Aalborgs legendariske aktivitetshus og spillested, 1000Fryd, er lukningstruet og har brug for din hjælp! Som følge af en naboklage skal huset gennemgå en massiv renovering, der løber op i flere millioner, og de penge har 1000Fryd ikke.
Stedet har de sidste 40 år haft uvurderlig betydning for Aalborg som by og for alverdens musikalske undergrundsscener både nationalt og internationalt. Det hele er båret oppe af de hundredvis af frivillige ildsjæle, der igennem årene har engageret sig i og udviklet sig med stedet.
1000Fryd er vigtigere end nogensinde og vil gøre alt for at overleve, men vi har brug for din støtte.
Vi modtager ethvert bidrag med kyshånd og er evigt taknemmelige for jeres hjælp.
Vil du donere direkte, kan det også gøres via bidrag til vores bankkonto på 1551-4930179574. Husk at skrive, hvem afsenderen er.
Alle som donerer, uanset beløbets størrelse, kommer på vores store takkeliste i porten.
❤️1000Fryd
Aalborg's legendary activity house and venue, 1000Fryd, is in danger of closing and needs your help! As a result of a neighbor's complaint, the house must undergo a massive renovation that costs several million, and 1000Fryd does not have that money.
For the past 40 years, the place has been of inestimable importance for Aalborg as a city and for many different underground music scenes, both nationally and internationally. All made possible by the hundreds of passionate volunteers who over the years have engaged in and developed with the place.
1000Fryd is more important than ever and will do everything to survive, but we need your support.
We welcome any contribution and are eternally grateful for your help.
If you want to donate directly to us, it can also be done via a contribution to our bank account on 1551-4930179574. Remember to write who the sender is.
Everyone who donates, regardless of the size of the amount, will get its name our big thank you list in the gate.
❤️1000Fryd
Throughout the past 40 years, many people have had personal and shared experiences at 1000fryd!
We want to save 1000fryd, because it is full of history and it contributes greatly to the cultural life in Aalborg.
Seven Feet Four spiller emorock og har udgivet sit debutalbum p det hollandske interpendent-label Coalition Records og er inspireret af s forskellige bands som At The Drive In, And You Will Know Us By The Trail Of Dead og Fugazi. Seven Feet Four er efterhnden rutinerede herrer, som har touret det ganske Europa og selvflgelige hjemme i det svenske. De har delt scener med dejlige navne som Pretty Girls Make Graves, The Locust og Division Of Laura Lee. Koncerterne skulle efter sigende vre en intens og dynamisk oplevelse. Det lyder jo altsammen meget lkkert.
Fra Amsterdam i det hollandske kommer Zea med i kbet. Den eclectiske dynamiske duo startede som sm intetvidende indiekids, der s lyset i The Pixies og Motorpsyko... Heldigvis voksede de kre sm op, gav fingeren til det hele og endte i en skn blanding af elektronisk-punk-hip-core-glitch-jamble som p en gang bevger sig p kanten, er dansevenlig, men alligevel kontronterende. Tilst et lille melankolsk jeblik her og der og billedet er fuldendt. Sidste r tourede bandet bde Europa og det store Amerika.. Hvilket ikke har skadet, men mske er der blevet skruet en anelse op for galskaben.
Mere Stones end Beatles og mere punk end The Pistols, mske Hollanske indie-elektroniske svar p Amdi Petersens Arme.
... Og s er der jo den hemmelige DJ....
...Og lidt anmeldelser..
