Saturday, May 8, 2010

Florence and The Machine & The Drums, Olympia Theatre, Dublin

I'd the joy of getting a ticket for Sunday nights Florence gig, I would describe it as truly mind blowing musical experience, but that doesn't cut it so heres a proper review:

There’s a certain amount of intrinsic respect due when bands like Florence and the Machine – who could probably give selling out substantially larger venues a good go – choose artistic integrity over financial benefits and turn up in The Olympia instead. It’s one of those venues that, despite its size, seems intimate, like every member of the audience is within touching distance of the stage yet still able to flit away to the back bar to grab a top up. By booking two nights in a row here, Florence has opted to open her tour with a crowd-pleasing bang.

Before the main event, though, there’s the not insubstantial matter of heavily hyped support act The Drums to get through. The Brooklyn lads are portrayed in their promotional material as a bunch of scowling hard men. On stage, though, there’s an amusing contrast in their touch of camp, with lead singer Jonathon Pierce’s slurry vocals punctuated by flexing dance moves and flamboyant instrumental flicks. While the majority of Florence’s crowd responds tamely to The Drums strangely electronic-sounding indie (given the lack of anything but guitars and drums on stage), we can’t help being impressed by their energy, as well as the array of pop-edged indie-rock they’ve lined up for their up and coming summer debut.

There’s no doubting, though, that Florence Welch owns this stage. Tonight her impressive set up includes a six-piece orchestra tucked away in a Perspex box, while the stage backdrop looks not unlike your grandmother’s curtains. Florence performs like an actor at the front of a onrushing ship, flicking her hips and waving her arms, and somehow managing to look like her flowing white cape is in a wind tunnel, despite The Olympia’s still air. Florence once had a reputation as a somewhat shy performer, but tonight she sparkles under the spotlight, showing only the briefest hint of nerves at the end of a first airing of an epic seven-minute new track, a soaring, swirling effort called ‘Strangeness and Charm’.

It’s only a handful of tracks in when Florence tells us she’s decided to play ‘everything’, and it’s going to me ‘a long night’, which brings a massive cheer. With such a smash album behind her, tracks like ‘Howl’ and ‘Girl With One Eye’ prompt sing-alongs that fall only a touch short of modern day classics, like late comers ‘You’ve Got The Love’ (which has certainly revived Candi Staton’s already substantial profile) and the epic ‘Dog Days Are Over’. ‘Drumming Song’ is another highlight, featuring Florence head banging her way through her usual single-drum routine, while new single ‘Cosmic Love’ sees the backstage ‘curtains’ rise to reveal a glittering array of stars.

Florence’s on stage persona has developed no end. Her banter included a full ‘happy birthday’ for a lucky lady called Fiona down the front, and, despite often appearing almost artistically sedate, she did slip in some late crowd surfing and a brief interval atop The Olympia’s substantial speaker stacks, almost leaning against the lower set of boxes as she belted out the classics.

Amongst the organic, witchy ambience that seems to be Florence’s preferred on-stage style, the redhead’s a stand out star. An encore of the slightly lyrically disturbing ‘Kiss With A Fist’ and ‘Rabbit Heart’ rounded up a polished, confident performance that suggests that the ‘Cosmic Love’ tour is going to be yet another chapter in what’s becoming a ‘alternative pop takes over the world’ fairytale. On the evidence of tonight, Florence is a worthy queen.

(c) By James Hendicott

SETLIST:


Setlist:
Howl
Coffins
Hurricane
Girl With One Eye
Lungs
Hardest
Drumming
Blinding
Liar
Swimming
Cosmic
Strangeness & Charm
You Got The Love
Dog Days Are Over
---
Kiss
Rabbit







New Kele

The debut solo single from Kele Okereke taken from his debut album, 'The Boxer' out on the 21st of June.

Friday, May 7, 2010

Antony and the Johnsons Announce New Album/Book Swanlights



Antony and the Johnsons follow up their 2009 opus The Crying Light with more luminescence-- new album Swanlights is out October 5 in Europe on Rough Trade and a day later in the U.S. via Secretly Canadian. Art book publisher Abrams will release a special edition of the album accompanied by a 144-page tome featuring paintings, collages, photography, and writing by Antony. That's all thats known at the moment, but feel free to gaze upon the album's cover up there for a few months.

Thursday, May 6, 2010

Fat who?

Reggae


Todays NZ band are Fat Freddys Drop.

Despite having been around for 10 years now, I only came to know of them earlier this year when a friend sent me one of their albums, it wasn't as easy to listen to mid winter as it is now while the sun is shining and I'm kicking back.

