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Showing posts with label . Show all posts

Friday, 12 August 2016

Love The Way You Lip Sync- Sziget Day Zero

There's always that one Sziget day you have to grind your teeth and accept that someone apparently larger than life is gracing the main stage for your own good and the happiness of others. I say your own good because it's clear as daylight that the festival needs big days to pull it along, make it profitable and allow it's overall awesomeness to exist from the circus tent to Sziget beach. The fact that on that particular day the island is overrun with too many people who have no clue as to what a festival actually is and spend their three plus hours glued to the palinka stands around the main stage is just a sad side effect you learn to live with. You do however harbour a hope that whatever the someone larger than life delivers is at least acceptable by it's own standards, and then sometimes you are painfully disappointed and wonder why you had to put up with the Barbarian hordes in the first place. 

But before we arrive to the piece of dubious entertainment which crowned the day, let us talk about really nice things. Like how the organizers moved the Europe Stage to a place where a) even I can find it b) pretty much anyone can very easily find it, so supporting upcoming European acts feels not just like a PR stunt exiled to festival backwaters, but a genuine effort to highlight bands you might not have known otherwise. The crowd was sizable for each act we checked out (Gray Matters from Romania, Snoir from Austria and Sattas from Turkey) with a large group of people from said countries being complemented by a mixed lot of curious onlookers keen to join in whatever was happening- which in the case of Gray Matters was a young lady screaming a lot, Snoir did some guitar pop yodels (being from, ahem, Austria) while Sattas are playing reggae-or so they say on their official website, to me it sounded more like ska, which reggae sometimes does, plus like that I could tick off the 'found random ska band' in the yearly Sziget bingo.

I'll linger a bit longer over Gray Matters, as they are the winners of Romania's Sziget talent competition. I'll also be honest: you'd be hard pressed to find a genre further off my musical radar, improvisational jazz, perhaps. I just now imagined the band's otherwise totally charming lead singer scream out her soul over minimal jazz, and am still contemplating the scariness of the prospect. Coming back to the real world, I have to admit that, although Sziget's metal loving audience has steadily diminished over the years, Gray Matters put on a show that didn't feel out of place, and kept it's pace up to the end, when the band made a poignant tribute to their friend Claudiu Petre, who died in the Colectiv club fire last October, and who was a great Sziget lover and regular. 

Next up was the Lightstage, which besides being a lovely wooden contraption bedecked with, yes, lights, is also situated in an oasis of Italian restaurants, which generally helps boost popularity. Although when I arrived my mind seemed more focused on which panino to get (it ended up rather conventionally being ham and cheese), I was absolutely delighted to discover Teapot Industries, who hail from Rome, play on strange instruments and whose wiki on the content of their lyrics I must quote, because it's just too good to glide over: "Like to Be Alone, Pt.2 is about multiverse travels. If we could travel enough far, we could discover an entire universe identical to ours.In particular Like to Be Alone, Pt.2 is about having sex with your doppelgänger."

Totally energized by the discovery, we headed to the main stage with a pit stop in A38, where Rico & Sticks were playing and of whom we can say, paraphrasing Woody Allen, that it involved the Netherlands. Jake Bugg's set felt more mature that his previous, rather tentative Sziget showing- it always helps when the first song turns out right, and On My One is definitely a fine opener. His rather basic guitar tunes might sound a bit too monotone to some, but they work wonders at setting a very definite and recognizable mood. So it was with a heavy heart that I left the second part to check out MO, but her concert from last year seemed to justify the desertion. 

This year was different though- for some reason the Rihanna loving crowd also turned out to be a MO loving crowd (damn you Diplo) and invaded the A38 tent in spite of the strangely early time slot. There was therefore much pushing and shoving, which is of course not MO's fault at any level, and she was as charming as could be, turned up in the compulsory quirky outfit and delivered her songs with great confidence. But somehow the raw magic of her early days is gone- just like her new tracks, which sound more like something dreamed up by her producer (double damn you Diplo) than herself, it all seems to have lost the fairy dust to a degree. This does of course sound like the age old hipster lament over how things were better before they went mainstream, but the truth is, they sometimes were.

