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Maroon 5 @ Water Rats 21/01/04
by Geelezee
Hidden
(or not so hidden) amongst the crowd at this special warm up show
at Water Rats for 200 lucky competition winners tonight is the fifth
wheel in a group of fifth wheels that used to support Justin Timberlake's
mighty pop-star ego. Yes, you'd better believe it, Joey Fatone of
N*Sync fame (sic) has arrived to check out one of his favourite
bands of the moment, LA pop-rockers Maroon 5. Its also common knowledge
amongst the industry, darling, that other well-known champions of
the Maroon 5 cause include Kirstin Dunst and Whoopi Goldberg. So
baring in mind what kind of crowd Maroon 5 are pulling in, does
this give us Brits, newly acquainted with the Maroons, some indication
of what to expect?
Well the short answer is yes. Coincidentally, so
is the long answer.
What kind of band would you expect Joey Fatone and
Kirstin Dunst to like? Pop, but a little rough around the edges?
(The guitarist has long hair). Rock, but not forgetting their pop-sensibilities?
(They write songs your Mum sings in the car). A band that look and
sound like a real band but take few chances in their art; instead
happily rock-out to big sing-a-long choruses and funky bass lines.
Perhaps this is a little prejudiced, but if you seriously consider
whether a member of the American Take That could possibly appreciate
the difference between timeless magnificence and a straightforward
rock band, the prejudice doesn't seem so unjustified.
Maroon
5 are, essentially, Red Hot Chilli Peppers fronted by Justin Timberlake.
Now take a minute to think about that. Yes, the Chillis are a seminal
band and Mr. J.T. is a talented guy with the sense to hook up with
the right collaborators. And he has a six pack. But would you want
the two to get together? Admittedly singer Adam Levine is a powerful
front man with a cracking voice, and he knows how to use it, hitting
screaming highs notes on tracks like 'Shiver' and effortlessly gliding
into delicate falsetto on 'She Will Be Loved'. The band proficiently
bang out funky bass lines and shrieking blues riffs, but where's
the challenge? Where's the excitement that should be there in a
new band like this? Tonight they run through their repertoire of
radio-friendly anthems, MOR choons, and fun-for-all-the-family funk
fests, and they work the crowd like the professional performers
they are. Levine screams, the crowd screams; Levine jumps around,
the crowd jumps around. It's all very Top of the Pops. But this
reviewer seems to be in some minority in not quite feeling it.
Yet it's hard to ignore the intense vibe at Water
Rats tonight. Mainly due to the crowd of late-teenage girls buzzing
around with wide eyes, unable to believe their luck at getting so
close to their new favourite band, and you have to give Maroon 5
credit for drumming up so much amorous attention. You could never
go so far as to label them as a boy band, they're talented musicians
and they write tunes that stick in your head whether you want them
to or not. Perhaps they're the type of band that are designed for
that late-teenage period where girls get a little bored of your
straight forward boy bands and start to get into 'real' bands. Of
course, this doesn't account for Whoopi Goldberg, which is an entirely
different discussion. Perhaps Maroon 5 are the first step for teeny-boppers
towards the world of real music. Somebody's got to do it, and it
may as well be these guys as anybody else. Maroon 5 are all part
of the rich tapestry that is the music scene. All the music scene's
a stage, and all the bands merely players. They have their exits
and their entrances; and one band in its time plays many parts.
Just as N*Sync played their part for the benefit of those teeny-boppers,
and Bob Dylan plays his part for that stage later in life when poetry
and politics seem so much more important than good looks and a falsetto,
Maroon 5 are travelling the middle ground, bridging the gap and
playing their role well. But do they deserve to be applauded for
that? Is that an honourable position to be in? The jury is still
out.
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