It's always kind of the same: the guy gets on stage - provided that there is one - looking like a lanky jackal, with a sweater or two on, and without notice he starts hitting on a jumble of cymbals stacked on tattered guitars, wedged between two ancient synths. After a few minutes, he ends up shirtless and everything disappears, crumbled and pulverized: the show, the music, the people around you, the stage - if there was one - and you find yourself in a hand-to-hand combat: the struggle of Man against the machine, the New Age of Metal, the big final crash. What matters then is not what this guy is doing, but the faith he's putting in it. And what he puts in it is nothing less than his whole life, messily arranged in a large pile of hypnogenic ... read more