Wednesday Sept 11
THE MESSTHETICS
(Record Release)
JANEL LEPPIN
MOCK IDENTITY
$15 Adv/ $18 DOS / Doors at 7:30
The last time drummer
Brendan Canty and bassist Joe Lally were in a band together, they were
the rhythmic architects for Fugazi, an organization whose decade and a
half of disciplined progressivism provided a necessary bridge between
the zenith of late-punk expression and everything alternative in rock
that followed. In 2016, the two were enlisted by guitarist Anthony
Pirog in a conspiracy to subvert and reimagine the power trio, bringing
fully into the 21st Century a form that may have reached near
perfection with Hendrix's Band of Gypsys on the very first day of the
1970s.
With a self-titled recording scheduled for release in the Spring of
2018 on Dischord, the Messthetics will widen the reach of a decisive
instrumental music that so far, they have only shared with a privileged
handful of east coast and southern audiences. Across its eight original
compositions and one cover, Anthony guides the sound through complex
changes and harmonic densities that might compound, but never confound
or muddy its connection with the listener's body. Recorded by Brendan
in their practice space, the group's debut gives Anthony ample
opportunities to swap guitar textures and styles as freely as an
octopus changes patterns.
Brendan's kit has a big heavy bell that he brought back from the Fugazi
days. He maneuvers through this rhythmically shifty music with a fluid
briskness that is periodically disrupted by the clang of his bell. Joe
spent 8 years in Italy, among other things, woodshedding on eastern
rhythms counted in 7 and 13, perfect preparation for the oddly-metered
work of the Messthetics. He brings a rock-solid foundation to the
groove at the same time playing a harmonic complement as ambitious and
interesting as Anthony's lines.
Bands can be dangerous when their members have accrued enough mileage
to see their chops season into something like musical wisdom. When that
understanding has the rare opportunity to percolate through a
collaborative environment founded in love and anchored in gratitude,
well, then shit can get rather intense. Anthony Pirog writes difficult
music because original music usually is. Yet the ideas that he feeds
through the Messthetics, are embraced by the Canty-Lally time machine,
not just with precision and nuance, but with soul, joy, and groove.
These last three are, indeed, the big guns in this spiritual war that
music must become in the post-Trump era.
The initial concept was to mix noise/improv guitar with dance grooves -
a kind of apocalyptic dance party where the beat keeps you moving, but
the guitarist relentlessly terrorizes you. The first track,
"Mythomania" retains elements of that posture, but as reality has
itself become more daunting, Anthony - a fearless guitarist - has moved
closer to his listeners, and is now willing to astonish without being
so confrontational about it. That doesn't mean the Messthetics in any
way retreat from the responsibilities of a "hard" sound, just that its
volume and edge never eat the bold structural ideas that define this
new music. Anthony will even lubricate his tricky time signatures with
energetic two-note riffs to keep the listener head-bobbing through the
twisting structures. And when their collective voice is thick and heavy
(like on "Crowds and Power"), it is neither ponderous nor plodding.
Their performances and this debut recording have a lift and buoyancy
that reflect back into the audience the love and gratitude at the
foundation of this trio's journey.