Saturday, March 4, 2023

Arcade Fire

 Arcade Fire is without a doubt the most famous of those artists starting with the letter "A" that I'm writing about. And, they are another Canadian band I first learned about at Soundscapes in Toronto. The store had listening statios where you could listen to a selection of CDs in order to see if you'd want to buy a particular CD. Between the accordion, the exuberantly warbling vocals of Win Butler, the Bjork-like vocals of his wife, Règine Chessagne on "I'm Sleeping In A Submarine" and the collective shouts in "No Cars Go", the first three trqacks of their eponymous EP, I knew  I'd be bying the record as I stood listening. "Headlights Look Like Diamonds" was the other stand-out track for me, and when I saw them play in live, I can remember the rhapsodic joy I felt standing at the listening station in Soundscapes, knowing I'd discovered a real gem of a band.


So, when I returned to Toronto a few months later, in 2004, I scoffed up Funeral without even bothering to listen at the listening station. The rewards were rich and many. It may still stand as the best debut LP of any band I can think of off the top of my head, and almost 20 years later, it sounds as fresh and exciting as it did the day I popped it into my cd player in my Subaru, as I drove back home to the Hudson Valley. It's an album I simply cannot singly out individual tracks since it's such a cohesive work of art. The "Neighborhood" series provides a unifying thread though each sonf has its own tonal palette. Again, the passionate vocalizing, the instrumentation, string arrangements, and evocative lyrics all work to make this one of the most rewarding and successful albums and deservedly has led it to being called one of the best and most important LPs of the 2000s so far. I guess I would be remiss if I didn't at least mention the anthemic "Wake Up", which brings audiences to their feet to this day. 

Of course, when Neon Bible was released in 2007, I didn't think twice and grabbed my copy and while Funeral still featured heavily in my rotation, this new one did not disappoint. I found it a perfect accompaniment to my long drives along the New York Thruway from the Hudson Valley to Brooklyn I took ever week. The opening cut, "Black Mirror" sets the pace and "Keep The Car Running" takes it up two notches. I would often catch myself topping out at 100 mph while blasting these songs. There are also some darker hued tunes and a re-recording of "No Cars Go" that absolutely soars!

Strangely, it was around this time that I noticed a curious phenomenon. Though by this time Arcade Fire had moved from small clubs to arenas and festivals; though they had songs featured in television and film; though they had been endorsed by folks such as David Bowie; had appeared on David Letterman and Saturday Night Live; had received several Grammy nominations and had two albums in a row making many Top Ten lists; and even having some songs licensed by the NFL (the proceeds of which when to the charity Partners In Health), I kept meeting people who had never heard of the band! Often, if I then played a song by them, people would recognize the song. I found this strange: when I was growing up, popularity and financial success went hand in hand, but here was a band that was selling records and receiving great press, and yet they didn't seem to have much name recognition.

It was sometime between the release of Neon Bible and The Suburbs that I met Arcade Fire's Sarah Neufeld, their violinist, at a Moksha/Modo Yoga Teacher Training in India. I was on the Moksha Teacher Training faculty and Sarah was a student. I did not know who she was until on our one day off we traveled together into town. We were making small talk, and I had already shared a bit about my NYC punk-rock days in the East Village and how I was now living in Tucson. She then said, "Oh, my band played at Solar Culture", a small artist venue in the warehouse district of downtown Tucson. I asked for the name of her band and she tilted her head, and in a questioning voice said, "Arcade Fire?" as if I would not recognize the name. After I picked my jaw off the floor of the van, I asked why she acted like I wouldn't know the band. She said, "Well, we're not big with hippies." This struck me kind of funny as I'd already shared my punk credentials, and I aksed her why she would think me a hippy. "Well, you know... yoga people." "But Sarah, you're here to become a yoga teacher!" I then said and to this she laughed. Sarah still practices, even when on tour, and is a co-owner and yoga teacher at the two NYC Modo Yoga studios.

2010's The Suburbs was another resounding success as their popularity grew, now hitting number one on the Billboard Charts and winning a Grammy for Album of the Year while getting two other nominations including one for Best Alternative Music Album. Maybe it's an age thing, but I was still meeting people who hadn't heard of the band, even while it was hard to escape hearing them on the radio and in stores everywhere I went! Their next album, Reflektor, was released in 2013 and while being met with critical acclaim, the elector-disco elements took me a bit longer to grow to appreciate and still it's the album I listen to least of thier oeuvre.

