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Feist broken social scene
Feist broken social scene









feist broken social scene
  1. #FEIST BROKEN SOCIAL SCENE FULL#
  2. #FEIST BROKEN SOCIAL SCENE TV#

For Kevin Drew, those concerts and the new album are a spontaneous celebration. More than a dozen musicians individually rotate on, play their parts, step back, repeat. On stage, the group expands and contracts like a single breathing organism. JOHNSON: Thousands of fans like Bargar are also drawn to Broken Social Scene's legendary live shows. You're bombarded by strings and epic crescendos and things like that, but it's not done in a way that feels cheesy or ironic it's honest.

feist broken social scene

It's this sort of this pure emotion and innocence. LESLEY BARGAR (Staff Writer, Filter): There's this sort of lack of an awareness of cool even that comes through in their music. She says Broken Social Scene has earned so much international attention in part because of the group's musical sincerity. JOHNSON: Lesley Bargar is a staff writer for the music magazine Filter. I don't there every really will be a last time.īut I'm glad we made this big, beautiful mess and everyone's on it because it's a really nice representation of where we've been for the last few years.īROKEN SOCIAL SCENE: (Singing) All they want is. DREW: You never know when the last time's going to be with this band, when we all get together. And because everyone is so busy, Kevin Drew sees this band's latest self-titled album as an especially rare accomplishment. It's a similar story for Stars, Metric and the Apostles of Hustle, all bands with members in Broken Social Scene.

#FEIST BROKEN SOCIAL SCENE TV#

Leslie Feist's own group, bearing her last name, has had a year packed with touring, network TV appearances and magazine shoots. Today the independent label is home to four bands that share their talent with Broken Social Scene. JOHNSON: To put that second album out, Kevin Drew and his friends launched Arts & Crafts Records. Heart is pounding in his chest (unintelligible). They wanted to distill the essence of epic rock into short, soulful pop tunes.īROKEN SOCIAL SCENE: (Singing) Well, he looks just like a son, looks just like you, but. Their sophomore album, 2003's "You Forgot It in People," fully captured the band's original musical vision. JOHNSON: When they could get away from their individual band commitments, Broken Social Scene's members went straight to the recording studio. So this started what became Broken Social Scene. And we had a bar called Ted's Wrecking Yard and we would do a lot of these shows where we'd say we'll never play the same song twice and-but it was fun. KEVIN DREW (Broken Social Scene): We put together this family and we started doing all these shows with whoever was in town would come and we would play. When those friends began building their own group, Drew borrowed talent from some of his city's best musical acts. He's been close to some of his band mates since childhood. Broken Social Scene co-founder Kevin Drew is part of that community. A lot of those musicians also play in an incestuous ring of bands that have shaped Toronto's thriving music scene. JOHNSON: The Broken Social Scene collective is made of more than a dozen artists who are always coming and going. FEIST: But then the rest of us come in, those doors that swing in and swing out, and then one of those old saloons need action, you know?īROKEN SOCIAL SCENE: (Singing).

feist broken social scene

They're the ones with the sleeves rolled up and the garters around their-and they're dealing the blackjack hands and stuff. LESLIE FEIST (Broken Social Scene): There's the brothel upstairs, there's the booze behind the counter, and it's being run by-the proprietors are the guys in Broken that are holding down the fort. Band mate Leslie Feist describes Broken Social Scene like a saloon in an old Western.

#FEIST BROKEN SOCIAL SCENE FULL#

With a horn section, a violinist, two full drum kits and a designated conductor, Broken Social Scene doesn't quite fit the traditional rock band mold.

feist broken social scene

Their latest CD is called simply "Broken Social Scene." NPR's Christopher Johnson reports. Since then, they've grown into an influential indie rock collective that's made three albums and done at least as many international tours. At the band's core are a few old friends who started Broken Social Scene four years ago. Their songs swell with sometimes more than 13 members playing orchestral rock 'n' roll. Toronto band Broken Social Scene is proof that any group is only as powerful as the sum of its parts.











Feist broken social scene