Monday, March 9, 2009

I Can't Hate Lark

In terms of popular culture, watching the audience at Burn, watching Lark, is the same kind of fascination I feel driving past a car crash. Lark and the Audience are two different things though. “She’s creepy in a hot kinda, I mean, Hot in a creepy kinda way” says my temporary sidekick, but I can’t hear her, I’m being hit by successive shockwaves of clean treble, curving bass riffs, thinking “Why won’t Inge look at me?”

There are three words I have sworn to avoid when talking about Lark. Aural, Cinematic, Operatic. Also I have sworn to not use any puns on the word ear, like eargasm. Can you tell, building up to this gig, I have been silently prejudging them?

All of these ideas are over used in this context and not entirely accurate about the battering ram force of them live. On your sound system, in your car, at home, in the garden, in the Goth crack den, Lark can get a backgroundy, a bit, sorta, progressive electronic rock, Lark Live are a total experience. Greater than the sum of its parts. One of those parts is Inge throwing hand shapes, so very Elizabeth Frazer, in a Slayer t-shirt. Another part is Fuzzy rocking out the bass, the guy with the long hands flipping switches, flipping to percussion. Another part is drums under the force of the sounds, Inge rocking her hips as she holds gently her hands on her chest, forcing out operatic scatting, making the emo boys stop questioning their sexuality, to backing tracks. There is something cinematic in the experience. Scanning the full crowd, sweat is dripping down from the ceiling under the low beams. Crisp sound you can feel driving through you make for a more physical than aural performance. If only Lark had melodies, they would be the water shed in electronic Goth, and who would want that.

It’s easy to maintain an Ironic distance. The crowd takes four songs to warm up to them; most of the pre-gig chatter has been on Inge’s hotness. But Lark take no prisoners, you either join or you die (well, leave the room, really). Sure enough there are many takers on the join option and the force of Lark moves through the crowd, moving the crowd. I am standing on the side, close at the speakers, feeling it physically, watching the performance, somehow thinking this is more like a play than a live band, so into it, yet some how not drawn totally in, overtaken by the blast and complexity of pure sounds, standing outside the fourth wall. And then it breaks. Lark leave the stage and the crowd, distant, are now asking, shouting, actually breaking their Goth personas and screaming for more. It makes you wonder why Lark are not reforming permanently. Almost shyly they re-take the stage, the performance it seems is over and Lark relax into just rocking out and they proceed to tear me a new ear hole.

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