Bled

Bled
Showing posts with label Marina and the Diamonds. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Marina and the Diamonds. Show all posts

Saturday, 15 August 2015

Budapest! Budapest!! Budapest!!! I Feel You- Sziget Day Three

As we were walking across the K-bridge it became evident that the crowds queuing to get in were considerably larger than during the previous days, but also crossing the security check point faster. In true Sherlockian form we immediately deduced these are day ticket holders, who are less of a hassle for the guards as they don't bring in tons of food and water.This must be a sign of the times, oh wait, with a jolt of pain it suddenly dawned on us: Lord Almighty, Avicii. And indeed, by late evening, combining the apparently unstoppable pull of Avicii and the always evidently unstoppable pull of Friday, the island was at full capacity. 

But don't expect any grumbling about that- sold out days mean our beloved festival can soldier on year after year. And having a silly headliner pack the main stage area in the evening means two blessed things: we can still thoroughly enjoy the previous band (who should have been, and technically were the main musical act of the night, but more about that later) and then we can walk around relatively unbothered on the island while some lights are beamed off from the main stage to the sonic background of, erm, nothing- but more about that later as well. 

For we must now, hard as it is, make some space for the day's first main stage act. It could have been slightly unfortunate that Awolnation rhymes with abomination, but it's actually sublimely fortuitous: they are just that. The only positive (?!) side to them is that the lead singer sounds scarily like Chad Kroeger of Nickelback fame, and since the latter had just cancelled their Budapest gig, this could have been some sort of consolation for any rabid Nickelback fans out there. (We took a break here to laugh hysterically at the thought for ten minutes or so.) 

The overall impact of Awolnation was that everyone suddenly became uninterested in everything, even the very important people enclosure felt strangely apathetic, the important people musing on the fact that maybe they are less important than they thought, and definitely less interesting, life in general is uninteresting and the contagion spread to us as well, so we suddenly found our cameras strangely uninteresting, we just idly fidgeted with the buttons overcome by mild existential angst and took no pictures at all of Awolnation. They only have themselves to blame.

This aggression could not stand, so we decided something must be done to raise the standards of the day, and we found the answer. Vivaldi. Take our advice on that- whenever you feel like maybe Sziget is not giving you what you deserve, head out to one of the alternative areas. In less than an hour we got a dose of classical music, watched some tango and investigated the Museum Quarter tents and the Hungarikum village area, where a village gnome was playing a tiny violin in a cage of sorts. You read that right. 

Thus recharged, we headed back to the main stage, where our lazy photographer was suddenly energized way beyond what we thought possible for him by the purple leotar...I mean musical accomplishments of Marina Diamandis of Marina and The Diamonds. But yes of course we must discuss the leotard, because it was a sight to behold, and suddenly made everyone realize, that in spite of all the Awolnations of the world, life is beautiful. It must also be mentioned that Marina is not just a pretty girl in a pretty leotard, there is something utterly charming in her quirky electro pop, although it crossed my mind that it still would be better suited for the atmosphere of the A38 tent, as the set seemed to lose force every now and then in the still devastating afternoon heat.

Speaking of A38, it was hosting The Subways in front of a relatively scarce but rather intense crowd. Which is extremely telling of the band's following: their brand of bubblegum punk is an acquired taste many might not necessarily wish to acquire, especially not if they're over twelve. It never ceases to amaze me how certain bands, once they found a recipe that works, even if only a little, stick to it with enviable force, slowly alienating older audiences and getting hold of fresher ones, still in a state of impressionable youth. To further add to these observations, we again have useful import from our fellow photographer on the reason for Subways' existence: the girl wants to make music to shake her hair to. In that she gets a ten out of ten and we are happy to leave the tent for this day's take on being totally immature in front of the main stage: throwing coloured dust at each other. This one goes down a blast as well, causing a giant rainbow cloud to raise above the island and then we're in for the main concert of the day.

Yes, Kasabian were the band delivering the good stuff, and there should be no doubt about that. In a frenzy of useful remarks, our photographer mentioned how they were more coherent this time than previously, and he hit the nail on the head. They are at the point in their career when the back catalogue easily allows for a set jam packed of hits, and the delivery matches the songs. They're not overdoing it either, gushing about the loveliness of the night and the people- they do compliment the crowd, Tom does intensively yell out Budapest a dozen times or so, just to make it clear they know exactly where they are, but they also engage in some good humoured banter and well, celebrate their rock starness, which is the least you expect from a bunch starting out as lad rock. 

Above all, they seem to be having an awful good time, and they pull you along- I mentioned how thinking of LSF being played live always makes me giddy with excitement, and this night was no exception. It just adds to the tally of how many times Kasabian proved to me they are a concert band by excellence, so next time, pretty please with sugar on top, let them have that 9:30 slot, few bands deserve it more these days. And because we're doing such a great job at relevant observations, here comes another gem: while Tom, good Irishman that he is, piled on some baby fat as the years passed, Sergio seems to come from the same Valhalla of musical demi-godness as Paul Banks: no sweat, legs apparently getting longer and slimmer each time. One day the man's going to turn into an ice giant of rock coolness and I want to be there to celebrate it. 

