shop | mailing lists
musicOMH
Facebook Twitter
music: gig reviews
DJ Shadow + Akala + Stateless
@ Brixton Academy, London, 15 December 2006
5 stars / 4 stars / 4 stars
One look at tonight's support acts will tell you that DJ Shadow and his tour is nothing if not eclectic. We have a trip-hop indie band, followed by one of the country's hottest young rappers and then the man himself - resplendent in front of a 20 foot wall of screens and a vast array of decks, laptops and other electronic wizardry. Midway through the show he assures the crowd that his main aim is to continually evolve, to not "keep putting out the same old shit". Judging by his recent output, friends and tonight's performance, there is little chance of that.

As a warm up, the combination of indietronic Leeds lads Stateless followed by Akala, the winner of a MOBO for Best Hip Hop Artist (he beat Kanye West and Busta Rhymes) gives an insight into what's in store from the music changeling that is DJ Shadow. On the one hand, Stateless peddle a fine line in atmospheric, sample-laden melancholy with a nod to both crossover acts like Massive Attack and Portishead (on breathy ballad Bloodstream) and the room-filling chorus of their indie contemporaries (Exit). It's a multi-layered and vast sound, but maintaining the subtle nuances of electronic music: programmed backdrops, DJ scratching and a vital live energy, channeled through lead singer, Chris James, a cross between Jeff Buckley and Chris Martin.

Akala is more straightforward: a young rapper who, somewhat refreshingly, speaks out against the glamorised spending, drug and violence of mainstream hip-hop. Kicking off with two tracks underpinned with rock guitar backing, he gets the crowd moving fits in the occasional (and breathtaking, literally) accapella, and manages to fit in a bit of Blair baiting for good measure. On Stand Up, he even name checks probably all of the worst crime and poverty ridden areas in England's cities with a chilling testament to the ills of street culture: "Critics ask me why I don't smile, they gotta be kiddin/little kids'll blow your head off just to say that they did it." As insightful as Dizzee, with an equal or better delivery, Akala looks like a hot prospect.

But the main event tonight is one Mr Josh Davis (to his mum) or better known to you and me as DJ Shadow. Climbing up a ladder to reach his platform, half way up a wall of monitors, he cracks his knuckles, says hello to the fans and kicks into Ticking Clocks, a trademark, and sample heavy ambient Hip Hop track. It's a nice taste of things to come. Watching a DJ should be both a visual and aural experience and while Shadow might be too far away for most in Brixton Academy to actually see his technical ability, he more than makes up for it through the visual and light show. Caricatures of rogue presidents (Time Is Not Enough), witty observations on certain, more popular tracks (Organ Donor), or just a series of intricate patterns (Be There featuring Ian Brown's vocal), they change the atmosphere from a gig to an event.

A few of Shadow's mates come out to add more variety to the show - Chris James (Stateless) and Lateef, from his Quannam projects collective. Both change the mood: James transforms a hip-hop mash up party into a brooding stadium indie, while Lateef is hell bent on turning Brixton into London's biggest and best block party, arms swinging, people singing and plenty of call and response. Shadow ends the show with an UNKLE mash-up, a breaks version of Rabbit In Your Headlights, interwoven with Badly Drawn Boy-led, punk-guitared Nursery Rhyme. He thanks the crowd for the year and support and mentions said evolution quote. It's alright Josh; we're with you on that one.

share
end of year feature
musicOMH's Top 50 Albums Of 2009
From the nearly 700 albums we reviewed this year, which did our writers love the most?
Introduction
50-41 | 40-31 | 30-21
20-11 | 10-4 | 1-3

  BUY DJ Shadow - The Outsider

now in music
ALBUMS OUT THIS WEEK: Efterklang, Ali Farka Touré & Toumani Diabaté, Holly Miranda, Strange Boys, Marina & The Diamonds, Kathryn Williams, The Courteeners, Tamikrest, Erik Hassle, Nedry, Toro Y Moi, Tom McRae...

ALBUMS COMING SOON: Jónsi, The Knife, Laura Marling, Archie Bronson Outfit, Frightened Rabbit, Two Door Cinema Club, Errors, The Radio Dept, Turin Brakes, Blood Red Shoes...

GIG REVIEWS: Beach House, tUnE-yArDs, Spoon, The Irrepressibles, Fanfarlo, Stornoway, The Soft Pack...

more live music reviews
    1. Four Tet @ Club Academy, Manchester
    2. Songs In The Key Of Old London @ Barbican, London
    3. First Aid Kit @ Union Chapel, London
    4. John Cale @ Royal Festival Hall, London
    5. Jaga Jazzist @ Islington Academy, London
    6. Broken Bells @ ICA, London
    7. FM Belfast @ Hoxton Square Bar & Kitchen, London
    8. Lady GaGa @ O2 Arena, London
    9. Los Campesinos! @ KOKO, London
    10. Ungdomskulen + The Good The Bad @ Lexington, London
    11. HURTS @ Wilton's Hall, London
    12. Yeasayer @ Heaven, London
    13. We Are Scientists @ Hoxton Square Bar & Kitchen, London
    14. Girls @ Scala, London
    15. Imogen Heap @ Shepherd's Bush Empire, London
    16. Beach House @ Bush Hall, London
    17. Spoon @ Electric Ballroom, London
    18. tUnE-yArDs @ Cargo, London
    19. The Irrepressibles @ Queen Elizabeth Hall, London
related articles
ALBUM:
DJ Shadow - The Outsider

GIG:
DJ Shadow @ Brixton Academy, London

SINGLE:
DJ Shadow - Enuff

MUSIC DVD:
DJ Shadow - In Tune And On Time

ALBUM:
Akala - It's Not A Rumour

GIG:
Akala @ Brixton Academy, London

TRACK:
Akala - Bulls#!t

TRACK:
Akala - Roll Wid Us

GIG:
Stateless @ Battersea Arts Centre, London

GIG:
Stateless @ Brixton Academy, London

TRACK:
Stateless - The Bloodstream EP

external
DJ Shadow



  more live reviews...



musicOMH
about us
contact
copyright
home
elsewhere
Twitter
Facebook
Last.fm
Soundcloud
MySpace
© 1999-2010 OMH