Anyone who has become jaded by the commerciality of live music, especially festivals, could find some relief this October. Bon Iver’s Justin Vernon, along with various other industry figures including Aaron and Bryce Dessner of The National, have announced a new two day music “happening” in Berlin. The event is entirely not-for-profit and currently without an official name. It will take place October 1 and 2 at FunkHaus studios.

In the announcement, organisers cited “egolessness” as a “guiding system” for the event. Rather than coalescing around a single venture, the idea is “based on friendships and relations of people that have evolved over years and the desire to put something together”. Although no formal lineup is to be announced, so far eighty artists have been confirmed.

That list includes members of Bon Iver, Alt-J, Poliça, The Staves plus My Brightest Diamond‘s Shara Nova, Lisa Hannigan, Damien Rice, Alexander Ridha (aka Boys Noize), Yoann Lemoine (aka Woodkid), Vincent Moon, Fog‘s Andrew Broder, Hauschka and many more. The statement from organisers continued to say that “It’s about new material, collaborations, unique arrangements, and dissolving borders”.

Bon Iver

Image via Pitchfork

There will also be no set performances, with artists gathering together a week before to rehearse and experiment. Audiences will then be guided through the various studio spaces to witness the various performances.

Every artist involved will be making their contribution without expectation of any fees, and patrons are assured that the cost of a ticket covers production costs only. Even more importantly, the event is also entirely free of commercial sponsors, meaning audiences won’t be bombarded by advertising or promoted merch. Although the event is presented by Michelberger Hotel.

This is not the first time that Vernon and Dessner have turned their hands to live music. Next week sees the Eaux Claires Music & Arts Festival take place in Wisconsin, brought together by the two musicians.

You can check out full details for their Berlin event here, including the full list of confirmed artists so far and information about tickets.

Image: The Independent

Veteran Cincinatti rockers The National have become just the latest band to speak out against U.S Presidential candidate Donald Trump, comparing the politician to McDonalds spokesclown and antagonist in the nightmares of children worldwide, Ronald McDonald.

Appearing on BBC Radio 5’s ‘Pineear’s Politics’, front-man Matt Berninger noted that the idea of President Donald Trump sounded like “President Ronald McDonald or something…that seems to make the most sense. Except I don’t think Ronald McDonald was as much of a bigot. I’ve thought of the bigotry in America and the deep-seated problems…that’s always been there and we can pretend like it has just gone away….Trump is the sickness that has been clogging the drain.”

“I think people are afraid,” he continued, “they’ve been marginalised financially, health-wise…by their own government. They’ve been put in a situation by their own elected leaders where they are desperate…he (Trump) is using their desperation and their fear.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yIWmRbHDhGw

Guitarist Aaron Desner also noted that “we were big Bernie (Sanders) supporters…now we are all migrating to support Hillary (Clinton) and frankly, I like Hillary a lot too. I think she’s entirely prepared and proven for this job.”

Its yet another example of the outspoken manner of The National, a band who have never been one to shy away from the political arena. Having campaigned with President Barack Obama from 2008-2012 at numerous rallies, events and speeches, the band quickly earned a reputation for their support of the democratic movement, support that continues here in hilarious fashion.

Image: 4ad

While Bon Iver is currently entertaining Sydneysiders at this year’s Vivid Festival, he is also lining up to take part in a new concert for our French friends in the city of love.

The National‘s Bryce Dessner has created a brand new concert called Invisible Bridge. On September 24th and 25th, Paris’s Philharmonie will be flooded with the sounds of this incredible indie supergroup, with Justin Vernon‘s flawlessly stunning voice as well as beautiful guitar compositions by Dessner and his brother Aaron, the contemporary stylings of eight blackbird and the sweet piano melodies of Katia and Marielle Labèque.

The Philharmonie’s website has this to say, describing what is to be in store for those interested:

“Passing nimbly between rock and contemporary music, Bryce Dessner cultivates the art of collaboration with shared compositions and performances. For this concert, he brings together guests from a variety of backgrounds: his brother and close collaborator Aaron Dessner (The National), singer Justin Vernon (Bon Iver), and the Labèque sisters.”

