
Saturday night, early a.m.,
Market Hotel. Atmospheric conditions: smudging fog and cold.
Indoor atmospheric conditions: hazy smoke, the humidity of sweat and beer. I ask myself some questions as my blurred eyes try to take in the situation—aware, only too aware, that I must try to communicate this to you, reader, at some point— how much garage punk dirty crazed repetitive repetitive psychedelia can be packed into a single evening? And how can I describe it? The answer to the first question is never enough, never ever enough, and the answer to the second is: uhh, whoops didn’t I sort of just do that?
Well, here are some facts to start off: Mean Motion, the Usasisamonster, and Awesome Color performed music at Market Hotel in celebration of Awesome Color’s new album, Electric Aborigines. Organized by the unstoppable Todd P, the show had that easy-going, connected feeling you can’t buy at the official venues. The sheer simplicity of it all felt like freedom: do what you want, when you want, how you want. Of course, because of this, the music became the main focus. It’s a free choice: and we choose good, new, different music.
So, Mean Motion, from the Netherlands, came on stage, unobtrusively got behind their instruments, and began playing long swells of guitar/synthesized noise while underneath there pulsed some simple yet unhinged and powerful drum patterns. They cleaned ears and cleared heads with their slow, ecstatic oceans of noise. (They are on tour in the U.S. and playing again at Baghdad on the 9th by the way.)
The second band, The Usaisamonster, provided a very different take on rhythm and noise: there were eccentric rhythmic and melodic patterns, extreme fist-pumping riffage, psychotic guitar ex-planetary fibrillations, and, even, short little moments of hoarse, burned plain chant. Our bodies did not know whether to fly left or right or all over the place. Unselfconscious pop folk avant-garde war path rock music: definitely fun.
And then Awesome Color came up, drunk and dirty and ready. It is no accident, it seems, that they were paired with the other two, as all the bands had a common theme of an “aboriginal” sound (as in, not necessarily Native [though, the plight of the American Indians is a major theme for Usaisamonster], but rather Original, Ur-, Basic, Before). Awesome Color’s particular attempt to get back to the primitive through sophisticated but mistreated electronic equipment like guitars and amps ran into difficulty when singer/guitarist Derek Stanton’s guitar broke on the first song. And then his second guitar broke mid-way in the set. Of course, the punishment that these instruments took made it understandable that they would collapse. The raging, literally shambolic guitar fought a constant battle with the solid rhythm of the drum and bass. Oft-compared to other Michigan natives The Stooges and MC5, Awesome Color’s music descended into the pounding throbbing noise expected and desired by the thinned-out but bouncing-off-each-other crowd. But most importantly, they completed the party atmosphere of the night, and brought show’s family of strangers together in one big final friendly danse macabre.
[words by John Melillo][Photo courtesy of Awesome Color's official website]