BPREVIEW: Dorcha + Chartreuse, Delta Autumn @ Hare & Hounds 22.12.16

BPREVIEW:  Dorcha + Chartreuse, Delta Autumn @ Hare & Hounds 22.12.16 / Artwork by Lewes HerriotWords by Ed King

On Thursday 22nd December, Dorcha perform at the Hare & Hounds (Kings Heath) with Chartreuse + Delta Autumn as support.

Doors open at 7:30pm. Tickets are priced at £7 (advance) and £10 (otd) with ‘all proceeds from this show will now go towards helping those affected by the Aleppo crisis.’ For direct gig info and online tickets sales, click here.Birmingham Preview

This Is Tmrw will be also throwing some DJs into the Christmas pudding, as it’s their party and they’ll play if they want to, with a ‘Special Guest’ also curiously billed to appear… Could it be Father Christmas?

No. He doesn’t exist. And how scary is a fat cosplayer, drunk on Sherry, creeping into your children’s bedroom at three in the morning..? Someone get Paul Dacre on the phone.

The obligatory Santa/Sexual Predator jokes aside; this looks like a good celebration whatever your appropriated religious predilection. Dorcha have (kind sorta) released a new EP recently, ISM, making some limited edition copies available at their Centrala party in mid November.

Being (INSERT PLAYFUL SELF DEPRECIATION) we never made it to Minerva Works and have been quietly self harming ever since. But now, dear hearts, bring out the short sleeves ‘cos Dorcha will be selling CDs at the Hare. It’s like Christmas.

Supporting Dorcha are the ever wonderful and sublime, Chartreuse. Named after mountains, monks or some really poky liquor, this Birmingham four piece are but wee nippers in the broader scheme of things – but bugger me with a salad tosser, they’re already amongst the cream of Birmingham crop. Like a chunk of 4D fell into Lou Reed’s overnight bag, got covered in Absinthe and glitter, before being sprinkled around Bobby Gillespie’s hotel room at 6am… It’s fair to say we like them. But see what you think – we rely too much on metaphors anyway.

Also supporting are Delta Autumn. Honestly, we don’t know much about this band. Except that it wasn’t always a band. But self described as ‘smashing hip hop, glitch, pop, rock, jazz and electro acoustic compositional techniques together to create a sound that sits somewhere between James Blake, Flying Lotus and Thundercat’ they sound worth a stop, look, listen. And This Is Tmrw are not often wrong.

But if you want a sneaky peak there’s a few tracks on Delta Autumn’s website for you to scroll through, including the oddly frenetic ‘Citrus Quotes’ with Juice Aleem – always a good name to see on a track listing.

Meanwhile, back at the ranch…

Dorcha / ISM EP Launch party @ Centrala 17.11.16

On Thursday 22nd December, Dorcha perform at the Hare & Hounds (Kings Heath) with support from Chartreuse + Delta Autumn. For direct gig info and online tickets sales, click here.

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For more on Dorcha, visit www.facebook.com/Dorchauk

For more on Chartreuse, visit www.facebook.com/chartreuseband

For more on Delta Autumn, visit www.deltaautumnmusic.com

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For more artwork from Lewes Herriot, visit www.lewesherriot.carbonmade.com

For more from This Is Tmrw, including full event listings and online ticket sales, visit www.thisistmrw.co.uk

For more from the Hare & Hounds (Kings Heath), including full event listings and online ticket sales, visit www.hareandhoundskingsheath.co.uk

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BREVIEW: The Garden + The Parrots @ Hare & Hounds, 28.08

The Garden @ Hare & Hounds 28.08.16 / By Rob Hadley (Indie Images) © Birmingham Review

Words by Jay Dyer / Pics by Rob Hadley (Indie Images)

For the full Flickr of pics, click here

It’s Bank Holiday Sunday and it seems nature has given us Brits one final fleeting glimpse of what summer should be. It’s hot, it’s muggy and a wave of BBQ smoke lingers on the air.The Mothers Earth Experiment supporting The Garden + The Parrots @ Hare & Hounds 28.08.16 / By Rob Hadley (Indie Images) © Birmingham Review

However the promise of a darkened room filled with sweaty people and loud music is too good to miss. Word reaches me that two of the best local promoters, This is Tmrw and Killer Wave, have teamed up to bring some exciting local and international underground bands to the Hare & Hounds in Kings Heath.

