jeudi 25 juillet 2013

LIVE REVIEW : THE NEW MENDICANTS AT THE LEXINGTON 10/07/2013


I think that you can qualify The New Mendicants as a "Supergroup". Their launch has been slightly more subdued than the fanfare that accompanied the debut of  "Blind Faith" some 44 years ago but Joe Pernice and Norman Blake's song-writing prowesses in their main outfits (Pernice Brothers and Teenage Fanclub) are the guarantee for a night of excellent music. 

Pernice and Blake started the band last year. Both moved to Toronto to live with their partners ("They married us, we didn't marry them" said Pernice during the gig). They had crossed paths before while touring in the UK but this new proximity meant that they developed a friendship that became "The New Mendicants". They started played gigs in Toronto last year followed by recording and a tour of Australia and New Zealand at the beginning of this year. So Far they have only released an EP to coincide with that tour (imaginatively titled "Australia 2013 E.P) but an LP is supposed to be released in the first half of 2014. 

I had caught Joe Pernice live last October in a small pub and had found him a fantastic performer with terrific in-between song banter but Blake's presence at his side gave him an extra boost on both fronts (performance and banter). The set-up for the gig was pretty sparse, just the two of them with their guitars and a glockenspiel. They introduced a couple of tunes from the forthcoming album explaining that many of the album were written to be used on the soundtrack of the movie "A Long Way Down" based on Nick Hornby's novel of the same name. Unfortunately they all the songs got rejected which means in Pernice's words that half of the album will be about "standing on top a building". These new snippets were interspersed with songs from their back catalogue. We got Teenage Fanclub b-sides, Scud Mountain Boys tracks, Zombies covers ("Butcher's tale", already played by Pernice at his gig last October)... Pernice was in fine form, recounting stories from attending an Hall and Oates gig in the mid-eighties in Boston (and telling that he had made up the whole story after finishing it). There was some really funny moments like when Blake messed up a glockenspiel part on one of Pernice's songs. Pernice retaliated by playing a wrong chord on purpose during the intro of "Baby Lee" while mouthing "fuck you" to Blake.

The audience was tremendously respectful, interacting with Pernice and Blake in-between songs but keeping religiously silent during the quieter numbers. The show was sold out and to adD to and already wonderful evening, Blake announced that straight after the tour he was going to Glasgow to continue work on the next Teenage Fanclub album. 

mardi 23 juillet 2013

LIVE REVIEW : BLONDIE AT THE ROUNDHOUSE 07/07/2013


Blondie was a band I'd always want to see live. They sound quite fantastic on record but the live reviews I had read through the years were sometime a bit lukewarm. I remember one in French magazine Rock'n'Folk where the journalist said he had never seen a gig by such an experienced band with so many bum notes !! Added value to attending that gig is that the missus is a Blondie fan, which means that for once I wasn't just by myself :). The Roundhouse is a venue I really like because you're never far from the stage wherever you're positioned in the venue.

I don't remember anything about the opening act apart from the fact that is was rather...err...unmemorable. Blondie opened the gig with "One Way Or Another" to a good crowd reception. Only three members from the original line-up remain :  lead singer Debbie Harry, rhythm guitar player Chris Stein and drummer Clem Burke. Other members are : Leigh Foxx (bass) who joined the band when they reformed in the late nineties , Matt Katz Bohen (keyboards), Tommy Kessler (lead guitar) who joined respectively in 2008 and 2010. They're all good musicians but they sometimes lack the "punk" vibe that was at the core of the original line-up (Kessler used to play guitar in the musical "Rock of Ages" before joining Blondie).

The set list relied quite heavily on songs from their forthcoming LP with a few classics mixed in (Heart of Glass, Dreaming, Hanging on the Telephone, Call me, Maria, Atomic). The new songs are ok but I can't see any of them sticking in the set list the way "Maria" from their comeback album "No Exit" has done. Of all the original members, Clem Burke is the one I found the most enthusiastic in his performance (which Debbie Harry doesn't seem to appreciate much... deduction made from the angry stares she gave him when there was one too many roll during the intros and the fact he was the only band member she didn't introduce. Mrs Harry put on a tremendous performance considering that the temperature mid gig was almost oven-like but she doesn't react too well to other members taking center stage, at one point putting her hands on Tommy Kessler's fretboard while he was doing an extended solo (during "Atomic" if I'm not mistaken). Chris Stein was in the back strumming, not seeming too concerned by the proceedings (for some reason he seems to favour using alternate tunings and using a thumb pick which means that most of the time he was drowned out by Kessler). They threw in a couple of covers for good measure, one of "Relax" by Frankie Goes To Hollywood (Why ???) and a rather cool one of "You Can't  Put Your Arms Round A Memory" by Johnny Thunders. That last one was dedicated to Arturo Vega, the recently deceased, designer of The Ramones' logo.

mercredi 17 juillet 2013

LIVE REVIEW : BURT BACHARACH AT THE ROYAL FESTIVAL HALL 26/06/2013


This gig is one that I had been eagerly awaiting for months. I bought the ticket in February and I wouldn't go as far as saying I was ticking the days on the calendar but there was a sense of something special about seing one of the greatest songwriters in the history of pop music. The show was an early start with the doors opening at 7pm and the gig starting at 8pm. It was my first time at The Royal Festival Hall and the venue proved to be as nice inside as it is ugly on the outside... Spent a couple of minutes in the lobby before climbing upstairs to access my seat, during which I managed to spot Jarvis Cocker, killing time before the gig by reading a paperback. My seat was quite far back (tickets weren't exactly cheap) but I still had a good view.

