Monday, 1 February 2010

Marina and the Diamonds @ London Tabernacle

Over the last eighteen months Marina Diamandis, better known as Marina and the Diamonds has dug solid foundations to give herself a concrete claim to at least a few of the jewels from the new princess of pop crown. With an imminent sold out tour and debut album ready to roll, now is the time for Marina to surface above ground into the public consciousness. This show at London’s Tabernacle, a converted Grade II listed building complete with curved beams, timber panel roof, ornate balcony and restaurant downstairs provides for a slightly more sophisticated venue than some of the sweating beer stained clubs that she’ll be playing.

The venue is only an eighth full when first support act, and recent Breaking More Waves new wave Tinashe plays. He benefits from the Marina hardcore standing right up against the stage. Playing taught tight snappy acoustic guitar backed just by a drummer to his side his set is almost too short. From the Vampire Weekend influenced A-Liar to the hooky “What do you know, what do you know about me,” chorus of the jiggle-skiffle Mr Presumption, the set is warmly received and deservedly so. Stripped of studio production, Saved with its Motown lion sleeps tonight hip wiggling “Oo-oo’s,” and Mayday with its obvious accessibility come across as gorgeously raw pop songs.

When the stage is filled with bearded check shirted men with non-descript haircuts, stereotypes kick in and it’s a fairly safe assumption that the half hour that follows will not haemorrhage dance routines, synth pop or celebratory club bangers. It doesn’t. Predictably Goldheart Assembly bring west coast harmonies to the country / folk / rock path. Yes another UK Fleet Foxes perhaps, who rock out a little more. Unfortunately they destroy any muso cool they may have obtained when they plea desperately “Please buy our album when it comes out in March, otherwise its back to work.”

“Hello diamonds,” Marina chirps; not to her backing band of what appear to be session musicians, but to the audience. These ‘diamonds’ are Marina’s crutch. Like any other performer she needs an audience, otherwise being on stage is worthless. The Tabernacle crowd give her the platform to play at being a ‘proper’ pop star, with her oh-my-god drama school graduate confidence, big smiles and Toyah goes opera euro-pop songs. Marina exudes quirky theatrical belief, albeit sometimes it seems too calculated and contrived in its ‘look at me posing’ control.

There are however hints of vulnerability that seep through. “I’m a snail without a shell,” she sings with whispered vibrato. Later she admits to being very scared about the release of her new single on Monday. It’s these moments of fragility that leave a perception that underneath Marina is as brittle and real as anyone else.

Marina and the Diamonds have the big pop songs in the trash culture obsessed Hollywood and the immense romp of Shampain, to have chart success, as well as slightly more complex tunes such as Oh No and the piano ballad Obsessions for a more long term musical relationship. If she can bring home the openness of her character more fully to the live arena, and appear less stage managed without coming across as being over affected or zany, then she could well be on to a winning formula live as well as on record.

Friday, 29 January 2010

Warpaint - Elephants

Warpaint are a group that we first introduced here in November. Subsequently at the start of this month they released a video for their song Elephants taken from their Exquisite Corpse EP. Today we’re playing catch up with the film.

With hints of paganism in their attire and a set full of dry ice, the band try to blow the listener away (as well as themselves in this rather breezy video) with their hypnotic guitar repetition that drips and trickles like raindrops on a window.

The band are playing dates with Yeasayer and Akron/ Family Stateside in the next couple of months, and we hope for a possible return to the UK later in the year when their debut album is complete and ready to go.

Thursday, 28 January 2010

Beach House - Teen Dream

This time last year the critics and writers were salivating over what many considered to the first great album of 2009 - Merriweather Post Pavilion by Animal Collective. You could almost imagine them setting up files entitled 'Albums of the Year' and typing the groups name into their new blank spreadsheet. Now, we’re only a few weeks into 2010 and yet already it seems to be happening again. Teen Dream by Beach House is being lapped up by those in the know. “An absolutely magical record,” babbled the NME. “Innocent wide-eyed brilliance,” said the The Fly. “A band truly finding its own voice,” raved the BBC. There seems to be a lot of dreamy love for Teen Dream. Yet having spent a significant portion of time delving into to its weary lullaby sound we have come away finding it rather underwhelming and insubstantial, rather like its nondescript cover (above). Although it’s a bolder progression than their previous work Devotion, and a number of songs - Norway and Walk In The Park - are hazily and lazily beautiful, it’s a recording that washes over us and then cascades away down the middle of the road rather than sinking in.

Recorded in a converted church, the album mixes soft piano, vintage organ, dulled drums and the slightly blurred near masculine vocals of Victoria Legrand to create something that is pleasant, consistent in its sound, and full of temperate atmospherics. However rather than becoming victorious through its subtleties and polite arrangements Teen Dream ends up drifting smoke-like away, with no heat from the remaining embers. Take a song such as 10 Mile Stereo which tries to build the gap by enveloping the listener with a simple plodding drum sound and intertwining quartz-like shimmering guitar that gradually elevates into something a little shoe gaze. In theory it sounds rather magical and special. In practice the song shrugs its shoulders afterwards and walks away. Maybe we sound a little harsh here, Teen Dream is certainly not a poor album, but many of the songs blend and mould into each other in a way that leaves a fogged and empty feeling.

We don’t have one of those album of the year spreadsheets, but if we did, we wouldn’t be typing Teen Dream into it. If this review is a reaction to all the reviews of praise, then so be it, but in all honesty Teen Dream fails to move us and is mainly forgotten once we press eject on our player.

Wednesday, 27 January 2010

Marina And The Diamonds - Hollywood ( Estonian Pop ! )

It seems a long time ago that we first posted about Marina and the Diamonds way back in 2008 here. Since then her star has continued to rise. The new single Hollywood is due for release next week and is currently A listed on the Radio 1 play list. With a growing dedicated fan base that are prepared to pay over £100 for her demo CD Mermaid vs. Sailor on Ebay, Marina appears to be developing a strong sense of loyalty, verging on obsession, amongst some of her followers. Next week will be the first true indicator of if her talent and hard work over the last couple of years has engaged with the public. At Breaking More Waves we will be holding our breath and listening to the Top 40 singles with a degree of trepidation.

But before that there is another video of Hollywood. According to Neon Gold Records blog it is ‘just found’ footage of Marina and the Diamonds playing on Estonia’s premier music revue program Pop ! Together with Gonzales, Marina performs a substantial string laden version of the song which should please fans immensely.

How genuine that Pop ! even exists as a program, we’re not so sure. The knowing winks, the claim that the video has been ‘found’, the poor clarity of the visuals complete with rolling screen effect and the crimped euro hair-do that Marina sports all suggest that this is an amusing set up. There are points when as Marina hams it up she looks like she is about to burst into hysterical laughter. Add to this the absurd facial expressions that the white gloved Gonzales pulls to develop a further layer of hilarity to the whole thing. Mind you, as far as we can tell following a quick raid on an Estonian to English internet translator, the subtitles are for real.

There are now are trio of videos for Hollywood, the other two which you can watch here and here. Furthermore this Gonzales version of the song is being given away as a free download from the Neon Gold blog get it by clicking here ! Here's the video.