Friday, October 25, 2013

Review: Savages @ Le Grand Mix, Tourcoing 23/10/2013

Slightly dreary October weeknight. A pretty well suited meteorological backdrop to the gig I was anticipating the most (albeit slightly, Warpaint in two weeks is also a solid contender) in late 2013: All female band Savages, evoking the early eighties vibes of bands such as Joy Division and Siouxsie and the Banshees.

Historical event in my personal history, the first time I can remember travelling abroad by myself to witness a musical performance. This is of course a slightly moot point, as Tourcoing is geographically way closer than Antwerp and Brussels, where I have also attented shows in the past. Nevertheless, venturing into France is always an adventure for easily disoriented persons such as myself. All it takes for me to get completely lost are slightly different road signs and road lines. Whereas I am sometimes nostalgic about days past, when going on an adventure by car in unknown territory, I am always happy and grateful to live in a time where a GPS is commonplace. Also present at Le Grand Mix, one of my top 5 favourite couples celebrating their 4 years together. Congrats again, Bram and Rosalie!

Opening act Johnny Hostile turned out to be a solo project. Johnny playing guitar, accompanied by a drum machine, reminiscing - not unlike the headliner of the evening - the darker music that came out in the eighties. When Jehnny Beth from Savages joined him on-stage for one track, comparisons to 'The Kills' automatically came to mind. Not bad, yet hardly memorable.

Savages then occupied the stage. I had expected them to play about 40 minutes, but they played nearly every song they have (apart from the instrumental track 'Dead Nature' and closing track 'Marshal dear' from the full album), and entertained the crowd for about an hour. It's always gratifying to see a band at a stage in their musical career where they still need their whole back catalogue to fill the setlist. Never any "I had hoped they would play this or that track"-complaints. Sound was adequate to good, and the stage performance was vibrant. The band dressed in mostly black, adhering closely to their own image.
Having watched some Youtube videos before the show, I noticed however that the Tourcoing performance lacked the punch I saw in some of the other live videos. Every musician was playing good in their own universe, but they seemed to be out of sync with each other for just a split second, which was nevertheless sufficient to slightly break the magic of complete synchronicity. It's possible that this was due to some technical issues the band wrestled with gracefully throughout the set.
Frontwoman Jehnny Beth is originally from France, so she had no problem addressing the crowd in their native language (even though a substantial part of the audience audibly crossed the border from Belgium just like myself). 'Il y a des hommes sauvages' when a heckler roared in the crowd and an (overly ironic) "les femmes ne connaissent rien du technique" when her monitor temporarily gave up the ghost among the headlights in that department. Apart from that, she's a frontwoman with an intense presence that really engages the crowd.
The set overall was well-balanced, opener 'I am here' serving well as a letter of intent. Weakest track in my opinion was 'I need something new', which couldn't really hold my attention. Luckily, the band recovered quickly. Definite highlight was the "Waiting for a sign/Flying to Berlin"-combo, the groovy nature of the latter contrasting well with the slow, brooding vibe of the former. Energetic single 'Husbands' also did not miss its mark.
Despite the minor criticisms I formulated earlier, my high expectations for this show were definitely met by a band on top of their game. I definitely see them going places, and urge you to go check them out if you're in the mood for a truly engaging, sizzling, contemporary post-punk live performance.

Setlist:

I am here
City's full
Shut up
I need something new
Strife
Waiting for a sign
Flying to Berlin
She will
No face
Hit me
Husbands
Fuckers

Sunday, September 22, 2013

Essential tracks by The Strokes: Top 10 and top 15

Listening to Room On Fire (it had been a couple of years) earlier this week, I decided to list what I consider to be the most essential tracks by The Strokes. Album-wise, it's pretty easy: 'Is this it?', 'Room on fire' and 'Angles' are all good and consistently so, 'First impressions of earth' is mediocre at best, and 'Comedown machine' does very, very little for me.

Here we go: (everything apart from the top 3 listed in random order)

Top 10


1. Under control

It's a ballad-type song, but yet, it sounds powerful, and has a retro feel. (Making the superposition of The Virgin Suicides-footage work really well).


2. Hard to explain

Most people think of 'Someday' and 'Last nite' when discussing the 'Is this it?', but I always preferred 'Hard to explain'. Indestructible.


