Congregation (Kerbdog album)

Last updated

Congregation
Congregation (Kerbdog album).jpg
Studio album by
Released10 October 2014
RecordedTracks 1–16: 07 April 2012 at Thekla, Bristol, England; 20 October 2012 at Garage, London, England, 08 December 2012 at Academy, Dublin, Ireland;
Track 17: July 2014 at Tower Studios, Evesham, England
Genre Alternative rock
Length71:22
Label Pledge Music & Graphite Records
Producer Dave Draper

Congregation is the third full length, and first live, album by Irish alternative rock band Kerbdog. The bulk of the album was recorded in 2012 at three different gigs in England and Ireland. A studio track entitled "Electricity" (a re-working of an old 1997 demo called "Soaking Wet") was recorded at Tower Studios in Evesham in July 2014. A Pledge campaign was unveiled on 23 June 2014 to help fund and promote the new release. [1] The campaign had reached 100% of its goal on 6 October 2014. The album was released on 10 October 2014 through Pledge Music and Graphite Records.

Contents

"Congregation" was released as a CD/DVD package and also as a Download. The DVD includes videos for "Electricity", "Severed", and "Pointless". There is also a live video of "On the Turn" from Sonisphere recorded on 6 July 2014, featuring Dave Draper on bass as a last minute replacement for Colin Fennelly, although the audio itself is the live album version from 2012.

Track listing

All songs written by Kerbdog.

  1. "On the Turn"
  2. "Pledge"
  3. "Mexican Wave"
  4. "Secure"
  5. "Lesser Shelf"
  6. "Rewind"
  7. "Severed"
  8. "Didn't Even Try"
  9. "Earthworks"
  10. "Scram"
  11. "Dry Riser"
  12. "Sally"
  13. "Sorry for the Record"
  14. "End of Green"
  15. "Pointless"
  16. "JJ's Song"
  17. "Electricity"

New studio track

Electricity, A brief history…

1997, A battle scarred, tired, post 6 years of touring Kerbdog hit Sun Studios in Dublin. It was a strange time, we were on the verge of being fired by our label but had two new labels trying to sign us. For the new labels we recorded a session of 6 or 7 songs. Session went well and we nailed the tracks. We left feeling good about things, shaking off 1.4m label debt and starting with a clean slate. We were also looking forward to two label showcase gigs supporting Placebo in Ireland.

Next day we get a call, there's an issue. Some idiot minding the studio brought his friends in for a party and our master tapes ended up at the bottom of the river Liffey. Gutted and fully aware we were not going to capture the same energy we returned to Sun to re-record the session. As expected the tunes sounded a little tired. We didn't want to be there, it was our last weekend off before hitting the road again and our only chance to be with friends, family, and girlfriends before we left. Never mind missing Fugazi play the local parish hall in Kilkenny!

Next up, we supported Placebo in Dublin and Belfast, they heard our sound check and decided we were a bit too good. They responded by doing the honourable thing, instructing the sound guys to prohibit us from going through the P.A. system. So, we did the gig with just stage monitors, no front of house sound, no drums to be heard, no vocals, just the top end of what was coming from the stage. Naturally it sounded awful, and soul destroying… The labels "passed" and we were left with a lifeless demo. That was the writing on the wall for the Dog.

However, in that session we recorded a song called Soaking Wet. In all the doom and gloom at the time we were still very aware it had a killer chorus. The demo always sounded down beat, un Kerbdog like and tired, we didn't listen to those sessions for years for obvious reasons. I had a listen a few months back and decided we should record a real version of the song and give it what it deserves. I had a think about the arrangement and decided it need a full re-working. I came up with some ideas, convinced the boys it needed doing, which was an easy task, and planned to get it done.

Sonisphere was upon us so we had a rehearsal booked for that. I rang Battle and said I had sussed the arrangement, dynamics and plan of attack for the song. "I’m good with that, I totally trust your judgement with that stuff". We ran through it twice and sent Dave Draper an extremely rough version of the track. He got what I was getting at with it and we decided to record drums at the 2nd Sonisphere rehearsal in Evesham. It was a really fun session, we were fired up with the looming festival slot next day. You can hear that energy in the song. Battle as usual was his funny entertaining self in the studio, having the control and live room in tears laughing at recent media revelations and what not. Take one, still trying to remember the arrangement we practiced twice, sounding a little shaky, the laughter didn't help… Take two, that's the arrangement. Take three, I go for it proper, that felt good. Dave yells from the control room "There’s gold in there!!". Job done, off to play and watch my hero's at Sonisphere!