In 2017, Everything Now was released and the title track reached number one on Billboard's Top 100. I've written a review here at this blog so all I'll say here is that the opening romantic piano flourish of the title cut still moves me and transports me to a mind movie as the best music tends to do. That year I saw the band perform in Denver and my friend, a newbie to Arcade Fire was blown away by the power of their playing and returned to Tucson a fan. 

The most recent LP, WE, was released last year (2022) and once again it leads off with a beautifully romantic piano motif in "Age Of Anxiety I". As the album progresses we hear elements from previous incarnations of the band with echoes of Reflektor as well as even Funeral but reenvisioned. 

So, Arcade Fire remains one of the most interesting of the "pop" rock bands I follow; perhaps now the most "commercial" among them. Sadly, the release of this album and the tour was tarnished by allegations of sexual abuse/exploitation on the part of the band's frontman/leader, Win Butler. In fact, after just two shows, Feist dropped out from the tour in solidarity with the women accusers. Allegations are just that, and both Win and Règine deny the charges, saying the relationships were all consensual. That said, the women accusing him of abuse are all young -- one just 18 -- and due to the age differences, and no doubt some fannish emotional entanglements, they seem to feel they were taken advantage of. Strangely, after a few days where the media announced this story, I've not seen any follow up. I do not know anything of the current situation. 


Friday, March 3, 2023

APOSTLE of HUSTLE

 

Apostle of Hustle only released 3 LPs and a few EPs over the course of their existence, and they are all worth hearing! They were a Canadian "indie-rock" band formed as one of the many side projects growing  out from the Toronto "supergroup/collective", Broken Social Scene. Apostle of Hustle was the brainchild of Andrew Whiteman formed after he had spent some time in Cuba learning to play the Cuban tres, sometimes thought to provide the defining sound of Cuban son. Wanting to create music inspired by the instrument and the music he heard in Cuba, Whiteman recruited Julian Brown and Dean Stone to form Apostle of Hustle, playing Brazilian and Cuban folk songs, covers by folk such as Tom Waits and Marc Ribot, as well as originals. 

I discovered their first CD, Folkloric Feel, at the late and deeply lamented Soundscapes in Toronto (where I discovered so much awesome Canadian music) soon after its release in late summer 2004. I'd been staying at the Toronto Zen Temple, where I did most of my Zen training, which at the time was on College, just down the road from Soundscapes. Guests appearing on that debut album include Feist, Brendan Canning, Kevin Drew, and Amy Millan, all from Broken Social Scene. The title starts off with some tenuous scratching, and grows into a stron rocking tune, evidence of the way they would interweave their influences. Other strong standouts include "Energy of Death", and "Dark Is What I Want/Strutters Ball" which plays with some jazz chording. There are quite a few soft-whispered ballads as well.

Three years later, they released their sophomore effort, National Anthem of Nowhere  featuring Liam O'Neil and Lisa Lobsinger as guests. Overall, I find it a more cohesive and rewarding album to listen to. The link provided brings you to most of the album, missing only the opening "My Sword Hand's Anger" and "Fast Pony For Victor Jara." The title cut and "The Naked & Alone" are strong rockers, followed by the jagged "Haul Away" and "Cheap Like Sabastien". "Rafaga" is a frenetic piece that moves through some interesting changes. "Jimmy Scott Is The Answer" tags the wonderful Jazz vocalist Lou Reed was a huge fan of. The album ends with the dark-hued "NoNoNo".

Later that year, the band released an EP of three different versions of "My Sword Hand's Anger". And one month later they recorded with Tanya Tagaq who they then joined with for a tour. 

In 2009, they went on tour with Gogol Bordello. I got to see them here in Tucson when the tour stopped at the Rialto. Everyone I went to the show with were familiar with Gogol Bordello and went to see them while for me, the thrill was to see Apostle of Hustle. Afterward, my friends all agreed that while Gogol Bordello put on a fine, fun show, they pretty much put on a one-note vibe, playing all their songs at the same high-energy and volume level while Apostle of Hustle showed themselves to be more varied and interesting. 

Their last album, Eats Darkness, featuring the loon on its cover, was released in mid-2009. The link offers a look at an intimate live performance of "Eazy Speaks." 



