it is not rock and roll if
you don’t get sweaty
There will be a moment when I get to say I told you so, and
it may or may not center around one of the three bands I saw tonight.
This evening saw me and a lucky plus one trying something new:
a first come, first served guest list. Part of
Intro magazines
Introducing
series, tonight’ lineup at
Bii Nuu (the club under Schlesisches Tor U-bahn
Station, club name more easily pronounced than station name) was Hamburg
favorite
Jack Beauregard, followed by
Nias, and ending with a rousing set from
Iceland’s own
Retro Stefson. I saw the first band open for Gotye at Franz last
winter and I knew Retro Stefson from an amazing performance at the 2011 Berlin
Music Festival.
Okay, so the first thing with a guest list like this
(tickets could not be purchased, you could only sign up online, giving your
email address and a plus one) is that lining up outside, in Barbara’s words, is
like an Easyjet flight, everyone is eyeing to get in first. We made it in (5th
in the door thank you!) and secured a nice spot right up at the stage. I have to say while the sound was
decent, by midpoint the club felt like dancing inside the sun, but (brace for
cliché) the bands were so good I barely noticed awww.
 |
Jack Beauregard |
First, Jack Beauregard, who (and this is a flattering
comparison) do at points remind me of Pink Floyd if they sang about love and
girls instead of space type things.
Three guys that craft pop melodies layered with sweet vocals reminiscent
of the kind of love notes and thoughts you scribbled on your English notebook
in high school, but not in that saccharine, obnoxious way.
If any of you remember the Philadelphia
space pop scene that brought us
Mazarin (now defunct) you’ll definitely dig
Jack Beuaregard.
Male harmonizing
worthy of the latest all male vocal groups (Fleet Foxes, Midlake).
 |
Nias |
Next, Nias, a band I didn’t even know was on the bill until
3 strapping young lads took the stage. I know nothing about them (and
later learned they are from the Czech Republic, offshoots of a post core band,
this info brought to you direct from the facebook page yes), but musically, I
would give the trio the honor of buying the CD. Vocals reminded me of The
Walkmen, while the music was mix of early Flaming Lips (like the Punk Rockers
are Finally Taking Acid era FL) and the Psychedlic Furs. No kidding, there were
some riffs that were obvious synth 80s throwbacks.
 |
Retro Stefson |
And finally, my somewhat ancestral Icelandic brethren take
the stage like Beowulf taking down Grendel (let no Scandinavian studies Phd be
reading this please.) The best
thing seeing an Icelandic band may be the intros, everyone has names that are
like 10 syllables long. 7 barely
legal musicians: Logi Pedro Stefánsson, Haraldur Ari Stefánsson, Unnsteinn
Manuel Stefánsson, Þórður Jörundsson, Þorbjörg Roach Gunnarsdóttir, Jon Ingvi
Seljeseth and Gylfi Freeland Sigurðsson. What the fuck I love Icelandic names!
Anyway, it’s a large group of keyboard. drums, girl on digital synth/keyboard,
2 guitars, 1 bass, and Harald, who plays tambourines and the crowd. Now, this
band has what rock and roll is lacking, and that is stage presence. That they
can rock a crowd as big as the daytime crew at Berlin Festival or as cramped
and crowded a teeny show as at Bii Nuu, should encourage ALL bands to get a
sexy, dancing tambourine man. The point when he took of his shirt and showed
the lovely six pack that I guess Icelandic winters give you, made it all worth
it. And let no one ever tell you Northern Europeans can’t dance, because the
boy has moves. Retro Stefson owes a lot to the metal and hardcore coming out of
that portion of the planet (I know, it is still going very strong). Over some repetitive and deep beats
that reference reggae, pop, electro and smattering of Latin American beats are
incoherent lyrics (what a xenophobe says because maybe it’s another language)
that worm into your brain, and fill you with the desire to chant back when the
band asks that of you (and they ask a lot, we are taught no less than 5 dance
moves, and instructed to do them in unison). So if you want a show that leaves you sweaty, happy, and
reaffirmed that the future of rock n roll is being shouldered by young 'uns from a
tiny island nation, then follow these guys. Band to watch, band to watch.