Photo: Wout de Natris |
Shame has three records under its belt and especially the first, 'Songs Of Praise' and the third, 'Food For Worms', are fantastic. Both contain exciting punk songs, to avoid the word postpunk, as how post can punk become? From the 1970s right through to the Franz Ferdinand and Arctic Monkeys generation. It's all in there with Shame adding its own energy. 'Drunk Tank Pink', the second album, has its moments but always sounded a bit forced to me.
Energy is there in abundance. A bass player who appears to have some kind of bouncing device underneath his shoes, who keeps running, does a flip over with bass and all, not spearing his instrument there. He draws a lot of attention, setting him apart from the two guitarists who just work real hard. It does not draw any attention away from the band's focal point, Charlie Steen. He is the real thing where a frontman is concerned. "Walking" on the hands of fans, forced to a near split, stagediving and the big, big movements. I don't know whether the world is ready for Shame, Steen is ready for the biggest stadiums. Drummer Charlie Forbes has to remain somewhat anonymously behind his drumkit, but is the one pounding Shame forward, never missing a beat.
Photo: Wout de Natris |
My imagination ran a bit wild during the show. I never saw The Who live but saw them live on television and saw the video of 'See Me Feel Me' on one of the very first 'Top Pop' shows in 1970. Charlie Steen's biggest secret is that Roger Daltrey's son-in-law is called Steen. Next I imagined Shame writing the 'Pinball Wizard' and 'See Me Feel Me' for their generation and conquer the world fully with them. In theory the band has it in it. Who are the millions of fans these days?, is the bigger question. Next I imagined the band 50 years from now still playing in huge venues. By the time Josh Finerty refrains from bouncing this hard, say 20 years from now, most likely I will be too old, if lucky, to go to shows. That part struck me as less attractive.
Photo: Wout de Natris |
Wout de Natris
You can listen to and order Shame's albums here:
https://shamebanduk.bandcamp.com/album/food-for-worms
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