| Paul Smith |
Guitarist Duncan
Lloyd, keyboardist Lukas Wooller,
bassist Archis Tiku and drummer Tom English formed Maxïmo Park as an avant garde rock band in 2000 in Newcastle,
England. The band took its name from Máximo Gómez Park in Miami, Florida, where
many Cubans play dominos. At first a largely instrumental group, the four
founding members played small shows, including Manchester's 'In the City',
which showcases unsigned bands in the UK. In 2003, the original singers, Lloyd
and Tiku, sought to add a front man so they could on writing the songs. English's
then-girlfriend heard his friend Paul
Smith singing to Stevie Wonder's
"Superstition" at a karaoke night and recommended him. Smith previously
had played guitar with his twin sisters in the instrumental band Me and the Twins, but this karaoke
night was only the second time he had ever sung in public. The band members gave him demos of their songs and Smith joined Maxïmo
Park. Together, they moved away from instrumental and avant garde music and collaborated
on writing smart, sharply catchy songs inspired by 1980s British new wave bands
like the Jam, XTC, Wire, and the Smiths. Maxïmo Park has released five
studio albums; the most recent, Too Much
Information, was released in February 2014. The first two albums went gold
in the United Kingdom.
While popular in Great Britain, Maxïmo Park is relatively
unknown elsewhere. That made it surprising that the band would headline the
500-capacity Gramercy Theater
tonight. Ah, but during intermission everyone around me was speaking with
British accents. British expatriates who relocated to New York comprised at
least some of the light audience in the theater. Smith came on stage wearing a tweed-like
suit and pork-pie hat (he later took off the jacket but never the hat). The
band roared into "Give, Get, Take" from the band's current album.
While the album introduced a more electronic sound to the band's music, the
live performance retained the band's earlier guitar-based sound. From here on,
it was a trip back to about 1980. Maxïmo Park is a pop band and the sound all
evening was retro new wave. The beat frequently was too busy for dancing, but provided
plenty of bop for pogoing. The band was energetic, but no member more than Smith,
who paced, squirmed, and shook along with his microphone throughout the show.
All was going well until the speakers failed 11 songs into the set, during
"Leave This Island." The momentum cooled, Maxïmo Park took a brief
pause while the sound system was restored, and then plowed back into bouncy pop
music for another 11 songs. Song titles like "Brain Cells", "Hips
& Lips", "Books from Boxes", "Drinking Martinis"
and "Girls Who Play Guitars" explored a wide range of clever lyrics. Some songs were more serious than others, including "Her Name Was Audre," about the
late Audre Lorde, a
Caribbean-American writer, radical feminist and civil rights activist. Maxïmo
Park may have a serious side, but tonight's concert was all about hip wiggles
and shakes.
Visit Maxïmo Park at www.maximopark.com.
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