Sonic Boom Six (Boston Music Room, 7.11.15)
Support for the Boom came from The Kenneths and The Tuts. The Kenneths play foot to the floor punk rock and their half an hour set whizzes by. I enjoyed it very much and will be checking out more of their stuff. The Tuts (as in tutting, rather than King Tut) play garage punk and a lot of their songs are too samey for me, with the exception of the vibrant"Dump Your Boyfriend" and a spirited cover of "Two Princes" featuring Laila Khan's vocals.
Khan returns with her band 20 minutes later, launching into "Bigger Than Punk Rock". It's a frenzied start to a gig that. Ska tinged new single "No Man No Right" is an absolute delight that gets the room bouncing. A smattering of other new tracks suggest that the band are going in a more pop direction, with "Love" having a particularly disco feel. "Drop The Bass And Pick It Up" seems to perfectly encapsulate the band's genre melding style, whilst the soulful "Northern Skies" sees the Boom drop the tempo as Khan takes to the melodica.
"The Kids Of The Multiculture" possesses a juggernaut of a guitar riff that wouldn't be out of place on a Muse record and sends the room crazy. This coupled with a racuous encore rendition of "Blood For Oil" concludes a fine set of the old and the new from a band who remain a vital part of the UK scene. With a new record on the way, SB6 promise that we'll be seeing a lot more from them in 2016.
Khan returns with her band 20 minutes later, launching into "Bigger Than Punk Rock". It's a frenzied start to a gig that. Ska tinged new single "No Man No Right" is an absolute delight that gets the room bouncing. A smattering of other new tracks suggest that the band are going in a more pop direction, with "Love" having a particularly disco feel. "Drop The Bass And Pick It Up" seems to perfectly encapsulate the band's genre melding style, whilst the soulful "Northern Skies" sees the Boom drop the tempo as Khan takes to the melodica.
"The Kids Of The Multiculture" possesses a juggernaut of a guitar riff that wouldn't be out of place on a Muse record and sends the room crazy. This coupled with a racuous encore rendition of "Blood For Oil" concludes a fine set of the old and the new from a band who remain a vital part of the UK scene. With a new record on the way, SB6 promise that we'll be seeing a lot more from them in 2016.
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