![]() ![]() ![]() Don't be fooled by the wit and hijinks that pour freely from this band however, they have a hell of a lot to say about our current state of affairs and Talbot rightly so, is mad as hell. Carefree verbal swipes at bandmates and a tongue-lashing for the likes of Catfish And The Bottlemen abound. Whether Talbot is purposefully entertaining himself as well as us is not in question. Lightning fast drums clatter with a heavy Future Of The Left-esque bass and razor-sharp guitars. The infectiously catchy, pot-shot slinging of 'Well Done' stirs up a frenzy in the crowd and even a minor vocal false start on the punk-as-you-like 'Stendhal Syndrome' only intensifies the rest of the song. Everything that's getting your goat in these uncharted times we find ourselves in, is addressed in a manner even the furious Sleaford Mods must surely applaud.īarring the album's closing slower-paced track 'Slow Savage' and the sadly missing 'Rachel Khoo', their live set is pretty much the rest of Brutalism, with bells on. 'Brutalism' is honest, intense, fun, captivating, often ridiculous and necessary as hell right now. The Bristol quintet's stunning debut album 'Brutalism' has finally landed into our lives and quite bluntly, it pisses all over, well, just about everything else currently. There's a momentum surrounding Idles that is swiftly gathering pace and it's been a long time coming. ![]() He and his band are on another toilet circuit of the UK, but this time things are a little different. Idles frontman Joe Talbot is eyeballing the curiously-gathered onlookers inside the tiny top floor room of Wakefield's Unity Works.
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