Fat Freddys Drop  is a 7 piece live Dub/Reggae band hailing from Wellington, New Zealand.The group’s first major release was a live album, Live at the Matterhorn, a lengthy jam session recorded in a popular Wellington night club. Their first studio album, Based on a True Story was released in 2005. After only a day of release it had gone gold and was number one in the New Zealand album charts despite having little advertising or marketing. The album’s first single, “Wandering Eye”, spent 17 weeks in the RIANZ Top 40 Singles Chart and peaked at number six.

Freddy’s dominated the 2005 New Zealand Music Awards, taking Best Group, Best Album, Best New Zealand Roots Group and the Peoples Choice Award. On December 18, 2005 the group were awarded the Worldwide “Album of the Year Award”, as voted for by over 20,000 listeners of Gilles Peterson’s BBC Radio 1 ‘Worldwide’ show.


"The industry will never find me. Here among the trees,
My footsteps will be, will be all that I leave"
The Raft, Fat Freddy's Drop

Their debut single:
Fat Freddys Drop - Wandering Eye

Some tracks from their current album Dr. Boondigga and the Big BW (BUY)

Fat Freddys Drop - Pull The Catch

Fat Freddys Drop - The Camel

Fat Freddys Drop - The Nod

Goodbye Gerry, R.I.P



I don't think I could let today pass without saying goodbye to one of the greats of radio, broadcasting legend, Gerry Ryan.

Now I will admit I wasn't a daily listener, but you can hide from how big of a void he will leave in the broadcasting world.

Watch a webcast of the funeral service of Gerry Ryan from St John the Baptist Church, Clontarf in Dublin from 11:30am this morning here.

From the 2FM website:


From everyone at 2fm to every one of our listeners.


We in the RTE radio centre have been immensely moved by the depth, warmth and volume of the tributes that have been paid by you, our loyal listeners in the hours and days since we all learnt of Gerry's death on Friday afternoon.


While we are coming to terms with losing a friend and colleague, we know too that the hundreds of thousands of people for whom The Gerry Ryan Show was a daily fixture, are themselves grieving over the loss of their friend.


The great gift that Gerry Ryan shared with us all was his unique bold style and his unequalled ability to communicate. For more than 22 years you told him and he told them. You took him to your hearts and he repaid that love with some of the funniest, sharpest and warmest radio programmes ever to be broadcast. Anywhere.


He would no doubt have been greatly honoured by the many famous and influential people who have paid tribute to him in recent days, but I believe he would have been even more impressed by the magnitude of the response of his listeners. I know everyone in 2fm has been.


The Ryan Line may now be closed, but be assured that every text to 51552 and every email to grs@rte.ie  will be read by his team and passed on to his family. The tributes received so far have been hugely comforting to all of us in 2fm and I know they will be just as important to his family.


For those of us who worked on it, the Gerry Ryan tribute programme on Saturday morning was one of the hardest things we've ever done and also one of the greatest privileges we could have had.


We cannot replace Gerry Ryan. Nor will we try to. But the show must go on. Where it will go and how it will go is a question and answer for another day.


For now we must simply say thank you to Gerry for all the memories. From the Ryan Show team and from everyone in 2fm, thank you for your support. It means more than you know.


From me and them, until then... whenever that may be. Thank you


John McMahon
Head of 2fm
2nd May 2010

Wednesday, May 5, 2010

It's not all about fush and chops!




This month is New Zealand Music Month! The month that Kiwi's like to celebrate their growing music scene. So this week, I hope to bring you a NZ album to brighten up your ipod!

Indie/Rock


Get In The Club (2008)
Tracklist
01.Western Zeal
02.Grow Up
03.All Over Town
04.Get Contented
05.K
06.Devo
07.Whiteout
08.In My Lifetime
09.Seven
10.Cut in the Rope
11.i20
12.Odyssey
13.Same Old Thing




‘Get In the Club’ is the debut album from the Auckland dance-rock, five-piece the Tutts, released in late 2008. From the runaway success of the first single ‘K’ to the enchanting and tainted love story of ‘I20’, the Tutts songs conjure images of debauchery, dark hallways, and a band steeped in nocturnal mystery. The new single ‘All Over Town’ picks up where the band left off with the vampyric club anthem ‘Whiteout’, with a Smiths like melody, a tambourine and jangling and jagged guitars, ‘All Over Town’ sees the natural evolution of a band finding their sound more and more, but one that is keeping the style that has earnt them the recognition they have received so far.

(extra info) Track #5,‘K’ was nominated for single of the year in 2007 at the NZ Music awards and won best breakthrough video on Juice TV in 2006.


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