I am happy and fulfilled now I managed to mention Sergio's legs in yet another context, and therefore have plenty of energy for a rant. The story of Avicii, sorry ◢ ◤,  begins somewhere in Sweden (I wanted to poetically add something like a frozen over Swedish back water but the man is disappointingly straight out of Stockholm). So the young man we are talking about is therefore Swedish and likes nice neat similar things, like evenly sized meatballs and IKEA racks. So he sets out to do something, but he can't cook or assemble stuff. 

He therefore has an idea that will revolutionize modern world: let's make many, many, I mean MANY songs that are all completely the same. Let's make light shows to these songs, that are also completely the same as any other DJ's light show. Even a bit worse, cause Swedes like lo-tech do it yourselves solutions. Let's choose a name that can be represented as a symbol, cause that seems to be widely accepted as cool and creative. And let's market these things as the best thing that happened to humanity since ABBA won Eurovision. And then, in some miraculous way, this super humanly daring feat worked, and Sziget sold out it's Friday with a record attendance over a man sitting behind a giant table blasting uniform nothing into the great wide open. The magnificence of life is that it will forever stay unexplained and unexplainable. 

Caught up in the sheer mental and emotional emptiness created by Avicii's DJ set (not a concert, never will be), I seem to vaguely remember being to a Gaslight Anthem show, which gave me the distinct impression that these people went to bed one night thinking they are an indie band, and woke up thinking they are Bruce Springsteen. Well crafted and harmless music, but definitely not something to jolt me back into life. 

For that I needed the Dropkick Murphys. They were in A38, the tent was full and shut down as a consequence, the sound was as bad as it gets, the crowd sweaty and erratic but their show felt like something. It felt alive, it felt like it's good to be alive, to be together, to have these days and nights of surreal pure joy. Yes, it's punked up Irish music, but it has a soul. It made me think of Tom Meighan's shouts over the crowd. Budapest, Budapest, Budapest. I FEEL you.







































Tuesday, 2 June 2015

Look Who's Coming to Sziget




Well, erm, it’s Robbie Williams. And Robbie out of all people even has one of the special pre-festival days dedicated to his artistic endeavours- kind of  a far cry from the times when he was my favourite ’take that’ based on the simple fact that he looked most clueless. (Insert here perusal of old Take That videos and oh my god, Robbie in a denim overall/onesie in Pray. What has been seen can, of course, never be unseen.) Now truth be said, and this is a snippet of epic importance here, Take That were never my favourite boy group, and I kind of took to Robbie more when he went solo, plus his concert reviews are consistently of the better variety, yet I still find the fuss a bit strange. But then again people have been going nuts over things that are even more of an enigma to me, like let’s say Kanye, so guess I will settle for Robbie, thank you very much.

The second special day will have Florence and the Machine headlining, and that’s also a bit odd to me, she’s still kind of stuck in the redhead with great voice and quirky outfits category. Of course I know that she has in the meantime taken to more dramatic attire and upped her „belting her heart out to giant ass tunes” game quite a few notches, so there, I want feathers, sparkles, sequins, showers of light and the likes to warm my dark little heart.

Speaking of my dark little heart, I might as well get the end show out of my system before I get too worked up about it. I kind of get the point of the whole endeavour, it’s nice to have some fireworks and easily digestible acts at the end of the festival, especially since so many revelers are by that time, as the lead singer of Hangmás nicely put it last year „washed shit”(the Hungarian version actually makes sense, yes.) Nor do I have anything in particular against electronic music, there’s quite a lot of it that warms said dark heart. But Martin Garrix is just beyond my powers of understanding. He is the most average EDM act I’ve ever heard, and as I was perusing Wikipedia and saw he’s Dutch I suddenly had the epiphany of oh yes of course he sounds like a poorly recycled Tiёsto. That’s what he is, to the core. I can only pray the similarly timed act in A38 is as good as La Roux was last year, to make whatever Calvin Harris had been doing on the main stage utterly irrelevant.

As I keep writing this thing on and off, kind of trying to let any rabid feelings settle by the time I shoot it out into the great wide open, some new acts keep popping up and then falling into a category I already ranted or raved about- so here’s Avicii, being the Swedish version of „average (insert nationality here)DJ” who plays exactly the same stuff as the other guys. I do remember liking one song from his varied repertoire, though, so I'll settle for aimlessly walking around the main stage during that one, then. And as a fresh development, the Eurovision winning song sounds exactly like that Avicii song I like- so as an improvement to the set, Måns Zelmerlöw could be occasionally thrown in with his little dancing stick man.


Interpol 2011

Since I’ve been pretty much on a moan ride above I guess it’s time I moved on to the good stuff. Because there is good stuff, actually, brilliant stuff and loads of it. So I will jump into the thick of it. Kasabian and Interpol. That sounds like a prayer answered.

