Post Punk Strikes Back Again 3, Hard Club, Porto, 07.12.2019

Okandi
Okandi Β© Telma Mota

words: Neno Costa (freely translated by Raquel Pinheiro); photos: Telma Mota

The third Post Punk Strikes Back Again, promoted by At The Rollercoaster was held at Hard Club with opening honours by the Dutch duo Bragolin that my late arrival did not allowed me to listen to. Perhaps as consolation the ears were graced with Tobias O’Kandi – Okandi’s gig – warming the air with his baritone tone, well-built melodies supported by samplers entwined with riffs and beats, and a seductive poetry giving us back, three years after O.Children, a portentous reborn author for a path that will be well worth to continue to follow. More would have been nice.

South Londoners Nerves struck with a frenzy swaying between provocative intensity and a promising melodic construction, torn by flashes of energy and a contagious viscerality. Despite their short existence – just over one year – this south London quartet heralds to refresh post-punk armpits. Our Nerves will be wrecked while waiting for upcoming apparitions.

English band Ist Ist opened Post Punk Strikes Back second act to a room, once more, filled with expectations. The Manchester natives cast a more a somber atmosphere, highlighted by Adam Houghton’s deep voice, with enveloping melodic bass lines and elegiac guitars in a sauce of binding repercussion, not lacking an electronic contribution perhaps suggesting future developments. With a catchy concert, though somewhat canonical, Ist It did not disappoint their audience.

Hotel Lux come from south London and took the stage with irony-filled lyrics and apparent inconsequence, nothing could be further from the truth. Named after a hotel in Moscow where many mistakenly thought themselves safe from Stalinist purges, the quintet offered us “pub-rock” that transfigures dramas into something between comedy and ironic dripping clothed in declamation over the (un)significant life occurrences. We want you back!

A post-rock gothic veil echoed with Brighton’s Esben and the Witch (EATW) a trio on an ethereal path of a devilish bass in electrifying dialogue with Thomas Fisher’s guitar and Daniel Copeman’s percussion. EATW did not disappoint those who waited for them, offering a place where shadows are evocations of light and redemption; Dramaless.

The audience, between 30 and 50 years old and wearing the most discrete types of irreverence flowed into the rainy night without disappointment on their faces. Iron and glass, strength and fragility dressed the iconic Ferreira Borges market. We wish a long life to sound breathing that has been inflating this elegant metallic skeleton with the flesh of the best sounds. There will be more next year.

Nerves1
Nerves Β© Telma Mota
Ist Ist 2
Ist Ist Β© Telma Mota

 

texto: Neno Costa; fotos: Telma Mota

Promovida pela At The Rollercoaster, o Hard Club recebeu a terceira ediΓ§Γ£o do Post Punk
Strikes Back Again, com honras de abertura para o duo holandΓͺs Bragolin que o meu atraso nΓ£o permitiu escutar. Talvez em jeito de consolaΓ§Γ£o os ouvidos foram agraciados com a atuaΓ§Γ£o em curso de um enorme Tobias O’Kandi – Okandi – a aquecer o ar com seu timbre de barΓ­tono, melodias bem construΓ­das apoiadas em samplers entranΓ§ados com riffs e beats e uma poΓ©tica sedutora a devolverem-nos, trΓͺs anos apΓ³s a passagem dos O.Children, um portentoso autor renascido para um percurso que valerΓ‘ bem a pena continuar a acompanhar. Soube a pouco.

Oriundos do sul de Londres, os Nerves acometeram com um frenesim balanΓ§ando entre a intensidade provocadora e uma construΓ§Γ£o melΓ³dica promissora, rasgada por clarΓ΅es de energia e uma visceralidade contagiante. Apesar da sua curta existΓͺncia – pouco mais de um ano –, este quarteto do sul de Londres augura refrescar as axilas do post-punk. Fica-se com os Nerves Γ  flor da pele, Γ  espera das prΓ³ximas apariΓ§Γ΅es.

Os ingleses Ist Ist abriram o segundo acto do Post Punk Strikes Back para uma sala cheia de expectativas, Again. Oriundos de Manchester, projetaram uma atmosfera sonora mais
sombria, marcada pela voz profunda de Adam Houghton, com uma linha de baixo melΓ³dico envolvente e guitarras elegΓ­acas em molho de repercussΓ£o aglutinante, nΓ£o faltando a contribuiΓ§Γ£o eletrΓ³nica sugerindo, quiΓ§Γ‘, outros desenvolvimentos no futuro. Concerto cativante, embora algo canΓ³nico, os Ist It nΓ£o desapontaram o seu pΓΊblico.

Vindos do sul de Londres, os Hotel Lux tomaram o palco com letras recheadas de ironia e
aparente inconsequΓͺncia, nada mais falso. Com o seu nome retirado de um hotel em Moscovo onde, erradamente, muitos se julgaram a salvo das purgas estalinistas, o quinteto presenteou-nos com um β€œpub rock” transfigurador de dramas em qualquer coisa entre a comΓ©dia e o pingar irΓ³nico com roupagem declamativa sobre as ocorrΓͺncias (in)significantes da vida.
Voltem!

Um vΓ©u post-rock gΓ³tico ecoou com o trio de Brighton Esben and the Witch, num percurso etΓ©reo com momentos de gravidade espessa guiado pela voz angelical de Rachel Davies, senhora de um baixo por vezes diabΓ³lico, em diΓ‘logo eletrificante com a guitarra de Thomas Fisher e a percussΓ£o de Daniel Copeman. Os EATW nΓ£o desiludiram quem os esperou, oferecendo um lugar onde as sombras sΓ£o evocaΓ§Γ΅es de luz e redenΓ§Γ£o; sem dramas.

O pΓΊblico, pendendo entre os 30 e os 50 anos e trajando os mais diversos modos de discreta irreverΓͺncia, escoou para a chuva noturna sem desilusΓ£o nos rostos. Ferro e vidro, forΓ§a e fragilidade vestem o icΓ³nico mercado Ferreira Borges. Deseja-se vida longa Γ  respiraΓ§Γ£o sonora que tem insuflado este elegante esqueleto metΓ‘lico com a carne das melhores sonoridades.

Para o ano hΓ‘ mais.

Hotel Lux 4
Hotel Lux Β© Telma Mota​
Esben and the Witch 3.jpg
Esben and the Witch Β© Telma Mota​