WHAT’S the warmest, most generous-spirited question you can ask someone?
For me it’s ‘what do you think of this song?’ It doesn’t happen much, but I
love being asked it. It is a question loaded with hope and trust. It is a
friend sharing the emotional light and shade of a snippet of culture and
asking you to make a call on its merits. And that’s something I won’t hold
back from.
It’s also extremely personal, and with that comes an implied and respected
sense of responsibility. You might as well ask me ‘what do you think of my
children?’ But unlike that question, where like most parents I’ve learned
to be a skilled diplomat, with music I will always deliver a frank
description of my gut reaction. To do anything else would be disingenuous.
My old school friend Andrew and I have been tic-tacking with songs and
albums for nearly 30 years and asking that question over and over. Back in
high school times it meant sitting in each other’s loungerooms during the
last days of vinyl (before the modern revival), enjoying whole albums while
we gossiped about what we’d read in the NME. By university it was mix tapes
and now it’s Spotify playlists.
We’ve introduced each other to a slew of music over the years. Our ‘what do
you think of this song?’ moments have morphed into CD purchases running
close to the thousands. Andrew can take all the credit or blame for making
me Australia’s largest collector of the recorded works of Orchestral
Manoeuvres in the Dark. It’s his cross to bear.
With the music comes the gigs. We’ve been to plenty of them together.
Recently they’ve favoured sit-down venues as we’ve cruised past 40. But
we’ll stand and rub shoulders with the uni crowd if the band is right. And
tonight feels like one of those nights.
It’s a stinking hot evening in Melbourne’s inner north in early February.
Two diminutive middle-aged men make their way to a High Street pizza
restaurant for a pre-gig meal. Bristol rage-merchants Idles will be our
entertainers and their two albums have been on daily rotation at my place
for months.
My attitude to this gig has flipped and flopped over the six weeks since I
bought my ticket, and now the event has arrived. I’m truly excited to watch
this five-piece bomb blast of punk(esque) noise-pop outside of the
restrictive confines of YouTube but apprehensive that in the flesh it might
be about bluster rather than passion. First Andrew and I must over-think
what we’re about to witness, in our traditional style.
I’ve enjoyed such a visceral reaction to Idles this year that they’ve
become a dopamine hit for my brain – a must-listen every day. So why am I
nervous about this gig? Andrew suggests it’s just a reaction to attending
something outside our comfort zone. We’ve been to plenty of loud shows, but
not to anything resembling punk for well over a decade. Not since we both
had kids.
We debate the likely percentage of female audience members at the show –
I’m thinking around 10-15% tops, Andrew plumps for something closer to 40%.
He proves a far better prophet.
Idles at first glance appear a geyser of bovver-boy male aggression, but it
turns out their lyrical and public denouncement of toxic masculinity counts
for plenty at this gig. The genders are close to evenly split tonight, and
the vibe isn’t ‘hard man’, it’s a lot more ‘tight community’. A few Billy
Bragg T-shirts are dotted around the venue, and it shows this is a crowd
ready to direct any collective venom against the updated post-Thatcherite
targets of Brexit and racism.
There aren’t many bands with a bigger platform right now on which to rage.
Idles are just two albums into a career already on a bullocking trajectory,
winning a swag of awards, strong social media approval, and impressively
straggling that line between critical acclaim and commercial success.
Brylcream, Creatine, and a bag of Charlie Sheen
When describing them to other enquiring friends, I’ve tried to avoid the
punk moniker as they’ve disavowed it themselves in interviews. But it’s a
hard one to steer clear of, so urgent, vibrant and often downright
aggressive is their music. I’ve settled on this by way of introduction
because anything more poetic would sell them short – they’re a band who
just don’t fuck around.
Brylcream, Creatine, and a bag of co-cay-ine.
Much of Idles’ chippiness comes from lead singer Joe Talbot’s rougher than
rough upbringing – his descent into alcoholism, and his rocky road as
primary carer for his mum Christine following a stroke she suffered when he
was just 16. Her death in 2017 just as Idles were working on debut album Brutalism is a significant touchpoint for many of that album’s
songs and her face appears on the cover art. The astonishing video clip for Mother features Talbot, dressed in a pink suit, smashing hundreds
of knick-knacks in front of a large photograph of his recently deceased
mum. In tribute, Christine’s ashes were pressed into 100 vinyl copies of Brutalism. As I said, Idles don’t fuck around.
