X Ticketlab uses cookies to ensure you get the best experience from our website. Check out our cookie policy for more info.

TicketLab Login

Lancaster Library

Thursday 28th August 2014, 2:30am

Price: £8.00
(£8.68 including booking fee)

I'm afraid this event has already occurred. Let's not live in the past - find an upcoming event!

Questions about this event?

You can message the event organiser here

About Ezra Furman

Day of the Dog saw Ezra Furman progress from the dark chamber-pop and gorgeous balladry of his solo debut and emerging as a stylish, technicolor, pulse-quickening rock provocateur conjuring an intriguing selection of iconic vintage styles. With early singles My Zero and Tell 'em All to go to Hell all being playlisted on BBC 6Music, and with a five star Guardian review under his belt, Furman returns to the U.K off the back of a sold-out tour to play a string of festivals over the summer including Dot to Dot, End of the Road & Bestival. After selling out two dates at the 100 Club in London we are pleased to announce that Ezra will be playing Lancaster Library on the 27th August.

Day of the Dog was recorded with the members of his regular touring band The Boy-Friends: Sam Durkes - drums, percussion; Ben Joseph - piano, miscellaneous; Jorgen Jorgensen - bass, miscellaneous; Tim Sandusky - saxophone. Furman supplied vocals, guitar, miscellaneous. Throughout the album, there is a sense of bold ambition and grand artistry in the tradition of songwriting giants of the past, but set apart by an undercurrent of deranged, ragged glory.

Songs like My Zero and Been So Strange take the broad-stroke tunefulness 80's heartland rock, strip off the gloss, deconstruct it, and reassemble it along unsettling and far more potent lines. Tell 'Em All to Go to Hell, Anything Can Happen and And Maybe God is a Train, affect a lurid 70s glam stance - jittery drumming driving glitter-and-dirt smeared guitar, strategically gilded with leering sax lines. Meanwhile, the title track evokes the shock therapy of John Lennon's initial harrowing post-Beatles albums - stark piano chords reverberating over massive but minimalist drums. Through it all, Ezra sings in a uniquely stylized yet powerful voice that alternates between odd, tremulous beauty and startling, guttural viscerality.

He formed his first band, Ezra Furman & the Harpoons, in 2006 while attending Tufts University. His lead singing and songwriting connected with listeners like a left hook to the jaw, a mix of stinging garage-rock and stripped-down acoustic numbers. He would write and record a total of four albums with this combo: Banging Down the Doors (2007), Inside the Human Body (2008), Moon Face (2009) and Mysterious Power (2011). Furman and the band toured extensively during this period, winning a cult of hardcore fans across the U.S. as well as in Europe.

Ultimately, Ezra parted ways with that band, returned home to Chicago, holed up in an attic recording studio and wrote and recorded the cycle of ten songs, each assigned to particular months of the year, he titled The Year Of No Returning. His aim was the self-professed lofty goal of real protest. Initially self-released, The Year Of No Returning was picked up by Bar/None and released for the first time on CD in the Summer of 2013, in conjunction with a full band tour of the East Coast and MidWest.

For Day of the Dog it's all about the rock 'n' roll with some punk panache thrown in. Ezra once again has re-invented himself , this time as an angry young man ready to throw himself on the pyre in search of the redemption that will follow.

Lancaster Library

Market Square,
Lancaster,
LA1 1HY

Directions:

Log in or Sign up

X

Forgotten your password?

{{message}}