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The Bellrays

by Stuart
The Bellrays

 

There are few things finer than a Friday night gig at Norwich Arts Centre. Even though winter appeared to have made a return, after a long tiring week at work the prospect of a few beers, some good company and three kick ass rock ‘n’ roll bands was all the incentive I needed to leave the home comforts behind. Arriving to find a disappointingly small turnout was a shame, but that was soon forgotten as Beast With A Gun kicked off proceedings. A garage punk trio from Great Yarmouth, they did a fine job of warming up us early arrivals. Featuring two guitars (no bass = sob), one fashioned from a cigar box, and a drummer who seemed to be as adept at dropping his sticks as he was playing the kit, their ramshackle racket was very entertaining. With between song raps delivered in a US drawl and a relaxed approach to their set, they seemed fully at ease at this their first Arts Centre show. Good Stuff.

The next band were Los Pepes from London. Cursory YouTube research had heightened my expectations and they completely delivered on that promise. Self-described as the ‘Motorhead of powerpop’ but with liberal doses of the Saints, the Sonics and Status Quo they immediately elevated the evening, their greater experience showing. They may not win points for originality, but they had the sound, they had the rock ‘n’ roll poses and they had the all the necessary attitude needed to carry off this sound convincingly. I get used to watching some meek, apologetic supports but this was a lesson in confidence. The guitarist/singer may have looked like he was in a different band to the other guys, but they all played their part and the drummer in particular was absolutely brilliant. WIth a bunch of European shows lined up I have no doubt they will impress every audience they play in front of and they left the stage to loud applause.

The BellRays have been plying their trade since 1990, with a sound split equally between punk, rock and soul, with a dash of blues for good measure. It’s a genius idea really - loud garage rock with expert guitar from Bob Vennum, topped off with the genuinely powerful soul voice of Lisa Kekaula. The audience had swelled to respectable proportions by the time their set began and it felt good to be in the hands of such experienced performers. Lisa’s voice was fantastic, it’s rare to get to watch someone so good, and whether fronting toot to the floor rockers, or slower more soulful numbers, her voice remained the focal point. Many audience members had thrown off their earlier shackles and there really was a proper Friday night vibe to the whole set. They played a lengthy show, gave us a couple of well-deserved encores and made a lot of new friends who had taken a chance on them.

Full marks go to Punk Rock Blues for promoting this bill of musical excellence. The bands provided the perfect soundtrack to a Friday night of sonic thrills, and having first heard the BellRays all the way back in 2002 it was great to be finally able to witness their live show.

 

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