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The French Exit



Last Updated: 11/30/2009

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Status: Single
City: New York City
State: New York
Country: US
Signup Date: 12/31/2007

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Friday, May 15, 2009 

Another amazing review from our #1 non-biased fan, Alan from Lucid Culture:


http://lucidculture.wordpress.com/2009/05/15/concert-review-the-french-exit-and-more-live-in-nyc-51309/

Monday, April 06, 2009 
All 8 songs from our recent performance on 92.1. WPTS University of Pittsburgh are now up for your listening pleasure.

Once again, big thanks to WPTS and an even bigger thank you to YOU for tuning in.

T.F.E.
Tuesday, November 18, 2008 

Thank you very much to Alan from Lucid Culture for the following review of our Mercury Lounge show.

The entire review can be found here:

http://lucidculture.wordpress.com/2008/11/17/concert-review-the-brixton-riot-and-the-french-exit-at-the-mercury-lounge-nyc-111608/

(I must preface the review by defending the soundman. We were having technical difficulty with the pickup in the acoustic guitar. The soundman was absolutely on top of everything, worked extremely fast and was very patient with us. Plus he had such a great sense of humor. But, the reviewer would not have known of that problem. Anyway...)

"If Tonic was still open, the French Exit would be headlining Saturday nights there. Sadly, that was 2006 – a lot has happened in this city since. There's been a big buzz about this band lately, not just because of frontwoman Mia Wilson's cheekbones or the distant, offhandedly menacing allure she cultivates. Like the band before them, they kept the ever-growing crowd rapt throughout their set of long, hypnotic noir anthems that sometimes bordered on goth (but in a good way - like Joy Divison rather than Nine Inch Nails).

Drummer Bryan Sargent began with brushes, switched to sticks and by the end of the show was playing with mallets. Like Jim White of the Dirty Three, he's an uncommonly musical player: throughout the show, he wasn't content simply to keep time, sometimes pushing the numerous dynamic shifts, sometimes following them with deftly placed, counterintuitive accents. Henri Harps began on guitar, flavoring the songs with eerie, minimalistically twangy spaghetti western licks when he wasn't blasting out chords lush with reverb and distortion before switching to bass and then back again. Wilson began on piano, switched to acoustic guitar (battling all kinds of sonic difficulties that could have been fixed had the soundman known how to do it) and then went back to keys for the remainder of the set. Vocally, Cat Power is the obvious influence, except that Wilson sings completely without affectation – in other words, she sings, she doesn't seh-heng. Like the preceding band, the French Exit also have excellent lyrics. Wilson projects them with the same raw, wounded, vengeful authority as the great blueswomen of the 20s and 30s: she speaks to anyone who's ever been done wrong.

Their first two songs built from creepy, minor-key intros from Wilson's piano and then her guitar. The third song of the set was long and ominous over a repetitive three-chord descending progression: "I think I have seen this coming," was Wilson's lyrical mantra. They picked up the pace for a moment after that. "What I lack in speed I make up for in cruelty," Wilson warned, "I don't care what happens next, just don't sleep near me…I'm rejecting them before they get me."

A fast one in 6/8 maintained the bitter edge: "It was a slap in the face, can't believe that's what you dragged home after me," Wilson wailed, "See you've found yourself a true fan who loves you like a child." They closed with their best song, a magnificent new one titled Bad Sign that built to a towering, symphonic crescendo, Wilson expertly laying down layer after layer of piano and string synth loops as Sargent played big, beautiful cymbal splashes with his mallets. What a viscerally intense way to end what what's been the best week of concerts in New York all year long."