”, as they say and I had promised a friend I would do this for her, long stories about calls from Saudi Arabia one doesn’t have a gap to take, and so a friend steps up to the plate and helps – so, so much for existential crisis’s, the promise has to be filled, and a review will damn well be written.

What joy, what fun and what a band! Existential crisis? What existential crisis? I have been inoculated!

The Cutout Collective are one of those bands that can make you feel good if you are prepared to open your mind and take the sensory assault for what it is – and it does make you feel damn fine.

I normally don’t like to review on only three songs off a sampler c.d, this particular one entitled – Eponymous by the Cutout Collective – but hell these guys have the ability to say in one song what the rest take three albums to say.

This band is danceable and lively – with its dark undertones and clever synths (that have no baring on being a hippy) Cutout Collective will appeal to any music taste, and to anyone who likes schizophrenic, challenging (for lack of better term) dance music – a mix of four on the floor and great rhythms. If you like music that has a good solid beat, interesting lyrics and clever arrangements this is for you. The mix is amazing! It is punky and dark and happy and emotional with a message to boot. I have a policy – if you are not on my iPod you do not exist – Cutout Collective landed up being loaded on Larry faster than you can say well, “Cutout Collective”.

Go back a couple of years and think about Dead or Alive’s- ‘you spin me right round’ and Kraftwerk’s ‘Antenna’ and you will have an idea of what you are looking at with Cutout Collective just a couple of years on in music evolution. Mix the two tracks in your head and you have a chance at the gauging Cutout Collective.

I will best describe Cutout Collective by saying – the Cutout Collective is like an angel crashing down to earth with burning wings, accompanied by a chorus of crazy music, the kind of music that lets you look forward to your flight downhill.
Tim Apter and Jason Hartford are responsible for the music, recording and production on the album. Tim takes credit for the lyrics. Jason also takes credit along with Chris Brink when it comes to mixing of the album. Lapdust mastering facility mastered the album. Lapdust are responsible for a host of great South African artists’ music mastering, and Cutout Collective come to the party with whistles and bangs – they don’t fail in their duty. Dan Flikker also did a really good job on, and I quote “everything you see”.

Cutout Collective make you want to tear the walls down and lay in the debris patting yourself on the back as they say to you – “do do do do what you do, sah sah sah say the right things, you know the feeling is there because you want it to sting, do do do do what you do, sah sah sah say the right thing”.

Isn’t that the perfect solution for an existential crisis? Hey and even if you aren’t plagued by existence and are looking to hear some kick a** music, that is seriously ground breaking in South Africa, music that sticks in your head like a well written jingle, go get it! Sweet Lard go get it. I promise this band is better than the Vodacom jingle – says she while lighting the Molotov cocktail.

Well done deconstruction recordings! This is one for the books.

Thanks: Clair Cantrell

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Pink Legwarmers and KOOS

Friday, 22 May 2009

Source: Clair Cantrell (Underground Press 22 May 2009)

Twenty years ago I was in pink leg warmers – not a care in the world. The world consisted of school and childhood education that would form my mind. Like a blank computer I sucked up the world and all it would give me regarding music. While the rest of the “Big” world were making art and making statements, I sat in my childhood bedroom dreaming of what it would be like to be a grown-up and how it was going to be for me to be the fat lady that ended the show. Opera was what I had my lil’ heart set on. As times changed and I grew older and my ambitions changed – along with it so did the world. Albeit that is stayed the same.

When I first became the Audiophile (labels are so much easier, yes, it is music that dominates my life), becoming a musician of sorts myself and landing up helping to run One F Music (in more recent years) – KOOS appeared across my path, through strange and twisted tales best left for bottles of wine and other recreational conversations, but I digress.
The subject of this article, the self-titled album by the band KOOS (originally The Black Tape) was made when I was 10 years old and at 31 years of age, blew my f**king mind!

koos

PINK LEGWARMERS AND KOOS

It had to be released! It had to get out there! People had to hear it! There was no other option! So Paul Riekert, Warren Siebrits and Marcel Van Heerden hopped on it like this was the last thing in the world worth releasing. Paul restored the original audio in One F Music studio, Warren gave us the means financially and Marcel sorted through his memories of his friends, some painful, and all of which very personal.

KOOS is still by far one of the most innovative albums that have crossed my path in the last 10 years. It is still relevant today as it was all those years ago. The social commentary, the noise – that all made sense – to fit together into a fantastic product that very nearly slipped through the cracks, had it not been for the visionaries at Shifty records. Lloyd Ross, Warrick Sony and their record label, that in those years had the balls to record artists like the late Bernoldus Niemand, and of course KOOS, are fully within their rights to take credit for this one – bless them! For without them it would indeed have slipped through the Calvinist, suffocated music industry of the time. In 2009 it was time for KOOS to rear its deserving head.

Without being put into a political timeline. They stood on their own, they didn’t need a Voëlvry to boost them – they had what it took, just by being who they were.

The majestic Megan Kruskal stood head and shoulders above the rest, an underground Maria Callas, equal to Nico and Eve Libertine. She sent shivers down my spine as we digitized the KOOS rehearsal tapes that were screened on the launch date at the Warren Siebrits Gallery, the night KOOS was re-born from Black Tape to digital, and carefully handed to the public nurses to go and play within their audio nurseries. “Breed like rats!” she wailed at us all – relevant today? I’d say.

With the primitive technology of the time they managed to get an original sound and machined it to sound like nothing else, although there are influences like Nick Cave’s original incarnation, The Birthday Party and Neubauten in there. Fred De Vries in his book Club Risiko writes extensively about the life of the band KOOS and the people involved in its creation. People like Neil Goedhals, Kendell Geers, Marcel Van Heerden, Velile Nxazonke, Gys De Villiers and the enigmatic Megan Kruskal. Sadly, the members of KOOS went their separate ways in 1990 and left us with a legacy that cannot be broken by time, not then, not now, not ever!

Saddest of all is that shortly after Neil Goedhals committed suicide by jumping from a block of flats in Yeoville the JHB Art Gallery bought some of his works. The KOOS album is a beautiful tribute to Neil, may he rest in peace. I was lucky enough to hear Marcel speaking about Neil and all the others in the studio while planning this album. With the greatest respect and reverance he said that KOOS were privileged and honoured. It was incredibly moving. I wish that I could have captured that moment forever.

