- Music
- 24 Oct 03
Once Like A Spark is a brilliantly brief headrush, a mad dash through the realms of punk, rock and metal that is the perfect pick-me-up for anyone who’s tired of post-rock, fed up with the new wave of cooler-than-thou US supergroups and longing for a bit of old-fashioned blood, thunder, sweat and bollocks.
Rarely has a band been so aptly named. Former members of the late, great Cuckoo – Andrew Ferris (vocals, guitars) and Jamie Burchill (bass, vocals) – are joined by Jamie’s brother Raife on drums and Cahir O’Doherty (guitars, vocals) for a sonic explosion that assaults your speakers and your eardrums with all the ferocity of a supersonic jet engine.
Current single ‘Calculate The Risk’ is as fine a calling card as you could wish for. The guitars buzz ferociously, the drums clatter and the bass seems to clamber all over the stop-start staccato melody, while the spoken-word vocals resonate with a mixture of rage, longing and regret. Like those other classic Northern punk anthems ‘Teenage Kicks’ and ‘Screamager’, one listen is never enough: as soon as it ends, you’ll find yourself reaching for the replay button. Trust me.
The good news is that most of the other 10 tracks are of a similar calibre. Opener ‘The Violence’ seems to burst from your stereo on a barely restrained wave of cranium-piercing riffs, ‘Brave Gravity’ nods briefly towards a slightly more radio-friendly sound, and ‘Do It…Now!’ takes the tempo down a notch or two for a love song of sorts that is more grounded in real emotion and raw desperation than most supposed ballads: “Don’t you dare say goodbye/You are the reference by which I measure everything.”
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In fact, the lyric-sheet is refreshingly free of well-worn clichés, from the socio-political rant of ‘I Opt Out’, through the self-doubt of ‘Writing The Ways Down’ and on to the explosive self-help for the modern sociopath that is ‘Conventional Thought’, where we’re encouraged to “Make more of this time/Be all of your anger”.
Once Like A Spark is a brilliantly brief headrush, a mad dash through the realms of punk, rock and metal that is the perfect pick-me-up for anyone who’s tired of post-rock, fed up with the new wave of cooler-than-thou US supergroups and longing for a bit of old-fashioned blood, thunder, sweat and bollocks.