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This time around I was determined to not miss them. “I’m a Pilot” made my list of top 50 songs from 2009. It was #7 in the Festive Fifty of the Contrast Podcast too. The band has made a harrowing winter tour of the US, made a beautiful new video for “Harold T. Wilkins.” They’re in the major press, listed among the “top 100 bands you need to know” and “emerging artists” and “Bowie-beloved.” Yes, that Bowie.
So I kept my fingers crossed and was gifted with a pass to see the show and some moments to chat with Cathy Lucas, the lovely, female, multi-instrumentalist and vocalist in this male-dominated quintet. Cathy and I talked about the importance of staying grounded amidst all this success. I had come to this meeting with the very distinct feeling that Fanfarlo wasn’t simply Simon and his band. It felt much more like a solid group of five people who worked together at music. I could sense that from how they looked onstage, how the music itself came together, collective instrumentation and backing vocals in tandem with Simon’s most obvious lead singer persona. Cathy confirmed my hunch, although she was the last member to join the band, I doubt she feels it much. “He writes the songs, definitely, but in terms of everything else, it’s pretty collaborative. We arrange together, we make decisions about music videos, art work, all of those things together.”
Tart: So you feel that you have a lot of input in terms of the direction of the band and so forth?
Cathy: “Yes definitely, and every member has different strengths. Some people are very active in the studio, some are more active in terms of online blogging, etc.”
And here, I told her how they make fun of her on the online tour diary. I’ve been a fan of this blog for a long while, I hope she’s looked it up by now, Cathy look at that online tour diary! You’ve got some revenge to take! But seriously, staying in touch with one another and recognizing each others’ strengths has surely allowed Fanfarlo to retain its DIY flavor despite moving to a major label. In the indie world, that is nothing short of a herculean task. As I looked over the crowd last night I noticed so many familiar faces, faces of people who I’ve seen at every single indie show I’ve attended in the past year. Making it to the “big time” hasn’t cost Fanfarlo any of their fans, if anything, it’s had an additive factor.
But that decision to move to a major label, was it difficult?
C: “We definitely discussed it at length, we all have different levels of…. comfort with that part of music and different ties to the indie community as well. Some of us are very much still involved with that and want to continue to be. Just recently we’ve been thinking about what London promoters we can use and we’ve actually gone back to our old friends who promote smaller shows.”
I tell her of my recent ranting about ticking monopolization and how it affects not only us, as fans, but the industry and its support of new music. Cathy and I have very much found common ground on the issue.
C: “It’s so impersonal, with the bigger promoters. [insert hated company name here] is a huge, huge corporation. They standardize music; they drive up prices. It’s just not good. We don’t have to work with them if we can avoid it.”
T: It’s great to be able to have a choice, at least!
C: “well yeah, it’s good to give promoters the opportunity as well, I’m not saying this is going to be this amazing thing for them to do, they can do it if they want, and some small promoters never get an opportunity to actually go to a bigger venue.”
(Cathy continues…) “It’s hard, once you go to that world, in terms of the label’s input it becomes very much about who’s at the top, the big thing, the big promotion companies, big directors an so on. We felt it really important to push from the other side, have input from the smaller, maybe more interesting, more experimental people. and that’s where we come from, we all grew up with that stuff and learned to be in bands with those people, and they helped us putting out 7” on their labels and we definitely want to stay connected in that way.”
And Fanfarlo is very committed to staying aware of what’s going on and of staying connected to its roots. In six years this group has transformed from a single man sending his files to a friend, into a solid body of five working musicians who travel together, seemingly endlessly. It’s the typical story of small band made big and famous in many ways. Yet Fanfarlo has, at this point, still managed to retain that “island of lost toys” feeling, a sort of collection of odd people who’ve found a home with one another.” All five, as I look at them onstage, have a distinct identity or costume, only Simon and Cathy seem to fit together. And as only those two come out on the first song, singing to each other as much as to us, I can’t help but think that they do that because they are the anchor in this group. This dyad dress the most alike, haircuts match in a sense, vocals compliment one another, and Cathy sings as loudly and as often as Simon. She’s his wingman, in 1940s jargon. Their chemistry is very strong. In our interview, Cathy is relaxed and composed even though she’s waiting for her sister and brother and family to arrive, (they live here in Chicago.) On stage Cathy is vibrantly alive, totally focused on Simon, handing him his clarinet when needed and ready for the handoff when he’s finished, completely poised and singing perfectly into the mic, loudly with him throughout the show. Picking up her violin, she’s even more alive than ever, and totally on her own. She’s a joy to watch and hear.