People like Johan Van Wyk (one of my favourite South African poets) wrote the lyrics for some of the tracks. Speaking out against what was happening in South Africa of course didn’t sit too well with the authorities at the time, but they steamed ahead – they was no silencing them. Songs which feature on the album such as “Sing Jy van Bomme”, “Tsafendas” and “Suid Afrikaanse Herfs” portray a country in turmoil, a country on the brink of something big, political unrest and states of emergency, like we experienced in 1985.

The limited edition copies of which only 500 were printed contain a copy of a flyer that was dropped from a helicopter over Soweto on the 16th of June, warning people to stay inside for their own safety! This album stands to show us that we are free to say what we want now – there is no problem with having a black drummer anymore – and that music is finally were it should be. Thank you, KOOS, for not being scared – for giving us a timeless collectors’ piece that showcases how easy it is for us now to create what was so difficult for you. You broke boundaries; you Dada’d us into belief that the music industry isn’t lost to our folk genre contemparies.

WE CAN SAY WHAT THE HELL WE WANT TO!!!! AND HOW WE WANT TO!!

This is an inspiring album, a truthful album and an album that wants you to get up and scream AT the world that music is still art and doesn’t have to be formulaic to be good

IT JUST HAS TO BE SPECIAL – and this album certainly IS that with no excuses! Opera for me? Nah – I’ll stick to the real street stuff thank you …

Clair Cantrell

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KOOS Retrospective

Tuesday, 24 March 2009

Source: Fred De Vries (Fred De Vries – 24 Mar 2009)

Hey hey hey, after a great launch party at Warren Siebrits’ gallery in Joburg it’s officially out: the KOOS retrospective, lavishly packaged (design by Righard Kapp) and released by One-F Music. It should be available from all good music shops.

The sleeve notes were written by yours truly, as was the press release, which you can read below. Enjoy the nostalgia…

KOOS RETROSPECTIVE CD

Finally it’s available again: the long lost album of the legendary South African band KOOS, which at the time, 1989, was only released as a limited edition black tape, packed in a brown paper bag. It became known as The Black Tape.

Forget about Johannes Kerkorrel and his Koos Kombuis, KOOS was the truly innovative band whose music defined and reflected South Africa’s increasingly dark eighties. The band was formed in 1986 by conceptual artist Neil Goedhals and actor Marcel Van Heerden, who were joined by Gys De Villiers, Megan Kruskal, Velile Nxazonke and Kendell Geers. The country’s original punk poet Johan van Wyk wrote some of the lyrics.

KOOS was a highly personal reaction to the chaos and despair that had engulfed the country in the mid-eighties. States of emergency, burning townships, murder, bomb attacks and people who ‘fell from the window’ of a police station or ‘slipped on a piece of soap’. That was the subject matter KOOS sang about in songs like Sing jy van BommeTsafendas and the menacing Suid Afrikaanse Herfs, which referenced the German terrorists of the Rote Armee Faktion.

Musically they were miles ahead of the 12 bar blues and folk that had inspired their alternative Afrikaner contemporaries. Their sound was artful anti-rock, fuelled by the noises that had reached Johannesburg from Berlin, Sheffield, Melbourne and Cologne: the metallic motorik and madness of Einstürzende Neubauten, Cabaret Voltaire, Birthday Party and Can. But all done in a unique style that has aged surprisingly well, and would now probably be called post-punk. Van Heerden sang, spat and whispered. Sometimes he used pebbles to distort his voice, while Goedhals punished his guitar.

KOOS disbanded in 1990. They had lived through the states of emergency of 1985 and 1986, they had been attacked, their name had partly been appropriated by Andre Letoit who became Koos Kombuis. But they had survived, battered but unbowed. Then, in 1990, around the time of the release of Nelson Mandela, the group imploded. The country was going through monumental changes. Goedhals didn’t want to perform anymore. There was no big fight, no drama, together they decided to call it a day. The raison d’être was gone. The band had made its statement: that one black tape, wrapped in a brown paper bag to accentuate its illicit content – a nod to the way the American bum must drink his alcohol.

Later that same year, on the 16th of August, on Elvis Presley’s dying-day, Goedhals jumped to his death from the sixth floor of a flat in Yeoville. A few days later came the news that the Johannesburg Art Gallery had bought some of his works. It sounded like a Goedhals prank.

The legend of Koos wouldn’t rest though. I wrote about them in my well received 80s underground book Club Risiko (Nijgh & Van Ditmar, 2006), where they share pages with international luminaries such as Sonic Youth, Laibach and Einstürzende Neubauten. Second, American underground label S-S Records intends to release some of Goedhals’s experimental pre-Koos recordings later this year.

But most important: here’s the re-mastered version of that legendary collector’s item that Shifty Records released twenty years ago.

KOOS 1986- 1990

personnel:

  • Christo Boshoff – bass, sax and keyboard
  • Gys de Villiers- bass and sax
  • Neil Goedhals – guitar and synthesizer
  • Megan Kruskal- vocals
  • Velile Nxazonke- drums and percussion
  • Marcel van Heerden- vocals
  • Kendell Geers- keyboard on Cowboy, tape loops on Wil ons Oorlewe and Tsafendas

All music by KOOS

  1. Sing jy van Bomme – Ryk Hattingh uit sy toneelstuk dieselfde titel
  2. Ek is my Dilemma – Johan van Wyk
  3. In detention – Christopher van Wyk
  4. Is jy ʼn Moegoe? – Marcel van Heerden
  5. Zebra in Paris – Megan Kruskal
  6. Sloper – Johan van Wyk
  7. Delilah – Les Reed and Barry MasonPublished by Hal Leonard
  8. Breed like Rats – from the play Oudisie om die Einde van die Aarde te Verhoed by Johan van Wyk
  9. Wil ons Oorlewe – na die gedig Hieronymus Bosch se Koringwa deur Johan van Wyk
  10. Tsafendas – Marcel van Heerden
  11. ʼn Bietjie Dom – Johan van Wyk
  12. Cowboy – Nikos Konstandaras en Tertius Meintjes na die gedig Cowboy Jan deur Johan van Wyk
  13. Karel & Jansie – Margaret Roestdorf
  14. Vlêrmuis – Johan van Wyk
  15. Suid Afrikaanse Herfs – Marcel van Heerden
  16. Bonus tracks:

  17. Honderd-en-een persent Bang – Johan van Wyk after a performance by The Plastic People of the Universe
  18. Too Heavy to Rise – Marcel van Heerden

Posted in Media Archive, Releases Tags:


Top 11 for 2008

Saturday, 3 January 2009

Source: Fred De Vries ( Fred De Vries – 03 Jan 2009)

Is it still really worth it to make end of year lists of favorite albums? Given the confusing state of the music industry one would be tempted to say no. The industry is in a mess. The CD-format is rapidly becoming obsolete, while downloads and sharity blogs flourish. Moreover, despite an overdose of good music, there wasn’t a single album that really stood out; 2008 didn’t bring us a new Closer or Entertainment! or Village Green or Damaged. Despite what the music critics try to make us believe (forget about the retro stuff of Fleet Foxes and the whine of Bon Iver) there were no classics.

