The Phoenix Network:
 
 
About  |  Advertise
Adult  |  Moonsigns  |  Band Guide  |  Blogs  |  In Pictures
 
CD Reviews  |  Classical  |  Live Reviews  |  Music Features

The Strokes

Second Impressions
By CARLY CARIOLI  |  May 1, 2006

The Strokes
TEXTURE AND TONE: It's all about the grain of Julian's voice

I didn’tlove the new stuff — except for “You Only Live Once,” which is like the Pretenders on cocaine and restraining orders, and “Ask Me Anything,” performed with just mellotron accompaniment and reminding me of Simple Minds and the Magnetic Fields. But I didn’t mind it either, since they got most of it out of the way up front a week ago Tuesday at Agganis Arena. On second listen, I decided First Impressions is made for these bigger spaces.

Julian, newly sober (no one on stage had so much as a cigarette all night), looked as if he’d poached his wardrobe from my high-school closet circa ’87: tucked-in T-shirt, ill-fitting leather jacket, tight black Wrangler jeans, between-haircuts mop, puffy hightop Reeboks tied too tight. Mood: a gangly hesher yanked fresh from some pressing street hassle and plunked on stage. Students of metal might have discerned flashes of Thin Lizzy (“Red Light”) and Guns N’ Roses’ “Sweet Child o’ Mine” (“The End Has No End”), as guitars feinted toward heavy with ominous triads and Blue Öyster Cultish pentatonics before withdrawing to more anthemic territory. Supersized ’70s LEDs flanked the stage and the drum riser, flashing mixing-board red and Tron blue and traffic-light green and pulsing squad-car blue/red/white. The Strokes were as loud as the lights, louder. They made girls dance. For “Under Control,” which may be their best song ever, Har Mar Superstar, a/k/a Sean Na Na, returned from his opening slot for an impromptu, second-time-ever duet. He and Julian ended up together on the floor, trading the line “I don’t want to do it your way,” Har Mar singing it an octave higher, with Julian’s crotch in his face. Beautiful.

So yeah, didn’t mind the new stuff, mostly because of Julian. The Strokes’ songs are palatable so long as they retain their texture and tone: it’s all about the grain of his voice, and how the overtone of grit overcomes and conquers the note, as if he were a grindcore singer. And what links the old and the new, which sound nothing alike, is that huge, insatiable, never-ending longing — suspension-bridge longing.

They delivered “Last Night” just a half step slower. Julian seemed to be searching for something to replace the easy conviction that attends a committed lush, and the searchlights searched for but didn’t always find him. It ended the way you’d want it to: Albert, that walking cartoon-bubble poof of hair, with his skinny, motion-blurred forearm whacking the guitar, uploaded the solo at the end of “Barely Legal.” It jumped out as gaudy and unrestrained as a Mardi Gras hooker — not Television, just made for TV.

Julian sang the old songs like a soul singer stuck with a lounge lizard’s voice: the effect has always been calm in the face of chaos. He clutched the mic and sang “Take It or Leave It” with that last-shred-of-dignity howl and stood his ground like someone around whom there is action-movie shit flying. Dead calm.
Related: Mando Diao, Boston music news: November 3, 2006, The Whigs, More more >
  Topics: Live Reviews , Guns N' Roses, Simple Minds, Thin Lizzy,  More more >
  • Share:
  • Share this entry with Facebook
  • Share this entry with Digg
  • Share this entry with Delicious
  • RSS feed
  • Email this article to a friend
  • Print this article
Comments

[ 12/01 ]   Boston Metro Opera  @ Old South Church
[ 12/01 ]   Lady Gaga + Kid Cudi + Semi Precious Weapons  @ Wang Theatre
[ 12/01 ]   Fenway Jazz Jam  @ Tiki Hideaway @ Howard Johnson
[ 12/01 ]   Davisson Brothers Band  @ Wolf Den @ Mohegan Sun
[ 12/01 ]   Air Force Band of Liberty  @ Lowell Memorial Auditorium
ARTICLES BY CARLY CARIOLI
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   BEST MUSIC POLL 2009 CONCERT  |  August 11, 2009
    Stream audio of all the bands' performances, watch video highlights, download interview podcasts, browse concert and behind-the-scenes photos, and share your own photos and videos at the  Boston Phoenix Web site  or  WFNX's site.  
  •   INTERVIEW: MICHAEL JACKSON'S AUTOBIOGRAPHER  |  July 06, 2009
    "This was still a 30 year old black kid when I was working with him," Davis says, still incredulous at Jackson's death. "And the guy who just died looked kind of like a 60 year old white woman in garish lipstick. Kind of like the Joker."
  •   BSO ANNOUNCES LAYOFFS  |  June 23, 2009
    Another painful day for the culture industry.
  •   PJ HARVEY WANTS YOUR FUCKING ASS  |  June 08, 2009
    PJ Harvey's two albums with John Parish are not her best work. (Go ahead and argue it, if you like.) The first, Dance Hall At Louse Point , was a surprise departure from her game-changing To Bring You My Love , an album that sold far less than Madonna records but packed as much cultural impact -- back when rock albums and cultural impact were still on speaking terms.
  •   HIGH SCHOOL MUSICAL 3: SENIOR YEAR  |  October 28, 2008
    Although Senior Year makes the most of its big-screen debut by increasing the body counts in its group-choreography numbers, it’s a smaller movie than its chart-topping, direct-to-cable predecessors.  

 See all articles by: CARLY CARIOLI

MOST POPULAR
RSS Feed of for the most popular articles
 Most Viewed   Most Emailed 



  |  Sign In  |  Register
 
thePhoenix.com:
Phoenix Media/Communications Group:
TODAY'S FEATURED ADVERTISERS
Copyright © 2009 The Phoenix Media/Communications Group