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Bomb Factory

NeatPeople and The Rank Deluxe

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Some bills can never quite live up to expectation. It’s the ones that you least expect anything from that usually do, whether lovingly hand-picked or cobbled together at the last minute. For both formulae to work (and it does if it annoys the audience into saying ‘Well I preferred the first band etc’ at the bar) they should always feature radically opposed bands that somehow manage not to jar. Anything uniform just dulls the senses and makes you wish you’d stayed at home screaming at the radiator to stop making clanging sounds.

Bomb Factory like to scream. At least, their singer Jack does, and screams with substance, a sort of cross between Janov’s PS therapy and being pissed off with Saturday telly, a much needed catharsis in bucketloads. Spindly staccato rhythms with sinister edges make their songs alert, urgent and plain arsey. Agit-prop in post July 7 times, with a song about Stockwell tube station, is a much needed reminder that the Magic Numbers aren’t the answer.

NeatPeople are, no puns intended, just that. And nice. That’s surely a bizarre coincidence, you say? They are also the happiest most contented band ever to climb onto the stage and happily interact with themselves and the audience without losing any of their breezing spring-day guitar pop feeling. It's like Jonathan Richman** fronting Kingmaker if they’d been any good and had had far better childhoods. A ringing guitar here, a happy fluid left-handed bassline there, and an embarrassment of melodies to sugar up the most ardent cynic. The contrast between first and second band couldn’t be more obvious, a bit like being given Belgian chocolates after losing a tooth in a pub fight. It's proof that ‘pop’ needn’t be a dirty word.

Cultural chavs with guitars? The Rank Deluxe wear hoodies – quite sensible in this weather and neighbourhood - but on stage with all those lights? A rush of youthful, happy-slap petulance, and the stage is suddenly vibrating. The correctly ticked boxes blatantly show through each song with a knowing swagger: white reggae-tinged angular NOW! songs about dole queues and Hainault, patented Chiefs/Hard Fi whoops and aaaah-a-a-aaahs, and in-your-face-Dad! arrogance. Regardless of this the aura they create feels right somehow: you'd even let them off for the five stringed bass, even though it's as 'street' as wearing an open waistcoat over a t-shirt.

Out of the three bands on offer, what more does anyone want from knowingly contrived ‘urban’ commentators than tonight's headlining display? The white heat and energy produced onstage only confirm the 'Rankers' as what is effectively in 2006 an A&R onanist’s festival of dreams, but on record you’d probably want to mock(ney) them as ‘zeity’ try-hards.

  • Bomb Factory 6 / 10
  • NeatPeople 7 / 10
  • The Rank Deluxe 6 / 10

a band not taking any criticism as such a stage

is in danger of suffering from the 'Terris effect'. Is it not normal for people disagreeing with what they see? I watched and listened and I was loathe to use cheap analogies but I jsut heard what I heard and wanted to interpret that, right or wrong, in the same way that you wish to express being 'working class lads' (as though you won't get signed if one of you had a degree - that in itself sounds loike a hackneyed soundbite).

I'm not offended by what your riposte is but really, don't be offended my viewpoint.

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