UPCOMING SHOWS:

UPCOMING SHOWS:

Sat. April 30
KONONO N°1 FEAT. BATUDA
(Le Grand Mix, Tourcoing)

Sun. May 1
HELL
(The Pit's, Kortrijk)

Thu. May 5
Awesome Tapes From Africa dj set
(Treehou5e Open Air, Ghent)

Fri. May 6
Invisible Hands / Neil Michael Hagerty & The Howling Hex / DSR Lines
(Vooruit, Ghent)

Sat. May 7
CRITES
(De Ruimte, Ghent)

Tue. May 10
SEX CRIME + THE ARROGANTS
(De Pit's, Kortrijk)

Thu. May 12
QUANTIC
(DOK, Ghent)

Fri. May 13
ARCHIE & THE BUNKERS
(Het Bos, Antwerp)

Sun. May 15
THRONEFEST (Taake, Inquisition, Mgla, Batushka, Inferno, Dysangellium, Wiegedood & The Commitee)
(Kubox, Kuurne)

Thu. May 26
PAUL COLLINS BEAT
(Den Trap, Kortrijk)

Fri. May 27
BEAK>
(Trix, Antwerp)

Wed. June 1
TY SEGALL & THE MUGGERS
(Botanique, Brussels)

Wed. June 8
UNCANNY VALLEY: THE LOS ANGELES FREE MUSIC SOCIETY AND THEIR LEGACY (WOLF EYES, etc.)
(Vooruit, Ghent)

Wed. June 22
FÖLLAKZOID
(Het Bos, Antwerp)






Tuesday, February 23, 2010

THE LEAVING TRAINS & THE CELIBATE RIFLES



On March 1. 1986 at the age of 16, I discovered a music club in my hometown called DE MEDIA where I went to see an IVY GREEN/L’ATTANTAT double bill. Both shows were wild and explosive and a new world opened up for me. Because I really loved the place, I became a co-worker and started recommending bands to the club owner. Two years later, THE LEAVING TRAINS from L.A. planned a European tour to promote their third SST long-player “Fuck” and I managed to book a show at the club. Again, it was another raw and exciting rock & roll night and because a good time was had by all, the club owner agreed to my recommendations to book more guitar bands. I can’t tell you how great it felt as a 17-years old kid to jump on his bike and pedal off to wild shows by the likes of SOUL ASYLUM, TAR BABIES, DOUGHBOYS, THE STEPPES, 11TH DREAM DAY, VANILLA CHAINSAWS, ED KUEPPER, THEE HEADCOATS, DEAD MOON, THE WALKABOUTS, THE CYNICS and 22 PISTE PIRKKO!


A couple of months later, I saw THE CELIBATE RIFLES from Australia at some squat in Antwerp called 1,000 Appeltjes (1,000 Little Apples). Half of the band was dressed like they’d spent the afternoon on a surfboard with their swimming shorts and beach sandals! It must have been July 30. 1988 because I remember how I slept on a bench in the city afterwards and took a bus to the Sfinks festival in nearby Boechout early in the next morning where I saw revelatory concerts by Toumani Diabate, Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan, Abdel Aziz El Mubarak and Ali Farka Touré. Although I had a very good relationship with my parents since my 3 older sisters had left the house, I really enjoyed being on my own as an adolescent, living on a steady diet of music and little money. The following night, I slept at an outdoors sawmill and after the second festival day, I had to phone my parents to come and get me because I had spent my last money on a Miles Davis record. But I’m wandering off the subject.


As with THE LEAVING TRAINS, THE CELIBATE RIFLES were also promoting their finest platter (“Roman Beach Party”) when I saw them for the first time. Both albums have that same exciting, loose spirit that somehow shaped me as an individual at the time. My carpe diem attitude was energized by both records and that’s probably the reason why I have always considered them as twin albums.

Life without memory is not life at all – to quote Buñuel - and that’s why I not only cherish both records based on their qualities but especially because they remind me of an inspiring time full of discovery & excitement. Nothing wrong with a healthy dose of nostalgia, right?

Here are 3 songs from both “Fuck” and “Roman Beach Party”. I’m sure you will agree that these songs still hold up today:

What Cissy Said – THE LEAVING TRAINS mp3

27 Days – THE LEAVING TRAINS mp3

So Fucked Up – THE LEAVING TRAINS mp3


Jesus on T.V. - THE CELIBATE RIFLES mp3

The more things change – THE CELIBATE RIFLES mp3

Ocean Shore – THE CELIBATE RIFLES mp3

Friday, February 19, 2010

YOSHIDA KIJU


Besides a couple of great new movies at the INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL ROTTERDAM, the true revelation for me was the discovery of the films of YOSHIDA KIJU, one of the leaders of the Japanese New Wave. Not many people outside Japan and France have ever seen any of his beautiful and intriguing films so I count myself very lucky for having seen 4 of the 7 selected films on the big screen. The focus on Yoshida Kiju was part of a more extensive retrospective of 13 films (Yoshida made 19 fiction films in total) organized by the Norwegian Film Institute who also published an enlightening and highly recommended catalogue called “Yoshida Kiju: 50 Years of Avant-Garde Filmmaking in Postwar Japan”.

