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Concert review: The Fray's pre-Grammys show

Feb 11, 2007, 04:40 PM | by Whitney Pastorek

Categories: Grammys, Music

Fray_lContinuing the pre-party smush of Grammy Week 2007, my friend Allyson and I headed over to the House of Blues Friday night to see this band called the Fray, who I believe at least 2 million of you have heard of, since you bought their album largely on the strength of a song from a Grey's Anatomy commercial. I respect that about you, PopWatchers: Your trust that, whatever happens, Grey's Anatomy will not let you down. And so even though prior to the show I wouldn't have known Fray lead singer Isaac Slade if he'd hit me in the face with a really sensitive man-stick, I decided I would trust your tastes and check it out for myself.

It should come as no surprise that the band opened with "Over My Head" ("They blew their load," said my friend Allyson) and closed with "How to Save a Life." But it takes a special band to hold my interest when I've never heard their music before, and perhaps the highest compliment I can pay the Fray (pay the Fray!) is that I enjoyed myself a great deal during the songs in between. They write really endearingly pleasant tunes, these boys ("There are so many of them!" exclaimed Allyson), and every once in a while they do something that grabs you by the throat because it's really great and original and not at all a total Wallflowers+Coldplay rip-off. ("PLAY SOME COLDPLAY!" screamed a drunk guy behind me.) Plus, they were totally adorable about being at their first Grammys after a number of years toiling in Denver obscurity, and spent a lot of time thanking their parents and their guitar tech and their lighting guy... and all of us, for missing the Justin Timberlake party to be there. (No problem, the Fray: We couldn't get in, anyway.)

I must give credit to Isaac, first and foremost, for figuring out the art of being charismatic from behind a piano. He plays a teeny tiny little Yamaha, but it's big enough to hold his weight when he stands on it (as he did during the "Over My Head" singalong) and also manages to produce a solid sound when it needs to. Slade's voice is this happy blend of pretty much every male singer ever -- Allyson said Thom Yorke, I said David Grey -- while his bandmate and co-vocalist Joe King fluctuates between a Ryan Adams thing and maybe a little John Mayer. And I stood there scribbling down all the lyrics I could understand -- the sound was a little muddy -- so I could Google them later and figure out which songs I liked. Here are some: "Fall Away," which sounds like Coldplay but has a really sweet earnestness to it; "Heaven Forbid," which has one of those great builds into a hard, rhythmic ending that busts out and hits you in the gut; "Dead Wrong," which has a melancholy vibe yet elicited fist-pumps from the woman in front of me (who was dressed in a Hard Rock Cafe sweatshirt and a Planet Hollywood t-shirt); and another song whose name I cannot figure out right now because the only lyric I wrote down was "something's got to-" and that is really not helpful. But it was a rocker that spanned the spectrum from Billy Joel to Nickelback to Van Halen, and had this awesome classical-piano breakdown in the middle that I loved.

And see, it's that sort of thing I'd love to see the Fray do more of, going forward. I'd like to see them get out of the middle of the road and play around with what it means to be a piano-fronted rock band. Seems like there are an awful lot of well-meaning white dudes singing songs about love and understanding at the moment, but this third song -- the one whose name I can't figure out right now -- was a glimpse of what's possible when these guys stop playing it safe and take their piano and use it to crush the competition. The two new songs they played -- a clappy rocker called "Absolute" and a Joe-fronted down home number whose title I didn't catch -- are an interesting start.

So on the PopWatch Concert Review Scale of 1 to 10 -- with 1 being the dude playing the Casio outside the Key Club last night and 10 being Pearl Jam in Mexico City -- I give the Fray an adorably middle of the road 6.5. When I got home from the show, I downloaded their album off the iTunes, and I'm looking forward to listening to it on the plane ride home. And then I will be edumacated!

sammy Wed, Nov 12, 2008 at 09:57 AM EST

the fray are absolutley amazin

bob Thu, Dec 27, 2007 at 04:30 PM EST

Isaac had his first kiss at 22!

bob Thu, Dec 27, 2007 at 04:30 PM EST

Isaac had his first kiss at 22!

elizabeth Thu, Jun 14, 2007 at 11:34 AM EST

My teenage daughter turned me on to The Fray prior to the Grey's Anatomy thing. (Which I do not watch.) One song caught my ear and the next thing you know I have cd's! I find their music to be very real and heartfelt in its songwriting, and I thoroughly enjoy the music alone. I purchased tickets to the upcoming show for the person whose taste in music I admire the most. They'll do nothing but grow. Gettem' guys!!!

