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Death From Above 1979 + The Rogers Sisters
@ Mean Fiddler, London, 23 August 2005
Central London is a dangerous catwalk this evening. The pavement along Oxford Street is nigh on impassable with swaggering losers, impatient commuters and clueless tourists. Droves of buses and taxis floor it like boy racers while killer cyclists seem even more bloodthirsty this evening.

You feel relived to have survived when you turn the corner to the Mean Fiddler. Then another catwalk-cum-identity parade greets you. Fashion victims, metallers, old timers and the odd suit - a true enough example of the kind of crowd Death From Above 1979 can umbrella.

The Rogers Sisters do their best to warm the former with a reasonable half hour of bubble gum garage rock. Much of this consisted of moderate rotation between B52s and Von Bondie-styled bouncy sounds. Despite relocating to New York's ultra hip Williamsberg neighbourhood, they don't seem quite ready to drop the classic Detroit sound most Detroit bands carry when starting out. Given that the garage rock train ship passed these shores a good couple of years ago, unless NY's karma provokes a radical change, these Sisters are just gonna be chasing the tugboats.

The wall of sound DFA 1979 can generate out of two conventional live instruments, namely a bass guitar and a drum kit, is simply staggering. Wherever you happen to be standing, the sheer power of their sound can pretty much pick you up and hurl you around the venue, making The White Stripes look and sound like The Carpenters.

And boy are they loud. We're talking the big league here - The Mastodons, Slayers and Metallicas of this world. But if you're suspect about the authenticity of what these two Canadians were knocking out on tape then I implore you to witness the live feast. Sebastian Grainger abuses his kit like a lunatic. At points its implausible how he seems to sustain the lung capacity to project his vitriolic vocals on song.

His cohort Jesse Keeler displays similar invulnerability to the human metabolism, chucking himself about the stage like a raggy doll while furiously gorging on his four strings but with the nous of skilled lead guitarist. Like many a hardcore band the tightness of DFA 1979 as a unit must be smiled upon, and in the case, not understated.

From the barrage that is Go Home, Get Down to the deliciously dirty Little Girl, each and every song of the hour is a seismic pleasure. With prominent slots at Reading and Leeds this weekend and an extensive support slot for the Queens Of The Stone Age / Nine Inch Nails US tour, you'd be a fool to give them a miss. Be warned though. A serious risk of tinnitus exists.


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