Reykjavík Grapevine - 31.07.2009, Blaðsíða 34

Reykjavík Grapevine - 31.07.2009, Blaðsíða 34
22 The Reykjavík Grapevine Issue 11 — 2009“They put on such a beautiful meal for us. We had the most amazing freshest fish I've ever had in my life. It was all so perfectly cooked too...Beautiful!” Jamie Oliver’s Diary Free of charge. Album Review Although it occasionally shows I have a feeling I’m going to be in the minority here, but I’m going to throw it out there: Retrön may be boisterous, fun, energetic and charismatic live performers, but there really isn’t much interesting going on here, technically or musically. Sure, there’s the dumb fun aspect, and the bitzcore Nintendo awesomeness of POWERUP is nice, but the whole album rolls predictably through its repertoire of 80s-style metal, rarely speedy or variable enough to warrant much applause. —SINDRI ELDON Retrön always sounded as a joke to me that started playing metal but with serious overacting, synths and a very ironic undertone. On Swordplay and Guitarslay, they offer ten songs that sound somewhere between early Iron Maiden, a student band’s early demos and early Gameboy-midis. To get straight to the point: the songs are quite annoying, and there is not much to gloss over. The recording is lousy, the songs are nothing special at all and the synths really drive you up the wall. There is only light in two songs at the end of the record, songs that, by the way, feature vocal lines: Slow Me and Helgrindur are really good, rocking 70s stoner rock, that bring to mind Black Sabbath or Wolfmother. It remains a mystery why they wasted the rest of the record.... —FLORIAN ZüHLkE Dr. Zühlke and Mr. Eldon Two men. One album. Lots of dissent. Retrön Swordplay And Guitarslay (2009) retron » Fun, if you’re the one playing it. Annoying synthie-metal mixture « -– So, the mighty Retrön get a rather unfavourable treatment from our duo of music reviewers this issue. This proved somewhat surprising to some of the Grapevine staff, as we’ve been blasting their album incessantly on our humble office stereo over the past couple of weeks, sinking deeper and deeper into their groove of Gameboy-meets-Fucking Champs inspired carnage. Then again, we are not the ones getting paid to appraise music; our boys are smart boys and their assessments are to be trusted. Perhaps Retrön ain’t musically brilliant, awe-inspiring or groundbreaking. Perhaps Swordplay and Guitarslay as a whole could and should be a lot better. But the track on offer as FREE DOWNLOAD OF THE ISSUE still fucking kicks our ass and inspires us to live our lives in a more awesome manner, and that’s a pretty damn good accomplishment for three minutes and twelve seconds worth of audio. Check it out for yourselves. Retrön Slow Me retron Download the free track of the issue SLOW ME at www.grapevine.is TRACK OF THE ISSUE Download your free copy at grapevine.is MUSIC & NIGHT LIFE Foreign Monkeys draw on simplicity and charisma for their fuel, and never grasp beyond their immediate reach, resulting in a satisfying, although not very surprising, modern rock romp. The crunchy, saturated guitars lead us expertly through the more progressive numbers, such as DunDun and Black Cave, but get a little lost in simpler territory, where firmer, more assertive strokes would have been more welcome in the production. The hungry, angst-ridden vocals range from teeny annoyance to flat-out brilliance, often in the same track, leaving the drums as the only consistent force on the album. This would ordinarily result in some loss of accessibility, but the drums plod and stomp with such virtuous grace and power that you are not left wanting, and although it is uneven and imperfect, π is an example of garage rock at its finest and most entertaining. -SINDRI ELDON Andrew W.K. is a guy you might have seen in some rather awkward/ awesome music videos in the early 00s. Not surprisingly most people choose to ignore and/or hate him, the reason being that he and his music are highly hazardous to anyone's cool, something that Icelanders care a great deal about. The album is, quite obviously, made up of cover versions of Japanese pop songs. The result is silly, like the very concept of pop music, and fun like pop music is supposed to be. The album includes many extremely catchy songs, some in fact too catchy, but what else can you expect from a cover album of this sort. The album is not being imported to Iceland, so downloading it would be the easiest way to obtain it... don't do that, though. That would be illegal. -GEIRHARðUR ÞORSTEINSSON Foreign Monkeys Andrew W.k. π (2009) The Japan Covers (2009) foreignmonkeys When you need your rock to kick some ass, you need look no further whatsoever. andrewwk + + Pointed and satisfying without being the most original thing ever released, Form Follows accomplishes something by not trying too hard to accomplish anything at all. It‘s just there, in all its popped-up electronic glory, with wallop-packing basslines, busy, urgent beats and moody synths; a testament to simplicity and solidarity over unnecessary experimentation. It is both rich and stripped bare, minimalist and intricate, finely crafted and yet very instinctive, and I think I might just listen to it once more after I write this. -SINDRI ELDON Tonik Form Follows (2009) tonikmusic Not going to change the world, but still pretty good. + www.islenskibarinn.is • info@islenskibarinn.is The Icelandic Bar • Austurvöllur • Reykjavík • Tel: 578 2020

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