Therefore this year a Top 11 that doesn’t just include albums, but also single tracks, ex aequo’s, books and blogs. And some are certainly not from 2008, but are somehow linked to the year, with ample space for women and psychedelica.

Here it is – in no particular order – my top 11 for 2008 – for what it’s worth…

  1. Shannon McArdle – Summer Of The whore (Bar None Records). Great title, great break-up album. Shannon McArdle was one of the singers and songwriters of the indie band Mendoza Line, who split after making the excellent, depressing 30 Year Low. At the same time her relationship with Mendoza’s other songwriter Timothy Bracey broke down. Summer Of The Whore recounts that painful break-up. Musically it’s a more laid-back affair than the Mendoza’s, while the lyrics verge between angry, bitter, sad and relief. Fave tracks: That Night In June and He Was Gone.
  2. Pink Floyd – Echoes (from the album Meddle (Harvest)). I’ve never been a huge fan of post Syd Barrett Pink Floyd, and from Animals onwards I found them increasing dull. But some of the work has certainly stood the test of time. And when I heard that keyboard player Richard Wright had died this year I played Meddle again. Wright was responsible for much of the beautifully melancholic Echoes, which covers most of side B. And what a great, simple signature he left behind with that “ping” right at the start.
  3. Cat Power – Jukebox (Matador). The Guardian predicted that 2009 will be the year of female musicians and the end of indie boy bands. They added that there is especially a future for electronic female pop. Maybe that’s something Chan Marshall aka Cat Power now also should try her hands at. After all she has worked with Faithless and El-P. Her latest album Jukebox was a kind of sophisticated extension of The Covers Album from 2000. Once more she managed to make other people’s songs her own, but Jukebox lacked something as unexpected as the Stones cover (I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction or something as exquisite as the Moby Grape tribute Naked If I Want To. Lovely album nonetheless. Fave track: New York, New York.
  4. Michael Bracewell – Re-Make/Re-Model; Art, Pop, Fashion and the Making of Roxy Music, 1953-1972 (faber and faber, ISBN 978-0-571-22985-7). This is the story behind one of the greatest debut albums of all time. It describes in great detail the context and environment that led to the formation of Roxy Music and the recording of that sublime eponymous LP. Some critics found Bracewell’s style and unusual eye for detail (read his description of The Marcus Price shop, Newcastle’s only trendy clothing store in the early 60s) too much. I loved it, and took out that 1972 Roxy Music album to play it again and again and again. Fave track: If There Is Something.
  5. Sticky Antlers – Sticky Antlers (KRNGY). Although the new Jim Neversink album still hasn’t been officially released, South Africa had plenty of interesting releases this year, especially by Afrikaans musicians such as Battery 9 and Bittervrug. But biggest kudos to the Sticky Antlers, who are part of a Pretoria collective. They started out as an improv band and crystallized into a proper fearsome lo fi noise-band that draws from outsider art, comix, underground films, Sonic Youth, PJ Harvey and The Boredoms. They’ve released numerous home-made CD-Rs on their independent KRNGY-label. Their first full length album comes with an exquisite hand made cover. The sound is distorted and haunting, occasionally verging on the hysterical. Read more about them on www.myspace.com/stickyantlers Fave track: Company
  6. Ex aequo: Drive-By Truckers – Brighter Than Creation’s Dark and The Dexateens – Lost And Found. Southern rock continued its survival long after the heady days of Lynyrd Skynyrd and The Allman Brothers, thanks to efforts by the Drive-By Truckers and the Dexateens. Brighter Than Creation’s Dark is easily the best Drive-By’s album since they started in 1996. In vinyl terms it would have been a double album. Nineteen compassionate tales of losers and no hopers captured the spirit of 2008 more than anything else. Fave track: Two Daughters And A Beautiful Wife. The Dexateens started out as a bunch of southern punks, but have developed over the years into a semi-acoustic alt.country outfit that makes great use of dual vocal harmonies. Their Lost And Found can be downloaded for free (or whatever you want to pay) from www.skybucket.com/media/dexateens/. Fave track: Altar Blues.
  7. Paul Westerberg – 49:00. Now this is a real odd one. The former Replacement released this as one mp3, which was to be downloaded from Amazon, and would cost a mere $ 0,49. Which was great value for 43:55 minutes of music. Amazon, however, soon removed the mp3 from its list of downloadables, allegedly because of copyright issues (there is a weird bit at the end where Westerberg does a medley of old songs). So by the time I heard about this album I had to track it down on blogs. Eventually I found it, downloaded it and when I played it I thought something had gone wrong during the downloading. The first couple of songs sound ok, but then you get snatches of compositions and you hear different songs playing simultaneously. Some tracks break off in what seems to be the middle, and others start way past their intro. From various reviews I learned that it was all intentional. All in all a great, messy, ADHD piece of music. And there’s more self-released Westerberg stuff on the net, like the missing minutes of 49:00 on a track called 5:05 and Bored Of Edukation. Go and find it…
  8. Hari Kunzru – My Revolutions (Penguin paperback, ISBN 9780141020204). This book was inspired by the Angry Brigade, London’s late 60s answer to the Rote Armee Faktion. The book traces the life of a 50-year old radical turned terrorist turned junkie turned incognito bourgeois husband. An exciting, entertaining novel that should be read while playing Pink Fairies and Hawkwind, and that somehow reminded me a lot of the founder of anarcho punk band Crass, Penny Rimbaud.
  9. We Have No Zen. I stumbled upon this blogspot after reading a piece in The Wire about an ultra obscure psychedelic noise Japanese band called Les Rallizes Dénudés. They were especially active in the late 60s and 70s, and apparently there were links with the people who hijacked Japan Airlines Flight 351 in 1970, orchestrated by the Red Army. Which is quite beyond the realm of normal rock and roll. Anyway, We Have No Zen not only had lots of Les Rallizes Dénudés music, but also tons of other equally extremely obscure music, all there to download for free (and some to buy). A superb blogspot!
  10. Ex aequo Various artists – Summer And Smiles From Finland (Fonal Records) and Sprengjuhöllin – Sprengjuhöllin. I know, I know, Summer and Smiles From Finland is from 2005, but I only discovered it this year. With the dreary muzak of Coldplay and the trusted sounds of Oasis, Metallica and AC/DC topping the charts, one has to look beyond the English speaking world for interesting music. So after reading a small article about Finnish band Paavoharju and the Fonal label I searched for them on eMusic and found an introduction to Finnish music, a compilation called Summer and Smiles From Finland. I duly downloaded it and have enjoyed tremendously ever since. It’s weird and wicked, freaky music, uncategorizable. Fave track: Risto – Nina olen, palasina. And there’s so much more out there up north. Check out the Icelandic mods of Sprengjuhöllin, whose self-titled album almost makes up for the disappointing new Okkervil River album and the lack of Kinks/Ray Davies material this year. Fave track: Worry ’til Spring.
  11. Finally a big chapeau for The Pavement Special, a live music/magazine/CD initiative which was started in 2007 by South African journalist Lloyd Gedye and designer Michael MacGarry. The third issue of TPS was launched in December, and the accompanying CD with tracks by tracks by Sticky Antlers, Blk Jks, Buckfever Underground, Cutout Collective, kidofdoom, Jacob Israel, Gazelle and Tale of the Son, gives a prefect overview what’s happening left of dial.

