The
surrealistic Swiss group Hell’s Kitchen fuses post-industrial
influences and gutbucket blues with primal, hypnotic energy, light years
away from the bland politically correct sounds of FM radio, from the
creative vacuum of soulless virtuosity. Regardless of its non-EU
origins, Hell’s Kitchen proudly boasts European roots and American
influences on this mindboggling piece of recording.
Here the video for 'Teachers' by Hell's Kitchen
Rural
roots, urban rock and tribal trance are the main ingredients of the new
blues recipe brewed by Hell’s Kitchen, with a little help from Rodolphe
Burger —former leader of legendary European underground band Kat Onoma,
no less.
Hell’s
Kitchen is Bernard Monney on vocals and guitar, Cédric Taillefert on
drumcussion (as this musical blacksmith calls his idiosyncratic drum
kit) and Christophe Ryser on the double bass. In addition to their
respective instruments, the three compadres are likely to be heard
beating on ventilation ducts, mauling dry pasta, throwing objects,
pounding on dustbin lids, rubbing washboards, and grating washing
machine tumblers while screaming, howling and stomping their feet.
“Dress to Dig,” the title track from the album, is a perfect example of
the group’s frenzy as they can be heard torturing a frying pan, a glass,
a garden chair…
The fourth musketeer rounding up this unlikely
trio played a leading role in the making of this recording: Rodolphe
Burger, with a slew of experimental projects to his credit, has worked
in the past with artists as diverse as French rockstars Jacques Higelin
and Alain Bashung, free jazz and blues guitarist James Blood Ulmer, and
others. Burger added his own production touch as the mixing sessions of
Dress to Dig were in the making, the members of the group recall: “For
six straight days, he gave us the very best of his talent and
inventiveness! He was the one who really picked up the raw meat we had
on our plates and cut it up into pieces, spiced it and grilled it to
perfect tenderness.”
This encounter of the third kind between the
young Swiss group and the seasoned underground rock star is not as
surprising as it may seem, Hell’s Kitchen bringing strong European
flavors to the most American of New World musical idioms with a flair
and spunk lacking most blues devotees outside of the US. Much like
reggae and bossa nova, karate or yoga, blues has become an international
commodity, and glory be to those, outside of the African-American
community, who manage to grace it with a dose of their own culture and
experience.
Shying away from smooth vocals and guitar heroics, the
members of Hell’s Kitchen see themselves as musical pioneers,
modern-day sorcerers feeling free to innovate in the lab. Their ultimate
goal, far from the polished and aseptic blues sounds currently produced
today, is to give the genre back its original relevance, entrancing
spirit, and vibrant energy.
Yet Hell’s Kitchen doesn’t limit its
repertoire to blues. In addition to Rodolphe Burger, other artists have
expressed their interest for their vision, including singer guitarist
Tété, who has appeared on stage with the group. A recording project with
Bashung was also in the works, unfortunately interrupted by the
latter’s death.
For the past few years, Hell’s Kitchen has been
burning up European highways, making weel-received appearances in
Russia, England, Italy, or Portugal at festivals like Eurockéennes and
Paléo. The trio has been offered to perform at the Deep Blues Festival
near Minneapolis—the king of neo trash blues events—on two occasions,
and intends to keep on preaching its special brand of blues across the
planet in the near future. Let there be no doubt, Hell’s Kitchen’s
nostalgia-laden echoes and contemporary sounds are here to stay!
www.hells-kitchen.ch