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  • The More Things Change: Of Montreal Concert Review

     

    May we never go go mental, may we always stay stay, gentle. Of Montreal’s flamboyant front man, Kevin Barnes, undoubtedly relishes in the irony of these lyrics as he performs what he dubs the “sissy dance” and shares the stage with four people in black, body-hugging one-pieces, and alien masks. For the next song, the actors peel themselves out of their extra-terrestrial leotards and put on tuxes and huge animal heads. They bumble around on stage, often roaring at or colliding with the band members.

    You’ve got to hand it to a band capable of producing such a bizarre spectacle. Even if you don’t like the music, you can’t help but watch and wonder what they’re going to do next. Trying to discern a narrative thread is impossible – the folks sharing the stage with the band change their costumes ten times during the show, wearing everything from hot-pink, one-legged flared onesies to jungle furs. During one song, the guitarist simulates humping one of the animals with the head of his guitar.

    An Of Montreal show is organized chaos. It’s like Carnival on stage. The audience goes along for the ride, largely because they maintain at least a vague belief that there’s some method to the madness.

    The show, especially the costume changes, reflects a band that constantly destroys borders and boundaries – even the ones they themselves have established. Whether during a two-hour show or a 10-year career, Of Montreal’s sound never stays the same. They reinvent their sound and aesthetic, and aren’t shy about borrowing inspiration from other bands and performers. The songs on their most recent album, Skeletal Lamping, provide funky pop hooks while pushing the band into new terrain. Barnes has fully embodied the alter ego he began developing for their previous album, Hissing Fauna Are You the Destroyer? He wears face paint, a puffy purple shirt that would make Seinfeld proud, and shiny red platform shoes. The overall effect offers a “Ziggy Stardust for the new millennium” vibe, while his voice and the band’s backing suggests a Scissor Sisters sound mixed with hints of psychedelia.

    Despite the band’s varying visual and aural aesthetic, their set list revolves around songs from the Sunlandic Twins era that have emerged as classics. These songs provide an armature for the mad dash costume and chord changes. Just when Of Montreal seems to be veering off the map (or stage), just when the audience starts wondering who or what they’re listening to, the band plows into a song like Oslo in the Summertime, which grounds both them and the audience. They push the envelope, but just when the audience gets antsy or uncomfortable, they rein it back in and reestablish their vintage quirky and contagious pop.

    Of Montreal might spin heads with their musical ADD, but any band that refuses to rest on their accumulated success and instead chooses to reinvent itself both on stage and in the studio deserves props, which the audience was more than happy to give them. Their encore of The Party’s Crashing Us, brought down the house and left the audience with the sense that while the band might continue morphing, they’ll always be a sight to behold.

  • First Look: Elliott Yamin’s Fight For Love

    I know we’ve been showing lots of new videos of late, but hey, we’re a music site and we love music videos.

    Fight For Love, which is Elliott Yamin’s first single to his upcoming album (which drops next week), has been out for a minute, but the video was recently finished and released.

    I’m not sure if I’m down with the mulletted look, but hey, this isn’t a beauty pageant. The dude can sing.

    Some people fight for love …

  • Tinted Windows: The Soundtrack to Summer 2009??

    tinted-windows

    Tinted Windows is probably not a supergroup you would’ve seen coming, but that doesn’t stop their debut album from being one of the most fun pop records to come down the pike in a while. Who’s in the band?, you might ask. Well, on drums there’s Bun E. Carlos, of legendary power-pop band Cheap Trick. On guitar, there’s James Iha, formerly of Smashing Pumpkins and A Perfect Circle. Your bassist is Adam Schlesinger, primary songwriter and chief wiseass for Fountains of Wayne, and on lead vocals…say hi to Taylor Hanson. Yes, THAT Taylor Hanson. Don’t lie. You know you’re still interested.

    Actually, if you’ve actually been following Hanson since “Mmmbop” turned them into teen sensations, you’d have known that they’ve released several highly entertaining albums recently, and that Taylor has grown into quite the assured vocalist. His voice is still boyish, and can alternately sound innocent or snotty, depending on what the song calls for. He’s the perfect fit for this band, bringing a bit of soul to what would still be a killer power-pop album. The riffs are crunchy, the drumming swings, and the hooks (mostly written by Schlesinger-is it me or is FOW one of the most underrated bands around these days?) are golden. These songs are perfect for dropping the top on the car on a nice summer day and singing at the top of your lungs.

    Tinted Windows uses the half-hour or so and 11 songs to pull just about every earworm trick out of the book. Whether it’s the “uh oh’s” and “whoa whoa”s in the frenetic album opener Kind of a Girl, the chorus of Doncha Wanna, which gets repeated so much it’ll ingrain itself in your head for at least a week, or the stut-stut-stuttered chorus of Take Me Back, these guys prove themselves masters of the great pop song.

    You know what the coolest thing about this album is? These guys sound like they’re having a fucking blast playing together. Most music is so processed and serious now-you rarely ever find anything in the mainstream that sounds as tossed-off (in a good way) and fun as Tinted Windows. So, if you’re looking for a great pop/rock album that you’ll be singing along with all summer, look no further than Tinted Windows. If you let the preconceived notions of a band with a Hanson brother keep you from checking this out, it’s your loss.