Showing posts with label Soccer Mommy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Soccer Mommy. Show all posts

Saturday, 30 September 2023

1,294 THE NATIONAL, Soccer Mommy, London Alexandra Palace, Wednesday 27th September 2023

 

After a couple of little gigs, it’s time for a big ‘un; and right now they don’t come much bigger (Stadia and Festivals notwithstanding), than US alt-rock leaders The National! The band of choice for serious black jeans-clad “sad dad” musos (hands up, guilty as charged) and now firmly established as the R.E.M. of this particular musical generation (I said it would happen, and it’s happened…), Ohio’s The National announced a date at London’s cavernous greenhouse Alexandra Palace, so naturally I logged on for tix at the very second they went on sale. Despite my continuous “refresh” efforts, however, I was stymied and locked out until the “sold out” signs went up about 10 minutes afterwards… Luckily, I checked back about half an hour later, to find they’d added a second date for the night after! Yay! So, I quickly bagsied tix for that one before they, too, disappeared… Good thing too, as The National then went and delivered what may well be their career-defining album in this year’s “The First Two Pages Of Frankenstein”, a quite magnificent body of work, mainly slow-burn, stripped back and understatedly melancholy, but with a significantly elevated quality of songwriting which took a quantum stride forward from their last couple of “National by Numbers” albums. Likely their best, easily the best album I’ve heard this year, this could be their “Out Of Time”, the one which elevates them from growing cult status to the national (sic) and international consciousness…

 (Ironic really, given that in mood and timbre, its more akin to R.E.M.’s follow up to “OOT”, “Automatic For The People”, but still…)

 So, hopes were very high for a performance to match, as Stu picked me up at 4, hitting traffic just off the North Circular which delayed our arrival until ¼ to 7. Parked up easily, nonetheless, and grabbed a quick bite in the main atrium before wandering into the huge and ornate venue just after 7. Nashville’s Soccer Mommy took the stage just after 10 past, immediately easing into pure, textural opener “Crawling In My Skin”. Thence followed a real early 90’s college pop throwback set, with some fine musicianship from singer/ songwriter Sophie Allison’s backing band (particularly the robust, strong-armed drummer) happily giving an extra dynamism to Sophie’s oft-muted (and in the case of her second album material, sadly a bit borderline dull) material. “Circle The Drain” was plaintive and lovely, almost a companion piece to The Blake Babies’ classic “Out There”, the eerie pseudo goth template of “Darkness Forever” was juxtaposed with a languidly summery “Bullet In A Shotgun”, and after a slightly morose solo cover of Slowdive’s “Dagger”, Sophie bigged up the headliners (“The National put on quite a show”) and left us with set closer “Don’t Ask Me”, which was the brightest, bounciest and Belly-est number on display in a quietly impressive opening set.

 

We kept our good viewing spots, house left about 10 rows back, as the place got understandably busier, the lights smashing to black dead on 8.20 to the big screen backdrop of the band about to take the stage! So they did, easing in with an elongated “Runaway”, singer Matt Berninger’s nuanced, inflected baritone already the standout feature. However “Eucalyptus”, next up, was utterly magnificent, eliciting a surprise singalong to the “you can take it” hook, and building to a dramatic and sweeping crescendo (not the last of the evening, of course) augmented by the brass section overlay and Matt’s impassioned vocal. Woah… they’ve not peaked too soon, surely?

 Thankfully quality control was maintained, despite (although I blanked on this at the time) guitarist Aaron Dessner then advising us that the band wouldn’t be repeating any songs they played last night! We therefore had a slightly off the beaten track National song selection, but as ever delivered with this band’s signature mellifluously understated yet wonderfully sombre style, and happily (which hasn’t always been the case in large venues for me this year) matched by a clear-as-a-bell sound and impressive augmented light and screen backdrop (said screen usually showing artily fragmented shots of the onstage action). A delicious “This Isn’t Helping” ceded to “I Should Live In Salt” (“one of our strange time signature songs,” advised Aaron before brother Bryce took centre stage with some serious guitar shredding through its building denouement); “I Need My Girl” was heartcrackingly sombre, Matt’s yearning mahogany vocal augmented by stark backlit blue banks of light; newie “Deep End” (from an unexpected forthcoming album “Laugh Track” – their second this year!) was an old school “Alligator”-era rocker with a slightly countrified (think R.E.M’s “Reckoning”) lilt; and “Sorrow” (preceded by Aaron joking, “we thought about playing you [this song] for 2 ½ hours – there’s a precedent for that!) was beautifully despondent, heartbreak never sounding so good.

 Thereafter, it all got a little intermittently (and surprisingly) punk rock! Oldie “Murder Me Rachael” was a startlingly upbeat and growling U2-esque 80’s stadium rocker with a thunderous climax; the equally veteran “Available” was a soaring blast, Matt (not for the first time) delivering his screaming vocals from the photo pit into the faces of the front rows; and after the circular layered vocal build of “Secret Meeting” calmed matters slightly, “Turtleneck” was a dynamically juddering swampy Stones-like blues rocker. Yikes!

