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She and Him and A Packed House at Central Park Summerstage

9 Jul
Photo: Dana Yavin

Photo: Dana Yavin

A quick glance at the sold-out crowd at Central Park Summerstage during last Saturday’s scorcher might have suggested something ranging from slightly eerie to downright strange – there was a sea of smiling Zooey Deschanel’s baking in the New York City sun. Draped in diaphanous sun dresses, hair adornments, and soft makeup, a quirky army of fans sat on the faux green lawn of Summerstage and dined on Asiadogs and craft beer through Camera Obscura’s upbeat opening set. And then, as the sun started setting over the skyscrapers in the distance, the one and only new girl fluttered out on stage with her rock partner in crime, M. Ward, and sang “I Was Made for You” to the true sold out crowd of cute impersonators.

Let’s back up a second to answer the immediate question sparked by this opening passage. Zooey Deschanel sings? Most know the rising star from “500 Days of Summer,” “Elf,” or the hit Fox show “New Girl,” but she is also an accomplished Jazz singer with a penchant for keyboards, percussion, banjo and ukulele.

After meeting on the set of the 2007 movie “The Go-Getter,” Deschanel and M. Ward, an accomplished Indie/Folk/Rock singer-songwriter, formed a collaboration that has since released four studio albums, the most recent released in May of this year.

The skill of both musicians was apparent during the sweltering show at Summerstage. Why am I belaboring the heat? It was HOT. Hot, humid, sticky, sweaty, and sunny. But, despite the heat – both generated from the sun and by the close grouping of attendees – the 28-song set captured the ears of the concert goers, and the vast majority of listeners were hanging on every note played by She & Him’s talented band.

I was most stricken with two elements of the show. It is no surprise that Deschanel can attract an audience – she is an actress – so the large crowd of wild-eyed lookalikes was expected, but her proficiency with the vast instrumentation on stage was intriguing. M. Ward and she swapped instruments and bounced around the stage effervescently. The extensive set list mixed She & Him originals with classics like “You Really Got a Hold on Me” and “Stars Fell on Alabama.” Deschanel and her backup singer duo The Chapin Sisters also performed an airy cover of “Unchained Melody.” During the encore M. Ward rocked a cover of “Roll Over Beethoven” and Deschanel and M. Ward closed the show with a sultry version of “I Put a Spell on You.”

Overall, despite the grueling heat, She & Him and Camera Obscura were pretty darn cool. I was impressed by the talent that oozed from She & Him, and considering the engagement of the audience, I think a full crowd at Summerstage agreed with that sentiment.

Album Preview – AM by Arctic Monkeys

5 Jul

Image

Sometimes a band just seizes the moment by the scruff of its neck and everyone knows, for better or worse, that it’s theirs. This is one of those times, and Arctic Monkeys are undeniably that band. After opening the Olympics last summer and headlining Glastonbury for the second time, they have built up such momentum that their new album, AM, is going to be a Very Big Event. It may not be out until 9th September, but here are five reasons you should be very excited about it right now.

 

They owned Glastonbury

The Rolling Stones were the most anticipated; the Mumford and Sons had the biggest sing-alongs, but the Arctic Monkeys owned the weekend. From acoustic versions of Mardy Bum to making everyone dance to When the Sun Goes Down, frontman Alex Turner had the crowd in the pocket of his sparkly blazer. They had all of the confidence they lacked the first time around, telling the crowd: “See you next time.”

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OEYo0ea7HF8

They’re one of the most consistent bands about

Every album by the Arctic Monkeys has been very good, despite their constant changes in musical styles. Even Alex Turner’s side projects have been excellent – from the crooning, wistful soundtrack to Submarine to the 60’s-influenced Last Shadow Puppets album. Everything he does comes with a seal of guaranteed quality. The only divisive thing in his back catalogue is their third album Humbug;, which is generally considered a brave experiment that wasn’t wholly successful.

R U Mine? is on there!

Back when R U Mine? was released in the distant past of February 2012, most people assumed it was a one-off single, to keep us content until the next album arrived. Which was fine by us – it contained some their most aggressive musical swagger so far, full of garage rock and cryptic lyrics that Alex specialises in. According to interviews, the band “discovered something in that record we thought was worth exploring”, influencing the rest of the album.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rJD-HEAHHg8

Josh Homme is involved

The Queens of the Stone Age frontman has been producing brilliant records like clockwork for over 20 years now. He produced the band’s third album and is set to appear on their new one. He is one of the most gifted guitarists of his generation and his influence always helps to push the band in a heavier direction.

Alex has become the rockstar he was always meant to be

Like the main character in a coming of age novel, Alex has matured from an awkward teenager to an indie rock god. With each album and image makeover, his confidence has grown – just witness the suave crooning on Suck it and See. It’s difficult to remember how he once sung about romantic problems with such believability. Now he is rarely seen without a leather jacket, sunglasses and a quiff. The time has never been better to see them live.

Let’s Go Safari teach the art of breaking bad news

28 Jun

There’s a saying that you should break bad news with cake. (Or, according the current Internet trend, cute animals.) Even if they are devastated by the news, it is scientifically impossible to stay down for long with cake. Dorset-based band Let’s Go Safari have taken this method to the logical extreme by delivering almost hilariously bleak messages to summery indie pop.

Let's Go Safari

Ignore their depressing promises: the five piece band have definitely been having a good year. In the last twelve months, they have signed to Red Dragon Records, released their first EP ‘Curiosity Killed… Let’s Go Safari’ and recruited two new members to their guitar pop family. Their aim is to create ‘meticulously messy’ songs which they seem to have achieved; each song bounces from verse to chorus in unexpected ways. If you are a fan of the Shins, you will feel in familiar territory with them, despite the South Coast accents.

