Tag Archives: Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix

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Phoenix Plays the Garden

October 15th, 2010


Three guys, Thomas Mars (vocals), Deck d’Arcy (bass) and Chris Mazzalai (guitar), began playing garage rock in a suburban basement in the ’90s. It’s a familiar story you’ve heard from countless other bands. The main difference in this case is that the group began outside of Paris rather than, say, Detroit or Milwaukee. Around that same time, Mazzalai’s older brother, Laurent Brancowitz (also a guitarist), was in another trio, Darlin’. That band released several songs, which Melody Maker described as “a bunch of daft punk.” Not too much later Brancowitz’s bandmates split to form Daft Punk and he joined his brother’s musical outfit, Phoenix. The now quartet got started covering Hank Williams and Prince in French bars, but they kept working their way up and people began to notice. They added synthesizers to the mix and put out several well-received albums, but it was their fourth studio effort, Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix, that put them in the mainstream. Since then Phoenix (above, performing “1901” on Late Show with David Letterman) has sold out increasingly larger rooms, and now they’re playing the big one, Madison Square Garden next Wednesday. Not only should you be at this show, but make sure to get there early enough to see Dirty Projectors and Wavves, too.

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Band Rises Like a Phoenix at Terminal 5

June 22nd, 2009

Phoenix – Terminal 5 – June 19, 2009

Phoenix - Terminal 5 - June 19, 2009

It’s strange how easy it is to miss a band’s rise in popularity. One minute it’s 2004 and a friend is playing you this “new” French dance-pop in a car, and the next it’s 2009 and that same band is taking the stage in front of a sold-out crowd at Terminal 5. While Phoenix has gotten a fair share of attention in those years in between, it has been most recently that they’ve reached the heights of that rise. Their set on Friday was sharp and impressive. The band bounced between songs that scream the ability to sell out arenas (like the two-part “Love Like a Sunset”) to simpler ones, like “Lisztomania,” which show why they still play venues like they did the night before at Music Hall of Williamsburg. Front man Thomas Mars excellently showcased those endearing moments that would fit tightly in a smaller club, but also knew when to take a step back and let his bandmates (Phoenix features six members for their live show) fill the three floors of Terminal 5 with more than just quick guitar lines and catchy melodies.

The rest of the set sparkled, and they wrapped up their encore with “1901,” the newest single off their new album, Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix. At the end of the song, Mars requested the lights be turned off, and when they came back on a few moments later, he was in the crowd, screaming along with the fans until the song ended. —Sean O’Kane

Photos courtesy of Sean O’Kane | seanokanephoto.com