Difference between revisions of "Sun, 28-Nov-1982"

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<span><font size="4">Reviews / Press Cuttings </font></span>
 
<span><font size="4">Reviews / Press Cuttings </font></span>

Revision as of 10:18, 24 October 2015

Old press avert for the gig

Lyceum, London, England

Also on the bill: Aswad, Maximum Joy, Zerra I

A Live Bootleg of this show does exist and is in circulation among the fanbase.

Setlist



Scan of review


Reviews / Press Cuttings


Aswad/Maximum Joy/Sisters Of Mercy
Lyceum

SISTERS OF Mercy are four in number; two guitarists, a bass player, a singer and a drum machine.
They rumble along doing amateurish impersonations of anything from the Stooges to the Birthday Party.

All their songs sound virtually identical. It would appear to be the band’s own lack of vision
and narrow sense of dynamics, rather than the simple limitations of a drum machine,that causes
their offerings to be so unimaginative.

Admittedly, they are a slight novelty. They are different from the average slick-dressed, hi-tech
funktionaries that seem to occupy every support slot in London these days. I prefer the sound of
the Sisters Of Mercy to the likes of Ultravox and all the Flocks of shitting Seagulls in the world
but Sisters Of Mercy have as much sham as those others have pomp. They seem keener to foster
an effect, glorifying best forgotten rock myths.

This is real ham stuff. The singer dresses himself in black and sports fashionably unfashionable long hair.
He wails in a grandiose monotone while pouting and posing with a degree of emotionless perfection
that can only be achieved after many year’s practice with the bedroom mirror.

As if to illustrate my points, they finish their set with a shoddy version of the Stooges ‘1969’.
Now I would have loved a zestful, sacrilegious romp but they treat the piece with such obvious reverence and awe,
all that emerges is a highly mannered pretence of brutality.

Good thing I told Iggy not to come. I stormed to the bar to seek the buyer of my next drink.

Maximum Joy have tightened up considerably and now have a more sparse, funkier sound than either previous glimpses
or hearings of their album would suggest them to be capable of. The lazy, loping brass that used to sprawl across
their material has been severely reduced and the result is generally more snappy and active.

Yet, while they appear to be enjoying themselves, there is this clogging air of worthiness hanging over them.
Plus, of course, the inescapable bitter truth that they’ll never avoid being consigned to the arse-end of
the sub-Pighead jazz brigade.

Realising how bored I was becoming, I once again strode barwards to seek relief for my raging thirst. Before long
I was falling about in glassy-eyed delirium. I puked up, nutted a bouncer, got thrown out and spent the night
in a nearby gutter.

I’m told Aswad were very good indeed.

MICK SINCLAIR