PS Oh, and I completely forgot to say what a great album Japanese band Boris made with Smile (Southern Lord), a perfect mix of noise, melody and drone, a kind of Blue Cheer for the new century. And also forgot to mention how much I enjoyed the Dylan movie I’m Not There and the Joy Division documentary and the Ian Curtis film Control. So that would make it a Top 13 or a Top 14 even…

Posted in Media Archive, Reviews Tags: , ,


Ramfest ‘08 DVD launch ‘n sukses

Monday, 27 October 2008

Source: Johan Swarts (Johan Swarts se bl0g, 2008.10.27)

Ramfest 2008 se DVD launch by die Klein Libertas-teater [op Vrydag 24 Oktober - red.] was ‘n rasende sukses (met die klem op raas). Battery 9 het op dieselfde aand hul nuutste album, Galbraak, bekendgestel met ‘n goeie dosis industriële rock en aKing het die gehoor betower met nommers van hul eerste album, Dutch Courage. Beide groepe is op die DVD te siene. ‘n Sterk wind het nie gekeer dat talle aanhangers vir die geleentheid opdaag nie – en raas is daar geraas.

Wat Battery 9 aanbetref – ‘n vertoning met fut. Te min Suid-Afrikaners ken Paul Riekert se industriële spitsvondighede. Hulle behoort myns insiens tot dieselfde klas as Kobus!: al hoor ‘n mens dit nie altyd nie, is hul lirieke van die skerpstes op die Afrikaanse musiektoneel. Riekert is nie bang om ‘n ding op die naam te noem nie, maar hy het terselftertyd genoeg liriese vernuf om op alles behalwe ‘n hoop vloekwoorde staat te maak vir trefkrag. Luister gerus na “Die vraglied” (’n parodie van “Die vlaglied van Suid-Afrika”) op die nuwe album.

aKing was self nie sleg nie. Laudo Liebenberg (voorman en kitaarspeler) en kie het liedjies van hul eerste album, Dutch Courage, gespeel. Liebenberg en Hunter Kennedy is ‘n gedugte skrywerspaar en Liebenberg weet hoe om ‘n solo uit te karring. Aanhangers was in hul noppies toe aKing hul tweede musiekvideo aangekondig het.

aKing op ‘n afstand

aKing op ‘n afstand

Voor die geraas is ‘n voorskou van die DVD vertoon. Boernoir produksies het hulself oortref met ‘n professionele produk. Die produksiewaarde van die twee DVD’s, wat onder andere walkaround footage (kan jy “fpersing” sê?) en die gekose liedjies van elke groep bevat, spreek van bevoegde filmvervaardigers wat weet hoe om te selekteer en te kombineer. ‘n Mens besef die omvang van wat hulle gedoen het eers wanneer jy ontdek dat deur hulle rofweg 15 960 minute se beeldmateriaal moes sif (dis omtrent 725 episodes van jou gunsteling televisiereeks) en die oorblywendes tot ‘n koherente produk van 4 uur moes smee.

Veral heuglik is Lark se heel laaste vertoning ooit, die Suid-Afrikaanse Air Guitar kampioenskappe (wat gewen is deur Heine “Lord Volmer” van der Walt) en Kobus! se opvoering van “Hoenderman”. Elke band se instrumente is apart opgeneem via ‘n multitrack recorder en na die tyd gemaster om so goed as moontlik te klink saam met vyftien kameras se beeldmateriaal. Die resultaat is iets waarmee weinig ander plaaslike musiekfeeste kan spog.

Die uwe was bevoorreg genoeg om self agter die kamera in te klim:

Raai wie byt sy onderlip wanneer hy konsentreer?

Raai wie byt sy onderlip wanneer hy konsentreer?

As vanjaar se fees enigsins ‘n aanduiding is van Ramfest 2009, behoort daar volgende jaar dalk selfs ‘n beter produk te verskyn. Indien Boernoir weer gekontrakteer word om dit te verflim (ek sou hulle huur) kry hulle hopelik ‘n paar dollies en cranes vir Ramfest ‘09. Dan gaan die pixels eers spat.

Koop die DVD. Jy gaan enersyds ‘n opkomende, talentvolle produksiehuis ondersteun en andersyds ‘n bydrae maak tot iets moois wat besig is om te groei in die Suid-Afrikaanse musiektoneel. Blameer dit op die hoenderman.

Lees gerus Danie Marais se resensie oor Galbraak.

Posted in Media Archive, Reviews Tags:


Industrial in Studentville

Monday, 27 October 2008

Source: Jess Henson (Levi’s Original Music Magazine, 2008.10.27)

To my mind, Ramfest is the alternative to alternative music fests in SA. And now they have their own DVD of Ramfest 2008 to prove it. Friday night’s combination of live acts and diverse fans at Klein Libertas Teater would agree with me.

