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Archive for the 'Final Fantasy' Category

Into the mouth of Final Fantasy

 There are a pair of new EPs coming out from my beloved uber-geek violin virtuoso Final Fantasy within the next few months. And, honestly, that’s the best excuse to post.

(photo from FF at Wordsmiths Books )

Final Fantasy: The Butcher

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This tackles new E.P. 1, “Spectrum 14th Century”. Meant to encompass a history of a fictional land in a fictional time (crushin’ mad-like on your nerd-brain there, bb), the songs are recorded with Beirut as Owen’s backing band and include such atmospheric nuances as faux-field recordings of birds (not birds) and other pastoral noises (not pastoral noises).  “The Butcher” is one of the prettiest and most sublime pieces I’ve heard from FF in a while, and for someone whose entire output is that, that’s saying a lot.

Final Fantasy: I Saved A Junky Once

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If the prevailing mood of the Spectrum ep is one of harmony, the mood of second ep, “Play To Please”,  is that of anxiety and discord. A series of re-configured songs from Alex Lukashevsky runs through striking off-notes, breaking strings and murky nervousness, like ADULT. being played by a string section. See: the above “I Saved A Junky Once”.

Beirut:Cliquot

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When the time comes, and it soon will, for either the world to end or for the greatest songs of the decade to be selected, this will certainly be near the top of my list. Owen’s aching, sweeping funeral dirge sticks in both head and heart forever.

Final Fantasy online (and eternal).





Yesterday fever, tomorrow St Peter

It would be relatively simple to proclaim Final Fantasy’s too-brief, strikingly intimate in-store appearance yesterday afternoon at Wordsmiths Books as, simply, the most moving show I’ve taken in this year.

Or maybe that would just make sense to those 30 or so who were there-the soaring, swooping orchestration that is Owen, his voice, his violin and his loops of both, put in the confines of a bookstore with high ceilings and a lovely echo.

To those lucky few, by god it was freakin’ magic.

The folks at Wordsmiths have yet to begin recording a single freaking thing, despite their continuous pull of massive A-list musical talent, so instead of being able to present you with a recording from Owen’s closing song yesterday, his massive, emotional version of Beirut’s “Cliquot”, instead all I can give you is the best that my Youtube scouring has uncovered-something from somewhere that wasn’t Wordsmiths:

Try to not get chills.

(His version of “Peach, Plum, Pear” stopped my heart.)

For more photos, check Wordsmiths’ blog. If you weren’t there and you’re reading Res, you probably can’t feel authentic emotion anyway, so no worries.





Talkin sweet and lookin fine

Canada’s Owen Pallet aka Final Fantasy aka friend of our beloved SparklyWolf is one of those in Camp Troubadour that never really got the attention he should have from me. In fact, I recall Hacks and I, a few years back, watching the video for “This Is The Dream Of Win And Regine” excitedly (particularly at the ill-fitting indiemotive “this is real rock” scream that comes from nowhere other than Owen’s overflowing heart as the song ends), only to discover his full catalog to be a bit, um, offputting, where “offputting” means “not at all expecting low-fi garage violin baroque”.

Flash forward to now, when I am obviously raging against the dying of the pretty, getting to a point where every mention of Dude’s Dance Party causes my most-immediate claws-n-fangs reaction (and, NO, “claws-n-fangs” is NOT the name of some new Simian side project, though I’ll sell you that one for free), and Owen’s pretty, lo-fi but highly technical soaring strings are like a salve. Time= perspective, folks, time=perspective.

Anyway, again our friends at Wordsmiths Books in Decatur (that’s Georgia, you Sufjanians) have nailed down an ideal indie in-store for their high-ceilings and marble marvelousness-next Tuesday, November 6th, at 4 P.M. The shin-dig is free, all-ages and probably going to be very much an intimate sort of thing, so getting there early to snap up some free parking is highly recommended.

Since everyone, including Southern Voice and Wordsmiths own blog, seems to be painting with the palette of Pallett (ooh, journo high five! HIGH. FIVE.!), I thought I’d decorate your Friday afternoon with a few choice Final Fantasy tunes.

Final Fantasy: Your Ex-Lover Is Dead

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There’s a lot of love, both spoken and silent, aroundabout these parts for Stars. Their first album didn’t shake our roof, but the new one is absolutely splendid, and certain to be a part of any 2007 top whatev. This is from Do You Trust Your Friends, the collection that involved Stars handing out turns at their Set Yourself On Fire tunes. Pallett wraps himself around and into the original album’s kickoff track, keeping that so-necessary sample and actually using it to (pardon the pun, I don’t want this and neither do you) fire up the whole song. It’s a bit more lush than what you may expect from Owen’s studio stuff under the FF moniker, but it’s that much better for it.

Final Fantasy: Fantasy (live Mariah Carey cover)

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Can I tell you how awesome this is? Oh, no need, you’re going to click out of sheer curiosity and then just fall, droolingly maddeningly deeply in love with the way Owen treats Mimi’s TomTom-snatching original with coolhighharmonious bliss.

This would be as opportune of a time as any for my plea to bring Mariah back to acceptable cool-there was a great remix of “Emotions” that surfaced early last year, and it made some small-ish round, but, really, “Daydream”, “Fantasy” (partic the ODB version, whose part here, unfortunately, is not played by one Patrick Wolf), “Emotions”…that was some good, good stuff.

If you need a touch of the orchestral, again: Final Fantasy at Wordsmiths Books, 141 E Trinity Place in Decatur, GA next Tuesday (the 6th of Nov) at 4 P.M.

 Final Fantasy’s myspace.