 For me, the gig took a bit of a lull thereafter (not helped by me zoning out slightly because some entitled 6 foot+ tall 5 to 3’er in a striped shirt planted himself directly in my line of vision – twat!), but a superb “Conversation 16”, with its’ juxtaposition of elegiac verse and huge strident “I’m EVIL!!” hook, brought me right back, before the propulsive thrill-ride of “Graceless”, the set closer and highlight of the night for me, saw Matt not only abandon the stage for the middle of the melee, but also then take a right turn and return to the stage via our side, phones held aloft to mark his progress. As he passed me by, I hastily snapped a photo, then during the early encore, tracked down the punter next to him in said pic (hi Max!).

 

“This has been the fucking best time!” pronounced a buoyed Matt, who once again had given his all, balancing his marvellous baritone with by-now easy frontperson showmanship. The slow-fast dynamics and textured hook of “Terrible Love” was the highlight of the encore, final number “About Today” seeing Stu and I head back to the car for 10.45 after nearly 2 ½ hours of stellar entertainment, a quick run seeing us back in the ‘don for 12.30. A superb night out as ever with The National, then, once again cementing their status as the heads of the US alt-rock table. Surely stadium-level status won’t be too long to follow…

Sunday, 26 June 2022

1,235 SOCCER MOMMY, Bristol Rough Trade Records, Sunday 26th June 2022

 


Another Rough Trade in-store gig and CD signing session, but this time with daughter Jami! I’d enjoyed “Color Theory”, 2020’s sophomore effort from Nashville’s Soccer Mommy, effectively a band vehicle for talented newcomer Sophie Allison to sprinkle a flurry of hazy lazy Belly/ Blake Babies college pop/dreampop stardust over her self-exploring confessional lyrics, then deliver them in a pure, delicate voice recalling Madder Rose’s Mary Lorson. So her impending new album “Sometimes, Forever” was already on my shopping list before I heard about this in-store show. Tix were duly snapped up, then, not only for myself but also for Jami, who enjoyed the repeated car CD plays. So, another daddy/ daughter gig!

 Rach was off early for a sea swim event so I still had to do the grocery shop first, but I did that in double-quick time so Jami and I could leave just after 11 for a swift drive and annoying queue into Cabot Circus car park, then a soggy tramp through a drizzly Bristol. Hit the venue about 20 past 12, picking up our new album CDs then taking a spot near the front, house right, and admiring the plethora of guitars onstage – no other equipment, so this was definitely a Sophie solo show! She joined us at 1 p.m., greeting her quietly attentive audience with, “hi guys… what is it you say; are you alright?... Now I’ve warmed you up with my humour, I’ll play some songs” and easing into the Madder Rose-esque sombre slow-burn opener “With You” off the new album. In fact, after then making reference to her guitar line-up (“an arsenal of guitars for a 30 minute set! And they’re all in [the key of] “A”!”), she announced that the set would consist solely of new album tracks – her prerogative, sure, but as an audience member, it was also my prerogative to feel a little disappointed by that, as I was looking forward to at least a couple of “Color Theory” tracks (“Circle The Drain” and/or Jami’s favourite “Royal Screw Up” would have been nice). Oh well…

 


Anyway, “Bones”, next up, had more of a slightly countrified Lemonheads slacker vibe, and “Shotgun” was more immediate, with a hooker chorus juxtaposing its’ melancholy verse. Following that, Sophie (who was open and charming throughout) asked for early favourites from the new album, a couple of punters calling for “Darkness Forever”, much to her chagrin… apparently this one was “too dark” and featured a really loud scream that the producer coaxed out of her during recording. So that was out too! Instead, she reached for the best-looking guitar, a sky blue asymmetric model which drew gasps from the crowd and a comment of, “it’s not mine, it’s [Soccer Mommy guitarist] Julian’s!” “Don’t Ask Me”, which received the benefit of this instrument, was my favourite of the set, again giving off strong Dandoesque laid-back college pop vibes. We made our way to the back during final number, the understated melancholy of “Still” (which also featured a descending choral chord structure recalling Buffalo Tom’s classic “Taillights Fade”), so we could be early in the queue for CD signing, greeting Sophie for a few quick words, signed CDs and a photo before heading off, back home just before 4 via shopping and Slim Chickens lunch in Cabot Circus.

 So, overall, a pleasant and diverting way to spend a Sunday, but one not likely to threaten my “Best Of” gig list for the year… disappointed about the lack of familiar material in her set, but a couple of promising new numbers, especially “Don’t Ask Me” which I’m looking forward to hearing in full band form. But of course, the track I’m looking forward to hearing the most (forbidden fruit and all that..) is the dark and screaming “Darkness Forever”…!