Review: Mongrel, debut show at Boston arms

Written by: David Harrison

November 9, 2008 · Filed Under Live, Review 

What is all this about then, I see a bunch of names under the banner Mongrel: Reverend And The MakersJon McClure and Joe Moskow, Babyshambles Drew McConnell, former Arctic Monkeys bassist Andy Nicholson and MC Lowkey.

A plethora of Indie minor celeb in one band, a bunch more in the audience.The PR looks second to none with a healthy mix of industry faces and random members from The Enemy and Glasvegas making up the crowd tonight.

The excellently monikored Death Ray Trebuchet open up the show, 3 Horns, a scuzzy bass and a shouty man at the back sound fresh until it dawns they are another Mr Bungle (first album only) tribute band with a dollop of late night Lost Vagueness field thrown in for good measure. Although anyone that convincingly can rip-off Mr Bungle has to be pretty compelling by association and technical ability, even if stylistically they may be throwing darts in the dark at a Mike Patton pinata.

Mongrel themselves are jumping about in the audience building up the vibe and then clamber on stage with a casual accord. We are going to be in for a randomly exciting Wednesday night out. Mongrel are a meeting of minds of black and white, rock and rap a nice human solidarity.

Mongrel’s heart is in totally the right place and in a lot of ways echo that of Crosby, Still, Nash & Young a political supergroup that come together at times of international crisis to talk about, to remind people not to get let their fears and war get the better of them. but that is where the comparison stop with a rather murderous crash.

They start hurling some piss poor lyrics at us. ‘This country is a lie, yer gonna die yer gonna die’ Thanks for that Mongrel. Not quite Ghost Town is it, I hope the album is called ‘GCSE rebellion’.

This is doing fuck all for me, look about and look for the escape route. Try to engage some people about the sheer awfulness of this act. Nobody is wanting to express an opinion seems a lot of people here work on this act looking at their next client, Emperors new clothes it would seem.

They order us to “Put your hands up if you hate racism ?” going on “If you keep your hands down it means you love racism” the MC tells us attempting to guilt trip support for his dreadful band. I feel short of options: I mean what if we hate this music, but also hate racism? Or what about Love music, hate Australians? It would seem we need a whole semophore for the range of realistic prejudices among the crowd. I point to the east with my left leg while holding a blue biro in the air indicating a dislike for budget rap and schoolyard politics.

This playtime rebellion continues and the band were very impressed with their own performance. Fortunately we didn’t realise Mongrel were doing two sets and left the building chose find something more enjoyable to do like having our fingers sliced off at one millimetre at a time like Pauly does with garlic in Goodfella’s.

So Death Ray Trebuchet good Mongrel bad.


Crosby Stills & Nash

Warner 1994, Audio CD, £7.99

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