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St. Vincent @ the Phoenix

Saturday, 17 December 2011 16:23
With the album Strange Mercy still warm from the oven, St. Vincent opened her show at the Phoenix last night knocking off hits. “Surgeon” and “Cheerleader” pulled in the crowd, making dancers out of hipsters and spreading preteen enthusiasm like a contagion. The sound was incredible – though the Phoenix usually delivers – and Clark’s voice, high and ethereal against the warm bass-heavy backing her band provided, was dead on. That voice was completely, gorgeously, dead, dead on. Working between her 2011 album and Actor and blasting through a cover from the Pop Group, St. Vincent sniped off a perfect set.
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The glutton in me was missing over-the-top jam battles that these musicians were clearly capable of having. Each song ended like a curt handshake. But like a connoisseur passing over cheap scotch, Clark carefully chose her solos and tore through each one like knife through a paper bag. She swung her axe as though she left the womb with it in her hands. Her guitar tone, built on pedal-knowledge and a remarkable ear, seemed to do the job of two instruments. Her energy on stage could’ve jump-started a car battery.
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Having been a hired gun herself, first with the Polyphonic Spree and then with Sufjan Stevens, Annie Erin Clark knows how to pick a band. Two keyboardists – one singing back up – and a drummer, Clark was at the helm of a tight ship. The banter between songs, spotlight shining on the angelic Clark, was more folk show than rock show. She told stories of cemetery hangouts in Washington D.C and later revealed that “Cruel” is basically a flash fiction piece about adopting a group of motherless children only to have them turn on her. This serene demeanor may have encouraged the “Annie, you’re so pretty” shout outs, which annoyed me (and probably Clark) because she was busting chops playing rock and roll, not limp-wristing an acoustic. Her most endearing moment was pausing a verse into “Dilettante” and admitting that she had forgotten her lyrics, asking us all to help her remember the first line.
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About leaving St. Berkeley School of Music, Clark remarked that she had to forget everything she had learned about music before she could start actually making music. But underneath the slick outfits and hipster credibility, there is still a lot of music nerd stuck on Annie Clark. That genuine musicianship made for an incredible show.

David Byrne and St Vincent Play Santa Barbara

Tuesday, 27 November 2012 19:10

David Byrne Returns to Santa Barbara

With His Latest Collaborator St. Vincent

    1. L. Paul Mann

 

David Byrne, the former fiery front man of Rock And Roll Hall of Famers', “The Talking Heads”, has constantly reinvented himself over the nearly four decades of his musical career. He first played Santa Barbara's Arlington theater on September 25th 1979, with the B-52's, in what may have been one of the best live shows I have witnessed there in the last 33 years. That show, at the forefront of the “New Wave” music movement, introduced many in the audience to a whole new genre of rock music.

Since the demise of that historic group, Byrne has embarked on a solo career, experimenting with a dizzying array of musical genres. His latest collaboration on his newest album “Love This Giant”, features singer-guitarist Annie Erin Clark, better known by her stage moniker St. Vincent. She began her professional music career as part of the massive line up in the experimental pop group Polyphonic Spree. The group blended a choir, rock band and classical instruments into a modern version of classic sixties bands like the Fifth Dimension. Byrne and Clark enlisted Indy producer John Congleton. Congleton has produced a myriad of musical acts including the Polyphonic Spree. Not surprisingly, “Love This Giant”, exhibits many elements that made The Polyphonic Spree so unique, including an array of classical horned instruments.

 

The show October 11th at the Arlington featured the new ensemble who created the album. An array of horn players eight persons strong, supplemented by a drummer and percussionist-keyboard player made up the backbone of the group. Meanwhile Byrne and St. Vincent fronted the group, swapping and sharing the lead vocal role. Byrne exhibited the same intense glare that he had on the same stage thirty three years prior, but his hair has turned to a ghostly white and he has grown a bit of a middle age paunch. The bulk of their nearly two hour set featured mostly the new album in it's eternity. The music the band created had a sound reminiscent of Fleetwood Mac's Tusk album, with the same grandeur as the marching band sounds featured on that 1979 masterpiece. But with Byrnes' quirky singing style and St. Vincent's raw Indy wailing and guitar playing, the performance came off with a fresh new sound unique to the group. The performance came off much like a Broadway show, with dance routines incorporated into nearly every song. The talented musicians were all introduced near the end of the set, with lengthy explanations of all of their side projects. Although the new music was well received by the crowd, it was the addition of some Talking Heads classics like “Burning Down The House” and “On The Road To Nowhere”, that whipped many in the crowd into a dancing frenzy. St Vincent had her own fans as well, who embraced the bands versions of some of her solo material, like the song “Cheerleader”, from her last album “Strange Mercy”. But it was clear that the mercurial David Byrne will be remembered most for his contribution to the dawn of the new wave with The Talking Heads.

 

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