The venue’s second, smaller room is host for this evening; its floor is already nice and sticky as I take a quick trip to the bar. The first band up on stage is The Mothers Earth Experiment, a six-piece ensemble who answer the question ‘’what’s up with all these flared jeans?’’.

The Mothers Earth Experiment arrange themselves on stage (which isn’t easy for a six-piece) and begin their set. The word ‘experiment’ within their name is aptly chosen; the band fuses together such a variety of genres that it is both old and fresh simultaneously. A luscious blend of Psychedelia, Jazz and Blues that takes you on a journey through the best parts of the 60’s and 70’s; in parts, they sound like Syd Barrett era Pink Floyd, in others the writing process behind The Beatles Revolver.

The Terror Watts - supporting The Garden + The Parrots @ Hare & Hounds 28.08.16 / By Rob Hadley (Indie Images) © Birmingham ReviewEach segment is wonderfully brought together – from the dual percussion, to the slightly overdriven guitars to the Ray Manzarek-esque organ. You get the feeling while watching The Mothers Earth Experiment that they must have so much fun in the rehearsal studio, just their effortless ability to be in complete sync is something to be admired. Arguably some of their instrumental songs go on a bit too long, but overall the set is a good dreamscape to begin the night – even if the room is a little empty this early on.

It appears the Hare & Hounds have their AC on the ‘ARCTIC’ setting too; to warm up I take a brief look outside to see more people have arrived, which is good news. Terror Watts are up next, a band that I’ve been keeping an ear on for some time; the three-piece are highly praised around Birmingham and this will be the third time I have seen them live.

Terror Watts play a form of high paced punk rock with a few more added pop hooks than most similar acts. They seem to have nailed the three-chord-song and maintain the pop melody throughout, which is quite intriguing. The rhythm section is pretty damn brutal and the bass is full of energy, which really compliments the high end distorted guitar and the melodic vocals. The room is much fuller by this point, something that reflects in the Terror Watts’ performance – one which is all about energy.Sunshine Frisbee Laserbeam - supporting The Garden + The Parrots @ Hare & Hounds 28.08.16 / By Rob Hadley (Indie Images) © Birmingham Review

Sunshine Frisbee Laserbeam are up next, as another influx of people come up the narrow winding stairs into the still unnaturally cold Room 2. Sunshine Frisbee Laserbeam are another band I have heard quite a lot about, however I’ve not yet had the chance to see them live. Like their predecessors, Sunshine Frisbee Laserbeam focus upon delivering a fast paced, energetic set with lots of movement both physically and sonically.

They utilise dual vocals extremely well and the two very different tones intertwine wonderfully. The use of over driven, octave effects on the guitar is also worked perfectly. Many bands use this technique to varying success, but the sounds produced tonight are refined and blend well with the raw power of the rhythm section. Although it’s hard to put a finger on the style Sunshine Frisbee Laserbeam are making; in some parts I hear Palma Violets, in others I hear some Blink 182 (I apologise).

Table Scraps - supporting The Garden + The Parrots @ Hare & Hounds 28.08.16 / By Rob Hadley (Indie Images) © Birmingham ReviewTable Scraps take to the stage next; the three piece are a punky, gritty mass of noise which comforts my ears. The pace of this band is the fastest tonight, with the tempo seeming to ever rise alongside the thunderous noise. The drums are the heartbeat; they pound and reverberate around the room with much focus upon the toms.

The tortured vocals are exactly what you would wish for with this style of music, cutting through the low end noise and ringing out catchy melodies for the duration of the set. The choruses are great for the crowd to scream back at the band, and there’s a ritualistic chant behind almost every song.

Table Scraps have elements of Ty Segall running through their music (albeit a far sludgier version) with simple songs played in a way you do not hear very often. This band are great for getting the heart race and adrenaline running, which is shown when the first crowd surfers of the evening start occurring in the middle of the room. And thankfully Table Scraps seem to have made the room a little bit hotter to counteract that air conditioner.

The penultimate slot goes to Madrid 3-piece, The Parrots. And I will get the following comparison out of the way, because the band (or their fans) are most likely bored of hearing it… and with my limited knowledge of Madrid’s music scene… The Parrots sound very similar, in terms of style, to Hinds. Absolutely no bad thing, but rather a look into what the Spanish are up to. But I love it, I really do. The harmonic distorted vocals, the jangling guitar lines, the galloping bass and the swinging drums; it all just fits so, so wellThe Parrots @ Hare & Hounds 28.08.16 / By Rob Hadley (Indie Images) © Birmingham Review.

