I get the feeling from talking to Vancouver natives that the Barcelona Chair don’t exactly maintain a consistent lineup—the last time I’d seen them was as a four-piece, so it was an initial disappointment to learn that their violinist had moved back to Hamilton, ON. I was skeptical that their brand of mathy post-rock could survive as a trio, but I was blown away by the sounds that persevered. Their guitarist can seriously shred, and the rhythmic convulsions of his body as he played was like a weird conductor’s dance. The trio conjured a lot of Japanese shoegaze like Sgt. and Mass Of The Fermenting Dregs, but the overall sound was rooted firmly in atypical time signatures, stop-start rhythms and dissonant chord structures. The dozens of pedals strewn about the stage made each song stand clearly on its own with thick delays leading into heady fuzz-based jams, and not once did my head stop to think about the fact that they were “down” a man.
Man Your Horse didn’t waste much time between songs, rarely stopping for more than a moment before launching into yet another high-energy tune. Their tracks didn’t really feel like complete, thought-out structures—more like loose jams organized around a batch of complicated riffs. Guitarist Julian Marrs gets bonus points for playing through both guitar and bass amps, creating a funky low-end harmonic that helped provide substance to his performance alongside bandmate and skinsman Scott Petrie. Rarely have I seen someone as excited as Marrs to be behind a six-stringed instrument, so I felt a little disappointed whenever he let his hands fall to deliver uninteresting lyrics caked in echo.
On the advice of a friend, who described closers Bel Riose as coming across “like icicles being driven into your eardrums by sheer volume” (in a good way), I took a defensive stance half-way to the back of the cabaret before they began. I was a little let down, then, when my ears didn’t start to bleed half-way through their “rock concert.” I really, really wanted to like Bel Riose, who are an unapologetically straight-forward rock ‘n’ roll duo, but I just couldn’t get into the traditional verse-chorus-bridge structure that all of their songs adopted. After the previous guitar-wizard-driven bands, seeing frontman Ryan Dolejsi pound out relatively simple songs on a supremely overdriven bass guitar was somewhat of an anti-climax. The brother outfit (sibling Geof plays drums) were sweating bullets by the end of their set, but I was still left scratching my head as to why they were playing with bands that had such a strong focus on technicality. I’d love to see Bel Riose again, but on a bill better-suited to their hard-up crunchy tones.




One Comment
Hey Fraser,
We just saw your review of the Jan 11th Biltmore show.
I don’t recall if we got a chance to meet you at the show or not but either way thanks for taking the time to review the show.
Unfortunately you’re right it wasn’t our best. After coming back from a year off playing live we definitely were pretty rusty at that show. We did have fun and enjoyed Man Your Horse and our pal Mikey’s band Barcelona Chair.
Sorry we didn’t live up to the high praise of your friend. Hopefully we can make it up to you down the road. Our EP release party is coming up @ The Media Club in March if you feel like coming let us know.
Anyway thanks again for taking the time out to review the show. Keep up the good work.
All the best,
Geof / Ryan – Bel Riose.
http://www.wearebelriose.com