Colin dropped by some weeks later while on a trip to the UK. Laying down bass tracks. Following this Battle, Billy and Myself flew back to Evesham for guitars and vocals. It was a happy, emotional, exciting session with a huge sense of relief that the Dog could nailed something solid for the first attempt in years. It sounded in the zone sonically that the amazing production values of OOT created.

The song sounds so far removed in every aspect from the original demo, we decided it needed a new name. After a few dodgy suggestions, Battle does what he does best, comes up with the words, Electricity it is!

Darragh Butler [2]

Personnel

UK Singles

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Therapy?</span> Northern Irish rock band

Therapy? are a Northern Irish rock band from Larne, formed in 1989 by guitarist-vocalist Andy Cairns and drummer-vocalist Fyfe Ewing. Therapy? recorded their first demo with Cairns filling in on bass guitar. To complete the lineup, the band recruited Larne bassist Michael McKeegan. The band signed with major label A&M Records in 1992, for which they released four albums, most notably Troublegum in 1994 and Infernal Love in 1995. Ewing's departure in early 1996 preceded the arrivals of his replacement Graham Hopkins and Martin McCarrick on cello and guitar. Neil Cooper replaced Hopkins on drums in 2002. Following the departure of McCarrick in 2004, the band have remained a stable three-piece since.

<i>Kerbdog</i> (album) 1994 studio album by Kerbdog

Kerbdog is Kerbdog's eponymous debut album. The album was recorded in 1993 at Rockfield Studios in Wales and released on 28 March 1994 through Vertigo. Though the band had various indie influences, with bands like Sonic Youth, Fugazi and Big Black, the album ended up having a Metallica influenced proto-grunge sound. The band said that this was simply the result of getting professional equipment, and turning everything up as loud as they could. What also might account for this is the fact that grunge pioneer Jack Endino recorded the album.

"If I remember right the whole thing took five weeks. No problems except that Cormac was still writing lyrics right up to the next-to-last day of mixing. Dummy Crusher was literally the last thing finished, we cut the vocal and then I mixed it next day. We had about run out of time at that point. [I] liked almost all of it. Thought the intro to EOG should have been half as long, but band disagreed; and in retrospect I would have turned up the vocals on EOG just a teeny bit, though no one ever complained. Didn't like Xenophobia much but that didn't make the album. Thought Clock should have been a single."
Jack Endino

<i>The Soundhouse Tapes</i> 1979 EP by Iron Maiden

The Soundhouse Tapes is the debut EP by Iron Maiden, and features the first recordings by the band. Released on 9 November 1979, it features three songs taken from the demo tape recorded at Spaceward Studios on 30 and 31 December 1978. The three tracks appear in a rougher form than they would on the band's eponymous debut studio album and subsequent singles, as they were all recorded in one session.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Diamond Head (British band)</span> British heavy metal band

Diamond Head are an English heavy metal band formed in Stourbridge, West Midlands, in 1976. They were part of the new wave of British heavy metal movement and is acknowledged by bands such as Metallica and Megadeth as a significant early influence.

Mansun were an English alternative rock band, formed in Chester in 1995. The band comprised vocalist/rhythm guitarist Paul Draper, bassist Stove King, lead guitarist/backing vocalist Dominic Chad, and drummer Andie Rathbone.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Kerbdog</span> Irish rock band

Kerbdog were an alternative metal band from Kilkenny, Ireland, formed in 1991. Following two albums released on Mercury Records, the band split up in 1998. Since 2005, they have reformed for a series of occasional one-off performances. In 2012, a live album entitled Congregation was recorded and released in October 2014.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Sabbat (English band)</span> British thrash metal band

Sabbat were an English thrash metal band from Nottingham consisting of Martin Walkyier (vocals), Andy Sneap (guitars), Simon Jones (guitars), Frazer Craske (bass) and Simon Negus (drums). They are considered one of the "big four" of British thrash metal along with Acid Reign, Onslaught, and Xentrix, who were all responsible for developing and popularizing the country's thrash metal scene in the late 1980s and early 1990s. Over their initial six-year run Sabbat released three studio albums, four demos, two split singles/compilation albums, two singles and a live VHS. In 1988 the band released their debut album History of a Time to Come which earned them further recognition. Their next album, Dreamweaver (1989), was also critically acclaimed. Shortly after the release of Mourning Has Broken (1991), tensions with the band began to surface, most of them revolved around money and Sabbat disbanded as a result. After an attempted reunion in 2001 which was blocked by Sneap, the original Sabbat lineup reunited in 2006. In December of that year they performed together for the first time in sixteen years at five different venues in England. One was a warm-up gig in Nottingham, the other four in support of Cradle of Filth. The band has continued to perform live around the world but has not released any new material. In a January 2014 interview with Decibel magazine Andy Sneap confirmed that Sabbat had once again split-up.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Rudi (band)</span> Northern Irish band

Rudi were a punk rock/power pop band from Belfast formed in 1975. Throughout the late 1970s they were one of the most popular Northern Ireland punk bands but while The Undertones and Stiff Little Fingers secured record deals with major labels and had chart success, Rudi didn’t hit the big time and became 'the band that time forgot'. Rudi split in 1982. Their recordings that can still be found today.

