25.3.19

Kristin Hersh + Fred Abong. Left Bank, Leeds. 21.03.19.




First words must be about the venue. Left Bank Leeds is a multi-disciplinary arts venue set in a Grade II listed former church now over 110 years old. Walking in really does have the wow factor with it’s archways, stonework, stained glass and subtle coloured lighting. A perfect setting for tonight’s gig.

Kristin Hersh is visiting Leeds as part of her ‘Live and Loud’ tour and has brought with her former Throwing Muses and Belly bass player Fred Abong and 50FT Wave drummer Rob Ahlers.

Fred Abong opens proceedings. Walking on stage he looks genuinely shy with a demeanour giving the impression he’s not quite sure how the audience will react. Last year Abong released the wonderful six track mini-album/ep ‘Homeless’. Full of mesmorising, repetitive guitar picking,  gravelly vocals that could easily be mistaken for those of Mark Everett (Eels) and some killer lyrics that could be dealing with any of life’s ups and downs – relationships, identity, frustration. Just listen to ‘Homeless’ and you’ll get what I mean. Recent release ‘Pulsing’, another six track mini-album that’s played in full tonight, follows in the same vein as Homeless with the addition of some dark grungier moments of heavier bass, driving guitar noise and vocals delivered with more aggression. Standout moments include the hypnotic ‘Firefly’, the heavy drone of ‘Sum’, the distorted guitar drenched ‘Meet Me’ and ‘Homeless’ – a favourite from last time I saw Abong play live – that catches your attention immediately and forces you to listen. If you only know Fred Abong through his work with Throwing Muses and Belly then tonight provided a perfect insight into his songwriting talents as a solo artist. Great stuff.

Fred Abong

Fred Abong


The mere presence of Kristin Hersh on a stage is enough to cause those gathered to fall into a reverential silence. Tonight is no exception. There’s no loud cheers, no stamping of feet or raucous clapping of hands. Just the odd whoop, polite applause and quiet anticipation. Perhaps it’s because it’s a seated venue and this forces people to be more subdued, more polite. Nonetheless the atmosphere is charged. Kristin Hersh attracts very few casual observers. Rather anyone who goes to see her falls into the category of dedicated fan and here in Leeds she can do no wrong. ‘Live and Loud’ means just that as opening number ‘Lax’ from 2018 album ‘Possible Dust Clouds’ proves. Hersh’s guttural, rasping vocals backed by  Abong’s pounding bass lines and Ahlers’ drums deliver an altogether different experience to seeing Hersh on her own with just her guitar.

‘No Shade In Shadow’, the lead single from Possible Dust Clouds is perfect with it’s hypnotic, repetitive, melodic, low fi distortion.  ‘Possible Dust Clouds’ quite rightly features heavily – current single ‘Loud Mouth’, ‘Tulum’ and ‘Halfway Home’ – darker, heavier, denser than a lot of Hersh’s recent output. Songs that sit brilliantly in a live setting, especially one with a past such as this one. Aside from these Kristin Hersh delivers a set of songs spanning much of her back catalogue. ‘Mississippi Kite’, ‘Sand’ and ‘Crooked’ from the soon to be re-issued ‘Crooked’ album. A driving, sonic ‘Sunray Venus’ and ‘Limbo’ are the only Throwing Muses songs to feature. ‘Your Ghost’, with backing vocals from Rob Ahlers, always a crowd favourite and always an emotional moment, receives the appreciation it deserves.

Despite moving little Kristin Hersh is a dominating presence. She says little but what she does say is quick witted and often full of wry humour. A problem with the G string on her guitar is compared to a strippers underwear. Gentle smiles quickly change into devious grins and, once a song has started, there’s that hypnotic stare. Fixed on some point not just at the back of this church but at some point far, far away as her head sways side to side Hersh becomes a different person, lost in her own world, possibly the world where voices once provided the lyrics and the chords to her songs. Then, as soon as a song comes to completion, she’s back with us.