Bill Wed, Apr 4, 2007 at 10:58 AM EST

It's everyone's personal taste weather they like a certain band or not, but don't judge the band's quality on whether they sound like everyone else, judge it on whether you think they sound good. Personally, I love The Fray, I'm seeing them in June, and I can't wait. If you have a chance I highly reccommend trying to find their EP they released before the album, Reason. It has a little bit different feel to it, but it's still great. My favorite on that is Unsaid, which I think they put on the UK version of How to Save a Life. Both CDs are great, and they have a lot of potential to become a truly great band.

Holli Wed, Feb 28, 2007 at 12:27 PM EST

The Fray are rockers. Well to me, that is. I think any music they put out there will be good, and they feel that even though their new songs/future CD's might not be as popular or have as good of sales, they will have released a better collection of Music! The Fray is the best!!!

j9 Tue, Feb 27, 2007 at 05:19 PM EST

the joe-fronted one may be called Uncertainty... or his newest one, Dixie.

uncertainty is more downbeat, while Dixie is upbeat...

zanne Wed, Feb 14, 2007 at 11:29 PM EST

i'd met the fray before the cd was released--they're very very good friends of a dear friend of mine. i heard the songs, the rough mixes, worked with ben (the drummer) a bit. so i'm biased--they're a great bunch of guys with a lot of potential that the hasn't even been heard yet. and just for the record--the gray's anatomy commercial came AFTER their first single, 'over my head', began to skyrocket up the charts.

the fray aren't much like anyone else--the comments about the concert in the above review made that obvious. they've got depth, intelligence, and diversity. they're young, so they're only going to get better. somehow, it feels like the only reason to rip on them is a desire to prove oneself different from the majority. a sad commentary about individuality, wouldn't you say?

meme Tue, Feb 13, 2007 at 03:23 PM EST

I feel a bit sorry for the Fray that the Grey's Anatomy folks smacked us over the head with "How to Save a Life". It made people not like them and while they're nothing revolutionary, they're definitely better than most of the junk out there, and they really don't deserve that.

Ellipsian Mon, Feb 12, 2007 at 08:22 PM EST

Just because something is popular or easily digestible does not automatically make it any less creative or artistic.
Just because something is not commercial or "poppy" does not automatically make it genius or relevant.
One's reactions to art and entertainment are subjective and personal, and to treat anyone's opinion as gospel or to feel angered by said opinions is irrational and self-destructive.

Kevin Mon, Feb 12, 2007 at 02:19 PM EST

I feel like I should walk around with a shield, because every time I bash The Fray or Grey's Anatomy people feel the need to project things at me! I've had a shoe, a fork, a few writing utensils, and a day planner all thrown violently towards my face! And that's not to mention all the bruises I have from getting smacked or slugged!

I get it folks!!! About a trillion of you like flimsy, butterscotch-flavored art and I'll stop talking about real bands/shows like Arcade Fire or The Sopranos in front of you. One question? When a meaningless song is scored over a hyper-dramatized scene, like most of those found in Grey's, do you fans feel more or less connected to the suburban lives that many of you envision as "The Real World?”

Christopher Mon, Feb 12, 2007 at 08:13 AM EST

It's so wonderfully safe to hate on the Fray, even if it's damning praise. If you think they're too much like another band, fine, wave that flag, but fans are responding to something (IMO, the lyrics, which are unusually sharp for the medium) and it's a shame you're missing out on that relationship instead of talking about the arm's distance you keep the band because someone else sounds like them.
John Lydon once said music reviewers should talk less about their opinions and more about what the music contains (and since that sounds so uncharacteristically reasonable from the world's biggest living brat, it stuck with me), independent of self-involvement.
But then, that's what blogging is-- it;s self involvment, and I know this because I blog, too. I... meh. I just hate to see a band struggle to produce something that I connect with and then hear people cynically suggest the band is interchangeable with another band.
That's my two cents.

Jessica Mon, Feb 12, 2007 at 12:48 AM EST

I believe the "rocker" song you're trying to remember is "Little House." It is definitely one of the most interesting tracks on their album because it so quite different from the rest.

Sparkler Mon, Feb 12, 2007 at 12:10 AM EST

It's a really good album – and I bought it before the "Grey's Anatomy" buzz, dagnabbit. Other really good tracks are "Vienna," and "Hundred."

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