Concerts

Concert Review: Metronomy, Mod Club, October 26

Posted on by Ricky in Concerts | Leave a comment

I was completely wrong on Wednesday when i had written that English four piece band Metronomy was a relatively unknown act. Arriving at the Mod club on Wednesday, I was thrilled to find the venue gloriously packed from wall to wall. That thrill would soon change to elation as Metronomy put on an energy filled show easily worth the price of admission.

Here are some random highlights:

It’s refreshing to see a band have fun both with their music and live show. Each member of the band wore matching light fixtures which would occasionally light up. Throw in some well timed choreographed dance moves and you have a good recipe for a fun show.

It’s completely reasonable to suggest that Metronomy belong in that special class of bands that you can say that no band sounds like Metronomy and Metronomy sound like no one else. No other bands make such good use of: squeals, high pitched effects and average male falsettos. It’s like they looked around at all the random sounds of life and decided to incorporate it into their tracks. Take a listen to the track Heartbreaker and try to decipher all the effects used. It shouldn’t work but it does with Metronomy.

Not many bands can get away with two instrumentals and not kill the audience but the dueling synthesizer instrumental halfway through the set not only energize the crowd but made me want to play the original NES for some reason. Oscar Cash, the synthesizer wizard/saxonphonist was a wizard behind the keys and added a lot of what I assume was slight improvisations to the songs, giving the tracks a nice organic live sound.

1-2 punch of new favorite Everything Goes My Way (featuring the only vocal performance by drummer Anna Prior) and old favorite Radio Ladio was a great way to bridge discographies and end off the set.

Metronomy was much much better live than I could have ever expected. Do yourself a favor and check them out.

Concert Review: Metronomy, Oct 22, Rock Hall

Posted on by halley in Concerts | Leave a comment

METRONOMY! They rocked rocked rocked my world. I’ve found it difficult to ‘sell’ the band to friends, but they truly are incredibly talented. Unfortunately, they sound way better live than recorded (hence making it difficult to convince a big group of friends to go to the concert), but for those amongst you who are uninitiated, I would say start with “A Thing for Me” – go ahead and put it on now while you read this review.

To DC’s credit, enough of us Washingtonians knew the band well enough to sell out the Rock and Roll Hotel when Metronomy came through on October 22nd.  The house was packed and the crowd was ready to rock out with the British group.

So first, the band is adorable. It consists of: a chunky, glowing lead singer, a pint-sized saxophonist, a glam female drummer, and a beautiful, falsetto-singing afro-sporting  bassist. The band took the stage wearing synchronized blinking lights on their shirts, too, which just added to the overall effect.

Anyway, the set list was AMAZING. The band led us through “A Thing for Me,” “The Look,” “The Bay,” “Everything Goes My Way,” “Heartbreaker,” “Back on the Motorway,” and ended with an awesome encore featuring “Radio Ladio.” “They Bay” is far and away  my favorite but the sing-along portion of “Radio Ladio” also was definitely a highlight of the night.

At the end of the night, I couldn’t believe I’d only paid $15 to see this group. The experience was worth far far more. The band graciously thanked their American fan base, mentioning they were next headed to Boston. Keep an eye out for them, wherever you are!

Metronomy – A thing for me by mayagi

Concert Review: Revolver, Chateau Marmont, October 16, The Horseshoe Tavern

Posted on by Paul in Concerts | Leave a comment

Toronto – As I walked into The Horseshoe shortly before Chateau Marmontstarted their set, I couldn’t help but notice the sparse turnout.  Not that I expected anything different – two French bands who are not exactly household names playing on a Sunday night while at the same time, Dum Dum Girls were playing Lee’s Palace, Trentemoller were playing The Phoenix, and of course, for those who’d rather watch TV, the second season premiere of The Walking Dead was on as well.  But as they say, the show must go on, and go on it did.

Chateau Marmont started things off, playing to a small crowd of probably 20 people but sounding great.  Singer/keyboardist Guillaume De Maria introduced one song by describing it as “Very erotic … like floating in the air naked.”  That’s as apt a description as I can think of.  Overall, they’ve got an interesting sound, a mix of electronic instrumentals and nice poppy tunes.  And when I say electronic, I mean it often veers a lot closer to stuff like Tangerine Dream than any more modern electro sounds.  that is, spacey, trippy and sounding kind of like the soundtrack of some early ’80s movie.  There’s also a hint of their countrymen Air in their sound.  Pretty impressive stuff.  Hopefully next time they come through town they play to a larger crowd.

