Appeared in The Daily Collegian on September 17th, 2008.
Thank you, Canada, for exporting some of the greatest bands in indie music. You have given us bands like Broken Social Scene, Tegan and Sara, Arcade Fire, the New Pornographers, and the featured band for tonight: Stars - a big-hearted group scheduled to perform at Pearl Street, 8 p.m.
As Stars moves from east to west for its jam-packed North American tour with opening band BellX1, Stars is in pursuit of making and breaking some hearts with its eloquence and catharsis. This quartet is comprised of Amy Millan, Torquil Campbell, Evan Cranley and Chris Seligman. As a band nearly 10 years of age, the group has released four studio albums while racking up some commendable award nominations along the way.
Though Stars has been active for some time now, success and recognition didn't come too quickly until the 2004 breakthrough album, "Set Yourself on Fire." If you have ever watched popular teen shows like "The O.C." or "Degrassi," chances are you've heard one or two of the band's songs in the background. Songs were also featured in other major shows like "Sex and the City" and "Law and Order."
Indie musicians have to make revenue somewhere, right? In a recent Q&A in The Advocate, Campbell, the lead vocalist, made a statement about the decision to sell the band's songs to glib programming.
"We despise it [TV culture], just like everyone else does. And we are slaves to it, just like everyone else is," said Campbell.
Stars is a band that is capable of great things. In the recording studio and at live shows, the two lead singers, Campbell and Millan, switch off vocals to produce sounds that are breathily dulcet (via Millan) and courageously plaintive (via Campbell).
As a duo, the band relies on the call-and-response technique, which in turn makes the music conversational and rounder sounding. Because it works for them, discordance and harmony in the band's lyricism have become the essence of Stars.
An element as important as vocals that gives way to Stars' distinction is the music. It is chamber pop filled with orchestral instruments that flirts with electronic synthesized keyboards. Stars produces some of the most poignant sounds heard in indie pop today. The melodies are infectious and have the ability to make you melt.
These mavericks play with different styles ranging from funk ("Ghost of Geneva Heights") to dark angular rock ("He Lied About Death"). The use of lush brass instruments gives Stars sex appeal. The band finds a happy medium between playing freely and using good technique - an essential component of a quality band.
Stars' latest full-length album, "In Our Bedroom After the War," has a fresh motif that is consolidated into the last twenty seconds of the track, "The Beginning After the End." It is a question of lost time and the meaning of war and destruction.
Another tune on the new album, "The Night Starts Here," is an empowering number that has disco credit - it could be sung by any Donna Summer type. . The song starts out with epic keyboards that create a dawning sensation. Millan opens with, "The night starts here, forget your name, forget your fear." With lyrics like that, how much more liberated disco queen can you get?
These earnest modern romantics yearn for a freer and expressive world and it is written on Stars' faces when performing live. Tonight, the band is likely to try out some new material that is only for purchase on-line.
The band's next performance will be in Providence, RI at Lupo's Heartbreak Hotel tomorrow if you can't catch the Pearl Street show this evening.
Tickets for tonight's show are still available for purchase.
Sunday, October 5, 2008
Thursday, October 2, 2008
Jenny Lewis' latest album sends listeners on ultimate 'Acid' trip
Appeared in The Daily Collegian on September 30th, 2008.
Before the release of "Acid Tongue," Jenny Lewis' newest sophomore effort, the performer made a YouTube video that flashed a toll-free number for people to call and listen to the album's title track.
Hearing the soulful song over the phone was as if Lewis was singing for you. Well, she is. She also sing for everybody else, including the "boulevard freaks" and "housewives losing their minds," as she says on "Sing a Song for Them."
Lewis makes "Acid Tongue" an album to please the masses as she dabbles in various genres from southern rock to chamber pop. Lewis mastered her sound with the help of big names like Elvis Costello and She & Him's Zooey Deschanel. Though, Lewis does keep M. Ward and Johnathan Rice around just as she did on "Rabbit Fur Coat."
With the trade in of her ex-counterparts, The Watson Twins and the influences and assistance of more well-known collaborators, Lewis loses the quiet, folksy spirit that stretched from beginning to end on her debut.
Looking back on her career as the front woman of Rilo Kiley, Lewis has been known to be a bearer of musical surprises and a definite risk taker.
She took a gamble with Rilo Kiley, transitioning from the craftily narrated "More Adventurous" to the funk-pop fusion, "Under the Blacklight."
"Under the Blacklight" was not anticipated by die-hard Rilo Kiley fans, but it was well received by critics and gained the band a much larger mainstream fan base.
Whether Lewis is off on her own or with Rilo Kiley, she doesn't fall short when it comes to her songwriting. She cuts deep with sharp-edged lyrics that span from dramatically self-obsessed ("Acid Tongue") to muscular and rough ("The Next Messiah").
The singer-songwriter isn't afraid to roll in the mud as she sings all over the spectrum, from addiction to politics. She even sings about her mom on the high energy, Little Richard-esque song, "Jack Killed Mom," a song that violently and humorously defends the honor of her mother.
