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Destroyer Concert Tickets

There are multiple artists with this name: 1) Destroyer is a Canadian indie rock band from Vancouver formed in 1995 and fronted by singer-songwriter Dan Bejar. 2) Destroyer was a thrash metal band from Poland. They formed in 2003 by Paweł „Koń” WIlemski (Vocals, Guitar), Radosław "Szymon" Kraweć (Guitars), Paweł "Basiorro" Leszek (Bass) and Piotr "Kocur" Leszek (Drums). Check our available Destroyer concert ticket inventory and get your tickets here at ConcertBank now. Sign up for an email alert to be notified the moment we have tickets!


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Avg. Customer Rating:
5.0 (based on 9 reviews)

http://www.mergerecords.com By JENNIFER KELLY On Five Spanish Songs, Daniel Bejar pulls off the rare trick of covering five songs by a single author - the Spaniard Antonio Luque, who records as Sr. Chinarro - while sounding precisely like Daniel Bejar. That's a feat for any performer, but more so for Bejar, who is, by nature, slippery and hard to define...
- blurtonline.com
It's ridiculous on the face of it: Destroyer recorded an EP of songs in Spanish because of leader Dan Bejar's conviction that "the English language seemed spent." That's what he writes in the press notes, at least. Yet even if you're holding fast to a tongue that Bejar insists is "good for business transactions, but that's about it," and even if you don't speak Spanish (the only other language Bejar knows), there's plenty to love about Five Spanish Songs...
- www.pastemagazine.com
"The English language seemed spent, despicable, not easily singable," Destroyer's Dan Bejar said when he announced 'Five Spanish Songs', an EP of cuts written by Antonio Luque of Seville band Sr Chinarro. Bejar has a wondrous lyrical facility that it'd be a shame for him to forsake - but he's also possessed of a beguiling, breezy touch that acts as a musical lingua franca here...
- www.nme.com
Dan Bejar (known solo as Destroyer ) is a bit of a mystery. The bushy haired Vancouverite is the member of The New Pornographers who doesn't seem to give a care, often meandering offstage to placate a nic-fit, or scaling back his audience interactions to a polite minimum while channeling a Hunky Dory era David Bowie. But, like all worthy troubadours, he has the uncanny ability to enthrall listeners with fantastic storytelling and musical grace...
- consequenceofsound.net
On Destroyer's new Spanish-language EP, Dan Bejar reimagines five songs by Antonio Luque of the indie band Sr. Chinarro, taking them beyond their acoustic alt-rock origins. Standout El Rito's shiny indie pop treatment makes it one of Bejar's more energized recordings to date. The other tunes are equally appealing and cosmopolitan...
- www.nowtoronto.com
Dan Bejar has never been a predictable man. A serial genre-chameleon, under his guise, he has churned out everything from acoustic indie to ambient experimental electronica. And after the British accented, " " name-dropping of Eighties soft rock homage , it's no surprise to see Bejar don another genre, persona, and even a new language. All of the tracks on are Sr...
- www.drownedinsound.com
On Destroyer's new Spanish-language EP, Dan Bejar reimagines five songs by Antonio Luque of the indie band Sr. Chinarro, taking them beyond their acoustic alt-rock origins. Standout El Rito's shiny indie pop treatment makes it one of Bejar's more energized recordings to date. The other tunes are equally appealing and cosmopolitan...
- nowtoronto.com
Dan Bejar shows a little love for an influence and takes a break from English with a handful of covers, deeming the English language "spent, despicable, not easily singable" and "good for business transactions, but that's about it." We could all stand a break, honestly--let an adjective count on this review alone serve as proof. Ample proof. Yes--breaks are good for the soul, as is the discovery of someone like Spain's Antonio Luque, aka the guiding force of Sr. Chinarro...
- www.undertheradarmag.com
This is Destroyer's first covers collection. Which is odd, really, since the verbose Destroyer main man, Dan Bejar, would seem out of place trying to fit into the confines of a song any less intense (or shorter) than his epics like "Rubies" or "Kaputt." If he's momentarily weary of working up his own tunes, so too has the English language lost its lustre for Bejar...
- www.cmj.com
Google+ by Chris Robertson