Showing posts with label Deerhunter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Deerhunter. Show all posts

Favourite gigs of 2013

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A slightly smaller tally of gigs attended this year, I think it ended up as something like 38 gigs and four three-day festivals, three of which were All Tomorrow's Parties. To be honest I saw so many good performances at the final three ATPs that I could have done a top 10 of those alone. Next year is bound to have a different dynamic of course. As usual I have tried to find some amateur footage of the gig in question, which isn't always possible.

1. My Bloody Valentine, Hammersmith Apollo, March

I have seen My Bloody Valentine many times over the years, so I was delighted to see that they were on top form both nights at Hammersmith. The first night shades it, I thought it was flawless,and underlined why they are one of my favourite bands of all time. I reviewed it here.



2. Deerhunter's ATP hat-trick, All Tomorrow's Parties, Camber Sands, June

Deerhunter have always been an impressive live band, and their ambitious task of playing three albums on three consecutive nights at ATP was always going to be a challenge. It turned out to be a triumph, and it was actually too hard to single out which of the shows was my favourite. My report on the whole festival is here.



3. Colin Stetson, London Cafe Oto, October

It's always great to see a musician and marvel at how they are doing what they are doing. In Stetson's case, he manages to bring percussion, melody lines and fills out of his bass sax, all without the aid of electronic trickery. It was even better to see this at close range in such an intimate setting.


4. Kraftwerk 3D, Latitude Festival, July

After the frustration of missing out on tickets for their Tate Modern shows, i was pleased that this show was every bit as good as I had hoped. They played a "greatest hits" set, not hugely different from the last time I saw them nine years ago, but the 3D made it special. Festival report here


5. Television performing Marquee Moon, All Tomorrow's Parties, Camber Sands, November

I'm sure people will be surprised at how high this is in my gigs of the year but, having been utterly disappointed by them in 2002, I thought I probably wouldn't even see Television again. This performance however, was stellar, and the guitar interplay was just beautiful.


6. White Fence, Tufnell Park Dome, May

White Fence were a revelation both times I saw them this year (the other was at the final ATP). I could take or leave their records up to this point, but they stole the show at this five band bill.

7. Parquet Courts, London Sebright Arms, March


Arriving on a wave of hype, Parquet Courts actually managed to live up it with this blistering show in the cosy basement of the Sebright Arms. It is unlikely that I'll see them anywhere as intimate again.

8. The Wave Pictures, London Lexington, December

This was billed as their Christmas party, but there were no cheesy seasonal tunes, just a career spanning set and some choice covers (Daniel Johnson, Lou Reed, the Modern Lovers). David Tattersall's guitar playing is worth seeing anyway, but I particularly loved the way the three of them fit together as a tight, minimal unit.

9. Factory Floor, London Corsica Studios, September

A wonderful, trance-like set just before the album came out, which seemed to hold the room in its spell. The best compliment that I can pay it is that, at the end, I couldn't tell whether they had played for ten minutes or two hours. They seemed so unstoppable it was a shame when they ended.


10. Tim Hecker, Pete Swanson, London St John's Church, September

This got into the top 10 by a nose, mainly because of the double bill of Swanson's brilliantly abrasive noise and Hecker's immersive ambient pieces, and also because the setting of this big old church fitted the music perfectly.

Honourable mentions for those great acts I saw that were just squeezed out of this top 10, take a bow, Shellac, Loop, Mogwai, John Grant, Swans, the Sea and Cake, Daughter, Dan Deacon, Yo La Tengo (twice!), Melody's Echo Chamber, Dinosaur Jr, Ex Models, the Breeders, Tortoise, Scout Niblett, Bored Spies, the Pastels.

FESTIVAL REPORT: All Tomorrow's Parties curated by Deerhunter, June 21st-23rd 2013

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It always takes a few days for the dust to settle and to get your thoughts together after an instalment of All Tomorrow's Parties. This one was even more of a challenge for me as I had to work on Monday afternoon, so I was straight back into the ugly modern world with a bang. Now, over a week later, I'm still trawling through clips and pics and words on the internet.

After the Atlas Sound gig last summer, I knew this ATP festival would be special. That show, on top of one by Deerhunter several years ago, sealed it for me that Bradford Cox is a very formidable talent.

