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Gonna be Big … Fontaines DC. Photograph: Daniel Topete
Punk

Fontaines DC: Dogrel review – boisterous Irish punks' perfect debut

This article is more than 6 years old

(Partisan)

Ben Beaumont-Thomas
Fri 12 Apr 2019 09.00 BSTLast modified on Thu 26 Sep 2019 12.03 BST

Americans will proudly trumpet their Irish heritage even if their only connection for generations has been Guinness soulfully supped in a shamrock-festooned theme pub, but in pop this impulse goes the other way.

Fontaines DC: Dogrel album artwork

Bono, Hozier, the Script – all allow their accents to drift across the Atlantic. So it’s refreshing to hear a singer,Fontaines DC’s Grian Chatten, embrace of all the bleating music of a Dublin accent. For listeners not versed in the Irish punk scene, his extremely characterful voice is as bracing as Alex Turner’s was when Arctic Monkeys broke out, and he uses it to voice aboisterous cast of personae: bullish yuppie on opener Big; ranting preacher onChequeless Reckless; fond documentarian on Liberty Belle: “You know I love that violence that you get around here / That kind of ready-steady violence.” That song and others here are fantastic ramalama surf-punk hits, but the five-piece have real range on this perfect debut. A stark Joy Division-style bass line props up The Lotts, with Chatten’s lines filling each bar to the brim, resulting in a deceptively simple, powerfully melancholy song.Roy’s Tune is equally sad and good, a steady Britpop ballad with a touch of the naivety of Ian Brown’s earliest performances. Television Screens has the kind of melody that would work in a traditional Irish folk ballad, but done as something Fugazi might play in their more tender moments. This is the kind of songwriting quality that bands can take years to reach, or never reach at all: brilliant, top to bottom.


More on this story

More on this story

  • Idles: 'Vulnerability is the armour'

  • Lockdown playlists for every mood, part two: chosen by Norah Jones, Joe Talbot and Flohio

  • Fontaines DC: A Night at Montrose, Dublin review – a blast of joy and disquiet

  • 'We’re existing on hope': Bat for Lashes, Will Young, Idles and others on music in 2019

  • Fontaines DC: A Hero’s Death review – sneer all you like

  • Idles review – snot, silly walks and compassionate aggro

  • 'Most political in years': critics hail Mercury prize's return to protest music

  • Irish punks Fontaines DC: 'You can feel the growing Anglophobia'

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