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(sandy) Alex G

at

Brudenell Social Club

Leeds

Monday 10th of February 2020

19:30

Sorry, This Event is in the past!

(sandy) Alex G Event Title Pic

(sandy) Alex G

Event Type

Genre : Music - General

Description

There's hardly a second when Alex Giannascoli's voice can't be heard in Walk Away, the opener of his latest album, House of Sugar. The distended, pitched-up wail that introduces the track gives way to cascading layers of his more familiar intonations. Someday I'm gonna walk away from you, he sings; not today. These are the song's only words, repeated again and again for more than four minutes. In the repetition, emphasis shifts from someday to not today" and back, leaving the listener in a space of uncertainty. It's in this space that Giannascolithe 26-year-old artist better known as (Sandy) Alex Glingers throughout the album's thirteen songs: between backwards and forwards, past and future, one voice and another. On House of Sugar, his third full-length for Domino and ninth overall, Alex inhabits a diverse range of musical and emotional points-of-view (often simultaneously), in turn illuminating the tension that hides in the shadow of desire.

Giannascoli began writing these songs in the fall of 2017, having just finished a tour for House of Sugar's acclaimed predecessor, Rocket, and moved into a new apartment in Philadelphia. Whereas with earlier efforts, such as 2011's self-released Winner or the landmark 2014 release DSU, he'd write numerous songs fairly quickly, with House of Sugar Giannascoli worked at a steadier pace, concentrating on fewer songs and laboring over each one more than before.

After building the tracks at home, recording most of the guitars, keyboards, and vocals himself, Giannascoli enlisted some recurring bandmates and collaborators to help realize further aspects of the album: Samuel Acchione's wailing electric guitar on Walk Away, John Heywood's bass underneath Taking, Tom Kelly's drums giving Hope its bounce, Molly Germer underscoring Southern Sky on violin. Throughout the process Giannascoli worked closely with Jacob Portrait, who mixed both Rocket and its predecessor, 2015's Beach Music, and here helped to balance each of House of Sugar's dense, multi-faceted tracks. As the product of extended focus and planning, House of Sugar emerges as Giannascoli's most meticulous, cohesive album yet: a statement of artistic purpose, showing off his ear for both persistent earworms and shifting textures.

Which is to say, cohesive doesn't imply that House of Sugar dispenses with the out-there sonic adventurism that's made previous (Sandy) Alex G records so singular. Giannascoli recorded with a clone of the Neumann U87 microphone, built by Tom Kellythe first time he'd ever used a microphone other than the Samson Q1U USB mic that he got as a teenager. The new mic, coupled with an updated version of Garageband that came with a replacement laptop, provided Giannascoli a new toolkit for home-recording, prompting him to analyze the types of sounds he'd been making and that he wanted to make. In addition to bolstering the rich, polished mix of its rock-oriented songs, the new equipment allowed for a broad range of unique technical experiments that provide each track emotional and tonal complexity. This includes not only the otherworldly vocals that haunt songs such as Walk Away, Taking, and Bad Man, but also the more subtle hums and echoes that texture Hope and Gretel, and the distorted soundscapes into which listeners of Sugar and Near are immersed.

Throughout, the multiplicity of Giannascoli's voice evokes the hybrid existence of a science-fiction creature, at once human and something else. Indeed, in many ways, hybridity defines House of Sugar. The lines between characters and narrators are perpetually blurry, allowing room for artist and listener alike to move through the songs, to access their shifting headspaces. On Southern Sky, we hear a voice other than Giannascoli's own: frequent collaborator Emily Yacina, who sang on Rocket's Bobby, among other (Sandy) Alex G songs. The pair's voices intertwine as they follow the track's meandering pathway. Its steady country-rock bounce belies the extent to which Southern Sky changes as it flows alonghow it starts with a discordant piano run and ends with the lilting strum of a single acoustic guitar, a disturbed (and unintentional) echo of Neil Young's Harvest Moon. The distinction between beginning and end, at first concealed by a tight composition, is emblematic of the way House of Sugar works as a whole: throughout the album Giannascoli makes you think that something is one way before revealing, often almost imperceptiblymaybe not until it's too latethat it's probably another.

The stakes are often high in this regard. The dramatic action pose depicted on the album's cover (as always, painted by Giannascoli's sister, Rachel) points to the feelings of precarity evoked within. Just as the figure skater looks poised to either succeed or fall, House of Sugar's characters are constantly teetering on the edge of extremes, approaching either bliss or violenceunless it's both at the same time. They're manipulated (Gretel) and manipulative (Crime); up in the sky (Sugar) and buried in the dirt (Bad Man). Caught in the ambiguous spaces of the songs, House of Sugar's characters are disposed toward the badMusic makes me wanna do bad things, sings Giannascoli on In My Armsbut seemingly reaching for the good. Or, are they? Could bad be good, sweet be sour? While each track hints at concrete situations derived from either Giannascoli's life or a covert array of literary and filmic sources, none excludes a host of oppositional possibilities that listeners can generate and regenerate themselves.

The album's final track, SugarHouse, opens with applause: it was recorded at a 2018 concert in St. Louis, with a saxophone overdubbed later, the first time Giannascoli has implemented a live recording on a studio album. (In 2018, though, he released a Live at Third Man Records LP.) A brooding, flowing anthem, SugarHouse shares its name with a casino not far from Giannascoli's home in Philadelphia; as the song unfolds, the casino emerges as a suggestive site for the album as a whole. Its first verse echoes the various moments when a House of Sugar protagonist realizes that highs are always temporary, that what seems sweet often isn't. SugarHouse is calling my bluff, Giannascoli sings. But, in the second verse, his characterunknown and brokennevertheless professes faith in where he is and who he's with. Nothing is definitive, but after thirteen songs of being split apart and spread around, through these relationships, in the House of Sugar, he might finally be put together again.

Brudenell Social Club

Venue Type

Social Club

Brudenell Social Club Profile Pic

Description

The Brudenell is a lively and fun loving venue that embraces music and art under a wide and diverse umbrella that has no boundaries.

Our open music policy believes in freedom and creation and holds the belief that music and expression provide useful social interaction.

It is a community ‘non profitmaking’ venue, that holds charitable status, based in Leeds 6. The Brudenell Social Club is owned by its members, run by its members, for its members.

The Brudenell is most famous for hosting secret gigs for bands like Franz Ferdinand and the Kaiser Chiefs. However, it has been a centrepiece of the Leeds music scene for a number of years, and hosts gigs most nights of the week, which are put on by a variety of local promoters.

33 Queens Road,

Burley,

Leeds,

West Yorkshire,

England,

LS6 1NY.


0113 275 2411

Parking AvailablePool TableDartboardLive Sports On TVAlcohol ServedReal Ale ServedOutside Seating

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