Beyond a life hardwired to pop culture via the 24 hour news feed, The Naked And Famous elicit a romantic connection inspired by the golden era of alternative rock; a shared response to a teenage soundtrack of epic, emotionally charged mid nineties music.
Released in March 2011, their ambitious debut Passive Me, Aggressive You featured the singles, Young Blood and Punching In A Dream. Lauded by the NME, it was “A classic case of lovely and beautiful: TNAF’s passive melodicism and aggressive innovation clash in a dazzling blaze of psych/sonic fireworks” and Rolling Stone magazine described Young Blood as one of the year’s “best singles”.
Fronted by Alisa Xayalith and Thom Powers, The Naked and Famous lit a fire under an online fan base, with a video subculture built through YouTube and into radio. M83 invited TNAF to remix a single and a Tiesto remix transformed Young Blood into a club smash. Agencies fell into The Naked and Famous slipstream, and theirs became the go-to soundtrack for gaming, Hollywood and TV shows mining a zeitgeist of young and interesting.
Twelve months previously the New Zealand quintet (including David Beadle, Jesse Wood and Aaron Short) had been writing and recording songs in bedrooms on Auckland’s North Shore.
By June 2012, The Naked and Famous had played to more than 600,000 people in 24 countries, but the band chose to hit pause and embark on a second album. Singer Thom, “Maybe we could have kept touring, there seemed to be many places to visit, but we’d been writing on the road and we were ready to make new music.”
They took a house together in Los Angeles folk music enclave, Laurel Canyon – a fitting reflection of their communal existence, just around the way from the glitter and doom of Hollywood. “LA is a surreal environment. It’s like someone at a party on the verge of tears – vibrant… but at the same time there could be something really depressing about it at any moment,' says Alisa. "We're a weird, functional family – so it’s inevitable that we end up writing about each other, about romance and being sad, about what we see each other dealing with."
The resulting album In Rolling Waves delivers darkly nuanced, intricately rocking electro gems once again born in bedroom studio sessions, then demoed in studios in Wales and Australia ahead of recording at Sunset Sound in Hollywood. Says Thom, "We spent a lot of time rehearsing the songs before we started recording, we all agreed the intention was to make an album we could perform as well live as in the studio."
From the moody synth swirls of Waltz to the hard-edged lullaby of Grow Old this is a bold, considered record. Plugging into the folksy sonics of their LA existence, the fiery kaleidoscope licks of A Stillness become a prog-tinged epic, whilst Hearts Like Ours and What We Want both find this band still have a firm grasp on the euphoric sound their audience love so dearly. Xayalith’s raw pop thrill I Kill Giants drew on her childhood, with it's title coming from Joe Kelly’s comic book of the same name, a cartoon Xayalith had discovered mirrored her own story.
Both I Kill Giants and The Mess were co-produced with Justin Meldal-Johnsen (Beck, NIN). This was the first time the band had brought anyone else into the studio in a production role. “I’d been skeptical of the producer role but Justin was interesting and I was up for the collaboration,” says Thom. “You can ask someone for perspective and they can actually give you something tangible… like, ‘get rid of that fucking guitar, it’s awful!’”
Powers sought out Alan Moulder (NIN, Foals, My Bloody Valentine) to mix this daydreaming dark-wave experiment, saying “It was my teenage dream to work with Alan Moulder. Growing up, I noticed his work on all the records I was listening to.”
2013 saw a more matured Naked & Famous who very determined to deliver new music to their fans. “Every song feels like it’s in the middle of something. It’s not after the fact, it’s momentary,” says Thom. “I feel like the whole record has had this ‘less is more’ approach… It feels more vital.”
Vital? Certainly. Exhilarating? Definitely.
2014 began with a bang for The Naked & Famous as they performed at Australia & New Zealand's Big Day Out festival, before heading to the US to perform at the Bonnaroo Music and Arts Festival alongside acts including CHVRCHES and Grouplove. Proving a busy year for the band, they continued to tour throughout Brighton, Cambridge and London before taking to the stage at California's Coachella music festival, prior to heading home for two headlining shows at Auckland's Powerstation. Returning back to the States early June, The Naked & Famous spent the next month touring around the US, Europe and United Kingdom, concluding back in California for the Famous First City Festival in Monterey mid August.
Spending most of 2015 in the studio, 2016 saw The Naked & Famous return to the stage, beginning the year with a performance at Wanderland Festival in the Philippines, before returning home for an appearance at the inaugural Auckland City Limits Music Festival.
Aaron Short and Jesse Wood left the band in early 2018.
Band Members:
Thom Powers (guitar, vocals)
Alisa Xayalith (vocals, keyboards)
David Beadle (bass)
REVIEW: The Naked And Famous @ Logan Campbell Centre, Auckland - 10/01/17 Submitted by Channel1 |
23 Jan 2017 |
REVIEW: The Naked and Famous @ The Powerstation, Auckland 16/05/14 Submitted by Ria Loveder |
1 Jun 2014 |
REVIEW: In Rolling Waves Album Review Submitted by Ria Loveder |
4 Mar 2014 |
REVIEW: In Rolling Waves Album Review Submitted by Dilemma |
27 Sep 2013 |
REVIEW: Gig Review - The Naked And Famous and F In Math at Flow Submitted by amandashootsbands |
15 Sep 2009 |
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musicbunny
Joined: 12/04/11 Posts: 1 Location: Outside NZ View Profile |
The Naked and Famous Interview Posted: Tue Apr 12, 2011 11:10 pm http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dNLuT-NLr0U |
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