CRUD MUSIC MAGAZINE
ALBUM REVIEWS :: NEWS :: CRUD RADIO ::NEW RELEASES::PREVIEWS::HOME
 
SAMARITANS - CHANGE OUR MINDS
 
 
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
MEDIA STREAM PREVIEW
play with Windows Media
Play Crud Radio - 1 hour of great music mixed exclusively for Crud
CRUD MUSIC MAG  ALERTS

MUSIC POLLS
Best of Glasto 2010
Dizzee Rascal
Scissor Sisters
Muse
Thom Yorke
Stevie Wonder

View Weekly Poll Results


Brendan Perry ~ Ark
Kathryn Williams ~ ‘Playing Out – Songs For Children & Robots’
Eliza Doolittle ~ Eliza Doolittle
I Am Kloot ~ Sky At Night
Grasscut ~ 1 inch/ ½ Mile
Bodi Bill ~ Two In One
The Pipettes ~ Earth Versus The Pipettes
Black Francis ~ Six Legged Man
Herve ~ Ghetto Bass 2
Mixtapes & Cellmates ~ Rox
Pavement ~ Quarantine The Past: The Best of Pavement
Pernice Brothers ~ Goodbye, Killer
Lightspeed Champion ~ Life Is Sweet!
Kathryn Williams ~ The Quickening
Ash ~ A-Z Vol.1

latest news

Badly Drawn Boy ~ ‘It’s What I’m Thinking’ and ‘Part 1 – Photographing Snowflakes’
Max Sedgley ~ 'Suddenly Everything' ~ 'Sound Boy' releases.
I Am Kloot ~ Autumn Tour dates
Various Unknown Artists ~ We Were So Turned On: A Tribute To David Bowie
Feeder ~ Renegades
Twilight Sad ~ ‘The Wrong Car’ EP
Frightened Rabbit ~ November and December Tour Dates
Clinic ~ 'Bubblegum' ~ New album
Gorillaz ~ 'On Melancholy Hill'
Tom Jones ~ 'Praise & Blame' new album

features

Pipettes - Earth Versus the Pipettes
New Wave to New Beat
LCD Sound System - This Is Happening
Eels/BBC4 Parallel Worlds
Arctic Monkeys Live @ Wembley Arena
Twilight Sad @ ICA London
Flaming Lips Live @ The Troxy
Nick Cave @ Hammersmith Apollo
The National Live @ The Royal Festival Hall
Guillemots Shepherd’s Bush Empire London

interviews

:: Frightened Rabbit
:: Teitur
:: Tom Williams and the Boat
:: Scritti Politti
:: Charlotte Hatherley
:: Delays
:: Editors
:: Grandaddy
:: Willy Mason
:: Palace Fires

news archive

June-Sept 2008
April-May 2008
Jan-March 2008
Oct-Dec 2007
Jun-Sept 2007
April-May 2007
Jan-March 2007
Oct-Dec 2006
June-Sept 2006
April-May 2006
Jan-March 2006
Oct-Dec 2005
June-Oct 2005
April-May 2005
Jan-March 2005

    

The National / Annuals @ Astoria, London, 22.05.2007

Explosions in the Sky

Manfully bridging the divide between the uncomfortably withdrawn and absorbingly eccentric, James Berry recoils at the loaded springs of Annuals frontman Adam Baker and the momentous slow-burn of Arcade frontman, Mat Beringer.

25/06/2007

Love Broken Social Scene but haven’t got the concentration to keep up with the every movement of such a twitchy many-limbed creature? Perhaps we could interest sir in a more manageable animal? Annuals, numbering six, are certainly a more tax-return-friendly size, but their productivity trails sparks and they serve as proof positive that you can always get everything you need in the boot if you spent your childhood playing Tetris and are willing to sit on the lid until the catch locks. Frontman Adam Baker is a loaded spring, rebounding from his microphone, keyboard and second drum kit positions, wrestling his boundless kinetic energy under control. He is like we imagine Fyfe Dangerfield from Guillemots might be were he not so antique and chair-bound. The music is Flaming Lips fresh, each member equally unflinching and exuberant in their contributions to each song’s framing. Like a jack-in-a-box (or out of a boot) they bring and already vibrant, overflowing album to life.

The welcome that awaits The National’s arrival expects no such thing – their sedate evolution is one of their important keystones – but it upholds the blistering enthusiasm in itself. Some things never change, or at least they do slowly, but something is very different this time around. You can’t ignore the anticipation of the 2000-plus strong sold-out crowd (and surprisingly at some points, choir) assembled here a mere day after the release of their latest album, ‘Boxer’. Their records are notoriously slow burning and even factoring in file sharing this is undoubtedly the ‘Alligator’ effect still catching up with them – they have a lot to thank that record for. So 2000 people, adoring, warm, arms extended. And frankly, frontman Mat Beringer does not know what on earth to do with them.

