Home /In depth /Show /
All Tomorrow's Parties 2003
Three nights, minimal sleep and more eclecticelectronicaweirdnoise action than any Pontin's has the right to play host to. But before Matt gives you the full low-down, we really should batter the highlight of the weekend into your consciousness, as the entity in question did into ours.
On paper, ATP 2003 was a battle between the electronica big daddy Aphex Twin and young Canadian pretender-to-the-throne Venetian Snares. In practice, there could only be one winner.
For anyone still wondering, it was Aphex Twin.
Quite simply, the man otherwise known as Richard D James is the musical equivalent of doing a pill: he'll make you dance for hours like a fucking retard, grin insanely and stay up until ridiculous times babbling shit. Fantastic.
All life before 2.30am on Saturday April 4th was instantly rendered pointless. By one man. A man who looks like an alien species, is renown for his awkwardness, but once every so often shows why he's number one.
This was one such occasion; 120 minutes of exocet DJ precision, mashing together the very greatest bits of techno, jungle and drum & bass; a couple of thousand mad-for-it stay-outs, many with E-filled veins, others merely psyched into a frenzy by literally non-stop body-arresting beats.
Amazing is the only word which could possibly be used to describe the atmosphere. No fights, no aggro, no bullshit. Just wall-to-wall rave action and Aphex Twin, messiah-like, manically shaking his fists elatedly at his dancing disciples.
By comparison, Venetian Snares was dead in the water before he ever started. Not that he didn't come close - the insane opening shot of 'Dance Like You're Selling Nails' almost defeated Aphex single-handedly with live vocals from opera singer-cum-MC hip-grinding vixen Jo Apps. Ultimately though, VSnares' music surely wouldn't exist without the influence of Richard D James. And the master hasn't been overcome by his student just yet.
--
So. What with the advent of discount airlines one would expect the profits of such grim English 'Holiday villages' as Camber Sands to be in steep decline. All the more reason then to hand the place over to a motley crew of ravers, bemused indie kids and avant-garde enthusiasts for the purposes of a prolonged three-night party!
And, yes, a three-night party describes the event pretty well. Those used to festivals like Reading and Glastonbury - and even the regulars who booked their tickets in advance expecting a similar line-up to the last few years - were in for a surprise. Acts started at around 4pm and continued till the wee hours (5 or 6am) and the number of them featuring live instruments (with the possible exception of the turntable) could probably be counted on one hand.
While this in itself is no bad thing, there was relatively little to actually watch onstage. Indeed at times I found myself frustrated by the crowd's tendency to stare aimlessly at the bloke onstage pressing buttons, rather than raving it up like they blatantly should. In essence it was more of a club atmosphere than a festival one, and because of this an act-by-act review would be rather redundant - instead I'll single out some of the highlights and try to give a feel for music being played on both stages.
Downstairs
Down here it was pretty much a big rave-up from 6pm till 6am each night. The stage featured more DJ sets than live acts (although with electronic music the distinction is often rather arbitrary), and the Skam Records crew were the best of the lot, ranging from trippy electronica to techno freak-outs, melodic stuff and old electro [The pulsating bass antics and live visuals of Meam were probably the most memorable - Adam]. They also made a mockery of the festival's supposed no-drugs policy by handing the TV test-card girl and what looked like her pet clown a spliff for their visuals. Other notables were the excellent Wevie Stonder, putting on a far better live show than the rest with their on-stage costume rave-up, DJ Woody with some impressive turntablism, and Bola's techno - they didn't actually turn up, ironically, but hearing their tunes on the PA was just as good.
The ever-so-slightly-mental Venetian Snares rounded the weekend off downstairs with his trademark machine-gun-fire gabba techno noise - great in small doses, but however many pills you've dropped, it's enough to do your fucking head in. To call him 'Aphex Twin without the tunes' would be a little harsh, but after a while I found myself retiring to the conveniently located Queen Vic Pub, where some militant indie kids had taken over the decks and started playing assorted retro classics. Frankly, after an afternoon of incessant 'rinsing' tech-house beats from next door (mm-chh-mm-chh-mm-chh-mm-chh->infinitum), it was a breath of fresh air.