The rest of the band each have their own place in this thing. I wish I’d have had the time to spend with them. They’re all interesting characters, and they do project a real character, each of them. There’s no pretense of uniformity in Farfarlo. Justin’s style shines through with not only his fashion sense but in his bass playing and occasional flash of smile at the audience (even to us up in the top layer.) He loses his mic towards the end, having pushed it away and then realizing he needed it for one more song. Oh well, after attempting to replace it so that it could be sung into, he gives up with a wide smile. We don’t mind that he doesn’t sing harmony in that song anyway. Amos is an endearing drummer and vocalist, and Leon’s trumpeting brings to mind Beruit and quickly buries that band’s memory as Fanfarlo’s image takes precedence – the crowd loved him! With each of these characters, Fanfarlo impresses, there’s no homogenizing factor here. Simon’s personality definitely holds sway as the lead, but even after so much time on the road together, this band has not become a brand, “Fanfarlo.” If anything, it benefits from the difference of its members.
I’m struck by how achingly beautiful the album is. Like much of 2009′s music, it calls out from a sweetly sad place. T: Something that comes out of the music, and and I know this comes out of not just the writing but also out of the performance, is that magical trick of sounding joyful and infinitely sad at the same time:
C: “Especially on this last record, we really tried to make it sound beautiful…. there’s many sides to [beauty], it encompasses the all of these aspects of humanity, both the melancholic side and things that are uplifting, and joyful. And also it relates to the lyrical content I think, because Simon tends to choose darker subject matters, whereas a lot of pop music tends to focus on everyday human things, he’s very interested on what’s on the periphery of humanity, on things that are slightly inhuman and strange about people. Performers especially are interested in that way of operating, in this liminal space that kind of brings out something that’s different, that accentuates the differences between people. I think that probably relates to our artwork as well. The two girls on the cover, they kind of embody that difference that is eerie and at the same time enchanting.”
And dear readers, that is exactly what I take from Reservoir. It enchants. It is the celebration of those differences in people that I hear in songs like “Luna,” where Simon’s fluid, swerving voice contrasts so dramatically with the percussion and handclaps and yet holds fast until the whole song slows down to accommodate it. That is the key to this band’s success.
See the review of the Chicago show at Gapers Block.
Darlings, just a quickie to remind you to come see the wonderful Fanfarlo tonight at Lincoln Hall! (There’s still a few tickets left, not many!) I’m listening to their College Radio Sessions EP right now (which you can download for FREE on their MySpace page) and it is lovely. I’ve been told I’ll have a chance to chat with the band tonight, so if you’ve got some questions, tweet me!! You’ll notice, they’ve got a nice long tour here, ending up at Bonnaroo. This band has been on tour non-stop, it seems. Their record, released last year was on many top ten lists of 2010.
For record store day Fanfarlo will release a 7″-single, “You Are One,” and original tune b/w Fleetwood Mac’s fantastic,”What Makes You Think You’re The One,” which the band recorded exclusively for the Record Store Day 7″ during a day off in Berlin, (see source here.)
Listen here to their concert from SXSW, hosted by NPR.
Tour Dates
Apr 7 2010 8:00P Lincoln Hall Chicago, Illinois Apr 8 2010 8:00P Grog Shop[Cancelled] Cleveland Heights
Apr 9 2010 8:00P Lee’s Palace Toronto, Ontario
Apr 10 2010 8:00P Studio Juste pour Rire Montreal, Quebec
Apr 11 2010 8:00P Paradise Rock Club Boston, Massachusetts
Apr 14 2010 8:00P Trabendo Paris
Apr 15 2010 8:00P Printemps du Bourges Festival Bourges
Apr 17 2010 8:00P Loop Festival Granada
May 26 2010 8:00P Nachtleben Frankfurt
May 27 2010 8:00P Gebäude 9 Köln
May 28 2010 8:00P Junges Schauspiel Hannover
May 29 2010 8:00P Folkfest Duisburg
May 31 2010 8:00P Knust Hamburg
Jun 1 2010 8:00P Postbahnhof Berlin
Jun 10 2010 8:00P Bonnaroo Festival Manchester, Tennessee
Well, now this is getting interesting… Over at the Contrast Podcast, Tim’s solicited everyone for their favorite 50 songs of 2009, remember? From all the responses he’s compiled the top 155. I’m very impressed with the list! If you didn’t submit your faves yet, you’ve still got a chance to get in the game at this point! Help us out, eh? (I”ve highlighted my top 10 in blue)
Here’s what Tim has to say:
Hello Everyone,
It’s time for the final vote to determine the top fifty songs that will be crowned as this year’s Contrast Podcast Festive Fifty:
Select your favourite 10 songs from the shortlist of 155 below and rank them from 1 (your favourite) to 10 and send the list to me (at contrast.podcast@gmail.com) You may also (if you are feeling evil) give a negative vote to any single song of your choice! The deadline for doing this is one week away – Monday 23rd November. Please ask your friends, family, blog readers and anyone else you know to send me their votes too – everyone can take part!!
