Fans on the Run: Flickerstick, The Strokes, and the Art of Instant Stardom
by Charles Marshall
Contributing Writer
Flickerstick
The Strokes
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Flickerstick, for better or for worse, rose to prominence as champions of
the reality TV show Bands on the Run -- a VH-1 series that chronicled
a contest between four bands on a club tour through the Midwest and Southern
United States. Points were awarded for door and merchandise sales, and one
band was eliminated on each of four "battle of the bands" episodes.
Flickerstick won Bands on the Run in typical back-of-the-class rock
star fashion. Their arch-rival, Soulcracker, pounded the pavement each day to
recruit fans for each evening's show, hawked merchandise with the discipline
and focus of a pharmaceutical sales representative, and hoarded as many
"bonus opportunities" as possible (most of which sent the bands on some sort
of hokey scavenger hunt). Flickerstick, by contrast, drank too much, slept
too late, and let arguments to turn into fistfights -- the most notable of
which occurred hours before the final and deciding battle of the bands
episode.
But in the end Flickerstick won the "championship" round, and therefore the
entire Bands on the Run series, because they were simply light years
ahead of their competition. Even through the crass editing of the VH-1 production
team, Flickerstick's sonic chemistry and charismatic swagger on stage moved
viewers in a way that made the SoCal cow-funk of Soulcracker, for all its
energy, seem terribly pedestrian. To the victors came the spoils of new
equipment, a VH-1 video ("Smile"), and a major label record showcase. Epic
Records eventually signed Flickerstick and immediately released the aptly
titled, Welcoming Home the Astronauts in November. The title was
fitting for the occasion, as Flickerstick returned from their orbit through
reality television to throes of admiring, even fanatical, fans.
Champions though they were, Flickerstick entered the larger rock world with
a bit of an identity crisis. What, exactly, were we to make of this band?
They were not (despite Soulcracker's desperate declarations to the
contrary), a "corporate" rock band, for major labels failed to pay them
notice until a nationwide television audience began following their every
move on Sunday nights with soap operatic devotion. And although
Flickerstick had conquered the Dallas club scene prior to VH-1, they lacked
the cool elusive indie credentials that propelled the likes of Yo La Tengo,
Of Montreal, or Neutral Milk Hotel to restricted-circulation cult stardom.
What Flickerstick was, truth be told, was a band of accidental television
stars whose fame preceded their music, where, thanks to the scandal and
gossip of reality TV, we learned more about the members' hygiene habits and
girlfriend troubles than we did about the music.
I got a whiff of Flickerstick's uncertain status in the modern rock world
when they came through the Washington, DC area during the strange stretch of
time between the final Bands on the Run episode and the major label
release of Welcoming Home the Astronauts. Rather than playing the
traditional rock venues in downtown D.C. -- the 9:30 Club or the Black Cat -- Flickerstick was cast out to the State Theatre in downtown Falls Church,
Virginia, a quiet leafy suburb named for an 18th-century Episcopal church
that counts George Washington as a former vestry member. It seemed an odd
choice for the sonic noise of Flickerstick, especially given the club's
heavy bent toward acoustic "mush rock" favored among southern fraternity
scene.
* * * * *
The State Theatre reflects its suburban constituency quite nicely. The
shows begin early, the crowd is orderly, and the bar stewards resemble
parents serving concessions at a high school soccer game. Soft pastels,
high ceilings, and sit-down dining replace the traditional black-walled
basement ambience of the underground indie rock club. Directly facing the
stage, a crowd of maybe 200 diehards patiently awaited Flickerstick. These,
I gathered, were the reality TV fans who had marked this date on their
calendar weeks beforehand (and likely arrived annoyingly early to secure
their stageside spot). Those of us who retreated to the balcony seemed to have
made a conscious decision to view the event from afar, staking out the role
of curious bystanders intent on separating ourselves from the hysterical
reality TV contingent. It was as if we feared that, by mingling with the
crowd downstairs, we might be mistaken for someone who cared too much.
Once Flickerstick strutted on stage to deliver its adrenaline-soaked opener
("Smile"), it was all anthems, all the time, gassed by soaring,
Edge-inspired guitar leads and a vocalist (Brandin Lea) who sings his choruses with the
spastic passion of a 12-year-old acting out a rock show in the downstairs
foyer. It was dramatic, stadium-styled, melodic rock performed with a
showman's flair that, ever since the late '80s, has fallen so far out of
vogue as to be suppressed, even mocked, by the rash of underground bands
today.
Watching Flickerstick explode into every chorus as if it were their last,
you could not help but hear the ghosts of Simple Minds, U2, or even Echo and
the Bunnymen -- big, bombastic pop music that intended to bowl you over
without the glam or the glitter of the heavy metal bands that dominated the
charts in those days. Like the sweeping cinematic hues of these British
alt-rockers of the 1980s, Flickerstick used similar wide-angle wall of
sound, complete with a backdrop of continuous film loops superimposed to add
to the band's transcendental efforts (much like R.E.M. used to use in their
earlier auditorium tours).