The most downcast song on the EP (Curiosity Kills…) is the ‘Glad to Be a Grad’, which explores the journey from optimistic University student to jaded graduate. “Take it from me, the job market’s crashed,” lead singer Ryan Woods chirps happily to an unbearably sweet pop riff. Fortunately, The simple, music-box like riff prevents it from being too depressing.

Let’s Go Safari also get a chance to show their more romantic side on ‘Down in the Basement’, although it’s filled with the same painfully honest Arctic Monkeys-like social commentary. The singer explains he doesn’t care if he a girl doesn’t ‘put out’ on the second date, despite lusting after a romance straight from the movies. Like all of their songs, it has a catchy chorus that crowds could easily pick up and sing to at a festival, as well as enough hidden depths to keep dedicated fans interested.

Check out their website, and follow the band through their Facebook.

Winning to Oasis Break-Up

21 Jun

liam and noel

Every break-up has a winner and a loser. There is always one person who has a sense of relief it is over while the other is consumed by regret. This is as true of bands as relationships. When Noel Gallagher left Oasis in 2009, he seemed determined to become the victor, claiming he “simply could not go on working with Liam a day longer.” Since then, bile has flown freely as both he and his brother Liam have competed to show who could rebound quickest. With Beady Eye about to release its second album, BE, it seems like a good time to analyse who actually won the break-up and answer the question of who had the true talent in Oasis once and for all.

The divorce got off to an unexpected start as Liam announced that he and the remaining members of Oasis were going to continue making music, and renamed themselves Beady Eye. Keen to have the first word, they released Different Gear, Still Speeding in 2011. It was a bombastic remix of Oasis’s style, doubling down on old-fashioned rock ‘n’ roll. There were hits – particularly ‘Bring the Light’ – but nothing on the anthemic scale of Oasis classics like’ Wonderwall.’

While Liam was surviving, Noel was actively flourishing with his new-found freedom. He formed Noel Gallagher’s High Flying Birds to breathe life into the material that had been sitting unused while he was in Oasis. The result was a great British album that sounded like the Kinks, Oasis and the Beatles all at once. The melodic highs of ‘If I Had a Gun’ and ‘The Death of You and Me’ were higher than on any Gallagher album since What’s the Story (Morning Glory?)

This brings us up to the present day and the release of Beady Eye’s second album, BE. Liam’s vocals are on top form as usual and the whole band gets a workout with swelling brass sections. ‘Flick of the Finger’ sounds like the climax of an action film, and the whole album will go down well at festivals this summer. However, it is unlikely to draw people in who weren’t Oasis fans.

Although the first round has undoubtedly gone to Noel, the future is uncertain for the Gallagher brothers’ rivalry. The success of High Flying Birds seems to have filled his ambitions for the moment. His collaboration with psychedelic group hasn’t surfaced two years after it was recorded, and he has recently suggested he may never record another album.

Of course, even in the messiest splits, there’s always the chance for reconciliation. The brothers are asked about reuniting Oasis in nearly every expletive filled interview and their responses have varied wildly. Noel has been philosophical, saying “you can never predict what you’ll be doing in 20 years” while Liam has gone on the record as saying he would “do it for nowt.” With the 20th anniversary of their debut album coming up next year it may be too soon to declare a victor.

The Music of Grand Theft Auto

14 Jun

GTA_San_Andreas_Soundtrack
The soundtrack is a crucial part of any film, saying what the actors can’t, yet the use of music has largely been ignored by video games. There is one huge exception to this rule, and that is the Grand Theft Auto series. In terms of maturity, diversity and originality, it is actually putting most film soundtracks to shame.

Grand Theft Auto is one of the best selling game series of all time, and it’s impossible to deny that music is a huge part of its appeal. Every time you climb in a car in-game, you have a huge host of radio stations filled with real-life songs, immersing you in that world as if it were your own. Every player has a moment of epiphany when they first start playing the game: they can go anywhere, do anything, and crucially, can listen to exactly what they want. The music has a knack for complementing exactly what you’re doing at the time – there’s dark, gritty rock for performing getaways and soaring pop ballads as you’re coasting down the highways. There is also old school hip-hop for exploring the shadier neighbourhoods. What other game can claim that discovering and enjoying new songs is actually part of the experience?

Even more impressive is the range of genres offered. Take GTA: San Andreas, which was set in a parody of 90’s LA. It could easily have been filled with alternative rock and gangsta rap; instead there is also country music, classic rock, reggae, metal and funk. There are more than 150 songs, covering the full spectrum of musical tastes. Having music you like at your fingertips at all times goes a long way in making this world believable. You will drive around, completely ignoring the game because you just want to listen to the end of song.

GTA 4 went even further, encouraging users to purchase music they enjoyed. Players could use their in-game mobile to ‘mark’ a song, and they would then receive a real email with a direct link to the song on Amazon’s music store. Minutes after you first heard it on the game, you could download the song to your iPod.

The latest game in the series, GTA 5, is due to be released later this year and promises to be even larger and more diverse than usual. The trailers include music by Queen, rapper Jay Rock, and country singer Weylon Jennings, tailored to the different characters. Instead of simply signing the latest hit single, the developers Rockstar have a knack for picking music that says something about the characters and the world they inhabit.

It’s refreshing to have game producers take music seriously rather than as a marketing gimmick. The people responsible for sound tracking most films and TV shows would do well to take note.