I’d actually been eyeing Interpol’s calendar early in the year and noticed a Sziget shaped hole forming in it right about the second week of August. And I was so right (I kind of love being right, so I was double tickled pink by the loveliness of it falling into place.) Now I’ve always loved Interpol a bit too religiously for my own good, but I will admit to their arts falling a bit into the monotone around their self titled album, when they seemed at a loss as to what to do with themselves without Carlos Dengler. So last year’s El Pintor was the sweet sound of victory- yes, the magic is still there, Interpol can still sound like the coldest music to melt your heart, something they do better than any other noughties bred indie band.

Kasabian 2010


Kasabian on the other hand never really put a foot wrong- or always put all their feet wrong, depends on whom you ask. You might go on a rampage and label them lad rock, then go on another one saying how pointlessly sophisticated of them to have an album with song lengths as titles. But for me any criticism can be countered with the sheer feeling of joy I have at any Kasabian concert- and due to them being busy bees and not avoiding Eastern Europe as much as other big acts, I’ve now seen my fair share of those. From playing for a handful of people in Pecsa to the Main Stage of Sziget I’ve never felt anything but giddy whenever LSF came on. I’m actually feeling pretty giddy right now, there’s one hell of a night waiting for us in August.

Foals 2014 VOLT


Last summer I boarded a hot capsule of tardiness (that’s a MÁV train for you, yes) to the far off provinces to watch Foals at VOLT, now they’ll be boarding something I assume fancier to come straight to my back yard, but I regret nothing, double Foals makes me double happy. ALT-J are one of those bands that could go either way for me- I fancy a couple of songs, but don’t go over the top for them, so if the live show is any good, the might just etch themselves into my heart. If not, they’ll go onto the ’other generic indie acts’ heap. Future Islands managed to get NME’s nod for the 2014 track of the year for Seasons, which baffles me to this day, I hope to be at least a bit less baffled after their concert- a bit of an ALT-J case this one as well, it might turn out great or utterly meh (like the 1975 did last year, another case of weird NME hype).

Speaking of what I did last year (not necessarily summer, but mostly the spring and autumn), well I missed some concerts, as I always do, and mostly because stupid. I missed because I still cannot properly consult a calendar and not plan trips to clash with concerts. So I thank the heavens above she’s coming to Sziget, yet, judging by my matchless talents, I can imagine wandering off to some alternative tent during her time slot, because see above. Kadebostany were cancelled, so that’s not my fault, I would say, but since I was rather curious to see their act I’m glad they got regrouped to Sziget (Though really, The Horrors cancelled a Budapest concert as well, I’d say that demands a grand regrouping manoeuvre too.) The reason why I missed Dropkick Murphys will forever be shrouded in mystery, so I will try to compensate for said horror this time around and catch one of my absolute favourite songs live-the only way I could stop playing Rose Tattoo in a constant loop is my iPod growing tiny iHands and slapping me each time I do.

Enter Shikari 2013


There’s of course, as always, complaining about how Sziget brings the same acts, year after year. Well I guess when you’ve grown into a bloody big festival, you arrive at a point where everyone who matters has  already been around. So either you go Glastonbury style and bring, erm, Stephen Hawking, or you stick to the stuff that works. Like Enter Shikari, the absolute Hungarian festival sweethearts- with a bit of luck Rou Reynolds will climb onto a tractor this time, or any eerie moving object in the main stage area. Eugene Hutz of Gogol Bordello wouldn’t say no to a tractor either and is generally very adept at promoting wine as a staple festival drink in it’s rather underdog battle with beer. I don’t have fingers and toes to count just how many times Goran Bregović has been to Budapest, but he’s always a sure hit on the World Music stage- and since Saturday doesn’t yet look all that promising on the main one, I might just end up among Italians screaming their hearts out to Ciao Bella and then suddenly becoming fluent in Serbian as well.  

Gogol Bordello 2011


Beatsteaks were an excuse to get really wild to No One Knows long before Queens of the Stone Age themselves graced Sziget and it’s good to have one biggish German act each year to please the large Bier und Spritzer drinking contingent. Speaking of acts that are brought mostly for the enjoyment of their fellow nationals, I have the distinct feeling Fauve are here mostly for the giant French village, but God bless their hearts they gave Sziget organizers a really grand idea. For Fauve are great, though probably something IS being missed from their charm if you do not speak le French, so everyone start assaulting those fast tracked summer courses at le French institute.


José Gonzalez 2008


The Ting Tings haven’t had an album in a while, so it will be interesting to see what changes they can bring to their set compared to the previous one, but José Gonzalez does have a new album, and it is quite splendid (his previous Sziget gig was splendid as well, mind you), so I am totally looking forward to some more splendour. Marina and the Diamonds comes in the wake of an album as well, and while I might not be quite as taken with it as with José’s effort, her shows are always absolutely worth their money.

                                                        Marina and the Diamonds 2012


Then there’s a list of acts I might as well see if the time slot allows it, grouping the likes of Paloma Faith, Ellie Goulding, Tyler the Creator or SBTRKT (hell yeah, I typed the name correctly from the first go).And yes, I will try to stick to my promise of discovering something new and exciting as well.