Chateau Marmont – Beagle by SWAG Blog

As headliners Revolvercame to the stage, they fared a bit better (there were probably 30 or so in the crowd at this point) and did a good job of persuading the audience to come closer.  They had a good sound, somewhat reminiscent of ’60s pop/rock (it’s likely no coincidence that they’re names after a Beatles album).  They showed off some good Crosby, Stills and Nash style harmonies throughout their set and even ended off with an unplugged encore of CSN’s “Helplessly Hoping” in front of the stage that was probably the highlight of their set.  They also threw in a peppy cover of M. Ward’s “Chinese Translation” during their main set.  Probably the most interesting moment came during their song “Get Around Town,” which to me sounded a bit like a hybrid of The Beta Band and Stray Cats.  Towards the end of that song, they decided it was time to invite local rapper More Or Les (although when the band introduced him, it sounded like MC Morales or MC Moralist with that French accent) onstage to freestyle  with them for a few minutes.  The band clearly seemed to be enjoying that moment, with singer Ambroise Willaume even musing at one point that they were thinking of changing their musical direction.  While I enjoyed Chateau Marmont  a bit more, both bands offered up solid sets that made it worth going out on a Sunday night.

Concert Review: The Lemonheads, October 17, Lee’s Palace

Posted on by Allison in Concerts, Everything, Reviews | Leave a comment

http://www.brooklynvegan.com/tag/Evan+Dando

There are some people, in spite of their every effort and bad habits, that will never age a day. Evan Dando of the Lemonheads happens to be one of those people. If anything, Dando has aged like a fine wine even with his much-publicized affair with drugs, a marriage with a model that has recently ended, and a self-proclaimed lack of ambition. Dando is now 44 years old, separated from his wife, and living a sober(er) life post-alcoholism (though he still maintains he likes taking mushrooms on a monthly basis).

For those of you who were born post 1980, a lot of this will seem completely obscure. But for women in my age group, Dando was briefly the world’s biggest teen heartthrob in that ’93-’96 time frame, gracing the face of glossy magazines and rivaling Kurt Cobain (as some kind of golden-haired and sanitized version of grunge music) and Oasis in terms of legendarily copious drug use, supermodel bedding (and eventual marriage), and making all of the other girls swoon. I didn’t really pay too much attention to the Lemonheads after It’s a Shame About Ray, but remembering that melancholy time period of my life, I was busy following Morrissey’s career nosedive with Southpaw Grammar and Maladjusted.

I wasn’t sure what to expect then, when Dando and his latest incarnation of “The Lemonheads” took stage in the latest in a string of “everything old is new again” one album tours. Touted as “Evan Dando and the Lemonheads perform It’s a Shame About Ray”, I was expecting this to be another in a series of stale cash grabs. This, after I’d sworn off all reunions–such wishy-washiness is pretty predictable from those with the ‘ol nostalgia bone. Dando took stage sporting a hoodie and good looks that seem not to have aged a day (and only then did I realize that at 44, he looks better than a 30-somethign Dan Cortez), a bassist that looked about 25, and a drummer.

Stiffly ripping through the set without pause, the packed and rowdy crowd certainly seemed to think he could do no wrong. He was egged on through his constant setlist glances and seemed unsure about which chords to play. Unless he was shoegazing, the memory could have been an issue here. There was one moment where he explained that they’d just restrung the guitar he was playing, which was not a good thing to do in retrospect, and certainly not right before a show. No matter, no one cared–everyone was just happy to hear the songs live again.

Skipping the tacked-on cover to Mrs. Robinson, Dando’s backing band was ushered offstage and he engaged everyone in a solo acoustic set, seeming to get more comfortable as he plugged along. This was an audience full of fans, he soon learned, and seemed genuinely touched that everyone knew the words to every song. The high moment came during Outdoor Type, when you could literally taste the palpable swooning of every woman in the room. Easing into things, Dando started to field requests from the audience, and boy were there a lot. Thankfully, only a couple of morons yelled for “Mrs. Robinson”, and were promptly ignored when he explained, pleaing for  “a song we’ve written”.

The band came back on again to shoot out hits like “Into Your Arms”. Then the encore of solo acoustic followed with a continuation of a barrage of requests and ended after one song. I suppose Dando was tired at this point–and after an hour and a half on a Monday, I suspect many others were too.

Overall I’m just happy he made it through the set consistently. And that he’s still alive.

3 out of 5