Friday, 28 October 2011

Come As You Are


Next Friday 4th November we [Triple Jump] are putting on and playing at the Unicorn in Camden. It's our first North London show in a few months and the other bands are mint. The venue is at 227 Camden road, NW1 9AA

Free show. Cheap alcohol. Four superb bands.

Lupins - http://www.facebook.com/pages/Lupins/179840132031894
Three blokes being mint.

Genetiks - http://www.genoton.de/
German band from Nürnberg. This is the last date of their European tour!

Silent Front - http://www.silentfront.co.uk/
First London show for a few months. Should have some new tunes ready too!

Weird Menace
Three Lasses being mint. Like sandpaper scraping against speakers belting out tight angular rhythms in an ice cool way. Apparently.


Saturday, 15 October 2011

Some Love, Somewhere

We were interviewed for the Irish music website Thumped.com a couple of weeks back and we had a page published about us in a recent edition of Molten Magazine in Northern Ireland. Gareth also wrote a double page spread on how actions speak louder than words in music, which was also published in Molten Magazine. You can see the Thumped interview here or you can buy a copy of Molten Magazine here. A big thanks to Ross Hunter and Ian Maleney for these. We get ignored by the press and fanzines in our home country so it was nice to be asked.

Right, Kim and Thurston have split up, I'm off to brush my hair and have a shave.

Thursday, 13 October 2011

Triple Facespace

The Triple Jump Records all-dayer went extremely well and we had a wonderful time. We nearly broke even too. Thanks Shield Your Eyes, Nitkowski, Econo, Caretaker, Sweet Williams, Kong, Shoes and Socks Off, Alex Robertson [Sound], Chris White and his friend [Posters], Julie Kane [Zines] Al Bailey [Distro] and everyone who came. And anyone I've forgotten. It was shit that Bad Guys had to pull out but it couldn't be avoided.

If you enjoyed our all-dayer, why not follow us on this social network site <---Click there.

Tuesday, 4 October 2011

Triple Jump All-dayer


This Saturday is the Triple Jump Records all-dayer at The Fighting Cocks. As we have organised it we are going on first. You can buy tickets or view the facebook or songkick pages by clicking the relevant word [I know you're not thick but I feel more comfortable explaining properly].

Line up

KONG
SHIELD YOUR EYES
SWEET WILLIAMS (ex-charlottefield)
NITKOWSKI
BAD GUYS
SHOES AND SOCKS OFF
SILENT FRONT
CARETAKER
ECONO
+ ZINES + ART + OTHER RAD STUFF!

DOOR TAX: £6

Bands will start at 2:30pm and finish by 11pm (as the cocks' strict curfew dictates) to allow anyone travelling down form central london to get the last train back in time.



Friday, 23 September 2011

The Wandering Eye

Tour starts this weekend in Nottingham with Guns or Knives!

September
24th Nottingham - The Maze
25th Sheffield - Audacious Art Experiment
26th Liverpool - Wolstenholme Creative Space
27th Belfast - Aunt Annie's
28th Cork - Fred Zepplins
29th Galway - Sally Long's
30th Dublin - Ruta Live (O'Byrnes)
October
1st Bishop's Castle - Six Bells Brewery (Music From Elsewhere Festival)

Monday, 5 September 2011

A Very Very Nice Man

September 3rd 2011 I Hate The Kids All-Dayer - The Victoria, Mile End.

There have been some great all-dayers this year, and we have been lucky enough to be a part of some of them. We played the Big Horse Party 2 in Leeds, the British Wildlife Records Festival 5.5 also in Leeds, the Nice Weather For Air Strikes Festival in Brighton, Sausagefest VII in Fleet, the Feliciano All-Dayer in Kingston, and today, the I Hate The Kids All-Dayer in Mile End.