<i>Hollinndagain</i> 2002 live album by Avey Tare, Panda Bear and Geologist (Animal Collective)

Hollinndagain is the first live album and second collaborative album by Avey Tare, Panda Bear and Geologist, released in 2002 on the label St. Ives. It was later retroactively classified as the first live album by their band Animal Collective.

<i>On the Turn</i> 1997 studio album by Kerbdog

On The Turn is the second and final studio album by Irish alternative rock outfit Kerbdog, released on Fontana Records in the UK on 31 March 1997. It was produced by GGGarth who had previously worked with Rage Against the Machine.

"We did one record with a band named Kerbdog, and we started off with about 25 cabinets and amps. It took about two days just to go through 'em all, but we got the best sounds that we have ever gotten. We used old Les Pauls, old Strats and Teles, different strings, different pickups."
GGGarth

<i>Welcome to Hell</i> 1981 studio album by Venom

Welcome to Hell is the debut studio album by English heavy metal band Venom. It was released in December 1981 through Neat Records at the culmination of the new wave of British heavy metal movement. The album was re-released by Sanctuary Records in 2002.

earthtone9 English metal band

Earthtone9 is an English metal band from Nottingham, England.

<i>9</i> (Public Image Ltd album) 1989 studio album by Public Image Ltd

9 is the seventh studio album by Public Image Ltd, but their ninth full-length release including the live albums Paris au Printemps and Live in Tokyo. It was released in May 1989 on the Virgin Records label.

<i>Naveed</i> (album) 1994 studio album by Our Lady Peace

Naveed is the debut studio album by Canadian rock band Our Lady Peace. It was produced by Arnold Lanni, and was released on March 22, 1994, by Sony Music Canada. Naveed became a success in Canada, being certified 4× Platinum in the country. There were five singles released for the album, including "The Birdman", "Starseed" and "Naveed". This is the only album to feature bass player Chris Eacrett, who was replaced by Duncan Coutts in 1995.

<i>Das ist Walter</i> 1984 studio album by Zabranjeno Pušenje

Das ist Walter is the debut studio album by Yugoslav band Zabranjeno Pušenje released on April 10, 1984. It was released through Jugoton in Yugoslavia.

<i>Neidermayers Mind</i> 1993 demo album by Korn

Neidermayer's Mind is a demo tape by American nu metal band Korn. It was produced by Ross Robinson and released in 1993. The demo is a rarity, but finished versions of the songs appeared on subsequent Korn albums.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Renegades (band)</span>

Renegades were a British rock band which started out as a side-project from two members of the band Feeder, featuring guitarist Grant Nicholas and bassist Taka Hirose, before becoming a pseudonym name for Feeder themselves. Nicholas formed Renegades alongside Hirose with Karl Brazil from Ben's Brother, who completed the group and a four-track EP was then recorded. Soon later, Renegades became an alternative name for Feeder at various concerts where they would play an entire show pretending not to be Feeder, but a different band with the same members. If Feeder songs released before the Renegades album were to be played, the band would announce that they're covering Feeder songs. Grant Nicholas once introduced "Tangerine" as "A cover of a song from a band we know".

Officer Kicks are a British rock group who formed in early 2005 in Southeast London.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Cry Like a Baby</span> 1968 single by The Box Tops

"Cry Like a Baby" is a 1968 song written by Dan Penn and Spooner Oldham, and performed by The Box Tops. The song reached No.2 in April 1968 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart, a position it held for two weeks. It was kept out of the top spot by Bobby Goldsboro's "Honey", which stayed at No.1 for five weeks. "Cry Like a Baby" also reached No.2 on Cashbox for one week. It stayed on the Hot 100 for 15 weeks and Cashbox for 14 weeks. It was awarded a gold disc for selling over one million copies in the United States.

"The Best Years of Our Lives" is a song by the British rock band Steve Harley & Cockney Rebel, released in 1975 as the title track from the band's third studio album The Best Years of Our Lives. In 1977, a live version of the song was released as a single from the album Face to Face: A Live Recording.

References

  1. ""Congregation" Pledge campaign".
  2. 'A History of Electricity from Darragh, Pledge campaign, September 2014'