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4 posts categorized "Feelies"

April 21, 2011

Album review: The Feelies, 'Here Before'

3.5 stars (out of 4)

The Feelies are famous for moving at their own, ultra-deliberate pace in a career that has yielded a mere four studio albums since the late ‘70s, and none since 1991. So it’s appropriate that the New Jersey quintet begins album No. 5, “Here Before” (Bar/None), with a knowing wink.

“Is it too late to do it again?/Or should we wait another 10,” Glenn Mercer sings, and then time melts away as the band slips into one of its patented trance-grooves, as if it were surfing atop a wave of guitars and drums rather than playing them.

Mercer, Bill Million, Dave Weckerman, Stanley Demeski and Brenda Sauter remain resolute minimalists, playing only what each song requires and nothing more. The building blocks of the band’s sound are as stout as ever: Million’s driving rhythm guitar, Sauter’s melody-gorged bass, Mercer’s deadpan vocals and guitar solos that alternately sing and drone. Weckerman’s array of percussion ornaments Demeski’s relentless, subway-train drumming in a way that sets the Feelies apart from virtually every other post-punk, post-new wave band to emerge from the late ‘70s New York/New Jersey scene.

The lovely twilight chime of “So Far” and “Bluer Skies,” the tumbling ferocity of “Time is Right” and “When You Know,” the mesmerizing glide of “Change Your Mind” -- the Feelies evoke their past without imitating it, balancing the pastoral, folk-based melodies of “The Good Earth” (1986) with the pinballing overdrive of their last album, “Time for a Witness,” released 20 years ago.

“Is it too late to do it again?” Clearly not.

greg@gregkot.com

June 29, 2009

Concert review: Feelies at Millennium Park

    The Feelies haven’t set foot on a Chicago stage in 18 years. But at Pritzker Pavilion in Millennium Park on Monday, in what turned out to be a glorious summer night, the New Jersey quintet made time melt before the eyes and ears of several thousand enthusiastic fans.

    Though the veterans of the ‘70s postpunk scene have grayed a bit around the edges, they still looked lean and preppy and they played with typical hunched-over earnestness, locking into the rhythm like five drummers in one.

    The 70-minute set resembled their first reunion concert last summer at Maxwell’s in Hobokon, N.J., with an arc similar to a jet plane taking off. Only this time, the energy escalated quicker, the songs revving faster and faster until they hit overdrive with “Slipping (Into Something).” As Glenn Mercer began his guitar solo, the relentlessly precise beat dissolved into chaotic pummeling.

     By the end, fans in the pavilion rushed from their seats to dance madly at the lip of the stage as the Feelies busted out first-album rave-ups “Crazy Rhythms” and “Fa Ce-La,” plus covers of R.E.M., the Rolling Stones and the Velvet Underground.

    Just like that the Feelies demonstrated that they are emphatically back after a nearly two-decade hiatus. The band managed four wonderfully terse studio albums between 1980 and ’91, the missing link between the Velvets and the Strokes. They bridged the gap with an emphasis on guitar-stoked brevity and directness, and a love of the drone. They worked repetition into mantras, and chiseled away at lyrics until they were practically haikus.

    It was a treat to watch the band work, with Bill Million setting the pace with his take-no-prisoners rhythm work on 12-string acoustic and electric guitars. Drummer Stanley Demeski was machine-like in his attention to the beat, playing with a Spartan savagery that never called attention to itself. He worked the rhythm by subtracting elements, so that every roll or cymbal splash seemed like a monumental event. He was abetted by Dave Weckerman, the band’s secret weapon, with his array of percussion nick-knacks; watching him furiously bang a tambourine inches from his face during a cover of the Stones’ “Paint it Black” was one of the night’s indelible images.

        Brenda Sauter was a serene presence on bass, her tone deep and assertive. And Mercer pealed off somersaulting solos with an exuberance magnified by his wired, wiry physique; at times he danced with the notes as he veered between his microphone and amplifier like the boy with perpetual nervousness (to quote a Feelies song that wasn’t performed).

    The band split the set among its four albums, and added a couple of promising new songs, “Nobody Knows” and “Time is Right,” that sounded worthy of their legacy. And as Monday’s set proved, it’s a legacy worth celebrating, again. 

    greg@gregkot.com

Feelies set Monday at Pritzker Pavilion

1. On the Roof 
2. High Road 
3. Nobody Knows 
4. Let's Go 
5. Deep Fascination 
6. Higher Ground 
7. The Final Word
8. Time Is Right
9. Away 
10. Slipping (Into Something)
11. Doin' It Again
12. Too Far Gone
13. Raised Eyebrows
14. Crazy Rhythms

Encore:
15. Carnival of Sorts (R.E.M. cover)
16. Fa Ce-La 
17. What Goes On (Velvet Underground cover)

Second encore:
18. Paint it Black (Rolling Stones cover)

Sponsored Link: Amazon's Feelies Store

June 25, 2009

The Feelies primed for first Chicago show since 1991 at Millennium Park

    Like their 1986 song “Slipping (into Something),” the Feelies have a tendency to sneak up on people, then disappear.

    In the song, the guitars surge then recede until they slip beyond the horizon, creating the illusion that they’re still playing just out of earshot. In the same way, the Feelies’ 33-year career has been one of slow-burn ascents and patient lulls, with a sound and sensibility immune to trends or time.

