Archive for October, 2009

Graveyard Songs

The Swear: Graveyard Songs

Immediate confession:
For the longest time, in my wallet, I carried around a guitar pick I had thrown at me the first time I ever saw Atlanta rock band The Swear live. It was a gale-force surprise of a show, them being tapped for a last-minute opening slot when my friend and I were head-first into our crush on “where are they now?-indie band edition” boy/girl band The Subways. Suffice to say, The Swear crushed all bands that came before and after. I remember turning to my friend, both our mouths agape as singer Elizabeth Elkins earned the title “frontwoman” again and again, falling to her knees, swinging the mic stand with a swagger befitting Robert Plant, and whispering in his ear “um I think we have a replacement for the Distillers.”

But, yeah, the guitar pick-I’m not one for such obvious acts of fandom from Atlanta bands-I mean, other than R.E.M. or Deerhunter, obviously (Bradford, call me!). That night, though, randomly being introduced to a band that changed the way I thought about what was happening in the Atlanta music scene-that was worth remembering, a night of fortuitous, happy accidents. And so I pocketed the guitar pick flung into the crowd by Elizabeth, and kept it in the change pocket of my wallet, along with a fortune cookie prophecy.

Also, it’s really possible after that first show that I wrote The Swear a fan letter.

Ok, it’s beyond a possibility, it’s the absolutely truth. And Elizabeth Elkins wrote back. (It’d be way cooler if this was pre-email, like if these missives were scribbled on torn sheets of paper, but alas all of this was through the magic of the internet.) We met up at Java Monkey, a, no, THE, coffeeshop on the downtown Decatur square. Given her straight-up rock-and-roll, self-mutilating gale force hurricane of a stage presence, the wait for her to show, with me holding a little reporter’s notebook waiting to jot down notes from any potential conversation, was incredibly unnerving. I mean, I’ve watched bands/artists/DJs do a lot of crazy shit during interviews or meetings, but, waiting for Elizabeth, I, admittedly unreasonably, feared for my personal safety once she arrived-hell, if you’ve seen what she does to guitars, mic stands, or her other band members, you’d have been scared, too.

In person, though Elizabeth Elkins proved to be warm and conversation, almost in a (dare I say it) southern way. We spent more time discussing literature and the music of Tori Amos than anything, and, upon parting, she gave me a copy of the Swear’s E.P. , Every Trick’s A Good One.

Lyrically, studying over each of those songs (particularly my still-favorite, “January”), it was evident how Elkins won the John Lennon songwriting award, and how this unabashedly ROCK, in all caps, frontwoman was versed in Updike and Joyce.

Musically, though….Every Trick’s a Good One lacked something. Some heart, some soul, some grit-all things that shined through their beyond-fierce stage show.

Flash-forward to NOW:

The Swear have an album. Hotel Rooms and Heart Attacks. And it is one of the greatest rock albums to be released by an Atlanta band, but unfortunately sent forth into the ether in a climate where this sort of thing, edgy rawness balanced by pop perfection and melody, is frowned upon from anyone south of the Mason-Dixon line. If The Swear were from New York, say, or L.A., the reviews would call them “rock’s new great hope” (forget how many years now they’ve been fraying edges, blurring the lines and kicking the shit out of amps, they’d still be a “great new hope”). But the Atlanta connection right now is, like The Swear’s name indicates of itself, a promise and a curse.

The Swear: Some Graves Are Stolen

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The songs on Hotel Rooms and Heart Attacks find the guitars chiming and razor-sharp, Jeremy Zamora not afraid to let loose with audible punk swagger and Kevin Williams finding a low-end groove that works in tandem with the rhythm section. This is an album of violence, of death, of passion. Hotel Rooms and Heart Attacks are graveyard songs, songs about drugs and lost lovers and death-but in it, too, you can hear the Atlanta skyline at night. Listen to, for instance, “Some Graves Are Stolen” or “Shuttered Off Christine”-this is the sound of Atlanta after dark. Goth-tinged, yes, but also crystalline. Oddly enough, the best comparison is to driving I-75 into the city on a warm summer night, windows down and Outkast’s Stankonia playing.

Hotel Rooms and Heart Attack’s opener, Vampire, is a mission statement if any rock band has ever written one-in the chorus scream of “you stole my fame”, you hear a band that’s been around the block a million times, has seen it all and has punched it in the face, and they’re clawing, screaming, in ringing violence and gorgeous melodies, to climb to the top.

