Janeโ€™s Addiction

COLUMBIAHALLE, BERLIN

Advertisement

Tuesday October 7, 2003

The weather turns bad just as soon as our plane lands, sullen black clouds rolling out across gunmetal skies, and by the time Uncut reaches the Columbiahalle, itโ€™s raining something Biblical. We find the venue on the outskirts of town, halfway down a long boulevard lined with an endless parade of stern-looking federal buildings. The Columbiahalle appears to be little more than a glorified school hall, smiling staff wandering around selling pretzels out of huge wicker baskets. Someone thinks itโ€™s a good idea to turn the house lights up full between bands, which does a fine job of massacring the atmosphere. It isnโ€™t very rockโ€™nโ€™roll.

As if in response to this, the support band, New Yorkโ€™s The Star Spangles, kick up a ferocious racket, racing through their Ramones-inspired pop-punk with what sounds like a bad case of amphetamine psychosis, everything haring by at breakneck pace.

Advertisement

Janeโ€™s Addiction are dressed sombrely, lot of blacks, khaki and muted yellows. Weโ€™re half expecting Perry Farrell to be dressed to the nines, sporting some outlandish work of haute couture?instead he slinks on stage in a nondescript parka, the only flash of colour a purple scarf, swiftly dispensed with.

Itโ€™s been 13 years since Janeโ€™s last toured, nearly that long since the band collapsed, burned out by bad drugs, fractious internal relationships, arrests and nasty rumours concerning Farrellโ€™s health. It was a disappointing end to an unusual five-year run. The widescreen cosmic rock of 1988โ€™s Nothingโ€™s Shocking and 1990โ€™s Ritual De Lo Habitual, channelled through Farrellโ€™s glammed-up junkie poet chic and Dave Navarroโ€™s thundering guitar riffs, put them up there with Sonic Youth and the Pixies at the forefront of what some might call the alternative rock explosion. The first time I saw them live was in west Londonโ€™s Subterania in August 1990. The hottest day of the year, condensation pouring from the ceiling and a bare-chested, dreadlocked Farrell launching into lengthy, semi-coherent rants about George Bush, the CIA and the Gulf War like a bedraggled, half-mad prophet of doom. It was, you might guess, quite some show, and with their passing a little bit of colour seemed to leach from the world.

Now, here we are with Janeโ€™s Addiction circa 2003, Farrell, Navarro and drummer Stephen Perkins joined by former session bassist Chris Chaney, out touring new album Strays, the first new material from the band since 1997โ€™s odds-and-sods compilation Kettle Whistle. While Strays was a fine comeback, Janeโ€™s have always worked best on stage?Navarroโ€™s terror storm of noise can strip the enamel from your teeth and Farrellโ€™s mesmerising presence, his unpredictable flights of freewheeling fancy, are best witnessed in the flesh. So they open with the psychedelic prick-tease of โ€œUp The Beachโ€ before slamming head first into the propulsive โ€œStop!โ€. โ€œTrue Natureโ€ sounds like a thunderstorm, โ€œBeen Caught Stealingโ€ struts and spits, alley-cat feral. โ€œThree Daysโ€ is way out there, a little piece of the apocalypse, Navarro whipping up a hellstorm, Perkinsโ€™ voodoo drumming tight while a stick-thin Farrell preens and sashays round the stage, a crazed poet warrior with an alien voice and eyes as big as oceans. New songs?the acoustic swoon of โ€œEverybodyโ€™s Friendโ€, the greasy riffs of โ€œJust Becauseโ€?sit snugly next to old classics. โ€œTed Just Admit Itโ€ is hideously oppressive, Navarroโ€™s guitar squealing like an animal being slaughtered, Farrell shrieking โ€œsex is violentโ€ over and over like the last lunatic left in Bedlam. And on it goes.

What you remember, watching Janeโ€™s Addiction for the first time in well over a decade, is how quite unlike any other band they are. The flamboyant Farrell is unique, while itโ€™s incredible how the muscular Navarro can always manage to make it sound like heโ€™s playing 50 guitars and not just the one. The sense of timing, too, is superb?songs careering along, suddenly slamming to a standstill, a pause, then off again at full throttle. After a thundering version of โ€œComing Down The Mountainโ€, they close with a heartbreaking take on โ€œJane Saysโ€, Perkinsโ€™ bongos light as a summer breeze, Navarroโ€™s rolling acoustic chords and Farrell leading the crowd through a mournful chorus of โ€œIโ€™m gonna kick tomorrow!โ€.

A pleasure to have them back.