Opening   one  of   the   finest  nights   of  extreme   musical  entertainment I have yet had the pleasure of witnessing was Glasgow's  own  Co-Exist. These  purveyors  of blasting  and slamming  grindcore  (with  a hint  of  hardcore), like  every band  on  this bill  except  Sleath,  are prime  Relapse  Records material.  Fair enough,  neither  Co-Exist nor Regorge, both coming  from Glasgow, would necessarily be  best advised to  choose a label so far flung  from their home country  to  reside  on,  but  in  terms  of  musical  quality,  attitude  and  individual  intensity  either  would  fit  snugly  onto  the  Relapse  roster, as  headliners Nile  already do.  Formed recently  of members  of  long-running and  much  revered demo  act Confusion  Corporation,  Co-Exist are, to its  members at least, a fun band  -- a release from  what became a  relatively thankless and time-consuming  venture, I am  told. That  they are  a fun band  in the eyes  of their  members took  nothing away from  Co-Exist's performance. In fact,  the band's light  hearts and  comparable humour  added much  to it.  I would  have been  impressed  and invigorated  by Co-Exist's  half hour  set of  quality  grind if it  had been played with  straight faces -- when  a band can  intersperse  blasting speed  with moments  of  Today Is  the Day  and  Neurosis-like dissonant intensity like these  guys can, it's hard not  to get drawn  in. However, the humour element  injected combined with  the band's  markedly physical performance --  featuring such carefree  antics  as  the band's  bassist  sprawling  on  the floor  in  Spinal  Tap-like  comedy  fashion  --  made  Co-Exist  a  more  than  usually  memorable support  act. One  example of their  knife-like spontaneous  humour came at  one point in the set when  the drummer announced that  the  band's next  two  songs would  be their  last  for the  evening.  Greeted by vocalised disappointment from  the crowd, he quipped, "You  fuckin' wanna  see Nile  or not?", and  launched Co-Exist  into their  next lurching and blasting song. As profound an example of a group of  proficient musicians  who know how  to write songs --  however simple  and short they may  be -- and get into the groove of  what they do in  the raw, live arena is rarely  found in signed or unsigned bands, and  though  Co-Exist aren't  yet musically  on a  level to  challenge the  bigger guns of their stylistic approach, their rounded performance --  possessing  energy and  humour  and  displaying formidable  technical  ability -- reminded me pleasantly of the all-round experience it used  to be  to see  Brutal Truth  live when they  were still  in business.  Co-Exist may not be a band of  the same level, but they have the same  balanced elements as the masters of  grind used to have in their live  shows, and that is something not only to be thankful for, but to make  seeing Co-Exist a priority on my list of things to do in the next six  months.                                                               
Promising local  death/grind hopefuls  Regorge followed.  As had  been the case when I last saw them, supporting Dismember [CoC #48] at  this very venue,  Regorge had done anything but stand  still since my  last  encounter  with them.  The  furious,  blasting crush  the  band  brought forth  after their  militaristic intro  had finished  was let  down only by a minor murkiness of sound which clouded its subtleties,  and  the fact  that the  band's new  lead vocalist  had to  date only  clocked up a meagre  few gigs with the band. By  the time Regorge had  begun  their second  song, I  was better  tuned into  to the  rushing  intensity  of  their music,  and  began  to  notice that  the  band's  compositions  had become  yet more  vibrant and  involved, while  the  musicians playing  them had obviously  been practising hard  of late.  The tightly controlled speed and  fury of the percussive assault laid  down by the  band's drummer suggested he'd recently been  locked in a  room with just his kit and a  week's food for company. The band's one  real mistake was attempting to cover At the Gates' "Blinded by Fear".  They made a noble attempt to do  justice to a great song, but neither  their sound  nor their  playing either  mimicked the  song's original  sound effectively, or framed it in another, still positive, light. It  wasn't the  right song to  play and  Regorge humbly admitted  as much  before playing it,  but the band should have  trusted their instincts  over  their  exuberance,  and  given  us another  one  of  their  own  compositions for delectation in the place of this faint shadow of the  work of  a greater band. At  present, the band's new  vocalist is the  only noticeable chink  in the band's increasingly  rock solid armour,  and he can be forgiven for his performance this evening. Nonetheless,  taken solely on  its own merits, his low death  growling and grunting  did not  have the  character and  conviction to  it which  the former  bassist/vocalist who  now handles  the backing vocals  possessed. The  new boy  should improve with  time and practice,  but I for  one hope  Regorge  won't be  taking the  road  of milking  the brutal  American  death/grind market by leaving his  vocals as characterless and solely  brutal  as they  came out  this evening.  