Lockout live review
State reviews the debut performance of ‘Lockout’:
The sound is glorious, rich, textured and mountain stream crystal clear…
State reviews the debut performance of ‘Lockout’:
The sound is glorious, rich, textured and mountain stream crystal clear…
The Spook performs “Lockout”/“A Mighty Wave” from the second live rehearsal of ‘Lockout’
Given the recent turmoil in Irish life you would think that artistic communities would be bursting at the seams with commentary, anger, disbelief, remorse, and whatever thoughts are required for us to circle round on ourselves and transcend the mess we are living in. But this is not the case in Irish music. Where is the anger? Where is the vitriol? Irish music in the charts is, for the most part, very polite and apolitical. The widespread endorsements for the recent, joyous victory for marriage equality were a notable exception, but in general, most our music now focuses more on the inner thoughts of the artist rather than expressing collective concerns.
However, this was not always the case. I love the iconic picture of Christy Moore being frisked by Special Branch in the 1980s . Christy and his cohorts Dónal Lunny, Andy Irvine Irivine et al dove deep into the spirit of Irish folk music and married it with a sharp, modern wit. This picture shows Moore as the folk hero he is, pushing the boundaries of consensus and fighting for the very soul of the country.
Delving further back into history, we find many more examples of political music, in both Irish and English; James Connolly was a song writer, Éamonn Ceannt a piper. There is a rich tradition of political songs in English from the Nationalist and Unionist sides from the 1800’s onward. Before this, poets and singers lamented the state of Ireland and the waning of the Gaelic language and culture through the Aisling poem and song.
Folk music, “the people’s music” as Pete Seeger called it, can be seen as old time sounds re-interpreted by the left, and country music the same for the right. Perhaps the act of folk revival is a reactionary one, that looks to an idealised past, but this history, this musical history, can also help us to frame our thinking about the present, and indeed the future.
There is much wrong in modern Ireland and indeed, much wrong in the wider world? We are in ‘recovery’, like chronic gamblers back at the table with a new line of credit, facing another major property boom and bust amidst widespread and continuing corruption in the legal, political and financial professions. The current regime, much like the last, has an alarmingly high tolerance for this. Who is the blame? No one and everyone it seems. No one specific. A man can go to jail for obstructing a water meter installation but it is community service for our white collar criminals. Now shut up and stop talking down our recovery for God’s sake!
Perhaps our musical silence reflects the wider, national silence, but this cannot last. The deeply irrational, fundamentalist right wing ideology we’ve aligned ourselves with is crumbling, and the struggle in Greece shows this. We are in “a revolutionary moment” according to journalist Chris Hedges, disillusioned by the old and searching for a new ideology to make sense of the world.
The notion of the political song is changing too. Recently I read of Scott Walker’s thoughts on his song “Jesse” from the ground breaking album “The Drift”. He sees this as an unconventional protest song, expressing the notion of “fascism in the air” in post 911 America. This is not a typical “come-all-ye” folk song, but the emotional impact of the song registers as modern protest nonetheless. History has most certainly not ended. Constance Marcievicz observed Jim Larkin as “a storm driven wave”, and perhaps in our unease we need a torrent of music and words to drive our thinking forward. As artists, perhaps it is time we step forward and deliver.
- Allen Blighe
(originally published in Hot Press, August 2015)
The Spook’s perform “Bloody Sunday (The Batons)” from the second live rehearsal of ‘Lockout’:
Check out this review of “The Brutal Here and Now” from The Guardian:
The band’s name and the title say it all: this is an intriguing and quirky psych-folk outfit with an unexpectedly tough edge. Named after a poem about a haunted canal lock, The Spook first got together in Dublin to write songs in the folk tradition, but other influences started creeping in. There are melodic echoes of Planxty or the Dubliners here, but matched against a blitz of guitar rock and feedback and a delight in the unexpected. They sing in three languages, starting in Italian with The Tarantella, which begins with an eerie wash of sound and ends up as a frantic party dance with a real sense of danger. Then there are brooding and menacing three-part harmonies on Black Diaries, edgy but acoustic Gaelic songs, and a fine mix of melody and unease in Shudder in the West. One of the Irish albums of the year.
“The Brutal Here and Now” will be released in the UK on December 3rd by Transduction Records, distributed by Cargo.
They make a big noise for such a small stage, and material from two superb albums of singular folk-heavy rock helped them wake up the sleepers in Body and Soul.
They arrived with the low, guttural drone of The Ragged Rock, a “sean-nos krautrock little number”, from second album The Brutal Here and Now. In Country Dark followed as solid evidence in their case for the greater inclusion of banjo in rock music.
In English and Irish (Bothar Crua Iarthar) they write expert trad tales delivered with tunes, vigour and generous use of feedback.
The Partisan, Sweeney’s Frenzy, The Hare and Pimlico helped round off a solid set that in the early Saturday evening shook both body and soul.