[kj] Killing Joke's career/[OT] Other Bands...

Darren A. Peace dpeace at bigfoot.com
Mon Dec 22 11:58:47 EST 2008


FNM? No argument there. Didn’t Geordie audition with them during the KJ hiatus that coincided with FNM needing a new guitarist?



If you like the Furs (and apart from Midnight To Midnight, the later albums have a lot to recommend them – High Wire Days, from Mirror Moves, is a particular favourite), you should track down the two Love Spit Love albums the Butler brothers recorded, and Richard Butler’s solo album is fantastic, after a few listens to get past the AOR sound.



Darren

Hungerford, UK



From: gathering-bounces at misera.net [mailto:gathering-bounces at misera.net] On Behalf Of Jim Harper
Sent: Monday, December 22, 2008 4:00 PM
To: A list about all things Killing Joke (the band!)
Subject: Re: [kj] Killing Joke's career/[OT] Other Bands...




Just thought I'd chime in with a few more acts worth tracking down and evaluating:



A) I'm sure most Joke fans (and people into general alternative/metal in the early 90s) will already have digested and evaluated these guys, but if you haven't, it's definitely worth looking at Faith No More. Their first two albums are patchy funk-metal with a bad singer, while The Real Thing is solid funk-metal with a decent singer, but they were something entirely different on Angel Dust, King For A Day and Album of the Year: heavy, experimental, funny, abrasive and defiantly individualist. They were openly influenced by Killing Joke- the drummer was very inlfuenced by the Joke and PiL, Billy Gould's bass playing is often reminscent of Raven's, while they're another of the few rock/metal bands of the time that used keyboards openly without sounding wimpy or poppy. I know not everyone on here thinks much of 'em, but for my money Faith No More were one of the greats. (It's just a shame some of the guitar on Angel Dust is so mediocre- Jim Martin was just not up to the task by then).



B) Not as abrasive as the Joke, but the first two Psychedelic Furs albums really deserve a listen for anyone into post-punk or new wave. Having said that, anyone into post-punk or new wave has probably already heard them.



C) D'espairsRay. Japanese rock. First-rate Japanese rock, well worth hearing. Much better than the somewhat overrated Dir En Grey.



My 2p'th.



Jim.

NOW AVAILABLE: Flowers From Hell: The Modern Japanese Horror Film, by Jim Harper (Noir Publishing).

"Fascinating overview of the Japanese horror boom... Comprehensive, in-depth and slickly presented."- DVD Monthly.

Available from Noir Publishing, Amazon.co.uk, Waterstones and all good bookstores.



-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://four.pairlist.net/pipermail/gathering/attachments/20081222/1d3809e6/attachment-0001.html>


More information about the Gathering mailing list