Live Review: Shlohmo, Purple, D33J

3 August 2015 | 12:51 pm | Hattie O’Donnell

"The elaborate set-up made all the difference, adding to the mind-melting experience of hearing this music live."

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After a much anticipated appearance at Splendour last week, Shlohmo and his WEDIDIT tour pals took the stage at Metro Theatre last night for a hypnotic set. D33J and Purple were great precursors to the headliner of the night, delivering moody tracks through purple-hued lighting.

Playing the entirety of his latest album from start to finish, Shlohmo's Dark Red filled the space with distorted heavy sound, a melancholy change from his earlier music. Opening with Meet Ur Maker, shredded synths rained down through a bleak, echoing beat. It's this ambient kind of dark melancholia that distinguishes his older, more approachable stuff from the new boiled-down fury.

Flanked onstage by drums and a guitar either side of the extensive motherboard set-up, the technical side of the production was impressive. Being a deeper album, Shlohmo enlisted live musicians to accompany the percussive snaps and deep bass, adding a different tonal quality to the (purposely) damaged sound. Bill DeLelles, a hired gun percussionist flown in from New York, worked the machine drum arrangements on live pads, while supporting act D33J strapped on a guitar alongside Shlohmo and worked the synth, seemingly from inside a smoke machine.

The elaborate set-up made all the difference, adding to the mind-melting experience of hearing this music live. The stage was shrouded in smoke and minimal lights, enhancing the moody and trance-like state of the crowd, while Shlohmo and his accompanists wore dark hoods, not showing their faces. This anonymity allowed you to focus solely on the beats and smoke-screened stage.

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The pace picked up with one of the last tracks, Fading, which broke the crowd out of its lull, harking back as it did to his older more drum'n'bass-influenced tracks. All up, it was an entrancing experience.