3. You only live once

The only track of 'First impressions of earth' to make it in my top 10 and top 15, on this light and poppy track, with a jumpy rhythm, we see The Strokes steering away even further from the garagerock sound of their early days.


Taken for a fool

A verse riddled with start-stop mechanics coupled with a rock chorus with a piercing riff. My favourite track off 'Angles'.


Reptilia

Second single off the 'Room of fire'-album. Definitely a solid bass intro, and I love the (long) bridge onto the "Our lives are changing lanes/You ran me off the road"-chorus.


Barely legal

Playful album track off the debut album.


The end has no end

Third single off the 'Room on fire'-album. Soundwise comparable (guitars almost sounding like keyboards) to first single '12:51', but this single has more to offer in the songwriting department, in my opinion.


Macchu Picchu

Also going for pop sensibility and almost reggae-esque rhythms, the second single that came off the 'Angles'-album.


Take it or leave it

Closing track off the debut album. The Strokes at their most urgent.


Meet me in the bathroom

One of my favorite 'Room on fire' album tracks. Riff-wise not too far away from some of the material 'Kings Of Leon' would come out with a couple of years later.


Because 10 tracks is not enough to feature all my favourite tracks, I need a top 15.

Top 15


What ever happened?

Opening the 'Room on fire'-album with a bang.


The modern age

Second track on the debut album, driven by a repetitive verse that lasts for over a mintue until we reach the chorus.


Between love and hate

Slower "Room on fire"-track, with Julian repeating "Never needed anybody/It won't change now" throughout the song.


Soma

Another debut album track, with some catchy guitar riffs.


I can't win

Final track on the 'Room on fire' album, that sounds pretty chipper, which contrasts with the resigned lyrics.


Wildcard


Life is simple in the moonlight

Interesting track, didn't make the top 15, but notable due to its lack of percussion.


Monday, September 9, 2013

I don't see what's strange about this

Radio

The National - Don't swallow the cap

Likely the most up-tempo single we've ever heard from The National.


The Vaccines - Melody Calling

Conjecture: The Vaccines are forced to write more downtuned material due to singer's Justin Young's voice issues. Doesn't bother me if it's as good as this song.


Chvrches - Gun

The Scottish elektro-pop trio with yet another solid gold single.


Breach - Jack

Let's not kid ourselves here: I know for a fact you've sang along to this at least a couple of times.


Chris Malinchak - So Good To Me

I'd probably go for this if you'd ask me to pick 'the ultimate 2013 summer song'.


Delv!s - Tell me

Only realizing that a track is by a Belgian artist after hearing it about ten times, that's one of the biggest compliments you can get.


Deap Vally - Bad for my body

Watched a fun live streamed set by these gals from some summer festival.


Icona Pop - Girlfriend

Icona Pop borrowing a chorus that Jay-Z borrowed from Tupac. And who knows where he got the idea, right? I feel like this ultimate female BFF party anthem isn't getting enough love. In my world, this is a smash hit record.


Disclosure - You And Me Ft Eliza Doolittle

This Disclosure track has a distinct nineties garage feel.


Lorde - Tennis courts

The Lana Del Rey influence shines through on a thematical level and in the phrasing of the lyrics.


Other

Daughter - Youth/Landfill

Elena Tonra's acoustic efforts sport a distinct 'take no prisoners, shoot straight to the heart'-approach. Beautiful. "This is dangerous/I want you so much, but I hate your guts/I hate you".


Poliça - Chain my name/The maker

I've been into Poliça's atmospheric tunes lately. "The maker" is a stunning track of their "Give you the ghost"-album. And "Chain my name' is a definite winner from their upcoming new album. "So are we made/ Just to fight/ All of our lives"


Little Dragon - Shuffle a dream

Listening to Poliça reminded me of this Swedish outfit. This is a track off their "Ritual Union" album.


Alt-J - Breezeblocks

Already a modern classic with a music video that's worth watching.


The Smiths - This night has opened my eyes

"I'm not happy and I'm not sad". Yup, this must be the Mozzer! Check out this relaxed track from the "Hatful of hollow"-album.


Tegan And Sara - Closer

I saw the video where Taylor Swift invited Tegan and Sara on-stage to perform this track, and was left to ponder "Why hasn't this been a worldwide hit?"


Aluna George - You know you like it/Your drum, your love

Killer legs! There, I said it. The musical side of AlunaGeorge is also alluring. Good stuff!