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Lineup: Weird War
Date: 03/05/2005
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by Gen Williams

Weird War are - so they claim - a band on a mission. Following on from hardcore Dischord sloganeers Nation of Ulysses' 13 Point Program To Destroy America, Ian F. Svenonius' current gang of rock and roll anarchists, recently joined by Trans Am sticksmith Sebastian Thomas, plan to change the world through subliminal messaging, imbuing their "vacuous" party music (their word, not mine, dear reader) with symbols, satire and loaded references and turning the tables on the status quo.

Their gelatinous funk is punctuated with posed beat-poet anecdote and theatrical soliloquy that slides into song, and it's near-impossible to mark a line between the two. A cellphone's pulled out, a mock conversation is held - "Why? I dunno..." and it mutates into the itchy spunk-soul of 'Why Do Guys Like Girls Like That?'. Indeed, Svenonius' fey, stop-start "...wait! Uh... Yeeeaaah. I like this music... Hold on! What. Shh!" jive rhetoric seems more integral to the entire performance than 90% of the musical output... and therein lies the problem.

Playing the geek-chic lounge-lizard and burying his tongue in the hollows of his cheeks, Svenonius introduces himself as the "greatest living poet", before another spasm of sordid bass guitar sends him jerking across the stage and reaching into a ceiling-scratching James Brown squeal. Undeniably, his cabaret persona is the focus of the band. The audience here assembled are more engaged between songs, laughing at his one-liners and shooting friendly catcalls, than during the music, when all that separates DiS and Weird War is a small pool of motionless heads.

Weird War flirt so saucily with parody that the gimmick overtakes the music. The initial rubbery grooves, so promising for the first few tantalising seconds, rarely explode into anything more than a spattering of squealing solos, and the songs and themes fail to claw their way into your mind to take seditionary root within you. It somewhat deflates Weird War's quasi-revolutionary manifesto. It's not that it's not entertaining; Weird War put on a funny, engaging show. It's just that the novelty's worn off before they leave the stage.

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Weird War

Awww, they were tremendous in Glasgow. Ian Svenonius is the man.

Weird War

Ian Svenonius is a FULL-BLOWN, COMEDIAN-AMERICAN.

However, the music is FULL-BLOWN, HEAD MUSIC.

Maybe the next time you see Weird War, you should REALIZE that this is HEAD MUSIC, and your HEAD should be placed in front of their GLORY HOLE. Then maybe, just maybe, you'll GET IT ON...FULL BLOWN!

7-UP!


Weird War

They were tremendous in London too. Mr Williams doesn't know what he's talking about. Ok, maybe he does, but he's wrong.
You see, being into bands should be about imbibibg the whole package, so as far as I'm concerned this renders Mr Williams comments obsolete. Sure, if you don't dig Weird War's polemic you might be struggling but how can you not fall for this man whos' so articulately on the money and funny with it to.
I have dragged 4 seperate people to share in the Weird War experience and they have all become converts to the cause. SAVE YOURSELF and go see them too!

Weird War

They were tremendous in London too. Mr Williams doesn't know what he's talking about. Ok, maybe he does, but he's wrong.
You see, being into bands should be about imbibing the whole package, so as far as I'm concerned this renders Mr Williams comments obsolete. Sure, if you don't dig Weird War's polemic you might be struggling but how can you not fall for this man whos' so articulately on the money and what's more funny with it to.
I have dragged 4 seperate people to share in the Weird War experience and they have all become converts to the cause. SAVE YOURSELF and go see them too!

Re: Weird War

It's MISS Williams.
D'oh.

Re: Weird War

I enjoyed the Glasgow show. Maybe because I was there to have a good time to the music and not to overanalyse it and try to score points in an online essay.

Re: Weird War

i only write what i think, fella. no point-scoring here. believe it or not, i tend to go to gigs in the hope of enjoying them. original, i know. i can only offer my heartfelt apologies for having a different opinion to you.

Re: Weird War

You're probably right about seeing them in a different venue. The Glasgow show was in a small, sweaty venue which is always the best setting for gigs of this nature.

The initial rubbery grooves, so promising for the first few tantalising seconds, rarely explode into anything more than a spattering of squealing solos, and the songs and themes fail to claw their way into your mind to take seditionary root within you.

If only I had a penny for the amount of gigs me and my friends have left muttering that to each other ;-)

Re: Weird War

c'mon, man. i go to a lot of gigs, and review a fair few of them. now, i COULD write "it was good, and there were guitars, and they sounded nice for a bit, but then it got boring so i went home and watched telly, which was crap." every single time i half-enjoy a show, but that'd be dull.

Re: Weird War

I wasn't having a go, I don't think I could do any better a job of reviewing a gig than you or anyone else. I don't actually think I'd be that good at it. I was laughing with you.....;-)

Re: Weird War

fair enough. :)

Re: Weird War

it ain't that it wasn't enjoyable. like i said in the review.... it was. and i would go again. just that much of it seemed like the same trick over and over again. i was absolutely sold on it for the first half, but it went nowhere after that.

i'd like to see them in a different venue.

x
miss williams




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