Battery 9 are stalwarts. Their spirited, strings, snare, cylinders-and-spark-plugs sound has lasted years in a topsy-turvey industry, and their artistic growth has garnered the respect of music loving veterans and virgins alike. This night hosted the kick-off their album launch tour, “Galbraak” — a term people who’ve drunk too much free Chattabox understand…

aKING are unsung heroes. They’re teaching music lovers to chant poetry, seducing scenesters across the country with a smile and filling hearts with an altogether almost alien state of conscious celebration. Theirs is holy work in a land of hopes and tears.

Put the two together in Stellies, and you’ve got trouble…

Klein Libertas was a clutch of subcultures that clicked in the spring winds. The fascinating collection of crazies included long, tall, dark-haired dudes with stickyout silver things on their faces that made me think of Horrorfest; warm ones with big hair and fat smiles that made me think of Avontoer 2008, incey-wincey bokkies in their party best, all cleavage and stiletto and spikey smiles that made me think of Miss SA, and the T shirt-and-trousers brigade making up the majority that made me think, sjoe, but some bands really are ambassadors of sound in SA. This majority, by the way, also buy CDs and DVDs and beers and tickets to festivals, and the music industry respects them. So much, in fact, that the aching boys are hosting an exclusive designer t-shirt exhibition on Tuesday.

Battery 9 don’t fork around. They knife through sound like it’s Saturday night at the Shack and uNathi is chef — chop, chop, sizzle, slice, sigh. Clean, powerful, industrial mixes seasoned with compulsive vocals, and a side order of live art. Enough to renew your liver. Or your spirit. Hard, hopeful, and nothing short of gourmet.

For dessert we had Hunter and Hennie and Laudo and Jaco. These lovely boys have finally put the cherry on the top and now we can have our cake and stick it in our eyes as well as our ears. It’s taken them some time, and I’ve waited patiently and said nothing about a certain lack of s-s-ssomething on stage. And I won’t ever either, because they’ve passed that stage, and if you want a hard-happy sing-along that looks as good as it feels, get your dose of aching live. They are the crème de la crème of commercial rock. Amen.

We finish with an afterthought. If you drop your drawers whilst standing on a chair inside Klein Libertas, and pull the big boy out for other drunkards to admire, spare a thought for the odd innocent journalist walking by less than two meters from your manhood. Or thank your lucky stars she didn’t have a camera at the ready…

Posted in Media Archive, Reviews Tags:


Battery9 se ‘Galbraak’ soos ruimtereis na son

Thursday, 23 October 2008

Danie Marais (Die Burger, 2008.10.23)

Paul Riekert is die donker man van Battery 9 wat geraas met groter geraas bestry. Danie Marais het ‘n paar vrae aan hom gestel.

Verlede jaar was Battery 9 se “Die hamster is dood” een van die songs wat my uit die bed uit gekry het. Vanjaar is dit “Geen genade” op die nuwe album. Wat kry jou uit die vere?

“Check one” van Leftfield, of as ek vinnig moet maak, iets hard en vinnig van Ministry. Die idee van vars gemaalde, goeie koffie kry my ook uit die bed uit.

In terme van kommersiële sukses sal Battery 9 waarskynlik ‘n marginale verskynsel bly, maar Galbraak is julle sewende album. Wat motiveer jou om aan te hou beweeg en geraas te maak?

Dis op ‘n manier nie eens ‘n keuse nie, meer soos ‘n kompulsiewe drang. As ek weer kyk, dan het ek nog ‘n album gemaak.

Was jou werkswyse op dié album dieselfde as in die verlede?

Min of meer – waar dit verskil van Straks is dat ek meer klanke en instrumente buite die ateljee opgeneem het, in hul “natuurlike habitat”.

The Clash het in “London calling” gesing: “London is drowning but I have no fear, ’cause London is drowning and I live by the river.” Het jy ‘n soortgelyke instelling oor Jozi en SA?

Ja, die gevoel word nogal raak beskryf, behalwe dat dit by my ‘n effe skisofreniese gevoel ook is; dis steeds waar ek verkies om te bly. Vir nou.

Galbraak is, soos elke Battery 9-album, vol woede, frustrasie en galgehumor. Wat maak jou gelukkig?

Ek is gelukkig as ek kan skep – in watter medium ook al. Nuwe musiek ontdek. Afsondering. Die “goeie lewe” – goeie spys en drank, gemak, ‘n mooi uitsig.

As jy een reël uit ‘n Battery 9-liriek kan kies vir jou grafsteen, wat sal dit wees?

Liewer nie, dis moeilik om Battery9-lirieke te vind wat nié onvleiend is nie. As ek moet, dalk “Maak ‘n nuwe begin…” uit “Nuwe begin”.

Posted in Media Archive, Reviews Tags:


Geraas maak is ‘n kompulsiewe gedrag

Tuesday, 21 October 2008

Source: Danie Marais (Beeld, 2008.10.21)

Paul Riekert is die donker man van Battery 9 wat geraas met groter geraas bestry. Danie Marais het ‘n paar vrae aan hom gestel.

Verlede jaar was Battery 9 se “Die hamster is dood” een van die songs wat my uit die bed uit gekry het. Vanjaar is dit “Geen genade” op die nuwe album. Wat kry jou uit die vere?

“Check one” van Leftfield, of as ek vinnig moet maak, iets hard en vinnig van Ministry. Die idee van vars gemaalde, goeie koffie kry my ook uit die bed uit.

In terme van kommersiële sukses sal Battery 9 waarskynlik ‘n marginale verskynsel bly, maar Galbraak is julle sewende album. Wat motiveer jou om aan te hou beweeg en geraas te maak?

Dis op ‘n manier nie eens ‘n keuse nie, meer soos ‘n kompulsiewe drang. As ek weer kyk, dan het ek nog ‘n album gemaak.

Was jou werkswyse op dié album dieselfde as in die verlede?

Min of meer – waar dit verskil van Straks is dat ek meer klanke en instrumente buite die ateljee opgeneem het, in hul “natuurlike habitat”.

The Clash het in “London calling” gesing: “London is drowning but I have no fear, ’cause London is drowning and I live by the river.” Het jy ‘n soortgelyke instelling oor Jozi en SA?

Ja, die gevoel word nogal raak beskryf, behalwe dat dit by my ‘n effe skisofreniese gevoel ook is; dis steeds waar ek verkies om te bly. Vir nou.

Galbraak is, soos elke Battery 9-album, vol woede, frustrasie en galgehumor. Wat maak jou gelukkig?

Ek is gelukkig as ek kan skep – in watter medium ook al. Nuwe musiek ontdek. Afsondering. Die “goeie lewe” – goeie spys en drank, gemak, ‘n mooi uitsig.