The National will also perform at a charity event to raise money for Syrian refugees this Friday. According to Now Toronto, frontman Matt Berninger explained, “There are a lot of people in need of a lot of help. It’s that simple. The community of Hamilton is doing more to help them than most nations, including my own.”

This is certainly not the first collaboration between members of The National and Bon Iver. As well as having performed and collaborated together many, many times, Justin Vernon and Aaron Dessner have also curated a festival together, Eaux Claires, which take place in Vernon’s home town of Eau Claire, Wisconsin. In its second year running, this year’s edition features the likes of James Blake, Erykah Badu, Jenny Lewis, Deafheaven, Shabbazz Palaces, S. Carey (Bon Iver drummer’s side project), Mavis Staples and more.

Image: Noisey 

Of course this song came on. As I walked along, nose running, throat scratchy and heart heavy, I had my Spotify on shuffle to distract my mind and the familiar opening sounds of The National‘s Bloodbuzz Ohio began to play. I hadn’t heard the song in ages, and it’s so weighted with feeling and experience that it physically stopped me in my tracks. I’d been so distracted thinking through everything the way I do in any situation, wringing my hands as the panic continued to rise. Home wasn’t good, work was worse, and I was stuck in an awful limbo unsure of where to go from here (in life, I was on the bus on the way home). Instead of continuing to trudge down the hill to my house, I sat on the bench I walk past every day and listened.

The National’s 2010 album, High Violet, is one of “those” albums. Those albums that will always stay with me, that have truly changed and shaped who I am as a person. Over the years, I’ve revisited it so many times when I need to feel, to accept and to grow that it’s become a form of therapy. The National have helped me get through some of my darkest times, and I found myself completely floored that once again, as I felt myself really losing grip on everything around me, it had come back into my life. High Violet signifies the all important healing process, and is my proxy in which I try to (and always do) overcome difficult times.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yfySK7CLEEg

Incredibly relatable due to the almost intentionally boring life they portray, lead singer Matt Berninger makes songs that aren’t about excessive lifestyles or celebrity. His lyrics about marital strife, financial burden and the pressures of every day life and the effects it has on every 7day people. He writes specifically about his own experiences, yet it’s the universal themes and the strange detachment from reality despite the specificity that allows the listener to insert themselves into the narrative. For my first real heartbreak, Sorrow became my song as Berninger mourned. “I don’t wanna get over you,” he laments and I lamented right there beside him. As he gets increasingly self-destructive in Little Faith, with lyrics like “I’ll set a fire just to see what it kills,” so too have I headed down that dark road.

The themes of isolation are just as strong, with songs like Afraid of Everyone describing the need to retreat, to hide away. “I try not to hurt anybody I like/ But I don’t have the drugs to sort it out…I’m afraid of everyone,” Berlinger’s baritone pierces my mind, singing exactly how I’m feeling – like a wrecking ball in someone’s life. “I had a whole in the middle…I told my friends not to worry,” the final verse of Anyone’s Ghost depicting someone turning away from the people around them, the paranoia rising and lack of trust in their friends waning as they delve deeper and deeper into their own mind. The feelings of overwhelming loneliness, utter hopelessness and total despair are all intertwined with these songs so much so that I’m almost scared to listen to this album at times – the memories are too strong and bring up chapters I have worked too hard to stow away. “I didn’t mean to let it get so far out of hand,” Lemonworld reflects, whilst Runaway depicts the stubborn fighting of a relationship and the seemingly impossible-to-find solution – a factor I know too well.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4_yskRDrmqI

The feeling of that awful carpet in my first home on my arms and the back of my legs as I laid on the floor staring up at the ceiling, tears streaming down my face as the house shook from the volume of the speakers and the whole weight of the world was on my chest with my heart in a million pieces. We weren’t together but he still cheated. Turning my face and seeing my mother’s eyes look down at me with a fear I had never seen before. “How did it get this bad?” I didn’t know. The feeling of school, of the very real panic I felt when I thought about it ending and the finality of it all. Of falling for someone so hard, but my stupid brain preventing me from opening up to them. Friends leaving, coming back and sucking you dry and then leaving again. “Everyone must be kept at an arm’s length, then they can’t hurt me. Don’t let them in, don’t let them in,” I’d tell myself, and in each of these moments, High Violet was playing. My feelings I was almost ashamed of having were now being sung back to me with steady rock’n’roll and a stunning voice, allowing me to realise that I wasn’t alone at all. 

