Bedouin Soundclash - Cedar Street Courtyard (SXSW 2009; March 20)

text: Nicole Kristek / photos: Nicole Kristek

Our image viewer requires Macromedia Flash. Get Macromedia Flash. If you have Flash installed, click to view gallery

Despite the fact that the line to get into Cedar Street Courtyard extended down the block, and the music to me brought back memories of my instruction in the proper way to “skank,” I was disappointed to see that the boys of Bedouin Soundclash seemed to have more energy and bounce than the crowd. While folks seemed to be enjoying the music, I couldn’t help but lament that people seemed to drastically overlook the that fact that what the “rude looking boys” on stage (in black with sharp glasses, hats and some checkered bass straps) play is rooted in some serious dance music.  And by dance music I mean a blend of pop music you might hear on your 90’s station that you hate to admit you liked because it was so freakin’ catchy smashed (play here on “soundclash” in case you didn’t catch that) with the ever-danceable dub and reggae rhythms that I find it almost impossible to resist or at least transferring my weight to.

Bedouin Soundclash, as their name may or may not suggest, is a collection of various influences, blending saxophone, trumpet, bass guitar and drums all into a happy sounding mix of upbeat dub heavy pop. I especially enjoyed the subtle use of muted trumpet, and the fact that bassist Eon Sinclair carried the melody on a number of tunes.

Most of the vocals were handled by guitarist Jay Malinowski though he had some nice vocal harmonies with Sinclair and at times the rest of the band, which they chose to smartly employ to draw the audience in at the end of their set, beginning a cover of “Stand by me” mostly sans instruments with the crowd as the accompaniment. While those who are new to Bedouin Soundclash might be tempted to relate them to Vampire Weekend I will point out that they come by their African influences in a bit of a different path (and earlier), with Bedouin Soundclash representing a fusion of various soul, reggae and ska influences rather than the new afro-pop that Vampire Weekend echoes.  Bedouin Soundclash’s history of working with various worldly musicians is reflected in their dub heavy rhythms and can be found on several of their albums such as Street Gospels or Sounding a Mosaic, which feature guest vocals by Vernon Buckley of the Maytones. 

DOWNLOAD: Bedouin Soundclash - Walls Falls Down (MP3) or Follow us for more Bedouin Soundclash MP3s (Twitter)

Bedouin Soundclash review to your liking? You'll sweat:

0 comments thus far ...

leave us a comment:





Concerts We Recommend

Morrissey + Doll and the Kicks - 11/30

Roseland Theater

Portland Cello Project - 12/4

Aladdin Theater

Passion Pit - 12/7

The Crystal Ballroom

Blind Pilot + Laura Veirs & the Hall of Flames 12/2

Neumos

Brett Dennen + Grace Potter and the Nocturnals - 12/6

Moore Theatre

Really interesting read. Thanks for sharing this.

by Hawaii Wedding Package on Mon Nov 30, 2009 at 01.03 am from the entry: Morbid Beauty - Thoughts from an East Coast Transplant in Tacoma

Resources like the one you mentioned here will be very useful to me! I will post a link to this page on my blog. I am sure my visitors will find that very useful..
Regards,
accident claim company

by Mark on Sun Nov 29, 2009 at 12.49 pm from the entry: True Roo: Bonnaroo Friday Report (June 12, 2009)

WOWOWOWOWOWOWOWOWOWOWOW

by sincerious on Sun Nov 29, 2009 at 11.28 am from the entry: Ginuwine's "Pony" Deconstructed Through Dubstep (Remix)

LOL I love the accent.

by Vicente E. on Sun Nov 29, 2009 at 04.26 am from the entry: We Were Promised Jetpacks - "These Four Walls" - Buy It

Chopin and Òlafur Arnalds aren’t even really worth a comparison. Their music is nothing alike.

by sylviadarling on Sat Nov 28, 2009 at 07.22 pm from the entry: Òlafur Arnalds - "Found Songs" - Borrow It

glad everybody is diggin’ it.  And Dre Ja Vu, send us your mixes when you’re done. If they are good we’ll post one.

by Colin on Sat Nov 28, 2009 at 05.49 pm from the entry: Ginuwine's "Pony" Deconstructed Through Dubstep (Remix)

There was definitely a guy surfing in a wheelchair. I tried to capture it with my camera, but it was a total blur. He came over the barricade 3 times. The first time, he came over AFTER his wheelchair.

by Jill Rachel on Fri Nov 27, 2009 at 03.24 pm from the entry: Motorhead + Reverend Horton Heat + Nashville Pussy - Showbox Sodo (Seattle, WA; Oct. 02,2009)

Melophobe is a concert review and concert photography website reviewing indie-rock, folk, hip-hop and more. Below are addresses to which you can send inquiries:

Advertising

advertising@melophobe.com

Editorial

editor@melophobe.com

Website

webmaster@melophobe.com

melophobe sponsors
Connect To melophobe