The Postal Service

The Postal Service is an indie electro-pop band, which started life as a side project for singer Ben GibbardDeath Cab for Cutie and producer Jimmy Tamborello of Dntel, Headset and Figurine. Several songs on their first LP, Give Up, feature guest vocals from Jenny Lewis, the lead singer of Rilo Kiley, a band which was once on the same label as Death Cab (Barsuk Records) and vocals from Jen Wood, an indie rock solo artist. Chris Walla recorded some of the songs and played the piano on PlayNothing Better.

The way in which the group combines electronic backing tracks with poppy hooks is somewhat reminiscent of 1980s new wave music. The group formed, in 2001, after Gibbard contributed vocals for a song on Dntel’s album Life Is Full of Possibilities called Play(This Is) The Dream of Evan and Chan. This song sparked an EP of remixes by other artists, such as Lali Puna, The Flaming Lips, Safety Scissors, Barbara Morgenstern and Superpitcher and was so well received that the two artists decided that further collaboration was in order.

Its name comes from the manner in which their songs were written, due to the fact that the two of them lived too far away to be able to work together in person. Tamborello would create beats and mail them to singer and lyricist Gibbard, who would then edit them and put his melodies over the tracks and mail them back. Gibbard didn’t write any of the lyrics until the tracks were completely finished.

Despite the fact that their main bands are still active, The Postal Service has supported its full-length album Give Up with a successful concert tour and has stated intentions to tour more in the future. The album’s most notable single was PlaySuch Great Heights that has been featured in various television commercials, series, and movie trailers also remixed by John Tejada. The album also recently became the most successful album for the Sub Pop label since Nirvana’s debut album Bleach.

The Postal Service more recently contributed a cover of PlayAgainst All Odds to the soundtrack to the 2004 motion picture Wicker Park, and the band has worked on several remixes of other artists, including PlayDo You Realize?? (Postal Service remix) (from Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots) and PlayLittle Girl Blue (Postal Service Remix) (from Verve Remixed 3) and PlayMushaboom (Postal Service Remix). Gibbard doesn’t sing on these remixes (except for Feist’s Mushaboom), and it is likely that he has granted Jimmy Tamborello permission to work alone under the name The Postal Service.

At least two songs have been recorded as of June 2006 for the newest The Postal Service album.

[Allikas: http://www.last.fm]

Mina avastasin The Postal Service’i tänu T.-le. Olen temalt päris palju uut muusikat leidnud, kuid TPS on vaieldamatult üks mu lemmikuid. Ise paigutaksin ta stiililt pigem elektroonika kui indie alla, aga no eks see liigitus ongi niivõrd varieeruv. Igatahes on tegu eriti mõnusa asjaga. Tähelepanu pööran veel Phil Collinsi “Against All Odds’i” kaverile, mille TPS on teinud omanäoliseks ja originaalseks. Väga mõnus. “Against All Odds’i” saab kuulata siit:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kehHqPfRhPo&eurl

Enjoy!

The Cure

Formed during the punk era of the 1970s while still in secondary school in Crawley, West Sussex, England, The Cure has been one of the most enduring bands of the last thirty years, even if that has come at the price of multiple line-up changes, with only original frontman Robert Smith remaining in the band. Shunning the anarchistic tendencies of many punk bands after their formation in 1976, The Cure’s first release was PlayKilling an Arab, based on material from French writer Albert Camus’ “L’Etranger” (translated into English as The Stranger or The Outsider). This track courted controversy because of its theme (misinterpreted as rascist, it was in fact, about the futility of killing any ethnicity), but it started to secure a small following, which grew following the release of debut album Three Imaginary Boys and non-LP single PlayBoys Don’t Cry in 1979, the latter of which would become one of The Cure’s most famous songs.

Following this, The Cure moved from their punk leanings into the portentous post-punk territory, releasing three albums of doom-laden rock in three years, Seventeen Seconds, Faith and Pornography, the latter of which charted inside the UK top 10, though the band were repeatedly dogged by the “Second-class Joy Division” tag. The group’s fifth album, following their third set of line-up changes, Japanese WhispersPlayLet’s Go to Bed alongside pop songs like Love Cats. Following the commercial disappointment of follow-up album The Top in 1984, The Cure returned to form with 1985’s The Head on the Door. Featuring the singles In Between Days and PlayClose to Me, The Head on the Door was distant from the band’s punk roots, having more in common with successful alternative bands like The Smiths and Echo & the Bunnymen than their gloomier roots.

Two years later, the eighth studio album Kiss Me, Kiss Me, Kiss Me was a more stadium-sized effort, though featuring audacious pop songs like Why Can’t I Be You, it was seemingly caught between two styles. However, it was the band’s ninth effort (following the departure of last surviving founder member other than Robert Smith, Lol Tolhurst), Disintegration, that would be their greatest success, both critically and commercially. Disintegration spawned hit singles like PlayLullaby (no.5 in the UK), PlayLove Song (an impressive no. 2 in the USA), PlayPictures of You, and PlayFascination Street. The album itself was a culmination of The Cure’s directions through the eighties, featuring the poppier side combined with the more tender aspects, as well as the gloomier facets.