The Parrots also have elements of psyche rock bands such as The Allah-La’s, and their overall sound is just overwhelmingly feel good. Yes, it is simple, but that’s the joy because they make it sound so fun. It’s not over laden with noise and over-experimented on the effects; it is honest and completely to the point, which is right up my street.

The Parrots’ front man, Diego García, is eye catching – running about the stage, ending up on his back whilst screeching out a guitar line. This is the craziest I have seen the Hare & Hounds‘ crowd tonight and it’s a great surprise to discover a band I really, really, want to see again.

But this is it. I have overheard, at various points this evening, how much people are looking forward to tonight’s second headliner The Garden. Somehow I’ve not listened to this band before either, but once again I am looking forward to see what all the fuss is about.

The Garden @ Hare & Hounds 28.08.16 / By Rob Hadley (Indie Images) © Birmingham ReviewAs I stand right next to the stage right speaker, I am shocked to see Trent Reznor (straight from the ‘March of the Pigs’ video set) and a young Dave Gahan wearing French regency makeup walk onto stage. One sits at the drums and the other picks up the bass, as they tear into a set which both confuses me and intrigues me equally.

The Garden are, almost definitely, the most polarising band I have ever witnessed live. I would understand that a lot of people would absolutely hate them, but I am not one of them (…I think). The Garden seem to cross genres nearly every second – starting with cataclysmic death metal style bass lines, then intertwining jazz, electro, new wave and beyond. It is madness, absolute pure unadulterated madness; you have to be completely open-minded and expect nothing.

Inexplicably, midway through a song, The Garden ‘twins’ (brothers Wyatt and Fletcher Shears) both drop instruments and embark what I can only deem as electro/dubstep karaoke which the crowd absolutely loves. If I were to attempt to define the sound I would suggest beginning with Devo, then imagining that Devo took some really awful acid and spawned some brutal dark Devo baby. Then you’d be close.

But there has been a lot on stage tonight, as The Garden end our Bank Holiday mayhem with simply a really strange set. One which has an incredible reaction from the crowd surfers, but something I was not expecting to witness on a Sunday.

For more on The Garden, visit http://www.thegardenvadavada.com/

For more from The Parrots, visit www.facebook.com/theparrots1

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For more from Killer Wave, visit www.facebook.com/kllrwv

For More from This Is Tmrw, visit www.thisistmrw.co.uk

For more from the Hare & Hounds (Kings Heath), visit www.hareandhoundskingsheath.co.ukFollow-Birmingham-Review-on-300x26Facebook - f square, rounded - with colour - 5cm highTwitter - t, square, rounded, with colour, 5cm high

THE GALLERY: The Garden + The Parrots @ Hare & Hounds 28.08

The Garden @ Hare & Hounds 28.08.16 / By Rob Hadley (Indie Images) © Birmingham Review

Pics by Rob Hadley (Indie Images)

For the full Flickr of pics, click here

On Sunday 28th August, Killer Wave and This Is Tmrw presented a Bank Holiday bonanza of bands – bringing Orange County’s The Garden and Madrid’s The Parrots to the Hare & Hounds as joint headliners.

Bolstering the 5pm line up were enough local luminaries to make the show twice as worth the cover charge, with The Mothers Earth Experiment, Table Scraps, The Terror Watts & Sunshine Frisbee Laserbeam filling the Bank Holiday bill.

Rock, roll, punk and pints of Sunday cider… Birmingham Review’s one-man-photo-machine (or Rob Hadley as he is known to his more human compadres) was there to capture an extensive picture spread to go into THE GALLERY.

Also keep an eye out for our full BREVIEW from Jay Dyer – coming to screen near you soon. So here. And later today.

Meanwhile, back at the ranch… here are a couple of tasty pictorial morsels (if you were too ruined by Sunday to see clearly for yourself). To check out the full Flickr of pics click here or on the link above.

