The Flying Club Cup
Beirut is an American indie-rock and world music band which was originally the solo musical project of Zach Condon (born Zachary Francis Condon in Santa Fe, New Mexico) and later expanded into a band. The band's first performances were in New York, in May 2006, to support the release of their debut album, Gulag Orkestar. Condon recorded before Beirut was established: when he was fifteen and under the name of Realpeople, he made an electronic record, fashioned after his love for The Magnetic Fields. Condon was a straight-A student until he dropped out at the age of 17 to travel Europe with his cousin in a drunken haze, cavorting and partying with the locals wherever he ended up. It was during one of these evenings that he was first exposed to Balkan music (notably including the Boban Marković Orkestar and Goran Bregović), blasting from the upstairs apartment. Condon ended up with the Serbian artists all night, going through albums country by country, note for note. The first album under the Beirut moniker, Gulag Orkestar (2006), was the direct result of what he learned that night. While it may sound like an entire Balkan orchestra playing modern songs as mournful ballads and upbeat marches, the album was performed and recorded almost entirely by Condon alone. He did so on Pro Tools while skipping school in Albuquerque and at Sea Side Studios in Park Slope, Brooklyn. Jeremy Barnes added percussion and some violin overlays. After recording, Condon formed a full band which at times varies in the number of members, from six to ten. Live he is accompanied by Perrin Cloutier (cello/accordion), Jason Poranski (guitar/mandolin/ukulele), Nick Petree (drums), Kristin Ferebee (violin), Paul Collins (organ/keys/tambourine/ukulele), Jon Natchez (baritone sax/mandolin/glockenspiel), and Kelly Pratt (trumpet/euphonium). In November 2006 Condon was briefly hospitalized for extreme exhaustion, the band's website said, and as a consequence the band cancelled the rest of the tour. They resumed performing in March 2007 and released their second album, The Flying Club Cup the same year on October 9th. Parts of the album were performed and recorded by Condon in his bedroom again, but others were recorded with the live band, which resulted in a more organic, live sound. While writing, Condon said he was inspired by French music, like Jacques Brel (whose song Le Moribond he covered on his Elephant Gun EP), and he moved to Paris for a while. During the extensive tour in support of The Flying Club Cup, Condon and the band more or less fell apart from exhaustion once again and disappeared from the radar in April 2008. Condon took a long break and returned in 2009 with a double EP, March of the Zapotec & Realpeople: Holland. The first was partly recorded in Mexico with the Mexican Band Jimenez and had a more South-American flavour to it than Condon's previous efforts. The second EP 'Holland' was credited to Condon's old name Realpeople and consisted of five electrotracks, once more in the vein of The Magnetic Fields. The band's album The Rip Tide was released in 2011. Albums * Gulag Orkestar (May 9, 2006) * The Flying Club Cup (October 9, 2007) * The Rip Tide (August 2, 2011) * No No No (September 11, 2015) * Gallipoli (February 1, 2019) * Artifacts (January 28, 2022) EPs * Lon Gisland EP (January 30, 2007) * Pompeii (February 28, 2007) * Elephant Gun (June 25, 2007) * March of the Zapotec & Realpeople: Holland (February 17, 2009) * East Harlem (June 7, 2011) * The Berlin-Albuquerque Sessions (November 22, 2022) Official website: www.beirutband.com Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
Beirut is an American indie-rock and world music band which was originally the solo musical project of Zach Condon (born Zachary Francis Condon in Santa Fe, New Mexico) and later expanded into a band. The band's first performances were in New York, in May 2006, to support the release of their debut album, Gulag Orkestar. Condon recorded before Beirut was established: when he was fifteen and under the name of Realpeople, he made an electronic record, fashioned after his love for The Magnetic Fields. Condon was a straight-A student until he dropped out at the age of 17 to travel Europe with his cousin in a drunken haze, cavorting and partying with the locals wherever he ended up. It was during one of these evenings that he was first exposed to Balkan music (notably including the Boban Marković Orkestar and Goran Bregović), blasting from the upstairs apartment. Condon ended up with the Serbian artists all night, going through albums country by country, note for note. The first album under the Beirut moniker, Gulag Orkestar (2006), was the direct result of what he learned that night. While it may sound like an entire Balkan orchestra playing modern songs as mournful ballads and upbeat marches, the album was performed and recorded almost entirely by Condon alone. He did so on Pro Tools while skipping school in Albuquerque and at Sea Side Studios in Park Slope, Brooklyn. Jeremy Barnes added percussion and some violin overlays. After recording, Condon formed a full band which at times varies in the number of members, from six to ten. Live he is accompanied by Perrin Cloutier (cello/accordion), Jason Poranski (guitar/mandolin/ukulele), Nick Petree (drums), Kristin Ferebee (violin), Paul Collins (organ/keys/tambourine/ukulele), Jon Natchez (baritone sax/mandolin/glockenspiel), and Kelly Pratt (trumpet/euphonium). In November 2006 Condon was briefly hospitalized for extreme exhaustion, the band's website said, and as a consequence the band cancelled the rest of the tour. They resumed performing in March 2007 and released their second album, The Flying Club Cup the same year on October 9th. Parts of the album were performed and recorded by Condon in his bedroom again, but others were recorded with the live band, which resulted in a more organic, live sound. While writing, Condon said he was inspired by French music, like Jacques Brel (whose song Le Moribond he covered on his Elephant Gun EP), and he moved to Paris for a while. During the extensive tour in support of The Flying Club Cup, Condon and the band more or less fell apart from exhaustion once again and disappeared from the radar in April 2008. Condon took a long break and returned in 2009 with a double EP, March of the Zapotec & Realpeople: Holland. The first was partly recorded in Mexico with the Mexican Band Jimenez and had a more South-American flavour to it than Condon's previous efforts. The second EP 'Holland' was credited to Condon's old name Realpeople and consisted of five electrotracks, once more in the vein of The Magnetic Fields. The band's album The Rip Tide was released in 2011. Albums * Gulag Orkestar (May 9, 2006) * The Flying Club Cup (October 9, 2007) * The Rip Tide (August 2, 2011) * No No No (September 11, 2015) * Gallipoli (February 1, 2019) * Artifacts (January 28, 2022) EPs * Lon Gisland EP (January 30, 2007) * Pompeii (February 28, 2007) * Elephant Gun (June 25, 2007) * March of the Zapotec & Realpeople: Holland (February 17, 2009) * East Harlem (June 7, 2011) * The Berlin-Albuquerque Sessions (November 22, 2022) Official website: www.beirutband.com Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
Adiafa
aeseaes
Agridoce
Alborada
Postcards From Italy
Nantes
Elephant Gun
A Sunday Smile
Santa Fe
Scenic World
Mount Wroclai (Idle Days)
Brandenburg
Rhineland (Heartland)
Cliquot
The Penalty
After The Curtain
Bratislava
The Canals Of Our City
East Harlem
Guyamas Sonora
The Bunker
Cherbourg
The Flying Club Cup
Un dernier verre (Pour la route)
Prenzlauerberg
The Gulag Orkestar
St. Apollonia
A Candle's Fire
Goshen
In the Mausoleum
The Rip Tide
Vagabond
My Night With The Prostitute From Marseille
La Llorona
No No No
La Banlieue
The Akara
My Wife
Carousels
Gulag Orkestar
Forks And Knives (La Fête)
The Long Island Sound
Port of Call
The Concubine
The Shrew
Venice
On A Bayonet
Payne's Bay
The Peacock
My Family's Role In The World Revolution
Gibraltar
Transatlantique
La Banlieu
My Wife, Lost In The Wild
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