Posts Tagged ‘wild beasts’

Wild Beasts, Still Life Still @ Horseshoe – Feb. 22, 2010

February 23rd, 2010 | By: Melody Lau

Photo Credit: Michael Fil

Photo Credit: Michael Fil

It was surprising to see the Horseshoe as packed as it was last night for the UK’s Wild Beasts because a) it’s a Monday night and b) shouldn’t we all be at home watching the Olympics instead? Needless to say, I defied both because days of the week don’t really apply anymore when you go to shows as often as I do, and I’ll admit it – I missed the end of the show because I went to the front room of the Horseshoe to watch figure skating. Come on, folks – figure skating!

Arts & Crafts newcomers Still Life Still opened the night to a venue that gradually filled up with each song. The Toronto indie rockers are always compared to label mates/boss Kevin Drew and Broken Social Scene, and for good reason. Though no where near the 15-piece super-group aesthetic of Social Scene, Still Life Still’s music is definitely a more simplistic, poppier take on the Toronto collective’s epic grandiose rock. But don’t jump the gun and proclaim these guys as the new generation of Brendan Cannings just yet, the band still has lots of work ahead of them. Musically, the band’s songs are generally a hit or miss but when it’s a hit, they really nail it – ridiculously catchy hooks, fun sing-along lyrics, and a heck of a melody. Though not the most interesting on record, Still Life Still knows how to bring it live. It’ll be very interesting to see this band grow in the upcoming years, whether they embrace their more pop-rock roots or gear towards an even more BSS-like sound. Either way, I see them doing well.

MySpace: http://www.myspace.com/stilllifestill

UK indie dream pop rockers Wild Beasts were up next and the second they stepped onstage, a wave of red light – an enemy of photographers – flooded the stage and a seriously addictive beat hit the crowd. Rhythmically heavy, Wild Beasts can make an audience dance, sway, head bob and pretty much everything in between. Lead singer/guitarist/bassist Hayden Thorpe’s voice is strange yet hypnotically compelling and when it contrasts with the lower register of bassist/guitarist Tom Fleming, it is oddly exquisite – voices like these don’t normally work but in this case it does. Songs like “All The Kings Men” and “We Still Got The Taste Dancing On Our Tongues” – both off their newest release Two Dancers – are prime examples of how great this band really is. Fantastic both on record and live, if you don’t have Wild Beasts in your musical library yet, do it now.

MySpace: http://www.myspace.com/wildbeasts

Sure, I missed the end of their set but I was able to listen to it from the front room just fine. The Canadians aren’t the only ones who did great last night. Gold medals all around!

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Wild Beasts @ Horseshoe – Feb. 22, 2010

February 23rd, 2010 | By: Guest Contributor

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Still Life Still @ Horseshoe – Feb. 22, 2010

February 23rd, 2010 | By: Guest Contributor

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Let’s Chat: Wild Beasts

January 19th, 2010 | By: Melody Lau

Wild Beasts

Wild Beasts

The Singing Lamb: To those who aren’t familiar with Wild Beasts, please introduce each member!

Hayden Thorpe – vocals/guitar/bass/keys (sparkling water)
Chris Talbot – Percussion/vocals (whisky and coke)
Ben Little – Guitars (green tea)
Tom Fleming – bass/guitar/vocals/keys (brewed coffee)

Give us a bit of history – how did the band come together? Hayden and Ben attended school together, correct? How has that initial partnership grow to the four-piece band it is today?

Tom Fleming: Hayden and Ben started playing together and tentatively writing aged 16. Chris saw them play and joined aged 18. I saw them play and joined aged 20. It’s been aggregative and the band is continually changing character.

How has the band musically evolved from the first to the second album? Many people say that the two are almost entirely different, sounding like two separate bands – do you think so?

Tom: I certainly see the difference between the two albums, but I would suggest that the second is a logical next step after the first. We had been listening to music widely, but I think with the second we learned better how to incorporate different ideas into what we were doing and making them stick together. The first had to be a definitive statement, sort of a “look, I’m here!” sort of thing, whereas this was calmer, more focused and if anything, more assured. We’re still trying to work out what we are and what we can do.

I’m always curious to know if bands read their own press – do you guys read your own interviews and reviews? Why or why not?

Tom: Unavoidably we do read some of our own press (we have people who send it to us for a start), but you have to take the view that “we know best”. To be honest, we’re never satisfied until we come across a slating. Whilst it’s nice that people are interested enough to cover us, surely press can’t tell us anything useful about what we do? I hope we’ve got a good enough idea ourselves. (Yes, I’m a massive narcissist).

I recently read this lovely scary story from you, Tom – what are some other scary things that’s happened while you were on tour?

Tom: Ah, that story is just cheap offcuts of Georges Bataille and the Marquis de Sade, but thanks, I had a ball writing it. The battles on tour are with yourself, the mind is a scary place when it is left alone for too long. Also, this month’s trip to Australia will mean we share a continent with the funnel-web spider – very aggressive, very poisonous, the size of a large mouse. Spiders don’t really bother me, but this is the exception.

Clearly, within the past decade or so, technology has changed a lot – how have things like Twitter and blogging (as you guys keep a blog on your website) altered the way you communicate and reach out to fans? How has this worked to your advantage the most?

Tom: I think it gives us the possibility to communicate as normal people, while preserving the music as something else, and hopefully in doing so show that what we’re doing is made by people, and that it is understandable and accessible. The best part about, say, twitter, is that it is writing that takes place in the (almost) present tense. Almost all other expression is done in the past tense, and that gives us something we can use to give refractions and immediate thoughts of the day, without having to labour over it too much. Hopefully it illuminates what we do rather than cheapens it.

And finally, since our site’s called the Singing Lamb – if you were a singing animal, what would you be?

Tom: The kookaburra – no others were considered.

***

For more Wild Beasts,
Website: http://www.wild-beasts.co.uk/
MySpace: http://www.myspace.com/wildbeasts

Wild Beasts will also be in Toronto on February 22 at the Horseshoe! Tickets are available now for $15.00.

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