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WE present to you the WE zine  A collection of studio notes, handwritten lyrics and more from when we created the album. Available for pre-order now. https://af.lnk.to/store
WE present to you the WE zine  A collection of studio notes, handwritten lyrics and more from when we created the album. Available for pre-order now. https://af.lnk.to/store
Arcade Fire: âWE,â The Influence of David Bowie, and Redefining Family on the Road | Apple Music
Interview with Win and Régine on X Radio (May 2nd, 2022)
Interview with Win and Régine on X Radio (May 2nd, 2022)
Arcade Fire - KOKO Grand Re-Opening. London, Â April 29, 2022
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Arcade Fire: âAmerica is rotten, but there are beautiful things about itâ
After the high-concept hijinks around their last record turned off fans, the indie troubadours have gone back to basics with a rousing new album about Trump and togetherness
Mid-morning in New Orleans, and outside an Uptown coffee shop, Win Butler is talking of life in his adopted city â the basketball, brass bands, and the poisonous caterpillars of the buck moth that, in late spring, fall from the cityâs trees on to unsuspecting passersby beneath. He surveys the mighty oaks across the street, broad-branched and strung with moss. âTrees run this city,â Butler says. âTheyâve definitely seen some shit, those trees.â
With his wife, RĂ©gine Chassagne, Butler is best known for fronting Arcade Fire. The band formed in Montreal at the turn of the millennium, quickly gained a reputation as one of the worldâs finest live acts, and over the course of five albums became indie music aristocracy. They were anointed by Davids Bowie and Byrne; they won a Grammy, a Juno and a Brit; they played Obamaâs inauguration; and frequently used their platform for political activism, promoting healthcare nonprofits, indigenous protesters and a number of Haitian charities (Chassagne is of Haitian descent). More recently, the band raised $100,000 for the Ukraine Relief Fund by playing a series of small club shows across the US, including cult New York venue the Bowery ballroom.
At times they have irked their audiences: the hijinks that surrounded the launch of their disco-tinged 2013 album Reflektor â secret gigs, street parties, audience dress codes â brought faintly unsettling echoes of U2âs Zoo TV campaign. But it was the release of their last album, 2017âs Everything Now, that rattled fans the most. The album was accompanied by a high-concept promotional campaign claiming that Arcade Fire were now part of a multinational corporation. They named their tour Infinite Content, and posted parodic record reviews, fake news stories, ironic product placements. To some, it was a glittering commentary on the consumer age; to others it seemed sneering, over-earnest and ill-conceived. To many, it was uncomfortably removed from the visceral heart-swell of their live shows.
This month, the band release their sixth album, We, a record they describe as being about âthe forces that pull us away from the people we love ⊠[and] the urgent need to overcome themâ. This being Arcade Fire, there is a hefty intellectual backstory, nods to the supermassive black hole Sagittarius A* and a guest turn by Peter Gabriel. But it also stands as the bandâs most tender record since their early output; spacious and simple and sweet, an album born out of the steady closeness of pandemic days.
Butler, Chassagne and their son moved to Louisiana six years ago, captivated by its mingling of cultures and unbridled passion for music and creativity. âWhatâs that Mark Twain line about there being only three cities in America?â Butler asks as we walk along Magazine Street. âNew York, San Francisco and New Orleans. Everything else is Cleveland.â
Butler cuts a conspicuous figure: basketball player-tall, with bleached blond hair, today he is wearing cream-coloured jeans, a tie-dyed white T-shirt and black bomber jacket. There is an intensity to the way he speaks, whether he is talking about a Mardi Gras spent playing cowbell in New Orleansâ TBC Brass Band, or the hanging chads of the 2000 US presidential race. But he seems to fit comfortably in this neighbourhood, greeting the coffee shop barista warmly and gleefully relating the history of Miss Maeâs, a 24-hour âdirtbag barâ that stands on the corner of Magazine and Napoleon.
[The Trump presidency] was pretty turbulent times in the US. Youâd wake up and you had no idea what was going to happen
Régine Chassagne
Down the street, Butler leads us into a former luncheonette, now home to Peaches Records. Peaches, he says, is some way removed from the record shop he frequented as a teenager in the suburbs of Houston, Texas â a chainstore in the mall that mostly sold CDs, and where he tried to nourish his love of New Order and the Cure. He talks of how his mother played jazz harp, his grandfather played the pedal steel, and how the first time he heard Smokey Robinson sing, he couldnât quite believe that this music had been made by human beings.
