Music Hall of Williamsburg
The Sounds

The Sounds

Natalia Kills, Limousines, Kids At The Bar (DJing between sets)

Wed, November 2, 2011

Doors: 6:30 pm / Show: 7:30 pm

Music Hall of Williamsburg

Brooklyn, NY

$22.50 advance / $25 day of show

This event is 16 and over

The Sounds
The Sounds
They‟ve blasted past the decade mark, released three acclaimed albums, and indisputably owned more than a thousand shows in over 25 countries. By now, people know: When it comes to sassy, confident, feel-good rock ‟n‟ roll Sweden‟s The Sounds are the gold standard. Even as they‟ve evolved markedly since their 2002 breakthrough debut, Living In America, the Malmö-based quintet has remained true to their New Wave soul, delivering that perfect mix of sass and smarts, old and new, electric and electronic every time. Even through label shakeups and grueling tour schedules, The Sounds have been remarkably reliable, but when it came time to make their fourth album, Something To Die For, they realized it was time for a major change.
“We‟ve grown so much together and we know exactly what we want,” says Felix Rodriguez, the group‟s resident rock star, guitarist, and one of the main songwriters. “So why hire other people? This is the first time we‟ve produced an album ourselves and it was an amazing experience. We are the ones that know each other best.” While The Sounds‟ last two albums – Dying To Say This To You (2006) and Crossing The Rubicon (2009) – were recorded Stateside with a handful of talented producers on board (including Jeff Saltzman, Mark Saunders, James Iha, and Adam Schlesinger), Something To Die For is one hundred percent The Sounds. Not only did the band produce the album themselves, but they wrote and recorded it in their very own studio over much of 2010.
“It took discipline,” says Maja Ivarsson, the towheaded vocal vamp of the band, “but the sound we got was exactly what we‟d been looking for, and never found, at other studios. Something kinda harsh and a little cold – it‟s hard to put into words, but here we were, in our own place, listening back to what we‟d recorded, and we‟re like, „This is it!‟” From opener “It‟s So Easy,” the difference is palpable. With four on the floor, the band bangs out a pulsing track that goes from ominous to blindingly bright as it approaches the transcendent “Dance With The Devil.” Here, Maja promises to “conquer our planet with dance,” and with anthemic, electro-fueled tracks like “Better Off Dead” and “Yeah Yeah Yeah,” The Sounds may do just that.
“We‟ve been interested in electronic music from the beginning,” says Jesper Anderberg, keyboardist, guitarist and other main writer. “That‟s actually why a lot of us started playing music, and we wanted to emphasize that a bit more this time.” When most of the group came together in 1998 as high school students in Helsingborg, they were “club kids” says Felix. Rounded out by bassist Johan Bengtsson and drummer Fredrik Blond, The Sounds have always displayed a healthy respect for bombastic synths and propulsive beats, but on Something To Die For, the feeling is bigger, broader and bolder. Of course, the same could be said about the band‟s rocking side.
Songs like “Diana” show off The Sounds‟ undeniable penchant for playful post-punk, while “The No No Song” is pure rock-pop rave-up, with Maja spitting vitriol through a vicious sneer: “It didn’t matter to you when it felt so right /And now you lost it all, well you’re not so bright.” All of it comes together perfectly on the titular song and album centerpiece, “Something To Die For” where, over the course of five and a half minutes, Jarre-like atmosphere dissolves into a speaker-crushing thump that climaxes in a winning collision of red hot guitars and icy keyboards. “It‟s all about passion and dedication,” says Maja. “That‟s what the title means -- it‟s something to be proud of, something to stand up for ... something to die for.”
After all of this fabulous bluster, Something To Die For comes to a surprisingly quiet close with “Wish You Were Here.” Over a rolling, folksy acoustic guitar, Maja coos, “Give me your hand and we‟ll go somewhere.” The truth is, The Sounds had us in their palms from the very first note.
Natalia Kills
Natalia Kills
Sex. Love. Control. Vanity.

Lipstick. Lies. Tears. Tragedy.

Pretty simple plot lines, really. Or not. Just ask anyone who's followed the first season of Natalia Kills' self-produced "Love, Kills xx" episodic series - a surreal blend of dream sequences, free associative song fragments, and pure femme fatale poetry that'd leave Quentin Tarantino feeling a bit flushed.