It's not all gutsy, sonically driven guitars and drums. Quieter, gentler but no less powerful moments come with Sky Motel’s ‘Husk’ and  ‘The Thin Man’ from Learn To Sing like A Star, both showcases for the raw emotion Hersh displays so easily.

The set closes with traditional cover ‘The Cuckoo’ but it’s just a minute or so before they return and, after Abong and Ahlers swap instruments, belt out a thunderous 50Ft Wave’s ‘Broke’.

The evening wasn’t perfect. Having the crowd seated suits the single guitar, solo shows Kristin Hersh has done in the past. It’s not so good when things are ‘Live and Loud’ and need a crowd who can stand and move. The acoustics of the high church roof also mean that, through no fault of the band, the sound wasn’t perhaps as clear as it should have been. But for an audience who hang on every word she says, on every note she plays and on every lyric Kristin Hersh sings these were trivial matters.

Kristin Hersh


Kristin Hersh

Kristin Hersh

Kristin Hersh


Kristin Hersh

1.3.19

Boy Harsher, Kontravoid, Soft Issues. Wharf Chambers, Leeds. 25.02.19.






First the venue – Wharf Chambers is a multi-use venue run by a workers co-operative. It’s inclusive, affordable (no rip off drinks prices here) and puts on a fantastic variety of live music throughout the year.

Tonight’s gig is a sell-out and by 8pm there’s a real buzz developing.


Soft Issues kick off the evening entertainment. This two-piece from Leeds deliver what can only be described as an insane level of screaming noise based on synth driven sounds. They don’t play tunes, they simply drill straight into your head with a hypnotising set that can, occasionally, lull you into a false sense of calmness before the ferocious, agonizing, grinding vocals and piercing, almost unbearable electronic soundscape once again kicks you in the head.

Soft Issues

Soft Issues


By contrast, Toronto’s Cameron Findlay, better known as Kontravoid, delivers a set of electronic beats that aren’t your run-of-the-mill dance tunes. Pushing the boundaries of techno electro-pop as vocals and non-stop movements are almost obliterated by the constant flickering of pure white strobes. It’s hard to know where to look or what to concentrate on. Kontravoid’s set of repetitive, mesmorising beats, dark lyrics and apocalyptic lighting mangles your senses as he takes you down an ominous path to who knows where.

Kontravoid


By the time Boy Harsher walk on stage the place is absolutely rammed. Sell out means sell out. I doubt you could have squeezed another soul onto the floor tonight. There’s a real sense of anticipation building. As one person behind me said, “I don’t care if I can’t see them. I just want to listen and dance.” And dance they did. It took no build up, no ‘getting into it’. From opening song ‘A Realness’ the whole place doesn’t stop moving. Boy Harsher play addictive, dark, minimal synth chords over deep, driving beats. If you’d never heard them before it’d be milliseconds before you were moving, dreaming, completely locked in to their techno-goth sounds. Add in Jae Matthews’ haunting vocals, piercing stares, occasional manic yelps and it’s easy to see why Boy Harsher draw you in and keep you fixated. Surprisingly their set tonight isn’t dominated by songs from recent LP release ‘Careful’ – ‘Fate’, ‘Come Closer’, ‘Tears’ and ‘LA’ are masterpieces of 80’s synth-pop influenced dance tunes but without the chintz. 2016’s ‘Your Body Is Nothing’ gives us ‘A Realness’, ‘Your Body Is Nothing’ and the constantly changing, simple beat into driving basslines, and unnerving vocals of highlight ‘Suitor’. On ‘Westerners’ (from EP Country Girl) and ‘Modulations’ (from ‘Lesser Man’) Gus Muller ups the tempo of synth driven melodies. Set closer, and arguably Boy Harsher’s calling card, ‘Pain’ is a magical mix of thick, pulsating bass rhythm, pounding beats and dark, husky vocals repeating “Pain breaks rhythm, breaks rhythm”. It’s easy to understand why Pain has, to date, been played over 1.3 million times on Spotify alone.

Boy Harsher

Boy Harsher

Boy Harsher

Boy Harsher

Boy Harsher

Boy Harsher

Boy Harsher

Boy Harsher