Tag: Eat Your Own Ears

  • Field Day review: ‘a fitting end to a triumphant decade’

    Field Day review: ‘a fitting end to a triumphant decade’

    Soaked:
    Merry dance: two festivalgoers combat the rain. Photograph: Carolina Faruolo

    In the ten years since Field Day first pitched up in East London the festival has gone from strength to strength, growing in size and status, but never failing to live up to its reputation for fantastic line-ups.

    It’s a humid start to Saturday, but an afternoon downpour brings festival-goers running for cover in the Shacklewell Arms tent where Meilyr Jones is thrashing about in time with his baroque-pop stompers.

    When the rain clears it’s a slippery walk over to Skepta on the main stage, and judging by the state of a few of mucky bottoms the mud has already claimed its first victims.

    Aside from some initial technical issues, Skepta plays a blinder. From opener ‘Konnichiwa’, the mosh pit is heaving, singing every word in perfect synchronicity, and ‘Shutdown’ threatens crowd collapse.

    Main stage follow-ups Deerhunter seem in high spirits as they crack on with a varied setlist from records old and new, including ‘Dream Captain’ and ‘Snakeskin’.

    By tea time the Moth Club tent is bursting with bodies getting their early-evening boogie on to Ata Kak, and as twilight settles over Resident Advisor, Holly Herndon’s set is in full flow.

    With a moving dedication to Chelsea Manning, it’s a compulsive, moreish performance from Herndon, full of bass and hungering voices.

    James Blake’s headline slot manages to maintain the songwriter’s trademark intimacy – no mean feat given the size of the crowd that has gathered to watch him.

    It’s a quiet start with ‘Limit To Your Love’ and ‘Retrograde’ both making early appearances, but the tranquillity is soon overhauled by the arrival of Trim for an intense performance of ‘Confidence Boost’, before the set winds down into a rapturous ‘The Wilhelm Scream’.

    James Blake - Carolina Faruolo
    Headliner: James Blake. Photograph: Carolina Faruolo

    By Sunday afternoon, the park has been transformed into a mire. Where yesterday trainers and plimsolls were de rigeur, there’s been a clear shift into the Wellington boot camp.

    There’s much squelching afoot at a frenetic Parquet Courts show on the main stage where Andrew Savage’s staccato bark manages to shake some life into the rain-fuddled field, and over at the Shacklewell Arms, Cass McCombs’ stylistic shapeshifting manages to draw out some lunchtime sunshine.

    Fat White Family achieve an incendiary blowout, cleaving their way through ‘Whitest Boy On The Beach’ ‘Is It Raining In Your Mouth’ and ‘Touch The Leather’ like a pneumatic drill through concrete.

    A bellowing Lias Saoudi plays master of ceremonies over a flurry of dancing, shrieking and ripped t-shirts, in nothing but a pair of navy y-fronts.

    Brian Jonestown Massacre’s set turns similarly surreal when Newcombe’s desire to hear the crowd shout “Pigfucker” in unison brings out a rainbow across the stage.

    The Avalanches was a rather disappointing affair. What was billed as a show turns out to be a DJ set during which more than a few confused audience members can be heard asking when The Avalanches are supposed to be on. Air on the other hand are sublime.

    Godin and Dunckel are on fine form, playing an intoxicating mix of their essential tracks, with ‘Playground Love’ and an elaborate ‘La Femme D’Argent’ inciting a head-spinning euphoria that could turn bones to butter.

    Sunday night headliner PJ Harvey is every bit the spectacle, bedecked in black feathers and backed by a nine-man band.

    Harvey plays some truly transcendent renderings of ‘Down By The Water’ and ‘River Anacostia’ before bringing the weekend to a thundering close with a glorious encore of ‘A Perfect Day Elise’.

    It’s a fitting end to a triumphant decade for Field Day, and a great foot upon which to start the next ten years.

    PJ Harvey. Photograph: Carolina Faruolo
    PJ Harvey. Photograph: Carolina Faruolo
  • Field Day 2015 – review: festival fun under East London skies

    Until next year: Patti Smith at Field Day. Photograph: Carolina Faruolo
    Patti Smith at Field Day. Photograph: Carolina Faruolo

    Tights were joyfully stripped from sun-starved legs, sleeves rolled up and dungarees donned as a week-long smudgy cloud hanging over East London made way for glorious blue sky to welcome Field Day to Victoria Park.

    Acoustic treats greeted punters as they flowed into the festival to the pacey parp of trumpets and trombones from local lads Hackney Colliery Band, kicking things off on the main stage. They were later followed by father and son duo Toumani and Sidiki Diabaté from Mali, playing the kora – a traditional West African instrument.

    Glamorous hordes swanned by as a couple lay face down on the grass near the stage, their cheeks pressed against a cling-wrapped copy of Saturday’s Guardian, the sound of the world’s best harp players the perfect lullaby for a quick power-nap.

    So far, so sedate. But as the sun began to set as dancing feet tossed dust into the air. Some reckless rapping from teenage hip-hop trio RatKing, who have been touring with Run the Jewels higher up on the Field day bill, got bodies shifting on the i-D Mix stage.

    Ratking
    Ratking (not to be confused with Rat Boy, another Field Day act). Photograph: Ella Jessel

    Sneaking under the awnings of the Shacklewell Arms tent came the bewitching vocals of Tei Shi, moniker of New York-based but Bogota-begot singer/songwriter Valerie Teicher. Her atmospheric electronic R&B left the crowd shouting for more.

