Every night, at early Arcade Fire club shows, there would be blood. “Every show I would bleed,” says tousle-haired multiinstrumentalist Richard Reed Parry, one of the chief agitators of the Montreal collective’s famed onstage art riot: eight players crammed onto tiny stages, throwing themselves around in an instrument-swapping fervour, tossing drums in the air or marching out through the crowd for a kerbside encore. “There was blood on the piano, everything was rusting from sweat and there’d be dust from broken plaster ceiling tiles in the keyboards because we’d just break stuff. There’s a lot of visceral memories of being on stages that could barely contain the band.”
Before long, alternative culture would struggle to contain them too. Arcade Fire’s seminal and influential 2004 debut album Funeral – released 20 years ago this week – was a huge critical hit on release, catapulting the band to instant fame thanks to such compulsive cult favourites as “Wake Up” and “Rebellion (Lies)”. David Bowie, David Byrne and U2 all paid their respects, either in walk-on music or guest performance: in Rolling Stone, Bowie hailed their “uninhibited passion” and “kaleidoscopic, dizzy sort of rush”.
In the intervening years, in critics’ poll after critics’ poll, Funeral has come to be regarded among the greatest records of the century so far, shifting the tone of the North American alt-rock of its age from the angular to the grandiose single-handed. Even 20 years on, with accusations of sexual misconduct against Butler that surfaced in 2022 having reduced the band’s cultural standing and somewhat marred the recent 20th-anniversary fullalbum tour, the sonic and emotional power of the record remains undiminished.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der September 12, 2024-Ausgabe von The Independent.
Starten Sie Ihre 7-tägige kostenlose Testversion von Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierte Premium-Storys sowie über 8.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
Bereits Abonnent ? Anmelden
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der September 12, 2024-Ausgabe von The Independent.
Starten Sie Ihre 7-tägige kostenlose Testversion von Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierte Premium-Storys sowie über 8.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
Bereits Abonnent? Anmelden
Old-school Dubois set on inheriting Taylor's throne
Caroline Dubois is unbeaten in 10 fights, has barely lost a round, she is the world champion, and nobody wants to fight her.
Forest canter past Wolves to continue unbeaten run
Nottingham Forest opened the door to a surprise Premier League title challenge after a sixth win in a row with a 3-0 victory at Wolves.
Life after Moyes a mess for incoherent Hammers side
As West Ham were defeated, they got a glimpse of what they have lost. David Moyes was at the Etihad Stadium, the scene of his last game as their manager. West Ham were beaten then, just as they were in Julen Lopetegui's latest match in charge.
Lessons learnt by United or just one more false dawn?
For large parts of his Manchester United career, Bruno Fernandes has appeared the answer. Now he posed the question.
From recession to rate cuts: 2025 economic predictions
I usually feel queasy when writing predictions for the year ahead.
London exchange exodus is a sign of US dominance
Last year saw the biggest outflow of companies from the London Stock Exchange since the global financial crisis. According to accountants EY, 88 companies, including Paddy Power owner Flutter, travel group Tui and Just Eat, abandoned the London market for US and European exchanges.
New blow as retailers warn of price hikes and job cuts
Keir Starmer faces a fresh Budget headache as retailers warn of higher prices and job cuts following disappointing sales in the crucial Christmas \"golden quarter\".
TALKING TRASH
From KKK brawls to the infamous man who married a horse’ episode, a new Netflix documentary delves into the story of The Jerry Springer Show’. Louis Chilton finds out more
Why the latest social media vogue is a fridge too far
Thought wall-to-wall beige and displaying books the wrong way round was bad? They’ve got nothing on fridgescaping’, the most unhinged Instagram trend yet, writes Helen Coffey
Drill, baby, drill': Big Oil is coming after electric vehicles
Have you ever gone back over your new year's resolutions from years ago and just thought, \"What was I thinking?\" Over the last year, it seems that Europe's biggest oil corporations did just that.