As jy een reël uit ‘n Battery 9-liriek kan kies vir jou grafsteen, wat sal dit wees?

Liewer nie, dis moeilik om Battery9-lirieke te vind wat nié onvleiend is nie. As ek moet, dalk “Maak ‘n nuwe begin…” uit “Nuwe begin”.

Posted in Interviews, Media Archive, Miscellaneous Tags:


Battery 9 Galbraak JHB cd Launch Review with an added extra

Friday, 10 October 2008

Source: Caz (Underground Press, 2008.10.23)

As if you didn’t know

Battery 9 is the brainchild of Paul Riekert, who writes the lyrics and the music, and sings, plays, records and produces most of what appears on the cd’s in his own studio – the audio arm of ONE F Music. His music own Production Company. On stage he is joined by Hyser Burger – Dj, Live action painter and MC, also known as DJ Fokolnonsens, and Cesare Cassarino – the guitar player, best known for his work as a bassist in the South African jazz and session scene.

The Launch Review

Friday, 17th October, Rock Bar; OMG acronym!!! I sincerely doubt there will be a better launch this year. We got to the Rock Bar Melville just as the band was going on. I was so excited I literally had to remind myself to breathe. My photographer, not so much, as he had never seen battery 9 live before. I had to remove the camera from him and take photographs myself as he was too over-whelmed by the bands awesomeness. A feeling shared by most of the fans. In fact, whilst taking pictures I was aggressively told to “stop taking photos!” by a mad sweaty creature in the audience because “it’s Battery 9!!! You have to dance!!” I have yet to see an international act rile up a crowd that much. I must admit, there quite a few incidents where even I could only stop and stare. Why this band is not charting internationally is beyond me. It’s almost like we hog the best for ourselves!

After the show I was told to wait backstage for the guys to come offstage. I was dripping sweat and hoarse from screaming. Hyser Burger, the live artist/industrialist/Dj of battery 9 was the first to come backstage. He flopped into a bean bag and looked at me quizzically. I stammered out “uh…interview….uh…press”. He smiled and said “maybe a bit later, we just have to catch our breath”. What a nice guy. I came back later to find Paul Riekert there alone. No interviews. I was heartbroken. These men were a defining block of my youth and now I had missed the chance to interview them. He must have my disappointment and said “how about you give us a call and we arrange an interview”

The added extra

Monday, 20th October, my office; Spent all day trying to muster the courage to call. When I eventually did, I stuttered and stammered and must have sounded like a giddy little girl but got the job done! Now if my heart rate can go back to normal……

Caroline: Hi, this Caroline from UNDERGROUND press, I got your number Saturday night.

Paul: yes Caroline, how are you?

Caroline: (stutter) um, very good, um how are you.

Paul: Good thanks, how can I help you?

Caroline: I would just like to know if I could arrange an interview with Battery 9 ?

Paul: Sure, when’s good for you?

Caroline: uh … um… whenever you’re free.

Paul: you can interview me over the phone if you like?

Caroline: Yeah that would be wicked. Thank you, are you free now?

Paul: ah yeah. Why not, go ahead.

Caroline: So how feel about the launch you had on Friday night?

Paul: Very cool. I haven’t felt like that after a launch in a long time. We got to see a lot of old friends to, there were quite a few young faces in the crowd.

Caroline: This is your seventh CD Launch. How does it make you feel that you can still work up a crowd like that?

Paul: grateful

Caroline: Industrial music has always had huge following in Europe, yet we don’t seem to have any S.A. industrial musicians making it that far. Do you think there is a possibility for bands of your genre to make it internationally?

Paul: It’s difficult. It’s difficult. You need to have proper support from somewhere to make a crack but I think there is a possibility, ya.

Caroline: do you think it may be due to lack of South African industry support in S.A. bands?

Paul: In a way

Caroline: I remember the first time I saw you was in 1995, you are as incredible now as you were then, if not more so.

Paul: (laughs) thank you

Caroline: I have always thought if ever a South African band would make it overseas, it would be battery 9. Is there any chance of battery 9 going global?

Paul: We’re currently trying to set a branch with One F music, my record label, in Europe. You can check it out if you like www.onefmusic.com

Caroline: Do you have any active online fan support groups?

Paul: The biggest one I know of is the facebook group.

Caroline: Besides renegade journalists that hide out backstage to interview you, have you ever been stalked by any crazed fans?

Paul: (laughs) Occasionally. S.A. is not that hectic.

Caroline: Any message you would like to send to your fans?

Paul: I just need to thank them. It’s up to them then it’s up to them whether there’s enough money to launch another album. I’m really grateful for the support we have…it’s really…lekker.

Caroline: I think that’s all I really wanted to ask (star struck journo is almost passing out with joy of speaking to one of her childhood heroes). Thank you so much for your time.

Paul: oh ok Great. Thank you, Caroline.

Caroline: ok, take care then bye.

Paul: cheers,

(Giggling like a teenager because he said my name)

Posted in Interviews, Media Archive, Reviews Tags:


Kopskoot! Release

Friday, 1 February 2008

Source: Flamedrop Productions – KOPSKOOT!

Koopskoot!

D!E SWAARSTE AFR!KAANSE ALBUM OO!T  THE HEAV!EST AFR!KAANS ALBUM EVER

Prepare to get your head blown off!  Finally Flamedrop Productions and ENT Entertainment are  doing what many have been screaming for. The wait is over.  For years Afrikaans speaking musicians have been paving  the way when it comes to Alternative and Extreme music in  South Africa and this 16‐ton strong compilation brings  together a wide range of bands and genres ‐ from legends,  pioneers and SAMA winners, to new blood, innovators and  foreign additions, all expressing themselves in the universal  language of Music (in general), and one of our 11 official languages,  Afrikaans.

The exciting bands on KOPSKOOT! (translated: “Headshot!”)  cover everything from Alternative, Hard Rock, Metal and  Hardcore, to Industrial, Grindcore and a variety of  Electronic adventures.

