OVERRATED?: Arcade Fire |
Now that the Best of 2006 lists are all finished and everyone has stopped arguing over whether TV on the Radio are overrated, we can get back to discussing whether the Arcade Fire are overrated? The new year brings new hype, and a number of big indie bands have announced follow-ups to their breakthrough records. What’s more, they’ve released singles, so we get to pass pre-emptive judgment on their hard work. Arcade Fire ,"Black Mirror"
The Arcade Fire’s debut, Funeral, was indeed somewhat overrated, but the subtle changes throughout this single from their upcoming Neon Bible really work. There’s the slight piano hook that cuts in briefly once or twice, and the swirling strings that build and recede as the song ebbs and flows. And lead singer Win Butler’s voice doesn’t seem so strained anymore. It’s a good look for him, and a promising leadoff.
LCD Soundsystem, “North American Scum”
Everything about this song says, “Welcome back, James Murphy.” There’s the removed-yet-flawless delivery (“For those of you who still think we are from England . . . We’re not”), the driving krautrock beat, the slick DIY perfection that defines DFA production, and, best of all, a new battle cry for everyone who thinks they’re losing their edge: “We are North American scum!”
Clap Your Hands Say Yeah, “Love Song No. 7”
It might have everything that made the group and their homonymous debut the blog heroes of 2005, but “Love Song No. 7” is missing something. Or maybe it’s adding something: the slick production that Clap Your Hands Say Yeah avoided. Whatever, vocals and pianos that could have been stark and haunting turn out ballad-like and tone-heavy. Let’s hope this isn’t a sign that the whole CD will lack the band’s defining rawness.
Modest Mouse, “Dashboard”
Although Johnny “The Smiths” Marr has joined the group on guitar, this is no jangly emo track. Everything about “Dashboard” screams single, from the big horns and bigger strings to the back-up vocals that echo the refrain “The dashboard melted but we still have the radio.” A nice sentiment; I wish I knew some 13-year-olds to play it for.
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- The down side
This is the same kind of self-alienation that dominated Funeral , except now there’s no tunnel, no back seat, no time for wishful thinking. Arcade Fire, "Black Mirror" (mp3)
- Buzzkill
In a self-affirming cover story on “the new speed of hype,” Spin magazine’s March issue profiles Vampire Weekend.
- Indie springs forward
For years we waited. And then we started making jokes about it. And then the jokes got old. So we waited some more. Clap Your Hands Say Yeah, "Love Song No. 7" (mp3)
- The nostalgia game
Like, gag us with a spoon already!
- Sincerely yours,
There is a surge in polyglot music, but despite its force, a strain of conservatism (one that has always run through indie rock) is keeping pace.
- ’Round the outside
Although music isn’t necessarily getting more political in content these days, it does seem to be borrowing a trope from the political world.
- Gorillaz in the midst
Remember the great electronica gold rush of ’97, the year Madonna’s Maverick label won a massive bidding war over long-ignored rave mystic Liam Howlett, a/k/a Prodigy, and we all grooved to the electropunk clash of “Smack My Bitch Up”?
- O, Canada!
You’d be forgiven for assuming that nothing’s been going on in Canada for the last few years beyond the interconnected shenanigans of that country’s indie-rock elite.
- Yeah Yeah Yeahs, TV on the Radio
The sun had started to set, the heat of the day has lost its grip on the city, and thousands – 10, 12, 15 thousand — were filing peacefully into City Hall Plaza long before the headlining Yeah Yeah Yeahs were due to take the stage. Slideshow: Yeah Yeah Yeahs and TV on the Radio, August 10, 2006 at City Hall Plaza Slideshow: The Crowd at the Yeah Yeah Yeahs and TV on the Radio, August 10, 2006 at City Hall Plaza
- Tam
I can’t quite put my finger on what it is about this debut from Canadian singer-songwriter Tam Isabel Pardo, but I can’t stop listening to it.
- Grin + Bear it
Panda Bear’s new album is built from striking found sounds and samples.
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