Something that interests me as a voracious consumer of new music is the rise of multi-venue festivals where you can try and cram as many acts into your day as possible. The SXSW festival in Austin, Texas is the best example of this, but this year already many UK events have taken this as their lead, with the likes of Brighton's Great Escape, Liverpool's Sound City and the long established Camden Crawl booking a huge range of bands over a variety of venues.
With literally hundreds of music festivals competing for space and attention over the summer months, this seems to be a succesful model. This year larger events such as Sonisphere have been cancelled, whilst even legendary ones like Glastonbury have taken a year off.
One event that has moved from its normal slot in the festival calendar is London's Field Day; a one day outdoor event that has steadily been building an audience in Victoria Park in Tower Hamlets since 2007. This multi-stage music festival traditionally takes place in August, but this year it has been pushed forward to the first Saturday in June due to the huge presence of the Olympics taking over that area in August.
Field Day always boasts a cutting edge line-up of both established and breakthrough acts, and as it is all compressed into one day, you don't have to camp or bring anything with you. For me, it works brilliantly as a showcase; an excellent way to see quite a few new bands in one day as you can cover the ground between each stage in a few minutes.
The festival emerged from small grass roots venues and promoters working together and has grown into something much larger. In 2006, it began in the car park of the Griffin Pub in Old Street as the Return of the Rural and took the format of a village fete with live acoustic acts such as James Yorkston and Beth Orton, as well as Clinic and Four Tet. These acts were large enough to pull a decent crowd back then, and the promoters decided to do something bigger the following year they booked space in Victoria Park, joined forces with other promoters and announced the first Field Day, which sold out to 10,000 people in August 2007.
The festival has evolved and grown in size to 20,000 and has now played host to the likes of Florence and the Machine, Phoenix, Santigold, James Blake to name just a few.
Last year's festival was the largest yet and there were some issues with overcrowding. These have been addressed this year with a new layout to help the flow between stages, although the capacity remains the same.
The close proximity of the stages gives the organisers another headache, specifically how to reduce the bleed-through of sound between venues. Over the years they have taken various steps to address this and with some clever positioning of each PA plus a capacity crowd in each tent, the colouration is negligible.
There are around 60 acts on the bill, so I thought I would try and pick out some highlights. There are inevitable clashes of course, but I reckon on a carefully planned day you get to see around 8 or 9 acts. A clashfinder is essential but here are some suggestions.
Grimes – one of the breakthrough acts of 2012, Grimes is the alias of Claire Boucher, a young prolific talent from Canada, who manages to straddle the genres of dance music, lo-fi indie and witch house with ease
Peaking Lights – a husband and wife duo who make a lo-fi mix of dub, krautrock and psychedelic pop
R. Stevie Moore – a prolific but wilfully obscure DIY musician who has been making music since the mid-70s but is only just coming to a wider audience now thanks to the likes of Ariel Pink
The Men – high octane punk rock, noisy and brash, which sounds like it was recorded with all the needles on red
Summer Camp – duo Jeremy Walmsley and Elizabeth Sankey are building their indie-pop origins into something very special,as last year's Welcome to Condale album showed.
Fennesz – legendary Austrian guitarist now firmly established in the world of ambient electronica, he makes some lovely noises
Andrew Bird – an amazing talent who plays superb violin, writes great songs and does clever things with loops. He is also a fantastic whistler!
Tortoise – the guys who brought dub, jazz and krautrock to the world of American indie-rock in a rescheduled show from last year
Mazzy Star – newly reformed,this duo made three classic albums in the 1990s, featuring the distinctive voice of Hope Sandoval and the psychedelic fuzz guitar of David Roback.
Liars – one of the finest experimental rock groups of the last 10 years, showcasing their new album WIXIW.
Papa M - the alias of David Pajo, best known as guitarist of the post-rock group Slint
Django Django - last but not least, one of the bands of 2012, on a mid-afternoon slot so look sharp.
Just in case you missed the clashfinder, click here to get the official one.
The Field Day line-up was hard to pick ten or twelve acts from, so I've made a 25 track playlist on Spotify. Enjoy!
Showing posts with label Summer Camp. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Summer Camp. Show all posts
Live review: Summer Camp, Cambridge Portland Arms 20th March 2012
It's a bit of a homecoming gig for Summer Camp's Jeremy Walmsley tonight, as he played some of his very first shows in this very room when he was a student.
This was the first time I had seen Summer Camp, and I had the choice of going to the Scala the night after or here. For those of you who don't know these two venues, it's a choice between seeing them in a converted cinema or a fairly large living room.
I made the right choice because they worked so well with the intimate 100 capacity crowd it was actually a bit of a special night.
Summer Camp are essentially a duo of Jeremy Walmsley and Elizabeth Sankey, though in tonight's live setting they are assisted by the drummer from Brontide and a backdrop of classic movie footage.
They open with the title track from last year's excellent 'Welcome To Condale' album and play an hour long set of both old and new material.
'Nobody Knows You' is Elizabeth's first chance to really shine and although she has some fairly random (but entertaining) in between song ad-libs, it's clear that she has immense stage presence.
The new songs sound great too. One is Moroder-style disco pop and the other 'Give Me Life' is equally strong. They play a couple from the 'Young' EP but mostly tonight's set reminds us how great the songs on 'Condale' are. 'Down', 'Better Off Without You' and 'I Want You' are classic indie-pop, and 'Brian Krakow' brings the night to a splendidly noisy conclusion.
The real highlights though, were they way they worked with the crowd and played on the intimacy of the venue. They played 'Losing My Mind' without any amplification, singing to each other as they weaved their way through the crowd. They also played the first song of the encore, a cover of Fleetwood Mac's 'Everywhere' without any PA, which was really effective as well.
It felt like they loved playing this gig, and it also felt like we loved having them play it.
A choice of music videos from 2011
I'm not a huge fan of music video as a medium, but this year I found myself discovering some that I liked via Youtube and Vimeo. I've selected them below, in no particular order. As a list it is slightly more lo-fi and pyschedelic than some others I guess, but that's just my personal preference.
A visually stunning effort to accompany this Timber Timbre song, I watched this for the first time in Halllowe'en week. Pleasantly spooky.
A Summer Camp video made using only animated GIFs.
A race around Glasgow featuring hundreds of people, capturing Mogwai's home city in its daily flux.
This video is the perfect companion to John Maus's music, its psychedelic imagery is fuzzy and puzzling but suits this song so well.
I love animation and this Mountain Goats video hits the spot.
Slightly sentimental reasons for including this Cashier no9 video. The Ulster Hall looks great and the dancer - the reknowned Northern Irish artist Jack Pakenham reminds me of going to gigs in the Empire Music Hall in Belfast, as he would dance like this at the end of the night.
Destroyer made the first video I can remember making an impact on me this year.
On her album Last Summer, Eleanor Friedberger looked back at the time she first moved to New York and this videoo underlined that by inter-cutting old and new footage. Unusual and maybe annoying for some, but it worked for me.
Pretty cut-out animation for a pretty Amor De Dias tune.
As anyone who is aware of Sarah Lund in the Killing knows, jumpers are back!
Again, another video that suits the music perfectly. A cinematic feel to this, but the visuals are disjointed and psychedelic, just like the Shabazz Palaces record.
The first time I saw this Fucked Up video I thought it was ridiculous, by the third time I was hooked and intrigued by the story. Clearly there are more films to come in this sequence.
These videos are a companion to my Spotify top 50, which I posted yesterday. Enjoy!
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