The gig started right on time with the band coming on stage and setting up and Bacharach joining them after everybody had finished tuning up. Still sporting his trademark blazer, he strolled on a stage in a relaxed manner greeting the crowd and thanking everybody for coming over. He said that he was pleased to come back to London and that he was grateful to Britain as it was here that records with his songs on them had first started selling. The show was very slick but Bacharach's demeanour is so laid back that something that must be a very "tightly scripted" performance comes off as relaxed. There wasn't any orchestra backing him contrary to his last London show at The Roundhouse but his backing band was quite impressive nevertheless : three singers, bass, an extra keyboardist, trumpet, saxophone, vibes, and a violinist. I think an acoustic guitar player would have been a good addition as sometimes the sound was a bit too "casio-ish" (if that makes any sense).

Rather than play a limited selection of songs from his back catalogue, Bacharach prefers to play lots of songs and compress them in medleys. I must admit that although I'd prefer to hear less songs but have them in their entirety, I didn't find the medley presentation as frustrating as I was expecting it to be. The medleys were done kind of thematically. One comprised the songs he had written for movies (with Bacharach singing lead on "Alfie"). One featured his early hits in the 1950's with songs such as "Magic Moments","The Story Of My Life" or the theme song for the movie "The Blob" that Bacharach said that even though it was a flop, both him and Steve McQueen's careers managed to recover from it. The three singers had quite a hard task on their hands having to cover for such great singers as : Dionne Warwick, Aretha Franklin, Dusty Springfield, Gene Pitney, BJ Thomas, Jack Jones, Chuck Jackson, Cilla Black and the list goes on... The two females were really good but I'm a bit more reserved about the male (a bit too X-Factor-ish for my taste). The rest of the band was fine and I enjoyed the vocal performance of the keyboardist on "My Little Red Book". The appearance of Bacharach's son Oliver to play keyboard during "Make it easy on yourself" was a nice touch, even though request for him to come back on stage came to a dead end as "he only knows one song" dixit Bacharach. That evening was a rare chance to witness a fine performance by one of the best songwriters of the twentieth century.


mercredi 10 juillet 2013

LIVE REVIEW : TIM BURGESS / LAMBCHOP AT THE BARBICAN 23/06/2013



I must admit I had a very limited lnowledge of tonight's two acts repertoire when I attended this gig. I have one measly Lambchop LP and I had never listened to anything put out by Tim Burgess or his band The Charlatans. Nick Wheeldon, mastermind of Paris Garage combo "Os Noctambulos"(shameless plugging : https://www.facebook.com/os.noctambulos?fref=ts) convinced me that he was a night not to be missed so I purchased a ticket.
The Barbican is quite an impressive place, spotlessly clean, it gives the impression of being teletransportated back to the seventies when the venue opened. The concert hall is all seated so it's a bit sedate for a rock gig but ideal for a band like Lambchop that requires a lot of attention from it's audience as they play very quietly. The Evening was billed as a collaboration between Lambchop and Tim Burgess with equal stage time provided for both bands.

Lambchop was on first at 7.30pm and played what was billed as a "set of classics" (Best of luck to the guy who might get saddled with compiling a Lambchop best of...).  As I said earlier they play very quietly, Kurt Wagner's guitar is so low that it's almost inaudible. Kurt Wagner has some funny exchanges with piano player Tony Crow. Tim Burgess comes to join on one song, sitting on top of one the monitors while duetting with Wagner. This gives Wagner the occasion to give the audience some insight on his friendship with Burgess and how they had met. Their set finished at 9pm and after a short fifteen minute break, Tim Burgess came on stage with his 4 piece band let by Charlatans guitar player Mark Collins (I wouldn't mind him lending me his Gibson Jumbo...). I must admit I came to the gig expecting to enjoy Lambchop's set the most but came out of it having like Tim Burgess's one even more. The gig was indeed as special one as Burgess was joined by a string quartet on a few numbers (with only Mark Collins remaining from the band) and Kurt Wagner reciprocated by duetting with Tim on one song (pianist Tony Crow joined for a few numbers too). Two female singers joined on backing vocals for a punchy version of the album's single "White". After Tim Burgess finished his set. Both bands came back on stage to perform Lamchop's "Up with People" and an anthemic version of "A Gain" from Burgess's latest album "Oh No I Love You". Truly great night of music which lasted for almost 3 hours.