Upstairs - the laptops
The feel upstairs, while more eclectic, experimental and live, still became a little samey after three nights. The highlights were great, but a number of rather dull and pretentious laptop acts managed to creep onto the line-up. Take Hecker for example - a tedious little bloke who treated us to a half-hour-long wasp noise from his iMac. The idea that this kind of music's impenetrability somehow makes it intellectual and worthy is something which needs to be challenged, I feel - the fact the vast majority of the crowd didn't 'get' it doesn't make them stupid, but makes the music fucking shite. Pretentious to the max, elevating the electronic process over and above musical content, and avoiding any kind of impact on the listener whatsoever, save mild annoyance.
Before you start judging me as an enemy of the avant-garde though, I have to say that Jim O'Rourke's laptop set was excellent. Using the same processes and styles as the other laptop acts but somehow managing to fashion it into an intense, organic whole, twisting flashes of melody and glitches into a gradual build-up of noise - more evidence for my theory that a grounding in traditional musical processes and forms is very important in making good electronic music. The man himself incidentally was being very friendly (and drunk, by the looks of it) in the pub afterwards.
Mira Calix and Andrea Parker were also quite interesting, although what was with the two balaclavad peeps ironing towels onstage? Who knows. Any effort to relieve us from the terminal boredom of watching a lone artist fiddling with a turntable was much appreciated, although you could've, say, switched to ironing shirts halfway through for a bit of variety.
Upstairs - the hip-hop
Thank god for the hip-hop acts then - without them the festival would have been almost entirely white male electronic fiddling and we'd have had no excitement on stage all weekend. Public Enemy were great fun, and seeing Chuck D and his crew sauntering around Pontin's holiday camp in the day was surreal to say the least. They played quite a few classics but towards the end their set ventured into rather wanky rap-rock territory and it was at that point I left.
Thirstin Howl III was my personal favourite of the hip-hoppers - combining great backing and melodies with excellent MC-ing, at times pretty funny, especially the 'I still live with mah mom' number. El-P was also excellent, as was Kool Keith, despite his DJ's rather lame self-promotional efforts (no we don't want to hear all your fucking remixes, get the MC onstage!)
Upstairs - the rest
Alongside the electronica a few Autechre-selected oddities had also made it onto the line-up. Avant-sludge-metallers Earth had cancelled but the noticeably similar Sunn 0))) took their place - two hooded wizards playing sludgy distorted echoey overlapping guitar chords, once every 5 minutes or so it seemed. Surprisingly perfect for the blissed-out, loved-up crowd awaiting Aphex's set, but hilariously frightening for our mates, who for reasons unknown had previously 'boshed down some mushrooms'.
Coil gave us some of their slow, gothy processed vocals and synth noises - interesting at first, but somewhat dated and became rather tedious after a while. The Fall were pretty much as you would expect The Fall to be - noisy, drawling and somewhat incomprehensible. Cue hilarious Mark E Smith impressions from the Gents toilets. Most exceptional of the guitar acts though were The Magic Band - backing band for '60s psychedelic rock genius Captain Beefheart. Surreal to say the least, watching over-the-top bluesy rock from a bunch of balding over-dressed Americans after an evening of electronica. One of them managed to take over the vocals pretty well, another had one of those hilarious double-headed guitars - your hippy parents would've loved it. If they were hippies, that is.
All in all then - some highlights, a lot of OK but fairly predictable club type DJ-ing - we rather felt this year's curators, Autechre, should've ventured a little further from their 'home' genre in search of an eclectic line-up, both downstairs and up. Next year's looks like a return to form though with Mogwai, Tortoise and Shellac all returning to curate a day each. See you then!
