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| Raphaelle Standell-Preston |
Vocalist
Raphaelle Standell-Preston
and drummer
Austin Tufts first met in
school in Calgary, Canada, when they were 12; they were comparing belly buttons
in the long-jump pit. They had previously seen each other in the school orchestra;
he played drums, she played clarinet. A later conversation over a blueberry
muffin in a high school cafeteria, prompted the formation of a quintet called
the
Neighbourhood Council, later to
be renamed
Braids (often stylized as
BRAIDS). Tufts has said that the
original name was "pretty terrible" and that the name change in 2006 to
Braids reflected the band's "interwoven and interlaced" style. The
band had early success backing
Standell-Preston
in a songwriting contest hosted by the Calgary Folk Music Festival. Braids
began receiving international attention with its debut album, 2011's
Native Speaker, which was shortlisted
for the 2011 Polaris Music Prize. The art rock band's second and most recent album,
Flourish // Perish, was released in
2013. Braids is currently based in Montreal and is now a trio consisting of Standell-Preston
on vocals, synthesizers and guitar,
Tufts
on drums and
Taylor Smith on
synthesizers.
Opening for
Wye Oak at
Webster Hall's
Grand
Ballroom tonight, Braids' music was bundled up in layers. Largely relying
on synthesizer tweaks and progressive percussion, the trio produced a soft and
dreamy yet intricate collage of sound that owed a debt to shoegaze bands of the
1990s. The largely electronic music was a mesmerizing and experimental haze,
manipulating sounds and complicating rhythms to the point where when
Standell-Preston was bouncing at her synthesizer, one could wonder which of the
polyrhythms she was grooving on. Meanwhile, her gentle pillow-talk vocals
delivered sometimes graphic lyrics in feather-light atmospheric and ambient gentility
somewhere between curiosity and trance. Snippets of synth lines and percussion ricocheted
behind her smooth vocals. The meticulous chill-wave architecture of the
compositions was expansive, as rhythms were deconstructed, looped and re-sculpted
into a balanced soundscape between chaos and recreation. Braids’ eccentric music
fell into a whimsical weirdness that was part wonder and part perplexing.
Visit Braids at www.braidsmusic.com.
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