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oceansize live again
Date: 12/05/2003
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by Raziq Rauf
Sometimes it all just goes to plan. Sometimes you’ll see a band performing and it all fits together. Fits like destined lovers: bodies entwined; words synchronised; moving as one. The rarity of tonight saw three such bands. Three bands flowing at a juncture clasped by their audiences in the palm of their eyes and kept forever more within them.

Manchester’s tRANSELEMENt brought their wackily punctuated name and their equally wackily punctuated music to what is a local venue, to them. They might have, should have, ought to have felt as if they had nothing to prove in front of an audience one may have felt were the equivalent of ‘regulars’, but they went all out. Throwing unfairly abstract rhythms and occasionally brutal musical violence out to an unsuspecting few, tRANSELEMENt mangle their music in the most delightful manner possible and somehow become an inconceivable joy. To describe them as a Mancunian version of The Coral wouldn’t be too unfair. Probably.

If Rok & Rol is a lifestyle then Mínus want to die by it. Creeping onstage decked out in assorted leather pants, dirty attitudes and skull emblazonments they were never going to croon love songs and gawp lovingly at their own footwear. With empowering atmospheric monologues, lovingly strewn over the shards of emptiness adorning the fallow periods of between-song sound-level construction, Mínus are able to perfect their sound and, indeed, gain emphasis with every single note. Deciding to veer toward their most recent material tonight seems as good an idea as any they have ever had and it proves to be one that showcases them in their most favourable light. Devoid of the youthful commotion of prior engagements, they play hard and fast hardcore-tinged, essential ROCK with the contagious chill and relaxation that other Icelandic bands have come to be famous for. I wasn’t ashamed to be left begging for more.

And what of the prodigal sons? Oceansize have returned to the venue in which they were borne. What a homecoming it proved to be. With a majestic superiority unseen in bands with less arrogance, nay, less confidence, they swagger and sway their way around the stage, engulfing their crowd in a sweeping wave of reverberating ecstasy. Mixing their old – already classics - and new to excruciating effect, the five loll their heads back and fro with personal anguish felt by sundry, but known only unto themselves. To close your own eyes now would be surrender. It seems it is all you can do but relinquish your right of conservatism. There is no rationale here. It has no fundamental logic, per se, and to try to explain the beauty of the crushingly floundering Tool-isms mashed with the droning underbelly of 6x7s. Pointless. These are not the actions of a band any more. Oceansize have risen over and surpassed all judgment in favour of their own justification. Above and beyond.

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Oceansize + Mínus + Transelement - Manchester Band On The Wall

Yeah!! What a stunning review...and how beautiful are Oceansize :)....

Lxx

Re: Oceansize + Mínus + Transelement - Manchester Band On The Wall

after a late start they've definitely caught up in my estimations.

x
gen

Re: Oceansize + Mínus + Transelement - Manchester Band On The Wall

The reviews on here would be so much better if there was more talk of the music, and less of the writers trying to show off how many long adjectives and cool phrases they can pack into a 500 word review. That review taught me barely anything about Oceansize's sound. Disappointing, Raz. Top band though.

Oceansize + Mínus + Transelement - Manchester Band On The Wall

Mate. The first band were awful. They had no present at all and need to learn that a performance does not stop at the end of the song. They cut songs up far too much and seemed to think constant variation is groundbreaking, when, in fact, it wrecks the whole idea.

Minus were just plain strange. Much better than the openers though, but no need for the greep voiceovers in between songs, and was the singer's mic even on?

But Oceansize were class...so modest, so tuned and so moving. Good review of them, but don't know where you were coming from about the first two bands.

Re: Oceansize + Mínus + Transelement - Manchester Band On The Wall

They had not 'present'?

I'm sure there's a joke to be made there somewhere.

Re: Oceansize + Mínus + Transelement - Manchester Band On The Wall

Erm. I personally didn't think that much to the first two bands either but comments like they "seemed to think constant variation is groundbreaking" are a bit silly, really. Perhaps their angle is slightly different to yours. They were quite obviously into what they were doing and didn't seem to me to be even attempting to break any ground. It's they're music and surely it would be a more mature approach to be interested by where their path has been. How they got to creating music that to them is music and to us is something that appears quite different. I dunno if that sounded like me trying to be all clever but I have difficult putting my reactions into words so, erm, sorry about that. I havent been trying to insult or offend you either so erm, sorry again, if that's happened. Oceansize were as brilliant and loud as ever. Nice venue too, never been there before.

Was that a review then?

What the fuck did Oceansize sound like? Stop it with all your pretend pompous pseudo-poetry; you could at least pretend to want be music journalists. For this, the vital ingredient is describing music, rather than fingering your own arses with cascading bullshit hyperbole that is of no use to anyone actually wanting to learn about the music.

Re: Was that a review then?

If you want to learn about the music, hwy not download an MP3, buy a CD on whim or *gasp* go to a gig and find out for yourself?

Re: Was that a review then?

What the fuck? Imagine if you bought Q or Mojo or whatever and instead of reviews they had blocks of text saying 'fuck off and buy the record if you wanna know what it sounds like'?

I could do that, but then whats the point of dis existing if its not gonna tell you anything about the music?

Re: Was that a review then?

The beauty of DiS is that it is an online archive
All articles on one band can be found on their profile
Read an earlier review of them
Read a few
If you really want to know what they sound like
I've described them so many times it's getting boring is all
Probably not an excuse but I guess if people want me to stick to some sort of formula of repetition when I write I guess I should probably give in and follow

I actually gave you the Tool meets 6x7 description (if you care to read it) albeit grudgingly and that's pretty accurate as it goes

Re: Was that a review then?

Just imagine buying Q or Mojo.. what a horrible thought that is.

Shouldn't a live review tell you how a gig was? how it made someone feel? rather than explaining for the 20th time what a band 'sound' like? Just a thought.

Re: Was that a review then?

If your so bored of writing about the band you can only grugingly be bothered describe them, then why review em? Hardly a spot on descriptions; what period Tool are you talking about?

Re: Was that a review then?

My sentiments exactly - like I said before:
"The reviews on here would be so much better if there was more talk of the music, and less of the writers trying to show off how many long adjectives and cool phrases they can pack into a 500 word review. That review taught me barely anything about Oceansize's sound. Disappointing, Raz. Top band though."

Raz, stop pretending mate. This all stems from when you didn't get that A for creative writing isnt it?This is your (pathetic) middle finger to that examiner isn't it?