Review: Eighties Matchbox B-Line Disaster
Monday, September 18, 2006
14 September 2006
The Buffalo Bar, Highbury
People are queuing round the corner over an hour before the doors open. Now that might be nothing special for whoever-u-jour’s solo Astoria date, but for an unsigned band playing in a pub basement, this is something to sit up, take note, and barge your way in so you get a good spot down at the front.
No-one’s under any illusions here; tonight the support bands might as well be a couple of guys playing a comb-kazoo and a couple of spoons, so little is the interest in them. Tonight is about a 5-piece Brighton who can genuinely claim to be peerless, both in the sense that no-one is doing anything close to their sound, and that no-one would even come close if they tried. Tonight belongs to the Eighties Matchbox B-Line Disaster.
“Mister Mental” is Elvis reborn through voodoo spells and forced through a Satanic assault course. Guy McKnight leads his gang like they’re single-handedly planning on inducing hallucinations through manipulation of the audience’s eardrums. And judging by the frenzy erupting in a venue smaller than your living room, they’re nine tenths of the way there.
How The Eighties Matchbox B-Line Disaster have inspired such loyalty is by producing the kind of schizoid blues-rumble that the cool kids love and the uncool kids love twice as hard. Currently label-less following Island’s unceremonious dumping of them in late 2005 – poor sales of their two albums being the whispered reason – it’s almost beyond comprehension that this band aren’t being fettered by every label going when you hear the band unleash the bug-eyed midnight shuffle of “Psychosis Safari”.
“Celebrate Your Mother” is still the MILF-worshipping, surf-punk gone-so-wrong-it’s-right slammer that brought them into the public-mindset, and it’s still enough to bring the Buffalo to a near-frenzy. Couple that with a song like “Chicken” – the musical equivalent of Quasimodo swinging from your kitchen lightbulb and screaming for bloody vengeance – and you’ve got the best damn live sets you could ever hope to have carved into your brain with a sonic-equivalent of a rusty Stanley knife.
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