Mrs Wife and I made  the long, dark journey to Edinburgh last night to bask in the glow that only  true legends can truly provide.
 This was no mere  journey to a gig - this was a chance to get up close and personal with genuine  living, breathing rock behemoths the likes of which venture only rarely to these  frozen Arctic wastelands.
 The term supergroup  has been used to describe Them Crooked Vultures since the moment they formed.  Bring together Nirvana's drummer, Queens of the Stone Age's singer/guitarist and  - the crowning achievement (in the eyes of many) - Led Zeppelin's bass player,  and it becomes almost inevitable.
 In truth, regarding  Josh Homme as being in the same league as Messrs Grohl and Jones is a tad  unrealistic, but the three certainly seem to be the best of  friends.
 I'd forgotten just  how powerful a drummer Dave Grohl is. Only once before had I seen him behind a  kit in the flesh, and it was for only five minutes during a Foo Fighters  festival set.
 But last night, in  the comparatively small Corn Exchange, there was a chance to see him thump the  tubs for the duration of a full concert.
 A lot of the time,  he's like Animal from the Muppets, wildly flailing arms, head bobbing furiously  and a huge grin covering half his face. If there can be such a thing as  controlled ferocity, Dave Grohl personifies it. His drumming literally sounded  like artillery fire at times, yet there was never a dropped beat. On the sleazy  flamenco of Interlude With Ludes, his rhythm became even more complex, seeming  to involve wooden blocks and rim shots (behave) as well as  cymbals.
 Although Homme and  live guitarist Alain Johannes contributed most to the vocals and guitars, the  more obvious attention-grabber was John Paul Jones. These days, worryingly, he  looks more like my mum's 50-something partner than half of the rhythm section  from the most legendary groupie-shagging, devil-worshipping, drug-imbibing rock  band this planet has ever seen.
 But he can still  play. There were nimble-fingered jazz-flecked bass solos, tender piano  instrumentals, a whole track where he played only keytar and a general air of  mild bemusement at the sheer awe with which the assembled fans greeted  him.
 The music? It  sounded like Queens of the Stone Age with the fat stripped off - lean, heavy and  loud. The band has far more character and gravitas on stage than was evident on  its album.
 Watch out for them  coming to a festival near you next year.
 
 
1 comment:
Happy Christmas to you and yours Jock.
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