Live review: Make It Pink + Anna Calvi @ Montreux Jazz Cafe, 04.07.11

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French Swiss folksters Make It Pink have built a loyal following over the course of their career, releasing their debut album Youth in 2005, Birth in 2008, and now their third album Dirth in April of this year. A couple of weeks ago they played a jam-packed Montreux Jazz Café, and I got a sense of just how much they are appreciated – the front rows aglow with cameras and phones ready to record every moment, and the girls standing immediately behind me chatting excitedly about the last time they saw Make It Pink, and how wonderful it was. In fact, one of them filmed practically the entire performance. Confident and assured in their home territory, they were playing to the converted.

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Live review: Figurines + Vinnie Who + Reptile and Retard at Montreux Jazz Cafe, 09.07.11

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For the second time in a week I’m back in the dark confines of the Montreux Jazz Café (previously I saw super talented folksters Make It Pink and the formidably-voiced Anna Calvi), this time for the SPOT on Denmark night of Danish delights.

Supported by ROSA, the Danish Rock Council and MXD, Music Export Denmark, SPOT on Denmark is a music festival held yearly in Aarhus, Denmark to showcase the best of Scandinavian music. ROSA and MXD then provide the best three bands at the end of the festival with industry-based assistance to promote their music. In these times of fiscal crisis and belt-tightening, it’s rather miraculous that the Danish government still prioritises and supports the creative industries in such a way. Indie pop rockers Figurines, disco-pop outfit Vinnie Who and electro-punks Reptile and Retard are the crème de la crème of SPOT on Denmark 2011.

Tonight, the promise of seeing all three bands has packed the 1000+ capacity Montreux Jazz Café to the rafters. First up are the Figurines, who prove themselves eminently capable of stealing hearts from the front row to the back corners, with the kind of cheerful, tousle-haired sexy insouciance that wins over festivals and music charts. Having toured with Kaiser Chiefs and Cold War Kids, and having recently released their fourth album, the three friends (plus two extra friends brought in for the evening) are on a roll and loving it. They start to get seriously interesting when things kick over into heavier, rockier territory, and the crowd responds accordingly with hands in the air, and scores of cameras aloft – a sure sign that an audience knows they are watching something memorable. I feel certain that I’ll be seeing their name on various festival bills all over Europe in the next few years.

I’ve been tipped off in advance about Vinnie Who’s super disco vibe, but I still didn’t expect lead singer Niels Bagge to be so incredibly, well, disco – a non-assuming, skinny guy in suit pants, dress shirt and braces – think Ólafur Arnalds with a touch of ‘Disco 2000’ style Jarvis Cocker – with a voice that would make Jimmy Somerville cry. But he carries it off with aplomb, helped out by his band, including the implausibly beautiful Kristina Kristensen on backing vocals and synths, working the feedback between audience and stage with their intelligent and irresistible disco pop. Even I, known disco-phobe, can’t help but be drawn into Vinnie’s mirrorball world. By the end of their set there is a palpable feeling of euphoria in the air.

When Reptile and Retard take the stage I get a strange sense of déjà vu – ladies and gentlemen, is David Lee Roth in the room? Wild mane of blond hair, skin-tight jeans, singlet, short tight leather jacket, a feline sexiness that is impossible to disguise…Thankfully, lead singer Mads Damsgaard Kristiansen is less concerned with comedic histrionics and heavy metal posturing, and more with turning in a feverish, hyperactive (at times hyperbolic – not sure what he wanted to achieve by yelling out that they are all on the dole) performance. Undeniably charismatic, however, that Mads. Due to public transport constraints I could only stay for the first couple of songs, but they were rippers, nihilistic electro-punk, with some suitably bleak visuals to boot. And I have it on good authority that later in the set Mads took off almost all his clothes and crowdsurfed half naked. Now that’s something I’m sure the Montreux Jazz Café doesn’t see every day.

All in all, an energetic and surprising evening from three bands with completely different styles and personas. Look forward to hearing and seeing more from all three of them.