As I said, this album now serves as a form of therapy. The crashing cymbals and Berninger’s incredible baritone voice turned up as loud as possible thumping in my ears force me to recognise what is happening and look inside. It helped me accept that being sad and miserable isn’t necessarily a bad thing, and it helped me come out the other side on more than a few occasions. I will never forget seeing the band live for the first time. Having undergone huge change over the past few months, it was an almost spiritual experience to see them perform these songs in front of me at one of Brisbane’s most beautiful venues, the natural amphitheatre at the Riverstage. The crashing, racing drum beat of Bloodbuzz Ohio rang out over thousands of people as Berninger’s deep voice boomed, “Stand up straight at the foot of your love.” The tears that had flowed so often whilst listening to this song before were back with a vengeance, and as the heavy guitar echoed through the trees and buildings and the night sky, I stood there watching and feeling it all. Truly liberated, it was a moment I would never forget as I sang along and cried. Perhaps Berninger and his band will never know how much this song, and this album means to me. But it doesn’t matter because I know how much it means to them.

I still get sad sometimes, and still feel like things quickly slip out from my control. I still give too much to people and get so hurt when they don’t do the same, and find those closest to me hurt me the most. But, having listened to this record regularly for six years, with each bout I get better. I know now that it’s okay, and I feel stronger when I put this on. The National’s High Violet helped me find solace in the sadness, and now I welcome these times because I know I can get through it.

Image: Consequence of Sound

Tributes are a tricky business. Done well, and they bring a whole new aspect to an original band or their work. Done badly, however, and they end up on stage in small town theatres, wearing worn out spandex and glitter. But to bring to life six whole hours worth of material, with renditions by every name in music you could wish for, is already a feat worth mentioning.

Following several years of work, The National have now formally announced their Grateful Dead mega tribute. Day of the Dead box set is indeed reported to be comprised of 59 tracks, with a run time of six hours, and is due to be released May 20 via 4AD. It will be available in digital format, and also as a 5xCD set and limited edition vinyl box set. The project is spearheaded by twins and members of the National, Aaron and Bryce Dessner, and all proceeds are intended for the not-for-profit HIV/AIDS organisation Red Hot.

Image via The National

Image via The National

Produced by Aaron Dessner, many tracks feature the house band: the Dessners, Scott and Bryan Devendorf (also of the National), Josh Kaufman, Conrad Doucette, Sam Cohen, and Walter Martin (the Walkmen). Amongst the other artists featured across the vast track listing are The War On Drugs, Kurt Vile and the Violators, Courtney Barnett, Anohni, Unknown Mortal Orchestra and The Flaming Lips– just to name a few!

As one of the most prolific bands from the 1960’s and 70’s (even though the band’s career spanned around five decades in total), The Grateful Dead brought together such a range of influences and styles as to make their huge catalogue brilliantly diverse. They are perhaps one of the few bands who’s work could be paid tribute in this grand style. Artists who have contributed to Day of the Dead have also published quotes about the band themselves. Will Oldham, and American singer-songwriter also know as Bonny ‘Prince’ Billy, commented;

“I have worked with a few people whose minds are brilliant and complicated, musically. There’s something about the Dead that allows these big-brained pickers to just chill the fuck out and feel good about it. There’s basic types of song forms and melodies that I have an affinity for, and the Grateful Dead have helped other people find their ways into these musics. So it isn’t as hard to establish connections with folks out there that might not otherwise share some of what I am digging into.”

