Type and hit ENTER

Commonly used tags...

Brighton Festival Brighton Fringe Brighton Pride British Sea Power Cinecity Lewes Psychedelic Festival Locally Sourced Lost & Found Love Supreme Festival Mutations Festival Nick Cave Poets Vs MCs Politics Rag'n'Bone Man Record Store Day Save Our Venues Six Of The Best Source Virgins Streets Of Brighton Street Source Tattoos The Great Escape Tru Thoughts Unsung Heroes
  • Home
  • News
  • Previews
  • Reviews
  • Features
  • Food
  • Tickets
  • Contact
  • Contribute
  • Advertise
  • Home
  • News
  • Previews
  • Reviews
  • Features
  • Food
  • Tickets
  • Contact
    • Contact
    • Contribute
    • Advertise
Reviews

Acid Mothers Temple And The Melting Paraiso U.F.O. Review

Oct 25, 2013
-
Posted by Stuart Huggett

Acid Mothers Temple guitarist Kawabata Makoto was in town just last weekend with his noise-metal trio Mainliner for a gig that heralded the start of his two-date ‘Brighton invasion’. On paper, the idea of getting an extra gig out of the Japanese psych leader’s current visit seems an excellent idea, unless you’re a venue or promoter suddenly faced with a pair of half-full concerts. Mainliner’s gig had also coincided with one of the busiest weekends of live music in the city for some time (sending us elsewhere), but fortunately tonight’s Sunday show is up against far less competition and Sticky Mike’s fills out nicely as the long evening unfolds.

With the multiple permutations of Acid Mothers Temple, Makoto is tirelessly prolific, issuing numerous studio and live albums year upon year, so every tour is unpredictable and inevitably accompanied by a heavily weighted merch table. Playing tonight, the five-piece Melting Paraiso U.F.O. combination is his primary outlet, generating lengthy, crystal clear flights of psychedelic space rock. They take to the stage this evening accompanied by pink and blue starbursts of filtered oil wheels from Sussex heads the Innerstrings Psychedelic Lightshow, an eye-opening spectacle only slightly diminished by bassist Tsuyama Atsushi’s fondness for making rabbit-ear shadow puppets in the beams.

Getting underway with a doomy, descending vocal chant, Acid Mothers Temple’s extended song constructions cover the ground from stately outer-space guitar peals and steady motorik rhythms to chewy riffs, rolling bass runs and squalling power chords. Makoto maintains the focus from the edge of the group while Atsushi and second guitarist Tabata Mitsuru take the lion’s share of vocals. Our eyes keep getting drawn to headbanging synth operator Higashi Hiroshi upfront, though, an immensely tall man with a fearsome shock of grayhair and beard who stands out even among one of the hairiest, beardiest bands around.

Time is suspended as we’re sucked into a whirlpool of extremely loud and deceptively intricate galactic sound-voyaging. The dual guitar charge and Hiroshi’s analogue whistles rinse our ears out completely, before some final nerve-jangling screams and evil laughter pitch us unsafely ashore. A real close encounter of the burned kind.

Sticky Mike’s Frog Bar, Sunday 6th October 2013
Words by Stuart Huggett
Photos by Agata Urbaniak

Oct 25, 2013
Email
Stuart Huggett
Stuart Huggett grew up in Hastings, writing fanzines and blogs about the town’s underground music scene. He has been a regular contributor to SOURCE, NME, The Quietus and Bowlegs. His huge archive of magazines, flyers and vinyl is either an invaluable research tool or a bloody pain. He occasionally runs tinpot record label Dizzy Tiger, DJs sporadically and plays live even less.
← PREVIOUS POST
Passenger Review
NEXT POST →
Howard Marks Review
Mailing List

Recent Posts
  • The Next Step Legacy World Tour Review
    Feb 18, 2026

    An exceptional dancing spectacular from the hit TV show The Next Step, with plenty of between the dances sections which fans will adore.

  • The Frank & Walters plus supports, Sat 30th May
    Feb 17, 2026

    A welcome return to Brighton from Cork's indie heroes, with seriously strong support acts.

  • The Rocky Horror Picture Show 50th Anniversary, Fri 17th April
    Feb 17, 2026

    Get dressed up and party with three of the original cast members at a special screening at Brighton Dome.

  • Polite Bureaux Headline the Green Door Store
    Feb 16, 2026

    Expect a night of edgy dancey punky fun as Polite Bureaux headline the Green Door Store in March.

  • Homegrown Festival First Wave Line Up Announcement
    Feb 16, 2026

    My Precious Bunny leads the charge as Homegrown 2026 makes its first line up announcement.

  • Mélanie Pain Review
    Feb 13, 2026

    Mélanie Pain turned The Ropetackle Centre into an intimate French nightclub to present her wonderful, new album plus some old favourites.

  • suede
    Suede, Sat 21st Feb
    Feb 11, 2026

    The oddball forerunners of the Britpop scene are coming to Brighton this month for the final date of their sold-out UK tour.

  • Blood Brothers Review
    Feb 11, 2026

    A stunning, majestic and sublime production of one of the greatest musicals of all time from the incredibly Willy Russell: unmissable.

Website developed in Brighton by Infobo
Copyright © Brighton Source 2009-2023
Acid Mothers Temple Review - Brighton Source