NOTE, BOBBYSIX HAS MOVED. PLEASE VISIT OUR NEW SITE INSTEAD, WHERE YOU WILL FIND SO MUCH AWESOME CONTENT THAT YOUR EYES WON'T KNOW WHERE TO LOOK FIRST: SOMETHINGYOUSAID.COM
Showing posts with label anna calvi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label anna calvi. Show all posts

Monday, February 13, 2012

Laneway Festival at Sydney College of the Arts, Rozelle



Heidi Pett and Bobby Townsend headed to Sydney’s Laneway Festival and did their best not to melt in the sun. Here's Heidi's review and Bobby's photos: 

Sydney’s Laneway on Sunday had all the hallmarks we’ve come to expect from the now national festival, which continues to expand from its beginnings back in Melbourne several years ago. A noticeable lack of denim underwear clamped tight to orange thighs, an impeccable lineup and a polite crowd of music lovers. You would think this might be par for the course at a music festival, but unfortunately it’s often not. In marked contrast to the heaving trains funnelling hordes of teenagers to last month’s Big Day Out, soundtracked to a chorus of “where’ve ya hidden yer flask?” the bus to Rozelle was populated by excited chatter about favourite acts and planning a day of feverish stage-hopping. It’s very obvious that most Laneway punters go for the music. Well, that and the fah-shon. Picking our way through lush grass and fig trees on the way into the Sydney College of the Arts in Rozelle, we were greeted by friendly volunteers at the gate before heading into the college itself, the sandstone buildings already radiating heat as the strains of Husky’s History’s Door drifted across the site. Beautifully dressed, bright-though-already-wilting young things were clinging to the shade, pressing themselves into the walls.

A quick wander around the site led to the Carpark Stage, where The Pains Of Being Pure At Heart were breezing through an enjoyable set of their trademark sweet-but-not-saccharine, noisy indie pop. As EMA was all rolling drums and red tights on the elaborately-named Eat Your Own Ears & Young Turks Stage, Jonti - a bouncing, flourishing little explosion of energy - was certainly having a good time over on the Windish stage. Portugal. The Man (below) were similarly energetic during a powerful, infectious and very danceable pysch-folk set that would prove to be one of the day’s highlights. They wore good shoes too.




Despite decades’ worth of songs etching his name into zillions of hearts, Neil Finn is not above being his own roadie, pottering about the stage helping out during set up. His current outfit, Pajama Club (above), purveyed a fuller sound than punters may have expected if they were looking for a reincarnated Crowded House, but as bassist Sharon yes-she’s-Neil’s-wife Finn so eloquently put it when I interviewed her recently, “they can get fucked”.

The band were entertaining and very much at ease, with Neil suggesting at one point that, “Sean might provide some small ambient moment while I tune,” at which they keys player issued a growling sort of hum into the mic, drawing laughter from the crowd, before the band resumed a set populated by songs which, although very different to the pop of Finn’s earlier projects, nonetheless showcased his knack for great melodies.

The six members of Austra whirled on stage, complete with pretty indie dancing girls (below), even though for many in the crowd it was getting too hot to stand, let alone dance, at that point. By the time Laura Marling (below) arrived, looking serene and composed in a white shirt and sunnies, the mid-afternoon sun was relentlessly attacking those watching her perform, burning the pale skin of Sydneysiders no longer accustomed to sunlight, and searing through skintight jeans. While Marling’s dark, brooding subject matter and steadily building folk tunes were perhaps not built for delivery in the blistering sunshine, her set was still simply beautiful.



Anna Calvi (below) arrived a vision of red and black elegance and worked her way through some dark indie tunes in which she illustrated her virtuoso guitar skills as boys and girls alike swooned. Elsewhere, Glasser was getting an enthusiastic audience moving and Yuck (pictured, top) belted out a fine collection of songs which combined fuzzy post-grunge with the indie sweetness of Teenage Fanclub.

The Drums were good fun, their set populated by crowd favourites including latest hit Money, as well as breakthrough Let’s Go Surfing. Unfortunately, the sound seemed a little off, rendering their indie surf tunes muddy and indistinct.

Feist put on one of the standout performances of the day over at the Carpark Stage; this tiny, sharp, angular woman was surprisingly high energy, jumping about and thrashing her guitar through a set which featured a nice mix of songs from new album Metals and old favourites, including I Feel It All, which had the crowd singing along. It was a mesmerising performance, as she played down-tempo, dramatic versions of many of her songs, including opener My Moon My Man, accompanied by the girls from Mountain Man on backup vocals, in borderline cultish matching dresses. It all seemed to end too soon, and indeed the short set concluded at 7pm instead of the scheduled ten past, leaving me with Limit To Your Love stuck in my head in anticipation.




