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Monday Night Meltdown @ The Grace, London (Live Review)

  • Published in Live

Monday Night Meltdown

The Grace

Words & Pics by Captain Stavros

Dork Magazine x Footsteps x M for Montreal x Mothland bring the heat

There are countless theories about spontaneous combustion and, as a child, I was deeply invested in every single one. Scientifically speaking, it’s what happens when heat can’t escape anymore; pressure builds, matter ruptures, something ignites. Oily rags. Friction. Damp organic material packed too tightly together. A room with no ventilation and too many bodies moving at once.

Sounds a bit like any gig worth its salt, really.

Monday night at The Grace had all the right conditions. M for Montreal x Footsteps x Mothland x Dork Magazine — essentially the cultural equivalent of throwing aerosol cans into a microwave — somehow still had enough fuel left after The Great Escape for one last detonation.

And ignite they absolutely did.

Mothland once again left the back door open for us and we slunk our way inside just as Boutique Feelings had started spilling onto the stage. A six-piece from Montreal crammed onto a platform built for maybe four people maximum, already threatening structural integrity before the first chorus properly landed.

We’d caught them the day before at The Old Blue Last, so we knew broadly what was coming. That still didn’t prepare us.

Karim Lakhdar moves with the same twitchy conviction as a young Zack de la Rocha — all kinetic urgency and barely-contained fury — but without feeling derivative for a second. Between cuts like ‘Long Sure’ and ‘If You Were Me’, the band swing violently between wiry post-punk, freeform jazz eruptions and politically-charged art rock. Before the second track properly kicks in, Lakhdar deadpans: “We don’t think it’s normal to scroll past a kitten, a war and a plate of pasta in less than a minute,” which earns the kind of uncomfortable laugh that only lands because everyone knows he’s right.

Lines like, “It’s when they start to take it all that you begin to fucking care,” hit especially hard against the backdrop of the current global mess. You don’t really watch Boutique Feelings so much as get swept into their frequency whether you intended to or not.

Flautist Vanessa Ascher, shoulder-to-shoulder with Lakhdar throughout, weaponises her instrument entirely. At points it sounds less like a flute and more like suppressive fire aimed directly at the patriarchy.

Then, suddenly, it’s over. The set closes with a surprisingly gentle, “Come chat with us by the merch table,” as though the previous forty minutes hadn’t felt like being trapped inside a politically conscious pressure cooker. We lean against the wall trying to catch our breath.

Needing a moment to cool off, we find a nook near the decks where a familiar face is soundtracking the downtime with Gary Numan’s ‘Cars’. Track after track, banger after banger, the room somehow keeps moving between sets instead of collapsing in on itself.

Only later, while scrolling through tagged photos after the gig, do we realise the DJ was none other than Nuha Ruby Ra, who we’d caught tearing apart The MOTH not too long ago. Had we clocked it at the time we probably would’ve gone completely tongue-tied, but instead she was warm, approachable and effortlessly cool in the way genuinely talented people often are. Given the moves she’s making over the next few months, it’s safe to say she’s one to keep both eyes on.

Then came Annie-Claude Deschênes.

Helping launch Quebec Spring’s M for Montreal clearly wasn’t enough excitement for one lifetime because she emerged onto stage like Leatherface armed not with a chainsaw but a microphone, immediately holding the entire room hostage. Backed by Boutique Feelings drummer Anthony Piazza — operating a cycloptic wrist-mounted spotlight camera that projected warped live footage behind them like some cursed voyeuristic surveillance reel — the whole set felt genuinely nightmarish in the best possible way.

Tracks like ‘Menace Minimale’ and ‘Les Manières De Table’ slithered around the venue with this grotesque electro-punk swagger; all chrome, sweat and predatory tension. It dripped from the ceiling like condensation in a slaughterhouse.

Another absurdly strong set.

Later in the evening we caught Annie outside the venue and, much like earlier encounters throughout the night, she was disarmingly easy to talk to. In the space of five minutes we somehow ended up discussing everything from being managed by Desire, to getting approached by the Yeah Yeah Yeahs for touring — influences you can absolutely trace through both her sound and stage presence. We passed along a cryptic message to a mutual acquaintance back in Montreal, both immediately cackling like cartoon villains before disappearing back into the night.

Tiny world.

Time folds strangely at gigs like this, but somewhere in the blur we spot the long, slender silhouette of Ellis-D standing beneath the glow of a running-man exit sign. We gush a bit about the set we’d caught at 100 Club and the mythical aura surrounding it. Demure as ever, he brushes it off with a shy, “Oh gosh, that feels so long ago.”

Naturally, all that humility evaporates the second he hits the stage.

Ellis-D spends most of the set climbing over PAs, launching himself into the crowd and generally treating personal safety as an optional extra. By the time closer ‘Drifter’ stretches into its sprawling finale, the room feels one bassline away from total collapse.

