Showing posts with label Breton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Breton. Show all posts

24 December 2012

Albums of 2012 // 20-11

Into the top 20, from Kendrick Lamar's opus and its Janet Jackson sampling Poetic Justice, via a quartet of Pitchfork Paris standouts through to Angel Olsen's otherworldly modern folk. Oh, and the 30 minute video of Dan Deacon at SXSW below is insanely good. What a guy.

20. Kendrick Lamar - 'good kid, m.A.A.d city'



19. Dean Blunt & Inga Copeland - 'Black Is Beautiful'



18. Breton - 'Other People's Problems'



17. Purity Ring - 'Shrines'



16. John Talabot - 'fin'



15. Dan Deacon - 'America'



14. DIIV - 'Oshin'



13. Gang Colours - 'The Keychain Collection'



12. Tame Impala - 'Lonerism'



11. Angel Olsen - 'Half Way Home'



17 April 2012

Breton // Corsica Studios, London

Breton
Corsica Studios, London
Wednesday March 28, 2012


There's no place like home. In the world of Spielberg, Disney, Dorothy, Last of the Summer Wine and KFC adverts, we know this to be gospel. Something of the same heartwarming self-assurance affects Breton at Corsica Studios, having in their own words gotten used to playing venues "where nobody knows us" - lending a celebratory air to the evening's entertainment that lacked only a 'Welcome Home Boys' banner and some bunting.

Breton have been steadily collecting column inches over the past 12 months or so for the collaborative audio-visual approach to their craft, one grounded in dark synths and monstrous, post-rock riffs. To date, though, these column inches have largely been in the domain of the bedroom blogger or record floor pamphlet. This packed-out show and the release of their debut LP 'Other People's Problems', however, are the stuff of the nationals.

The brooding intensity of Breton's music tonight could have come across as impenetrable. Edward The Confessor, a stuttering, combative assault, is set to a backdrop montage of urban decline, Roman Rappak's accusatory poetry delivered while stalking the stage. The rest of the band's backing incantations make for an oppressive live experience. Isolating, then, you'd think, if it weren't for the playful mid-song banter and grounding in gaffer tape bass repairs which reflect a genuine exuberance in their performance tonight.



From here, the set really kicks on. In Electrician, Breton have found a powerfully addictive Vek-like hook to accompany the heavy beats, which gets the shoulder-to-shoulder crowd collectively swaying, if not quite dancing. Jostle verges on the type of looped Eurodance you may have heard through Faliraki club toilet doors as you're puking up the last of your Reef, but it soon evolves into a sort of tropical hardcore, with Rappak bent double in his earnest delivery, bringing to mind the ever exuberant Ed MacFarlane in doing so.

The show closes out with a rapid rendition of the rave-rock Episodes, Breton's Hummer, a track which similarly failed to make the debut album cut but makes for a limb-flailingly dangerous live injection. Like Foals, Breton's reputation for cultured craft combined with a frenetic live experience will undoubtedly see them spring from South London - and mean they shouldn't have too many problems playing where nobody knows them in the future.

words: Andy Porter

Breton's debut album Other People's Problems is out now on Fat Cat Records.

11 September 2011

Breton // The Commission

South London collective of film and music makers Breton have remixed the likes of Local Natives and Chapel Club, toured alongside the recently out of sight but never out of mind Tom Vek, and over the past year have released a series of inspired EPs of atmospheric trip-hop and oppressive post rock, with electronic, occasionally dubby overtones.  

The Commission announces sees the band coming out of the Lab and readying the release of their debut LP with a slower tempo but equally enthralling beats, plus some stunning visuals from collaborator Stuart Sinclair. Check out the video and an early favourites of ours The Well and December below.



DECEMBER by bretonlabs 


BRETON_ The Well by youWILLBEfollowing