France Rocks Summer Fest may be the largest festival of French music in the United States. The fifth annual celebration features electronic, jazz, world music, and pop/rock artists at 15 live music events in Brooklyn and Manhattan throughout the month of June. A rare stateside appearance by La Femme, a psych pop act from Paris, was among the most anticipated shows, selling out Brooklyn Steel in advance of its June 5 performance.
Formed in 2010, the then-unknown band toured the United
States with only 3,000 Euros on hand to promote its debut EP. This proved to be
a clever marketing strategy back home, as the French audience was intrigued
that one of their bands was on an American tour, so why did French pop fans not
know the music? The band developed a following and released its third album, Paradigmes, on April 2, 2021.
Local band cumgirl8 and an Australian who lives in Paris,
Sam Quealy, performed outstanding indie-rock sets as support acts. During the
final intermission, stage hands aligned a line of four simple and identical keyboard
stations along the front line; a guitarist, bassist and drummer would perform
from the back line. Six musicians came on stage wearing what looked like
vintage prom tuxedos. Yes, the band had a light-hearted sense of humor.
La Femme performed a breed of synth pop that sounded like updated new wave music. The band incorporated elements of the 1960s underground pop movement in Europe called yéyé. Some songs leaned towards garage rock, others to surf rock, tropicalia and even big band influences. Male and female vocals intertwined, sometimes in unison, other times as contrasts. The vocalists almost exclusively spoke and sang in French.
Playing songs from all three albums plus a few extras, La
Femme seems to specialize in two styles of pop music. Much of the music was
soft, hypnotic, slow-burning or moderate-tempo, with a few brief attempts to
jar the easy-going pulse. The band also played a fair amount of faster-tempo
songs that sounded like deep cuts from the B-52’s 1980s catalog.
The musicians’ movements were limited somewhat in space due to the fixed positions of most of the instruments. Nevertheless, the musicians swayed in place to the rhythms and energized the audience through ongoing engagement. By the end of the show, several of the members took off their jackets and the bare-chested Marlon Magnée did a stage-dive into the audience.
A vast sea of fans from front to back
and side to side bobbed to the music throughout the show. La Femme is a party
band, and the band succeeded in providing the soundtrack to a fun evening to
several hundred French expatriates. Viva la France!
Setlist
- Nouvelle-Orléans
- Cool Colorado
- Le sang de mon prochain
- Où va le monde
- Mycose
- Nous étions deux
- Télégraphe
- Foutre le bordel
- Paris 2012
- Antitaxi
- Me suive
- Elle ne t'aime pas
- Packshot
- Sur la planche 2013
- It's Time to Wake Up (2023)
Encore
- Vagues
- Tu t'en lasses
- Tatiana
***
The Manhattan Beat covers New York City's live music developments as they happen. All articles are written by Everynight Charley Crespo. All photographs are taken by Everynight Charley Crespo, except when noted otherwise. For a list of Manhattan venues that are presenting live music regularly, swing the desktop cursor to the right of the home page and click on the pop-up tab "Where to Find Live Music." For a listing of upcoming concerts for live audiences, visit The Manhattan Beat's June calendar.
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