KOPSKOOT! Album Track List:

  1. VOICE OF DESTRUCTION – JMSP  S.A. Metal Godfathers (formed in 1986) with the legendary  first ever extreme Afrikaans song (written in 1993 & recorded in 1995).   The bad will be doing a reunion tour in March after a decade of silence.
  2. ANDRÉ VAN DER WALT – Pneuma   New blood with a fine blend of Electronic and Hardcore.   1st appearance of the song on CD
  3. VAN COKE KARTEL – Algehele Kontrole   lternative Rock.  Fokofpolisiekar vocalist & bass player project.   VAMT winner / SAMA nominee.
  4. LION’S PRIDE – 11 July 1302 (De Vlaamse Leeuw) From Belgium.  A song in Flemish (which is very close  to the Afrikaans language).  South African release debut.
  5. TERMINATRYX – Siek+Sat  Industrial‐Metal.  A new breed of South African music.   The only female‐fronted band on the collection.
  6. INSEK – Satan Is Liefde  Super‐charged Grindcore, featuring one of the  founder members of the legendary Groinchurn.
  7. MIND ASSAULT – Stadig Verblind  Superb Metal from the Cape Province.
  8. BREINSKADE – Blou Moord   Extreme Hardcore‐Techno from the brain behind Battery 9.
  9. DIE KRUIS ‐ Helmasjien  Industrial flavoured Metal project from K.O.B.U.S. vocalist.
  10. F8 – SexHex   Pronounced: “fate”.  Bass‐driven one‐man project  coining its own genre: Tekno‐Grind.
  11. HELSINKI ‐ DNA  Hard‐edged dance cut from a brand new project which includes  Battery 9 affiliates.  First ever official appearance of Helsinki on CD.
  12. NUL – Elektro‐Berzerk  Electronic Revolution Music.  First time the track is available on CD.
  13. SOMERFAAN – Die Spook (Kom Weer) ‐ remix  Exclusive Kopskoot! remix.  SAMA winner.
  14. BATTERY 9 – Geen Genade  S.A. Industrial legends.  SAMA winners.
  15. CONQUEST FOR DEATH – Positiewe Houding ‐ Negatiewe Wêreld   San Francisco/Tokyo Hardcore‐Thrash band with a  track exclusively recorded in Afrikaans for Kopskoot!
  16. K.O.B.U.S. – Tienerangs  The SAMA winners who sent Afrikaans music in a whole new direction,  formed by V.O.D vocalist Francois and Springbok Nude Girls guitarist Theo.

KOPSKOOT! Created, Produced & Compiled by Paul Blom  Co‐produced by Sonja Ruppersberg  Executive producers: Rui De Sousa & Paul Blom  (NOT FOR SENSITIVE EARS)

Posted in Media Archive, Miscellaneous, Releases Tags: ,


Club Risiko: Die boek is veel meer as bloot ʼn ondersoek na die underground in die vroe 1980’s

Friday, 25 January 2008

Source: Andries Bezuidenhout (Andries Bezuidenhout op Litnet – 2008/01/25)

Club Risiko: De jaren tachtig, toen en nu
Skrywer: Fred de Vries
ISBN: 90 388 7458 8
Formaat: Sagteband met cd
255 bladsye
Normale prys: € 22.50
Uitgewer: Nijgh & Van Ditmar, 2006

Die 1980’s moes een van die mees absurde dekades gewees het – wat musiek betref, asook ten opsigte van wat besig was om in Suid-Afrika te gebeur. Dit was die jare van klere met pastelkleure, Japannese slippers, baggy broeke, new wave en bands soos Modern Talking en Alphaville. In Meyerspark, ʼn voorstad van Pretoria, het hoërskoolkinders danspartytjies in garages gehou op die maat van Hazeldean se “It’s like an earthquake”. Murmelende buisligte is met gekleurde kreukelpapier oorgetrek om ʼn tipe ambiance te skep. Op die TV het PW Botha ʼn noodtoestand afgekondig.

Na skool, in 1988, is ek army toe. In daardie twee jaar, van 1988 tot 1990, het baie dinge verander. Die Voëlvry-toer het die hele musieklandskap verander. In 1990, toe ek pas uit die weermag kom, was daar ʼn rockfees met die naam Houtstok. My hare het al begin groei. Ek het ʼn T-hemp aangehad met Nelson Mandela se gesig op. Op ʼn stadium het ʼn vrou daaraan gepluk en histeries geskree: “Het jy kinders, hê? Het jy kinders?”.

Groot name in die musiekindustrie het opgetree. Daar was egter een vreemde band waaroor ek sedertdien wonder. Hul naam was Koos. Nie Koos Kombuis nie, alhoewel hy ook opgetree het. Net Koos. Ek onthou hul vier dedicated fans met hul banier – ʼn swart een met die naam Koos in wit daarop geverf. Die twee o’s was vredestekens. Een van die fans was Francois Kruger, wat twee jaar voor my op skool was. Hulle het swart klere gedra.

Koos het een of ander tyd redelik vroeg in die middag opgetree. ʼn Vreemde man met ʼn bril het op ʼn stoel gesit en geluide met sy kitaar gemaak. Ek dink iemand het tromme gespeel. Daar was ook twee mense wat gesing en geskree het. ʼn Vrou het in die mikrofoon geskree: “Someone was coming on Rambo’s knee, wish it was me, wish it was me!” Van hul lirieke was in Afrikaans, maar ek kan min daarvan onthou. Ek was heeltemal te clueless om te waardeer waarmee hulle besig was.

Koos het aanhou speel en wou nie ophou nie. ʼn Mens kon die benoude verhoogbestuurder op en af sien trippel. Hy het aan hulle beduie dat hulle nou moet klaarmaak. Hulle het egter net aanhou speel en aanhou speel. Op die ou end het die klankingenieur, vermoedelik uit pure desperaatheid, die klank afgeskakel. Eers toe het hulle die verhoog verlaat – oënskynlik heel verdwaas.

Hierna het Koos in die niet verdwyn. ʼn Mens het nie juis meer iets van hulle gehoor nie, behalwe dat hulle deel was van die vroeë alternatiewe Afrikaanse beweging. Hulle het blykbaar in die Black Sun in Hillbrow opgetree tydens die eerste “Alternatiewe Afrikaanse Konsert”: ʼn Onbenullige detail, dalk nie eers ʼn voetnoot in die geskiedenis van Afrikaanse musiek nie, laat staan nog Suid-Afrikaanse musiek.

Hulle sê mos profete word nie in hul eie land geken nie. Dit verg ʼn Nederlandse joernalis met ʼn belangstelling in ondergrondse kontrakultuur om ʼn projek uit Johannesburg van die vroeë 1980’s op te diep om ʼn mens werklik te laat waardeer waarmee die lede van Koos besig was. In Club Risiko (die titel is geneem van die naam van die ondergrondse klub in die eertydse Wes-Berlyn, waar mense soos Blixa Bargeld en Nick Cave rondgehang het) is Fred de Vries spesifiek geïnteresseerd in mense en projekte wat deur die media as onder andere industrial, punkfunk, no wave, noise, indie, punk, alternative, anarchopunk en postpunk beskryf is.

