Wednesday, 17 July 2013

Ardingly College Battle of the Bands: review and interview

Ardingly ArtsFest: Room for Improvement and others

In the last week before the summer holidays began, my school hosted a week dedicated to the arts. As part of this, on the Wednesday morning, there was a ‘Battle of the Bands’ featuring only students. I was pretty tired when I headed down to the main stage, considering I’d just performed a play and was also suffering a minor head injury, but it was warm and everyone was sitting on the grass in groups, really relaxed, and it seemed like a great day to laugh at some of the people I go to school with and maybe actually find some talent in some of them. And, what do you know – that actually happened!
In total we had seven bands perform, which surprised me – I didn’t know my school had that many musical people, especially considering how many of the students had already left for the summer by this point. First up we had ‘The Justin Ho Trio’, who weren’t spectacular, although this might be an unfair assessment because they were disadvantaged by being first up with no idea what to expect, and they lost the element of surprise as the stage technicians kept asking them to play parts of their songs to test the audio system. They played two covers, the first being ‘Crossroads’ by Cream, and the second actually being a cover of a cover, John Mayer’s version of the Hendrix song ‘Bold as Love’, and both came across as mediocre imitations of good songs.
They were followed up by ‘General Buller’, a band who played completely ridiculous original songs – the kind that are so terrible they become really good fun for everyone involved, and it could have been a really great set if it weren’t for the inane between-song commentary of the frontman, who tried to convince us that the songs had Serious Artistic Merit. But that’s a quality that’s meant to show without being pointed out, as proven by the following act, unaccompanied singer-songwriter Charlie Jackson, who really impressed me with his two original songs and who seemed stylistically reminiscent of Coldplay’s Chris Martin in the early 2000s.
The next band to take the stage was ‘Safe Kinda High’ (second Hendrix reference of the day) and although they had it tough coming after Jackson, I thought they were great too. Musically, similar to General Buller, yet they took themselves less seriously and related easily to the audience as they played their mix of covers and originals. Most of the band then left the stage, but their frontman Jojo Macari stayed to perform as an acoustic solo artist. There on his own, you could tell the songs had been written by the same person as the full-band songs, but there were more vocals-based, more understated and more serious. One of these has actually been recorded and released online, while the other remains untitled, although I refer to it in my head as ‘No Recollections’.
Macari was also involved in the final band of the day, ‘The Laces’, who opened with a terrible pool table joke, and clearly have talent (specially their guitarist) but whose only song was in more of a hip-hop style and so wasn’t my thing at all. It did, however, make for a good finish to the event, but I’m getting ahead of myself… one other band performed in between, and that was ‘Room for Improvement’.
I tell you, if this competition had been judged on audience reaction, these five guys would have won by a landslide – the cheer when they took the stage was enormous. First, they played the Red Hot Chili Peppers’ ‘Under the Bridge’, a great song off an otherwise uninspiring album, and this band’s classically trained lead singer, Dom Morgan, clearly has more talent than the original’s Anthony Kiedis. The only problem with this is that he seriously overshadowed the other members of the band. The lead guitarist, I am sure, would have shone in any other setting with his solo, and yet here didn’t feel quite as important. Some harmonies were also added by rhythm guitarist Thomas O’Dell, and I thought the different approaches of the two singers (his quiet and gentle compared to Morgan’s extreme and emotive) could have been made use of more – of course, I discovered after that this would have happened if it wasn’t for microphone problems!
Following this, the band played a rendition of Weezer’s ‘Island in the Sun’, which was less polished, but this of course suits the song. It was more of a full band workout and it seemed as though they were more laid back and enjoying the moment by this point.
The night before had been comedy night, featuring several famous comedians, but opening for them had been a local professional band called ‘Reachback’. I’m happy to say most people I spoke to agreed with me that there was very little to enjoy about them – no talent, grating mic personality and an obvious pastiche of Paramore. At least half of the student bands would have been much more deserving of that slot than they were.
After the show, I spoke to the rhythm guitarist and backing vocalist of ‘Room for Improvement’, Thomas, about his band and the show as a whole. First I asked him about the band’s name (this has always interested me – a name is usually the first thing somebody knows about a band, so it must be a pretty huge decision to make) and was told that during the band’s early sessions, which may have been lacking in productivity, the lead guitarist suggested that the name would hint to the audience to not expect much… and that it would hopefully be a nice surprise when they turned out to be alright.
Moving onto song selections, Tom told me that ‘Under the Bridge’ was the first song they figured out how to play and therefore was the best rehearsed. It’s also one of the only songs that all five members liked, considering how conflicting their music tastes are – “psychedelic rock, punk, metal, hipster and weird pony dubstep”. ‘Island in the Sun’ was chosen when they realised they needed a second song with half an hour of rehearsal time to go, because its four basic chords made it a quick one to learn. In Tom’s words, “we didn’t have an ending so did the musical equivalent of sticking a band aid on it and hoping for the best!” Currently the band have just returned from a difficult tour of Ghana, on which they spent their spare time writing original songs, on which Tom writes the lyrics and all members collaborate for the music.
I then asked if, considering their cover versions stayed fairly faithful to the originals, they thought this was the best way to play a cover or if they thought it was better to rearrange it and make part of it your own (I had recently persuaded him, a huge Beatles fan, to listen to 801’s reworking of ‘Tomorrow Never Knows’). He replied that both can work, but if you change the song, it’s important to ‘make it your own properly’. Staying faithful can, according to him, be best for tribute bands, but these should still add their own little touches, such as the guitar solo and harmonies on ‘Under the Bridge’.
I was shocked to hear that Tom as a guitarist is completely self taught and has only been playing for six or seven months! The guitar he uses isn’t a real Fender Stratocaster, but could be mistaken for one from a distance. He told me that it was his dad’s in the 80s (obtained under ‘pretty suspicious circumstances’… intriguing) and that its bright red colour worked well with the band’s uniform of white T-shirts and different trousers.
The ArtsFest crowd was the biggest the band have played to so far in their career, although they nearly played a car park show to several hundred people, and would have if it wasn’t for the weather. Apparently, playing to a massive crowd would be ‘amazing’ but also nervewracking, given the fact that any major mistakes would be witnessed by so many people. However, considering how much the band have enjoyed playing to smaller crowds, they aim to keep working their way up to see just how fun it can get.
When I asked him his honest opinions on the other student bands, his reactions were mixed… one band which I’ll leave unnamed was completely trashed, and in his words, had “No real stage presence: good instrument playing, but the singing was just not good. The tone was off, no real expression and it just didn’t sound nice!” However, he praised ‘General Buller’ were praised for writing songs that suited the vocalist’s limited range, and also singled out ‘The Laces’ for being one of the better bands and having good showmanship. He believes his band shared that trait and their lead singer managed to get the crowd excited before their playing started, and I’d definitely concur with this.

To finish with, we talked about the future of both Tom and the band. He hopes they can keep working together for now and cryptically hinted that there might be ‘more opportunities for them, come September’. He likes working in a group setting (despite the arguments) because the sound they produce is a lot more full than what he can do on his own with his guitar. However, he’s not completely sure what route he plans to take into the music business. He just knows that he wants to get there, hopefully playing stadiums, and hopefully playing a fusion of psychedelia and modern mainstream pop. I can imagine this and will be following his career, however, I happen to know that he also enjoys and is a natural at stand up comedy, so who knows…

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