Last year quite a few people said that they hadn’t heard many of the songs, so this year I’ve setup a handy player with (almost) all of the tracks on it:
A.A. Bondy – When The Devil’s Loose
Aidan Moffat & the Best Ofs – Big Blonde
Alexi Murdoch – Towards The Sun
Alice In Chains – Check My Brain
Andrew Bird – Fitz & dizzyspells
Andrew Bird – Nomenclature
Andrew Bird – Not a Robot, but a Ghost
Animal Collective – My Girls
Animal Collective – Summertime Clothes Antlers (The) – Two
Art Brut – DC Comics And Chocolate Milkshake
Asobi Seksu – Transparence
At The Stars – Oxygen & Rust
Atlas Sound – Walkabout
Auld Lang Syne – Where My Fortune Lies
Avett Brothers (The) – I And Love And You
Bat for Lashes – Daniel
Beirut – The Akara
Bell X1 – The Great Defector
Big Pink (The) – Dominos
Black Joe Lewis & The Honeybears – Get Yo’ Shit
Bob Dylan – Beyond Here Lies Nothin’ Bombadil – Sad Birthday
Bon Iver – Blood Bank Builders and The Butchers (The) – Barcelona
Butcher Boy – Carve A Pattern
Buzz Aldrin – You and I
Camera Obscura – French Navy
Camera Obscura – Honey In The Sun
Camera Obscura – My Maudlin Career
Casiotone For The Painfully Alone – White Corolla
Cats On Fire – Horoscope
Cats On Fire – Letters From A Voyage To Sweden
Cats On Fire – Tears In Your Cup
Danger Mouse & Sparklehorse with Wayne Coyne – Revenge
Das Racist & Wallpaper – Combination Pizza Hut And Taco Bell (Wallpaper. RMX)
Dave Matthews Band – Why I Am
David Bazan – Bless This Mess
David Gedge And The BBC Big Band – My Favourite Dress (live at West Yorkshire Playhouse, Leeds, 29 April 2009)
Death Cab for Cutie – Little Bribes
Decemberists (The) – Annan Water
Decemberists (The) – The Hazards of Love Part 4 (The Drowned)
Decemberists (The) – The Rake’s Song Decemberists (The) – The Wanting Comes In Waves/Repaid
Decemberists (The) – Won’t Want for Love
Dizzee Rascal & Armand Van Helden – Bonkers
Doves – Jetstream
Doves – Kingdom Of Rust
Drums (The) – I Felt Stupid
Editors – Papillon
Edward Sharpe & The Magnetic Zeroes – 40 Day Dream
Edward Sharpe & The Magnetic Zeros – Home
Eels – Fresh Blood
Elvis Perkins In Dearland – Shampoo Fanfarlo – I’m A Pilot
Faunts (The) – It Hurts Me All The Time
Flight of the Conchords – Carol Brown
Flight Of the Conchords – Sugarlumps
Florence & The Machine – Cosmic Love
Florence & The Machine – Dog Days Are Over
Florence & The Machine – Kiss With a Fist
Franz Ferdinand – No You Girls
Franz Ferdinand – Twilight Omens
Franz Ferdinand – Ulysses
Future Of The Left – Arming Eritrea
Girls – Hellhole Ratrace
Gong – Dance with the Pixies
Grand Archives – Oslo Novelist
Grizzly Bear – Two Weeks
Guggenheim Grotto (The) – Fee Da Da Dee
HEALTH – Die Slow
Heartless Bastards – The Mountain
Here We Go Magic – Fangela
Horrors (The) – Sea Within A Sea
I Like Trains – Sea Of Regrets
Iggy Pop – King Of The Dogs
Jarvis Cocker – Angela
Jarvis Cocker – I Never Said I Was Deep
Jarvis Cocker – Leftovers
Jason Lytle – Yours Truly, The Commuter
Jason Mraz – Traveler/Make it Mine (live)
Kasabian – Fire
Kurt Vonnegut & Dave Soldier – Nice Very Nice
