Vipertime x Moron Butler - jazz/punk album launch
Wharf Chambers, Leeds.
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More information about Vipertime x Moron Butler - jazz/punk album launch tickets
motoric drive of krautrock and the abstractions of John Coltrane, the album is released this May on Hastings label Property Of The Lost. Expect a set from each band plus plenty of cross-pollination.
"Dance floor ready" - Jamie Cullum (BBC Radio 2 Jazz Show)
"They have that deep, angry sound that you find in Gato Barbieri and Steve Grossman" - DJ Colin Curtis (UK dancefloor jazz legend)
Too odd for the punk shows and not weird enough for the experimental shows, Moron Butler have been leaving audiences confused and frustrated since 2021. Encompassing the DIY ethos of Minutemen and Hüsker Dü alongside the ramshackle charm of bands like The Replacements, they play songs that are "too short", songs that "stop just as they get going" with lyrics that are "too downbeat" . These are the sort of reviews that Moron Butler have come to expect. It's what pushes them on against the mundane.
Lyrically the band is inspired as much by the works of Cheever, Berryman and Steinbeck as by the street poetry of Billy Woods and Black Thought, with a soundtrack blending the sounds of Wire and The Fall shot through with Silver Apples, Joy Division and a peppering of US West Coast punk from across the decades. These are songs about history. The small quiet moments that have been forgotten, alongside the events that continue to haunt our thoughts. Three split 7 inch singles with three diverse and equally undefinable bands have done nothing to help Moron Butler slide easily into a category. Embrace the confusion.
New collaborative album "Vipertime & Moron Butler" was born out of a chaotic night in Hastings. A raucous double bill at infamous boozer The Jenny Lind led to an evening of cross pollinating line-ups, feedback, mosh pits and a breakneck rendition of TV Eye by The Stooges. By last orders local label Property Of The Lost had commissioned the album. Each track on the record features a combined line-up of the two bands. Moron Butler's motoric kraut-punk is augmented by the sinewy abstractions of Ben Powling's saxophone. Darren Tracey's guitar infiltrates Vipertime's double-drum rhythm section with the acerbic attack of Gang of Four and Sonic Youth. At the centre of the album are the voice and lyrics of Troy Osmond - monotone, insistent, heavy with references.