It had been a long time since I had witnessed an alternative rock band so
honest about their ambition and so physically moved by their own music. And it
made me wonder whether the wave of disaffected noise bands -- what Cher, the
heroine of Clueless, dubbed "complaint rock" -- was reaching its
tipping point, and, if so, whether we would welcome more Brandin Leas
strutting around the stage, doing their very best to turn a quaint suburban
theatre into a miniature Wembley stadium. After all, was this not the point
of American alternative or "post-punk" music in the first place? To make
grand music on a smaller scale, equally transcendental but free from the
antiseptic stench of modular star building? It was enough to make my friend
and I head downstairs to mingle with the reality TV fans for a while.
* * * *
Several weeks after I saw Flickerstick play the suburbs, I went downtown to
Washington's fabled 9:30 Club to watch the Strokes. The Strokes deliver
gangly melodic rock in a dispassionate tone that generates the same
affections as a band like Pavement. Their debut record, Is This It?,
is sharply focused, tightly arranged, and literal in a way that draws
favorable comparisons to the Stones, the Velvet Underground, and even some
early '50s rock.
Like Flickerstick, the Strokes rocketed to fame rather inadvertently.
Hailing from Manhattan's East Side club scene, the Strokes became an
overnight sensation in publications ranging from Vanity Fair to
Entertainment Weekly, conquered the temperamental British music
press, and emerged as the darlings of the college-club circuit. But just as
Flickerstick tries hard to shake its image as reality-TV rockers, The
Strokes have been weighed down by naysayers who caricature the band as a
mere media invention. And in many circles, the Strokes' credibility remains
suspect for the preposterous reason that their lead singer might have been
rich before he got into rock music.
The Strokes took the stage at the appointed time, played their entire debut
album almost song-for-song, and then walked off stage. The whole episode
lasted about 45 minutes. Although the fans shrieked the same star-struck
shrills as the Flickerstick fans, there were no lengthy film and audio clips
preceding the show, no elaborate lighting to enhance the drama of the music,
and certainly no passion among the players. Instead, the Strokes played the
role of the stoic, standoffish rock stars the crowd wanted them to be,
cutting through the set with a precision and promptness that suggested they
had an even bigger party to attend later. This anticlimactic on-stage
persona seemed to embody the very question posed by title of their album:
Is This It?
The crowd, mostly in their early twenties and looking very much like a patio
party off of M Street, loved every minute of it. After all, the mirage that
good music is made with minimal effort or care has been the currency of
college radio for over a decade. And, in a larger sense, the artist's
manufactured indifference to the music has been instrumental to the romance
of rock. The Strokes' act, right down to Julian Casablancas's deadpan
delivery, is well tailored to evoke this romance and to fit them alongside
the revered indie-rockers that they so desperately crave to be.
* * * *
On the way home from the 9:30 Club, I wondered who would win a Bands on
the Run episode between Flickerstick and the Strokes. I decided that, most
likely, it would go to the Strokes. Despite (or maybe even because of) the
biting jabs about being "bratty rich kids," the Strokes exude the allure of
rock's forbidden side -- a glimpse inside the cool kids party in the back
room of some dark nightclub or somebody's downtown loft. Flickerstick, by
contrast, has the wide-open hospitality of an all-campus party, bound and
determined to win over every member of the audience with every ounce of
music (and effects) that they can muster. Because rock fans usually favor
the forbidden over the accessible, I figure they most likely would choose
the cool kids club hosted by the Strokes.
And the Strokes' album is better. Velvets comparisons aside, Is This It?
boasts ten equally artful pop songs whose chic chord progressions,
prolific amalgam of influences and modish sophistication will endure as a
minor cultural watermark, somewhere alongside the likes of the Replacements'
Let It Be or the Magnetic Fields' The Charm of the Highway
Strip. Rather than fashioning a new genre, the Strokes have offered a
sleek and inspired ode to the magnetism of vintage rock.
Welcoming Home the Astronauts will not hold up nearly as well over
time. Outside the confines of a live club, where the volume and the
theatrics of a song actually have a chance to resonate in a defined space,
the emotion and anticipation in Flickerstick's recurring crescendos begins
to wear off, exposing the shortcomings in the lyrics. Consider the chorus
of "Beautiful": "'Cause you're so beautiful, beautiful today / You're so
beautiful, beautiful in every little way / Cause when you're coming around / I'm
off the ground / I got to say."
But in the end, I wanted to see more Flickerstick in the Strokes -- an
aggressive stage presence rather than a haughty stage attitude; a carefully
crafted setlist rather than a rendition of songs in the order they occur on
the record; a physical immersion in the music rather than a mere recitation
of words and notes. As good as the Strokes' music is, their act is
rehearsed, canned, and comes across as mildly insincere.
Watching Flickerstick flaunt their music with the zeal of that 12-year-old
in the foyer reminds us how badly we need at least a handful of artists to
admit how much they care about their own music. Bands on the Run,
for all its hokiness, gave us a glimpse of degree in which bands will allow
themselves to be entirely consumed and captivated by their music without any
sense of shame or discomfiture. Flickerstick, even in its drunken swagger,
continues to allow this on stage. It is contagious to watch, and it made me
wish the Strokes would allow themselves, and their fans, that same luxury.