Wednesday, March 1, 2023

Akron/Family

 Today, March 1, 2023, I thought it might be fun to do a version of something I did decades ago when I was a deejay for Queens College radio: Alphabet Soup. Each week I will spotlight some artists for each of the letters of the alphabet. And thus, this week, I'll present seven bands and solo artists whose name begins with the letter "A"

Akron/Family were an American alt-folk/experimental/psychedelic/post-rock/noise band active from 2002 to 2013. Each of the musicians played multiple instruments and vocalized. Their music incorporated improvisation and the use of "found noise" such as that of a creaking rocking chair, thunder, and white noise.

Though none of the members were native New Yorkers, they became a hub of creativity that revolved around the Gimmel Coffee House in Williamsburg, Brooklyn from 2003 - 2007. It was while based in Brooklyn that they came to the attention of Michael Gira of Swans and Angels of Light fame, who signed the band to his label as well as collaborated with them on several projects.

They has already released their eponymous LP in 2005 along with a collaborative LP entitled Akron/Family & Angels of Light same year. I first became aware of them with the 2006 release, Meek Warrior. The opening cut, "Blessing Force" is a wild rave that features wild rhythmic changes, elements of discordant noise and an ebullient chant. Its 9-minute assault ends abruptly and is followed by the pastorally acoustic tune built around the Mahaprajñaparamita Mantra, entitled "Gone Beyond." Other songs such as "The Lightening Bold of Compassion and the closing "Love and Space" evidence their Buddhist inclinations. 

The following year brought Love Is Simple, the opening, "Love, Love, Love (Everyone)" begins with the Tibetan Buddhist teaching that "every precious living being" has at one time been one's mother, so we must "Go out and love, love, everyone." Perhaps my favorite cut from this LP, featuring a glockenspiel, is "Don't Be Afraid, You're Already Dead" which is sung after a verse where they repeat "Don't be afraid, it's only love" leading into the chorus: "Love is simple." 

.Set 'Em Wild, Set 'Em Free was released in 2009, followed by 2011's S/T II: The Cosmic Birth and Journey of Shinju TNT and their final LP dropped in 2013. Throughout their career, the quality of their work never faltered.

ALL THEIR ALBUMS can be found here.




Sunday, July 19, 2020

Blue Angel from Phoenix, October 20, 1980

Soon after writing the following review, I indeed got to see Blue Angel, featuring Cyndi Lauper at a free outdoor concert in Forest Park, Queens. Lauper grew up in Ozone Park and went to Richmond Hill High School in my neighborhood of Richmond Hill. That concert was where I really got to see the amazing talent of this band and to witness the spectacular voice and charisma of its vocalist.

What I didn't know at the time was that Lauper had received offers as a solo artist but held out wanting the band to be part of any deal she made. When Polydor finally signed, recorded and released the eponymously titled album in 1980, Lauper hated the cover, saying it made her look like Big Bird. That didn't stop Rolling Stone from including in as one of the 100 best new wave album covers in 2003 -- which is kind of weird.

Despite critics -- including me -- giving positive reviews, "it went lead", as Lauper later put it, and Blue Angel disbanded. Their manager, Steve Massarsky (manager of The Allman Brothers) filed a suit against the band after a falling out which forced Lauper into bankruptcy. Due to her financial stress, she worked in various retail stores and waitressing at IHOP, and singing in local clubs. Every critic who saw her could see her "star potential" and like me, were blown away by her four octave range!




From the archives, here's my review of Blue Angel...

Polydor has just released the debut album of a band called Blue Angel. The cover, a garishly tacky affair, lulled me into expecting either a '50s revivalist sound, or a cheap imitation of The B-52s. While the "pop" music of the '50s and early '60s is the primary influence, this is definitely a post-punk version of that earlier revival sound as epitomized by Ruben and the Jets.

"Maybe He'll Know" is the lead-off track on Side One, replete with a classic modified Blues riff, featuring a choppy rhythmic bass line, tenor sax growling and a "cheesy" organ sound. Singer, Cyndi Lauper's vocals are soulful and impressive. Many of the songs, especially the ballads like "I Had A Love" are introduced by those "simplistic" piano triplets so beloved by Frank Zappa. 

