Heard
Here
Coldplay
Ani Difranco
So Much Shouting, So Much Laughing
Ani
DiFranco’s new live album, So Much Shouting, So Much Laughter
is a varied collection of songs that span the career of an artist
who has been redefining herself onstage and in recordings for over
a decade.
DiFranco is a singer/songwriter/performance-poet who refuses to
be constricted to one genre. The songs on this latest effort range
from rockin’ righteous tunes such as “Letter to a John”
to sad, confessional laments like “Reveling.” She is
able to bring up both serious political and personal issues with
wit and grace. Her feisty lyrics are sometimes sexy, sometimes poignant
and always intelligent in a delightfully unpretentious way.
Seven of the 24 tracks are live performances of songs that appear
on the double CD Reckoning/Reckoning, released in 2001, but the
compilation also includes new recordings of songs from albums as
old as Not So Soft (DiFranco’s second album, released in 1991).
Each of these songs is given a fresh, new feel thanks to the now
defunct six piece band that traveled with Ani on her 2001 tour.
Fans of her previous work will enjoy the musical version of her
poem “My IQ” and an inclusion of a revisited “Not
a Pretty Girl.” Enthusiasts and Ani-novices alike will most
likely find themselves moved by “Self-Evident,” a song/poem
inspired by the events of September 11, which DiFranco read as a
work in progress for much of the tour beginning in September, 2001.
The range of instruments, which includes an upright base, a keyboard
and horn section, makes for some interesting improvisations, but
unfortunately cuts down on the amount of haphazard story-telling
that appears on previous live recordings.
DiFranco describes herself as a “tour hag” in one of
the fewchatty interludes on the second disc of So Much Shouting,
So Much Laughter, and she is one of the few artists who can safely
call the road her home. Ani has been touring almost constantly for
most of her career and she knows how to take the stage. She creates
an intimate and casual atmosphere out of large venues packed to
the limit. Though she rarely addresses them directly, the audiences
are very present on her album. They consist of mostly female voices
cheering and hooting at the songs’s racier lines. DiFranco
acknowledges her ardent fans’s responses with her confident
laughter, which is heard throughout the album, and you often get
the feeling she is singing with a smile on her face.
–Julie Sabatier
Imperial
Teen
On
You
want Imperial Teen to be a European teen disco band because their
music would be so easy to dance to. And they could be your new favorite
band, if only the lyrics didn’t easily become such fluent
slogans, propelling you into a Pepsi commercial nightmare á
la Super Bowl Britney Spears. However, it gets deeper than that.
Sure, there are the rock steady beats and far-out California keyboards
that could make any roller-rink devotee melt, but the truly cool
thing about this record is its willful buoyancy.
Where Imperial Teen’s last album, 1999’s What Is Not
To Love, reveled too often in episodes of unsubstantiated gloom,
On is both unabashedly jocular and deep. The tension between fun
and depression that Imperial Teen’s sound stimulates is now
embraced, with mostly magnificent results.
Every catchy Imperial Teen song includes three elements: an overly-simplistic
but charming lead guitar, new-wave keyboards and boy/girl harmonies.
There are any number of variations on this basic foundation, giving
each memorable song its specific charisma, such as the pseudo-introspective
lyrics of “Million $ Man” or the percussion-heaviness
of “Captain.”
On’s best songs, of course, are those that break the pattern.
“Baby” is loop heaven. Yells, keyboards, guitars, percussion,
handclaps and choir-like harmonies are looped together with lyrics
that match the straightforward structure: “I can’t take
any calls/ I’m watching sun spots on the wall” and “Va
va voom, vis- á-vis/ I call you, you call me.”
The bouncy piano of “Our Time” is a new-wave Beach Boys
while “City Song” is an American take on Belle and Sebastian
lightheartedness (“Go to the convent/ They’ll help you
see clear/ Ave Maria/ Hey wait, aren’t you in Imperial Teen?”).
Then there’s the minimalist drum-loop-driven “Mr. &
Mrs” and the super-synthesized, ultra-bratty “Teacher’s
Pet” — tracks that take the Imperial Teen system to
new extremes of technological exploration.
The album tends toward songs with danceable rhythms, but there are
a few philosophical moments. “The First,” the album’s
closing track, is a meditation on regret, much darker than the rest
of the album and much more successful than the equally languid “Undone”.
It’s a piano ballad gone wrong: “Put your ear up to
the radio/ What you hear is a miracle/ Go the other way/ There’s
another way to feel undone.” It’s cute and all, but
comparatively trite and frankly, just not good enough for the IT
“system.”
On’s opening track, “Ivanka” summarizes well:
it’s fast and headstrong with lyrics that don’t necessarily
make sense but that you don’t necessarily want to think about
anyway because you’re too busy humming along and cleaning
your room in supersonic speed. It’s really great.
–Kari Wethington
Reindeer
Section
Son of Evil Reindeer
You
know those great ideas you have when you’ve had way too much
to drink? However brilliant you may have felt stumbling home from
the bar, when you wake up the next morning, you’ve either
forgotten all those plans you made the night before or they just
seem completely absurd. But if you’re Gary Lightbody, the
lead-singer, guitarist, and songwriter of the Scottish indy three-piece
Snow Patrol, those ideas turn into great bands.
The drunken brainchild of Lightbody, the Reindeer Section released
their debut, last year’s Y’all Get Scared Now, Ya Hear,
with a full fifteen members in tow - an unprecedented number for
an indy band, or any band for that matter. Pulling together various
members from Belle & Sebastian, Mogwai, Mull Historical Society,
an Arab Strap, among many others, Lightbody created his own Scottish
indy dream team. And now with an additional seven members (including
Roody Womble from Idlewild and Norman Blake of Teenage Fanclub),
some pre-studio rehearsal time, and a full two weeks in the studio
(as opposed to the measly ten days they had for the first record),
the Reindeer Section has released Son of Evil Reindeer, a record
that, like the debut, proves a intimate listening experience despite
the bloated size of the band.
Somewhere between Belle & Sebastian’s impeccably written
folk and Arab Strap’s brutally honest lo-fi rock, is the Reindeer
Section. The brainchild of Lightbody, this impressive side project
has become an outlet for songs too heartbreakingly fragile to make
it onto the more up-beat Snow Patrol records. With the help of the
well-suited back-up vocals of Eva’s Jenny Reeve, some piano,
trumpet, flute, slide guitar, and other odds and ends, Lightbody
muses wistfully about the women he wished he never met, those he
can’t leave behind, and those knows he will never have.
Fortunately, Lightbody’s breathy Nick Drake-meets-Elliot Smith
vocals perfectly suit his often ephemeral songs. His voice just
floats above the band’s organic arrangements. “Grand
Parade” and “Your Sweet Voice” are both accomplished
folk ballads, while the sunny Mamas and Papas vibe of “Strike
Me Down” makes even a break up sound like a good time and
proves that the group has more sides to them then their nearly uniformly
downtrodden debut.
Son of Evil Reindeer also finds time to highlight vocal talents
other then Lightbody’s. Idlewild’s Woomble flexes his
mojo on “Who Told You,” and Arab Strap’s Aidan
Moffat turns up for another lude tale about falling in love, mid-life
crises, and watching the tele on “Whodunnit? “ Still,
it’s Lightbody whose presence is most felt, and though the
record’s sincerity can get a bit overwrought, his songs are
a real, if simple, pleasure thanks to his mates’ tasteful
arrangements. At their best, the Reindeer Section have all the whimsy
and hooks of a great Belle & Sebastian record but without all
the smarmy attitude.
–John Macdonald
|