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2010年7月16日Keane在里斯本Super Bock, Super Rock音乐节现场表演
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乐队介绍(原文)


The band toured Perfect Symmetry around the world, playing to packed arenas in 28 countries, from Russia to Australia, Colombia to South Korea and Lebanon to Switzerland. When they had gaps in their schedule, they would head into studios to work on tracks – not with any particular purpose in mind, just because it’s what they enjoy doing most. “It’s incredibly refreshing in the middle of a long tour to go into a studio and create something,” says Tim Rice-Oxley. “It’s what we ended up doing on most of our days off.”

Those tracks would eventually come to form a new eight track EP, Night Train, which will be released globally on 10th May 2010. Taking its title from the band’s favoured mode of transport during the tour (the Moscow to St Petersburg train was particularly memorable), it demonstrates yet another sure-footed sonic swerve. Highlights include Keane’s two genre-busting collaborations with fast-rising Somali/Canadian rapper K’Naan, who they met through a mutual appreciation (Keane are surprisingly popular in hip hop circles, with Kanye West another big fan). Over three days in a London studio, Keane and K’Naan created the irrepressible Stop For A Minute and the Rocky-inspired Looking Back. “I think those tracks show us in a completely different light,” says Chaplin.

Another definite standout on Night Train is Ishin Denshin (You’ve Got To Help Yourself), an addictive electro-pop cover of the Yellow Magic Orchestra song which features Japanese baile funk MC Tigarah. “That song pretty much exemplifies the way we did the record,” explains Rice-Oxley. “I worked on the original idea on a plane, Richard recorded the drums in DC, Tom did his vocals in Copenhagen, Tigarah did hers in LA and we finished it off on the tour bus. And I’m hugely pleased with the end result.”

Night Train also includes the gorgeous, 80s-flavoured Your Love, which hangs around a rare lead vocal from Rice-Oxley, a man more renowned for his Ivor Novello-winning song writing than his singing. “All of these songs were recorded with a spirit of ‘Why not?’” he says. “We didn’t labour over making this record, or worry about it, we just enjoyed experimenting with things.”

The result is another Keane record that’s surprising, challenging and imaginative – but still built around tunes you’ll be whistling for weeks. When Keane first got together all those years ago, three of the bands they most admired were the Beatles, Radiohead and Blur. What made all of those acts special was that although nobody could ever predict what they’d do next, you knew it would be worth hearing. With the release of Night Train, that’s an exclusive club to which Keane have surely now gained membership.

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