"Anna Blue" is a sentimental covering of the same subject Pati Smith covered in "Piss Factory". Ironically, Lauper even sounds a bit like Smith circa Horses on this track. A bluesy sax solo takes it back to its main motif -- a rhythmic anticipation which drops a beat while Lauper tops off the vocal line. "Can't Blame Me" is a neat little pop tune featuring yet another rousing sax solo on the bridge; this time, the feel reminds me of the Dave Clark Five as they were on their Return album. The side ends with a 16-bar Jerry Lee Lewis blues-rocker -- a lover's response to "Chantilly Lace".

Side 2 features two covers: the 1959 instrumental, "Cut Out" (King Mack) is in the tradition of rock instrumentals popularized by bands like the Dave Clark Five and The Ventures; the vein The Raybeats are currently mining. The other cover is the sublimely mawkish ballad, "I'm Gonna Be Strong", a song I can remember my older sister playing on the victrola back in 1963. Only, here, Lauper kills it! At the coda, just when you think she's hit the highest note she's got, she goes a step higher and it always brings up chills and moisture to my eyes....

This is a really wonderful collection of party-music-dance-pop and I can imagine they would be a really fun band to see live! I'm sure this comes as a surprise coming from the guy whose typical beat is the avant-garde, but this proves I know how to have fun!

Wednesday, January 8, 2020

Merce Cunningham: The Permanent Experiment In Dance (From Phoenix, March 10, 1980)


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Merce Cunningham is arguably America’s most consistently innovative choreographer. As the New York Times has written, “Mr Cunningham has given us the permanent experiment in dance.” His works bear little, if any, resemblance to classical ballet nor to the innovations of the “First Lady” of modern dance, Martha Graham, in whose company Cunningham danced as a soloist for five years.

His dances are not programmatic; he has escaped the chains of romanticism and sentimentality. They are not about anything but, he would insist, movement and activity. To paraphrase Marshall MacLuhan’s famous maxim: “The movement is the message.”

The basis of his work, he says in a recent interview, is “the strictness of somebody doing a movement properly and the freedom with which it is done.” He gives the example of walking; the mechanism of what is done in walking is strict, but the different ways in which people walk, the how, is the free expression. Even when trained dancers do their movements fully, clearly, and correctly, they will still do them differently from one another. “That’s what interests me,” he declares.

A major innovation of Cunningham’s is actually an application of one of John Cage’s: the use of chance operations. Chance should not be confused with improvisation. Instead of consciously deciding which movement shall follow another, Cunningham uses the chance methods of the I Ching and coin tossing to choose from among a predetermined “set” of movements, and then find ways to get from one to the other.

Another of his innovations stems from his belief that dance should exist independently of music and décor. Painters such as Robert Raushenberg, Jasper Johns, and Andy Warhol and composers such as John Cage, Earle Brown, David Tudor and others work independently on designs and music for dances that they may or may not have ever seen. When then combined with the choreography of Cunningham the effect is startling, as much for the disjointedness that often results as for the occasional chance synchronizations.

On Saturday, March 1st, the matinee program consisted of a new work, “Duets,” and two revivals, “Landrover” and “Changing Steps Et Cetera.” “Landrover” is a 55-minute long work in four sections. The first explores an asymmetrical use of space. A cluster of five dancers stand in the back, stage right, while another walks swiftly in a zig-zag pattern out from behind them to the front, stage left, where he whips his arms about him like a hydra. After this motion is repeated several times, he zig-zags back off-stage behind the clustered group, which then erupts into a cyclone of movement.

This high state of energy continues until the second selection which begins very slowly and stately. This is in contrast to the music of John Cage, Martin Kalve and David Tudor which consists of distorted pops, scrapings, electronic sounding waterdrops and other indistinguishable sounds. The third section features a fragmentary voiceover from Cage.

This and the fourth section are highly charged with tension and ever-mounting excitement. At one point, a male and female dancer run toward each other along the diagnonal of the stage. She then leaps up as he lowers himself just a bit to catch her just above her ankles, which she falls head-first over his back and slowly slides down the length of his body. He too, lowers himself until she softly slides completely off his legs and they are lying flat on the ground with the soles of their feet touching. This is a truly breath-taking move, which in the performance I witnessed, is by chance accompanied by a sudden high-pitched tone which seems to “stretch out” as the dancers stretch and slide along the line of their bodies. The dance ends with  the initial asymmetrical pattern emerging out of the whirlwind of movement with an unexpected suddenness and resolution.