Despite my  few misgivings,  Regorge put on  a stunning performace, and one showing  that the band  continue to strive  towards greater things. None of  their classy new  material is yet available --  their unremarkable _Decerebate_ demo is  the last thing the band officially offered up --, but very soon a new  demo will see  the light of day,  and I would strongly  advise any of  you favourable to fresh death metal  and grindcore to keep an eye out  for it. I certainly will be.                                          
Do you  remember Dearly Beheaded? Well,  if you do then  you can  approximate the sound of Sleath by  estimating how much DB would have  progressed  their  metalcore groove  by  now.  Composed partially  of  ex-Dearly Beheaded  members, Sleath may  not sound exactly  the same,  but  its certainly  not  hard to  believe that  this  band is  ex-DB.  Unsurprisingly, the  band's style destined  them to be  tonight's odd  ones out in terms of speed. It didn't help Sleath's case that as they  began, all I could hear was  their snare drum and their singer pushed  the band yet lower in my  esteem when he began repeatedly and angrily  demanding the crowd to come down  the front and mosh -- crowds should  mosh of  their own  accord, not  'cause you tell  them to.  It's fair  to  say  that Sleath  deserve  some  respect for  evidently  throwing  themselves  into  their performance,  but  ultimately  on grounds  of  musical  quality as  well as  style, not  to mention  the quality  of  performance offered,  I'd rather have  had more Regorge  and Co-Exist  and forgone Sleath's lengthier performance, and from the looks of the  crowd -- not  many takers for that  offer of moshing --  I wasn't the  only one.                                                             
Nile were of course the  band that everyone present, ultimately,  was  waiting  for, this  being  their  first  ever appearance  on  UK  mainland, and specifically  in Scotland. Despite the  feel of tension  building up on Nile's intro, their initial assault of "Black Seeds of  Vengeance"  did not  start their  set  as the  band would  inevitably  continue. A mild murkiness of  sound muddied this initial assault and  the "Pestilence  and Iniquity"  that followed, but  by the  time Nile  were throwing "Serpent Headed Mask",  "Stones of Sorrow" and "Ramsees  Bringer of War" our way there was nothing technically amiss either in  band  or  sound-system,  and  consequently nothing  that  could  halt  Nile's  warpath of  destructive and  infectious musical  carnage. The  "Libation..." intro provided  a brief respite before  a crystal clear  "Masturbating the War God" came hurtling forth and Nile followed this  on with a  collection of _...Nephren-Ka_ favourites:  "Opening of the  Mouth" and  "Howling of the  Jinn". "The Black Flame"  brought things  back to a deceiving calm for  the last time before its explosion into  chaos and "Smashing the Antiu"  closed the forty-odd minute set. Nile  were intense,  infectious and  enjoyable to an  extent I  have rarely  experienced  with  any  band  or  event. I'd  banged  head  and  fist  furiously, I'd  air-guitared to  riffs and  solos and  shouted myself  near-hoarse echoing  the lyrics to  songs or suggesting  additions to  Nile's setlist. But I was still not satisfied; my work as a screaming  lunatic  was  not done;  Nile  had  left  the stage  without  playing  "Defiling the Gates  of Ishtar". As the band  finished with "Smashing  the Antiu" and made to leave I screamed the missing song title at the  top of  my voice and, furiously  and frantically, joined the  rest of  the crowd  in attempting  to chant  Nile back  onto stage.  Who knows  whether it was  our efforts that made the difference  or whether Nile  were just  testing our mettle  (or metal?)  by leaving, but  they did  indeed returned  to the stage --  and within only a  few minutes too.  They proceeded  to play "Defiling  the Gates  of Ishtar" --  my voice  almost died with  the cry of pure joy  I let out as they  did -- with  what was probably  the cleanest, most powerful sound of  the night. I  can hardly conceive of how the evening could have been better or more  enjoyable,  and  I  certainly  would  have  been  content  with  much  less  than the  utter brilliance  Nile  (and some  of their  support)  delivered. Nile were enrapturing; they  may not have been flawless in  performance,  but a  minorly  flawed Nile  performance  amounts to  a  downright -amazing- performance from just  about any other band. Like  Cryptopsy, Nile are  in a different league to the  general melee, and  though I could  have seemingly improved their performance  for my own  tastes and in  minor ways by changing it, this  does not detract from  the fact that this is the best gig I've been to in years.