A terribly honest review of the gigs of my 2008.

Thursday 27 March 2008

FOALS @ ASTORIA 17/03/08

FOALS

Foals are a bunch of incredibly talented musicians. Every instrument is mastered; the drumming is precise complexities, the lead guitarist manages to play terribly difficult guitar parts whilst throwing himself around in a manner where I'd struggle to even stay on my feet, and even Yannis with his yelped vocals manage to make the perfect equilateral band. But they also manage to prove why the current popularity of 'rock' music is actually a detrimental force to the scene. Foals are yet to release their album at the time that they play this show and yet they've sold out a 2000 capacity venue, have been main support for a Bloc Party tour that ended with two nights at Alexandra Palace and have appeared on the front cover of every appropriate music publication. Which leaves you wondering, 'All of this on the back of a couple of singles?' If this had happened five years ago they'd be headlining the Barfly or possibly The Garage and getting tiny columns in the 'To Be Watched' sections of the music press. Instead we have a band who have so much potential they have some saved in off-shore accounts, but who appear to be suffering from the spotlight too soon. It is apparent in their performance tonight and even in their debut album.

The singles, as expected, manage to stand out in the set, while Olympic Airwaves and set-closer Electric Bloom manage to stand their own, but too often it seems as though something is missing. Perhaps it is the self-belief that would normally come from working their way up through the venues over years or perhaps they were just suffering from the end-of-tour-tiredness, but whatever it is I'm left feeling empty. While the band prove tonight that they should be one of the best UK bands to emerge in the noughties, they will only achieve this if they're given the time to build a sound on their ability without too much expectation.

http://www.myspace.com/foals

FLASH! FLASH! FLASH! PHOTOGRAPHY @ THE SOCIAL 17/03/08

FLASH! FLASH! FLASH! PHOTOGRAPHY

3FP are impossible to generalise. Marsha of Xfm fame labelled them 'fight-pop'. Now, even putting my hatred for genres that make no sense and are lacking in any indication as to the band's musical stylings aside (if I were to not disregard it I'd label them 'party-core'), I disagree. She also puts Tellison in the same group but you'd hardly lump them together. In fairness she has only heard Aquaman and you could draw some comparisons there I guess, but this band currently seem unable to decide what they want to sound like and instead sound like bits of everything. This is charming in a way, but disjointed too and I'd imagine that people might love one song and then head to the bar during the one after as it's not their kind of thing.

Tonight they air two new songs, both of which hint at a more defined direction. The first to be played, Beeps And Clicks, is one that the band have been championing as their biggest 'hit' yet, so much so that it has even found it's way into their Facebook statuses. And yet tonight it fails to grab me. Unlike the other debutant, Steven Glansberg, which leaves myself and others around me dumbfounded. Sounding like a Kerrang! mash-up of The Bronx's Californian rock 'n' roll with smatterings of the pop-hardcore of Set Your Goals and even a shake of Be Your Own Pet's youthful abandonment, 3FP have managed to write one of my favourite songs of 2008.

I feared them topping that and, had it not been for their especially prepared cover of Flying Without Wings by Westlife in honour of St Patrick's Day, I doubt they would have. Starting at the regular pace of the ballad, the tempo slowly crept up on me until Mike was in full screaming and the band were in sloppy-punk mode, at which point Folu would interject with the next verse at the original speed and take the song off the boil just to build it up again. An incredible adaption that proves that the band really know how to make a song their own, they followed that with traditional set-closer, Aquaman and I left for the Astoria a happy fan.

http://www.myspace.com/flashflashflashphotography

LENNY KRAVITZ @ KOKO 13/03/08

LENNY KRAVITZ

I was raised on Lenny Kravitz. When I try to remember the first song that I ever saw on MTV, back when MTV was just the one channel, I think of Are You Gonna Go My Way by Kravitz. I remember the lights and the female drummer. I think of the dreads. And it is not at all surprising that I think of that riff. He was always one of those acts that I'd love to see based purely on my youth, but I only bought tickets for this show due to my mum desperately wanting to see him. At £40.20 each ticket after fees I certainly wouldn't have bought tickets if it weren't for her. I was even less enthused when I found out that there would be no support. All of that money for just one man, and what turned out to be a one hour and forty-five minute set.

It wasn't really worth it. He has produced many albums each crammed with a ton of filler and the odd anthemic single. With this show destined to be used to road-test his latest album, Love Revolution, live, I understood that we would probably get half hits and half shite. Something that I did not expect however was Lenny Kravitz to bring with him his merry bunch of talented session musicians (including a brass section) and then masquerade as the new James Brown, extending his new songs into jazz-funk odysseys that were more just odd. The one saving grace was his ability to pull out a hit at just the right moment to remind me that he can write them, and with songs like Mr Cab Driver, Again and Fly Away unleashed he managed to appease me.

