Reykjavík Grapevine - 09.04.2010, Qupperneq 30

Reykjavík Grapevine - 09.04.2010, Qupperneq 30
18 Open: Mondays-Saturdays 11:30-22:30 Sundays 16:00-22:00 Now offering catering service! Probably the best pizza in town Pizzeria tel. 578 8555 Lækjargata 8 Downtown Music | Live Review The Reykjavík Grapevine Issue 04 — 2010 did you KnoW? That "a. rawlings" is actually just a clever pseudonym of everyone's favou- rite Canadian experimental poet - slash - Icelandophile, Angela Rawlings. More on her at www.commutiny.wordpress.com Hours after a volcanic fissure rup- tured in Fimmvörðuháls on the ver- nal equinox, Canadian electro-glam star Peaches erupted onto NASA’s stage in a fury of beats, costumes, hair, and attitude—a suitable finale for the inaugural Reykjavík Fashion Festival. Peaches’ musical persona is ob- sessed with hair and costume; she has worn beards for media appear- ances, displayed her own private curly fringe for CD covers and online interviews, and—well—her fourth album title speaks for itself: Impeach My Bush. In videos such as Serpen- tine and Talk to Me, hair adorns cos- tumes as fringe, while in Tombstone Baby two women toy with sexual f lir- tation and frustration through acts of hair stroking and pulling. With Peaches’ attempts to un- tangle conventional attitudes to hair, it was appropriate that she took the NASA stage dressed in boxing shoes and a black-hair body suit with tower- ing head dress. Her second song, the aforementioned Talk to Me, demand- ed responses from two blonde go-go dancers who joined Peaches onstage, both silent dancers in black under- wear and oversized matted wigs that obscured their faces. Peaches oscillated between en- ticement and violence as she inter- acted with the audience. With swift kicks, she swiped empty bottles off the stage in a spray of broken glass. Her performance pushed through choreography and costume changes (from towels to pussy lights, glam- rock necklaces to prosthetic breasts), props and prat falls—dangerous enough with a drunken, infatuated mass surging towards the stage, ea- ger to paw Peaches. Playing into this visceral audience desire and her own ideology, Peaches delivered a series of interactive antics (spray-spitting fake blood, pulling pretty girls onstage to dance, allow- ing hungry hands to molest her gui- tar) that amped up the crowd’s party drive. Peaches even crowd-surfed and walked all over the audience. To prep the howling mass for this latter stunt, she shouted, “Are you ready for something special, Reykjavík? … Jesus walked on water; Peaches walks on you.” She chased this with stripped-down beats and laissez-faire lyrics in Serpentine, a song from her newest album I Feel Cream, with a chorus that proved the motto of the night: “I don’t give a fuck if you maul me.” I stood and watched the grotes- query of the evening. A hard-working (and arguably exhausted) performer executed choreographed moments and pushed or kicked any object or person out of her way while booze- soaked beauties, bedecked in fine suits and frocks, pulsed their young bodies and yelled infatuation unin- telligently. My mind wandered to a YouTube fan video for Peaches’ an- themic Fuck the Pain Away paired with Miss Piggy clips. Excess. Des- peration. Greed. Shock art of swine in pearls. Puppet perversion, jerks and gyrations, mouth full of sexually explicit expletives. Whether drunk, bitter, sleepy, euphoric, or volcanic, by the end of Peaches’ performance, we all found our release. Fashion, Eruption, Aggression, And A Whole Lotta Fuzz Peaches storms NASA at the RFF a. RaWlinGS JÓi KJaRTanS Music | CD Reviews Úlpa have been lingering at the periphery of the Icelandic music scene for long enough to make something of a name for themselves, but I can’t remember ever meeting anyone who really likes them or has even listened to them, except for this one guy... although I am a bit of a shut-in. All that said, Úlpa’s latest effort is as darkly satisfying as all their work, with a heavy Arabic twist to their guitar work and songwriting. This does unfortunately make them sound a bit too proggy for my taste, but Úlpa’s laid-back professionalism and their richly textured soundscape, one glimpsed through a hazy murk of flange, delay, reverbs and overdubs, always make for an intriguing listen. - SindRi Eldon Found Songs is a project Ólafur Arnalds undertook last year. It involved writing, recording and mixing a track every day for a week, then giving them away for free via his Twitter account. The result is a twenty minute mini album containing tracks that are sparse and minimal, switching away from electronic percussion and with the piano and violin forming the central soundscape. And such are the feelings of loss, pain and melancholy that pervade through the album’s minor keys, what Arnalds seems to have done is make a soundtrack for possibly the world’s saddest film, if that existed—a film that would probably contain death, cancer, incest, addiction and a bag of kittens being tossed into a river in the first ten minutes. Admittedly, some people may find the album a little cold and lacking in depth due to the shortness of the tracks. But given some time and the right setting, its soft tones have a notable calming effect. - BoB ClunESS Úlpa Ólafur arnalds Jahilíya (2009) Found Songs (2009) ulpa Self-indulgent and clichéd, but in a good, wholesome way. olafurarnalds Sad sounds and melancholy to soothe the savage beast. hudson Wayne How Quick Is Your Fish? Seven tracks of laconic resignation form Hudson Wayne’s third “full- length” and it stands firmly as the band’s most relaxed and confident offering yet, which is not to say it goes anywhere special or interesting. It relies more on its mood and energy to create atmosphere than any kind of effect or production gimmicks, meaning that, for better or for worse, it’s true nature is obvious: a simple little bit of morose guitar drudgery, not blessed with any highs or lows, just cruising through foggy skies with no particular destination in mind. - SindRi Eldon sykurtheband Music to come home drunk to peaches ladytron dJ's Bloodgroup Sykur NASA, March 20th 2010

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