CARIBOU (1 Viewer)

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[FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]U:MACK [/FONT][FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]
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[/FONT][FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif][/FONT][FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif][/FONT] [FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]CARIBOU
+ WINDINGS
[/FONT][FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif][/FONT][FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif][/FONT][FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif] FRIDAY SEPT 7
CRAWDADDY

DOORS 11.30pm (LATE GIG) TICKETS [FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]
17 FROM ROAD, SPINDIZZY, CITY DISCS & ONLINE AT www.tickets.ie
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The wonderful Caribou return to Crawdaddy on friday september 7, for a late night show. Their new album, Andorra opened up a bright, heavy and happy cacophony of riotous, ecstatic sound will be their first on the city slang label.

"I've always made music for the escapist thrill," confides Dan 'Caribou' Snaith. "I think my music looks inwards for some escapism from the world, rather than outwards." Frankly, we don't blame him. Gritty urban reality? Um, no thanks! We'll have a double helping of the escapist thrills, please. On this, his fourth album, London-based, Canadian ex-pat Caribou emerges with his most wonderfully dense and moving album to date, the giddy delights of Andorra.

Featuring guest vocals from Jeremy Greenspan (Junior Boys) on 'She's The One', this album marks the first time, Snaith sings on every song and invites us into this most personal and emotional body of work. It also finds Snaith with two new record labels, City Slang and Merge Records (home to Arcade Fire) for the USA.

"Basically all the songs that I really love are 'lump in your throat' pop songs," Snaith offers as his secret manifesto for the album. "I still can't really listen to 'This Will Be Our Year' by The Zombies because it turns me into a big cry-baby. But it's all about trying to recreate that feeling. Music either has that effect or it's bullshit I've decided in the last year. So I wanted no bullshit on this album. Turned out that was incredibly hard," he laughs, "but I wanted every track and every part of every track to come as close to that emotional precipice as I could possibly manage."

Previously, The Milk Of Human Kindness (released in 2005 on The Leaf Label), saw the Caribou live band (two drummers, guitar, keyboards, vocals and hotchpotch instruments accompanied by the hyper-colourful projections of acclaimed Dublin-based animators Delicious 9), playing 140 shows across North America, UK, Europe, the Balkans, Taiwan, mainland China, Australia and Japan. Opening for the Super Furry Animals, Caribou was playing to ever increasing audiences on tours with compatriots Junior Boys and The Russian Futurists. It was an affirmation that Snaith's fanbase had remained loyal and what's more, continued to grow, after the 2003 lawsuit issued by rock relic Handsome 'Dick' Manitoba, effected Snaith's artist name change to Caribou.

After a hectic time on the road, during which he also managed to complete his PhD in Maths, Snaith luxuriated in having all the time in the world, creating and destroying entire imaginary musical cosmoses to find the perfect ingredients of Andorra. The small matter of marrying his long time sweetheart, learning to play Guchin (a stringed Dulcimer type of instrument) in China, taking up the ancient art of trampolining... it can safely be said that Dan Snaith can't stand still for too long and has an eyewateringly severe work ethic.

The album title's inspiration is a mythical, tiny country wedged between France and Spain amongst the Pyrenees. "I expected it to be some sort of lost, magical place full of a history, where a defiantly isolated people lived romantic lives," Snaith muses. "It certainly looks like that when you first drive into it, but then all of a sudden a town that's essentially the world's most crass duty free shop appears out of nowhere! Andorra * the idealised place in my head * became a home for, the romanticized characters in the album's songs."

Snaith wrote 670 unique music tracks (this is no exaggeration) distilling the essence into nine exquisite songs, and he plays almost all the instruments on the album, drums, guitars, keyboards, bass, vocals, flutes, percussion and trumpet. And Guchin. Each of Snaith's three albums is highly distinctive, and Andorra is no exception. Start Breaking My Heart (2001) rivaled the likes of Boards of Canada for superb melodies and a yearning sense of nostalgia, while Up In Flames (2003) opened up a bright, heavy and happy cacophony of riotous, ecstatic sound, leading to the day-glo psychedelic pop of The Milk of Human Kindness.

Andorra, however, is like day for night in terms of the sheer scope and widescreen sweep of musical ambition and imagination. "I spent all my time pacing around making up melodies, it was an intense, marathon process, trying to get the musical ideas to fit together," Snaith recalls. "I literally rewrote the verse for 'Sandy' over five days, I kept writing it over and over again about 150 times. What can I say?" he laughs. "I'm a control freak!"

The result of his labours is an absolute master class in freeform pop, incorporating classic love trysts, betrayals, swoons and flutters drawn over nine divine love songs where Snaith's imagination runs riot.

And it's not just Snaith's imagination involved here; director Werner Herzog's feature films were also an unlikely inspiration.

"What captivates me so much about Herzog is that behind the story he's telling, you are also glimpsing into this massive imagination of his which is very much evident if unarticulated. I feel the same is true in music * music, like film, is more than just storytelling. The story that a song tells can be elevated above what the lyrics hint at. For the past year all these jangled parts, songs, ideas have been piling up inside my head and somehow the idea of the album is to wrap them all around pop songs, so that they point towards something bigger living inside my imagination."

'Melody Day', (the single released July 30th) doesn't waste any time in thundering out the trap. Snaith has created a melody that is distinctive yet familiar; euphoric, yet melancholy. "Most of my songs try to achieve that mix and this one perhaps gets closer than any other." (If you have not heard the glorious re-imagining of this track by Dan's old spar Kieran Hebden, please get in touch. Glorious in a word.)

Album highlight and preciously layered 'She's The One' was written and recorded when Jeremy Greenspan passed through London for a few days while on tour with Junior Boys late in 2006. "Jeremy wrote the lyrics for 'She's The One', it's about a guy singing about his girlfriend who treats him badly and he can't see that. It's a classic pop song set up." Such a simple gem on the surface, but listen for the wondrous way that Snaith nestles the percussion and descending strings together to create an effortlessly brilliant tune.


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