Langhorne Slim – I Love You, But Goodbye Leisure Society (The) – A Matter Of Time Leisure Society (The) – The Darkest Place I Know Leisure Society (The) – The Last Of The Melting Snow
Lily Allen – The Fear Low Anthem (The) – Champion Angel
Madness – We are London
Memory Tapes – Bicycle
Metric – Gimme sympathy
Metric – Sick Muse
Meursault – Love Or Limb
Meursault – Nothing broke
Meursault – William Henry Miller Pt. 2 Meursault – William Henry Miller Pt. 1
Mew – New Terrain
Middle East (The) – Blood
Morrissey – I’m Throwing My Arms Around Paris
Morrissey – Something Is Squeezing My Skull
Mountain Goats (The) – 1 John 4:16
Mumford & Sons – Roll Away Your Stone
Mumford & Sons – The Cave Mumford & Sons – White Blank Page
Muse – Uprising
National (The) – So Far Around The Bend
Neko Case – Middle Cyclone
Neko Case – People Got A Lotta Nerve
NOFX – My Orphan Year
Owl City – Fireflies
Pains of Being Pure At Heart (The) – Come Saturday
Pains of Being Pure At Heart (The) – Higher than the stars
Pains of Being Pure At Heart (The) – This Love Is Fucking Right
Pains of Being Pure At Heart (The) – Young Adult Friction
Passion Pit – Moth’s Wings
Passion Pit – The Reeling
Paul Haig – Relive
Pet Shop Boys – Love etc.
Pete Yorn & Scarlett Johansson – Relator
Phoenix – 1901
Phoenix – Lisztomania
PJ Harvey & John Parish – Black Hearted Love
Prefab Sprout – Earth, The Story So Far
Prefab Sprout – Let There Be Music
Prefab Sprout – Music Is A Princess
Raveonettes (The) – Suicide
Regina Spektor – Folding Chair
Regina Spektor – One More Time With Feeling
Richard Hawley – As The Dawn Breaks
Saint Etienne – Method of modern love
Sam Bisbee – Never Fall In Love
Spoon – Got nuffin’
Temper Trap (The) – Sweet Disposition
Thom Yorke – Hearing damage
Throw Me The Statue – Hi-Fi Goon Twilight Sad (The) – I became a Prostitute
U2 – No Line on the Horizon
Very Best (The) – Warm Heart Of Africa
Wave Machines – The Greatest Escape We Ever Made
We Were Promised Jetpacks – Quiet Little Voices
We Were Promised Jetpacks – Roll Up Your Sleeves
White Lies – To Lose My Life
Wilco – Wilco (The Song)
Wilco – You And I
Wilco – You Never Know
Wild Beasts – All the Kings Men Withered Hand – Love in the Time of Ecstasy
Withered Hand – Religious Song
Wye Oak – That I Do
XX (The) – Crystallized
XX (The) – Intro
XX (The) – VCR
Yeah Yeah Yeahs – Heads Will Roll
Yeah Yeah Yeahs – Zero
Oh, I was trying to stay away from you until I was better, but I don’t need to listen to this to tell you that it’s fantastic. I remember it well. Fanfarlo is a band that took a bit to grow on me. Funnily enough, once I saw their video I loved them. And you know I usually hate videos! But they are so charming; Cathy Lucas (violin, keyboard, vox), Justin Finch (bass) and Amos Memon (drums) and Leon Beckenham (trumpet, keyboard) all captured my attention. I loved Luna mp3 right off the start, and once I put faces to that music, it all just came alive for me. So please, indulge yourselves, go take a peek at this gang and come out to see them on their US tour. We’re all a little bit excited about it!
