I first caught Edwin Stevens perform as Irma Vep sometime in the late noughties at London’s Mascara Bar venue. He took to the stage solo and struck me as an earthier Will Oldham-type character: radiating emotion and pathos with only a guitar and voice. The set was intense and beautiful; it also involved humour and belching. In the intervening years, Irma Vep has released a flurry of LPs, […]
Irma Vep
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Turquoise Coal The début release from the Turquoise Coal label is also Irma Vep‘s first time on vinyl, though it’s also the tenth solo album from Klaus Kinski drummer Edwin Stevens. However, anyone familiar with Klaus Kinski and therefore expecting a full-frontal assault of blistering noise from Stevens will be bound for some disappointment – in fact, a metric shedload thereof.