All Tomorrow's Parties 2003
Hecker, I thought, was just so great. Yeah, I KNOW it was a wasp noise, but it was so refreshing to hear someone playing something that provoked some kind of reaction, unlike most of the diluted, tedious, scattershot, semi-ambient DIRGE that polluted the weekend. I wouldn't choose to listen to it at home, but FUCK YES, he was using a supposedly 'experimental' medium as a means of trying something 'experimental'. Class.
Mira Calix and Andrea Parker. Fucking terrible. Blah blah random beat MOR slightly moody SHITE.
Magic Band. Best act of the weekend by several interstellar miles. It takes music played with conventional instruments, some of it 30 years old, to show 99% of the weekend's acts how to play something FRESH and INNOVATIVE and EXCITING. Even though the second half (with vocals) wasn't as good.
Second half of Jim O'Rourke I liked.
Sunn 0)))- brilliant. New, non-acoustic-based music made by people willing to admit they are HUMAN BEINGS.
On the whole, my opinion is that this year's ATP was so underwhelming it was cringeworthy. I had fun, yes, but the music was largely uninspired and as derivative as any retro cunt squad garage rock clones.
Re: All Tomorrow's Parties 2003
sun 0)))) complete and utter nonsense. i was suprised people even applauded. complete shite. probably the only act who were heckled all weekend. they made the mingin hotdogs seem like an attractive option.
the laptop kids need their hands chopped off. most of it was just shit. gescom were good, miles better and completely different to what i'd seen them do before.
i'm lookin forward to next year so i can actually see people do things. ie stuart braithwaite making a racket... although the site of him chasing after some little wanker (with the intent to kill) in the arcades on the first nite was excellent. better entertainment than half the shite that was on.
Re: All Tomorrow's Parties 2003
"sun 0)))) complete and utter nonsense. i was suprised people even applauded. complete shite. "
but then i saw you wrote this as well:
"i'm lookin forward to next year so i can actually see people do things. ie stuart braithwaite making a racket... "
figures.
Re: All Tomorrow's Parties 2003
Sun 0))) I liked in that situation but wouldn't buy the record.
Magic band were a bit wanky I thought (some of those blues solos... hm) but made a change from boring laptop peeps.
Re: All Tomorrow's Parties 2003
Aphex twin is still god
Re: All Tomorrow's Parties 2003
My main quibble with the lack of stuff to look at is that people insisted on staring at the stage anyway despite the fact nothing was going on...
Im not against laptop stuff by the way, am quite into some of it but don't think its really suited to a festival
All Tomorrow's Parties 2003
- and the reason to go and see such stuff live is for the atmosphere - and since there appears to have been a lack of it - (judging by matts emphasis on the fact that people insisted to keep eyes forward,)
one would have expected them to have made an effort to get some accompanying visuals, like a psychadelic projection or something -
ah well - heres to next year.
you would have thought that they could have made an effort to get some accompanying visuals
Re: All Tomorrow's Parties 2003
maybe they expect kids to take more drugs to make their own projections?
Re: All Tomorrow's Parties 2003
Re: All Tomorrow's Parties 2003
er?
downstairs was the fecking skam room for most of it for goodness sake, and full of Mego stuff too, (bar sunday maaaybe [uh, memory..], when there was mucho awesome djing..) - v. bleepy/laptop/electronica/etc, and moreso constantly than upstairs was in all fairness. don't remember much live hip hop/guitar etc etc acts anywhere other than upstairs either..
mm, now i think of it.....Coil did have some projections - but they were of the winamp-cd-visualisation sort [+ pretty snowflakes on the side wall] and so not worth the fucking bother one bit after all that, we fucked off to dance our asses off to LFO's set downstairs in the end instead, anyway [+no visuals], so dunno if the pretty pictures [or the set] got owt better after the first 15 minutes.....
.
.
.
i cant remember what else i had to say, i'm too arsed off with things crashing anyway, so this may seem a tad terse ;)
Comments
- Post a new comment on this article