ADEBISI SHANK: THIS IS THE ALBUM OF A BAND CALLED ADEBISI SHANK (2008)
1) You Me; 2) Dodr; 3) Colin
Skehan; 4) Shunk; 5) Mini Rockers; 6) Agassi Shank; 7) I Answer To Doc; 8)
Snakehips.
There is one thing that
bugs me about the debut album of this band called Adebisi Shank, titled This Is The Album Of A Band Called Adebisi
Shank, as well as the slightly earlier 4-song EP by the same band, called This Is The EP Of A Band Called Adebisi
Shank (it makes sense to treat the two within the same review, considering
that both are executed in the same style, and that the «Album» runs only
slightly over 20 minutes anyway). The thing that bugs me is that the individual
titles, breaking the established idiom, are not listed as ʽThis Is The First
Composition On The Album Of A Band Called Adebisi Shankʼ, ʽThis Is The Second
Composition....ʼ and so on. Instead, they inexplicably adopt the old
pretentious jazz tradition of assigning random combinations of words and
non-words to their instrumentals. This does not seem consistent. Then again,
the very name of the band is essentially a meaningless word combination
(«Adebisi» is the name of a character from the Oz TV show, chosen rather randomly), so the inconsistency goes even
farther than that...
Nevertheless, this is as
far as I can go about seriously criticizing the record, because in all other
respects Adebisi Shank, a power trio from Wexford, Ireland, created out of the
ashes of an earlier «post-rock» project, Terrordactyl, build up one of the
strongest cases for «math rock» that I have ever witnessed (although be sure to
take my words with a grain of salt, since I am anything but a solid expert on
these hip new genres). Their older peers, like Don Caballero, and their
contemporaries like Battles may have collected more fame under their belts, but
this is mainly due to different marketing strategies — Battles go for a more
public image, whereas Adebisi Shank mainly keep to themselves and let their
music do all the talking, and I do mean all:
there is no singing whatsoever, other than a few electronically processed and
looped vocal bits from time to time, nor do they waste their times on music
videos (although their live shows have gained an exceptionally high
reputation).
Now, in general, «math
rock» is a dubious enterprise. In their hyper-rationalistic efforts to find the
«perfectly complex» combination of beats, chords, and effects even the best
representatives of the genre (and it is hard to tell who the worst ones are,
since math rock, by its essence, requires a mega-level of intellect, technique,
and creativity) may drive themselves into the quagmire of purposelessness
(well, then again, real
mathematicians sometimes do that, too). So when I first heard about these guys
and decided to give them a first try, I was certainly skeptical — especially
since my latest math-rock experience had been with BATS, where the first three
or four songs are usually awesome, and then the headaches begin.
But Adebisi Shank ain't anything like BATS and their «heavy
metal trigonometry», or even like Battles and their chipmunk robot fantasies.
The difference is that, while all those bands do the kind of «robot rock» you'd
expect a robot to produce if the robot were pressed into inventing rock music,
Adebisi Shank do the kind of «robot rock» you'd expect a robot to produce if
the robot wanted to create his own impression of a previously experienced and
«assimilated» wild rock'n'roll band, let's say, with a slice of Celtic heritage
(be it AC/DC, Slade, Thin Lizzy, or U2, echoes of all of whom — and many more —
may be heard throughout the album).
Most of the
instrumentals are taken at fast, pouncing tempos. The rhythm section is almost
completely dependent on the powers of drummer Mick Roe, who isn't much about
tricky, off-beat polyrhythms à la
Bill Bruford, but sometimes sounds like a finally disciplined and harnessed
avatar of Keith Moon — filling up as much space as possible with his loud and
surprisingly melodic bashing, but all of it according to a strictly
pre-planned and perfectly realized strategy. Bass guy Vinny McCreith (whose
stage gimmick consists of always wearing a mask while playing — he says it's
all about having the audience concentrate just on the music, but maybe he's
just an IRA veteran on the run) usually provides the main riffs and melodic
developments throughout the show: the bass is laid on in such thick, distorted
swabs, that most of the time you will probably be playing air bass to these
tracks than air six-string.
Not that any of this
means depriving guitar guy Larry Kaye from what is rightfully his: there is
plenty of guitar riffage as well (usually doubling the bass), and when he gets
around to soloing, the two-handed tapping technique, long associated with the
self-indulgence of pointless «guitar wankery», displays a fuck-'em-all spirit
set against the relentless jackhammer punch of the drums and the brutal bass
onslaught. Larry also seems like the only player out of the three who is sometimes
allowed to improvise, and when he does, the guitar bursts out in splatters of
punkish anger, showing that our robot has probably even spent some time in the
company of the Stooges.
Individual tunes, be it
on the EP or the LP, are all but useless to name — they are about as different
as individual tunes on an AC/DC album (actually, the guitar tone and snappy
chords of the main riff to ʽMini Rockersʼ might have made Angus and Malcolm
very happy): if you are truly impressed by one of these compositions, you will
probably want the enchantment to last to the very end, and if you are not, you
probably just don't have enough robot blood floating in your veins. I will
tentatively single out ʽColin Skehanʼ as a personal favourite (mainly for the
ultra-cool stop-and-start false coda), and ʽYou Meʼ as the album's deviating
tune (it's got the only vocals on here, even if they only consist of the song
title, distorted and looped as befits a robot freshman, recently initiated into
the wonders of kick-ass rock'n'roll).
If you are interested,
be sure not to miss the EP as well — compared to the longplay, it is even
heavier, although, fortunately, that heaviness is of the neo-garage type rather
than the death metal type. (ʽJump Cutʼ, with its choppy chords, is particularly
telling, although the song eventually switches over to a somewhat romantic
mood, becoming a suitable background for a never written Bruce Springsteen
epic; they do not go for that kind of sentimentality on the LP). Limitations of
their chosen genre, and its inborn deficiencies (such as the very hard task of imbuing this stuff
with «soul», although the band really works wonders within the formula),
obviously prevent it from the status of an all-time classic, but not from a
solidly guaranteed thumbs up.
Check "This Is The Album Of A Band Called Adebisi Shank" (MP3) on Amazon