Screeching to the converted
SIOUXSIE & THE BANSHEES
Shepherd's Bush Empire London
(10/7/02)
There is no one like Siouxsie. I think
t
his is a guarantee. Arrogant she may
be, but what she's always made clear

is that she won't play the marketing
game: she despises the corporate
music industry and rightly so.

Whatever you made of tonight, no one
can vent spleen so uncompromisingly.
Siouxsie has never done an acting
course, she's never been a kids' TV
presenter, and she'd never get signed
now: she's far too scary, too lethally raw.
We know about Siouxsie. Part of the notorious
Bromley Contingent who surrounded the
vanguard of punk, her fame was kick-started
when she played an impromptu set at the 100
Club's 1976 Punk festival delivering the "Lord's
Prayer" in a way no one had quite heard it
before (and variously described as
"magnificent" and "unbearable"). Sid Vicious was in the band.
It's 25 years since punk. In the interim, the
Banshees have turned out sacks of LPs,
travelling through art-punk of the most
incendiary kind, setting a template for what
would become goth. Seven years ago they split;
but now they're back. What they turned in this
evening was a nihilistic, aggressive, sleazy
romp, a walk down memory lane that reminded
you how perverse things once were. The scene
is set with an empty stage and the existential
thudding of a Neu track. Krautrock of the most
hypnotic kind. Then here they are. Steve
Severin. white-blond, on bass. Budgie, hands
bandaged. Knox Chandler on guitar. And Siouxsie, inpinstriped suit, sequinned eyes and hair like a black
parakeet' s. She's 45, looks 18: pacts with the devil have no doubt oeen made.
What do we get? The Berliner-cabaret howl of "Pure", from '78, Siouxsie's voice truly disaffected. The Teutonic,
deconstructed smash of "Metal Postcard". The sound is deafening, and the balcony is rocking - feels as if it might
come loose. By the end of "Christine'' (the strawberry girl). Budgie is wheezing, almost crippled already, arms
round his chest; Sioux has removed her jacket to reveal a glittering bra top, and looks like a demonic mix of Anita
Dobson, Betty Boop and the Queen of Sheba. As "Cities in Dust" begins to take the building apart, she drags at a
bouncer as he tries to restrain the stage-divers, and when he won't listen, knocks him to the ground with a roar of
"Get DOWN!" When "Voodoo Dolly" gathers its pounding, erotic beat, she's writhing on her knees and rolling her
eyes like
Blade Runner's dysfunctional pleasure unit Pris.
Did it work? For my money, it was too heavy, too unsubtle, but this was a set for themselves, and Siouxsie, in her
primal bellow, clearly has things to exorcise. It's the insurrection she stands for that counts. They could've done
the crowd-pleasers. They preferred not to. What they did was encore with "Peek-A-Boo", complete with
accordions and opening act the Ex-Girls, three eccentric Japanese divas dressed as trogs. In context it didn't
seem that odd.
(GLYN BROWN - Independent)...cheers to Mitch (4 Minute Warning) for supplying the cutting!
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