Die laat 1970’s en vroeë 1980’s – die jare voor globalisering, die tydperk voor die deregulering van ekonomieë deur mense soos Ronald Reagan en Margaret Thatcher ingeskop het – was ʼn besonder interessante tyd vir populêre en ondergrondse kultuur. De Vries het gaan uitvind wat die ondergrondse bewegings in plekke soos New York, Berlyn, Amsterdam, Ljubljana, Parys en Johannesburg gemeen gehad het. Wat is die ooreenkomste tussen Sonic Youth, Crass, Laibach, Einstürzende Neubauten, The Ex en Koos?

In elkeen van hierdie stede was daar “eilande” – plekke wat in isolasie bestaan het. Ironies genoeg het hierdie eilande mense juis in staat gestel om alternatiewe, ondergrondse gemeenskappe te stig. Hierdie was gemeenskappe wat onbeskaamd teen die hoofstroom was. Musikante wou platemaatskappye vermy en ondermyn. Die hoofstroommedia is ondergrawe deur onafhanklike publikasies. In elkeen van die plekke was daar bymekaarkomplekke vir die kontrakulture wat uit postpunk ontstaan het. Soms was die anargisme polities, soms was dit meer kultureel van aard.

Alhoewel die mense wat deel was van postpunk fisies van mekaar geïsoleerd was, het idees oor grense heen beweeg. Dit was egter die dae voor die internet se ooraanbod van inligting. Dit was die dae toe jy jou plate in ʼn winkel in Hillbrow moes gaan koop om uit te vind waarmee ander mense besig was. De Vries is spesifiek geïnteresseerd in hoe presies hierdie invloede van plek tot plek kon reis. Natuurlik het sommige interessante projekte nooit ʼn breër gehoor gekry nie, soos Koos, wat ʼn kasset met hul opnames in ʼn bruin papiersak verkoop het.

De Vries pak die storie aan as ʼn reis in elkeen van die stede. Hy gebruik ʼn film deur die Franse regisseur Leos Carax, genaamd Pola X, as raamwerk vir sy soektog na wat oorgebly het van die verskillende projekte. Daar is ook ʼn verwysing na Dostoejefski se The Underground Man as eerste formulering van wat die underground behels. Club Risiko word ʼn tipe speurverhaal, met flardes bewyse, indrukke en gesprekke wat deur die strate van New York, Berlyn, Amsterdam, Ljubljana, Parys en Johannesburg versamel word.

De Vries wil weet wat die impak van kulturele anargie is op die individue wat die underground bewoon het. Sommige oorleef. Sommige behaal sukses in die hoofstroom en word deur dié wat agterbly, afgeskryf as “sell-outs”. Sommige word in so ʼn mate meegesleur in die soeke na kuns sonder kompromis en die verskuiwing van grense dat hulle hulself in die proses vernietig, soos Neil Goedhals van Koos. Ander besluit om heeltemal “uit te klim” en ʼn ander, meer “normale”, lewe te lei. Hul betrokkenheid word dan bloot as ʼn fase afgemaak.

De Vries is hier en daar nogal genadeloos met van die groter ego’s van die underground. Blixa Bargeld loop byvoorbeeld deur onder die sarkasme. Maar meestal word daar met empatie geskryf, veral in gevalle waar persone met wie onderhoude gevoer word, ʼn sin vir humor toon, of hulself nie so ernstig opneem nie.

Miskien is dít juis die paradoks van die underground: erkenning deur die hoofstroom word afgeskryf. Maar steeds soek kunstenaars iéwers erkenning – en in die soms benoude wêreld van kontrakulture, waar ego’s tussen die stront en bloed teen die klubs se mure bots, is erkenning skaars en jaloesie volop. Wat beskou ʼn mens as oorspronklik en nuut? Hoe evalueer ʼn mens eksperimente wat soms aspris heersende norme van musikaliteit probeer ondermyn? Wanneer is sulke eksperimente grensverskuiwend en wanneer is dit sommer net obskuur? De Vries kritiseer veral kunstenaars wat onbewus is van hul voorgangers. Die kulturele underground is immers nou al ʼn eeu of twee oud!

Die boek is dus veel meer as bloot ʼn ondersoek na die underground in die vroeë 1980’s. Dit probeer om die impak van daardie bewegings vandag na te speur. Dit plaas dit ook in historiese konteks – veral in die konteks van die intellektuele geskiedenis van die underground. Dit doen dit sonder om pretensieus of hoogdrawend te word.

Om al die detail hier weg te gee sal die genot uit die lees van die boek haal. Die bonus vir Suid-Afrikaners is natuurlik dat dit ʼn CD met opnames van Koos insluit. Die CD bevat lirieke van onder andere Ryk Hattingh, Johan van Wyk en Chris van Wyk, asook van Marcel van Heerden. Die laaste track op die CD, “Suid-Afrikaanse herfs”, met sy verwysings na die Baader-Meinhof-hofsaak in Duitsland, verdien om as ʼn klassieke Afrikaanse opname erken te word.

Enige iemand wat in Afrikaanse musiek en letterkunde belangstel – asook waar die twee bymekaarkom – móét hierdie boek lees. Die boek is in Nederlands geskryf. Ek moet hier tot my skaamte bieg dat ek verkies om Nederlandse letterkunde in Engels te lees, soos The Discovery of Heaven, maar ten spyte van my tekortkoming het ek dit heel maklik gevind om Club Risiko te lees. Dit het my in so ʼn mate ingetrek dat ek meestal vergeet het dat dit in ʼn ander taal geskryf is.

Ek hoop die boek sal op een of ander manier in Suid-Afrika beskikbaar gestel word. Dit noop ʼn mens om die Voëlvry-beweging te herevalueer, veral die musikale aanslag wat gevolg is. Hopelik sal die lede van Koos hul regmatige plek in die geskiedenis van Afrikaanse musiek inneem – sowel dié van hulle wat Johannesburg se Club Risiko oorleef het, as dié wat nie het nie.

Fred de Vries is op die oomblik besig om aan ʼn biografie van Sinclair Beiles te werk. Hy woon in Johannesburg.

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Sweaty night at the armpit

Friday, 3 August 2007

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.

Posted in Interviews, Media Archive, Miscellaneous, Reviews Tags:


untitled

Thursday, 12 July 2007

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.

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