On paper it looked like a decent line-up, with a few naysayers grumbling that Deerhunter playing their three previous albums was not a strong enough draw, but in practice this turned out to be one of the best ATPs I have been to. There is no doubt that the factor that made this so special was Bradford Cox's very hands-on approach to curation. This always makes an ATP better of course, and the likes of Matt Groening, and more recently, Julian Koster of Neutral Milk Hotel (at Jeff Mangum's ATP) or the twins from the National have made great efforts to engage with other artists that they've chosen to appear.


Bradford took this practice to extremes - appearing on stage no less than five times on Friday night. We had his apologetic opening turn as Atlas Sound, where he sang over backing tracks instead of playing guitar, claiming quite reasonably that he had been too busy re-learning 60 Deerhunter songs. He then briefly helped re-unite Stereolab during Tim Gane's Cavern of Anti-Matter set by bringing out Laetitia for a version of 'Blue Milk', and filled the TBA slot in the programme himself, by jamming an improvised set with the Tom Tom Club. In fact only Martin Bramah's reinvigorated Blue Orchids escaped his attention, their own 'Dumb Magician' providing one of the early, Bradford-less highlights.

The Breeders playing the Last Splash was a treat in itself, with Kim Deal smiling like mad the whole way through it, and they augmented that album with a cover of Guided By Voices's 'Shocker in Gloomtown', a very liberal helping of songs from Pod, and the inevitable Cox cameo on 'I Just Want to Get Along'. All of that meant that I missed most of No Age, but on the three songs I saw they were on blistering form, and it seems they are back to a duo again. The first Deerhunter appearance of the weekend ended the main stage activity for Friday, with the whole of Cryptograms and then the Fluorescent Grey EP getting played, and sounding utterly incredible. I meant to make notes on this, but all I wrote for this slot was "completely brilliant", so there you go.

Due to the fact that our chalet was right outside the venue, Saturday began with the Microcastle soundcheck rumbling through the wall. Some songs were played three or four times as I drifted in and out of sleep.

Once inside, it was over to Ex Models to start the day with an impressive jolt of spiky noise. Featuring Kid Millions and Shahin Matia from Oneida, this lot hadn't been heard of for over five years, but today they revisited their last album Chrome Panthers and it sounded ace. If Bradford Cox was the ever present persona on Friday - and in fact he was standing in the crowd near me watching Ex Models - then Saturday was Oneida's turn, as they all appeared for a mesmerising improv set with the legendary Rhys Chatham as well. They had a lot of fun, with Chatham switching between trumpet and guitar and the band providing the intensity. I found it an infinitely better improv effort than Kim Gordon and Ikue Mori's set, which didn't connect with me at all.

Tom Tom Club provided the Saturday night fun antedote upstairs, dropping in a cover of 'You Sexy Thing' straight after 'Genius Of Love'. A most un-ATP move, but it went down very well. My enjoyment of Panda Bear downstairs was dampened by a packed and humid room, and whilst his set was all new material, I have to say that the songs I heard sounded awfully pretty.

Maybe because it is my favourite of their records, Deerhunter's Microcastle set seemed to go up a gear from the brilliant Cryptograms performance. Although they had a technical hitch, this enabled Bradford to tell stories, and when they came back they played a TWENTY minute version of 'Nothing Ever Happened' which got into to such a krautrock groove it sounded, in that moment, the best thing ever.

Someone realised that Deerhunter and the B-53s share a bassist and this meant that the tribute band's slot was moved until the end of the main stage festivities. It was strange to have a tribute band at an ATP but they were damn enjoyable and perfect for Saturday night. As well as the hits, their version of 'Give Me Back My Man' was so much fun.

Talking of fun, I spent the rest of the night in the over-subscribed party at Chalet 205, which was the sweatiest, most claustrophobic and most fun chalet party I have been to at ATP. A seemingly impossible number of people were at it and when I left, on the friendly suggestion of security staff, it was daylight and the seagulls were already prowling.


(l-r: William Basinski, Rhys Chatham, Laetitia Sadier)

I was appreciative of Sunday's quiet start, including an attempt at the quiz where I learnt that Bradford Cox and myself stopped getting on with the NME at precisely the same point - namely the appalling 0/10 review of Stereolab's 'Cobra and Phases Group' in 1999. I never bought a copy since, and it seems he had a similar reaction.

The actual Steve Reich was first on the main stage first for a performance of 'Clapping'. Musicians from the London Sinfonietta performed his music for the next hour (Electric Counterpoint and New York Counterpoint), ending with a '2x5' which with its conventional guitar-bass-drums-keys arrangement sounds not unlike post-rock. It made perfect sense to have Reich and his music at ATP, as he has inspired so many bands that have played the festival over the years.

