Review: Keane at the Fox Theatre in Boulder, Colorado, August 3, 2006*

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By Matt Anderson
2006.08



"We found our home in Boulder," Tom Chaplin, Keane's lead singer, said shortly after the start of the band's briskly paced 80-minute set at the intimate Fox Theatre in Boulder, Colorado.

The band's first-ever show in Boulder was enthusiastically received, prompting Chaplin, in his strong East Sussex British accent, to kid about taking the entire front section with him everywhere he goes. That's the section comprised primarily of lovely young ladies shouting their undying love for the 27-year-old baby-faced lead singer.

Naturally, the challenges of singing at 5,400 feet above sea level drew Chaplin's immediate attention. After the rock-anthem "Bend and Break" from the group's first album, "Hopes and Fears," Chaplin commented that's what he felt like he was doing—bending and breaking.

Chaplin performs over an impressive vocal range and, true to the Keane spirit, even the elevation couldn't get in his way.

Marking one year since the band opened for U2 at the Parc des Sports Charles Ehrmann in Nice, France, a football stadium that hosted somewhere in the range of 20,000 rockers, Keane headlined its own show to a capacity crowd of 700.

Touring in support of its second album, "Under the Iron Sea," an album that deftly avoids the sophomore slump, the band is already well traveled but, refreshingly, it has managed to escape the baggage of pretensions and put on a fun show that's all about the music and the fans.

Chaplin, a multi-talented hyphenate (singer-songwriter-pianist-rocker), worked the stage well, bounding from one end to the other, shaking hands, signing autographs, and fully offering the band's gratitude for the fans in Boulder, Denver and across America who support its work.

The energy and commitment brought to the stage by Chaplin, along with Tim Rice-Oxley on keyboards and Richard Hughes on drums, emphasized the breakout trio's main strength—a focus on songs with meaningful lyrics worth singing.

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(Photo by Matt Anderson)

For a band only two albums into their career, Keane benefits greatly from having songs that feel comfortably familiar, particularly the songs "Everybody's Changing," "We Might As Well Be Strangers," "This Is the Last Time" and the aforementioned "Bend and Break." Chaplin also put ubiquitous hit "Somewhere Only We Know" to solid use as a great sing-along.

While their latest chart topper "Is It Any Wonder?" was every bit the sizzling rocker it promised to be, the songs benefiting the most from their performance were other, less familiar tunes off the new album.

Gaining extra resonance through their live renditions were the sweetly bitter "Leaving So Soon?" ("If you don't need me, I don't need you"); the eagerly optimistic "Put It Behind You" ("Because if you never even try, time will pass you by"); and the gently romantic "Hamburg Song" ("No, don't want to be the only one you know; I want to be the place you call home").

The latter song Chaplin introduced by saying it was the one song he'd most likely screw up (expletive paraphrased), but it went off without a hitch.

With the set list skewing toward the new material, Chaplin dubbed "A Bad Dream," another song off "Under the Iron Sea," arguably Keane's best song yet. The song's relatively quiet and dramatic, about a soldier questioning his responsibilities and longing for his lost love. It's a particularly timely song amidst all the renewed tensions in the Middle East and elsewhere.

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(Photo by Matt Anderson)

That song reflects the band's hallmark: soulful lyrics that constantly search for the bright side, for hope, even in unreasonable circumstances.

They were sentiments that could be heard all through the evening, from "Try Again," ("God I wish you could see me now; you'd pick me up and you'd sort me out"), to "Nothing in My Way" ("Well for a lonely soul you're having such a nice time").

Keane's found its niche with wholesome, universal songs that, like U2, the band it opened for only a year ago, can keep people engaged for years to come.

Get more on Keane from the band's website and Interference.com's interview with drummer Richard Hughes.
 
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:up:
Can't wait to see them in Chicago in September!
They have quickly jumped up to Coldplay status for me (personal opinion only); which is really saying something! (I regret seeing only 4 shows of the Twisted Logic tour, even though they were all the same)
Now, as far as reaching U2 calibur for me.... let's not even go there :wink:
 
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Keane needs more pub

I enjoyed your portrait of the Keane show. I had a similar experience when I saw them in Cleveland. While I believe that "is it any wonder?" is a politically-driven song, I believe it's one of the most apolitical albums I've ever heard. "Bad Dream" is ruined for me if you put any polical meaning behind it. I think it's a song that evokes powerful imagery and is meant for the audience to determine what it really means. While it's easy to attach a politcal statement to every great band out there, I would like to think human relationships and inner turmoil are just as or more interesting than the war in Iraq. And while attaching political meaning may be your way of expressing your love for the song, I had a totally different take on it. That, I will keep to myself.
 
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