Thursday, March 29, 2007

Ambulette in the New Times

This is my first piece for the Phoenix New Times, with more on the way:

Serial poposity
By
Chris Nixon
Phoenix New Times
Published: March 29, 2007

Getting hotter: Ambulette
Where: Modified Arts
Details: Scheduled to perform on Friday, March 30
Subject(s): The New Trust, Ambulette

"Cold, remotely desolate, permanent." That's how Denali (the Richmond, Virginia-based band, not the Alaskan mountain) described its brand of spooky, down-tempo pop during its four-year lifespan. Formed with her older brother Keeley in 2000, Maura Davis' former band (R.I.P.) released a pair of highly regarded albums before calling it quits. The discs revealed a four-piece band drawing from the rainy-day soul and dreary down-tempo of Portishead along with the hipster croon and heady lyrics of Metric's Emily Haines. While picking up the tempo, Davis has progressed from sweetly morose goddess to slightly more chipper chanteuse since 2004. Previously known as Bella Lea, her new outfit Ambulette isn't exactly American Bandstand sing-along bubblegum pop. The 2007 EP The Lottery (Astralwerks) ranges from the breezy rock of "I've Got More" to the twangy balladry of "If You Go Away." Along with bassist Howard (Pinebender) and drummer Rapsys (Euphone, Heroic Doses), Davis teams with guitarist Matt Clark (Pinebender, White/Light, Joan of Arc) to broaden her sound. If her career were a game of hot/cold, Maura Davis would seem to be getting warmer.

TV on the Radio sidebar for the U-T

TV ON THE RADIO
Hometown: New York City/Brooklyn
Year formed: 2001

LINEUP
Tunde Adebimpe – vocals/loops
David Andrew Sitek – guitars/keyboards/loops
Kyp Malone – vocals/guitars/loops
Jaleel Bunton – drums
Gerard Smith – bass

A LOOK AT TV ON THE RADIO ON RECORD

“Young Liars” (Touch & Go Records, 2003, EP): The first proper TV on the Radio album, setting the stage for later successes. Technically, the 18-song collection of four-track recordings cleverly titled “OK Calculator” represents TV on the Radio's first album. But the self-produced disc sounded more like a demo than a proper debut, and only a scant few copies made it into wide circulation. The EP “Young Liars” gave the world its first taste of the band's stratospheric indie rock doo-wop sounds. From the fuzzy bass and skipping beats of opening track “Satellite” to the brilliant a cappella cover of The Pixies “Mr. Grieves,” “Young Liars” established TV on the Radio as a creative force and set the stage for the critical success of “Desperate Youth, Blood Thirsty Babes.”

“Desperate Youth, Blood Thirsty Babes” (Touch & Go Records, 2004): Winner of the Shortlist Music Prize in 2004, chosen by a panel of musicians, producers and journalists. Tunde Adebimpe and Kyp Malone's hair-raising harmonies are all over TV on the Radio's full-length debut. It's a revelation, lifting the hair on the back of your neck. Adebimpe and Malone use overlapping patterns and extremely high registers to create otherworldly music. Words like “seminal” get tossed around a lot, but this is a big album: big sound, big ideas, big voices. “Desperate Youth” is a benchmark, a record that symbolizes the height of creativity in our current era of blog buzz bands and insta-rock-stars. Critics loved this album; popular success had to wait.

“New Health Rock” (Touch & Go Records, 2004, EP): A short compendium of the band's work through 2004. This three-song EP features one new original song (“New Health Rock”), the opening track on “Desperate Youth” (“The Wrong Way”) and a cover song of fellow Brooklynites The Yeah Yeah Yeahs (“Modern Dance”). Released seven months after “Blood Thirsty Babes,” this short blast of TV on the Radio's power harkens back to the band's first album more than to the second, “Return to Cookie Mountain.”

“Return to Cookie Mountain”; (Interscope Records/4AD, 2006): The most accessible and best-selling album to date for an ardently non-commercial band. Full of horn loops and processed samples, this beat-driven album finds TV on the Radio focusing on more stripped-down compositions. Less atmospheric congestion from other instruments allows for more space for the band's trademark vocal style. Past outings have created more dissonance and tension between the instruments and the harmonies. “Return to Cookie Mountain” feels more like an album of songs. David Bowie sits in on “Province,” a beautifully simple track that has come to define the record. TV on the Radio may never reach the ears of millions. But the music is deep and more rewarding on each subsequent listen.

– CHRIS NIXON