Live Review: Camden Monarch
September 2nd, 2010 | By Conil
Live Review: Conil/London/8.5

If you listen to Conil‘s record, Strange Part of the Country, you’ll hear a four piece band with big sound and a voice that breaks with honesty. The album has been getting buzz since it came out with comparisons across the board from singer-songwriters to 90′s grunge. When I saw Conil perform at the Monarch in Camden, he didn’t have his usual band with him, just a sampler. In theory, the Monarch is your ideal indie hangout pub and a great place for live music. The huge bar and large expanse of dance floor is great, and there’s plenty of Dickensian furniture for meeting up in the perennially hot neighborhood in North London. Monarch is great for big band sounds that get people on the floor, but that’s not Conil.
Before the set, I had a lengthy chat with the “anti-James Blunt” on the back porch over beers and coffee, and was surprised by how genuine he seemed and also, how complex. As we got closer to his set, he seemed to go a bit nervous, but with a quiet confidence as if to convince himself he could do this. This humility is something so rare in musicians, and even rarer to come across on stage.

With an audience mostly made up of 18-21 year olds (who are more interested in boozing up and hooking up than listening to the people on stage), getting them to pay attention to you is daunting and near impossible. Lucky for Conil, he’s got this voice. A smokey, late-night, whiskey voice that can whisper truths and scream obscenities with more sincerity than anyone who hangs out in Camden has heard for years.
While I watched him perform his eight song set, he cultivated a small following among those who would listen, which is all he wants anyway. Starting out slow and building to three-song string of his strongest tracks on SPOTC, “Distances From Here”, “Stoned”, and “Years Between”, it seemed that he had the crowd’s attention. Before the show, Conil assured me he brought along the sampler because he wanted to perform “A quieter set, not like the record”, but it soon became obvious he was finished being quiet and wanted you to remember him.
Honest without being crude, and emotional without being whiny, Conil is much more than he presents on Strange Part Of The Country. He doesn’t need auto-tune, he doesn’t need all the hipsters in Camden to care, hell, he doesn’t even need a band behind him. Conil just needs your ears, and everything else will follow suit.
Taken from Eburban.com





