when i first listened to beirut, i had one of those moments in life that epitomizes all the feelings that you are feeling at the time (mainly who you are and where you're going in life) and it just kind of all made sense.

this guy is a 21 year old brilliant artist who makes me jealous to think of all the untapped potential that we as youth have in terms of creativity.
heres an excerpt from last.fm about him:
While it may sound like an entire Balkan orchestra playing modern songs as mournful ballads and upbeat marches, Beirut’s first album, Gulag Orkestar, is largely the work of one 21-year-old Albuquerque native, Zach Condon, and was almost completely recorded at home. Horns, violins, cello, ukuleles, mandolins, glockenspiels, drums, tambourines, congas, organs, pianos, clarinets and accordions (no guitars on this album!) all build and break the melodies under Condon’s deep-voiced crooner vocals, swaying to the Eastern European beats that sound like they’re being brought to you by a 12-member ensemble.
Though young, Condon already has a few albums under his belt. He recorded under the name The Real People when he was fifteen, which was an electronic record admittedly fashioned after his love of The Magnetic Fields. At sixteen, he recorded an entire doo-wop album that was inspired by Frankie Lymon and the Teenagers. Condon was a straight-A student until he dropped out at the age of 16 to travel Europe in a drunken haze, cavorting and partying with the locals
Though young, Condon already has a few albums under his belt. He recorded under the name The Real People when he was fifteen, which was an electronic record admittedly fashioned after his love of The Magnetic Fields. At sixteen, he recorded an entire doo-wop album that was inspired by Frankie Lymon and the Teenagers. Condon was a straight-A student until he dropped out at the age of 16 to travel Europe in a drunken haze, cavorting and partying with the locals
wherever he ended up. It was during one of these evenings that he was first exposed to Balkan gypsy music (notably including the Boban Markovic Orkestar), blasting from the upstairs apartment. Condon went upstairs to see what exactly he was hearing, and ended up staying up all night with the Serbian artists, going through albums country by country, note for note. This new album is the direct result of what he learned that night.

the reason why i'm sharing this guy with you right now, is not only because he's playing a show at the wiltern on May, 30!!!!!!!!! but because hopefully he will introduce you to new genres of music that has the potential to change your whole perspective on what modern music is, and where it's going.
for me, his music represents a nostalgia that has been lost through the ever present producing of pop-one-hit-wonder-singles, and reminds me of what music is all about: the music. check him out on last.fm or something. i'm not promising it will be epic, but it probably will be.
No comments:
Post a Comment