My mother worked fifteen hours five days a week
My mother worked sixteen hours six days a week
My mother worked seventeen hours seven days week
So, we know what we’ve signed up for this evening in Thornbury. It won’t be
a night for shrinking violets. It will be ear-drum splittingly loud,
raucous and confrontational. We’re far from the oldest people in the room,
but we are some of the shortest. Andrew and I have a brief shouted
conversation about where the best place would be to park ourselves. As
someone who has experienced a heart attack in recent years, I’m reticent to
stand anywhere in a crowd I can’t move quickly away from, and pitch for
somewhere near the back of the room. As someone who hasn’t experienced a
heart attack in recent years, Andrew shows more bravado and encourages me
forward to within 20 feet of the stage. Space here is at a premium and we
cop plenty of nudges and elbows from enthusiastic punters seeking a similar
vantage point.
The venue has also warmed up significantly. I’m sweating heavily, and in an
admission I would never make to the twenty-somethings around me, am feeling
the weight of a late night with the main act still to come.
Idles’ entry is relatively nonchalant and offhand, given the maelstrom they
are about to create. They merely wander on in the semi-dark, take up their
five spots on the stage and smirk a bit at each other. They reek of
confidence and of a battle with audience expectations already won. They
also exude rough and ready charisma They’re as comfortable being
photographed in dresses as they are without any tops on and tonight it’s a
mix of skin and loud shirts. Guitarist Mark Bowen’s Hawaiian top is my
favourite but, like many of the garments, it won’t last long in this show.
I said I’ve got a penchant for smokes and kicking douches in the mouth.
Sadly for you, my last cigarette’s gone out
Talbot is wearing a bold red sweater and he prowls the stage staring at us
accusingly with piercing eyes. I am immediately reminded of Guardian writer
Michael Hann’s pitch-perfect sketch of him: “with slick-backed hair,
tattoos and a sizeable moustache, he looks as if he has walked off a
19th-century Mississippi paddle steamer, having fleeced the other
passengers in card games”.
They kick off with Colossus, a growling slow-burner for the first
three minutes of its duration (“a death-watch beetle percussion and
end-of-days bassline”, as esteemed music journalist Kitty Empire described
it) and the crowd simmers and burbles in expectation. They know what’s
coming. There is already a singalong underway for the opening lines. Andrew
and I, despite our proximity to the stage, can barely see the band. We’ve
got a couple of basketball teams in front of us and our view is largely
sweaty T-shirts. This problem is about to be quickly solved.
After a pregnant pause, there’s a quick tap on the snare and Colossus flips itself completely into an insane thrash-pop
firebomb. The basketballers are gone as the crowd at the front suddenly
becomes liquid, and for a brief second I can clearly see everything on
stage. Andrew and I leap back just in time to land on the outskirts of the
mosh pit and barely manage to keep our feet as the primal tenor of the gig
is revealed. We bravely pop in our earplugs and watch on in bewildered awe
as the band take us on the angriest, most masculine rant against angry,
masculine, ranty aggression we can imagine.
It’s not exclusively their message to preach. A month later, Andrew and I
will be blown away at the same venue by the charmingly named Suss Cunts,
three local women with a similar capacity to energise the room and mock
narrow-minded male-centric egotism. But tonight, Talbot and his crew have
us captivated.
As other friends of mine (mostly corporate types) have innocently wondered
while being blasted with Idles in my car, what on earth are they so angry
about? The answer lies partially in a few late-70s punk staples –
inequality, delinquency, rejection at the hands of the state and the
middle-class. But Talbot’s central conceit in Samaritans, and one
he comes back to in many of his lyrics would never have been touched by the
Sex Pistols or even the more progressive works of The Clash.
Man up, sit down, chin up, pipe down, socks up, don’t cry, just lie,
grow some balls, he said
He cites a recent epiphany after reading artist Grayson Perry’s punchy
gender challenging treatise The Descent of Man (Penguin, 2016).