This Dutch duo (Arnold de Boer: guitar/vocals, Remko Muermans: keyboards, sampler and vocals) make a charmingly schizophrenic sort of fractured punkadelic artpop, and they are good at it! Compressed trajectories recall The Notwist, but amplified into some Buzzcocks adrenalin rushes, alternating with neon ricochet math rock pencils standing on their hard sharpened points, with shimmering synth tickles from heaven. For some unknown breath waggle I'm called to think of Tall Dwarfs singing with a hip hop infusion and noisy punk muffins in the oven. Hard shifting GBV forced awake by alcohol deprivation have shredded slice and dice visions of hardcore owls in bladder with pumping pop skyrockets being fired in big chunky explosions amidst the fertile reinvention taking place constantly. They can sound like a robot programmed to rhyme, and/or psychotic reactions while jumping out of their skins. Veering from second to second between folk songs to speedy hammered sections. A strum becomes a pop song that spits out periodic gobs of steel wool as it saunters down a sun dappled lane. The Buffalo 66 sample brought warm chills. This feels like some sort of revelation at 6 in the evening on a sunny spring day with my headphones on and all of the windows wide open. George Parsons [Dream Magazine - Issue 4]
Usually, when I get a package from Amsterdam, I'm expecting it to contain something that'll get me 'hella *&%$. So, at first, I was disappointed when I opened a package addressed from the Netherlands only to find a promotional copy of Zea's Today I Forgot to Complain. But after listening, I found it to be almost as good as the product I'd been hoping for. Mixing just the right amount of punk guitar riffs, samples and electro synths, Zea puts together a very fine piece of modern musical artwork. With total disregard for the average listener, Zea makes electropunk music that embodies the ideal essence of the genre. Arnold de Boer's blend of electro and punk rock is laced with serious melodic choruses over fun, innovative drill n' bass beats that make for an utterly new variety of music that defies the terms "like" and "as." The album flows along in patchwork style, best demonstrated in the segment of "They Grow Up Weird" where Zea run from punk to video game soundtrack to soft metal with a low-fi radio segue into "Mountain Every Minute", a track that revitalizes the skateboard-reggae-dub of Sublime and the South Beach Dub Allstars with a shot of avant-garde electronic art. "Press Start to Continue" starts off with a great, vulgar sample then moves right into a sweet harmonic punk chorus, then back into a slamming electro-house beat. The album zigs and zags all over the fucking map, to an extent where the average listener absolutely cannot keep up. This album covers all the usual musical bases, while tapping into the new, throwing out attitude and riffs all over, like a kid refusing to stay within the lines of a coloring book. Even the slowest piece. "He's Passed", ends with a prank, obnoxious cell phone call that any musician will relate to. Why the fuck not? "Kiss Kiss Revolution", another beautiful cut-and-paste piece, keeps angsty punk rock right where it should be...in the fucking basement!!! I'll sum this one up by saying. as long as I keep stumbling across hungry underground electronic music artists who don't give a damn, I'll know why I love electropunk music. Tim Lofgren [100% Unnatural Webzine - Issue 14]
Genius indiepop made by two notepad-doodled Dutch boys that have Autechre soundtracking Rugrats coming in one set of ears and the sweet harmony of Mr Bungle flushing Belle & Sebs heads down the toilet going out of the other. The respective rosters of Sarah records and Tigerbeat6 line up at opposite ends of the playground and then ... BULLDOG!! Snot and hairgrips everywhere. Petra Star [Careless Talk Costs Lives - Issue 4 - May/June 2003]
Baffling experimental rock from Holland. Living in Amsterdam, surrounded by all manner of legal highs, must do funny things to your mind. Dutch duo Zea, for exaample, had the bright idea of punctuating their frenzied guitars and crashing drums with ringtones, accordions, bells, whistles, freaky voices, plinky-plonky pianos and other surreal sounds. Bizarrely enough, somehow it works. Like Japanese experimental rockers Polysics and Buffalo Daughter, Zea casually throw brainnumbing noize, punchy pop, hamfisted hip-hop and funky techno into the mix, creating a jagged, f**ked-up sound that's so much more than the sum of its parts. Like They Might Be Giants jamming with the Ramones or Pink Floyd headlining a punk convention, Today I Forgot To Complain is bewildering, enigmatic and always full of surprises. David McComb [Kerrang - May 2003]