Figurines play at Stall 6, ZH, on 28.09.11. Their fourth, self-titled album is out now.

Vinnie Who‘s debut album Then I Met You is out now.

Reptile and Retard are currently playing a series of shows in Denmark and Germany.

Review: OpenAir St. Gallen Sunday 03.07.11 – The National, Warpaint, Beirut, QOTSA

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Sunday starts with a sharp pain to the wallet – ouch, CHF 45 for parking! That kinda sucks, as it was the same price to park the whole weekend. Oh well. Next year I guess we will do as everyone else did, and park around the town*.

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Review: Open Air St. Gallen, Saturday 02.07.11 – Crystal Castles, Hurts, John Butler Trio

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Saturday dawned cloudy and cool, perfect for tramping about and soaking up some music.

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Review: Open Air St Gallen, Friday 01.06.11 – The Young Gods, Friska Viljor, The Vaccines, Elbow

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My first day at Open Air St Gallen 2011 – muddy, a little chaotic, interspersed with some moments of sunshine and lots of good music.

After much faffing about getting there, I arrive in time to see The Vaccines on the Sternenbühne. I’m intrigued by them, people either love or hate them and I’m keen to see them live to see what the fuss is about. Singer Justin Young sounds terribly like Tom Smith from The Editors to me, but without Tom’s dark appeal. Their indie rock’n'roll sounds good, if a little predictable and unremarkable to me, but perhaps with a few beers I’d have a different perspective. Nonetheless, the audience is enjoying the set immensely; ‘Post Break-Up Sex’ brings showers of beer as cups are thrown up in air.

For their first time at Open Air St Gallen, Friska Viljor are on the main stage, the Sitterbühne. The Swedes are just getting more and more popular, and with good reason. Resistance is futile – their ukelele, glockenpsiel and singalong music is too infectiously good-natured and fun to resist. They are their usual jaunty, cheerful selves on stage, and play their set with aplomb, telling stories about girls won and lost, best friends (each other) and life and love. Swedish flags are waved around on long poles by crowd members. But what I really want to know is – how do they keep their clothes so blindingly white? Someone must know the answer to this laundry conundrum!

Post-industrial rock band The Young Gods are Swiss legends, they’ve been around for donkey’s years and B. loves them. He’s tried to persuade me to go and see them numerous times, but I’ve always found a reason not to. However, next time they play, I’ll be there with bells on, because they were damn awesome yesterday. Singer Franz Treichler was radiating some serious forcefulness and power on stage, the likes of which I haven’t seen for a long time. Impressive. Unfortunately, I had miss the last part of their set to do some interviews, but I’ll be definitely looking them up the next time they play Zurich.

Elbow was the major drawcard last night on the Sitterbühne, as evinced by the phalanx of photographers bristled underneath the stage, pointing their lenses into singer Guy Garvey‘s face and outstretched hands. Guy is the consummate showman, gracious and stylish, with a lovely Mancunian accent. I’d like to make special mention of the fact that Guy has epic hand movements. You know, I think I missed the Elbow bus somewhere along the line. A sacrilege! I hear thousands cry. Or at least, I haven’t had time to digest and appreciate their epic works. But even I, an Elbow novice, thought ‘Lippy Kids’ was genuinely lovely and moving. A polished and elegant performance, a deserved highlight.

My last gig of the day was Sheila She Loves You in the Marlboro Wah Wah Woom (I can’t say that without feeling like I have a lisp). The precocious indie popsters from Basel get better and better every time I see them. They played two sets last night, including some new material that is darker and more introspective than the sparkling pop melodies of their first album Esztergom. The latest single from Esztergom, ‘How’s About’ got a cascade of sopa bubbles in the air, lighters aloft and a crowd singalong. Aww. Expect some new material from the Sheila boys soon – I interviewed them earlier in the day and got the lowdown – stay tuned for that later.

A long, strange train journey home (what is it with teenage boys and knives?), a few hours sleep and back again for Saturday.

