Death to New Rave

Long live Klaxons

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WE CAN DANCE IF WE WANT TO James Righton, Jamie Reynolds, and Simon Taylor

Ironically, Klaxons, the English band behind the most danceable indie rock in years and originators of the term "New Rave," don't want to be the torchbearers for the dance revolution. They're just three (sometimes four) young men from Stratford-Upon-Avon and Bournemouth, England, they contend, who, a year ago, got bored with the grey, depressing drone-rock billowing out of London like so much factory smoke and decided to update the rave scene's DayGlo dedication to all-night fun. Soon after, the major rock press picked up on it when, as a joke, bassist/vocalist Jamie Reynolds described his group as "New Rave" in an interview. Always on the hunt for conveniently labeled revolution, New Musical Express (NME to friends) slapped Klaxons on its cover, declared "new rave fever," and booked them on its massive "indie rave" tour.

"People wanted to start this non-existent genre, and we told them we're not part of it and we don't give a fuck about it"For the English, that's all well and good. But when was the last time an American rock audience was inspired to dance to an electric guitar? As the band embarks on a U.S. tour—last night's show at the Bowery Ballroom in Manhattan was sold out—in support of the stateside release of their debut LP, Myths of the Near Future, Radar asked guitarist/vocalist Simon Taylor, 24, how Klaxons plan to persuade the Yanks to do more than just cross their arms and nod approvingly to the beat before moving on to the next big thing.

RADAR: What can you, Simon, do to make people dance?
SIMON TAYLOR:
It sounds really pathetic, but I don't think there's anything you can do to encourage people other than just go for it, just do it. We are not one of those bands that makes people clap on the left and clap on the right. We just go out there and play and hope for the best.


"GRAVITY'S RAINBOW"
Surely, considering your brightly colored beginnings, you have some magic scheme to get the party started.
[Long pause.] I'm really struggling 'cause I don't think there's anything you can specifically do—whatever you tell an audience, they will just do the opposite. If someone tells me to dance, that's the last thing I feel comfortable doing.

Is that where "New Rave" comes in, then, as a simple way to signify a dance party?
It came from Jamie. He mentioned New Rave as a joke to talk about how the British press get excited by anything new, like the new rock revolution or the new this or new that ...

But you all dressed the part with whacked-out, retro rave wear right up until recently.
One of the things we're constantly learning is that we get an idea in our heads and then we do it. Then we have another idea and we do that, but when you're a touring band, there's a delay between the ideas being transmitted and received. The thing about when we first started was that all the bands in London were quite gloomy, and that just bored us—and we wanted to wear bright clothes. And then I suppose everyone else started doing it—and not in an arrogant way—but we just got bored of that. It's just constantly about change.

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