No Sweat: The Raveonettes (and Crocodiles) @ The Henry Fonda (11/13)

Categories: Last Night

View more photos in Timothy Norris' "The Raveonettes @ Henry Fonda Theater" slideshow.

Do Scandinavians sweat? After watching The Raveonettes play over twenty songs from their growing catalog last Friday at the Fonda, I'm not positive I can provide the answer to that question. Sure, the Danish twosome named their new album In and Out of Control, but there was nothing "out" in their supremely controlled performance to a less-than-capacity crowd. Sune Rose Wagner (he) and Sharin Foo (she) came, played, and went on their way. I would describe him as professional, her as icy, and the whole show as appropriately efficient, if I wasn't worried that "professional," "icy" and "efficient" could be taken as prejudiced, or even cliched, when writing about a Northern European duo.

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Timothy Norris
The Raveonettes

The evening started with an opening set by San Diego's Crocodiles, who surprised the few early comers with a barrage of fuzz and pedalwork that seemed to justify the wave of hype they're currently riding. Though singer Brandon Welchez's stage manner still betrays a ho-hum suburban fascination with the Johnny & Sid Show of 1976, the real power is in the hands (and feet) of guitarist Charles Rowell and his curtains of sound.

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Timothy Norris
Crocodiles
If their Fat Possum debut, Summer of Hate, doesn't quite deliver on the Kevin Shields comparisons bandied about by some critics, the live versions of those tracks at the Fonda were drenched with enough feedback and noise to make even the most jaded ears perk up. Their repertoire is a little slight (with the exception of doo-woopy ballad "Here Comes the Sky," the superior B-side to single "I Wanna Kill"), but the kaleidoscopic drone wrapping more than made up for any shortcomings. The Fonda might not (yet) be the best venue for the Crocodiles' act, but they're definitely worth catching at a smaller club.

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Timothy Norris
Raveonettes #1 Fan!: Rodney Bingenheimer
Fuzz, curtains of sound, feedback, drone: these dimensions of the opening act's sound made them the perfect appetizer for main course The Raveonettes. Sune and Sharin were presenting their fourth album, the aforementioned In and Out of Control. This is their fifth major release if one counts Whip It On, the 2002 EP that put them on the map. LA nightlife legend and KROQ DJ Rodney Bingenheimer was at hand to introduce them (they're his favorite contemporary band).

The basic Raveonette song goes like this: close harmonies on verses that owe much to the Scandinavian folk tradition and often sound like witchy rhymes of enchantment, backed by a basic surf or Spectoresque or Velvets drum pattern, followed by a loud, fuzz-drenched guitar rave-up, and then going back to the verse. If the song is meant to be a single and/or get them on the radio, a catchy, poppy chorus is added before or after the fuzz attack.

Last Friday, the duo went through those motions over and over, never missing a beat, or showing anything we could call "soul" in the American senses (either RnB, rockabilly, punk, metal, etc.)--or, in the case of the statuesque Sharin, getting a single strand of blond hair out of place. Even after shredding on the guitar or pounding on the drums, the unflappable blonde resumed her poise with no visible evidence of effort.

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Timothy Norris
Sharin Foo
Smoke, colored lights, and strobe effects (to punctuate the rave-ups) were deployed again and again. The meat of the set was the less familiar material from In and Out of Control, from set opener "Gone Forever" to the anthemic "Suicide," with its epic buildup. The new songs were less cluttered by the usual, obsessive Wall of Sound/My Bloody Valentine/Jesus and Mary Chain treatment--the occasional quiet moments, including a nice voice-and-tambourine turn for Sarin, were not dissimilar to Rick Rubin's recent stripping of The Gossip's sound.

But The Raveonettes also offered the fans an extensive stroll through their back catalog, going all the way back to Whip It On. "Veronica Fever" still retains the folk, almost medieval vibe of the chanted verses that sandwiched the noise attack, and the surf drums on minor-key spookfest "Attack of the Ghost Riders" are now even more obvious. They also played several songs from last year's Lust Lust Lust, including the hypnotic "Dead Sound" and a revamped "The Beat Dies," now sounding like a full-blown Angelo Badalementi-Julee Cruise homage that still can't hide the fact that the chord changes are basically Madonna's "True Blue" (go listen to it).

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Timothy Norris

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