Infernal Noise Brigade

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Poster for INB performance in London, June 2005
Poster for INB performance in London, June 2005

The Infernal Noise Brigade was a Seattle, Washington-based musical group, who originally formed to participate in the protests at the WTO Meeting of 1999.[1] Over its seven-year history, the group performed as part of several large-scale protest actions, such as those at the 2000 IMF/World Bank Meeting in Prague,[2] the 2003 WTO Ministerial in Cancún,[3] Mexico, the 2004 United States Republican Party National Convention in New York City,[4][5] as well as at numerous events in their homebase of Seattle.[6] In July 2005, they participated in the protests against the 31st G8 summit in Scotland as part of a European tour that also brought them to England, Germany, the Netherlands, Belgium, and Austria.[4]

Their website describes their music as combining "elements of drumline, taiko, Mughal and North African rhythms, elements of Balkan fanfares, breakbeats, and just about anything else."[1] Although best known for their free (and often confrontational) public performances at political protests,[7] they sometimes performed at more conventional concerts and club gigs, usually featured as part of a musically eclectic program.[6]

Christopher Frizzelle, in an "obituary" for the band in the Seattle-based arts weekly The Stranger, remarked that their "most important and dramatic public events were standoffs with cops" and that they "can be credited for keeping WTO protestors energized, focused, and photogenic… What their parties and their protests had in common was intensity, vividness, and a fun, frightening sense that anything could happen. They were lessons in liberation."[7]

Frizzelle, who travelled with INB on a portion of their European tour, wrote in his review of that tour that the members used "band names", partly to "retain the mystery of the band" and partly to preserve their anonymity from their employers: almost none of the band members are professional musicians. As example, Frizzelle provided the roster from the mainland portion of the European tour: "Annemat, Atomika, B. Q. (whose band name is Red Dot, but no one calls her that), Bluer Than You, Bookworm, Brassbelle, D. P. Punkass ("My whole name is Dread Pirate Punkass, but in print I like to be D. P. Punkass"), DK Pan, Flash, Grey Filastine, Hawtpantz, Ice Frog, In Phase, Megor, Mildred, Mr. Rose, the Professor, Ramon, Satsuma, Skunk, Spider, and Violet."[4]

The Infernal Noise Brigade officially disbanded on July 29, 2006.[8][7]

Contents

[edit] Recordings

  • Insurgent Selections for Battery & Voice[9]
  • Vamos a la Playa (live in Cancún), 2003[9]
  • "L'étincelle"/"Manguera" (single), 2004[9]
  • Final Report, 2008[9]
  • (with Filastine) No G8 Japan Action Benefit, 2008[10]

[edit] Related Acts

Filastine
¡Tchkung!

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ a b Untitled page on official site, accessed 27 March 2007.
  2. ^ Graeme Chesters and Ian Welsh, The Rebel Colours of S26: Social Movement: ‘Frame-work’ during the Prague IMF/WB protests (PDF), Working Paper Series Paper 18, University of Cardiff School of Social Science, November 2001. p. 14. Accessed online 27 March 2007.
  3. ^ The front cover of the University of London’s Institute of Commonwealth Studies handbook MA in Understanding and Securing Human Rights uses a photo of the INB in Cancún as an illustration. Accessed online 27 March 2007.
  4. ^ a b c Christopher Frizzelle, Enduring Freedom: Marching Through Europe With The Infernal Noise Brigade, The Stranger, Aug 18 - Aug 24, 2005.
  5. ^ Josh Feit, Parade Rout, The Stranger, September 9 - September 15, 2004. Accessed online 27 March 2007.
  6. ^ a b Untitled list of performances and tours on their official site. Accessed online 27 March 2007.
  7. ^ a b c Christopher Frizelle, R.I.P., INB (1999-2006), The Stranger, posted online on August 8, 2006, accessed 27 March 2007.
  8. ^ Official site, home page, accessed 27 March 2007.
  9. ^ a b c d Audio samples and release info, official web site, accessed 27 March 2007.
  10. ^ Page at Irregular Rhythm Asylum, accessed 10 April 2008.

[edit] External links

Languages