Quiet Sunday continued with a lovely set from Laetitia Sadier who seemed relaxed and eager to talk to the crowd. She played a lot of her new album and then she introduced a new song dedicated to the much-missed Trish Keenan of Broadcast which I think must have had an impact on Bradford Cox, as Deerhunter's Halcyon Digest set later that evening was touched by the same air of melancholy.

Before that though, William Basinski created some sedate loops to a mostly reverential audience in the sticky second-stage area, and the great Michael Hurley played a great set to an initially small crowd on stage one. It felt to me that everyone who ventured in to hear his set stayed with it, and I know the comparison is back-to-front, but he reminded me a lot of the late Vic Chesnutt. Nice rants about YouTube and Monsanto as well!

One of the worst clashes happened later on Sunday, when Pere Ubu and Dan Deacon overlapped for fifteen minutes. Pere Ubu sounded on great form, David Thomas seated and chatting centre stage, giving out against claims that he is "grumpy". I left after a superb version of 'The Modern Dance' and got in position for Dan Deacon.

Even though I've seen his 'audience participation' act before, there is still something very special about it. He gets a crowd who are too cool for such things to dance and run around a packed venue at his bidding, which makes me think that there is some sort of magic in the air. His drummers, Jeremy Hyman (of Boredoms and Ponytail) and Kevin O'Meara, play a blinder as well, and the energy level and humidity meant that I had to go and get changed immediately afterwards.

It is left to the final Deerhunter set to bring the metaphorical curtain down on the main stage with their album Halcyon Digest. Until tonight this was probably my least favourite of the three (there's little between them though), but this set built up slowly, again seemingly in tune with the underlying Sunday "vibe". The big blow-out this time was 'Desire Lines' which was just fantastic, but the memorable moments come around 'Coronado' and 'He Would Have Laughed', two pieces written as a tribute to the late Jay Reatard and tonight the latter is also dedicated to Trish Keenan, a woman whose influence (and that of her band Broadcast) was felt strongly at this festival. Bradford made an impassioned and genuine speech about how this weekend was the best of his life - and having witnessed him enjoying himself so much I cannot argue with that.

Within the hour a skinny stage diver is carried aloft by the still lively crowd watching the edgy electronica of Black Dice close out stage two. Of course it's Bradford Cox, and the crowd gave him a final lap of the venue as he surfs overhead. He was there at the beginning and the end, and seemingly all points in between, and the efforts of him and his band made this one of the very best ATPs. As I said earlier, there was magic in the air.

Some previous ATP adventures
Curated by Jeff Mangum
ATP versus the Fans
Curated by Slint

PREVIEW: ATP curated by Deerhunter

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*** a review of this event can be found here ***

The last time I saw Bradford Cox on stage he was playing a rambling and diverse set in London's Scala, the hot and humid atmosphere playing havoc with his jet-lag. He was brilliant though, effortlessly improvising around the tunes we knew from the Atlas Sound releases and getting some inspirational sounds from what looked like a straightforward singer-songwriter set-up.
Now it is the turn of his band Deerhunter to curate one of the final weekend All Tomorrow's Parties - the last one in the summer, if any of you are last minute ticket buyers there is still time and the link is here - and they have pulled together a diverse and interesting bill. There is indie-rock a-plenty, not least with the Breeders revisiting the Last Splash on it's 20th anniversary, modern classical (Steve Reich, William Basinski) and luminaries of alternative music stretching themselves in new ventures. Panda Bear and Avey Tare from Animal Collective appear separately, the latter with his new project Slasher Flicks, as do Laetitia Sadier and Tim Gane formerly of Stereolab. Laetitia is solo and Tim has a brand new band called Cavern of Anti-Matter. I could go on but instead I'll point you towards a Spotify playlist which I have made as my homework, or prep, for the event.



The best album releases of the month, May 2013

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It is proving to be a thankless task to divide this year into 12 chunks. Strong releases just keep coming, so much so that the months are running into each other, and also it is has been hard to whittle May's albums into a tidy 10. Once again I've ignored the very obvious - Daft Punk, Savages, Laura Marling - as they've already had lots of coverage on both blogs and mainstream media. Anyway, here are my choices...


The National 'Trouble Will Find Me' choice tracks: I Need My Girl, I Should Live in Salt, Sea Of Love

A much slower-burning effort than their other albums, this took several listens to click, and I've always clicked with the National's other records straight away. Gradually the lyrical gems hooked me again once again ('Humiliation' in particular is so stunning I feel like applauding), Berninger is pretty much my favourite lyric writer of the last few years, and the tunes are stronger and even catchier than I had thought at first. This will definitely be close to the top of the tree when we draw a line under 2013.


