Boston

Tame Impala deliver ‘Lonerism’ for the masses

Tame Impala play "Late Night" with Jimmy Fallon on Monday, Feb. 18. They play a sold out show at Terminal 5 in NYC the next night, and have dates in Boston and Philly in the spring. CREDIT: MATT SAVILLE
Tame Impala play “Late Night” with Jimmy Fallon on Monday, Feb. 18. They play a sold out show at Terminal 5 in NYC the next night, and have dates in Boston and Philly in the spring.
CREDIT: MATT SAVILLE

In print, a psychedelic band from Western Australia who call their latest album “Lonerism” don’t seem like the most likely candidates to be the biggest sensation in indie rock. But Tame Impala are selling out most of the shows on the tour they are about to begin, which is their biggest trek through the U.S. to date.

“Whenever there’s music where the lyrics are wearing your heart on your sleeve and talking about things that you don’t really talk to anybody about — which is really just kind of music in general — but whenever you’re doing it onstage, you just have that feeling that you’re connecting with other people in the world that feel the same way,” says singer and songwriter Kevin Parker.

The music on “Lonerism” ranges from heavy to melodic to focused to spacey. Sometimes it is all of those things in one song. What makes the album so exciting is that no structure is safe from being seriously messed with. The songs are all prone to either sudden unexpected explorations or sudden endings. A vicious lead guitar might step forward in the mix into what a listener might think would be a searing solo, only to have the song end two seconds later. On the song “Keep On Lying,” a trippy organ and guitar interlude gives way to a party conversation that makes the listener feel like an observer who wants — but just isn’t able — to participate.

“I love the sound of something that makes you feel like you’re on drugs,” admits Parker when asked if he approves of the “stoner rock” title that his band is often tagged with.

But the song titles on “Lonerism” speak volumes for those who don’t speak much: “Music to Walk Home By,” “Why Won’t They Talk To Me?” and “Feels Like We Only Go Backwards” are just a few.

“It’s really an album about other people, or at least trying to interact with people,” says Parker. “I think the whole loner thing about the album is that overall the character realizes that he’s destined to be alone, from all of these interactions.”

Parker says he has been surprised by how people have taken to Tame Impala though, in particular a group of school children from Staten Island whose moving reinterpretation of “Feels Like We Only Go Backwards” has racked up thousands of views online.

Check out the video below.

“It was pretty surreal,” says Parker of watching the PS 22 Chorus perform one of his songs. “It didn’t even feel like it was my song. It felt like the people doing the song, that whole thing that I was watching on the computer screen was bigger than the song, like I was covering their song. … Kids can extract that pop element to it. It’s not that only kids can do it, but it’s that it can be taken out of it and you can leave behind the totally blown-out distorted drums and you can just make a nice little sing-along out of it that’s really uplifting.”

Broken mirrors

Tame Impala’s summer single, “Elephant,” features one of the most badass lines in recent memory. In the song, about an overconfident, but ultimately insecure man, Parker sings, “He broke the mirrors off his Cadillac, cuz he doesn’t like it looking like he looks back.

Parker admits that the line was on special reserve for a while.

“I don’t actually remember how I thought of it,” he says. “All I know is that I was driving home from the beach. I know where I was and it was long before I started writing lyrics for that song. I didn’t have a notebook, but I just remembered that rhyme. I didn’t even think it was going to fit. I had no idea how it was going to fit into a song. I then sort of sang it and put it into a sentence and it really seemed to fit well. It was one of those cosmic miracles with lyrics that don’t happen very often for me.”

 

 


News
Entertainment
Sports
Lifestyle
National

DNA evidence may clear Honduran man sentenced to…

Lawyers seeking to overturn the murder conviction of a Honduran man who has been on Florida's death row since 2006 presented new DNA and blood stain evidence in a Florida…

Local

Northeastern University says it's readying to butt out

Northeastern University formally announced Tuesday that it will be among the first colleges in the Boston area to implement a campus-wide ban on smoking.

Lifestyle

Newbury Street gains a well-heeled new flagship with…

When you step into the brand new Frye Company flagship space on Newbury Street, it hits you. The distinct, inimitable smell of fine leather: rich and warm, at once familiar,…

International

Italy's Berlusconi questioned in prostitution probe

Italian center-right leader Silvio Berlusconi was questioned by Rome prosecutors for three hours on Tuesday over allegations the former prime minister paid 750,000 euros to buy the silence of people…

Arts

The results for the 31st Annual Elliot Norton…

The Boston Theater Critics Association celebrated excellence in theater at the 31st Annual Elliot Norton Awards Monday night at the Paramount Theater. Named for eminent theater critic Elliot Norton, the…

Entertainment

'Star Trek Into Darkness' more like 'Into Dumbness'

“Star Trek Into Darkness” is as glum and mechanical as its predecessor was buoyant.

Entertainment

Holly Madison's fiance is in deep, deep trouble

Holly Madison's fiance and father to her infant daughter, Rainbow, is facing more than 13 years in prison for bribery, embezzlement, conspiracy and conflict of…

Entertainment

The Word: Vin Diesel thinks Facebook owes him

Vin Diesel has a bone to pick with Facebook. The "Fast & Furious 6" star is taking credit for making celebrity pages popular on the…

NHL

Bruins - Rangers series schedule

NHL Playoffs: Bruins - Rangers series schedule

MLB

Red Sox skid continues in 5-3 loss to…

Lack of offense cause for 5-3 loss to Rays

NHL

Playing the Field: Maple Leafs fans elected to…

Toronto Maple Leafs fans elected to not riot despite promise

NFL

Hadfield: Bruins comeback the second best in Boston…

Hadfield: Bruins comeback the second best in Boston sports history

Home

Keep allergens out of your home

Asthma and allergy pro Robin Wilson tell us how to keep allergens out of our home.

Education

Father says Chester High School tried to cover…

Alphonzo Green said Chester High School tried to cover up the vicious attack on his 16-year-old son that was captured on a cell phone video and went viral.

Food

Sweet secrets from Hungry Girl

The peppy food star teaches us some tips and tricks.

Style

Trend of the week: Leopard spots that pop

Leopard print are everywhere now from dresses to sneakers, we round up a few of our favorites.