
The volume is turned up so high that when Keiren Webster's bassline kicks in, the windows of the tour bus begin to shake.
And when guitarist Pete Reilly plays his first power chord, they threaten to fly out of their frames completely.
Forget Led Zeppelin, My Bloody Valentine and even Mogwai.
When it comes to loud, even Motörhead's Lemmy might quake at the sheer ear-splitting volume The View are coaxing from their on-board hi-fi.
"Shout it from the rooftops," insists the colossal chorus...but we're betting that, at these sound levels, that might not be necessary.
The View are playing their favourite new album - and, coincidentally, it's their own.
Which Bitch is the follow-up to last year's chart-topping Hats Off To The Buskers.
It's not out until next year but the band treated A-Listed to a sensational sneak preview.
And the verdict? Frontman Kyle Falconer insisted: "It's magical."
Keiren, meanwhile, suggested: "It's majestic."
"It's the bee's knees," grinned Pete.
But the truth is, it's probably even BETTER than that.
Together with producer Owen Morris and string arranger Ollie Kraus, the four-piece from Dundee have pulled off the impossible and created a masterpiece.
The gutsy punk-rock thrills that made their debut so essential are all still present and correct.
Yet this time around there's much more besides, including dazzling orchestral fantasies like the breathtaking Distant Doubloon, toe-tapping shanties (Typical Time 2), massed choirs (Glass Smash) and raw, celtic-infused rhythm and blues (Double Yellow Lines).
Those who've been content to dismiss them as Tayside tearaways with a well-deserved reputation for bad behaviour, mayhem and drunkenness might want to have a rethink because Which Bitch proves they've got lofty musical ambitions too.
"We've moved on," explained Pete. "We've gone out of our way to put a bit of extra thought into the recordings this time round," added Keiren. "Just to make things more interesting and a wee bit different."
Partly, of course, that's the result of the amazing success clocked up by their platinum-selling debut.
Kyle confided: "We'd say to Owen, 'It'd be good to have an orchestra on this' and whereas before he'd have said, 'Well, we've not got the budget for that, you've already spent your tenner at the pub' this time it was, 'Well, you can do that if you want to'."
Elements of the new album will be familiar to long-term fans - at least three songs, Jimmy's Crazy Conspiracy, One-Off Pretender and recent single 5 Rebbeccas, have been in the band's live set since last December. But the process of putting Which Bitch together really got under way when indie legend Owen - famous as the man who rescued the crisis-hit recording sessions for Oasis's Definitely Maybe - flew up to Dundee in January to hear their new tunes.
Kyle explained: "He came up to Scotland and really kicked things into gear.
"He wanted to know what was going on with the album and more or less pushed everything forward. He was really a key part of it all."
Work continued in February and March with a series of test recordings at Owen's home in Wales.
To inspire themselves to push beyond the conventional indie format, they continuously blasted out hits by Fleetwood Mac.
The operation then moved to the world-famous Monnow Valley Studio, also in Wales, in May to begin recording work on the album proper.
But the sessions were nearly over before they'd even begun. After the band celebrated their reunion with Owen over a hearty liquid breakfast, 21-year-old Kyle decided to take a dip in the River Monnow, which runs alongside the studio.
One insider revealed: "It's a beautiful, fast-flowing salmon river but the current is very strong.
"Kyle jumped in and was pulled under almost immediately. When he didn't reappear, we really thought we'd lost him.
"He finally struggled to the surface 500 yards downstream and managed to grab onto a branch.
"He'd no clothes and he looked like a drowned rat. But, because he was a bit the worse for wear, it took him about an hour to scramble up the bank."
It wasn't the only time the singer got into trouble messing about on the river.
On another occasion he clambered into a dinghy, determined to sail down to the local pub.
But while the bar was four miles away as the crow flies, the winding river meant a journey of more than double that. As a result, the mop-haired frontman spent almost the entire day out on the water. Pete recalled: "We had a lot of fun there. We had a raft that we used to go out on as well. It's a beautiful place so it was nice, now and again, to take a break and have a bit of a laugh."
On another occasion, Steven - known to most band insiders by his nickname 'Crazy Mo' - took Owen on a pub crawl in nearby Monmouth that ended in a tattoo parlour.
Keiren laughed: "Now Owen's got a View tattoo just like the ones we've all got. It will wind Liam and Noel up - he doesn't have an Oasis one." Meanwhile in a series of gruelling all-night sessions, the ambitious structure of Which Bitch began to take shape.
Kyle and Keiren would frequently drag the producer out of bed to record song ideas.
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Billiards, pool
Croatia Service
By NonsIcece.. Posted July 14 2009 at 4:21 PM.
easily the best band too come out of Scotland
in my opinion
use need ti get ti australia to play a gig
wid be class
By Ryan Shackleton .. Posted November 19 2008 at 9:55 AM.