Best in show: FridayThe Young Gods, for sheer raw energy and power.

For decent photos of the Open Air St Gallen 2011 (where you can actually see the performers, rather than as mere specks in the distance), check the Open Air St Gallen gallery or MTV site.

Live review: Architecture in Helsinki + Cut Copy, Stall 6, ZH, 28.06.11

There’s no denying the fun, happy spirit of Melbournites Architecture in Helsinki. Their quirky, irreverent indie pop won them scores of fans in the mid to late noughties, myself included. Now, in the difficult tween years of the decade, they have eschewed some of their signature quirkiness for synth-laden, polished pop with a definite whiff of the 80s, but still retain their sense of experimentation.

Last night’s double bill at Stall 6 with fellow label mates Cut Copy was proof positive that they can still work a crowd with their bright, infectious tunes and off-beat sychronised dancing (see ‘Alibi’).  Kellie Sutherland and Cameron Bird had the on-stage moves, ably supported by Gus Franklin’s kung fu and Jamie Mildren’s deadpan Nimbin dancing. There were a few hands-in-the-air/mexican wave moments which would have seen a room full of communal exuberance if the crowd hadn’t been so dazed by the scorching heat of the day and the stifling atmosphere inside the venue.

One of my faves, the sparky ‘Do The Whirlwind’ gets an outing but never really takes off into the flight of fancy it could have been, and their cover of Londonbeat’s 80s classic ‘I’ve Been Thinking About You‘ is a crowd pleaser, but could have used a good sharp dose of irony to lift it from its nostalgia-laden depths. Love Kellie’s vogueing, though, see if you can catch it here:

Irresistibly danceable, new track ‘Escapee’ (dedicated to Roger Federer) is a highlight, as is 2007`s ‘Heart It Races’, and finally, the first single from the latest album Moment Bends, ‘Contact High’. The audience is definitely appreciative, sweatily bouncing around with hands in the air. But I can’t help thinking that in moving to this smoother, more polished sound they have done away with some of what made them special. Or perhaps it’s just my particular aversion to synths. As a child of the 80s I find it hard to see the irony in revisiting all those synths and 80s sounds. It’s still daggy; not enough time has passed to make it new and interesting. I can’t relate it to anything cutting edge or modern, nu new wave or whatever. It’s all Jean Michel Jarre and shoulder pads to me. Perhaps that says more about me than about Architecture in Helsinki, though. I was never an early adopter of trends, couldn’t see them til they hit me in the face. Ouch, I think that would be said trend slapping me upside the head…

After Architecture in Helsinki, it was time for Cut Copy. Oh dear. What can I say? I admit I have only a passing acquaintance with their back catalogue, so at first I honestly thought I had mistaken them for another band, and that some other band who I had assumed was Cut Copy were on stage. I was confused. Because what was happening on stage surely couldn’t be the band that so many people had raved and buzzed about. Lead singer Dan Whitford’s thin, falsetto voice sounded completely unlike what I expected, almost off-key, and the cliched choruses grated on my ears. Was it the mix? I don’t know. I could only stand it for four songs, then I left. A pity, because on record their mix of dance rock/synth pop sounds good, and I was excited to see them. I don’t like giving bad reviews, but last night’s set rates up there with Wilco`s 2009 gig at Volkshaus as one of my all time worst gigs. Let’s hope last night’s gig was just a one-off, or perhaps even just a figment of my fevered imagination. Anything but actual reality.

Architecture in Helsinki setlist (thanks, Nic!): Desert Island/Hold Music/Everything’s Blue/Go/Denial Style/Beep/Wishbone/Escapee/I’ve Been Thinking About You (Londonbeat cover)/Deep Down/Do The Whirlwind/Heart It Races/ B4 3D/Contact High

Moment Bends, Architecture in Helsinki‘s fourth album, is also out now on Modular Recordings.

Cut Copy‘s third album Zonoscope is out now on Modular Recordings.