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Marky Edison

Marky Edison

Man With A Mission Is My Hero

Japanese superstars Man With A Mission have released their new single ‘My Hero’. The video finds the half man, half wolf collective providing the soundtrack to the accomplishments of an everyday hero with their electrifying blend of rock, rap and electronics.

Having emerged with feral rock energy in 2010, Man With A Mission have released four albums in Japan, which have topped the charts and led the band to sell out arenas across their homeland. They will be touring again in December and have announced Don Broco as support for their mega Tokyo arena shows to 36,000 fans at the Saitama Super Arena on December 2 & 3.

Man With A Mission’s guitarist/vocalist Jean-Ken Johnny says: “We're so excited to play with Don Broco in Japan. I'm 200% sure that it's gonna be an amazing night. Thanx to Don Broco for joining us!” Don Broco frontman Rob Damiani says: “We can’t wait to get back to Japan in December to play with Man With A Mission and play to our Japanese fans again. When they asked us to support them at their sold out hometown arena shows in Tokyo we leapt at the chance, we love Japan!” 

Moderate Rebels Share Philosophical Opus

London post-psych collective Moderate Rebels now unveil their debut full-length album, The Sound of Security, which further pursues their sonic manifesto of “using as few words and chords as possible”. Despite being introduced by the group as “a load of overheard pub conversations, squashed into one song”, there’s a whole heap of wisdom in the words of ‘When The Cost Has No Value’, a deadpan roll-call of neologisms for our times set to two and a half minutes of loping drum-machine-and-strum-driven melody. The song cements the collective’s standing at the lyrical and sonic cutting-edge, sounding entirely effortless as they do so.

“We tried to create conditions where the songs could write themselves with minimum resistance; an automatic writing situation,” say Moderate Rebels. “The point was to remove ourselves, our beliefs and our intentions as much as possible; to just let it happen. It’s never been about us, we want to make music that aims at being more important than that.”

Having set out their hypnotically brutalist improv with prior releases God Sent Us (Nov 2016) and the Proxy EP (June 2017), the group decamped to a small Bermondsey studio to cut an album influenced by Spacemen 3, La Dusseldorf, Kaitlyn Aurelia Smith, Roxy Music, Black Box Recorder, Jenny Hval, Death In Vegas and MGMT. These artists were not the only thing that impacted on the final record, however.

“There were churches on either side, so we’d hear the congregations singing and playing all day, celebrating their spiritual beliefs with a jubilant and communal noise. Without getting too much into psychogeography, that couldn’t help but bleed into what we were putting together. It’s powerful and uplifting stuff, no matter what your own particular philosophy may be. At the very least, it explains all the handclaps on the album!” The resulting 13 tracks, released as ‘The Sound of Security’ on Everyday Life Recordings on 8 December, are as fascinating and exhilarating as such contrary stimuli would suggest, being energetic, intoxicating and ruthless in their stark approach, yet imbued with all the freedom of a group utterly at ease. “Our music seems to be all about turning weaknesses into strengths,” say Moderate Rebels, a little modestly. “We decided to not try to gloss over our musical limitations and imperfections, and just embrace them.”

 

See Moderate Rebels live

12-14 January 2018: Rockaway Beach, Butlin’s Bognor Regis

10 February: Tooting Tram & Social, London SW17

24 February: The Finsbury, London N4

 

 

 

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