November 9th*Chicago, IL*Schubas
November 11th*Minneapolis, MN*Triple Rock Social Club
November 13th*Denver, CO*Moe’s
November 14th*Salt Lake City, UT*State Room
November 16th*Boise, ID*Knitting Factory
November 17th*Seattle, WA*Crocodile Cafe
November 18th*Vancouver, BC*Media Club
November 19th*Portland, OR*Doug Fir Lounge
November 20th*Sparks, NV*Great Basin Brewing Company
November 22nd*San Francisco, CA*Rickshaw Stop
November 23rd*Los Angeles, CA*Echo
November 24th*San Diego, CA*Casbah
November 9th*Chicago, IL*Schubas
November 11th*Minneapolis, MN*Triple Rock Social Club
November 13th*Denver, CO*Moe’s
November 14th*Salt Lake City, UT*State Room
November 16th*Boise, ID*Knitting Factory
November 17th*Seattle, WA*Crocodile Cafe
November 18th*Vancouver, BC*Media Club
November 19th*Portland, OR*Doug Fir Lounge
November 20th*Sparks, NV*Great Basin Brewing Company
November 22nd*San Francisco, CA*Rickshaw Stop
November 23rd*Los Angeles, CA*Echo
November 24th*San Diego, CA*Casbah
November 27th*Santa Barbara, CA*Muddy Waters
November 29th*Tucson, AZ*Club Congress
November 30th*Santa Fe, NM*Santa Fe Brewing Co
December 2nd*Austin, TX*Independent
December 3rd*Dallas, TX*The Loft
December 4th*Houston, TX*Walter’s on Washington
December 6th*Birmingham, AL*Bottletree
December 9th*Baltimore, MD*Metro Gallery
December 10th*Philadelphia, PA*Johnny Brendas
December 11th*Arlington, VA*Iota
December 12th*Pittsburgh, PA*Brillobox
December 14th*Detroit, MI*Majestic Cafe
December 15th*Toronto, ONT*El Mocambo
December 16th*Montreal, QUE*Il Motore
December 17th*Cambridge, MA*T.T. The Bear’s
December 18th*New York, NY*Webster Hall
nope, I’m still not able to listen to music, the tinnitus is as bad as it was on Saturday, ugh… hanging in there in hopes of a cure soon! It’s dreadful, my darlings… the worst.
Fanfarlo are coming to the US to promote their wonderful debut record, Reservoir, which I’m sure you all already have but which is still having a US release date. Why do these things still have separate releases for Europe and the US? They’ve been selling them from their website since July 24 to all of us, regardless of country. But, oh well, I guess you don’t pay those fancy high import prices on your mp3s after October 6! Make a note of that now, my darlings! The real news here, of course, is that they are touring. And if you live on one of either the Left or East coast, then you’re in luck.
Here they are covering the Smashing Pumpkins, “We Only Come Out At Night”
Tour Dates
Sep 14*Chop Suey*Seattle
Sep 15*Troubadour*West Hollywood
Sep 16*The Echo*Los Angeles
Sep 17*Popscene*San Francisco
Sep 20*Kungfu Necktie*Philadelphia
Sep 21*Bowery Ballroom*New York
Sep 22*The Bell House*New York
So this band, Fanfarlo… I’ve heard them a bit on The Waiting Room‘s radio show over on WOXY the past few weeks. I’ve always kind of written them off because I felt the lead vocals were just trying too hard. Little things like that get to me; I’m petty like that. It’s a character defect, I know. Today, however, my mailbox produced a video.
Usually I don’t watch videos. I turn them on and hop over to another page and listen to the song. They often ruin the music for me. I hate seeing the band before I hear them; I like to make up my mind based on my ears first. And I especially hate seeing whatever they think represents their music if it’s not going to be them. That is usually disastrous!
Full of opinions today, aren’t I!?! Fanfarlo … the topic at hand… I get this video and a version of “The Pilot” begins to play, but quits after only a short bit… “Harold T. Wilkins” starts up and I click over to see what the hell is going on. I’m drawn in; the video is interesting and I want to know just what this Fanfarlo thing is. This lead singer isn’t trying too hard at all, silly woman! Well, I’m happy to be proven wrong on this count. Darlings, you will love this song. Perhaps you’ll agree with my initial assessment on a tune or two on the full album, but for $1… can you really complain? Now, they’re offering up “Luna” as the single of choice today, and it’s quite beautiful after about the 2 minute mark I think. Once it slows down and the strings really come in the whole thing unravels in a really delicious way, like when a woman lets her hair down slowly before getting into bed. As a whole, the song is quite schizophrenic with changing tempos and lyrics that come and go, but it’s lovely, enjoy!
Fanfarlo offer us some very well crafted and FUN folk-pop music with catchy lyrics and good melodies. Watch that man sing. It’s very sneaky how he draws you in, isn’t it? I love how all those instruments and musicians are piled up in that shed! Marvelously good fun was had that day, you can just tell!
Pop on over here to buy that album at a ridiculously low price if you can’t get that widget thingy to work. xoxo