After The Horrors put in a fairly solid yet somehow uninspiring display, M83 (below) closed the Carpark Stage with a fantastic stage set-up, brilliant lighting and sound so loud that it threatened to rip the head from the shoulders of anyone who dared venture too near an amp (just ask Bobby, who was in the photo-pit and still can’t hear out of his right ear a week on).

The rush was then on to make it to the central stage for SBTRKT, who conveniently started twenty minutes late due to sound issues which seemed to plague a few acts throughout the day. Eventually, the masked producer had the exhausted crowd dancing on their last legs to end what was a long, hot but enjoyable day, with the opening beats of single Wildfire greeted by roars of approval.

The main complaint from Laneway punters seems to be the incredulous “Whhyyy would they put Fantastic Band X and Amazing Band Y on at the same time?”, but clashes are difficult to avoid with this kind of lineup, which this year was peppered with a strong showing of female artists who took out the highlights of the day. With impressively daggy new t-shirt tans we trooped back out the gates, reluctantly dragging feet sore from a day of dancing and running from stage to stage.



Review by Heidi Pett. Pictures and a bit of gushing about Laura Marling by Bobby Townsend

Wednesday, February 08, 2012

Melbourne's Laneway Festival 2012: a photographer's perspective


Bobbysix snapper Vinisha Mulani talks us through her experience in the photography pit at Melbourne's Laneway Festival:

St Jerome's Laneway Festival, Melbourne - also known as The Hipsters' Annual Mass Migration to Footscray. The banks of the Maribyrnong River and the Footscray Community Arts Centre were bouncing with sunshine, tattoos and on-trend attendees. A gem of a venue, the Footscray Community Arts Centre had incredible views of the river, lush grassy knolls and even a few graffitti-clad laneways to boot. I had managed to wangle a photopass - despite my camera being approximately two metres shorter than the other photographers' and naked of accessories. Hanging out at the photo pit felt a little bit like a first day at a new school and your skirt being too long. Or not having a Tamagochi.


After getting over my camera's inferiority complex (the festival had everything short of portable counselling sessions - Melbourne's beloved BeatBox Kitchen & Taco Truck both made an appearance), I became a Photography Warrior. Despite being ill-equipped of extra weapons, before I knew it I was dodging and weaving through various jutting lenses and camera bags in the photo pit, shooting (get it?) subjects I've never seen that close before, and did not even bang into anyone's equipment (cough). 



Together, my camera and I developed girl-crushes on the amazing array of strong female performers inclusive of Anna Calvi and the incredible Maddie Follin of The Cults. My view of the audience also changed. Usually in festivals I'm on a constant tip-toe, drowning in a sea of the lucky tall - but from the photo-pit a new perspective emerged. (See image below of two girls crushing on Jonti with ukelele- giggling, hand over mouth, wide-eyed, head tilt). 



Highlights of the festival: Starting the day with Husky, a blue sky and a view of the river - the musical equivalent of having a massage on the beach. Being close to Active Child's harpistry. No long queues. The aforementioned girl crushes. An ice cream break (it was hot). Surviving the photo pit.


Words and pictures by Vinisha Mulani. Check back later in the week for Heidi Pett's full review of Sydney Laneway 2012.

Wednesday, December 21, 2011

Breaking M83, Anna Calvi and Twin Shadow tour news.


Some Laneway sideshow news hot off the press is that pioneering solo orchestra M83 has added an extra date to his sideshow run. His mighty fine album Hurry Up I'm Dreaming has made a mark on countless best-of-2011 lists and tickets to his first two dates in Sydney and Melbourne have completely sold out, so you'd do well to make a note of the sales deets below. You snooze, you lose suckers.

Thursday 2nd February 2012 Prince Bandroom, MELBOURNE
Tickets through Moshtix, online or 1300 GET TIX (438 849) and The Prince Bandroom, online or 03 9536 1168 Tickets go on sale 9am, Thursday 22 December (that's tomorrow, by the way).

In other sideshow news, ANNA CALVI and TWIN SHADOW will be joining to forces and playing co-headline shows in Sydney and Melbourne (a coming-together of their previously-scheduled sideshows). Here's the score:

SYDNEY: Monday 6 February, Oxford Art Factory, Sydney. Tix on sale now from moshtix.com.au.

Tickets for Anna Calvi at the Metro Theatre will remain valid for the new Oxford Art Factory date on Monday 6 February, or customers can elect for a full refund. A Century Venues representative will be contacting patrons, or alternatively, customers can call (02) 9550 3666 to make arrangements. 

