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Thread started 10/07/09 9:02am

Copycat

Live Review: Radiohead's Frontman Gets Funky




October 2009

To understand what Thom Yorke is up to with the new ensemble he brought to the Orpheum Theatre on Sunday, it's useful to quote one of pop's surviving godfathers. "Once you've done the best you can, funk it!" said George Clinton, the founder of Parliament Funkadelic and guiding light for countless musicians trying to find their footing on the dance floor.

To "funk it" doesn't merely mean to relax; it requires concentration and the kind of muscle that never tenses up. For Yorke, the frontman for the highly cerebral and very popular band Radiohead, it also means rejiggering the multidirectional music that group has perfected, to better emphasize its cornerstone: the groove.

Radiohead isn't often discussed as a dance band, though its sound relies as much on rhythm as on Yorke's woozy melodies and Jonny Greenwood's thickets of effects. But by joining forces with alternative rock's favorite bassist (and Clinton's friend) Flea, as well as drummer Joey Waronker and Brazilian percussionist Mauro Refosco, Yorke is aggressively reaching for the bottom in his own sound.




The effort (which was reportedly similar to Friday’s at the Echoplex) revealed what Yorke's compositions have in common with the work of such post-punk bands as Gang of Four and Mission of Burma, which also mixed rock's sharpness with the heavy pull of funk and disco. The songs, many of which came from Yorke's 2006 solo album, "The Eraser," are clearly influenced by recent dance music trends such as jungle and dubstep, but with live instrumentation instead of electronic settings, they also recalled the moment punk found its hips.

Repetition was the key to the sound, as the band sought the exact point where the repetition of minimalist art music could fuse with the different, though related, repetition of dance pop. Flea often led the way, tightening the approach he takes with the Red Hot Chili Peppers and upping the energy on nearly every song. He also played a mean melodica.

Another sonic layer came from Radiohead's longtime producer, Nigel Godrich, whose keyboard and guitar playing sometimes gave the music an ambient feel, akin to some of the work of Brian Eno. Yorke himself occasionally added insistent piano lines or shivery guitar parts, as well as deploying his remarkable falsetto.

It wouldn't be fair to call this music Radiohead Lite, because it wasn't light at all. But it was more concentrated and, in some ways, more graspable than that group's work. By appealing to the lower body, Yorke and his band dictated the audience's focus in ways that Radiohead's performances don't.

Revamping his older songs and performing a few new ones, Yorke still worked on articulating his obsessions. His great theme (so far) is how anxiety or even pain can turn into a form of rapture, whether through psychic alienation, physical affliction or, more frequently lately, sexual desire. (This is a guy prone to song titles like "Feeling Pulled Apart by Horses.") That's a natural fit for dance music, which offers ecstasy through bodily entanglement and exhaustion.

Yorke acted out the passion of the disco onstage, grinding and swaying and wobbling madly as the crowd cheered every contortion. His dancing was so zealous that it brought to mind the punk forebear Iggy Pop, who's always approached the art as half visionary trance, half pro wrestler-style peacocking.

At certain points, Yorke stopped his happy writhing to deliver a song in a more subdued, almost soft-rock style. Then, the strange lushness of his compositions and his voice dominated, revealing Yorke's secret vice: an addiction to beauty.

Quickly, though, Flea would return to slap his bass, the rhythm section would kick in, and the quest for that funky groove would resume. It's not just a side interest for Yorke; it's a fundamental that he's sharpening. It's all part of one of rock's most ambitious guys doing the best he can.


http://latimesblogs.latim...eatre.html
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Reply #1 posted 10/07/09 9:08am

PANDURITO

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My name is Thom
and I am funky
fro
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Reply #2 posted 10/07/09 9:14am

Timmy84

Uh oh Thom. dancing jig boogie fro
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Reply #3 posted 10/07/09 9:47am

GirlBrother

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If this is funky, Pat Boone is a motherfucking pimp. confused
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Reply #4 posted 10/07/09 9:48am

voyevoda

Thom Yorke is a ugly mother fucker.
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Reply #5 posted 10/07/09 9:55am

Timmy84

GirlBrother said:

If this is funky, Pat Boone is a motherfucking pimp. confused


spit
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Reply #6 posted 10/07/09 10:19am

Copycat

GirlBrother said:

If this is funky, Pat Boone is a motherfucking pimp. confused




Pat Boone's iced out pimp cup. wink
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Reply #7 posted 10/07/09 10:46am

GirlBrother

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Copycat said:

GirlBrother said:

If this is funky, Pat Boone is a motherfucking pimp. confused




Pat Boone's iced out pimp cup. wink


lol
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Reply #8 posted 10/07/09 11:21am

Phishanga

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voyevoda said:

Thom Yorke is a ugly mother fucker.



And a genius.
Hey loudmouth, shut the fuck up, right?
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Reply #9 posted 10/07/09 6:52pm

japanrocks

cool to see him with Flea

i like this one

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Reply #10 posted 10/07/09 6:55pm

japanrocks

this one is nice too



man, flea got the better gig with Thom Yorke

Chad Smith is on tour with Van Hagar!!
[Edited 10/7/09 18:55pm]
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Reply #11 posted 10/08/09 1:52am

Phishanga

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And a beautiful new mellow song.

Hey loudmouth, shut the fuck up, right?
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