In “Duets,” one couple at a time enters onto the stage and dances to the accompaniment of Irish percussionists Peadar and Mel Mercier’s bodhran and bones. The first two duets seem almost traditional, containing elements of folk dance. Just before the second couple dance off the stage, a third couple enters slowly, a female dancing, orbiting around the slow motion walk of Cunningham himself. After the sixth couple has completed their duet, the other five couples enter and each perform their respective duets, so that there is now six independent duets danced in different floor spaces, with occasional overlapping, while Cunningham and his partner wind their way through the constantly changing floor space.

This fragmentary “collage-like” effect is what dominates in “Changing Steps Et Cetera,” The dance is made up of a number of solos, duets, trios, quartets, and quintets, part or all of which may be given at any particular performance. To this may be added sequences of “Loops,” a solo work or Cunningham and sections from “Exercise Piece 3” as space and personnel permit. The dances are independent and may be arranged in any order, therefore, it is never quite the same thing.

In this performance, clusters of dancers converged, broke apart, and moved around each other in a myriad of patterns. Everyday movements such as walking, running, skipping, and simply standing still are all utilized. Occasionally, individuals or groups freeze into sculpture-like postures which other dancers use them as props, weaving their way around, under, over, and through them, even sometimes picking them up, moving them to other areas of the stage, and placing them into different postures.

While a soloist performs at the front of stage left, and groups of three and four form circles, a trio makes its way across the stage left to right; a woman kneels on her left knee, keeping her right foot flat on the ground while a man, lying perpendicular between the space created by her legs rolls from her back leg to her front leg and another pulls the woman along, thus continually creating more space for the man to roll between. It is a humorous scene and looks fun and joyful. And that is another point of Cunningham’s dances: many of the moves reminded me of the kinesthetic pleasures of movement, the sheer joy of forming shapes with your body, bounding, twisting, writhing, jumping, and touching. Indeed, there were some movements, especially in the duets and trios, that were very sensual, almost erotic in nature.

During the dance, Cunningham makes his way to the center of the stage, passing a wooden folding chair around his body. At the center, he sits as the other dancers radiate in a spoke-like pattern. Cunningham then stands on the chair and it seems like some mock ceremony of adulation. I am reminded of photos I’ve seen of both Isadora Duncan and Martha Graham in similar poses, and wonder if this is gentle satire. At any rate, it feels light-hearted, and after Cunningham raises his arms, fluttering his hands, he lets them drop to his sides as he lets his head drop abruptly and the dance ends as the audience, which had been chuckling, erupts into roars of laughter and applause. It was a wonderful and joyous performance, and a perfect conclusion.

Sunday, December 31, 2017

2017's Highlights

I never got around to writing about my favorite musical experiences from 2016, so I figured I'd do this now before time slips away from me again, because 2017 was a really good year!

One of the few posts I wrote in 2017 was a review of Arcade Fire's Everything Now and as the year comes to an end, I have to say that the title track is one of the most moving and powerful performances I've experienced this year. I was fortunate to see the band in Denver back in October and the whole show was strong and inspiring. It really struck me as to how they can still seem to have an intimate rapport with their audience even though that audience comes close to 16,000 people in a coliseum type venue! 


Then there was the unexpected collaboration between two of my favorite 'slacker' song-writer/performers. I'd have loved to see them live.



Speaking of another performer who can make any venue seem like an intimate living room, though the album came out in 2016, I got to see Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds in NYC in June, and more than once there were shivers running up my spine and tears flowing from my eyes. By the end of the concert, there were over 50 people from the audience up on stage and Nick was two rows away from where my friend Dawn and I were sitting at the Beacon Theater. When he returned to the stage, there was one of the biggest group hugs I've ever witnessed.