âLook at this,â Butler says, holding up an octagonal copy of the Rolling Stonesâ compilation Through the Past Darkly, and holding forth on the qualities of a good record sleeve. His attention alights on Pink Floydâs Dark Side of the Moon, and the merits of the short album. âThereâs like four songs on it and a lot of connective tissue,â he says. âAnd they sort of stretch it, so you have this space to hear stuff. Thatâs not even my favourite record, but itâs an example of coherence. You look at the album artwork, you listen to it, itâs very coherent.â He was seeking something similar on We, he says, paring back more songs than ever before to make a taut 40-minute record. âWe cut some really good shit,â he says. âThatâs how we did it.â
We walk along Napoleon to a Creole-Italian restaurant to meet Chassagne. This afternoon, the rest of the band will arrive in New Orleans to begin tour rehearsals, and Butler is eager to be back out in the world again after the restrictions of lockdown. He recalls the bandâs recent show in New York, how good it felt to be before a crowd once more. âOne hundred people spitting in my face,â he says. âIt felt like being baptised.â
At the counter in Pascalâs Manale, the oyster shucker Thomas âUptown Tâ Stewart stands beside a mound of silver shells, discussing the peaceful pleasures of Cyrano de Bergerac, jazz, poetry and softly spoken people. We are drinking martinis, and Butler is trying to persuade me that the best way to eat an oyster is to sit it atop a saltine cracker, with horseradish, ketchup and a little lemon juice. Chassagne stands beside him and unceremoniously slugs black a Gulf oyster from its shell. Stewart is impressed. âYou knocked that down like you just did a shot of good bourbon!â he tells her. âI caught your rhythm. You have a lot of good energy.â
Chassagneâs energy has always been undeniable. When Butler first saw her she was singing jazz standards at an art opening in Montreal, and he immediately asked her to join his fledgling band. The strands of what she has described as her âgrandmother musicâ â opera and Jacques Brel and Edith Piaf, somehow melding with Butlerâs art pop influences. On stage, they perform a similar feat: Chassagne singing, dancing, shifting between accordion, keys and xylophone, seemingly existing in her own orbit as the rest of the band play on.
Back at the table this lunchtime, she sits in a black batwing top and black jeans, her dark curls jigging along to the theme to Captain Kangaroo, inexplicably playing on the restaurant stereo. âI havenât heard this song in for ever!â she says, suddenly distracted. Chassagne does this often â a sentence drawing suddenly to a halt so she can sing along with a chorus, then dart back to the conversation.
Before the detour into Captain Kangaroo, she was recalling how the new album took root in pre-Covid America, in the days of the Trump presidency. âIt was pretty turbulent times in the US,â she says. âYou would wake up and you had no idea what was going to happen.â The band began work on a record they hoped might reflect that turbulence: tracks such as the slow, syrupy End of the Empire reflecting the decline of western power, with references to the cauterising effect of television, the urge to unsubscribe and watching the moon on the ocean âwhere California used to beâ.