At this point the day turned into a lull before the grand show, with Parov Stelar providing background music from the main stage (just how on Earth did they get there?!) for sipping spritzers and mojitos. By nine a clock the island was almost at full capacity, with all arteries leading to the main stage clogged with people figuring out how to bend the rules of physics and squeeze into non-existing gaps in the crowd. Thus they waited. And waited. And then waited some more. For Rihanna decided all these people squashed into festivaly pulp on a chilly August night are really not worth her efforts, majesty and full attention. She therefore sashayed onto stage at 10, knowing full well that Sziget has an 11 PM curfew, played and copiously lip synced to a barely recognizable medley of her songs, then departed just as superbly carefree as she had arrived. If you want a clearer picture of just how bad the whole thing was, let me elaborate on the moment I was thinking how some fireworks with Avicii would be the thing to light up my mood, and yes, there was that low point when I wished Robbie Williams was there to swing for me. Experience does put things into perspective, doesn't it? I therefore warmly recommend the teachings of the mighty Coen brothers to Sziget's organizers, whom I otherwise love so much: What have we learned from this? Not to do it again. 
























Thursday, 3 December 2015

Names, Dates, Numbers: Sziget 2016 is Starting to Happen


The other day, as I was idling home on Andrássy avenue, I saw the Christmas lights being turned on, and suddenly I went all gooey and mushy inside: ’Awww, there, it looks just like Sziget.’ While this might seem a bad case of getting your priorities wrong, I daresay it isn’t. Sziget’s night lights are just as pretty come day, while the ones on Andrássy look like pathetic little plastic snakes that crawled onto the avenue’s unsuspecting trees.

Sziget never gets bogged down by the mundane hassles of everyday life and that’s why in the cold heart of winter, when the warmest bit of your flat probably has the temperature of the coolest and windiest corner of the summer island, you wish you were back.

You also meet people in coffee shops and bars who wish they were back, and exile together becomes a bit sweeter, you reminisce together over photos, mark your calendar as totally engaged from August 10 to 17 next year, and make plans. Plus fret over who’s going to be on the line up, of course. You have your little list, check band tour schedules and keep your fingers crossed.

And then here comes the morning when you wear a Cheshire cat perched on a tree grin on your face, or well, there’s kind of no trees in Iceland, so you might as well be perched on the rim of some improbably named volcano: Sigur Rós are coming to our little island, and it’s going to be superb. (Insert random thought here: with a count of 441.000, Sziget has more szitizens than Iceland, we might as well send our own football team to the next European Championships then.) 

We can further rejoice over news of (I can use my favourite letter again in a hopefully majestic concert review, yes I can ) becoming a Sziget repeat offender, joining Parov Stelar and M83 in the club. Naughty Boy, Kodaline and John Newman move us in no particular way, but they must have their fans as well- Bring Me the Horizon definitely do, and they do move us in very particular ways, which on Sziget will manifest themselves 'as as far away from wherever BMTH are as we can'.  But even that makes us happy, since spilling vitriol over a concert or two is a compulsory experience that not proper festival can do without.














































Monday, 24 August 2015

Best Concerts of Sziget 2015: #6 MØ

Speaking of reviews that blow your fuse, the other day I accidentally bumped into one which had the exquisite talent of calling MØ Diplo’s little protegee, thus graciously wiping out the existence of a sea of fabulous music that existed before MØ kindly agreed to make Diplo’s endeavours marginally interesting, if only for the length of a song. (Here I also insert a small rant where I growl about how Diplo doesn’t get to be called M.I.A.’s little protege, on account of his having a Y chromosome as opposed to her two Xs).

It was of course one of those 'I want to say everything about Sziget in twenty sentences' pieces which we all know will never work, but I still find it completely off the mark to judge MØ, or any artist for that matter, based on a guest performance. For the thing is, each and every song on her debut album, No Mythologies to Follow, is a better one than Lean On and very many established artists should envy the confidence with which the young Dane delivers her music. Looking at her immediately connecting with the audience and transporting them to the world of her tunes is electrifying and makes it look very easy- when of course it is anything but that.

Nothing about her music is little- and we can only hope that even bigger things lie ahead of her. And if you’ve heard Lean On one time too many for the comfort of your soul and want to feel really pristine and cool again, try playing MØ’s collaboration with Elliphant- One More. Unfortunately we cannot get one more of MØs concerts in the near future (and I was stupid enough to miss last year’s A38 boat concert), but you can always check out Elliphant in Akvárium on September 24th.