So, one of the many treats and surprises this year was the first album from Broken Social Scene in 7 years! It had gotten to the point where I just stopped thinking they'd ever get it together to record as a group again, and here's the title cut:


Perhaps the other most surprising treat was the new release from Do Make Say Think entitled Stubborn Persistent Illusions, their first in 8 years! Best listened to all the way through, here's "Bound and Boundless," one of my favorite tracks from the new one:


One of the heaviest albums released in 2017, and garnering accolades from many quarters is the new band, Ex Eye, featuring the phenomenal saxophone playing of Colin Stetson, alongside some fierce drumming from Liturgy's Greg Fox and guitar from Toby Summerfield, topped off with keyboards from Shahzad Ismaily who plays with Marc Ribot’s Ceramic Dog. While generally spoken of as "Metal" of an avant-garde variety, you'll hear influences from jazz and minimalism -- in a very maximalist way!


Speaking of Colin Stetson, he had a busy year, as along with several soundtracks, he released another solo effort, All This I Do For Glory. It was a difficult choice as to which piece to share here, but finally I settled for this powerful short one, "In The Clinches" as it shows a bit of the sheer physicality involved in Stetson's playing, free of any overdubs or looping! That's right friends, he does this all in real-time, every sound coming from him and his instrument; no enhancements! He mics the sax so the mechanics of the instrument create the percussive parts and the dog-collar he wears includes a contact mic picking up his 'vocalizing' via his vocal cords.


She didn't record a new album this year, but Natalie Lafourcade at The Rialto here in Tucson was a brilliant performance that was a true highlight of my year musically speaking. 


Another fun live show I got to see was the legendary "ramen rock" band Shonen Knife when they played 191 Toole here in Tucson. They've been rocking together for 35 years and none of them look like they're 35 years old! Must be that ramen....


Most ambitious project of the year must go to Stephen Merritt who wrote a song for each of the 50-years he's been alive; a kind of musical memoir. Each of the five disks covers a decade of his life. I don't think it will take the place of the masterful 69 Love Songs, but 50 Song Memoir is truly an impressive feat. Considering the scope, I offer this link to a page I hope offers a grouping of one song from each of the five decades:


Finally, I end this with three local bands including one of the more exciting discoveries (for me) from this past year; the Tucson-based Friends of Dean Martinez played several weekends at the dark and very cool whiskey bar, Owl's Club and they just blew me away with their lush, deconstruction and reconstructions of some pretty classic pop and jazz tunes. I knew nothing of them till I read about them in Tucson Weekly and apparently they have links to the more well-known Giant Sand and Calexico. 




I also got out a few times to see my creative neighbors (well at least two of the three of them) Golden Boots, who released a new cassette (yes, exactly) this past year.


I think the band I saw the most times in 2017, hands down, was Kyklo, which I've called one of Tucson's musical treasures. They need someone to get them into the studio and record them! Here's a small excerpt of them playing one of their many gigs at The Coronet...




AND yes, last but not least, the new one from Bradford Trojan who ends up being the last music performance I got to see in 2017; a fun gig at Tap and Bottle just the other night!


Happy New Year!

Tuesday, August 22, 2017

Everything Now!

Very early in my "music critic" career (which spanned from the late 70s through the mid-80s) I came to recognize that music criticism -- and by extension any critical writing -- is more revealing of the critic than of what is being written about. And even then, I shied away from the "critic" role, rarely writing about anything I did not like. Rather, I wrote about the music that moved me; that held importance for me. I wrote as a fan wishing to share with others the profound experience of listening to what moved me. Just maybe, I hoped, it would move you, the reader as well.

Arcade Fire has recently released their fifth full-length cd Everything Now, and I think it may be their most fully realized effort since their first ground-breaking cd, Funeral. That is to say, it's a near-perfect offering, and has deepened in my appreciation with each listening. Moments of sheer frisson, with the hair-raising, eyes misting telling me there is something about this music that viscerally means something to me at this point in my life permeate this album. And, as always when any piece of art moves me in this way, I feel gratitude and want to share it with anyone willing to listen.

Win Butler, the brain behind the band, has a real deep understanding and appreciation of the "album format," and to varying degrees, every Arcade Fire release has been a "concept album." With Everything Now, this carries to the very formalist aspect of the song sequence. The album begins with a short "Intro" titled "Everying Now (Continued)" with the first thematic expression of the concept: "I'm in the black again. Not coming back again. We can just pretend we'll make it home again from Everything Now." It's a slow, draggy staccato rhythm over a bit of a drone-dirge. It ends with a female voice saying "Now" and the title track, "Everything Now" begins with it's big romantic melodic motif spelled out on the piano. The more I listen to the opening verse, the more I get the chills:

"Every inch of sky's got a star and every inch of skin's got a scar,
I guess that you've got Everything Now.
And every inch of space in your head is filled with the things that you read,
I guess that you've got Everything Now.
And every film that you've ever seen fills the spaces up in your dreams, that reminds me
of Everything Now."

