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| Andy Hull |
Andy Hull was feeling
increasingly alienated and frustrated during his high school years in an
Atlanta suburb that he spent his senior year studying at home. While home, he
also wrote and recorded a full length indie rock album, and then built a band, Manchester Orchestra, around his songs
in 2004. He named the band after Manchester, a musically prolific city in
England (The Hollies, the Bee Gees, and Herman's Hermits during the British Invasion of the 1960s; the Smiths, the Buzzcocks, the Fall, New Order, and Joy Division during the late 1970s new wave; the Stone Roses and Oasis during the post-punk years later on). Manchester Orchestra is
composed of Hull on vocals and rhythm guitar, lead guitarist Robert McDowell,
keyboardist/percussionist Chris Freeman,
bassist Andy Prince and drummer Tim Very. Manchester Orchestra has
released several EPs and four studio albums; Cope was released on April 1, 2014.
Manchester Orchestra headlined at the 3,000-capacity Terminal 5 tonight, demonstrating how
the band's popularity is steadily increasing. The band opened with "Shake
It Out" from the Mean Everything to
Nothing album, then "Pensacola" from the Simple Math album, and maintained the intense wall of sound from
there on. Throughout the set, songs built dynamic crescendos that stabilized to
a hypnotic point, then built further up. A decrescendo would often follow when
the vocals reappeared for a verse or chorus. The song "42,"
originally recorded by Bad Books, a
side project featuring Hull and Kevin
Devine, tonight's opening act, remained soft from beginning to end. "Colly
Strings," a song wrote to his wife before they married, might have
qualified for an endearing moment. Many songs, including "Everything to
Nothing," mixed the soft with the bombastic. During one of the encore
songs, Devine came onstage to share lead vocals with Hull in a seven-minute
version of "Where Have You Been?" That song, perhaps more than any
other, nailed the band's signature crescendo-decrescendo dynamic. This is how
the band's sound has evolved; while the vocals were often light and airy, the
music often brutally pounded the head. On albums, Hull's lyrics are
self-questioning and perhaps even seem to seek a spiritual center, but in
concert the lyrics were largely indecipherable. Instead, the band fed its
audience blast after blast of sonic boom, occasionally propelled by guitar
duels between Hull and McDowell. Tonight, the band was less Pink Floyd rock and more Bad Brains mosh.
Visit Manchester Orchestra at www.themanchesterorchestra.com.

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