Fiesta comienzo de temporada: Twin Guns (ex-The Cramps), La Iguana, Vigo, 10.10.2019

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© Guilherme Lucas

words: Guilherme Lucas (freely translated by Raquel Pinheiro); photos Guilherme Lucas

Last Thursday, TWIN GUNS, an American band from Brooklyn, New York, were the group chosen to open the new concert season at La Iguana Club, a rock club in Vigo, Spain. Their beginning dates back to 2010. At first they were a duo (maybe that is the reason for the group’s name), formed by guitarist and vocalist Andrea Sicco and drummer “Jungle” Jim Chandler, the latter famous for having also had been a drummer of the legendary The Cramps in 2003-2204, since becoming an asset for promoting Twin Guns to audiences with a taste for the same kind of sound. In 2014, with the arrival of bassist Kristin Fayne-Mulroy they become a trio, an equation that continues to this day.

Carefully listening to their discography currently up to four albums, one quickly realizes that they’re a quality band of subtleties that often surprises, perhaps because of their remarkable ability and creativity to fuse diverse music genres, and turn them into something of their own. There is a story of combustible American garage rock in them, that is constantly crisscrossed in its compositions by various genres: from rock’n’roll to surf music, country, blues, punk, psychobilly, trash, psychedelic, etc., performed in a noir and cinematic way. They have a gothic and dark aesthetic ambience, which is quite obvious in nearly all their themes, within a sunglasses after dark tone, which the three elements embody blamelessly during the whole performance. Among other details of dark inclination within the themes of rock’n’roll suicide their performance and sound send us completely into B-series films, western-spaghettis, crime in the city and dark alleys,. The good “ghosts” of The Gun Club, The Cramps, Iggy And The Stooges, Link Wray, Johnny Cash, and even Suicide (band) haunt a large part of their repertoire, but it is wrong to think they are just another band of great wannabes: on their own way they are building their own path and there is merit in that, as it is in their variety of styles, and in the way they play them that their worthiness resides. I really enjoyed Twin Guns’ concert that oscillated between a good and very good performance, also a result of the different intensities of each of the performed themes.

Andrea Sicco (also a member of the noise-rock band, Art Gray Noizz Quintet), is a very competent and focused guitarist-vocalist, managing to cover several styles, both when it comes to singing and guitar work, being exquisite in both aspects. Quite particularly, too, because a guitarist who happens upon the fortune of choosing to use a white Fender Jaguar as his favorite guitar, coupled with a Fender Twin Reverb, and have Reuss RSH-03 as one of his effects pedals, is,without a doubt, a tasteful, cultured musician, and artists of such class are very much needed, at least as far as I am concerned. Those who don’t understand what I’m talking about, do your research, he only clue I provide is: Melbourne. Between mourning and pure chaotic savagery Twin Guns, played two encores requested by the audience, which of course was euphoric with a great performance. The three of them volunteered until one of the guitar strings broke during a devastating solo in Jack The Ripper, a Link Wray cover. It was the right cue to end the show.

Interestingly, I realized that little by little, and having seen The Cramps live in 2006 at Vodafone Paredes de Coura Festival, I will have been able to see other former The Cramps in different contexts; a year ago it was Fur Dixon at Barracuda – Roque Club, this time Jim Chandler… so, bring on the next living “crampesque” legend because i tis always guaranteed to be a good thing.

In short, I spend a very pleasant Thursday night with these New Yorkers in the land of nuestros hermanos. Next time you come to Europe next time I hope you’ll play in Portugal.

 

 

texto e fotos: Guilherme Lucas

Fiesta comienzo de temporada: Twin Guns (ex-The Cramps) – Os TWIN GUNS, banda norte-americana de Brooklyn, New York, foram o grupo escolhido para abrir a nova temporada de concertos, na última quinta-feira, no clube de rock de Vigo, Espanha, o La Iguana Club. O seu início de atividade remonta a 2010 e eram inicialmente um duo (eventualmente sendo esta particularidade a razão para o nome do grupo), formado pelo guitarrista e vocalista Andrea Sicco e o baterista “Jungle” Jim Chandler, este último famoso por ter sido também baterista dos lendários The Cramps entre 2003-2004, e que tem servido desde aí como uma mais-valia na divulgação dos Twin Guns para públicos com gostos pelos mesmos tipos de sonoridades. Em 2014, passam a ser um trio, com a entrada da baixista Kristin Fayne-Mulroy, equação que se mantêm até ao presente.