Colleen 'The Weighing of the Heart' choice tracks: Humming Fields, Raven, The Weighing of the Heart
my review the 405
"In terms of subverting the singer-songwriter motif and turning it into something new and genuinely strange, this album reminds me of Arthur Russell's The World of Echo. Songs are hinted at and then morphed into something you don't expect. That Colleen has managed to create a work this beautiful whilst developing her inventive music is something that should be applauded. This album is a genuine delight."


Scout Niblett 'It's Up To Emma' choice tracks: Gun, Second Chance Dreams, What Can I Do?
An album written in the aftermath of a relationship that has ended, 'It's Up To Emma' is as good a record as Scout Niblett has made to date. All those emotions are turned into songs - you have the revenge fantasy of 'Gun', defiance on 'You Can't Fool Me Now', hope ('Second Chance Dreams') and finally, resolution. Musically, the bare bones of her raw guitar and single drummer are joined by string arrangements this time around, which works very well with this material.
I was lucky enough to interview Scout Niblett about this album, the feature can be found on the 405 here


The Fall 'Re-Mit' choice tracks: Victrola Time, Hittite Man, Loadstones

This current line-up have delivered three albums as a unit with mixed results - Your Future Our Clutter was an impressive new lease of life, whilst Ersatz GB failed to deliver much that was memorable, save for a bizarre penchant for metal riffs. However Re-Mit returns to more familiar Fall territory with lots of garbled vocals, motorik rhythms, rockabilly and garage-punk, so of course this is nothing short of a massive return to form.


Deerhunter 'Monomania' choice tracks: THM, Back to the Middle, Monomania
As they've been gearing up to play their back catalogue at the imminent All Tomorrow's Parties festival, the release of 'Monomania' took me by surprise even before I listened to it. It has been my most listened to album of the month, initially because I was puzzled by their decision to submerge their sound in a grungey kind of garage-rock mix, and then because I realised that I loved quite a lot of the songs. Not the Deerhunter album to play in order to win them new fans, but an intriguing and occasionally great listen I reckon.


Mikal Cronin 'MCII' choice tracks: See It My Way, Shout it Out, Don't Let Me Go
Inextricably linked with the popular garage-rock underground thanks to his partnership with Ty Segall, Mikal Cronin's 2nd album is something else entirely. Think the grunge-power-pop of Lemonheads and Nirvana, and songwriting promise which suggest Elliott Smith or even Alex Chilton.


Bibio 'Silver Wilkinson' choice tracks: A Toute A L'Heure, Look at Orion!, Dye the Water Green
Bibio is the work of Stephen Wilkinson, which I guess explains the title to an extent, and this is the follow up to the super-hazy 'Mind Bokeh'. Often tagged electronica, Bibio is actually more of a dreamy, folk-rock act, and this is more obvious on this album, where there are less beats and more "real" instruments. The downbeat nature of this reminds me a bit of Gravenhurst's recent work, really very pretty indeed.


The Pastels 'Slow Summits' choice tracks: Secret Music, Night Time Made Us, Check My Heart
I was a fanzine boy fifteen years ago and I rang up Stephen Pastel and got him to talk me through their then newly released album 'Illumination'. I never thought that it would take until now to release the proper follow-up, but I'm pleased to say that it picks up where its great predecessor left off; melodic and very slightly jazz influenced indie-pop with a lot of depth to it.


Mount Kimbie 'Cold Spring Fault Less Youth'
choice tracks: You Took Your Time (ft. King Krule), Made to Stray, Slow
Another electronica act branching into live instruments and even vocals on their second album. The duo add vocals themselves, but they are joined by King Krule for two of the standout tracks. A few reviewers have hinted that this is a push towards the mainstream, but I wouldn't go that far just yet. It is more accessible than their debut but it isn't a sell-out, more of a development in their sound that works and also makes perfect sense.


Public Service Broadcasting 'Inform - Educate - Entertain' choice tracks: ROYGBIV, Spitfire, Everest
As long standing supporters of this lot, it has been thrilling to see this debut album chart at no.21 in the UK. All of the early singles are here, seemingly refreshed in the context of the album, and newer tunes like the Kraftwerk-esque 'Now Generation' and the downbeat closer 'Late Night Final' make it more than worthwhile to check out this complete set.