Showing posts with label Dance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dance. Show all posts

4/13/11

Interview: Midnight Juggernauts

Midnight Juggernauts @ Witloof Bar












With the release of their debut album "Dystopia" in 2008 the three Australians from Melbourne established themselves in the Indie-Dance scene and beyond. Their spacy sound is as original as hard to describe: a mixture of Indie-Pop, Dance, Electro and Psychedelia. The band toured with Justice and played at renowned festivals as Glastonbury or Coachella. In 2010 Midnight Juggernauts released their second album "The Crystal Axis" which gives up the catchy dancefloor anthems for a more complex, adventurous sound. It failed to repeat the commercial success of "Dystopia" and is definitely one of the most underrated albums of 2010. Before their gig in Brussels I had the chance to speak to them.
Midnight Juggernauts on...
... their way to success:
"We owe everything to the internet. We had no money and so the internet was the only way, especially when it comes to getting known in Europe or the States: Australia is so far away from everything. Actually we all are big internet nerds and constantly twitter."  
...the making of "The Crystal Axis":
"We didn't want a second Dystopia. We wanted to do something new. For several weeks we isolated ourselves in a beach house on the Australian coast, trying a new way of writing in a different environment. We filled the living room with loads of instruments and pedals and gadgets and just jammed and experimented. We had a hammock and saw dolphins swim by, it was great!"


...having their own record label (Siberia Records):
"From the beginning we put out our records on our own label. All of a sudden we were CEOs! We just felt comfortable with it and continued that way. We did have offers by major labels but didn't like the conditions. You lose a lot of independence."
...Belgium:
"We've played with Goose and Das Pop and we like Soulwax or The Subs. And of course we love Tintin and Belgian beers!"
...playing in the Witloof Bar:
"We were a bit surprised that there was no support act and that we weren't scheduled for the Orangerie. It's nice to play in small venues though, we feel like the Beatles in Liverpool! We are just scared of being punched in the face or someone unplugging our instruments."
...the pants of drummer Daniel Stricker:
"What do you think of those pants? They were 400 Euros and look like pyjama pants. He is wearing pyjama pants for 400 Euros!"
...advice for upcoming bands:
"Smile on stage! Invest everything you have in your band. Reinvest everything you earn with the band. Don't expect to make much money with it and don't concentrate on that. We actually financed our first tour ourselves."
...playing gigs: 
"We like to add little covers for fun. Sometimes it’s a disaster, like with Blur’s „Girls and Boys“ which we hadn’t practised at all. Or we played a Michael Jackson cover when he died. Tonight our manager is going to chip in with his saxophone." (And he did: With Gerry Rafferty's old classic 'Baker Street').
...being interviewed:
"Are you really writing all this down?! 

Into the Galaxy, Dystopia (2008)

Laura vs The Savage Pack, The Crystal Axis (2010)

5/8/10

What Ever Happened to Rock’n’roll?

Indieclub Tries to Revive Brussels Rock Scene

From Electro and Pop to Techno - there are plenty of options to go clubbing in Brussels. But for rock fans the picture looks a bit scarce to say the least. The party Indieclub wants to fill this gap.
What exactly is the concept? Charles Grison (24) and Gordon Delacroix (24), the organisers behind the event, admit that they are not trying to reinvent the wheel: "It's really simple. We just want to revive the old recipe of playing indie and rock music in a club."
"In the end of the 70s and beginning of the 80s there were only parties like this in Brussels", Carl de Moncharline who has worked in the Brussels club scene for 20 years now tells me. "But then the movement changed." The nightlife veteran of the Belgian capital recently opened the Wood in Bois de la Cambre where the Indieclub party will take place this Saturday.


In other European cities as Berlin or London numerous rock parties have continued to exist - with success. Why not in Brussels? "In other countries rock plays a bigger role in the popular culture, especially in England", Charles and Gordon explain. "It seems that rock parties were forgotton here and rock was only related to concerts and festivals."
The potential seems to be there. With the Ancienne Belgique and the Botanique, Brussels offers two renowned conert venues with a diverse and up-to-date line-up. Rock concerts are generally sold out within minutes - who ever tried to get tickets for bands like Vampire Weekend, Franz Ferdinand or MGMT knows what I'm talking about. And not to forget of course the Belgian rock festival Rock Werchter which was elected the best rock festival in the world several times. Remains to be seen if the Indieclub will succeed in getting Brussels on the dancefloor with guitar sounds. You can find out for yourself this Saturday, May 8th.

Entrance: free
Doors open: 23h
Address: 1 Chemin de la Meute, Brussels

5/5/10

Welcome to FEAR AND LOATHING IN BRUSSELS!

As probably every person outside Belgium I thought Brussels was boring and not much more than EU Politics, rainy weather, those omnipresent chocolates, granny laces and Manneken Pis. Until I met some "real Belgians" (yes, they do exist!) and discovered that the real picture was far from what I had had in mind.

Fear and Loathing in Brussels wants you to discover the hidden, the new, the cool, the hype, the fun, the stylish, the crazy, the surprising, the real Brussels - those diamonds that make this city worth living in.
For all Bruxellois, new arrivals, passers-by and everyone who loves the Belgian capital. Be wild!