My fourth time seeing Brix And The Extricated play live. [Click here for an older live review]
Tonight at The Lexington, Brix's entrance was dramatic, she sparkled from head to foot in shining headdress, glittering eye make up, twinkling gold guitar strap, and (hopefully faux !) fur coat. I have to admit to feeling emotional, even tearful - I think it was feeling overwhelmed and glad to be bestowed a female heroine, centre stage, at last. Decades of gig-going, but back in my teens and the most part of my 20s, what I would have given to have a rock goddess of a frontwoman/role model...! Chrissie Hynde has had a similarly powerful effect, in my 30s, and [I wrote about that here]
The songs and Brix's singing are so powerful. The strength of her voice, so commanding. There were only two moments where Brix lent a slower, quieter quality to her voice (as heard in The Adult Net). Primarily, Brix is unafraid to be loud and insistent, and to sing in a talking punk or rap style, and deliver everything with intent, dead serious. At one point, in a new song, she was pointing, and reaching out to the audience from lowdown, in-your-face, in a 70s punk style: confrontational, or just wanting to demand a direct communication with the audience, on our level.
With Steve Hanley's expert bass, we've obviously got another legend of The Fall. The full band sound is huge and rhythmically spectacular. Hearing songs like 2 X 4 - that rockabilly influence was one of the key things to draw me to The Fall. I'd play along, in my bedroom, with newly bought electric guitar, frantically, inspired. Now I'm dancing along, propelled in awe.
Big New Prinz is the pinnacle of the night, once again. But this time it is epic. We're led in with a slow, swirling intro, wondering what's coming next - Brix whispers the words, and we're taken aback when the song suddenly explodes into action. Winding and grinding on, hypnotic trance effect successful, the song then plays out to its end with every band member leaving one by one. First, it's Brix, and I have to smile that it's her walking out of a song a bit early and not Mark in his trademark nonchalant style. Then the instrumental chords and rhythms dwell magically, before guitar is gone... leaving only that monumental bass with drums. I think we could listen to that legendary sound all night, but soon it slows to an end, and we're left transfixed.
Watching Brix perform, again and again, as I have done, I come away feeling blessed by her confidence, self-assurance. She may be singing songs she wrote in her time in The Fall where Mark E Smith tyrannically ran the show, but now she's the frontperson, she's centre-stage. She's the star.
Music blog to accompany the paper fanzine The All Thrills No Frills Music Bill. Personal thoughts on music, with no particular agenda other than being true to ourselves and being passionate.
Showing posts with label brix smith start. Show all posts
Showing posts with label brix smith start. Show all posts
Sunday, 6 November 2016
Friday, 12 June 2015
Brix And The Extricated, at the 100 Club, 29th May 2015
Brix was a pivotal part
of many of The Fall's best creative periods. The thrill of her
returning to music, with intentions to publish an autobiography, is still reverberating. A moot point for some, but for me this club gig
with other former Fall members outstrips anything the Mark E Smith
group have done in a decade. While Kicker Conspiracy, CREEP, Hit The
North, Dr Faustus, LA, Big New Prinz, Totally Wired, Cruisers Creek
are songs that wouldn't fill up a usual Fall setlist nowadays, they
are played resoundingly powerfully tonight – and are all we could
wish for and more. It's not the hankering for the old, but hearing
these songs fronted by the almighty and wonderful Brix in such a
commanding manner.
Whilst Brix is clearly
reliving the glory of 80s and 90s Fall, and must have a lot of great
memories, she is also buoyant about the present moment, being
frontwoman, innovating a cracking set of songs. This is a new and
absorbing experience. Certain Fall fans faithful to Mark E Smith as
centrifugal overlord are wrongly wary. Questioning Brix's credentials
is not an option: she has nothing to prove. Hearing this batch of
songs and many more from those years, emphasises her imagination,
ideas, contributions through several crucial epochs of The Fall. In
the interim between her departure from the MES-led Fall and this
current venture, Brix had a pop career – Adult Net, a
sunny sounding rock act with gentle, lovely vocals that represent a
different side of her – now she's here playing her
favourite old Fall songs, and she's singing with more fierce force
and power than Mark E Smith. Her voice is deep and dark. The intent
in her delivery is full of sure-fire strength. Wilful ignorance or
gendered contempt from a certain kind of Fall fan is not to be
tolerated. Pining for MES ('it's not The Fall without Mark!') is
tiresome. How about instead opening your ears and mind to a positive
alternative from someone who was equally a key player in the finest
Fall achievements? Mark E Smith is a great, but it must be admitted
that the live shows have become poor: continual celebration of
frothy, drunk mutterings as spectacle becomes hollow and sad (Mark
can be sharper, and all the better for it).
Brix's confidence and
control show her seriousness of purpose. With the celebrated Hanley
brothers on bass and drums, and Fall Heads Roll era Steve Trafford on
guitar, this is no tribute: this is still the music of legend very
much alive. Lay of the Land is a surprise highlight of the set, and
that classic, crunching, tight, rhythmic sound so definitive of early
Fall kicks up a storm. Likewise, 2 X 4 is a surprise and heavyweight
addition. We are spoilt with Hit the North and Mr Pharmacist - and
Big New Prinz, possibly Brix's defining moment (from The Fall's most
overlooked LP, I Am Kurious Oranj), is the perfect closer to a
compelling gig. Brix shouting the lyric: 'He is not
appreciated!' seems at odds and feels poignant (she must be
appreciated!). This isn't about nostalgia because the new songs sound
beyond worthy in comparison, and the old stuff has been enlivened
anew. If Brix and The Extricated are to be a long-term concern, they
threaten to surpass current Fall standards by a long shot. These are
invigorating times.
Setlist:
U.S. 80s-90s
Feeling Numb
Leave the Capitol
2 X 4
(a new song)
LA
CREEP
Cruiser's Creek
(2 new songs)
Hotel Bloedel
Dead Beat Descendant
Totally Wired
Lay of the Land
Hit the North
Mr Pharmacist
Big New Prinz
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