VIDEO: Arctic Monkeys at the House of Blues
Arctic Monkeys perform "My Propeller." See a gallery of Derek Kouyoumjian's live show photos here
Just five months after they last touched down on Boston,
mop-topped Brits the Arctic Monkeys stopped by the HoB this past Sunday,
headlining a sold-out show with New
Jersey power-punk trio the Screaming Females. (Only
one of whom, by the way, is a chick. That would be their pint-sized lead
singer, whose gritty, powerful vocals belie her tiny stature.)The shoulder-to-shoulder crowd was packed with dedicated fans --
no musical window-shoppers present, if those feverishly clamoring for the band
on all sides of me were any indication. The Monkeys slouched onstage, greeting
the crowd casually, with little fanfare, before diving right in. "Less
talk, more action" was the prevailing sentiment, and the throng howled
their approval as lead singer Alex Turner unleashed his smooth vocals on the
room. When the band broke into "I Bet You Look Good on the Dancefloor," off their freshman album Whatever People Say I Am, That's What I'm Not,
no one seemed to care what they looked like on the HoB's floor. Heads banged,
hair flew, and one particularly energetic lass got busy doing something that
looked suspiciously like a hoedown. For their part, Arctic Monkeys don't rely
on choreography or shtick, preferring to let their darkly melodic alt-rock
stand on its own. Hair in their faces, eyes cast mostly downward, the band
skipped all banter, preferring to remain a bit aloof, or maybe just unaware of
their audience. Their performance didn't suffer much for it.
The Arctic Monkeys began as relatively young blood; they released
their first studio album when Turner was just 20 years old. So I was a little
taken aback by the rather unprecedented number of middle-aged, conservative
types nodding in time around me. Now, maybe it was where I was standing,
nursing a solo beer on the fringes of the heaving masses -- perhaps I'd
stumbled into the chaperone section -- but a more likely explanation is that
the four-man band's sound has really matured over the course of their
three-album career. Their most recent record, 2009's Humbug (which proved
fodder for most of the night's setlist), demonstrates the strides the band has
taken, both lyrically and instrumentally. Such Humbug tracks as "My
Propeller" and "Crying Lightning" sounded noticeably tighter,
the band's sound more harnessed and focused than that of the frenetic-yet-infectious
songs with which they first made their mark on the American music scene.
Though it's true that Turner's stage presence contains a certain
signature touch of ennui, the band seemed to actually gain energy as the night
wore on. By the end of the roughly 90-minute set, they seemed to have just hit
their stride. Which is perhaps why they returned for not one, but two more
songs -- just when I was beginning to suspect that the HoB had put a moratorium
on encores. (The last four or five bands I've seen there have left the stage
and stayed gone.) The audience worked for that extra set, though: everyone
seemed resolved to wait it out, refusing to leave the venue even as the stage
crew began industriously shlepping equipment around, looking as though they
were packing up. The house shared a robust holler when the band shuffled back
onstage for "Secret Door." After the Arctic Monkeys took their leave
for the second and final time, one reveler summed the night up in his remark to
a friend: "Dude, that performance was a little weird ... but I liked it."