The Swear: Vampire

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Yes, they’re from Atlanta. Yes, they’re a rock band. They’re too gritty for the indiepoppers, too well-done, too talented, too precise and too smart for those who like the sound of garages falling apart. Yes, that means they straddle some very serious lines. And yes, they write dark power-pop songs that read like great literature. A promise and a curse? That is, in fact, The Swear. And they’re screaming for you to listen, That worn, broken scream that emits from Elizabeth on “Deadfall”? That’s real-way more real than 99% of bands coming from the same scene right now. The Swear are fighting for your attention, for your mind and your heart, rather than fighting for you to up them on HypeMachine-how fucking refreshing is that? As one of the interludes on Hotel Rooms and Heart Attacks cautions, “one must be so careful these days”. Give yourself over to the promise and the curse of The Swear and they’ll give it all back, tenfold.

The Swear play Bar Matchless in Brooklyn on Saturday, Oct 10.





We are capsules of energy

Fever Ray
Webster Hall, NY
9/29/2009

(If you’ve never listened to The Knife, or Fever Ray, if you’ve never experienced the sheer wonder, the terror and childlike glee, that is the music they make, then this review will not be for you. Skip to the pretty pictures, poor dear.)

The live show of Fever Ray, nee Karin Dreijer Andersson, also known as the other half of I-guess-they’re-defunct Swedish electronic duo The Knife, is impossible to separate from the imagery she and her co-conspirators so cleverly crafted around her self-titled album. Fear, the animalism and savagery at the core of human nature, ritual and domesticity all come to light within the hour-and-change Karin and her band are on stage-and “come to light” is a very specific choice of words. Whereas the stage presentation of The Knife consisted of minimizing the presence of Karin and her brother Olof with front- and rear-projection video screens oft vastly overpowering the siblings, as Fever Ray Karin’s stage presence was less hidden and more augmented-with lazers and well-placed antique lamps. Granted, as the show progressed through its cycle of birth/life/death/repeat, Karin emerged from her position cloaked in shadows rarely, and the only time she was front and center was after the hellish, ecstatic death-ride of a cover of Nick Cave’s “Stranger Than Kindness”, as the gorgeous yet world-weary “When I Grow Up” slowly covered all in attendance like a cloak.

I’m pretty sure my auditory bar was set too high by comparing this show to seeing The Knife at the same venue years ago, but that show was, truth be told, the single live concert with the best sound I’ve ever experienced. It’s undoubtedly unfair to compare Karin’s solo project to her work with Olof, but it’s also, given the sonic similarities and her unique voice, an inevitability. So, during the opening “If I Had A Heart”, when Karin’s vocals were lost under the roar of the bass, it was unnerving. And exhilarating. That meant this would be a show with more of the human elements that made the Knife’s live stuff worth owning audio recordings off (see: the live “Pass This On”). And, when Karin allowed the gorgeous minimal-informed synthetics of “Dry and Dusty” to get nearly a verse ahead of her and then ran along to catch up, like a child falling several steps behind her mother, it made for that much more of a shared experience-the reason, after all, that you pay $35 to stand in a room with 14,000 others and experience what amounts to headphone music.

Not enough has ever been made of Karin’s stage presence, but, other than her giant Swedish elf of doom manning the laptop, the most impressive figure on stage was, in fact, her. Having now seen both of her musical incarnations, it’s evident that the “hands shaking like tremolo by the microphone stand in time to the music or with vocal enunciation” bit isn’t just her funnyscarymonkeygoblin character in The Knife-it’s her, it’s what she does, and it’s damn endearing.

It’s also not to bring to the show the knowledge of Karin’s previously-guarded personal life, which has leaked out in dribbles since the release of Fever Ray. So, when “When I Grow Up” emerged from the sonic backlash, the demonic evocation, the, if you will, “hell-ride” (RIP Wesley Willis) of “Stranger Than Kindness”, and so too did Karin, finally uncloaked and in full spotlight, smiling, the thought of her in her home role of mother and wife was as joyous as the song itself-in fact, I recall screaming “please just let me live here” midway through. It was utter, blissed perfection.

As the show ended, a Vashti Bunyan cover leading to a long, drawn-out and rapturous “Coconut”-only then did the magic of the night really dawn on me. It was like sand through hands, or like lazers through smoke-visible for only a second, and then gone.

(Photos courtesy Kristina Weise)