About | Advertise | Contact | RSS
SA Current home page.
Email this Story  Print-ready version  leave a comment
[0]

Music > Aural Pleasure

Vampire Weekend
courtesy
Vampire Weekend: Afro-pop for the Ivy League.

 

Vampire Weekend
Vampire Weekend
(XL Recordings)

If Paul Simon’s Graceland met The Strokes’ Is This It at a Columbia University music-appreciation class, fell in love, and had a baby — and that baby’s godparents were Ladysmith Black Mambazo and David
Byrne — the little tyke would probably grow up to be Vampire Weekend’s much-blogged-about, self-titled debut.

But despite its convoluted heritage (or maybe because of it — hey, those are some good genes!), Vampire Weekend sounds remarkably fresh and fun instead of painfully derivative. Singer-guitarist Ezra Koenig and his band of hipster laureates have successfully melded NYC post-punk and African pop (with a healthy dose of baroque string arrangements) to create what they call “Upper West Side Soweto.”

Gimmicky? Sure, on paper — but it works. This collection of catchy, upbeat tunes chooses earnestness over irony: Repeat listens reveal a band that isn’t mocking African pop but making a serious attempt to honor it. “Cape Cod Kwassa Kwassa” ditches the drum kit for hand drums, and “Bryn” grooves on a sublime 12/8 beat that might not be authentic, but it’s not winking,
either. The Afro-indie concept gets a bit tired on “One (Bryn’s Got a New Face),” but the band has other tricks up its cardigan sleeves.

Record-highlight “A-Punk” is a grab bag of pilfered British sounds, alternating between a revved-up 2-Tone beat and a “Strawberry Fields”-esque harmonium chorus. (Give Koenig points for subbing “Ay! Ay! Ay!” for “Oi! Oi! Oi!”)

Elsewhere, “Walcott” and “I Stand Corrected” are perfect slices of indie-pop, all lifted to stellar heights by keyboardist Rostam Batmanglij’s chamber string arrangements.

Vampire Weekend met at Columbia and the record’s lyrics are heavy with Ivy League imagery. Koenig walks the fine line between clever and pretentious, dropping references to grammar rules as well as grammar mangler Lil’ Jon (“First the window, then it’s to the wall”) on “Oxford Comma.”

Being such literate guys, Vampire Weekend must be familiar with Oscar Wilde’s assertion that “talent borrows, genius steals.” Time will tell whether or not these guys are geniuses, but there’s no doubt they’ve got talent, energy, and limitless potential. I’ll be rooting for them when the blogosphere backlash kicks in.


Choose an identity: Anonymous User

User:
Password:

Please type the code you see into the box below the image:

Code Image - Please contact webmaster if you have problems seeing this image code 

By posting a message, you agree to our Posting Policies No account? New users sign up here.

Keyword search

Detailed search

Preferences

Critic's picks
Non-recurring
All ages

Keyword search

Browse restaurants

Search by:

Cuisines (701)
City (689)
Neighborhood (114)
Reviewed (173)
Critic's pick (56)
Open 24 hours (17)
Late dinner (303)
Brunch (54)
Takeout (142)
Delivery (36)
Outdoor dining (124)
Kid friendly (156)

Serving

Food (50)
No alcohol (18)

Featuring

Dance floor (8)
Darts (1)
Billiards (7)
Games (2)
TV (10)
Outdoor seating (25)
Dress code (2)
No smoking (11)
Wheelchair access (42)

Keyword search

Detailed Search