    The good news is that the Feelies are again in one of their periodic busy periods --- busy being a relative term, in that they have played about a dozen shows since reuniting last summer for the first time in 17 years on their home turf of northern New Jersey. On Monday, the core group of Glenn Mercer, Bill Million, Dave Weckerman, Stanley Demeski and Brenda Sauter will play its first Chicago show since 1991 at the Pritzker Pavilion in Millennium Park. As last summer’s first reunion show at Maxwell’s in Hoboken, N.J., demonstrated, the quintet’s one-of-a-kind weave of guitars, sparse vocals and percolating percussion remains intact.

    “Brenda described it as muscle memory,” says Mercer, the band’s primary songwriter and cofounder with Million. “In the first rehearsal we got back into that place where we left off, and with every show we’ve played it’s gotten a little better.”

    Though the Feelies have put out only four studio albums, each offers a distinct angle on the group’s evocative sound. In 1976, they were quiet suburban kids who wore button-down shirts and glasses, and then on stage behaved like bouncing pinballs lighting up an arcade game. 

    “Bill and I were both at a show in New York around 1972 where the New York Dolls and Modern Lovers were playing,” Mercer recalls. “The Dolls [dressed in glam-rock drag] were the hot band at the time, and then there was this other band led by Jonathan Richman doing totally the opposite thing, with this kind of buttoned-down look. It was pretty inspiring. We heard a distinct continuation of the sound that the Velvet Underground had, and in the back of our minds it suggested an approach that kept a little distance between us and the ripped T-shirt, punk look that would become fashionable a few years later.”

        The Feelies focused on a relentless, driving rhythm, but without heavy use of cymbals. That freed up the high end of the mix for the twin guitars to weave in and out, blurring the line between lead and rhythm. And it also created room for a percussionist to add additional rhythmic accents with maracas, claves, woodblocks and timbale.

        At the height of the punk era in 1978, the Village Voice hailed the Feelies as New York’s best underground band. Thurston Moore of Sonic Youth remembers seeing the band during that time and being struck by their austere look and magnetizing sound.

        “They had this radical otherness about them, and it was genuine,” he says. “They’re unlike any other band, really. I saw them as a rare thing, and I still think that’s true today.”

         Their full-length debut, “Crazy Rhythms” (1980), folded their quirkiness and intuitive studio experimentation into hurtling pop songs, which directly inspired R.E.M. (whose Peter Buck would coproduce the band’s second album, the 1986 release “The Good Earth”). Director Jonathan Demme  was a huge fan as well, and cast the band in his 1986 movie “Something Wild.”

    A major label deal soon followed, but the band drifted apart after strenuous touring in 1991.

    “We didn’t get dropped, we broke up,” Mercer says. “The whole idea of taking things to the ‘next level’ didn’t appeal to us. We were touring a lot and still not making a lot of money. So when the opportunity came up for Bill to get a job in Florida to support his family, he took it. And then it became impractical to keep it together.”

        Million says the band was never cut out to play by anyone’s rules or schedules but its own. “After the ’91 tour, I always looked at it as when time came around again, we would do something,” he says. “Collectively, we’re fortunate: we are all of the same mind set. Time is different for this band, for some reason. It doesn’t affect us to think it’s been 17 years since we played. We’re not driven by schedules.”

    Million stopped playing music for a few years while in Florida helping rear three sons with his wife. Mercer continued to record with Weckerman in the band Wake Ooloo, Sauter fronted the band Wild Carnation, and Demeski was the longtime drummer in Luna.

    They reconnected with the promise that they would work on new music, and a few new songs have been slowly added to the set list. The reunited band still works only in short bursts to accommodate work schedules and family obligations. Million still lives with his family in Florida, and commutes north on select weekends for rehearsals and shows. Sauter lives with her family in Pennsylvania. When the Feelies gather to play, it’s a treat for all involved, in part because there is no agenda other than to create something worthwhile.

        “At some point we’ll have nine or 10 songs, and we’ll collectively agree it’s time to record them,” Million says. “When? I don’t know. But we’re going in the right direction. It’s everyone’s primary interest right now.”

        greg@gregkot.com

  

      The Feelies: 7:30 p.m. Monday at Pritzker Pavilion, Millennium Park, free; millenniumpark.org.

The Feelies discography: 4 top-notch studio albums

    What will the Feelies play Monday at Millennium Park? Expect them to draw heavily from their four excellent studio albums:

    “Crazy Rhythms” (1980): Covers of the Beatles and Rolling Stones set off caffeinated originals with quirky rhythmic accents and studio experiments. One of the masterpieces of the post-punk era.

    “The Good Earth” (1986): With a new lineup (which has remained intact ever since), the quintet builds a richer, almost folk-based variation on its hypnotic sound. (Both the band’s first two records are out of print, but are to be reissued with bonus material this year on the Bar/None label.)

    “Only Life” (1988): Not a bold evolution like the first two albums, but a refinement of a sound that values melodic jangle and trancy drone.

    “Time for a Witness” (1991): As close a representation of the band’s live sound as there is on record, with forceful performances honed by steady touring.

    greg@gregkot.com

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