 

The Garden @ Hare & Hounds 28.08The Garden @ Hare & Hounds 28.08.16 / By Rob Hadley (Indie Images) © Birmingham Review

The Garden @ Hare & Hounds 28.08.16 / By Rob Hadley (Indie Images) © Birmingham Review

For more from The Garden, visit www.thegardenvadavada.com

 

The Parrots @ Hare & Hounds 28.08

The Parrots @ Hare & Hounds 28.08.16 / By Rob Hadley (Indie Images) © Birmingham Review

The Parrots @ Hare & Hounds 28.08.16 / By Rob Hadley (Indie Images) © Birmingham Review

For more from The Parrots, visit www.facebook.com/theparrots1

 

The Mothers Earth Experiment @ Hare & Hounds 28.08

The Mothers Earth Experiment supporting The Garden + The Parrots @ Hare & Hounds 28.08.16 / By Rob Hadley (Indie Images) © Birmingham Review

The Mothers Earth Experiment supporting The Garden + The Parrots @ Hare & Hounds 28.08.16 / By Rob Hadley (Indie Images) © Birmingham Review

For more from The Mothers Earth Experiment, visit www.facebook.com/themothersearthexperiment

 

Table Scraps @ Hare & Hounds 28.08

Table Scraps - supporting The Garden + The Parrots @ Hare & Hounds 28.08.16 / By Rob Hadley (Indie Images) © Birmingham Review

Table Scraps - supporting The Garden + The Parrots @ Hare & Hounds 28.08.16 / By Rob Hadley (Indie Images) © Birmingham Review

For more on Table Scraps, visit www.facebook.com/tablescrapshq

 

The Terror Watts @ Hare & Hounds 28.08

The Terror Watts - supporting The Garden + The Parrots @ Hare & Hounds 28.08.16 / By Rob Hadley (Indie Images) © Birmingham Review

The Terror Watts - supporting The Garden + The Parrots @ Hare & Hounds 28.08.16 / By Rob Hadley (Indie Images) © Birmingham Review

For more on The Terror Watts, visit www.facebook.com/terrorwatts

 

Sunshine Frisbee Laserbeam @ Hare & Hounds 28.08

Sunshine Frisbee Laserbeam - supporting The Garden + The Parrots @ Hare & Hounds 28.08.16 / By Rob Hadley (Indie Images) © Birmingham Review

Sunshine Frisbee Laserbeam - supporting The Garden + The Parrots @ Hare & Hounds 28.08.16 / By Rob Hadley (Indie Images) © Birmingham Review

For more on Sunshine Frisbee Laserbeam, visit www.facebook.com/sunshinefrisbeelaserbeam

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For more from Killer Wave, visit www.facebook.com/kllrwv

For More from This Is Tmrw, visit www.thisistmrw.co.uk

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For more from the Hare & Hounds (Kings Heath), visit www.hareandhoundskingsheath.co.ukFollow-Birmingham-Review-on-300x26Facebook - f square, rounded - with colour - 5cm highTwitter - t, square, rounded, with colour, 5cm high

 

BREVIEW: Whitney @ Hare & Hounds, 23.08

Whitney @ Hare & Hounds 23/08/16

Words by Graeme Elliott

For a band which created such laid back music, Whitney are hard working bunch – touring heavily in support of their debut album Light Upon the Lake. The hard work is definitely paying off though as Hare & Hounds is packed; there is palpable excitement in the room as the audience waits for the band to enter. whitneylightuponthelakealbumart

Front man and drummer, Julien Ehrlich, is the first one to wander on stage, his baggy shirt tucked into his grey sweat pants and towel draped around his neck; gym chic. He introduces their set by telling us they will be shaking up the order this evening; a way to liven things up on tour, no doubt, although their debut album’s title track, ‘Light Upon the Lake’, is an oddly gentle choice of opening. It almost works too, and the band injects more energy into it as a live version – but it still feels a little lost and timid thrust out up front.

Things soon pick up pace, and the subsequent combo of ‘Polly’ and ‘Red Moon’ prove the highlights of the night. For ‘Polly’ the band provides a grand sweeping backing to the Ehrlich’s falsetto, before the song gives way to its soulful trumpet outro. And live the swing of ‘Red Moon’ is emphasized – with Max Kakacek’s lead guitar and Will Miller’s trumpet trading melodies, playing off each other. It’s only a shame that it ends too soon; it feels like Whitney could have pushed this gentlemanly dual between their two musicians a bit more.

This is Tmrw - logo transAs we move towards the second half, the set sags a little. A passable cover of Bob Dylan’s ‘Tonight I’ll be Staying Here With You’ doesn’t help, but the final combo of ‘The Falls’ and ‘No Women’ close out the set on a high; the band pausing to soak up the applause and say goodnight before launching into the final brief outro of ‘No Woman’.

This brings me to a concern I have with Whitney; their songs are skillfully played and arranged, but nothing fully grabs hold of you as you expect it should. ‘No Women’ being a typical example; a fine song, but it never seems to build to the heights it threatens to and ends too suddenly.