The chasm between uncomfortably withdrawn and absorbingly eccentric is this man’s style, but even by previous standards, standing limp, nervous, he looks like he’s knocking back chloroform shots to quall the terrors. There is an antidote though, and that is his art – he lives at the heart of his songs, wrapped tight in the protective reams of his abstract and contemplative imagination – and this is no more evident than tonight. This being the first headline show on the ‘Boxer’ run he still tip-toes through new songs, losing himself for a minute, then becoming self-aware, checking he has his footing. But more familiar, and now intuitive, songs – ‘Secret Meeting’, ‘Murder Me Rachel’ – are the exorcism of his inhibitions that prove the rule. Super-charged set climax ‘Mr November’ ramps up the temperature of his blood and he teeters at the lip of the stage, microphone pulled up above his head, screaming at the sky, over and over, louder and more intensely with each call. Until the song’s climax falls off the edge and suddenly there is silence, then wild applause, and he is left, flailing slightly, caught in the headlights, arms hung unevenly, carrying the air of a man who’s just regained consciousness in Trafalgar Square wearing nothing but a squewiff smile and dizzy confusion.

The sound in the Astoria does them no favours. They’re a band for whom the subtleties reign over the bold shapes and though their dynamic has to change – a live performance is not available for digesting at great length, nails must be struck precisely – tonight the sound hangs heavy and there is little breathing room. Of the new songs, ‘Slow Show’ breaks through to blossom warmly, ‘Squalor Victoria’ batters its way towards an intoxicatingly blunt finale, ‘Racing Like A Pro’ glides beautifully with Matt spinning out the repeated refrain “you’re dumbstruck baby” like he’s just grown wings and a whispered ‘Gospel’, utilising the broken and ever so quite grand piano on stage, is so bruised and delicate you want to pick it up in your hands and offer it some protection. Beneath the handicap they play majestically, intricately, perfectly - more so than we’ve seen them do before, in fact – and that still leaves an impression of grandeur. Some things never change, but some things just get better. Here’s looking forward to their November tour

Relevant sites:
www.americanmary.com/



James Berry for Crud Magazine 2007©


01/07 Bonzo Dog Band Reissues
01/07 Camden Crawl 2007
01/07 Damien Rice - Live - Hammersmith Apollo
01/07 Explosions In The Sky - London Astoria
01/07 Fog - Live - Luminaire, London
01/07 Maps - We Can Create
01/07 The National - London Astroria
01/07 Murder By Death
01/07 Phat Kev
01/07 Bowie, Bluetones , Cavern Club
01/07 Clinic, Howard Devoto
01/07 Junior Boys, Blondie
01/07 The Hold Steady - LIve - Electric Ballroom, London
01/07 The National - Brixton Academy
01/07 Yo La Tengo - Royal Festival Hall
01/07 Half Cousin Interview
01/07 Mexicolas Interview
01/07 Palladium Interview
01/07 Brakes Interview
01/07 Elevenseventy Interview
01/07 Jackson Analogue Interview
01/07 Adem Interview
01/07 Ambulance Ltd Interview
01/07 Black Arts Interview
01/07 Crimea Interview
01/07 Delays Interview
01/07 Editors Interview

01/07 Fear of Music Interview
01/07 Grandaddy Interview
01/07 Gratitude Interview
01/07 Ikara Colt Interview
01/07 John Zealey Interview
01/07 Liam Frost Interview
01/07 Mansun Interview

January 2001
July - August 2001
September - October 2001
November - December 2001
January - March 2002
April - July 2002
August - December 2002
January - March 2003
May - August 2003
November 2003
January - March 2004
April - September 2004

October - December 2004
January - March 2005
April - December 2005
January - August 2006
September - December 2006
January - September 2007
October - December 2007
January - May 2008
June-December 2008


 
 
 

 

© CRUD MUSIC MAGAZINE/
2-4-7-MUSIC.COM 2009

STILL refusing to dumb it down.

CRUD MUSIC MAGAZINE HOME :: NEW RELEASES :: MUSIC REVIEWS :: MYCRUDSPACE :: MEDIA STREAMS :: MUSIC NEWS :: ADVERTISING :: POLLS :: CONTACT US ::
***AVERTISEMENT***
Room4U.org.uk - Up to 75% OFF standard rates
***AVERTISEMENT***
Crud Magazine is set up and maintained in accordance with permissions and conditions agreed by all parties.