Andoni Egiluz, become an avid boxer, gathers and, in the right position, throws a hook full of rage into the air. Along with these violent gestures, the movement of your hips helps keep the pace of the whole group. And his strong, deep voice goes through all parts of the audience's body.
The concert kicked off with the song Zaldia Burning from Beat Kamerland’s first album, which was released in 2017. Transparent and not very hard guitars.
By making a nod to the underground aesthetic, pants raised on the waistline, white stockings, long hair, mustaches and old school tattoos help you get deeper into the post-punk style. They have stated that they are a group with a lot of personality, both in terms of how to dress and through the passion shown.
The sounds of music seem to enter a trance or guided ecstasy situation. As if the four musicians were playing violence based on rebellion.
Ground for Dogs is the second album that highlights the presence of bass and guitar that is not fuel. The look of the cow has been the song in Basque that they have sung in the middle of the concert. And it has brought to the room an apparent calm, with a calmer rhythms. It shows more instrumental and harmonious parts that cannot be removed from the head.
There is a fascination of insanity in the outlines of this group. The fear of violence swells you in the concert. I couldn't turn a blind eye to the moving and violent movements. You get away from commercial melodies and you get into the rhythms of the 1980s that mark your identity. Helping the search for beauty in violence.