Too many times Whitney’s songs seem to stop short and they can seem a little flat because of it. Unarguably a hard working band, filling venues from Chicago to Birmingham, but perhaps Whitney could push themselves a little more – to give their songs more space to build on record, and to improvise with live. This could do a lot more to liven up their gigs than rearranging the set list. 

For more on Whitney, visit www.whitneytheband.com 

For more from This Is Tmrw, visit www.thisistmrw.co.uk

For more from the Hare & Hounds, visit www.hareandhoundskingsheath.co.uk

BPREVIEW: The Garden + The Parrots @ Hare & Hounds, 28.08

14054201_946347345474602_5516814521916213764_nWords by Ed King

On Sunday 28th August, local promoters Killer Wave and This Is Tmrw join forces for an ‘all dayer’ live music event at the Hare & Hounds (Kings Heath) – with The Garden + The Parrots sharing the headline.Birmingham Preview

Elsewhere on the bill are Table Scraps, Sunshine Frisbee Laserbeam, The Terror Watts, Mothers Earth Experiment – with DJ sets from Terror Twins, Killer Wave + This Is Tmrw.

Doors open 5pm (so, an ‘all afternooner..?’) with advance tickets at £10 – which as far as Bank Holiday Sundays go, and considering the line up, is pretty bloody reasonable. For direct gig info & online ticket sales, click here.

The Garden are a self described ‘constantly evolving’ rock band from Orange County – currently touring the globe, coming to the Hare & Hounds on the third date around the UK (with two more in Southern Ireland).

Never dull, never pigeonholed, The Garden’s 2013 debut LP, the gloriously titled Life and Times of a Paperclip, is 16 track DIY extravaganza chocked full of 90sec garage band sonic booms – with their latest, and eponymous, LP losing none of the raw punches but stepping up the vocal leads and production value.

The Garden’s latest release, ‘Call This # Now’, begins (and ends) with what would probably happen if the black box from Event Horizon released an accompanying soundtrack, before jumping to a funky looped production and summer mish mash. It’s great fun, absurdly catchy, and has the occasional swear word. Sold. So what to expect on stage is anyone’s guess, but I reckon it’ll be a fun way to spend your Sunday.

But don’t take our words for it, click below and work it out for yourselves.

‘Call This # Now’ – The Garden

Sharing the Sunday top slot are Spanish three piece, The Parrots.  And whilst we’re describing bands by metaphor, The Parrots are The Velvet Underground on a prolonged holiday after stealing Cliff’s double decker and driving over Lemmy’s foot. Well it makes sense to me.

Anyway… The Parrots are also globetrotting, coming to Birmingham on the second stop of their five UK dates – on the road to promote their debut LP, the also gloriously titled Los Niños Sin Miedo (Children Without Fear). Out on Heavenly Recordings from 26th August, Los Niños Sin Miedo is 10 track garage fest of summer strained awesomeness, thrown in your face from a recklessly moving vehicle whilst spanking your rear. HUGE fun.

The album’s lead single, the… titled ‘Jame Gumb’ (if you were born in the 90’s +, Google it) is a two and a half minute meander into a tripped out soundscape that should give you a taste of the other nine tracks that sandwich it.

But again, we could be talking trite sh*te for all anyone would know. Stop, look and listen for yourself – click below.

‘Jame Gumb’ – The Parrots

The rest of the Sunday service comes from a healthy array of Birmingham bands that would be worth a cover charge on their own.

But here’s a list, with some helpful URL links if you’re feeling click happy: Table Scraps, Sunshine Frisbee Laserbeam, The Terror Watts, Mothers Earth Experiment.

Phew… I’m off for a lie down. Wake me up on Sunday would you.

Killer Wave and This Is Tmrw present The Garden + The Parrots, with support from Table Scraps, Sunshine Frisbee Laserbeam, The Terror Watts, Mothers Earth Experiment at the Hare & Hound on Sunday 28th August. For direct gig info & online ticket sales, click here.

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For more on The Garden, visit www.thegardenvadavada.com

For more from The Parrots, visit www.facebook.com/theparrots1

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For more from Killer Wave, visit www.facebook.com/kllrwv

For More from This Is Tmrw, visit www.thisistmrw.co.uk

For more from the Hare & Hounds (Kings Heath), visit www.hareandhoundskingsheath.co.uk

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