Siren Festival: Not Just For Freeloaders and Followers (The Intern Chronicles)
Tuesday, July 29th, 2008The 8th annual Siren Festival, presented by the hypocrites at the Village Voice, was this past weekend at sort-of-worth-going-to Coney Island. Since nobody else could be bothered to leave their air-conditioned apartments Saturday morning, we sent Summer intern Alex Gavin there for nine hours of heat-stroke and his first lesson on how to really judge people, the good-old-fashioned NYC-on-NYC way.
Did you wake up Saturday a broke-ass twenty-something with no plans? Well, me too, but The Siren Music Festival had it covered. For the 8th consecutive year, the Village Voice offered a generous sampling of live entertainment by orchestrating fourteen bands into a giant hipster-magnet just off Surf Ave. All this mobbin’ was packed into nine hours of frantically paced sets from the who’s who of the indie scene at the unobjectionable cost of absolutely nothing. That’s right, for-fucking-free. While most festivals have pawned the value of band exposure for that of AT&T, it is nice to see The Voice kickin’ it old school in the land of Christopher Wallace at the always colorful, Coney Island.
After weaving through the strollers that dotted the bustling boardwalk, I arrived at Main st. for Parts and Labor. This Brooklyn-bred quartet sprinkled rhythmic electro-subtleties over brutal riffing to create auras of an undead A/V club, and as the last chords bled out, I cruised over to Stillwell to scope the other stage. Sweeping through pockets of the deep-fried air that radiated from vendors trafficking their wares to the hungry, hungry hipsters, I found myself absorbed in two divergent soundscapes: the menacing synths of Parts and Labor yielded to Film School’s airy reverb; the dueling resonance vied for space amongst the sandy planks of the walkway. Muted tones from both stages reverberated throughout the Wonder Wheel, and with each step, Film School faded in over the unbridled glee of nearby carousel giggles. In this moment, a symbol of childhood innocence whirled in perfect rhythm with music characterized primarily by drugs and excess.

As the sun lost control of the day, the roasted-pink shoulders of a formerly pasty populace squared up for some Beach House. The dulcet duo of Victoria and Alex swayed cozily in time with their Gila opener and dedicated a haunting Heart of Chambers “to sweat, and sweating,” as the heat graciously dissipated in their presence.

As I approached the only foreseeable drawback to Siren— that is, deciding between Stephen Malkumus and Broken Social Scene, my choice was clear: BSS. Not simply because BSS serves as the SNL of modern music by spring-boarding careers of former members to solo success (e.g. Leslie Feist), but, to be honest, I had snuck in [ed. note: bitch is underage] a few beers throughout the day and Stephen Malkumus was just too rigid for my buzz. Rewarding this judgment, BSS opened with a belting, horn-driven “KC Accidental”, washing down a day in the sun with a flawless set that peaked at a mind numbing “Cause = Time”. After the last encore faded, spiraling lights from nearby rides befell the area, unveiling a luminous new visage of the moon-drenched Coney Island. Siren came to a close, and a new neon landscape emerged on the horizon.


Photos and Text by Alex Gavin


