Perry tears strips off modern masculinity, saying forms of it “if starkly
brutal or covertly domineering are toxic to an equal, free and tolerant
society”. It was a message that hit home for Idles, particularly as their
lead singer underwent therapy.
“I realised that I was alone a lot,” says Talbot in a confessional
interview recorded in 2018. “But not alone. I was surrounded by wonderful,
supportive people but I still felt lonely. I wanted to be normal and that
feeling of failure comes from a long line of things that have happened,
that I’ve encountered – through advertising, people on the street, people
at school, teachers (all) telling me how to be.”
The mask of masculinity is a mask that’s wearing me.
“Masculinity as a construct is dangerous, problematic and bullshit. This
isolation and these cultural constructs that make men feel isolated in
disguise – are something they don’t really understand or believe in.”
In the hipster hotbed of Thornbury, it seems he’s joyously preaching to the
converted. But a few songs in, and as the moshing intensifies and Andrew
and I shrink towards the back of the room, Talbot shows he can back up his
words with actions. He stops Great mid-chorus to lambast the
lagered-up male moshers and appoints a young woman pressed against the
front of the stage as de facto monitor, telling her “our children and
grandchildren will remember you this night, and will speak your name down
the years for bringing these fuckers into line”. From this point on the
crowd will leap, sway and cheer but an element of respectful celebration
dominates.
Bass player Joe Kiernan is amidst us soon after, seated on the floor right
in the middle of the throng, and pumping out his driving rhythms surrounded
by beaming faces. It’s the kind of Kum Ba Yah meets metal moment that fits
perfectly with the title of Idles’ breakthrough album, Joy as an Act of Resistance. There’s nothing scary about this
band, other than the unavoidable passion of their music. It’s actually the
fact they’re such a cheeky pack of ratbags that endears them to so many.
‘Never fight a man with a perm’, yells Talbot gleefully. It’s the title of
Joy’s second track and the joke is appreciated that as a mantra for living,
it’s not exactly one of the ten commandments.
Soon after comes Danny Nedelko, their most celebrated track. Named
after a member of their support band with Ukrainian heritage, it’s the most
magnificent homage to a tolerant, multicultural society imaginable. As one
YouTube commenter astutely puts it, “How can a band make me both want to
punch a wall and hug a stranger in one song?” To hear it in the flesh and
jump around deliriously to its buzzing, thrilling sound with a like-minded
community of believers feels nothing short of a privilege.
My blood brother is an immigrant, a beautiful immigrant
My blood brother’s Freddy Mercury, a Nigerian mother of three
Andrew and I debrief on this privilege soon after as we join the rest of
the beaming sweat-soaked crowd out on High Street. Many of them will head
to the nearby bars, their night merely reaching the half-way mark. But
we’re both emotionally and physically exhausted with domestic
responsibilities looming next morning. So we head home in the car and
excitedly talk over each other in an effort to make sense of what we’ve
just experienced.
Andrew’s music tastes veer to the more sensitive side of the spectrum so I
had been unsure if he’d enjoyed the gig. He assures me the threat of being
crushed was greatly outweighed by the thrill of both the spectacle and the
tunes. We agree we’ve never seen a band put so much sheer physical effort
into a gig. I feel drummer Jon Beavis shoulders a heavy load in this regard
– almost every song requires him to pound his kit into submission lest it
start to fight back at some point. There’s no resting point, there’s no
retreat, there’s no half measures. And, as Andrew points out, that’s the
right fit for an Idles gig. You’re all in, or there’s no point being there.
When I ask someone ‘what do you think of this song?’, the least edifying
reaction is a shrug of the shoulders. I’d much rather someone absolutely
hated a song and could tell me why. You would never shrug your shoulders to
an Idles song. They perform confidently and without compromise. Their songs
are full of wit and confrontation, but always with a knowing sense of
self-deprecation. As a band they demand you join them, be part of their
world and embrace a fight against privilege, racism, entitlement and
indifference. They demand vulnerability, empathy, intelligence and caring
about those outside your immediate circle. To the uninitiated, they’re just
a spirited British retro-punk band. But to those lucky enough to tap into
their world, they’re a feisty, modern beacon of light shining irrepressibly
against the grey. Why do I hold them so dear? Because they’re playing
what’s in my head. And clearly, what is in many others.
Thursday, July 11, 2019
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