Right down to their insistence on using a slashed ‘ø’ in their name, The Do — or, if you will, The Dø — are a band riddled in idiosyncrasies, an inner turmoil between genuine performing flair and over-the-top whimsy. The French-Finnish two-piece have carved a modest but appreciable impact through two albums: A Mouthful, a promising three-quarters-good debut of liltingly jazzy indie-pop; and Both Ways Open Jaws, where misguided experimentation morphed into something dull and irritating. Hits follow misses like clockwork with The Dø, who schizophrenically dart between likeable and tiresome, skewing ever more closely, of late, towards the latter.
And so it goes live, the two-piece bringing with them a full band to realise their vision of Gallic-tinted ‘fun’ music; pop for the over-21s. Against a cacophony of summery, brassy support, the quirky pair reel off a selection of their favourite party genres, track after track, without direction or discipline. It’s cowbell-tapping samba! It’s thumping bass-funk! It’s synth-heavy dance! It’s rock-jazz-indie-pop! Such jack-of-all-trades-ery is only destined to fail, being as they are only a master of just some. ‘Too Insistent’ is a wishy-washy misfire, whilst slow and sultry ‘At Last’ is simple and effective, offering a small glimpse of their potential as a kind of tolerable Ting Tings.
This oddly cloying music met with muted appreciation at Bush Hall — polite applause, naturally, but nary a head bobbing, even during the most energetic numbers. “As long as we’re dancing,” frontwoman Olivia implores during ‘Bohemian Dances’, but Shepherds Bush seems reluctant to oblige. Perhaps their sound is deigned for those less cynical, but it’s tremendously hard not to be when there’s a fucking saxophone solo propelled down your throat, a cringing indulgence which surely the gods decreed to be banished with the threat of Luther Vandross. An evening of high quirk — Olivia often sings with a lit-up megaphone, and the band end one song by freezing like mimey performance artists — was never going to be an easy sell, but it’s all the more infuriating given their obvious, poorly-channelled talent.
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