Well until Let Love Rule that is. Having kept the older songs to their original length previously, he decided to extend this one by continually repeating the title lyric, before he began preaching unity, brotherhood, Christianity and a need for a 'Love Revolution' to the crowd. He then asked for people to join him on stage for a mass dance along. The whole thing was painful. Looking over the faces of the crowd you could see that his search for community had been successful, it just meant that everyone was united in alienating his warmth with beautiful British cynicism. Some things are best left to the past it seems.

http://www.myspace.com/lennykravitz

Tuesday 25 March 2008

CASIOTONE FOR THE PAINFULLY ALONE @ BUSH HALL 05/03/08

CASIOTONE FOR THE PAINFULLY ALONE

Casiotone For The Painfully Alone are like watching that moment in City Of Angels when Meg Ryan dies and Nicholas Cage is left alone having given up an eternity for a few measly hours with her. It is like the moment when Anna leaves in The O.C. and Seth is left, tears in his eyes and his nose pressed against the glass of the airport check-in window. It is like those songs that you listen to when you break up with the kind of girl or guy who shape your life and is like when your best friend leaves for another country and you wonder how you ever coped before you met them. Casiotone For The Painfully Alone manage to harness all of that misery and emotion and melancholy and make songs out of it, songs that make your stomach tangle and your throat dry. Live this only happens quicker and more emphatically.


Drawing largely from Etiquette they only really leave out Tonight Was A Disaster from the 'must play' list of songs, but this really doesn't matter. Opening with Cold White Christmas, Owen Ashworth (the man behind CFTPA) has the audience hushed and attentive from the very off. His electro-fused emo couldn't be better suited to his sullen, almost monotone vocals that express his stories of abandonment, false hope and emptiness with aplomb. And so, when Jenny Herbinson joins him on stage to add some female vocals to the mix, it is quite a surprise to find that her innocent, borderline naive, sunshine-like personality manages to add just the right tone to the songs to give them an idea of possibility, but the kind of possibility that would never come true. The highlight of the set for me though was Hobby Holly where Owen sang alone, unaccompanied by any instrument for the vast majority of the song before a small explosion of sound toward the end. Somehow, cutting the clutter and just having the voice, broken and unashamed, singing as though it were only him and Holly in the room managed to make the whole song so much more poignant.

Somewhat coincidentally this show happened to be the very first that I went to alone. It didn't end up being at all painful however. CFTPA are a band that are best suited to having no distractions, nothing to disturb your mind from fixating on the beautiful agony of real life represented without shame or excuses, just a hope that one day a smile will see you through.

http://www.myspace.com/cftpa

Wednesday 19 March 2008

SLOW CLUB/ THE WAVE PICTURES @ THE ENTERPRISE 04/03/08

SLOW CLUB

This is the third time that I've seen Slow Club in 2008 and I'm getting to a point where it is impossible to describe quite how great they are. So I will try to explain it in an alternative way. Having introduced an ex-girlfriend of mine to them at the beginning of the year and her now being just as much of a fan as I a, I decided to buy an extra ticket on this occasion too and introduce my best friend to them. To put it simply, he has asked me to not only ensure that I buy him a ticket for every gig I go to that Slow Club play in future, but also for me to introduce him to more bands that I like in the future. Apparently they're good enough to reinstate his faith in my music taste.

The band currently only have a single that has been released as well as an early demo (or at least that's all that I've been able to get my hands on) and so they draw largely from songs that will be appearing on their imminent debut album. However, where some bands might suffer with this unfamiliarity, Slow Club manage to make their music seem familiar. Perhaps this is in it's simplicity, or perhaps it is due to the catchy, pop-like elements of their acoustic, stripped-down music. Ultimately I feel that Slow Club manage to answer that age-old question of, 'If I love this band this much how can other people not feel the same?' Slow Club, it would appear, make it impossible not to like them.

I will inevitably see this band at least five or six times more this year. It seems that I'm powerless to buy tickets and desperate to see them in action. You should see them, I promise that you will start paying more attention to my recommendations if you do.

http://www.myspace.com/slowclub


THE WAVE PICTURES

When I saw The Wave Pictures supporting Slow Club just over a month ago I was a fan of the way they went about their music even if their music didn't appeal to me greatly. There was a certain swagger and light-heartedness about their performance, from the soloing on lead and bass guitars to the giggle-worthy banter between songs, all of which seems to have been lost in this performance. Perhaps the band are taking the show a little more seriously due to the packed room and their headline slot, but I feel that something vital has definitely been lost in the process.

I expected my friend - the one that I dragged along to see Slow Club - to really like The Wave Pictures. They're currently producing music that belongs in the mid-90s but seems current enough to warrant a revival. My friend, who I remember loving Suede and Supergrass and other bands that once graced the superb 'Shine' series, should lap these up. But instead he appears totally uninterested. I am too and I'm starting to feel embarrassed for expecting him to be a fan. I'm certain that he would have been had he seen them at the Borderline when they managed to impress me. Tonight we both decided to leave early instead.

http://www.myspace.com/thewavepictures