Monday 23 January 2017

Gig review: The Dillinger Escape Plan, Nottingham Rock City, 21/01/17


It’s never a nice thing when a band you like decide to break up, but when The Dillinger Escape Plan’s guitarist and founder Ben Weinman announced that 2016’s Dissociation album would be their swansong, it made a strange kind of sense.  There were no petty spats, no ‘musical differences’ (read: petty spats) and no embarrassingly public fallouts; they’ve just decided that enough is enough.  Weinman’s reasons made sense: not wanting to keep doing it when people were over it; not wanting to descend into self-parody; not wanting to try to push a pretty extreme band for longer than age would allow.  They wanted to leave dead horses unflogged and I respected that, even though I didn’t really like it.

Cruelly avoiding Newcastle on their farewell tour, we piled into a car and headed to Nottingham’s fine Rock City venue to see them off.  Hard to pigeonhole, Dillinger have had several labels thrown at them and have done their best to avoid them all: math-core, math-metal, metal-core, and whatever other hybrid terms lazy hacks could muster.  At times nodding to the likes of Nine Inch Nails or Faith No More as much as their whatever-core predecessors Botch and Coalesce, Dillinger simply sound like Dillinger.

I’m pleasantly surprised to see that Rock City, while not filled to capacity, is respectably busy for a band that isn’t exactly easy on the ears.  Apparently preferring Jack Daniels to support bands, we managed to miss one and a half of the supports and arrive midway through Ho99o9’s (pronounced ‘Horror’, apparently) set.  A live drummer and no other instruments that I could see, they were basically two guys stomping around the stage and shouting.  Wikipedia lists them as ‘experimental hip hop’ and when was Wikipedia ever been wrong?  The dense, mostly-bass noise that accompanies the vocals was pretty cool, it’s just a shame that they didn’t bring anyone with them to play it live, and it did get a little repetitive after a while.  Call me old fashioned, but that’s just cheating.

Dillinger, fronted by the impossibly ripped Greg Puciato, walk on to minimal lightshow or fuss and kick into recent single ‘Limerent Death’.  The rolling riff gives way to some NIN-like quiet moments before the accelerating tempo of the ending and some frankly savage screams from Puciato.  ‘Panasonic Youth’ is next, showcasing the breakneck tempo changes and baffling time signatures that make them such a unique prospect.

Puciato has developed into a fine frontman (hard going, since he technically replaced Mike Patton in the band) with a versatile range, which he shows off effortlessly tonight (how many of these [blank]-core bands have the drummer do the clean vocals because the singer can’t?).  Capable of a controlled falsetto, a fierce scream, and a distinctive clean vocal, he’s a ball of energy on stage.  In fact, it’s exhausting just watching them, such is the intensity of the show.  Weinman is a hyperactive presence (probably reflected in his writing style), seemingly unable to play a full song without mounting an amplifier or launching himself across the stage.  Not missing a single note while doing it, by the way.

The set draws from their 20-year career, with 5 songs pulled from Dissociation, and a good selection from the rest.  ‘Milk Lizard’ brings a dirty groove, ‘Black Bubblegum’ and ‘When I Lost My Bet’ are all stop-start rhythms and weird tempos, and the dynamic ‘One Of Us Is The Killer’ is the closest thing they’ll do to a conventional song.  Of their signature skittering ‘math’ songs, ‘Sunshine The Werewolf’ and ‘Farewell, Mona Lisa’ stand out as excellent songs as well as absolute monsters.

They slow it down with the piano-led ‘Mouths Of Ghosts’ before destroying the place with a final rendition of older tune ‘43% Burnt’.

It’s impressive enough that they can even remember such complex, fast and technical songs, but to be so tight and together live shows just what and exceptional band we’re losing.  They’re incredible tonight and as the crowd streams out I don’t think any of us will really appreciate how special they were until later.  Sure, we still have bands like Norma Jean, Car Bomb, Heck, Candiria and (presumably) Converge but good as they are none of them quite have what Dillinger had.


And here’s me already referring to them in the past tense.  Shit.

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