Because this isn't a folk album, the songs aren't as densely packed with complex verses. On the happily reminiscent piano ballad, "The Black Sand," Jenny croons "on the black sand" over and over. This pop shift could be a hard pill to swallow for her older fans who adored the poeticism featured on "Rabbit Fur Coat."
Though her lyrics will always serve as her greatest craft, Lewis makes a fair tradeoff by diversifying soundscapes instead.
She reveals the Jack White in her with a genuine southern-rock style with dark, syncopated foot drums and electric guitar plucks on the beefy and rugged, "The Next Messiah."
On the uptempo country track, "Carpetbaggers," Lewis trades off vocals with Elvis Costello, the English musician that resurrected his classic nasally voice that has been locked away in a vault since the late seventies.
"Acid Tongue" was recorded at Sound City Studios in Van Nuys, California and completed in a mere three weeks. It is evident that much of the album was recorded live by how unrefined it turned out.
Nevertheless, the album does have a few cleaned-up tunes. The two most polished and mature songs on the album are the ones that strongly emulate the Adult-oriented rock sound of Fleetwood Mac: "Godspeed" and "Sing a Song For Them." These gems serve as the middlemen of the album's ranging styles.
"Pelican Bay," the bluesy-sexy song only available via the Web, is filled with reverb, lush vocalizations and a heavy bass guitar that sure to make you sway from side to side and snap your fingers.
Though Lewis' musical influences are easily traced in her songs, she mystically pulls off a fresh sound with every album she creates. As her musicianship grows, she is free to try anything and don't think she won't. Lewis is a renegade and she isn't going anywhere.
Before the release of "Acid Tongue," Jenny Lewis' newest sophomore effort, the performer made a YouTube video that flashed a toll-free number for people to call and listen to the album's title track.
Hearing the soulful song over the phone was as if Lewis was singing for you. Well, she is. She also sing for everybody else, including the "boulevard freaks" and "housewives losing their minds," as she says on "Sing a Song for Them."
Lewis makes "Acid Tongue" an album to please the masses as she dabbles in various genres from southern rock to chamber pop. Lewis mastered her sound with the help of big names like Elvis Costello and She & Him's Zooey Deschanel. Though, Lewis does keep M. Ward and Johnathan Rice around just as she did on "Rabbit Fur Coat."
With the trade in of her ex-counterparts, The Watson Twins and the influences and assistance of more well-known collaborators, Lewis loses the quiet, folksy spirit that stretched from beginning to end on her debut.
Looking back on her career as the front woman of Rilo Kiley, Lewis has been known to be a bearer of musical surprises and a definite risk taker.
She took a gamble with Rilo Kiley, transitioning from the craftily narrated "More Adventurous" to the funk-pop fusion, "Under the Blacklight."
"Under the Blacklight" was not anticipated by die-hard Rilo Kiley fans, but it was well received by critics and gained the band a much larger mainstream fan base.
Whether Lewis is off on her own or with Rilo Kiley, she doesn't fall short when it comes to her songwriting. She cuts deep with sharp-edged lyrics that span from dramatically self-obsessed ("Acid Tongue") to muscular and rough ("The Next Messiah").
The singer-songwriter isn't afraid to roll in the mud as she sings all over the spectrum, from addiction to politics. She even sings about her mom on the high energy, Little Richard-esque song, "Jack Killed Mom," a song that violently and humorously defends the honor of her mother.
Because this isn't a folk album, the songs aren't as densely packed with complex verses. On the happily reminiscent piano ballad, "The Black Sand," Jenny croons "on the black sand" over and over. This pop shift could be a hard pill to swallow for her older fans who adored the poeticism featured on "Rabbit Fur Coat."
Though her lyrics will always serve as her greatest craft, Lewis makes a fair tradeoff by diversifying soundscapes instead.
She reveals the Jack White in her with a genuine southern-rock style with dark, syncopated foot drums and electric guitar plucks on the beefy and rugged, "The Next Messiah."
On the uptempo country track, "Carpetbaggers," Lewis trades off vocals with Elvis Costello, the English musician that resurrected his classic nasally voice that has been locked away in a vault since the late seventies.
"Acid Tongue" was recorded at Sound City Studios in Van Nuys, California and completed in a mere three weeks. It is evident that much of the album was recorded live by how unrefined it turned out.
Nevertheless, the album does have a few cleaned-up tunes. The two most polished and mature songs on the album are the ones that strongly emulate the Adult-oriented rock sound of Fleetwood Mac: "Godspeed" and "Sing a Song For Them." These gems serve as the middlemen of the album's ranging styles.
"Pelican Bay," the bluesy-sexy song only available via the Web, is filled with reverb, lush vocalizations and a heavy bass guitar that sure to make you sway from side to side and snap your fingers.
Though Lewis' musical influences are easily traced in her songs, she mystically pulls off a fresh sound with every album she creates. As her musicianship grows, she is free to try anything and don't think she won't. Lewis is a renegade and she isn't going anywhere.
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