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¡ Forward Russia !

Over-rated greatness?
Or Greatly over-rated?



  • 1st album

    moments of brilliance, generally 'good' elsewhere. 2nd album.. consistently good, fewer moments of brilliance. top live band.

  • Not a patch on Kane's reviews for Sandman

    but here was my review for the Leeds Student newspaper:

    !Forward, Russia! (supported by Johnny Foreigner) @ The Cockpit:
    Monday 28th April 2008: By Nicholas Polydor

    Main tour support Johnny Foreigner were a bitter disappointment. The
    texture and excitement of their studio material failed to translate to
    the live stage: they were flat, uninspiring, and repetitive to the
    point of boredom. Bassist Kelly decided to shout and scream through
    several of the band's songs, although certain members of the audience
    felt that this was, in fact, 'cool'. Most alarmingly, following their
    penultimate song, she remarked that it was not, in fact, 'a song' at
    all, but 'an interlude'. Joking or not, a support slot is the time to
    play your punchy hits, not your 20-minute free-jazz curveball. For all
    their merits on record, tonight Johnny Foreigner sounded
    indistinguishable from a million other bands currently touring the
    circuit.

    By the time !Forward, Russia! came on stage at just gone 9:30pm, it
    was startling to see that, for a band promoting their new album on the
    penultimate, homecoming date of a national tour, The Cockpit's main
    room had not been completely filled.

    A year ago, towards the end of the touring cycle for their
    well-received 2006 debut long-player, "Give Me A Wall", !Forward,
    Russia! had packed out the considerably larger Metropolitan University
    venue. Perhaps the taste of mainstream music fans has moved on to the
    'next big thing'. The new album "Life Processes", released through
    Cooking Vinyl Records rather than via guitarist Whiskas's Dance To The
    Radio imprint in order to prevent a conflict of interests, has failed
    to light up the Chart. Still, what the band may have lost in
    commercial success they most certainly have not lost in live
    performance ability, and over the next 80 minutes the band proved how
    foolish the mainstream record-buying public have been in ignoring the
    band.

    Draping the microphone cord around his body before a single note has
    even been played, frontman Tom Woodhead is clearly premeditating his
    convulsions. Immediately, the charismatic frontman is twisting and
    turning across the entire width of the stage, each flailing limb
    seemingly in time with the flashing red and blue (and occasionally
    white) lights overhead. The other three members also sway with verve
    and confidence.

    Katie Nicholls's drumming is fluid and inventive, but it is the
    interplay between Whiskas's guitar and Rob Canning's bass, high in
    the mix, that drives the songs forward. The only problem is that
    Woodhead's vocals, while distinctive and earnest, are slightly
    muffled. This means that the audience has to listen exceedingly
    closely to decipher the excellent lyrics. The set is heavy on the new
    material, reaching delightfully high levels of intensity whilst always
    remaining controlled, but it is the older material that is the most
    comfortably performed and elicits the biggest reaction from the crowd
    . 'Don't Be A Doctor', the epic between-albums white-label single (and
    later included on Dance To The Radio's "Out Of The Woods and Trees"
    compilation) is played flawlessly, every subtly detailed element
    delivered gloriously. Having noticed a group of particularly eager
    fans near the stage moshing, albeit in a fairly regular fashion, to
    single 'Twelve', Whiskas decided to precede latest single 'Breaking
    Standing' with a speech to the group, warning the perpetrators to
    consider the safety of those around them and keep tabs on their
    jumping. This prompted sniggers from sections of the rest of the
    crowd, and Whiskas was visibly annoyed when one punter crowd-surfed
    onto the microphone stand, quickly pushing him out through the rear
    stage entrance. Apart from that, !Forward, Russia's! crowd interaction
    was as relaxed and enjoyable as one might expect from an
    eagerly-awaited homecoming gig, and the band chose to dedicate a song
    to their tour manager, Al, who was celebrating his birthday. The band
    showed they were capable of playing the slower numbers equally as well
    with their rendition of new-album-closer, 'Spanish Triangles', before
    returning to an expectant crowd to play an encore of 'Fifteen Pt. II'.

    The crowd went home with big grins on their faces - the band were as
    great as ever. The only lingering sadness was that more of Leeds had
    not witnessed this performance from one of their city's leading bands.

    8/10

    • bet youve

      bin waiting ages for a forward russia thread to come up so you could post this review :)

    • I would say

      that that review easily surpasses any of my efforts :) Ah, Sandman. I need to be not-so-lazy and cough up some more articles for them. Here's a recent(ish) interview someone did with Whiskas, quite funny because he was a bit boozed up. http://www.audioscribbler.co.uk/features/forwardrussia3.htm

    • pretty much the exact opposite to what i thought

      the sound was shit for every band, but it was best for Johnny Foreigner. they played the "hits", no "20-minute free-jazz curveball"'s (i have no idea what the fuck this means, or how it could be compared to any JF song) and came across very energetic and passionate, even if it wasnt the best sound (which it never is in the shitpit)

      I left after about 4 or 5 FR songs, every new song starts with shitey delayed/looped guitars and turns "epic". bad sound and a crowd of non-music-loving pricks that were concentrating more on how many times they could make their feet leave the ground than what was going on on stage didn't help either.

      • 'concentrating more on how many times they could make their feet leave the ground'

        so what did you do, stand at the back of the room, arms folded, painfully observing the sound dynamics and subtle, artistic movements of each individual band member?

        • in was stood about halfway forward

          in front of a group of pricks.

          i actually thought the best part of the gig was whiskas kicking some turd out of the back door for ruining everyone elses gig.

          out of about 25-30 gigs i've seen at the cockpit, the sound has only been good for 2 or 3, trail of dead and mew off the top of my head. it's so murky and muddled and plain shit.

  • I love this band

    I gave a listen to both of their albums the other evening - prompted by thoughts of their under-rated greatness - I really like the second album, which I am more familiar with, as it was the first I bought.

    I saw them in Manchester (with Grammatics) and I was a bit taken aback at the time by how different they were to my expectations, and by the devoted enthusiasm of the audience.

    Now that I am more familiar with their stuff, I would like to see them again.

    NB I think JF are brilliant live - I've seen them twice - it is possible to like both them and FR!

    • of course it's possible to like

      JF and FR. i wasnt being a musical snob, i used to really like FR.

  • ¡f,r!

    are great

    one of my favourite bands
    the first album has brilliant songs but doesn't have a great flow
    the second album has a great flow and is just brilliant from start to finish

    the only shame about f,r is that they're so damn quiet these days

    more gigs please russians...

  • .

    I got the first album for £1.99 the other day.

    Had a listen and it didnt grab me at all.

    Just seemed a bit dull samey, but maybe it needs afew more listens.

    • the production is horrific

      try track down the single/demo versions of the songs on the album

      they're real good.

    • £1.99

      from where?
      you know when you feel like theres a band that you really would like, if only you listened to them
      thats me, im stupid

    • i didn't like it when i first heard it

      But now it's one of my favourite albums.

  • I do love FR

    , although I have gone off them slightly after Katie Nichols told my off for crowd surfing at their gig.

    GAY!

    • *told me off

      soz

    • Why is that "gay"?

      Maybe you were hurting people...

    • She was right to do so

      its against the cockpits policy anyway.