French Letter Music Blog
French Letter
Apr4

Written by:aidan
Wednesday, April 04, 2007 

You thought my punning title was excruciating and unconvincing? You should have been to The Shins concert in Paris last Sunday - the least seediest and most boring time a guy can have in Pigalle.

Having loved their latest album "Wincing The Night Away", we went to see The Shins live at the Elysee Montmartre last Sunday night. It was fairly boring, a big disappointment.

In truth, I should have expected as much when lead singer James Mercer came on stage - short hair, trimmed beard and shirt-and-tie set making him look like Babydaddy's brother in the civil service. Finicky retuning between every song, almost no interaction with the audience (it was his lackeys - sorry, bandmates - who fulfilled that obligation) - in short, the image of a humourless muso completely at variance with the joyous, romantic impression his lyrics and melodies give.

The concert opened with the first four songs off the album, in the same order and reproduced note-for-note - always a sign of overseriousness at work. The huge crowd (about a thousand people, I guess) seemed fairly sedate from where I was standing - only a rockin' encore cover of 'Girlfriend' by Jonathan Richman and the Modern Lovers brought people to life i.e. a bit of jumping and excitement.

But then, Richman is a master live performer who writes all his songs with a view to entertaining a concert audience. By contrast, The Shins seemed to think they were playing in the Louvre and we would just watch in reverential awe. Only guitarist Dave Hernandez seemed to get into the rock n'roll spirit - pulling rawk poses, talking to the crowd and (best of all) chopping out some killer riffs. I'd like to see HIS band if he ever has one.

And it was all over at 10pm! Now I know there are curfews in some Paris venues but it didn't help dispel the final verdict of a thoroughly boring night out. So out we spilled onto Pigalle, the seediest street in Paris, like leaving midnight mass in Temple Bar.

The concert was filmed for eventual DVD release - probably with the title "Yawning The Early Evening Away". Get the album; leave the tickets.

Anyway, you can judge for yourself - here's 'New Slang' (the song that Natalie Portman in the film 'Garden State' says will change your life) live from the Elysee Montmartre last Sunday:


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7 comment(s) so far...

Re: Shin Faint: The Shins live in Paris

Very interesting Aidan. I had tickets to see them in Brussels but they postponed the gig to the same night I had tix to see his Bobness. What to do? I plumbed for Bobbie D in the end, but you make me think I may have made the right decision (for once). Although I am still very curious to see the Shins live. Another day, etc.

By admin on   Wednesday, April 04, 2007

Re: Shin Faint: The Shins live in Paris

Great review. I am rather underwhelmed by the new Shins record. There seems to be a whiff of underachievement at the moment - many bands are not following up a breakthrough album with a new level of achievement. The Shins, Arcade Fire... maybe the new Modest Mouse will arrest the trend.

By stephen on   Thursday, April 05, 2007

Re: Shin Faint: The Shins live in Paris

Stephen, I wasn't familiar with their old stuff before I heard their new album (pertinently enough, there's a song called 'Australia' which I find brilliant - and Perth-inently enough too it reminds me of 'Spring Rain'-style Go Betweens).

By aidan on   Thursday, April 05, 2007

Re: Shin Faint: The Shins live in Paris

Thank God there are people here who aren't afraid to say that the new Shins and Arcade Fire records aren't actually all that good. Nice piece Aidan. Even the headline is Fianna Faultless.

By Michael on   Saturday, April 07, 2007

Re: Shin Faint: The Shins live in Paris

I sincerely love the new Arcade Fire record.

Interesting post Aidan. The performance in that video is so lifeless.

By Garret on   Saturday, April 07, 2007

Re: Shin Faint: The Shins live in Paris

em, Michael, I actually like the new Shins album very much, hence my disappointment at their live show.

Also, I thought my headline was a bit Labour-ed.

By aidan on   Sunday, April 08, 2007

Re: Shin Faint: The Shins live in Paris

I think it was me saying that the new Shins and Arcade Fire records are disappointing fare, not Aidan. The Shins record is less quirky and seems to miss the point of the band. It's missing the melodies that stick in the mind.

The Arcade Fire record is too portentous for its own good. The playful tempo changes mid song from Funeral are missing from this new record.

By stephen on   Tuesday, April 24, 2007

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