eMusic Review 0
Wire have never been big on recapitulating their past, and in this 2004 performance from their Send tour, they spend their entire main set playing material from that album and the Read & Burn EPs that preceded it. Judging from this recording, totally ignoring the past is a tack more long-running bands should take on stage: Wire are audibly thrilled to be playing songs that mean something to them in the moment, and they thrash and buck like kids a third their age.
Without the serrated digital edge of their studio recordings, these songs become as massive as heavy metal but as austere as modern art. The slow-burning "99.9" becomes an ideal opener, a bubbling electronic presence that erupts into volcanic punk rock, and from there on out it's a consistent, monomaniacal assault on the new material. (Graham Lewis, once the leather-jacketed romantic of the band, has bulked up his bass tone and his voice into twin bludgeons.)
Finally, for their encore, they reach back for four tracks from 1977's Pink Flag album — the oblique but furious take on punk rock that provided the DNA for the rest of their career. They've actually gotten faster and more powerful with time… read more »