Wednesday, 9 January 2013

Alt-J present an awesome wave

The first thing any true fan will know about British-band Alt-J, is that this in fact is simply how their name is spoken, written, it is represented by a simple triangle. Sadly, my iPad did not have this feature, a shame given that it would have given this post the Alt-J indie stamp. This feature of the band, the initial inclination that opens up to the whole world of the quirky-style of the four Leeds University graduates.

It was in their second year of university where the band were first in the making, Joe Newman (guitar/vocals) came to Gwil Sainsbury (guitarist/bassist) with some demos he had developed inspired by his Father, who was also a musician and the two began collaborating helped by incidentally the Apple software GarageBand. Before graduating the pair met Thom Green (drums) and Gus Unger-Hamilton (keyboards), who interestingly studied Fine Art in contrast to the other three who graduated in English Literature the four moved to Cambridge. After two years of honing their skill and developing their sound the band signed to Infectious Records in 2011 and created their debut-album, An Awesome Wave.

Their sound is the musical version of The Mighty Boosh, unique, brilliant and something not everyone will get. With a compelling concoction of gentle-folk guitars, catchy keyboard melodies and pacey hip-hop/dub drum-beats, the band truly have something that sets them apart. But it is not just this they have in their arsenal, lyrically their music is fascinating, take Matilda the first single released from An Awesome Wave as an example, it describes the holy demise of Leon and the sickeningly corrupt drugged-up Detective Stansfield in the finale of Luc Besson's 1994 film:Leon. For a band that could easily be labelled as Pop-Rock this is different to say the least.

Other notable tunes, include the uplifting Something Good, an escape to harsh realities of a relationship with drugs, hum-provoking yet still with a chilled-vibe and Breezeblocks which is based on Maurice Sendak's  children book, Where the Wild Things Are. Whilst the band thanked their parents for not making them get "real jobs" in their Mercury-Awards winning speech, it is without doubt they have used their literature studies in composing their music.

The record is exquisitely well-rounded and never seems contrived, provoking-thought at every corner. Whilst in the mainstream-market not managing to score that highly, they have been widely recognised in the UK Indie-scene and with spots at some of the top festivals last Summer, including Reading and Leeds and T in the Park, the band have achieved greatly and will no doubt continue to.




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