“I was never really conscious of doing something to be anti-something, but whenever I wrote a screenplay, it naturally came out like that.”


University-educated Yoshida made his raw debut film in 1960 when he was 27 years old, after only five years of apprenticeship mainly under Kinoshita Keisuke, master of comedy and melodrama. He had graduated in French literature from Tokyo University, Japan’s top university, and was heavily influenced by Sartre’s existentialism. Yoshida brought his academic views of society to the screen and rejected harmony and resignation.

The Affair at Akitsu (1962) is a beautiful and intense melodrama and marked Yoshida’s first collaboration with the star actress Okada Mariko. Before long they became inseparable, married and established their own independent production company Gendai Eigasha. About The Affair at Akitsu, Yoshida says the following: “I was thinking of trying to make a romance film. But romantic love is always betrayed by time, because it’s only for a very short period of time that a man and a woman can think in unison. So for me a true romance film is a film that shows the gap between the woman and the man and shows that they go past each other without really finding a common meeting point.” A wonderful and powerful film!


Yoshida’s filmic analysis of human relationships and female nature is experimental in both style and structure. Eros + Massacre (1969) is a complex yet enchanting tour de force and almost unanimously acclaimed as his true masterpiece. The film takes on Osugi Sakae, the pre-war anarchist and advocate of free love, and his relations with three different women, but has them mingle and interact with a couple of student radicals from the 1960s. Yoshida denies the narrative function of cinema in favor for a dynamic interplay of different points of view. It’s a long and complex film, but the inspiring content (the struggle between male logic and female passion) and the enchanting cinematography ensures a most rewarding experience.

Looking at it more broadly, I also went beyond the normal set of rules for setting up the camera and framing a scene. The common rule is that when you make a close-up, the focus of the shot should be at the center of the frame, so that for most people it’s easy to look at, it’s comfortable. Which also means that as part of the set of rules of cinema, the person at the center is often unconsciously defined as the protagonist. So I very often frame only half of the face of the actor. It’s a kind of resistance, telling the audience, “Don’t trust so blindly what you see on the screen. Please try to find by yourselves what is really important to you as the audience, in what you see within this frame.” That kind of feeling became stronger and stronger for me.


Coup d’Etat (1973) is a beautifully accomplished attempt to journey into the mind of the rightist revolutionary Kita Ikki, and which takes on the position of the emperor in the modern Japanese setting. It’s a difficult film to understand but the strangeness of the style of the film makes watching it an altogether unique cinematic experience.

At the age of 40, Yoshida took a thirteen-year break in making feature films during which he challenged the format of documentary. During the 1980s, he made two more films: The Human Promise (1986) and Wuthering Heights (1988).

Yoshida returned to fiction filmmaking after another fifteen-year interval with The Women in the Mirror (2002). Three generations of women question their identity but, with the atomic dome of Hiroshima in the background, have to admit that there can be no definitive answer to their query, due to the irrational character of the atomic bombing. According to Yoshida, the film took him 13 or 14 years to make and reunited him with Okada Mariko on screen after an absence of three decades.


The Women in the Mirror was also the last Yoshida film I saw in Rotterdam and I hope I will be able one day to see his other films too. According to Yoshida, what a filmmaker – as an artist – really wants to do is express something that one doesn’t understand. I myself didn’t understand a lot of what I saw on the screen, but I was completely enthralled by his challenging and brilliant films.

“A film is ultimately not about what I tell the audience to see but about what the audience sees and discovers for themselves.”

Thursday, February 11, 2010

CC RIDERS



In 2001, Alicja Trout’s Contaminated Records released a 100 copies only CD-R by a band called CC RIDERS. Besides Alicja herself (The Clears, The Fitts, Lost Sounds, Mouserocket, Nervous Patterns, River City Tanlines, Black Sunday), this Memphis band included Monsieur Jeffrey Evans (Gibson Bros, ’68 Comeback, South Filthy), James Arthur (Fireworks, Necessary Evils, Feast of Snakes, Golden Boys) and a guy called Jay Reatard. Around 2000-2001, the band had a weekly practice on Friday evening 7-9pm and according to a recent Jeffrey Evans post on the Goner Board, Jay always added the right guitar parts and hooks even on the real rootsy stuff the band was doing. Despite the band’s killer line-up, the music on the 11-song CD-R is far from essential. Nevertheless, it’s great rockin’ stuff and I would love to own a copy on vinyl. I sincerely hope the album’s (re-)release is just a matter of time. In the meantime, you can enjoy the CC RIDERS here:

1. Monkey's Uncle
2. The Long, Long Ballad Of The Red-headed Girl (killer!!!)
3. I Gotta Right (Iggy And The Stooges)
4. Olde Joe Clarke (traditional)
5. Train Kepta Rollin' (Tiny Bradshaw)
6. Soul Deep (The Box Tops)
7. King Riders Boogie [King Riders Motorcycle Club, Memphis, TN]
8. This Pussy's Gotta Give
9. Sally Honeycutt Blues
10.Workin' Man Blues (Merle Haggard)
11.Stormy Monday Blues (traditional)