
VIPERTIME
MORON BUTLER
Thursday 28th May
£12
Booking fee: £1.50 (per transaction, not per ticket)
Doors: 7pm Live Music: 8pm
General admission – standing show
Age requirements: 18+
“Really f***ing happening. I dig this big time” – Mike Watt (Minutemen, The Stooges)
Leeds aggro-jazz group Vipertime and Kent-based post- punk band Moron Butler launch their new collaborative album ‘Vipertime & Moron Butler’.
Lyric heavy, hard edged and combining the acerbic attack of Gang of Four, the motoric drive of krautrock and the abstractions of John Coltrane, the album is released this May on Hastings label Property Of The Lost.
Expect a set from each band plus plenty of cross-pollination.
VIPERTIME
“That was Vipertime. I wouldn’t mind hanging out somewhere where that was going on. I guess I’d have to go to Leeds” – Iggy Pop
“Technically outstanding and phenomenally imaginative” – Louder Than War
“Dance floor ready” – Jamie Cullum
“They have that deep, angry sound that you find in Gato Barbieri and Steve Grossman” – Colin Curtis
Born in the snake pit of Leeds house parties, aggro-jazz four-piece Vipertime have earned a ferocious reputation at venues and festivals across the UK, honing their craft while pushing their line up of saxophone, bass and twin drum sets to its sonic limits. Their excursions to the borders of modal jazz, post-punk, dub and afrobeat have built a sound that is simultaneously unique to the band and a microcosm of the thriving UK scene.
Beginning as a free-improvising group in 2018, Vipertime swiftly began writing and moved into the studio to create 2019’s Shakedown, 2020’s Limbs/All Our Heroes Are Dead and 2023’s critically acclaimed Arise. This album received airplay on BBC 6 Music, BBC Radio 2, BBC Radio 3, BBC Introducing and Worldwide FM, was championed by Iggy Pop, Gilles Peterson and Colin Curtis, and was placed in Louder Than War’s ‘Albums of 2023’ list.
The band have undertaken numerous UK tours and played festivals including EFG London Jazz Festival, Manchester Jazz Festival, Leeds Jazz Festival, Smugglers Festival and Solfest, and in 2024 were selected for Jazz North’s prestigious Northern Line scheme.
New album Vipertime & Moron Butler sees the band in collaboration with post-punk band Moron Butler. Jazz is dialled down in favour of the acerbic attack of Gang Of Four, distorted punk-dub of The Pop Group and the motoric drive of Can. The voice and lyrics of Troy Osmond come to the forefront, his incantations interspersed with saxophone abstractions and fuelled by hard-edged bass and drums.
MORON BUTLER
Teachers, publicans, engineers, gardeners. Small town simple lives, using music as a creative release. Too odd for the punk shows and not weird enough for the experimental shows, Moron Butler have been leaving audiences confused and frustrated since 2021.
Encompassing the DIY ethos of Minutemen and Hüsker Dü alongside the ramshackle charm of bands like The Replacements, they play songs that are “too short”, songs that “stop just as they get going” with lyrics that are “too downbeat”. These are the sort of reviews that Moron Butler have come to expect. It’s what pushes them on against the mundane.
Lyrically the band is inspired as much by the works of Cheever, Berryman and Steinbeck as by the street poetry of Billy Woods and Black Thought, with a soundtrack blending the sounds of Wire and The Fall, shot through with Silver Apples, Joy Division and a peppering of US West Coast punk from across the decades. These are songs about history: the small quiet moments that have been forgotten, alongside the events that continue to haunt our thoughts.
Three split 7-inch singles with three diverse and equally undefinable bands have done nothing to help Moron Butler slide easily into a category. Embrace the confusion.
