Despite the name, this event isn't really a street festival like the
Choriner
Straßenfest. First of all, it's all about the
music, and second, it doesn't normally actually take place in the
street. (Ironically, it would seem it doesn't even usually take place
in venues on Torstraße, but rather in venues near
Torstraße.) This year, the entirety of the festival took place
inside the Volksbühne, one of the nicest
venues
I've
been in
in Berlin. Apart from the main hall, both of the secondary "salons",
two makeshift stages in the halls above those, and a back room even
higher and further back in the building were in use as well. The
foyer was used for an independent label market as well as various
talks and workshops. It was quite fun to explore the many parts of
the expansive building!
Event: Torstraßen
Festival 2019
Venue: Volksbühne
Location: Berlin,
Germany
Date: 7 September 2019
I arrived in time to
see the end of the set by Jealous
in the Roter Salon ("red salon"). The Berlin trio played a
noisy, punky, gothy blend with hints of Cramps-style psychobilly. The
most immediate reference point, however, was Bauhaus,
especially in the spindly, Daniel Ash-inspired guitar. Nonetheless,
my favorite part was the bass: it was prominent and driving, but for
one song, the bassist used a slide to play most of the riffs and even
played a wild solo with it. The vocals were unfortunately quite
distant and mixed too low, but they
had a good sound otherwise.
[Jealous.]
I
went up a back stairwell to the Rangfoyer Rot ("red balcony
foyer") to see Michaela Meise,
a Berliner accordionist. Most of her set consisted of international,
politically-oriented folk
tunes from the 60s, often
translated from the original languages (Greek, English, French, etc.)
by herself. Several songs covered the plight of Jews during and after
World War II, many were protest anthems from various European freedom
struggles, and her final song was a cover of DDR band Karat's "Der
blaue Planet", an anti-nuke song from 1982. Meise's vocals were
plain but clear and precise, which lent itself well to understanding
the words. For most of the set, she was joined by Barbara Wagner, who
I recognized from seeing her earlier this year with Britta
in the same building. The guitarwork was fairly restrained but was a
nice accompaniment to the accordion. I appreciated their effort in
keeping these older yet still relevant songs alive.
[Michaela Meise with Barbara
Wagner.]
I
took another back stairwell up another level into the back room
merely described as the 3. Stock ("third floor", but by
German counting, i.e. not including the ground floor) to see John
Moods, better known as a member
of Fenster. He appeared alone with just a guitar, a
keyboard, and an iPhone. I
had been expecting something somewhat psychedelic, but what I got was
more like a cheesy, laid-back 80s pop sound with a hint of R&B.
The
vocals were okay, but with the dominant backing tracks, his stage
presence came off a bit strange. It worked slightly better when
people stood up and started to move a bit, but it seemed like he was
missing his target. I was also disappointed that his guitarwork was
minimal and mostly overshadowed by the backing track. There were
even taped guitar parts that were louder and more interesting than
what he played live! It was strange. I liked his lyric "Why do
we try to be cool?", but most of the rest was uninspiring.
[John Moods.]
I
left a bit early and went back to the Roter Salon to catch the end of
Swoosh's set. They
were an instrumental five-piece (three guitars, saxophone, and drums)
playing free jazz or noise rock. The music sounded mostly
improvisational, and the three guitarists were well-trained in making
small rhythmic patterns and noises that fit together to built up a
bigger sound. However, most of what I saw was fairly sparse, and the
saxophonist in particular was quite minimalist. Some parts did have
some groove, but most sounded fairly brooding and looming. It
seemed they were on to something and I
wish I'd heard more.
[Swoosh.]