Following this, a remix compilation named Mixed Up was released in 1990, featuring one new track, PlayNever Enough, and two years later tenth studio album Wish surfaced, which was a hit mainly from the momentum gained by Disintegration, though it also featured their most famous pop song, PlayFriday I’m In Love (no.6 in the UK and no.18 in the US). During the years following this, the band became distracted and discouraged by the lawsuit launched by former member Lol Tolhurst, who felt he had been deprived of royalties. As a result, the 1996 album Wild Mood Swings felt unfocused, and was a critical and commercial failure, though the single PlayMint Car was a moderate hit.

In 1997, The Cure released the compilation Galore, featuring new song Wrong Number. Three years later, at the release of original album Bloodflowers, Robert Smith announced it would be the last album for the band, the album itself being a return to the gloomier rock of Pornography and Faith. Resultantly, another hits compilation was released in 2001. However, in 2004, the band surprised all by returning with a self-titled album, their twelfth studio album, which was a surprise hit, reaching the US Top 10, its lead single - PlayThe End of the World - becoming a modest hit on Modern Rock radio, and recieving a relatively warm reception from the press.

In May 2005, Smith fired Roger O’Donnell and Perry Bamonte from the band, along with Bamonte’s brother Daryl, who had been The Cure’s tour manager for many years. The remaining members of the band (Robert Smith, Simon Gallup and Jason Cooper) made a few appearances as a trio before it was announced that Porl Thompson would be returning to The Cure.

Their thirteenth studio album was penciled in for the first quarter of 2007, but its release was postponed. They played one live concert in Miami (23 March 2007) at the unlikely dance-focussed Ultra Music Festival. Further concerts in 2007 followed in Australasia: Fuji Rock Festival, Japan (27 July); Hong Kong (30 July); Singapore (1 August) and a tour of Australia and New Zealand.

The Australasian concerts were the first in the region since the Dream Tour of 2000 in support of Bloodflowers. These 4Tour dates featured a heavier, guitar-based sound (with Roger O’Donnell’s departure The Cure’s signature delicate guitar/keyboard layering also vanished) and no new songs were included in the sets. However, fans were treated to close to three hours of pure, classic The Cure, the band playing a long string of hits and fan-favourites before ending their shows with thrashing encores which delved into their back catalogue to some of their earliest recordings such as, PlayFire in Cairo, PlayGrinding Halt and PlayThree Imaginary Boys.

An Autumn US tour was to follow but was eventually cancelled to enable the band to finish the recording and mixing of the new record. Despite the cancellation of the tour, four shows were played in October 2007, the last three in Mexico City. Here The Cure introduced a handful of new songs which displayed both the melodic/pop as well as the sombre/tender aspect of their songwriting.

In 2008, The Cure embarked on the next leg of the 4Tour, starting in Stockholm (9 Feb) and continuing through to London (20 Mar) before heading across the Atlantic to complete the previously cancelled tour of 2007. The European 4Tour saw the band deliver powerful shows lasting over three hours, none more exhilarating and charged than their superb performance at Vienna’s small-sized, 3000-capacity Gasometer (23 Feb). In Paris, Bercy (12 March), The Cure returned to the stage for an amazing fourth encore, ending the 3 hour 30 mins show with their emotional classic, PlayFaith. In London (20 Mar), The Cure were again in top form, performing for over 3 hours and offering a great set including brilliant versions of PlayA Night Like This, PlayFrom the Edge of the Deep Green Sea, PlayFriday I’m In Love and Disintegration. Also notable was the magnificant, swirling guitar playing of Porl Thompson on the often over-looked Wrong Number and PlayNever Enough, featuring a guitar-less and dancing Robert. The set included a large number of pop hits drawing a huge reaction from the crowd; amongst them: PlayHot Hot Hot !!!, PlayThe Lovecats, PlayClose to Me and PlayWhy Can’t I Be You?. New songs played were: The Only One (formerly known as Please Project), Freak Show and the emotional A Boy I Never Knew.

The Cure’s next album ‘13’ is due for a Spring 2008 release to coincide with the US tour.

Allikas: [http://www.last.fm]

Bändi ametlik kodulehekülg: [http://www.thecure.com]

The Cure’i näol on tegemist juba väga vana kalaga maailma muusikas. Niivõrd mitmekülgne, mis laulja Robert Smith võib olla. Wow. Ja samas nii sügav, hingestatud, intiimne. Kergelt stiililt midagi bowielikku. Või on just David Bowie cure’ilik? Igatahes on tegu vääga mõnusa asjaga. Hiljuti Tallinnas toimunud Good Charlotte’i kontserdil esitasid noormehed just nimelt The Cure’i loo kaveri. Selleks looks oli sensuaalne “Love Song”:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P4SZhumbv0s