Escutando atentamente a sua discografia, que conta já com quatro álbuns, rapidamente percebemos que é banda de qualidade e de subtilezas que em muitos momentos surpreendem, talvez pela notável capacidade e criatividade de fundir géneros musicais distintos, e de os transformar em algo próprio. Há neles uma história de garage rock americano em combustão, que é constantemente entre cruzada estilisticamente nas suas composições por diversos géneros musicais: desde o rock’n’roll, passando pela surf music, country, blues, punk, psychobilly, trash, psicadélico, etc, executados de uma forma noir e cinematográfica. Possuem uma ambiência estética gótica e dark, que é muito evidente em quase todos os seus temas, dentro de um registo sunglasses after dark, que os três elementos personificam irrepreensivelmente em toda a sua atuação. A sua performance e sonoridade remete-nos completamente para filmes de série-B, western-spaghettis, crime na cidade e becos escuros, entre outras minudências de pendor obscuro dentro das temáticas do rock’n’roll suicide. Os bons “fantasmas” de uns The Gun Club, The Cramps, Iggy And The StoogesLink WrayJohnny Cash, e até mesmo Suicide (band), assombram muito do seu repertório, mas desengane-se quem pensar que são mais uma banda de wannabes dos grandes: à sua maneira estão a construir o seu próprio percurso e tem mérito nisso, pois, é na sua variedade de estilos, e na forma como os interpretam, que reside o seu gabarito.
Gostei bastante do concerto destes Twin Guns, resvalando entre o bom e o muito bom na sua atuação, fruto também das diferentes intensidades de cada um dos temas executados.

Andrea Sicco (que também é membro da banda noise-rock, Art Gray Noizz Quintet), é um guitarrista-vocalista muito competente e focado, conseguindo abranger vários registos, tanto ao nível de canto como do seu trabalho de guitarra, sendo primoroso nos dois aspetos. Muito particularmente, também, porque um guitarrista que pode ter a fortuna de escolher usar uma Fender Jaguar branca como a sua guitarra de eleição, ligada a um Fender Twin Reverb, e ter como um dos seus pedais de efeitos o Reuss RSH-03, naturalmente é um músico culto e com muito bom gosto, e artistas com esta classe são muito necessários, pelo menos para mim. Quem não perceber o que estou a comentar, que investigue, e a única pista que dou é: Melbourne. Entre o dolente e a mais pura selvajaria caótica, os Twin Guns, fizeram dois encores a pedido do público, que naturalmente estava eufórico com uma grande prestação. E assim se prontificaram os três, até que uma das cordas da guitarra se partiu durante um solo devastador à la Link Wray, na versão do mesmo, Jack The Ripper. Foi o mote certo para dar por finalizado o espetáculo.

Em jeito de curiosidade, constatei, de que a pouco e pouco, e depois de ter visto os The Cramps ao vivo em 2006, no Festival Vodafone Paredes de Coura, vou conseguindo ver outros ex-The Cramps noutros contextos; há um ano foi a Fur Dixon no Barracuda – Clube de Roque, desta vez o Jim Chandler… por isso, que venha a próxima lenda viva “crampesca”, é sempre garantidamente coisa boa.

Finalizando: foi uma muito agradável noite de quinta-feira, aquela que passei com estes nova-iorquinos, em terras de nuestros hermanos. Quando regressarem à Europa da próxima vez, espero que atuem em Portugal.

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© Guilherme Lucas

 

 

 

Thalia Zedek – Interview

Thalia Zedek by Naomi Yang
© Naomi Yang

 

Thalia Zedek is currently touring Iberia. She will play in Portugal on the 11, Plano B, Porto and on the 13th, Lounge, Lisboa. Her 2018 album Fighting Season was one of Mondo Bizarre’s Magazine albums of the year. We have a brief interview with Thalia about her songwriting, covers and touring. 

by Raquel Pinheiro

It has been almost  two decades since you have been releasing solo albums. By then, did you found it hard to switch from a band and joint writing to solo writing?

I didn’t find it hard to switch. In Come, even though me and Chris worked collaboratively, we also each wrote separately. In a way it was freeing to write for a solo project because I didn’t have to worry about how the song would fit in with a band’s sound or instrumentation.

How has your writing process changed with time?

It actually has changed very little over the years. Of course technology has changed so now instead of recording my ideas onto a cassette, it’s an MP3 recorder. But it still starts with me picking up my guitar and starting to play. For me, the music usually comes before the lyrics.

Where do you find inspiration? Which subjects are of most interest to you?

Lately , because of all of the crazy stuff going on in the USA I have found my writing to be much more political. But I’m also inspired by dreams as well as real life experiences that me and the people around me are dealing with, love, death, friendship, loneliness etc.

You have recorded and sang several covers. How do you choose a cover?

It’s almost always a song that I’ve loved for a very long time and that connects with me on both a melodic and lyrical basis, though a recent exception is an Arboretum song I’ve been covering called “People Flock Not to the Good”. It came on randomly when I was listening to something on my computer. The song I was listening to ended and the Arboretum song started playing and totally stunned me with it’s beauty.

Which is your favourite instrument to play and which is your favourite instrument to compose?

Guitar and Guitar!

You’re seen as one of rock-indie-alternative great ladies/dames. Do you see yourself as such?

That is not how I see myself. I’m just a songwriter and musician who happens to be female and who has been lucky enough to be recording and touring for many years , and lucky enough to have played in some really good bands over those years.

Do you still enjoy touring? Over the years has your way of touring and performing changed?

I still really enjoy touring, maybe even more so than when I was younger, as I feel less pressure than I have in the past. Or maybe I am just a little more confidant? I play a lot more solo shows now than I used to and I’ve been enjoying that lately. It gives me a lot more flexibility in terms of traveling and logistics and also is a different experience for the audience.

Do you have any pre-gig rituals?

No.