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pafY6sZt0FE]

As well as the release of the recordings, an all-star Day of the Dead set has been announced for this year’s Eaux Claires (August 12-13), the festival curated by Aaron Dessner and Justin Vernon. Read the full track listing for the release below.

Day of the Dead:

Thunder (Vol. 1):

01 The War on Drugs: “Touch of Grey”
02 Phosphorescent, Jenny Lewis & Friends: “Sugaree”
03 Jim James & Friends: “Candyman”
04 Moses Sumney, Jenny Lewis & Friends: “Cassidy”
05 Bruce Hornsby and DeYarmond Edison: “Black Muddy River”
06 Ed Droste, Binki Shapiro & Friends: “Loser”
07 The National: “Peggy-O”
08 Kurt Vile and the Violators: “Box of Rain” [ft. J Mascis]
09 Bonnie “Prince” Billy and Friends: “Rubin and Cherise”
10 Perfume Genius, Sharon Van Etten & Friends: “To Lay Me Down”
11 Courtney Barnett: “New Speedway Boogie”
12 Mumford & Sons: “Friend of the Devil”
13 Lucius: “Uncle John’s Band”
14 The Lone Bellow & Friends: “Me and My Uncle”
15 Lee Ranaldo, Lisa Hannigan & Friends: “Mountains of the Moon”
16 Anohni and yMusic: “Black Peter”
17 Bryce Dessner: “Garcia Counterpoint”
18 Daniel Rossen, Christopher Bear and the National: “Terrapin Station (Suite)” [ft. Josh Kaufman, Conrad Doucette, So Percussion and Brooklyn Youth Chorus]
19 Angel Olsen: “Attics of My Life”
20 Wilco and Bob Weir: “St. Stephen (Live)”

Lightning (Vol. 2):

01 Bonnie “Prince” Billy: “If I Had the World to Give”
02 Phosphorescent & Friends: “Standing on the Moon”
03 Charles Bradley and Menahan Street Band: “Cumberland Blues”
04 Tallest Man on Earth & Friends: “Ship of Fools”
05 Bonnie “Prince” Billy & Friends: “Bird Song”
06 The National: “Morning Dew”
07 Marijuana Deathsquads: “Truckin'”
08 Cass McCombs, Joe Russo & Friends: “Dark Star”
09 Nightfall of Diamonds: “Nightfall of Diamonds”
10 Tim Hecker: “Transitive Refraction Axis for John Oswald”
11 Lucinda Williams & Friends: “Goin’ Down the Road Feeling Bad”
12 Tunde Adebimpe, Lee Ranaldo & Friends: “Playing in the Band”
13 Local Natives: “Stella Blue”
14 Tal National: “Eyes of the World”
15 Bela Fleck: “Help on the Way”
16 Orchestra Baobab: “Franklin’s Tower”
17 Luluc With Xylouris White: “Till the Morning Comes”
18 The Walkmen: “Ripple”
19 Richard Reed Parry with Caroline Shaw and Little Scream: “Brokedown Palace” [ft. Garth Hudson]

Sunshine (Vol. 3):

01 Real Estate: “Here Comes Sunshine”
02 Unknown Mortal Orchestra: “Shakedown Street”
03 Hiss Golden Messenger: “Brown Eyed Woman”
04 This Is the Kit: “Jack-a-Roe”
05 Daniel Rossen and Christopher Bear: “High Time”
06 The Lone Bellow & Friends: “Dire Wolf”
07 Winston Marshall, Kodiak Blue and Shura: “Althea”
08 Orchestra Baobab: “Clementine Jam”
09 Stephen Malkmus and the Jicks: “China Cat Sunflower – I Know You Rider”
10 Bill Callahan: “Easy Wind”
11 Ira Kaplan & Friends: “Wharf Rat”
12 The Rileys (Terry and Gyan Riley): “Estimated Prophet”
13 Man Forever, So Percussion and Oneida: “Drums – Space”
14 Fucked Up: “Cream Puff War”
15 The Flaming Lips: “Dark Star”
16 s t a r g a z e: “What’s Become of the Baby”
17 Vijay Iyer: “King Solomon’s Marbles”
18 Mina Tindle & Friends: “Rosemary”
19 Sam Amidon & Friends: “And We Bid You Goodnight”
20 The National With Bob Weir: “I Know You Rider (live)”

Image: Pitchfork.