We left at around 2pm to get there in time to catch Death Pedals. The journey should take forty five minutes to an hour, but a bunch of knuckle dragging gobshites decided to go on a march through London and block the roads. The English Defence League had taken it upon themselves to defend this nation from… er… I dunno, people willing to do the jobs they can’t be arsed to do? Apparently, later in the day, a coach load of EDL members broke down on the Mile End Road and got pelted with rocks by a gang of youths. Seriously, don’t fuck with the East End, especially if you’re a fascist. History has proved this;



Our journey took four and a half hours meaning that we not only missed Death Pedals, we missed Primo Leviathan and November Fleet too. November Fleet later got us back and left before we played, not out of spite, they had a genuine excuse and we didn’t mind as Nic [November Fleet and Solomon Grundy] had lent Gareth some sticks because he had forgot to bring his. Elks, Throwing Up, Holy State and Gum Takes Tooth played before us and I was especially impressed with Elks. Dan of the Math Jazz band Nitkowski described them as a mix of ZZ Top, Joy Division and someone else whom I can’t remember, but I did agree with him.

Just before Gum Takes Tooth played, about sixty girls from a roller disco group arrived, and the already busy venue was now heaving and had become very hot and humid. I had the honour of picking one of the women up off the floor after she came crashing through a door onto the pavement beside me. She didn’t say thank you, but I wasn’t going to say anything because she was built like a brick shithouse and had tattoos instead of hair. This was one of the hottest shows I can remember ever playing. I was so wet that my fingers kept slipping off of the intended fret and sweat was dripping into my eyes making it hard to see. In a weird way, I quite enjoy playing shows like that. One Unique Signal played last and were as incredible as they always are. I used to hate all-dayers but I’ve had such good experiences over the last couple of years that I now quite enjoy them.

After some drunken chat with Will [Lupins] and Wayne [Death Pedals] about weight loss, and how Wayne once ran the hundred metres in twenty six seconds, we drove back to Kingston, getting a kebab on the way. I woke up in the morning fully clothed with the light on and everything still in my pockets.


September 4th 2011 Malcfest - In a Field, Kent

Recently I have been listening a lot to “The Who Sell Out” and as we had a bit of a journey ahead of us, I thought it’d be the perfect opportunity to play it to Phil and Gareth. Our tape converter only plays one side of the recording so everything panned to the left was missing. The Who pan all the drums to the left, making it un-listenable, so I stuck on the other record I’ve been listening to a lot recently - The Slider by T. Rex. I understand that it’s probably not the coolest of records but I like it. I suppose it’s one of those records people would describe as a guilty pleasure. Personally, I wouldn’t. Eating crisps at a funeral or masturbating in the changing rooms at the local swimming pool would be a guilty pleasure, not listening to something you like.

Malcfest is an outdoor festival set over the weekend nearest to Malc’s birthday. He has been doing it for a few years in his garden in Catford, but this year, found a field attached to a pub miles from anything else. It’s pretty much a festival for his friends and a few friends of friends. When we arrived we set about having a look around, She Makes War was playing on one of the stages and in the field next to it people were doing some Morris dancing. We’re not really keen on Morris dancing so we didn’t join in. I did however have the urge to borrow one of the sticks and have a stick fight with Phil. We didn’t, but if we had, we’d have both enjoyed that.

The show was fun to play and the response from the crowd was great. I was starting to wish I’d been there the whole weekend because the atmosphere was perfect and the people were very friendly. Maybe next year. Another band played after us on a different stage, but because we were busy chatting to some people and packing our equipment back into the van, we missed them. We did catch Andy K and Thumpermonkey Lives! Andy K was brilliant and had the crowd in hysterics, I’ve not seen anything quite like it and if you ever see him on a bill, go check him out. Thumpermonkey Lives! were the headliners. They play a mix of metal and prog and are an incredible bunch of musicians.

On the way back home our van lost power and we had to pull over onto the hard shoulder and wait for a mechanic. He arrived after about an hour but didn’t know what was wrong. The mechanic put the van onto the back of the recovery vehicle and we all got a lift home to Kingston.



Thanks to Alex, Wayne, Stu, Tom, Bass and Malc for inviting us to play these two great shows.