SOUNDTRACK: ARCADE FIRE-“We Used to Wait” (Saturday Night Live, November 13, 2010) (2010).
I know they played two songs that night but I just watched the rerun and they only showed one song.
I’ve always thought that Arcade Fire were pretty cool live. And this set from SNL proves me right. “We Used to Wait” comes from The Suburbs and it’s a pretty mild song on the record. But live, the band plays with really weird sounds and explores different types of cacophony.
This is especially true from guitarist Richard Reed Perry (who plays all kinds of other instruments too). He plays some of the more riff-based notes in the song, but he also plays some really loud, unusual chords as well. Some of them are quite dissonant and they really bring a dramatic noise to the song.
The string section (three violins on this show) in addition to playing the strings also added some really cool dissonance. In fact, the first time the strings came in, the sound was quite surprising.
I also love the percussive nature of the band. By the end of the song it seems like half the band are banging on drums (while playing other things as well, no doubt).
Win Butler is an intimidating frontman–I find his face to be open, almost blank. He’s kind of hard to read. He’s also very tall. When he walks out into the audience in the middle of the song, it’s a little unnerving.
One thing that I have liked about Arcade Fire from the beginning was their intensity, and this song certainly displays it.
[READ: November 7, 2011] “The Stain”
This is another Tessa Hadley story about a woman who cleans up. It’s nothing at all like “Friendly Fire,” but I still think it’s interesting that she has another character who opts to do cleaning work.
In this one, Marina is a mother of a young boy, Liam. To makes extra money she takes on a job as a house cleaner and “companion” to an elderly man. He’s 89 and from South Africa. He has recently come to Britain after his daughter (who has lived here for a long time) moved him here. And the house where he lives is a house not far from where Marina lives. Indeed, it’s one that she grew up looking at and wondering what it looked like inside (it’s a very big house).
The old man is notorious for making cleaning women go away–he is cantankerous and crotchety. But Marina soothes him right away and they form a kind of bond. Marina even brings Liam over a few times and he gets along quite well with the old man.
After a few months, the old man begins slipping extra money into Marina’s envelope. She’s made very uncomfortable by it and tells him to knock it off. He keeps trying in small ways to give her extra presents (both because he likes her and because he seems to dislike his own family who barely give him any attention). And then one day he announces that he is giving this gigantic house to Marina, his own children be damned.
This causes massive friction between Marina and the man’s daughter, Wendy (who hired Marina in the first place). Things get resolved to everyone’s satisfaction and Marina agrees to keep working there.
On the man’s 90th birthday, she finally gets to meet all of his family. And Wendy’s youngest son tells her something that changes the way she looks at the old man and her job.
The ending is touching and more than a little conflicting (for the reader but not for Marina). It was a very good and surprisingly intense story. Tessa Hadley is definitely a great writer.

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