PHOENIX
IT’S NEVER BEEN LIKE THAT
Release Date: May 23, 2006
When they say It’s Never Been Like That,
they mean it. “This was about starting all over,”
says Thomas Mars, Phoenix’s photogenic mouthpiece,
stumbling across a cross fader in their Versailles studio,
“it was about making ourselves scared again.”
If there is precisely the kind of scrubbed-up freshness
you might expect to hear on a particularly striking
debut album to the four-strong Frenchmen’s third
record, there is a reason for that. They attacked it
as though they had never recorded together before. But
there is no accounting for musical telepathy. Something
gelled. It’s Never Been Like That? It’s
never been sunnier, stronger, more coherent, thoughtful
and alive. Welcome to the masterpiece that Phoenix have
always threatened to make.
It’s just a simple tale of rebooting, really.
Four boys with brotherly love decamped to Berlin last
summer to channel the energy of the last truly Bohemian
European city and to refract it through their uniquely
Gallic gaze. Such is the synchronicity of the boys’
unique mindset they set themselves the giddy task of
recording without a note of the record written. Without
any prior consideration as to what it might feel or
sound like. Because their relationship with one another
stretches all the way back to High School, they could
afford the risk. They entered the recording process
determined to find the energy of a first take. There
would be none of the luxurious soundscaping they had
perfected to monumental effect on Alphabetical
or its wildly eclectic but strangely coherent predecessor,
United. This time it was all about the rawness.
“There is a brutality to the record,” says
Thomas, “which I was surprised that I liked so
much and even more surprised that it sounded so us.”
It’s Never Been Like That was conceived
with a live mentality. If at first it sounds breezily,
crazily immediate, that vigor should not detract from
its deeper, more lasting residual air of a band at the
peak of their powers, both musically and intellectually.
There is little in the way of the studied air of its
precursors.
Jump out first cut “Long Distance Call”
lends the album its be-damned-with-what-went-before
title. A bracing guitar intro segues into a stop start
verse that is punctuated by one of those keyboard motifs
that Phoenix seem so effortlessly to dust off from a
synthesized archive and bring swinging back into modernity.
The chorus is a defiant plea for their intention of
starting over. The mosh pit ought to be alerted. Other
highlights of the record include the buoyant springtime
jangle of “Consolation Prizes”, the bold
opening salvo referencing their own French-ness, “Napoleon
Says”, and the aptly titled “Second To None”.
This record sounds terrific loud. It has a jump-around
zeal that previous Phoenix albums have only hinted at.
It is both succinct and playful. Oh, and if it is a
fashionable record, then it is fashionable only by accident
and that is only because integrity is fashionable once
more.
The musical playfulness that saw them swapping between
new hip hop technical noise and a luscious orchestration,
between fluttering house timbres and direct rock action
on their opening two shots has been compressed into
a more direct sound on album number 3. But the spirit
of Phoenix and their misadventures discoloring the rulebook
of what pop music can represent remains.
The record represents a kind of hard won freedom for
band and sound alike. They found it within days of settling
into Berlin. In a huge abandoned State Radio complex
in the former Eastern sector - “with just the
ghosts of some of the communist spirit left in the building”
- they were able to release something and worry less
about the intricacies of their sound.
For now Phoenix are back home in Versailles, rehearsing
for the live debut of their most alive record. “It
is going to be fun,” assures the gentlemanly frontman,
understating wildly. It is going to be so much more
than that. It is going to be the rebirth of one of the
few unique propositions in contemporary pop. Phoenix
has once again risen from their own ashes. |
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photo credit
Paul Bernhard |
photo credit
Nicolas Toutain |
photo credit
Greg Williams / Art + Commerce |
photo credit
Greg Williams / Art + Commerce |
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