Showing posts with label The Swell Season. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Swell Season. Show all posts

Friday, 15 January 2010

The Swell Season... real people, real live (Shepherds Bush Empire, Thu 14th Jan 2010)

It's not really fair on us mere mortals for someone to successfully write music, and lyrics, and sing, and play guitar, ... and be a generous artist not a control freak, and not be an ego maniac, and be utterly engaged and sharing with the audience, and be funny, ... all at the same time, faultlessly.

How does one get to this point in an artistic career (he must have been working as a full time musician, what - 20years?), and not be deeply angry with the world (like say, David Gilmour), or have become introverted and withdrawn (like say, Van Morrison), or just plain bonkers (like say, Prince). You can't imagine Glen Hansard writing a political protest album, or 'reinventing' himself, or writing a musical, or moving 'full-time' to LA. He's just bloody normal like the rest of us, and that's weird.

Hansard has a frankly intimidating cohort of strengths (and every time I think about it I find new ones), but live he has an amazingly soul-warming ability to connect with the audience. At times during the show it's as if he's organising an impromptu singalong at the local pub. (Actually he gets us singing quite a lot - I think he uses it as his own way of gauging how well the gig is going - our singing is his reward, his private payback and possibly the main reason he does this at all).

In the narrative in my head - he's honed his performing manner and on stage presence by busking in the street (just like in the movie Once, so, yes, possibly just a fantasy) - years and years of struggling to earn enough to survive as a musician. The ability to easily drop off the cuff jokes and banter casually like a standup is something that takes many years of live work. The moment where he steps conpletely off mic to the stage to play "Say it to me now", plain and raw, - it's breathtaking - (it works as a gimmick too - the audience is almost shocked), and I think he does it to honour that memory of where he's come from, a gesture of respect towards his art.

The gig was just flawless. It was perfect in a completely natural way, not in a 'every-minute-detail-in-the-proper-place' way. All the musicians are so talented that there's not a wrong note in the entire show - but it's as live and real and in the moment as possible. You're swept away by Hansard's visceral passion and joy for what he's doing.

And then Irglova. On piano, on backing vocals, and singing centre-stage herself - she doesn't disappoint in the least. What I find impressive is her fierce, fierce inner confidence. The boys - Glen and the Frames are a) all Irish (obviously) where she is Czech, and b) they've have been mates and worked together for more than a decade and she's the newbie. And yet she has the confidence to express her artistic voice in amongst that. Her singing reminded me most of Joni Mitchell (which got me thinking about who are the essential female singing archetypes - I reckon;  folk - Joni Mitchell, jazzy - Billie Holiday or Ella or both, poppy - Dusty Springfield, soul - Aretha, indie- Kate Bush, rock/punk - Patti Smith.... ), and her songs are exactly as ethnic/traditional as I thought they were - all in sweet, gypsy tinged, strictly minor keys.

The set was based around most or all of Strict Joy, with various older songs scattered in between, and interestingly just the one cover - a rollicking, fiery version of Tim Buckley's "Buzzin Fly" (with a stanza from Jeff Buckley's)

Some other notes: i) Hansard's guitar - a Takamine accoustic, is used almost entirely through the show (only change I noticed) - I think that's another sign of mature confidence not needing to flit around on various slightly different guitars, ii) The Frames - essentially they're a highly competent rhythm section, there's very little soloing, and the bass player (who has a wonderfully melodic style) is the main momemtum driver - they'd do well in the Austin country/roots scene.

The highlights, besides the entire thing, for me were "In these arms", "I have loved you wrong" and the closing High Horses (they can't pull off the coda quite as well as on the album.. but still it's just stupendously good).

Set list (thanks Martina!)

Fallen from the sky
Lies
Low rising
Feeling the pull
In these arms
The Rain
The moon
If you want me
Fantasy man
Say it to me now
Leave
Back broke
Buzzin Fly (Tim Buckley cover)
solo Interlude by Colm Mac Con Iomaire
I have loved you wrong
The verb
The siren
When your minds made up
Falling slowly
High hopes
High horses

Links:
The Swell Season
The Frames

Friday, 4 December 2009

The Swell Season... a music maturing

Strict Joy, second album from The Swell Season, unveils Glen Hansard and Markéta Irglová in confident swing. Their musical relationship has grown and matured at a rate of knots - fuelled by a deep artistic empathy. They fit together and complement each other in a rare fashion; male and female voice, guitar and piano. Him garrulous, extrovert, heart on the sleeve, her reflective and circumspect.

They're writing what I call 'pure music'. What I mean by this is music where the delivery and presentation is unimportant, and where the time and place and context are unimportant too. So for example, on the live recording accompanying this CD they perform "Falling Slowly", with the Frames musicians and a high school choir joining them for backing - while equally the same song holds true if it's just him on the acoustic guitar. More broadly I mean that the songs are so strong as compositions that it would be no leap to hear other musicians, in completely different genres, playing them in a different key, at a different tempo... the essence survives. The classic example is "Wonderwall" - and Noel Gallagher's famous comment about knowing you've made it when buskers are singing your songs. If the song is strong enough it'll work with a wide variety of situations and performers and still hold its essence. The downside is that you're also running the risk of being X-Factor-ed, or Westlife'd... Alexandra Burke's cover of "Hallelujah" being an obvious case in point.

While the first album was wonderful, nevertheless it felt a little bit like a sketch... partly because it has reworked Frames songs (and more included in the live show), but also because it's more of a stylistic mixed bag. By contrast Strict Joy sounds more deliberate. The deep pleasure is the balance between them in the harmony singing, and the interplay between her piano and his guitar. Irglová's piano is often childlike in its simplicity and melodic playfulness, full of twinkles and plunks, or otherwise backing Hansard's acoustic with a restrained, hand-in-hand pacing. The album also has a more consistent tone, for me sounding (if anything) inspired by mid-seventies folk-rock of say CSNY, and particularly Van Morrison. All but two tracks are credited to Hansard, but Irglová's two more than hold their own. Throughout they're backed with a gently understated skill by friends and musicians from The Frames.

The album is wistful and sad; there are starry fables, sorrowful regrets, and above all a searingly honest intimacy. Thematically, Hansard is writing about a relationship maturing - the songs are about a man who finally stops running away when things get serious, about facing up to broken promises and disappointments, and about finding in the end a kind of workable redemption in love - where moments of ecstasy still come along now and then. Clearly they're allowing us to be tempted by the thought that the songs are autobiographical, but the songs are really so well crafted that this doesn't necessarily follow (I suspect this usefully helps to add some mystery to aid the marketing - why spoil the illusion?).
It's intricate and subtle, and this makes it hard to nail down. "In These Arms" is a gorgeous love song as good as anything they've done. "Fantasy Man" is a sophisticated folk in a traditional style with Irglová singing lead. "Paper Cup"... sounds (surprisingly) a little like Cat Stevens, while "Love That Conquers" has that sun-baked David Crosby 'after-the-summer-of-love' sort of feel.

Highlight for me is the coda that closes out "High Horses", a perfectly, exquisitely balanced change in tone and momentum that shows a true master at work.

But really there's not a fault in the whole thing and I simply can't recommend it highly enough. If you've enjoyed say, Fleet Foxes, or Bon Iver... this will more than live up to expectations.