The National, Kanye West, Ellie Goulding and Mumford and Sons.

Is it the 2016 Glastonbury headliners?

No, but the answer’s even crazier. It looks like Goulding, West and the two bands are working on a collaborative album. And they’re not even the only ones involved.

The crowdfunded album is currently titled Metamorphoses, and will be in support of Global Citizen, an organisation focused on ending extreme global poverty by 2030.

The album is set to feature twelve tracks, also crowdsourced, and will effectively be a collection of stories, poems, reflections and lyrics that they’ve been collecting across the past six months from fans and activists alike via the Global Citizen website. This out of the ordinary or extraordinary collaboration’s musical essence and meaning is described by Ben Lovett, the master behind the wonderful madness, of Mumford and Sons:

Metamorphoses has the potential to break down our preconceptions of the voices of creativity, what different people around the world are thinking and who has the right to be heard. In my own life, I’ve experienced people trying to define me and put me in boxes and categories. Through collaboration we can show people how those lines can be blurred and are ultimately redundant. The artists involved in this project are some of the most genuine artists the world has to offer. Artists like Kanye West, and The National are doing something globally important that is touching people down to their DNA. And these masterfully creative people are going to be interpreting incredible submissions from people across the globe. It has been a joy reading all of the submissions we received over the past six months. I’m truly excited to see what we will create together.

Metamorphoses is set to be released later this year.

Image: UMag Mag

During The National‘s set at Treasure Island Music Festival last October, CHVRCHES frontwoman Lauren Mayberry made a surprise appearance, helping the band perform a stellar rendition of I Need My Girl. Now, two months later, she has paired up with The National’s Matt Berninger again, for an interview on Live Nation TV.

The pair sat down for a nine minute discussion, exchanging tales on a number of subjects including performance nerves and their perspectives of fame. Both of them expressed fears of messing up in a live setting, with Berninger stating that “there’s no way to be totally confident up there. I don’t know how a human being would be confident elevated 15 or 20ft off the ground with everyone looking at you.”

At one point in the interview, Mayberry admitted she once took a hip-hop dance class to help aide her stage presence, to which Berninger responded with “Performing is exhilarating, but just right on the edge of completely humiliating all the time.” He then continued to recount an early experience performing at SXSW, where he jumped ahead an entire song on the setlist – leaving his band and presumably his audience bewildered. “I was screaming my head off to Available,” he recalls, “and they were playing a totally different song. I was singing those lyrics to a drum beat. We didn’t get signed.”

The interview as a whole is very, very charming. The pair discusses these topics in a way that humanises them even more so. It’s nice to realise that even large performers like Matt Berninger get stage-fright at times.

You can watch the interview below.
[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lj5yWgycCXs&w=560&h=315]

CHVRCHES will be hitting up Australia shortly for St. Jerome’s Laneway Festival, as well as three sideshows:

Laneway:

Sat, 6 Feb: Laneway Fest, Sydney College of the Arts, NSW
Sat, 13 Feb: Laneway Fest, Footscray Community Arts Centre, VIC
Sun, 14 Feb: Laneway Fest, Esplanade Reserve and West End, WA

Sideshows:

Thurs, 4 Feb: The Enmore Theatre, NSW
Tues, 9 Feb: The Forum, VIC
Wed, 10 Feb: The Forum, VIC

 

Matt Berninger’s haunting baritone vocals and dark melancholic lyrics have pleased indie rock fans for more than a decade. But stripping away the grandiosity of being backed by four fifths of The National may lead fans to question whether a solo Berninger outing might be worthwhile. EL VY may not be a solo project, but as a side project, Return to the Moon nonetheless answers the question in the affirmative.

