Beirut
The
Flying Club Cup (Ba Da Bing! Records)
Having released the internationally celebrated
Gulag Orkestar in May of 2006, Beirut has been under
the public gaze for little more than a year. Yet, within that
short time, the band has experienced travels to Russia, Poland,
Turkey and throughout North America and Europe, as well as
a tsunami of interviews, photoshoots and features. It has
been a year where associations with Lebanon’s capital
city turned yet again from romantic to tragic, and where a
great fervor could develop around an album conceived and constructed
in a teenager’s New Mexico bedroom.
Zach Condon recorded Gulag at his parent’s
home shortly after quitting college. For him, it was nothing
new, having recorded hundreds of songs since he was fifteen
the same way. However, as this was his first record to get
properly released, with the flood of attention, as online
raves lead to reverential fandom, he set about constructing
a full band to perform. Astonishingly, he proved himself as
talented a bandleader as composer. New songs were written,
album songs reworked, and the band’s shows quickly developed
to dramatic heights far beyond its mere months-long existence
(do an online search of live reviews for proof). This band
went on to record an EP, Lon Gisland (pronounce with
an East New York accent), which marked the first Beirut recordings
with the live ensemble.
Six months of recording has led to The Flying Club Cup.
Inspired by an obscure photo from 1910 depicting hot air balloons
taking flight mere steps away from the Eiffel Tower, an image
Zach stuck to the wall for inspiration, The Flying Club
Cup is an homage to France’s culture, fashion,
history and music. In fact, each song intends to evoke a different
French city. Yes, two years ago, Condon was immersing himself
in Balkan folk, absorbing the newly discovered sounds, scales
and styles. Two years ago. That’s an even longer time
when you are 21 years old. He absorbed what he heard –
the sonic joys of a skeletally structured, cacophonic ensemble
– and moved west. Soaking up the likes of Francois Hardy,
Charles Aznavour and, most notably, Jacques Brel (a huge influence
on both Scott Walker and Mark E Smith), Condon has been articulating
his conversational French, especially during between-song-banter
at shows. However, the album, which like all of Beirut’s
music waxes nostalgic about the cultures it emulates, was
recorded far from its heart’s epicenter.
Initial work was done to computer at a nondescript Albuquerque
office space, aka the A Hawk and a Hacksaw practice room;
Heather Trost of AHAAH plays violin and viola on three songs.
Engineering and production assistance came from Griffin Rodriguez
(AHAAH, Man Man) whose ability to distinguish instruments
out of a sea of sound is unparalleled. He helped separate
the many instrumentalists, who were deeply involved in recording,
as opposed to Gulag’s largely solo flight. The orkestar,
which has solidified into a core group of eight total members,
have grand plans for replicating the album live, and are now
an integral part of Beirut’s identity.
An opportunity to record in a real studio came
via a friendship formed with multi-instrumentalist Owen Pallet,
who records as Final Fantasy. In trade, Owen asked the band
to play on an EP he was recording (to be released on Dead
Oceans) in exchange for offering up some of his studio time.
And thus, Beirut got to record at the Masonic church studio
owned by Arcade Fire, and more opportune, populated with their
many obscure instruments. Initial plans to add final touches
to the songs developed into something more ornate, as Pallet,
whose arrangement abilities have benefited dozens of records,
added lush string sections and singing (on “Cliquot”).
So here we have The Flying Club Cup,
something more than a home recording but no less personal;
something less than a studio album but no less professional.
Within the spectacle and intimacy, you can hear a love letter
to the joie de vivre that defines our existence.
Listen closer, and you also hear the emergence of a singular
musical talent –Mr Zachary F Condon, at present living
in Paris – who is as unbounded by cultural borders as
he is led by where his heart travels.
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