Prague’s Rock Café club does resemble a bunker – a
small bare concrete hall deep under the earth’s surface. The fact
that the sound engineer’s place is iron-plated with dense grey
grating also suggests that an enemy attack is anticipated any moment.
So it’s in a way fitting that this venue hosted a band which
named their last album Songs from the Bunker – a bunch of
Norwegians going by the name of the Greenland Whalefishers.
When the Czech support band (a folk-punk family gang of a father and
three sons, all dressed in kilts and doing their best to butcher such
notoriously well-known numbers as Jesse James and Auld Lang Syne as
well as their own compositions) reluctantly left the stage, the
Whalefishers launched into their set, kicking off with another
notoriously well-known (but in their case not butchered) number –
the Irish traditional Whiskey You’re the Devil.
Surprisingly, the club remained more than half empty (not even a
stalwart optimist would have been able to call it half-full); maybe due
to the late hour in the middle of a working week, maybe due to
insufficient promotion of the gig. There was a "hard core" directly in
front of the stage, a gang of "tough punks"... of about 13 or 14 years
of age. One of them even sported a prize mohawk, which his friends kept
carefully smoothing and straightening with their helpful hands. Several
girls engaged in a happy dancing in front of the stage with blissful
expressions on their faces.
The Whalefishers plunged into one song after another, without pauses,
without delays, without wasting any time with idle chatter. Arvid, the
frontman, who sounds like a clone of Shane MacGowan and yet not a cheap
imitator, proved to be a real showman – constantly jumping up and
down like a rubber toy, crouching, waving his arms in the air like a
windmill. Hugging the leg of his bandmate while continuing to sing.
Crawling on the back of another bandmate. Other musicians did their
best not to lag behind.
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The set was a colourful mix of traditionals (Irish Rover, South
Australia), the Whalefishers’ own, irresistibly catchy songs (from old
albums as well as their latest release) and even one Pogues number – If
I Should Fall From Grace With God. Uptempo numbers, slower (but still
pretty quick and vigorous) songs and even a breath of balladic slowness
when the whistler Agnes took the mic for Johnny Lee Roth and sang the
intro to the song before it picked up a breakneck speed. The mix of
noisy percussions, guitars and sweet-sounding whistle and fiddle
sounded as good live as on any album.
If I Should Fall From Grace With God turned almost into a theatre
performace – Arvid and Agnes (and her whistle) sharing one
microphone, always coming closer and closer to each other, mouth to
mouth as if going to kiss, and then in the last moment distancing each
other again. Finally, Arvid jumped into the woman’s arms she
confidently held him as if he did not weigh more than a child. A proof
that a tin whistle is good for your muscles? ;-)
The band’s interaction with the audience was perfect – they
kept shaking hands with fans during songs, handing them bottles, taking
offered drinks. During Wild Rover, Arvid gave a mic to the audience for
every chorus, letting people sing – or rather shout – the
catchy "no, nay, never!". Twice he pulled a fan on stage, letting him
dance and jump around and thoroughly enjoy his 15 minutes – or
rather seconds – of fame.
During the whole gig, stage-diving took place, but let’s call it
a "soft" version. Don’t imagine a fan furiously running on stage,
darting among the band members and then taking a mighty leap on the
heads of the – welcoming or unwelcoming –
audience. Picture a well-behaved young punk climbing on the edge
of the
stage, careful not to interrupt the performace, patiently waiting until
enough people come under him and then slowly lowering himself to their
raised hands. That’s what one can call an exquisitely polite and
civilized punk spirit. ;-)
Finally, Arvid did the same and let the fans carry him around on their eager hands.
In just slightly over an hour, it was over – but it was an hour
of joy, fun and superb music. Here is hoping for the next
"whalefishery" in Czech waters.
More photos from the gig are HERE.
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