musicOMH
The Modern
@ Paradise Bar, London, 6 July 2004
After sitting through a band whose concept of a live performance is to explain, in depth, the literary and philosophical background to each song, the plastic fantastic skin-deep shallowness of The Modern comes as a much-needed refreshing blast. This is a band that looks good, have a sound that couldn't be more now and what's best is that they know it. Arrogance can be a very attractive quality in a band, and The Modern have it in spades.

It might just be a small bar in the dark heart of New Cross, but it's a home town gig for the band and they give it the full treatment with uniforms, compere, cheekbones and attendant Gimp all present and correct, not that you can imagine they know how to do it any differently. Launching into their current single Suburban Culture, it retains all of its electro pop sheen in a live setting, the zeitgeist riding mix of Visage, The Human League and the Cure enhanced by a performance worthy of the description.

With two perfectly pouting front men performing like a cross between David Byrne and Phil Oakey, and a Marilyn Monroe down the Torture Garden look-alike front of stage, there's plenty to keep the eye occupied, and that's before a rubber spiked gimp suit wearing fellow begins to writhe to the music. It's a show almost as polished as the music, and it's been my pleasure and pain over the last few years to witness to a lot of bands that fall into the synth-pop, electroclash genre. The Modern are definitely up their amongst the best I've seen.

Where they do fall down, though, at least on the basis of this show, is a lack of material. Perhaps it was just a lack of time or a trick to keep people wanting more, but when your entire show is shorter than one of the support band interminably long introductions then it's hard to judge whether the band have more than their, admittedly impressive, one or two tricks.

But, having said that, I'd rather a band kept it short and sweet than out staying their welcome, and after five sweet slices of synthpop, The Modern leave the stage in the fine style they entered it. More suited to guesting in clubs than headlining their own gigs at the moment, The Modern are still an exciting prospect and definitely ones to watch over the next few months.


  share with:  Facebook | Digg | other sites


  BUY The Modern - Jane Falls Down



latest live reviews:
The Xcerts @ Cabaret Voltaire, Edinburgh
Stephen Malkmus @ City Varieties, Leeds
The Faint @ Cargo, London
The Hidden Cameras @ St Leonard's Church, London
Soulwax @ Electrowerkz, London
Mishka Adams @ Vortex, London
The Cribs @ KCLSU, London
Fucked Up @ Esquires, Bedford
GIG REVIEWS ARCHIVE
A B C D E F G
H I J K L M N
O P Q R S T U
V W X Y Z #
BUY MERCHANDISE
BUY GIG TICKETS
TOP ARTICLES NOW
RELATED ARTICLES
INTERVIEW:
The Modern

VIDEO:
The Modern - Industry

VIDEO:
The Modern - Jane Falls Down

TRACK:
The Modern - Jane Falls Down

TRACK:
The Modern - Industry

TRACK:
The Modern - Eastern Bloc

TRACK:
The Modern - Surburban Culture

GIG:
The Modern @ The Paradise Bar, London



  more live reviews...
about us | staff | write to us | mailing list | copyright | home page

© 1999-2008 OMH. all rights reserved