Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Shaking Things Up

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Shaking Things Up

    Shaking Things Up
    By Sergey Chernov

    Moscow Times, Russia
    June 23 2006

    Avant Music

    The headliner of Avant Fest 2006 is Arab Strap, a Scottish band that
    includes Malcolm Middleton (left) and Aidan Moffat (right).

    Avant Fest 2006, to be held on Project Fabrika's open-air stage
    this Saturday and Sunday, was designed to fight Russia's "musical
    provincialism," according to founder Maxim Silva-Vega.

    Now entering its third year, Avant brings a slice of cutting-edge music
    from the West, with many acts performing in Moscow for the first time.

    "We are orienting toward modern rock 'n' roll and modern pop music,
    toward [Britain's] Glastonbury festival," Silva-Vega said in a recent
    telephone interview. "We want to be a festival like they have in
    Europe, with relevant bands and a democratic atmosphere, where fans
    can mix with the musicians."

    This year's Avant, which has a lineup of 26 bands, including six
    international ones, will be headlined by the Scottish indie legends
    Arab Strap. Hailing from Falkirk, Scotland, the unusual-sounding duo
    of Aidan Moffat and Malcolm Middleton will perform Saturday night
    backed by a full rock band.

    "It's a five-piece band, it's very rock, as opposed to the other
    bands we've had," said Moffat by telephone from Dublin, Ireland,
    where the band was performing last week.

    According to Moffat, the band playing at Avant will be pretty much
    the same as that used on "The Last Romance," Arab Strap's last album,
    described by critics as its "lightest" and "brightest" record to date.

    "I think we wanted everything a bit more immediate," he said of the
    album. "We wanted to catch people's attention a bit quicker than
    [on] our previous records. On the older records, you have to really
    spend time with them and listen to them and give them your attention,
    and I suppose the idea was that it was going to be quicker.

    "You know, not commercial or anything like that, but just a little bit
    more approachable and certainly more melodic and tuneful. And it does
    have a happy ending as well. There aren't many of our records that have
    happy endings, but this one has a nice, big, bright, happy ending."

    To achieve this new feel, Arab Strap -- which has been around for 10
    years and took its name from a sex-shop device -- had to change its
    modus operandi drastically.

    "How we normally work is, you know, we just get together after a year
    or two, and then we both have things we've been working on, and we just
    bring it together," Moffat said. "We don't really normally do demos and
    things like that, but we did do it for our last album. It was the first
    time we really had the songs written before we went to the studio."

    With Scotland in the limelight again thanks to the success of the
    Glasgow-based Franz Ferdinand, Moffat said that his homeland tends
    to draw everyone's attention once in a while.

    "It always comes round every five or six years, the spotlight on
    Scotland again," he said.

    Apart from Arab Strap, Avant Fest will feature Oceansize, a loud
    five-piece progressive rock group from Manchester. Also from Manchester
    comes BigFinn, whose style ranges from folk to electronic.

    BigFinn features brothers Colin and Norman McLeod, who run the Moolah
    Rouge studios in Manchester and came to Russia earlier this year as
    the additional musicians to I Am Kloot.

    Other international acts include Why?, a band based in Oakland,
    California, that blends indie rock and hip-hop; the French "new
    chanson" artist Dominique A; the melancholic indie-pop band Refree,
    from Barcelona, Spain; and the experimental, instrumental trio Plokk,
    from Hamburg, Germany.

    The Russian bands taking part in the festival are either established
    club acts -- such as the woman-fronted Deti Picasso, which plays
    guitar alt-rock with a touch of Armenian folk, and the post-rock
    outfit Silence Kit -- or up-and-coming acts such as 2H Company,
    the hip-hop crew from the suburbs of St. Petersburg.

    Avant Fest 2006 runs Sat. and Sun. starting at 4 p.m. both days
    at Project Fabrika, located at 18 Perevedenovsky Pereulok. Metro
    Baumanskaya, Elektrozavodskaya. Tel. 265-3935. For a complete schedule
    of concerts, see www.avantmusic.ru.
Working...
X