Polyphonic Spree Wait Ep Rar
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STARSANDHEROES takes in THE POLYPHONIC SPREE experience with frontman TIM DELAUGHTER is a wanted man. Not by the police (at least, we don’t think so). Not for crimes against laundrettes – although heaven help whomever has to wash 24 multi-coloured robes every night. Not even – and this comes as some surprise – on account of his brazenly cheeky appropriation of a fair portion of ’s schtick.
None of the above. In fact, ’s overwhelmingly triumphant new album has the nation’s media in such a lather, that Team Fly find themselves actually queuing to speak to the relentlessly, almost supernaturally cheery Polyphonic Spree singer outside the upstairs bar at.
'What’s his name??' Asks DeLaughter amenably as a BBC microphone is waved in front of his face. He’s ever obliging, trotting out station idents in his softened Texas drawl, for a Radio 1 DJ he’s clearly never heard of: 'Hi Chris, I’m Tim from The Polyphonic Spree, and I just wanted to say thanks for the best six months of my life'. He’s a good liar, certainly. Getting into the light-hearted spirit of the occasion, are running a competition to guess the combined weight of all two score PS members – together they’re heavy, geddit? – and there is much enthusiastic chatter about the variously-coloured Spree ribbons given to all punters on arrival at the venue (a bargainous 94p on at the time of going to press). There’s an unmistakable carnival atmosphere as we wait, not harmed at all by ’s sporadically entertaining portly-Prince-in-pants routine chugging away around the corner.
We finally manage to collar DeLaughter (rhymes with 'daughter' – how many times?) in a thoroughfare backstage corridor. Having lost their deal with last year, DeLaughter and associates decided to start their own label, (positive vibes all round, then). Mustn’t it cost a fortune to come out on tour? 'Oh yeah, I put a second mortgage on my house just to do this trip,' he says matter-of-factly, as if risking one’s entire security on a musical whim were the most normal thing in the world. DeLaughter admits it is 'excruciating – really tough' to tour with such a huge number of people, but any pain caused is kept well hidden. 'Street musicians make more than we do, but we’re gonna get there one day!' Last night, The Polyphonic Spree returned to Camden for another gig at the – where they played their first UK show in 2002 – and received the kind of rapturous reception usually reserved for boybands by ing-up teenage girls.
Leaving aside the obvious logistical minefield revolving around fitting so many berobed bodies onto such a relatively small piece of floor (they bolted an extra bit to the front of the stage), DeLaughter laughs at the memory: 'It's good to be back in the old sweaty box again! It’s extremely intimate – definitely another way to see The Polyphonic Spree.' DeLaughter seems quietly vindicated that he has come to this after his previous band, never-quite-were grunge popsters, imploded in 1999. 'I thought one day I was gonna have this group – I knew it would happen but I thought I'd be a much older gentleman. I didn't think about, I was just more interested in creating the sound that was appealing to me.' He imbues the word 'sound' with sufficient onomatopoeic pizzazz, and has such a childlike shine to his eyes, that all potential cynicism simply drains away. There’s something in the air, and it’s catching.
The Empire is a far more fitting venue for The Spree: the legacy of London’s past is evident in its ornate fittings and overhanging balconies, perfect for TPS’s cavalcade of harp, horns, formation dancing choir, guitars and lunatic piccolo (seriously), all led on their merry journey by bouncing, grinning, inspirational master of ceremonies Tim DeLaughter himself. Oh, and did we mention the, who has the already arms-raised crowd shouting 'Together we're heavy!' Before the band invades the stage in a technicolour (they’ve ditched the all-white, as recent pictures will show you) explosion, leaving us half-expecting to show up with a pile of stone tablets? Or at the very least,? Well, now we have.
Is a conscious continuation from 2002 debut, right down to TWH's first track being prefixed 'Section 11'. Much as some smokers look at every subsequent cigarette as if it were an extension of their very first drag, DeLaughter had this very much in mind. 'That was the agenda from the very beginning, yeah. The very first show we played was called 'The Beginning Stages Of' – I knew it was gonna [be] a sonic journal along the way, and that one record would always continue to the next record. But it hopefully won’t cause cancer!' On the evidence of tonight's performance, The Polyphonic Spree's never-ending album (not to mention their ever-growing presence) is more likely to cure cancer than cause it.