"Some girls want to be a princess when they grow up," explains Natalia. "I wanted to be in a bad bitch girl gang."

She also wanted to be a pitch-dark pop star in the time-honored tradition of Kate Bush and Depeche Mode. So to strike a balance between it all, Natalia—a native of England's rugged Bradford area — left school and moved to London alone to pursue her desire to creatively express herself through music and film at just 14. After 4 successful years on prime time BBC television and radio, and several songs in box office film sound tracks, she set out on a mission to combine her love of music, film and the stage into one frame. Her initial songwriting forays were to develop into the pop gravitas of Natalia Kills' solo material - from the creeping keys and whip-cracking breaks of "Zombie" to the heaven-sent harmonies and Eurythmics-like head-rush of "Mirrors."

"I'm really influenced by the way music is applied to films, because it creates drama and suspense," says Natalia. "If you mute a film, you don't know when the
killer is coming and without that tension there is no feeling of curiosity or fear. But when you have the pulse of the music, it provokes an emotion. That's what I'm inspired by—creating a full-on experience."

And since "Love, Kills xx" is like a backstage pass to Natalia's restless mind, the artist/actress has created an entirely different film as an extension of her debut album, Perfectionist. Co-directed by the same French filmmaker as Love Kills (Guillaume Doubet), it's the perfect pairing for an album that features such Technicolor producers as Fernando Garibay (U2, Snoop Dogg, Britney Spears), Jeff Bhasker (Kanye West, Jay-Z, Alicia Keys), Ron "Neffu" Feemster (Dr Dre, Michael Jackson), Akon and Cherrytree's label boss and Lady Gaga-collaborator Martin "Cherry Cherry Boom Boom" Kierszenbaum (who has also worked with t.A.T.u., Frankmusik and Far East Movement) A-list assistance aside, Natalia's ultimate vision shapes the direction and sound of her debut album, Perfectionist. "Good producers find a way of enhancing an artist," says Natalia. "They don't give you their musical sound, they give you your own.' My album was definitely a joint experience of creativity."

That is exactly what made will.i.am want to sign Natalia to his label jointly with Cherrytree: the shape-shifting performer/writer/director that is Natalia Kills knows
exactly what she wants, whether it's a stone-faced "Love Kills xx" scene or an all-out assault on what it means to be an all or nothing pop star.

"I like the way radio music used to be—really direct, wild and expressive," says Natalia. "It wasn't like ‘I love you baby' or ‘let's party all night'; it was songs like Queen's ‘Love Kills.' She continues, "You know, ‘Drills you through the heart/Scars you from the start'? Artists used to say whatever they were feeling. There was a real freedom of expression. And you know what? It's important to be brave in music, because if you can't be brave there, where can you?"
Kids At The Bar (DJing between sets)
Kids At The Bar (DJing between sets)
Hailing from Oklahoma City, Kids At The Bar is the musical project of Producer/DJ duo Chad "Rad" Raunborg and Matt Buckley. Since their debut remix for friends Trash Yourself, Kids at the Bar have quickly become one of the hottest emerging acts in electronic music. In 2010 alone, they have played SXSW, Burning Man, booked a 12 city coast to coast "So We Can Party" tour and shared the stage with the biggest DJs in the world at ULTRA music festival. They have been featured in RCKSTR Magazine's October 2010 Hypes Section (www.rockstar.ch/), been played on Kissy Sell Out's BBC Radio 1 show, and have had their tracks featured on endless DJs mixtapes such as Tiesto's Club Life 189.

They have been praised by countless blogs and have reached the top five on Hype Machine's popular list numerous times (reaching number one with their "Walking On A Dream" remix).

After gaining popularity from their remixes (including official remixes for Ellie Goulding, Kill Hannah, Les Savy Fav, Harlem Shakes, Trash Yourself, Toxic Avenger, and Morning Benders to name a few) the duo caught the attention of Eli Smith (So Sweet Records co-founder). So impressed with their work, he jumped at the opportunity to release their debut EP "Exile" on his brand new label KillPop Records, co-owned with Frankmusik.

With the success Kids At The Bar have garnered in 2010, 2011 sees them expanding their domination even further with a tour lined up for europe and many more bone-shattering remixes and originals.
Venue Information:
Music Hall of Williamsburg
66 North 6th St
Brooklyn, NY, 11211
http://www.musichallofwilliamsburg.com/