    But as with previous years, bigger acts seemed to struggle with sound. In the Crack tent, Chet Faker could hardly be heard, though the crowd seemed more than happy to sing blithely along to ‘No Diggedy’ all the same.

    Punters crammed the main outdoor stage eager to hear Caribou – the perfect choice for the headline slot. But the sound on the Eat Your Own Ears stage was also weak. “I feel like I’m watching this on TV”, one chap said to his friend, staring glumly up at the video screens beaming images of crowd-surfers and girls hoisted on shoulders.

    Sunday

    If Saturday night was all right for partying, then Field Day Sunday put music firmly back in focus. A more seasoned festival crowd gathered to see the likes of Patti Smith, Ride and Mac Demarco on the main stage, with the weather gods once again looking kindly on proceedings.

    Feeling disorientated in your local park by the array of tents, stalls and stages is a strange sensation at first, though wandering between them all to discover new acts whilst grazing on some of the stellar street food offerings is no bad thing.

    Gulf were an early find, a psychedelic guitar-pop group from Liverpool playing to a modest crowd in the Moth Club tent. For a new band, festivals are like a shop window, a place to find new fans, and Gulf’s lilting, melancholic melodies and full-throttle guitars are sure to have won them friends.

    Walking between stages it was surprisingly easy to be distracted by the sight of adults sack-racing, or in the words of the bawdy announcer, showing “athletic prowess in the sack”. Silly but actually rather fun, the ‘Village Mentality’ area is an enduring feature of Field Day that makes it stand out from its festival brethren.

    Lounging
    Napping: A couple snooze while revellers flit between the bands. Photograph: Ella Jessel

    Packing out the Verity tent were Leopold and His Fiction, who wowed the afternoon crowd with a high tempo set of vintage rock, complete with singing drummer. “This song is about Detroit,” declared frontman Daniel James, the crowd roaring their approval. “Has anyone ever been to Detroit?” he followed up, to a more muted response – though enthusiasm for this all-American blend of Detroit rock and soul was well placed.

    In an early evening slot, Patti Smith and band played Horses in full, with punk poet Smith showing she’s lost none of her energy or stage presence in the 40 years since the album was released. From the snarled opening line of “Jesus died for somebody’s sins, but not mine,” it was clear Smith meant business.

    Smith railed against governments and corporations and implored everyone to be free, to whoops and cheers. By the end, audience members were calling out the names of lost loved ones during an emotional rendition of ‘Elegie’, dedicated to all those people “who we have loved and are no longer with us”.

    Those who left after Patti Smith must have felt there was no room for improvement, but the remaining faithful were rewarded with a serene set from headliners Ride. Playing songs from across their four albums and various EPs, the reformed cult act and original ‘shoegazers’ have lost none of their intensity, their guitar ‘wall of sound’ thankfully still intact.

    With cruel punctuality the curfew was reached. Happy, sunburnt and a little worse for wear the crowd filed out, leaving only glimpses of grass under a carpet of plastic cups, broken sunglasses and crushed cans of Red Stripe.

    Could the sound have been better? Probably. But Field Day has all the elements for a great party and emerged with its reputation for devising an eclectic line-up unscathed, though a few decibels short of fever pitch.

    http://fielddayfestivals.com/news/

     

  • Ears to the ground: an interview with Field Day founder Tom Baker

    Eat Your Own Ears founder Tom Baker
    Tom Baker of live music promoters Eat Your Own Ears

    The health of London’s live music scene is mainly a reflection of the calibre and variety of its artists but those who facilitate that experience deserve some credit too.

    Tom Baker is the mastermind behind Eat Your Own Ears, a company he founded in 2001 that has become a major force in promoting live music.

    After starting the company in 2001, he help the likes of Fourtet, Hot Chip and Florence and the Machine in their early years, and in 2007 found Field Day, the annual music festival that sees 30,000 people trek to Victoria Park each year.

    His secret, it seems, is to take your chances when they come. After graduating in arts management, he moved to London to work at the Scala in Kings Cross. It was one day while flyering that fortune struck.

    “A friend who worked at 93 Feet East on Brick Lane asked me if I’d thought about doing my own night,” he explains. “He offered me the venue and said he’d help if I came up with some ideas.”

    The next step involved putting his university research into action. Tom’s dissertation had been on independent versus major record labels, which gave him the idea to approach labels like Domino, Rough Trade and Warp with the idea of putting on nights where a new artist would be presented alongside the label’s more established artists.

    And this link to artists and labels remains, even though the company is much bigger.

    “It’s about the music we like and are passionate about and about working with artists we’ve worked with over time and finding and developing new ones,” he says.

    Such an attitude would stand any potential festival organiser in good stead, but the roots of Field Day are somewhat more idealistic.

    “It was inspired by an event called Return of the Rural,” he says. “Me, my brother and partner are all from Somerset, and at the time of Foot and Mouth we thought we’d put together an event that celebrates the countryside. We did it in the 291 Gallery in Hackney and it was a mixture of dance music, live bands and a ceilidh band.”

    Anyone who’s experienced Field Day will recognise the village fête in an urban setting vibe. The festival has grown year-on-year, and in 2014 will become a two-day event.

    “The Saturday will be the full onslaught with multiple stages and a mixture of dance music and live bands, new bands and world music, and the Sunday will be a scaled down version that’s accessible for people who have to go to work the next day,” he says.

    It promises to be a special year, with Pixies to headline the first ever Field Day Sunday and melancholic electronica masters Meteronomy confirmed as Saturday’s main act.

    Baker adds: “We’ve taken our time to take it to a second day until we felt comfortable we could do it and until we were sure we’d found the right act to launch it with.”