Later, Butler sings: "Every inch of road's got a town,
and daddy how come you're not around"

and you begin to truly understand the vacuousness of having "Everything Now."

When the chant begins, "Everything Now.... Everything Now" he sings:

"Everything Now.
I can't live without.
I can't live without.
"Till every room in my house
is filled with shit I couldn't
live without.
I need it.
I can't live without.
Everything Now."

Whew! I don't know about you, but this hits home a bit closer than I'd like to admit.



After Refector's electro-disco, Everything Now, while holding still to some of that (especially in the Kraftwerk sounding riff of "Put Your Money On Me") there's a strong white-soul-funk reminiscent of David Bowie's "Thin White Duke" phase, but to my ears, sounding more rocky and less artificially synthetic. This funk first rears its head on "Sounds of Life," with the repeating refrain:

"Looking for signs of life.
Looking for signs of life every night,
but there's no sign of life.
So we do it again."

"Creature Comfort" always raises the goosebumps and brings on the wet eyes. I know it's me. Fuck it. Wim and Regine trade lines:

"Some boys hate themselves, spend their lives resenting their fathers.
Some girls hate their bodies, stand in the mirror and
wait for the feedback, saying,
"God, make me famous, if you can't
just make it painless." Just make it painless."

And the sheer impossibility of making it painless rips into my heartmind. It's the first noble truth: duhkha. 

And:
"It goes on and on, I don't know what I want,
on and on, I don't know if I want it.
On and on, I don't know what I want,
on and on, I don't know if I want it."

Truly!



"Peter Pan" alternates between dreams where the beloved is dying or living. It's an expression of anxiety about what age brings:

"Be my Wendy, I'll be your Peter Pan.
Come on baby, ain't got no plans.
Boys and girls got all the answers,
men and women keep growing their cancer..."

Butler ends asking, "How can I live with so much love?"

"Chemistry" plays with the age-old notion that whatever makes any relationship "work" it's something beyond mere personality that boils down to sheer chemistry -- which if we could only remember, comes down to formulae! There's a playfulness when he sings (with tongue in cheek?): "Chemistry, you know me. But how could you know me? I feel like you know me. Right." Is this not the fundamental issue around NRE (New Relationship Energy)?

Then comes a pounding rocker just over one minute long called "Infinite Content." Butler chants:

"Infinite Content. Infinite Content.
We're infinitely content.

All your money is already spent on it.
All your money is already spend on
Infinite Content."

This formally ends "Side One" coming as the 7th song on the album followed by a folk-country version of "Infinite Content" beginning side two. There are 13 songs on the album and the 7th and 8th songs are different versions of the same song. "Electric Blue" is another funk-rock tune. Regine sings:

"Summer's gone and so are you.
See the sky electrocute a thousand boys that look like you.
Cover my eyes, Electric Blue."

The funk continues with the heavy bass line that introduces "Good God Damn," which plays with the phrase "Good God damn" by asking "But maybe there's a good god, damn,"

"Put Your Money On Me" has that Kraftwerk sounding ostinato pattern while Butler sings:

"Put Your Money On Me,
Or tuck me into bed and wake me when I'm dead.
I know that you gotta be free,
but I'm never gonna let it go."

The penultimate song asserts "We Don't Deserve Love" and Butler sings: "If you can't see the forest for the trees, just burn it all down, and bring the ashes to me." Mommy and daddy make their appearance again (they turn up periodically in many Arcade Fire songs gong back to Funeral, when he sings: "Hear your mother screaming, hear your daddy shout. You try to figure it out, you never figure it out" and what mama is screaming is "You don't deserve love."

And then we come to the final cut and it's the opening cut again! "I'm in the black again. Not coming back again. We can just pretend we'll make it home again, from Everything Now."

This time, a lush string arrangement builds in a crescendo that ends abruptly, as if the tape broke. When listened to on a car cd player, there is no gap between the end of this and the beginning of the first cut and you begin to related to the whole album as a helix; or a closed loop like a mobius strip. It's its own world. It is Everything Now!