Review: Irya's Playground

BY SIMON SWEETMAN
Last updated 12:00 09/03/2010
1 of 42 Los Amigos Invisibles
PHIL REID/The Dominion Post Zoom
THE BOYS FROM VENEZUELA: Los Amigos Invisibles, from left, Juan M Roura, Julio Briceno, Maurigo Arcas, Armando Figueredo, and Jose R Torres.

Relevant offers

Gig reviews

Gig review: Leon Russell Review: Kyuss Lives! Gig review: Bob Dylan in Auckland Gig review: Stone Temple Pilots Gig Review: Doobie Brothers Gig review: Donavon Frankenreiter Review: Kitty, Daisy and Lewis Review: Incubus at Vector Arena Laneway festival a roaring success Review: Fleet Foxes in Auckland

Irya's Playground
Pacific Blue Festival Club, Sunday

Irya's Playground is a Swedish indie-pop group, formed around the vocals and songwriting of Irya Gmeyner. The group has been performing the onstage musical accompaniment to Cirkus Cirkor's Inside Out.

In their own show, there are moments of joy and intrigue as a slight twang of countryish guitar merges with a 1960s organ sound, but many of the songs are like the sort of pop tunes that Mike Oldfield was trying to write in the 1980s. And, apart from Moonlight Shadow, that was a giant failure for Oldfield.

Gmeyner is clearly the star of this show - the band plays an instrumental piece before she takes the stage, essentially giving her a buildup. But really the star of the band is drummer Erik Nilsson who uses the bell of the cymbal, the butt of the stick, the rim of the drums, clicking and clacking and providing punctuation to many of the songs rather than driving a groove.

Keyboardist, Ludvig Rylander, is also solid - he and Nilsson hold the sound together and give it structure.

Unfortunately too many of the songs suffer from hackneyed lyrics, a one-note performance setting from Gmeyner and the feeling that this modern indie-pop is incredibly dated without attempting to appeal to or reference any retro ideas.

People who saw the theatre show were possibly thrilled to see Irya's Playground working in a new setting and another side to the band.

But as a rock show by a rock band this was nothing special - the sort of thing that if performed as a standalone show, outside of the Arts Festival umbrella, would have attracted no interest at all. And though the band is not without its charms, it's telling that the closing cover of The Church's Under The Milky Way was one of the best songs - by a long way.

Ad Feedback

- © Fairfax NZ News

0 comments
Post a comment

Post comment


Required

Required. Will not be published.
Registration is not required to post a comment but if you , you will not have to enter your details each time you comment. Registered members also have access to extra features. Create an account now.


Maximum of 1750 characters (about 300 words)

I have read and accepted the terms and conditions
These comments are moderated. Your comment, if approved, may not appear immediately. Please direct any queries about comment moderation to the Opinion Editor at blogs@stuff.co.nz
Special offers

Featured Promotions

Sponsored Content