Clutch, Phil Campbell & The Bastard Sons & Sigiriya, The Great Hall, Cardiff
With vast swathes of the South Wales metal community up to
their tits in mud at the annual swamp also known as Download, one of the most
loved bands on the circuit made a return to a packed Great Hall for a night
which once more demonstrated their class. Clutch had played Download on Friday,
and with a week or so gigging around the Euro festival circuit which culminates
in a slot at HellFest, the band squeezed in a gig at The Great Hall. Something
of a shock, but a welcome one as they obviously could have headed out to their
next gigs in Greece a couple of days earlier where I’m sure the weather would
have been better than another damp June day in Wales.
With a short five song set, Swansea based Mountain Rock
outfit Sigiriya (7) took to the stage as the opening band and to be fair
to them, did a sterling job. Formed from the ashes of psychedelic doom
merchants Acrimony in 2012, the four-piece led by vocalist Matt Williams
cranked out a five-song set list which shook the foundations of the building.
Their stoner style went down well, the thick riffs of Stu O’Hara crashing down,
as their sonic wall of noise reverberated. A typical Swansea delivery earned a
warm response as the venue filled and by the time Whiskey Song was
thundering out there was head banging and appreciative nods all around the
room. With two albums under their belt and a third due shortly, Sigiriya are a
band who are worth a view.
Pontypridd’s favourite son (ignore the LA crooner Jones)
will always be one Philip Campbell and since the death of Lemmy and the demise
of Motörhead he’s
been slowly building momentum with The Bastard Sons (8). Constant
gigging and a set list that comprises new songs with classic Motörhead has led the band to
get huge support slots with Slash and Gn’R in recent times. As the crowd
increased in size, this was inevitably something of a homecoming gig for a
band who just deliver the goods time after time. Campbell remains unassuming,
allowing his guitar playing to do the talking, except for the odd foray to the
microphone. Vocalist Neill Starr holds centre court, all energy and hair but
with a voice that is so well suited to the band’s songs. A decent number from The
Age of Absurdity were complimented by Born To Raise Hell and a
raucous Ace of Spades, whilst Campbell also debuted a solo track, which
in all honesty sounded like the majority of the material on offer. Still, any
material from Campbell is enjoyable and this was no exception. Some excellent
audience participation ensued although it was clear that the crowd was in the
main there for the headliners with a lot of the audience unfamiliar with the
non-Motörhead
material. With a headline gig of their own to come in November at the Tramshed,
2019 is looking like another good year for the Motörhead man and his sons.
As what is probably the largest stage backdrop I have ever
seen hung over the stage. Neil Fallon reminded the audience halfway through the
gig that Clutch (9) had played TJs in Newport ten years ago, almost to
the day. That was my first encounter with the Maryland quartet, and I’ve
enjoyed how the band have slowly gained momentum. Now commercially more astute,
Clutch have headline quality and it’s no surprise that their UK tours usually
sell out. But Clutch possess so much more. An ability to vary their set evening
after evening means you rarely get the same set of songs. Opening with Escape
From The Prison Planet (from 1995’s eponymous album), Fallon, Tim Sult, Dan
Maines and Jean Paul Gaster never miss the opportunity to throw in the obscure
and the rare, and as well as seven tracks from 2018’s Book of Bad Decisions
and the two from the previous Psychic Warfare release, we were treated
to Power Player from 2007’s From Beale Street to Oblivion, a
roaring Willie Nelson from Slow Hole to China, Red Horse from Pure
Rock Fury and the Bad Brains influenced Passive Restraints from
1992’s second EP. This delighted the hardcore who now are outnumbered by those
sucked in by the success of 2013’s Earth Rocker.
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