Posts Tagged ‘Broken Social Scene’

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Soundtrack Review: Scott Pilgrim Vs. The World

October 7, 2010

Your incredible journey ends today!

Scott Pilgrim vs. The World was a love story about Canadian indie rock and video games. Its soundtrack is unsurprisingly built from Canadian indie rock, and was released on a limited edition red LP.  A video game with eight-bit graphics by Paul Robertson was also released, so the film’s makers know their target audience.  Director Edgar Wright, who has proved himself a music lover in the past, worked together with Bryan Lee O’Malley, creator of the original Scott Pilgrim comics, to pick songs for the film.  Many of the songs in the movie, like Plumtree’s “Scott Pilgrim,” inspired O’Malley to write the story in the first place.

Soundtracks and I have had a long, sordid history.  If I notice music in a movie, I’ll often associate the emotional response I had to the movie with the music itself.  As a result, I’ve had everything from mediocre Japanese pop to pounding John Williams insinuate itself into my music library through soundtracks.  The better soundtracks often try to recall their films: the Pulp Fiction and Clerks soundtracks were both peppered with lengthy chunks of dialogue.  Soundtracks like those are essentially mixtapes, made of a wide assortment of preexisting songs.  If there’s an Achilles’ Heel to such soundtracks, it is that you are largely at the whims of the directors’ musical tastes.  Quentin Tarantino may be able to pick interesting songs for a soundtrack, but the music in High Fidelity was so bad that it rendered Cusack’s record-collecting main character unbelievable.  Fortunately, O’Malley and Wright have picked some standout selections for Scott Pilgrim.  “Sleazy Bed Track,” by The Bluetones, is a real hidden gem that I didn’t even notice in the film.  With its organ underpinnings and bluesy guitar work built over what Alex Ross would call a lamento bass line, this song consistently makes me stop what I’m doing to listen to it.  Blood Red Shoes, Broken Social Scene, and The Rolling Stones also contribute solid songs.  These are all good selections – they worked well for the movie, and they work well in the context of the album.  More importantly, they are engaging and listenable even without the larger context of the film.

This is not to say that there is no music written for the film.  There’s plenty of noisy and forgettable background music, a bass battle, a synthesizer battle, and even a Bollywood number penned by Dan the Automator.  Fortunately, all this material was shunted to a second album, dubbed the ‘Original Score’.  There is plenty of original music to listen to on the ‘Soundtrack’ album, all the same.  Beck was enlisted to compose music for Pilgrim’s band Sex Bob-Omb, and Broken Social Scene wrote two tantalizingly short songs for Pilgrim’s rivals Crash and the Boys.  These two fictional bands have a very loud, distorted, lo-fi sound in keeping with their roles in the film as underground garage bands.  Their songs sound bad by design, but they are energetic and fun to listen to.  Toronto glam band Metric contributed the guilty pleasure “Black Sheep,” a previously unreleased single, to serve as the performance by the fictional Clash at Demonhead.

The individual songs on this album are almost without exception fun and interesting to listen to.  However, that does not save the album as a whole from sounding more like a mixtape than a conventional album.  Since the album pulls from different bands from different decades, this fate is a hard one to escape.  It’s certainly as interesting and as well-constructed a soundtrack as the Pulp Fiction soundtrack.  Further, I think it benefits from not being burdened with long dialogues to support the album the way Pulp Fiction’s was.  Ultimately, though, this album is for fans of the movie.  If you liked the film, you’ll probably like the album.  If you didn’t see the film, the album is still a serviceable primer on Toronto garage rock, but it’s not going to be the album of the year.

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Review: Zeus – “Say Us”

September 13, 2010

I am going to go out on a limb and say you have never heard of this band.  Which is a tragedy, because Zeus is one of the best acts I’ve heard this year.  Their debut LP, on Toronto’s Arts and Crafts label, is a timeless piece of rock craftsmanship.  Many of their songs are written with three-part vocal harmonies, which echoes The Beatles, and and is a sound that has unfortunately all but disappeared from rock music.  Lead vocals are traded between three of the four band members.  With many of the instrumentals echoing early 70’s hits like “The Joker” and “Layla”, the band as a whole has a tendency of sounding like what The Beatles might have recorded had they not broken up in 1969.  That’s not to say that they are a revival band.  They somehow sound very fresh and contemporary, even while their musical language is often fifty years old.

Their claim to fame is that they are the backing band for the side project of Jason Collett, when Collett is not recording with Broken Social Scene.  This puts them a few steps back from the limelight: they’re still too indie for Pitchfork.  I discovered them on one of La Blogotheque’s Take Away Shows.  They had shown up to film Jason Collett, who eked out one nervous song before relinquishing the guitar to his backing band.  With no preparation, and with cigarette still in hand, the band rocks through the streets of Montreal, belting their three part harmonies from fire escapes and setting off imaginary pyrotechnics in the park.  These videos are a blast to watch, and you should check them out here.

After seeing how energetic they were in their videos, I was just a little disappointed when I first dropped the needle in the album.  While most of the cuts on “Say Us” are spot on, there’s an unfinished and slightly restrained quality to the opening tracks that suggest that the band is more comfortable in front of an audience than in front of a studio microphone.  However, the band seems to relax and open up about halfway through the third cut, “Kindergarten.”  The second half of the A-side is absolute gold.  “Greater Times On The Wayside” is the catchiest one minute song I’ve heard since the B-side of Abbey Road, and it transitions seamlessly into “River By The Garden”, a sweeping murder ballad that is easily the best song on the album.  The B-side opens with “You Gotta Teller”, a raucous number that should have been in Scott Pilgrim and wasn’t.  “Marching Through Your Head” is the closest thing the band have had to a hit, with a music video and an appearance on their EP “Sounds Like Zeus”.  “Heavy On Me” builds gradually into a power ballad that could almost be from U2, and is immediately followed by the incredibly light and perky “At The Risk Of Repeating”, which closes the album.

I can’t help but smile when I listen to this album.  Zeus sounds like they are having such a good time when they perform, and that joy is contagious.  Derrick Belcham said it best at La Blogotheque: “We didn’t know Zeus before we filmed them, but today, after hearing them play on a fire escape, in the street, around a fountain, and later that night on stage, we are still wondering why this band isn’t filling concert halls the world over.”  I’m left wondering that myself.

You can also stream some cuts on this album on their Facebook page.

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Social Scott Scene

August 26, 2010

Broken Social Scene is trying very hard to impress me with their pedigree this week.

First, we just saw Scott Pilgrim vs. The World.  In the film, Scott Pilgrim’s band comes up against a band called “Crash and the Boys”.  All music by Crash and the Boys in the film is by Broken Social Scene.  Plus, Bryan Lee O’Malley, the original author of the Scott Pilgrim graphic novel, cites the influence of Broken Social Scene on Toronto’s music scene and, by extension, his story.

Meanwhile, I had just discovered the band Zeus on one of La Blogotheque’s Take Away Shows.  I ordered the LP, and it came very attractively packaged and pressed by the Arts and Crafts label.  Who founded the Arts and Crafts label?  I’ll give you one guess.

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