Pour les fans de Electro.
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Laibach’s story is one as mired in controversy as any band with close ties to a revolutionary art collective would be, with their very first performance banned before it opened due to the local government’s objection with its posters. When a promotional tactic as innocent as a poster can get you shut down by the higher ups, that’s when you know you’re doing something right. Formed by Dejan Knez during his summer holidays from school in 1980, the band originally performed as a quintet, debuting live in 1982. Understandably, the band’s outrageous and provocative attitude made them one of the biggest Slovakian bands of all time in short order, and 1986 they’d found a famous fan in the form of the BBC’s resident indie rock guru John Peel, who broadcast songs of theirs on his radio show and made them cult heroes in the U.K.
In 1989, their notoriety increased even further with the release of an E.P featuring seven different interpretations of The Rolling Stones’ “Sympathy For The Devil”. The band were loved and loathed as revolutionary iconoclasts and dangerous menaces in pretty equal measure, so obviously the one place to go after that was into the pop charts, which they did with the release of their 1992 album “Kapital”. This was a band so dedicated to their artistic cause that the L.P, CD and cassette tape versions of the album contained different versions of each song. Yet it was critically raved about and set them up for another successful album which came in the form of 1994’s “NATO”. The record comprised almost entirely of covers of different songs about war, from Pink Floyd’s “Dogs Of War” to Europe’s “The Final Countdown”.
To this day the band remains as devoted, uncompromising and genuinely thrilling as they ever were, and are still the only band like them around. Theirs is a live show in which anything could happen, and if you want to see something that you’ll never forget, then Laibach come highly recommended.
Laibach have a great reputation and I wasn't disappointed. They did two sets and played tracks from Spectre and Iron Sky. Live their music comes alive. The sounds was loud, low and exciting. The light show worthy of a stadium and the back projections fabulous. There is no chat between songs; rather short recorded message like 'you are the best audience'. Brilliant stuff. For a band who have been around for a while they still put on an exciting polished show. Go see.