Showing posts with label phoenix. Show all posts
Showing posts with label phoenix. Show all posts

Phoenix

Le Retour des Hommes de Phoenix
French Indie Rockers Get Famous, Go "Bankrupt"
By Andrew Clayman
Published in The Nashville Scene, September 2013










There was never any reason to worry about Phoenix suffering the dreaded "sophomore slump" this year. In a clever bit of foresight, the French quartet sneakily released its actual sophomore album nearly a decade ago when nobody was looking (2004's Alphabetical), thus freeing them up to follow the mega-success of 2009's Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix with no fear of a formulaic misstep. In fact, rather than reacting to the pressures of their newfound stardom, the band set to work on their latest (and fifth) album Bankrupt! by completely sequestering themselves from anything that might remind them of how popular they'd become.

"We really just cut ourselves off from the outside world," guitarist Christian Mazzalai tells the Scene. "We closed all the doors for two weeks. We didn't even see a movie or read the newspaper. ... If you go in trying to please someone else or do what they want — it's not good for your art to compromise."

Theoretically, "what people want" in this case would have been an obvious sequel to Wolfgang, which — led by the hit singles "1901" and "Lisztomania" — sold more than 10 times as many copies in the U.S. as Phoenix's first three albums combined. Lost in the band's supposedly overnight success, however, was the 10-year journey to get there, starting as young idealists emerging from the same Paris suburbs as Daft Punk and Air.

"We take it at as a gift that our success came gradually and slowly," Mazzalai says. "We were totally ready to guard ourselves from all the pressures that come along and not to be changed by it. What we love and have always done is to try to bring the same fresh attitude to our music as we did when we were teenagers playing in the basement. That's very important to us."

Just because success hasn't changed them, however, doesn't mean Phoenix isn't a changed band. It's not a consequence of playing Saturday Night Live or sharing a stage with R. Kelly at Coachella; it's a matter of getting older and wiser as musicians, including knowing when to be less old and less wise in how they approach it.

"When we were working on our first album [2000's United], we were looking for perfection — to make the perfect pop song," Mazzalai explains. "Now we've discovered the beauty of imperfection."

As evidenced by Bankrupt!, Phoenix skipped the easy road of Wolfgang 2 by creating a batch of synth-heavy, lyrically cryptic tracks that Mazzalai calls "more complex" than their earlier work and "constantly evolving."

Take for example Bankrupt! 's title track — a slow-burning, almost Philip Glass-esque keyboard experiment spliced with an acoustic ballad — which changed so much in Phoenix's summer live shows that Mazzalai barely recognizes the recorded version anymore.

Just on the flight back on the plane from the U.S. recently, they were playing the whole album on Air France," Mazzalai says. "And I never normally listen to my own music, but since I couldn't go anywhere, I decide to give it a try. So I just listened to that one song, "Bankrupt," and it sounded totally strange to me, like it was something done by another band. So, you know, I love that, when your songs have their own lives. After you release them, you don't control them anymore. And that's a relief. Because when you are doing the album, every night, in all of my dreams, there's a faint hint of those songs that's always there. So having them out there in the world is very helpful. I can get some rest now."

In all likelihood, Mazzalai and his bandmates — vocalist Thomas Mars, guitarist-keyboardist Laurent Brancowitz and bassist/keyboardist Deck d'Arcy — haven't had much rest since Bankrupt! hit the U.S. charts at a career-best No. 4 back in April. A long slate of massive festival gigs will finally give way to a more traditional tour this fall, though Mazzalai does suggest that something "very unique" is in store for this tour. When asked to elaborate, however, the Frenchman bites his tongue.

"I'm sorry, but I cannot reveal it."




Jenny Lewis

Jenny Lewis Comes Alive
From Child Star to Indie Queen to the Cover of Every Magazine
By Andrew Clayman
Published in The Phoenix New Times, July 2009



It’s been over a decade since Jenny Lewis quit her acting career to pursue music full-time. Nonetheless, the sultry redhead’s child-star past has remained an endless topic of curiosity for fans and critics alike—first as a credibility obstacle for her band Rilo Kiley, and now as a comparison point for the fame she’s reached as a solo artist.

Lewis’s second solo effort, Acid Tongue, hit shelves last September, promptly followed by a torrent of magazine features, TV appearances, and sold-out shows. The ambitious album was a Fleetwood Mac caliber study in painting personal portraits with broad strokes, and it came complete with star-powered cameos from the likes of Elvis Costello, Chris Robinson, and Zooey Deschanel. If Rilo Kiley’s ultra slick 2007 album Under the Blacklight hadn’t already established Lewis as a mainstream pop star, Acid Tongue clearly has.

In contrast to most indie-rock crossover artists, though, Lewis has been down this road before—sort of. Twenty years ago, she was the precocious star of two popular Hollywood films, Troop Beverly Hills and the Fred Savage/Nintendo vehicle The Wizard. At just 13 years of age, she was getting her introduction to celebrity status—an experience that has scarred its share of youngsters in the past, but in Lewis’s case, only seems to have helped her develop into a more astute and confident performer.

When the movie roles came harder to come by in the late 90s (Angelina Jolie aficionados might at least remember Lewis in 1996’s less-than-classic Foxfire), Lewis formed Rilo Kiley with another former child actor, Boy Meets World’s Blake Sennett. In retrospect, Rilo Kiley’s 1999 debut EP now looks like the key pivot point of Lewis’s bizarre career— smack dab between the celebrated bookends of The Wizard and Acid Tongue, and essential to her expertly handled evolution from actress to singer, kid to adult (it should be noted, her low-hanging bangs have been the one constant).

By wisely putting Hollywood behind her entirely, Lewis was more quickly accepted by the notoriously cynical indie community, and Rilo Kiley became one of indie-pop’s more celebrated bands of the past decade, helping to establish the reputations of labels like Barsuk and Saddle Creek. Much like Liz Phair before her, though, Lewis never made any proclamations of devotion to the so-called “indie aesthetic.” Even as her unique combination of charm, smarts, and sex appeal made her the focus of the indie scene’s lust and admiration, Lewis’s music wasn’t exactly too nichey for a broader audience to understand. If anything, it was just a matter of time before her undeniable talents caught the attention of a public that had watched her grow up.

That sea change began in 2004, when Rilo Kiley’s third full-length album and Warner Brothers debut, More Adventurous, generated some radio play with the perfect pop singles “Portions for Foxes” and “It’s a Hit.” Once Jenny’s trademark short skirt and come-hither stare started showing up on MTV, the band’s fan demographic immediately expanded, and predictably, the innerband turmoil began.

Lewis’s off-stage relationship with Sennett soon ended, and when her solo debut Rabbit Fur Coat made more money than More Adventurous, Rilo Kiley appeared to be in trouble. The band eventually reconvened to make the commercially successful Under the Blacklight, but even amongst diehard Rilo fans, there’s little denying where Jenny Lewis’s heart seems to be these days.

Acid Tongue was written and recorded with her current boyfriend, Scottish singer/songwriter Jonathan Rice, and to pardon the pun, it proved to be a much more adventurous record than the disappointing Blacklight. Interestingly, Lewis has recently begun playing the Rilo Kiley song “Silver Lining” as the start of her solo shows—an indication that the line between the two projects is fading, and further proof that Jenny Lewis is ready to be a household name, rather than just a dorm room one.