El VY is a collaborative project between Berninger and producer/instrumentalist Brent Knopf. Knopf has frequently toured alongside The National as a member of Portland’s Ramona Falls, as well as Menomena, and has privately been exchanging musical ideas with Berninger for almost as long. The pair’s familiarity shines through on the new LP, with Knopf’s intricate multi-instrumental arrangements never failing to capture or add to the mood of Berninger’s sullen, self-aware and frequently autobiographical lyricisms.

Evocative of the unsettling riffs of The DoorsPeople Are Strange, the spiraling chord progressions and ominous vaudeville swing of Silent Ivy Hotel tell the story of a leery protagonist dismissing a secret lover. The addition of Knopf’s organ and piano arrangements perfectly capture the jaunted character of the whole affair.

Next, tropical instrumentals and chunky rhythmic funk underlies the hyper-masculine bravado of I’m The Man To Be. Matt’s fevered and self-aware monologue satirises the rock star superego that the frontman has no doubt come to inhabit. The inclusion of lyrics like, “I’m peaceful because my dick’s in the sunshine,” might push the goofball element to the limit, but the track’s intelligent deconstruction remains laudable none the less.

Third track Paul is Alive shows the collaboration at its best. Adopting a lighter tone, the track combines playful riffs supplied by complex instrumental layers with Matt’s earnestly autobiographical lyrics. Things are a little less somber than what’s typical of The National, with catchy lyrical lines like, “sitting outside the Jockey Club/Crying in my 7-Up/I could hear Hüsker Dü and The Smiths, the Sluggos, The Cramps go bup-bup-bup-bup inside.”

Laden with hooks and interlaced with some less than serious throwaway charm Return to the Moon showcases the fruitful results of collaboration between two of indie rock’s finest.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vFCZGqPx4Gg

Performing at Treasure Island Music Festival over the weekend, brooding rockers The National surprised and delighted fans by bringing out CHVRCHES‘ Lauren Mayberry for a surprise duet of their stunning 2013 track, I Need My Girl. Coming out on stage to rapturous applause, the pair delivered the sombre track like the true frontpeople they are; both commanding and controlled, and both acting like it isn’t a huge deal that this was happening.

The added presence of female vocals, let alone Mayberry’s, was a welcome addition to the forlorn track and added even more of an emotional side to the performance. Mayberry, who normally sings over high intensity electronic beats, sounded perfectly at home on the stripped back, almost skeletal track and was the perfect accompaniment for The National’s Matt Berninger‘s deep voice. You can see fan footage of the whole song below, and prepare yourself for some goosebumps.

It’s been a little while since any new material from The National. Aside from a surprise release of a track called Sunshine On My Back earlier this year that was leftover from their last recording sessions in 2013, we haven’t heard any new stuff from the band since their Trouble Will Find Me album of the same year. However, although frontman Berninger has been busy with his EL VY side project, the band also debuted a new song over this weekend at a charity concert for Guatemalan schoolchildren foundation, Cooperative For Education. The charity was founded by Matt Berninger’s cousins so perhaps he was just doing the right thing by his family, but nevertheless it has got us extremely excited for new material from the band hopefully in the very near future!

It’s not exactly a Beyonce or a Drake move, but a new song from The National has unknowingly popped up on the Internet today. Titled Sunshine On My Back, it was apparently left over from the Trouble Will Find Me sessions in 2013, and features Sharon Van Etten  on vocals.

The slow burning, guitar driven number isn’t exactly new material, but is quintessentially The National, and would serve as a reminder as to why they’ve remained totally relevant and poignant over the last decade. Lyrics such as, “I’m so glad that you came / I needed someone who loves me / But just don’t try to talk yourself into this love / And sleep like a baby while I’m staying up,” pack in just as much heartfelt emotion as any other song they’ve made, with frontman Matt Berninger and his immediately recognisable voice knowing just the right way to make me come undone.

It was rumoured last year that the band was to be working on their seventh album, so perhaps this has come as a refresher before we prepare to move onto the new stuff? In any case, it’s a beautiful track and is available for purchasing on iTunes now. You can also hear it below.