I
crossed over to the other side of the building to the Grüner Salon
("green salon") to see Kate NV,
a Moscow-based experimental electronic artist. Most of her set
consisted of building up weird sound fields by looping hand
instruments, keyboards, samples, and processed vocals. Her first
piece started with playing a series of tuned bells and glasses that
she looped to create an abstract harmonic foundation. As the set
progressed, she increasingly relied on her electronics, in particular
what sounded like synthesized wood percussion. (In that, I was
reminded of the strangely delightful BANANA
collaborative project
from 2017.) Most of her songs were instrumental or had minimal,
possibly wordless, vocals, but for her last song, she finally sung a
longer set of lyrics in Russian. Her playfulness was enjoyable, as
was watching her put the pieces together of her songs, but it was a
bit slow and not always entirely successful.
[Kate NV.]
I
went back to the 3. Stock to see Jana Irmert,
a Danish cellist and vocalist. She also used a backing track, but it
was fairly minimal and would have given her instrument and voice
plenty of room to shine had she chosen to take it. However, her
material was almost exclusively downbeat, droning, and tepid. She
appeared to be a skilled performer, but I longed for a bit of
movement, or an excuse to take a more expressive solo on the cello.
[Jana Irmert.]
At
that point, the Großes Haus (the main hall) finally opened, and I
went to see the first band of the night on that stage, The
Chap. Their electronic indie
rock was consistently upbeat and extremely high-energy. I was
impressed that they basically didn't slow down at any point. They
were a bit punky, but were tight and had a strong rhythm throughout.
Their energy was wild and tense, yet they harnessed it effectively.
One song even featured coordinated dance moves. Their lineup featured
two keyboardists, a drummer, a guitarist, and a bassist/guitarist.
Everyone contributed backing
vocals. The balance between
the instruments was arranged well; no instrument dominated, and all
had their moments to shine. Their final song was somehow
even more highly
charged than
the rest and featured a more
explicitly motorik-oriented
driving drumbeat.
[The Chap.]
The
next act on the same stage was P.A. Hülsenbeck,
who was accompanied by a drummer, a trumpeter, a bassist (on bass
guitar and double bass), and another performer
who seemed to be providing sound manipulation and samples. The songs
were jazzy and started in familiar territory but gradually got more
experimental and exploratory, particularly when the person in the
back started wielding his effects. At different points, he added
dub-like delay to the drums, messed with the reverb of the bass, and
distorted the trumpet à la Jon Hassell. The centerpiece was a dark,
haunting song about the disintegration of Europe. While the band was
completely hidden by fog machines, two dancers approached each other
from opposite sides of the front of the stage. They wore large veils
with a blue light emanating from where their faces should've
appeared. After that song, one left, but the other remained, mostly
just huddled sadly on the ground. The mood was rather gloomy, but the
creative use of instrumentation and effects was well done.
[The best I could do for P.A. Hülsenbeck with
so many fog machines.]
I
went back up to the Grüner Salon to see Chris Imler,
a drummer gone solo in the vein of Robert Görl of
D.A.F.
He had a rig with samplers and synthesizers built around his drum kit
so that he could play standing, trigger his samples, and sing
simultaneously. The techno vibe risked being generic, but his humor
and intensity kept it rolling, and the live drumming made a big
difference as well. He regularly interrupted himself with comedic
interjections before jumping back into the middle of his songs. It
was all a bit bizarre, but he made it fun and the audience was
finally ready to dance, so he fit the bill perfectly.
[Chris Imler.]
The
festival continued with more bands and DJs until 4 in the morning,
but it was after 11 when I decided it was probably time to head home.
I'm sure there were even more quality acts to follow, but I was happy
with what I got to experience. The Volksbühne is a great venue, and
I loved the cozy salons with their color themes including matching
upholstery. The festival was well organized and well
curated; the variety of
performers was excellent.
It felt like a smaller-scale, more approachable and sustainable
version of South
by Southwest.
I look forward to going back!
Scores:
Jealous: B
Michaela Meise: B+
John Moods: D
Kate NV: B-
Jana Irmert: C-
The Chap: B+
P.A. Hülsenbeck: B-
Chris Imler: B+
P.S. Thanks to Tim and
Lutz!
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