MELBOURNE: Wednesday 1st February, Corner Hotel, Melbourne. Tix from Polyesters (City and Fitzroy stores) or cornerhotel.com

Tickets for Anna Calvi on Friday 3 February will remain valid for the new date on Wednesday 1 February or customers can elect for a full refund. The Corner Hotel Box Office will be in contact to make arrangements, or alternatively, customers can call (03) 9427 9198. 

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Laneway Festival announces artist sideshows


Right now at Bobbysix.com, we're frantically interviewing lots of acts that are set to play at next year's St Jerome's Laneway Festival. Expect to see the fruits of our chats cropping up all over the site like a rash (but a nice one) over the next few weeks.

Of course, the impending Laneway also means SIDESHOWS! Whoop whoop! Today, a bunch of them were announced, so pay attention as we slap you round the chops with a whole lotta exciting tour news.

ANNA CALVI
Hot damn, this chick (above) is on fire at the moment. The half-Italian, half-British artist’s dramatic vocals and darkly cinematic instrumentation have won countless plaudits, including a Mercury Music Prize nomination and praise from no less than Brian Eno, who calls her, ‘the best thing since Patti Smith’.

Dates and Venues:
Friday 3rd February 2012 - Corner Hotel, Melbourne (18+)
Tickets through Corner Hotel Box Office, www.cornerhotel.com or 03 9427 9198
Polyester (City & Fitzroy stores)
On sale Wednesday 23 November

Wednesday 8th February 2012 - Metro Theatre (18+), Sydney
Tickets through www.ticketek.com.au / 132 849
On sale Wednesday 23 November

THE DRUMS + CULTS (CO-HEADLINE SHOWS)
Two of the most talked about bands of the past 12 months join forces for a night of seriously compelling indie pop.

Dates and Venues:
Friday 3rd February 2012 - Palace Theatre, Melbourne (18+)
Tickets through www.ticketek.com.au / 132 849
On sale Wednesday 23 November

Wednesday 8th February 2012 - Enmore Theatre, Sydney (All Ages)
Tickets through www.ticketek.com.au / 132 849
On sale Wednesday 23 November

FEIST
After four years, the Laneway Festival welcomes back Leslie Feist, whose new record, Metals, is a typically gorgeous, acutely observational collection of tracks ranging from low rumbling and moody ambiences to those more brutal and intense.

Dates and Venues:
Wednesday 1st February 2012 - Palais Theatre, Melbourne (All Ages)
Tickets through www.ticketmaster.com.au / 136 100
On sale Thursday 24 November

Tuesday 7th February 2012 - Enmore Theatre, Sydney (All Ages)
Tickets through www.ticketek.com.au / 132 849
On sale Thursday 24 November

Thursday 9th February 2012 - Thebarton Theatre, Adelaide (All Ages)
Tickets through Venue*Tix, www.venuetix.com.au or (08) 8225 8888
On sale now



GLASSER 
Prepare to be mesmerised by the one-woman orchestra of Cameron Mesirow (pictured above).

Dates and Venues:
Wednesday 1st February 2012 - The Toff in Town, Melbourne (18+)
Tickets through www.moshtix.com.au or 1300 GET TIX (438 849)
On sale Friday 18 November

Wednesday 8th February 2012 - The Standard, Sydney (18+)
Tickets through www.moshtix.com.au or 1300 GET TIX (438 849)
On sale Friday 18 November

M83
French electronic dream-pop!

Dates and Venues:
Friday 3rd February 2012 - The Prince Bandroom, Melbourne (18+)
Tickets through www.moshtix.com.au or 1300 GET TIX (438 849)
On sale Friday 18 November

Thursday 9th February 2012 - Metro Theatre, Sydney (18+)
Tickets through www.ticketek.com.au / 132 849
On sale Friday 18 November

TWIN SHADOW
Propulsive beats and romantic drama!

Dates and Venues:
Wednesday 1st February 2012 - Corner Hotel, Melbourne (18+)
Tickets through Corner Hotel Box Office, www.cornerhotel.com or 03 9427 9198
Polyester (City & Fitzroy stores)
On sale Friday 18 November

Monday 6th February 2012 - Oxford Art Factory, Sydney (18+)
Tickets through www.moshtix.com.au or 1300 GET TIX (438 849)
On sale Friday 18 November

WU LYF
Their live show justifies the not inconsiderable hype surrounding the publicity-shy, record label-averse Mancunian four-piece.

Dates and Venues:
Thursday 2nd February 2012 - Prince Bandroom, Melbourne (18+)
Tickets through www.moshtix.com.au or 1300 GET TIX (438 849)
On sale Friday 18 November

Monday 6th February 2012 - Metro Theatre, Sydney (18+)
Tickets through www.ticketek.com.au / 132 849
On sale Friday 18 November