And then Lemonsuckr arrive to finish the job.

A completely new band to us, though judging by the amount of merch already in the crowd, absolutely not to anyone else there.

Dressed like sleazy sixth-formers from some lost 1982 public access broadcast — leather jackets, shirts, ties, already drenched in sweat before the first song properly lands — they treat the stage less like a performance space and more like a vague suggestion. Cables whip through the audience. Microphones migrate into impossible places. People get tangled together like human extension leads.

It’s total chaos.

An intensely British, deeply unwell version of Kraftwerk.

By the time they tear through ‘Dead Disco’, ‘Instant Kinks’, ‘H.E.A.T.’ and new single ‘Stain’, it feels like they’ve absorbed residual energy from every set before them and completely overloaded. There’s something impossible to pin down about Lemonsuckr; grimy but magnetic, detached but euphoric, like finding a rave flyer in a puddle and deciding to follow it anyway.

After the set we end up outside with the Mothland crew and the band themselves, attempting to convince them that Montreal needs to import whatever the hell this is immediately. Negotiations continue over post-loadout kebabs before the reality of it being a Monday night finally catches up with everyone.

Somehow, after an entire festival weekend, every band still turned up ready to empty the tank completely. By the end of the night, The Grace didn’t feel like a venue anymore so much as the smouldering remains of a very controlled accident.

Days later, the smoke still hasn’t cleared but we’re happy to report that we’ve not gone up in flame, yet.

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Bonnie Trash @ The Grace, London (Live Review)

  • Published in Live

Bonnie Trash

The Grace

Word & Pics by Captain Stavros

Caught Red Right Handed: Bonnie Trash Possess The Grace  

This evening has been years in the making, but most of London is unwittingly missing out. Just outside Highbury & Islington Tube, The Grace looms like a scar on the city’s skin; a part of London forever caught between polish and grime. Tonight promises to get filthier still. It’s Monday night, and it’s time to take out the Trash. Only this time, the Trash is taking us out, white-hot and merciless.  The Bortolon-Vettor twins take the stage like revenants. Sarafina, leather-clad and statuesque, fixes the room with a Medusan stare and doesn’t let go until the final feedback collapses into the floor. A perfect crucible for Bonnie Trash’s brand of gothic demolition. They launch straight into ‘Maria’, a convulsion of riffs and vocal shrieks that feels like it’s been waiting years to escape. Emmalia, half-hidden beneath her fringe and oversized leathers, hammers out riffs so loud the sound techs beg her to turn down. She obliges only with the reluctance of someone sacrificing a child. This doesn’t stop them from twisting the fretboard into something ugly and unholy, stubbornly loud enough that the sound techs continue to plead for mercy. She relents with all the grace of a predator letting go of prey.

But it’s Emma on bass who draws the eyes almost as much as the ears. Bespectacled, wide-eyed like some nocturnal owl, sci-fi tattoos crawling up her arms, she drops basslines that feel like seismic aftershocks under the floorboards. Together with Dana on drums; a shadowy powerhouse who bends cymbals and time signatures seemingly with the ease of a mentalist warping spoons. Instead of tearing the place apart she was the cohesive and rhythmic gravitational force magnetising Bonnie Trash to the stage. Together they formed a storm system, black-skied and unpredictable. They stitched terror into melody as deftly as a surgeon’s hand.

The setlist reads like a series of open wounds: ‘Veil’, ‘Hell’, ‘Poison’, ‘Zero’. Each track claws deeper into the night and into the backs of our skulls. Their mid-set lunge into ‘Red Right Hand’ doesn’t honour Nick Cave so much as obliterates him. This isn’t Cave’s sly preacher. This is a mauling; a ruthless, feral reimagining that strips the flesh from the original. Arguably the hardest, most merciless version of it ever wrung from the source, brutal and snarling. The vocals continue to scrape against the tremolo guitars, a jagged clash that leaves no space for thought tonight. Forget spectacle, this is attrition by decibel; a show that feels wired to outlast you.

By the end, after ‘What Have You Become’ seals the night shut, guitars slump against amps like wreckage and the stage feels like it’s been levelled. Sarafina peels off her coat to deliver a raw “please don’t leave me rotting in the ground,” and for a moment the crowd seems ready to hand over their souls in exchange. Religion doesn’t quite cover it; this was something colder, more physical, like being possessed by a frequency too low for the human ear. And yet, when the noise subsides, the frost thaws. Bonnie Trash become mortal again, thanking every last punter, signing anything shoved in their hands, and laughing about careering rentals down unlit country roads on the “wrong” side of the lanes. But for the hour before that? They weren’t a band. They were an entity dragging us into their orbit, and leaving us changed.

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