Reykjavík Grapevine - 09.05.2014, Qupperneq 25

Reykjavík Grapevine - 09.05.2014, Qupperneq 25
First things first, we’d like to thank Phédre, Ken Park, Nolo and every- body who showed up for our summer celebration at KEX on May 3. The hos- tel was crammed with exciting music, people and good vibes. Thank you! With that out of the way, we have a lot of new music to share. Over the last month we have been listening to a lot of Myndra, a three-piece indie band led by the Icelandic singer-song- writer and guitarist Linus Orri, who was once a member of Just Another Snake Cult. Linus met his two Cana- dian bandmates after agreeing to host them in Iceland through Couchsurfing. He then went to Rimouski in Canada to record an album with them. The outcome is the fantastic ‘Songs From Your Collarbone’ out in June. Check them out at soundcloud.com/myndra Twenty-year-old Sigurður Ýmir who makes beats under the name Pretty Please just released a hazy new song called “100kg” that has us bouncing while we dream of summer parties and happy days. The track is currently streaming on his Sound- Cloud, just waiting for you to push play. Finally, FM Belfast’s long awaited third LP, ‘Brighter Days,’ landed on April 22 and it was well worth the wait. It retains the spirit of exuberant elec- tronic joy that inhabited their earlier al- bums but the song writing is more ma- ture and the sonic palette bigger. The song “Ears,” for example, juxtaposes a distorted hip-hop beat reminiscent of Boards of Canada with a funky slap bass and moody melancholic synth melody. Delorean is a glorious ever- building and grinding journey with virtuosic synthesiser workouts. Their newest album sees more diverse and complex vocal arrangements. Their trademark elongated echo falsettos have been toned down a bit, which is a good thing because, although enjoyable, they might have become a bit gimmicky by the third album. They still have their giddy goofiness and sense of humour. “We Are Faster Than You” has a shuffling beat and a tiny synthesiser arpeggio combined with playground chants of nanananas, and jaunty saxophone mini-solos. The whole album is a warehouse of rejoic- ing and is bound to produce buckets of smiles and booty-shaking this sum- mer. The all new "ELVIS PRESLEY – ON STAGE" music experience kicked off its tour here in Reykjavík on the last day of winter—April 23. I just want to start this review by saying that I've been a big fan of Elvis since I was ten. I even wrote my mas- ters thesis on the man. So the excite- ment was high when I walked into Harpa’s Eldborg Hall to experience “the closest I could get to seeing him in concert.” Elvis never played outside of North America while he was alive, but thanks to the wonders of modern technology, a show like this has been running on and off since 1997, touring in many of the countries Elvis didn’t visit. Before it was called Elvis Presley in Concert and at that time some of the players were member of his original band in Las Vegas. It was not the case this time around though and nobody on stage looked like they had been born when Elvis was still alive. The main problem with this concert was, first and foremost, that it was not a concert. It was a group of people playing alongside a movie, an expen- sive movie (tickets were sold for 10,000 ISK). It never really felt like a real show. During many of the songs the band did not seem in sync with Elvis’s voice and after 20 minutes, the movie cut from ‘70s concerts in Vegas to clips from the ‘Elvis 1968 Comeback Special,’ and then back again. It was really ironic to hear Elvis utter the words “If you milk it long enough” on stage. What would he have thought if he knew that long after his death he would be on a big screen in a concert hall in Iceland backed by session play- ers milking his legacy to the max? I'm waiting for the hologram… 25 Music Step into the Viking Age Experience Viking-Age Reykjavík at the new Settlement Exhibition. The focus of the exhibition is an excavated longhouse site which dates from the 10th century ad. It includes relics of human habitation from about 871, the oldest such site found in Iceland. Multimedia techniques bring Reykjavík’s past to life, providing visitors with insights into how people lived in the Viking Age, and what the Reykjavík environment looked like to the first settlers. The exhibition and museum shop are open daily 10–17 Aðalstræti 16 101 Reykjavík / Iceland Phone +(354) 411 6370 www.reykjavikmuseum.is “If You Milk It Long Enough” Elvis Presley—on stage Words Davíð Roach & Óli Dóri Words Óli Dóri Brighter Days Ahead REVIEW Straumur has been active since last summer, with writers Óli Dóri and Davíð Roach documenting the local music scene and help- ing people discover new music at straum.is. It is associated with the radio show Straumur on X977, which airs every Monday evening at 23:00. Straumur April 23 Harpa Concert Hall Elvis Presley On Stage Nanna Dís

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