The album opens with Age of Anxiety I and II, tracks that take their name from Lawrence Ferlinghettiâs 1958 poem I Am Waiting. When Butler was 15, his beatnik English teacher invited his good friend Ferlinghetti to read at his school. It was a life-changing moment for Butler; so much so that he stole a copy of the poetâs Coney Island of the Mind from the school library. Not so long ago, he found the book in a box of his belongings at his parentsâ house and began rereading. When he came across the poem I Am Waiting, âI just started weeping,â he says. âAll the themes in that poem, itâs like all the shit I write about. Like looking for the soul of America, waiting for the American eight ball to straighten up and fly right. It got so deep in me. Like a spirit got in me.â
Butlerâs relationship with his homeland has always been complicated and contradictory and highly charged. âThis shit is fucking rotten, but thereâs beautiful things about it,â he says. âI live in America, I canât believe I still live in America. But thereâs something about it that I canât quit. And as an artist youâre trying to break something open and let the light in.â
He talks about the war in Iraq and the war in Afghanistan and the war in Ukraine. âAnd itâs poor people who suffer,â he says. âAlways, everywhere, always poor people suffer. Russian oligarchs are losing one of their boats, like boo hoo. Which boat did you lose? Theyâre all fine. But all the money is blood money, itâs all from the suffering of poor people.â
What role can music play? Butler pauses. âWeâre the court jesters,â he says. âWeâre performing in the court. The infrastructure of the thing is money. I donât know the answer. But you can kind of undercut it.â
Across the table, Chassagne frowns. âItâs not the court,â she says firmly. âThereâs no prerequisite on who to play music for. We play music in hospitals, for dying patients, we played at the inauguration. Itâs food for the soul. Itâs not that the music cures the community, but the music is the evidence that there is a community. Itâs like evidence of life.â
Arcade Fireâs lineup has shifted over the years, but for We it numbered Richard Reed Parry, Tim Kingsbury, Jeremy Gara and Butlerâs younger brother Will, who has since amicably left the band. When the pandemic began, they had all flown to New Orleans to begin work on the new record. âAnd then our phones keep beeping and weâre getting texts saying flights are getting cancelled, borders getting closed,â remembers Chassagne. âSo we had to do an emergency plan for them to go back immediately. Everything was falling apart.â
When everyone departed, Chassagne and Butler were left with three daysâ worth of demos. âGlorified writing sessionsâ, as Butler puts it. âBut at a point, I thought: âWell, this might be all there is so Iâm going to work on this as if weâre never going to play music again,ââ he says. âAnd I realised that even just three days, there was so much music in there. So it was like: well, thatâs all we have. This is it. Itâs DIY.â
For months, the pair stayed home and wrote with an intensity that they had been unable to find since their debut album, Funeral. âWe were stuck in our house and so what do you do?â says Chassagne. âI guess the interesting thing is that when youâre stuck with yourself you ask: âWhat am I here for?!â So we just wrote and wrote and recorded ⊠â The songs soon began to pile up. âWe just worked every day,â says Butler. âAll night, as if it was due the next day, but for like, a year.â
Loving someone is hard. Itâs up and down, itâs a tough thing, but itâs also the shit
Win Butler
On Butler and Chassagneâs first date they went to see Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon. Chassagne had failed to mention that the film would have French subtitles, and so she spent the movie whispering translations to Butler in the dark of the cinema. Today over lunch, there seems a similar connection; a closeness to their dynamic that I have not seen since I interviewed them back in 2005 for Funeral. Their sentences frequently overlap, Butler picking up where Chassagne leaves off.
Their new album might come with a clever marketing campaign, slick videos, an artful mission statement that mentions Carl Jung and Martin Luther King. But at its heart lies something really quite simple: the connection that spans between the extended family of a band, that exists between a band and its audience, that binds two people over the course of a 20-year relationship.
There are two distinct halves to this record: the first tells of isolation, the second is about resolve. âItâs about unconditional love, love thatâs not merit-based,â says Butler. âThatâs not about loving someone because theyâre such a good person, or theyâre so talented. Itâs love that has nothing to do with what you did, itâs something thatâs freely given, and thatâs why itâs the most precious thing.â He begins to sip Chassagneâs untouched martini. âLoving someone is hard,â he says. âItâs up and down, itâs a tough thing, but itâs also the shit.â Chassagne nods. âAnd the beautyâs in the commitment.â
Outside, the city is closing down under a tornado warning, shops shuttering, restaurants hurrying away their patio chairs. We drive back along Magazine Street with the windows down and the high winds blowing, listening to a top-secret remix of Age of Anxiety II (Rabbit Hole), a call-and-response track between the pair. âNothing can ever replace it / When itâs gone you can still taste it,â runs the lyric. âGoing on this trip together ⊠â
In the front seat, Butler shakes his head; behind him Chassagne pats her hands rhythmically into the air, silently finding her way into the song. We drive on through the Garden District, past a seafood boil and the alligator museum, and on towards Arcade Fireâs rehearsal space. Outside, against the darkening sky, the tops of the oak trees wave wildly.
Arcade Fire - Live From Koko (London - April 29, 2022)
Age of Anxiety I
Ready to Start
The Suburbs
Neighborhood 1 (Tunnels)
Generation A
My body is a Cage
Aftetlife
Reflektor
Rabbit Hole
Creature Comfort
Sprawl II
Everything Now
The Lightnning I + IIÂ
Rebellion (Lies)
Unconditional I (Lookout Kid)
Wake Up