Front 242 is intentionally a mysterious and somewhat anonymous band.
Front 242 might not even be a band in a traditional sense. Based in Belgium,
the collective's contributors often work independently on projects and
sometimes bring those efforts to the others where such collaborations become
Front 242 songs. Very often, the musicians are simultaneously recording music
for other outfits as well.
Since forming in Belgium in 1981, Front 242 embraced a style of music that would eventually become a genre known as EBM, electronic body music. The band and its music would help reshape the electronic, industrial and gothic music genres with its dark and danceable synthesizer and percussion grooves. This music also contributed to the underground "rivethead" culture in the 1990s.
Onstage at Elsewhere Hall, Front 242 maintained its rivethead fashion,
wearing military flak jackets and crew cuts, along with black trousers and dark
sunglasses. The four musicians on stage played hard and heavy
electro-industrial songs accompanied by rivethead-style post-apocalyptic and
dystopian video projections inspired by science fiction. As the projections
were also projected onto the musicians, very often the visuals on the screen included
unintentional shadow play as the musicians danced to their own music. From the start, Jean-Luc De Meyer and Richard 23
(Richard Jonckheere) traded vocals, with De Meyer singing the more gutteral
vocals, while shining flashlights into the audience and bouncing energetically to
the stark, somewhat harsh rhythms of keyboardist Patrick Codenys and
percussionist Tim Kroker.
Considering the multi-layered thickness of current EBM music and
the lavish productions of current dance music producers, Front 242's performance
was raw and even primitive. The bare-boned music was devoid of guitars and
bass, entirely performed on synthesizers, percussion and pre-programmed click
tracks, with bristling vocals that were ominous, abrasive and menacing. The aggressive
music throbbed harder, darker and edgier than what is played typically at dance
clubs.
In recent years, Front 242 toured several times performing its
best-known tracks and no new material. This time, the set included the
favorites plus newer songs and some older songs which have never been played
live or have not been played in several decades. It was a retrospect with a
look to the future or a still thriving ensemble. Even after 40 years as a unit,
Front 242 proved at Elsewhere Hall that it remains a paradigm for the electro-industrial
underground.
***
The Manhattan Beat covers New York City's live music developments as they happen. All photographs are by Everynight Charley Crespo, except when noted otherwise. For a list of Manhattan venues that are presenting live music regularly, swing the desktop cursor to the right and click on the pop-up tab "Where to Find Live Music." For a listing of upcoming concerts for live audiences, visit The Manhattan Beat's October 2021 calendar.
No comments:
Post a Comment