More than two decades after the Strokes led an indie rock renaissance in New York City, a Strokes cover band called the Brokes played a sold-out show at Arleneās Grocery, a small venue on the Lower East Side.
Hailing from Toronto, the Brokes were on their first American tour, and this gig held special meaning: The Strokes used to play Arleneās back when they were the garage rock princes of downtown Manhattan honing their act at clubs like this one.
During a 45-minute set, the Brokes blazed through early Strokes hits like āThe Modern Ageā and āLast Niteā as fans chanted lyrics and pumped their fists into the air. The frontman, Marlon Chaplin, wore sunglasses and fingerless gloves while singing through a distortion effect to match Julian Casablancasā vocal style.
The Brokes guitarist Adrian Traub-Rees, wearing a white suit and Converse sneakers, looked and sounded like Albert Hammond Jr. as he played a white Fender Stratocaster. The crowd roared when he traded licks with Brandon Wall, who plays Nick Valensiās guitar parts, during another Strokes fan favorite, āReptilia.ā
Mr. Chaplin addressed the crowd in his Casablancas-esque tone: āWeāre taking you back to āRoom on Fireā with this next tune.ā
After a few more Strokes hits, Mr. Chaplin alluded to the past: āI donāt need to tell you all about the history of the Strokes here at Arleneās.ā
The grainy footage posted to YouTube of the Strokes at Arleneās in 2000 is now an artifact of a bygone scene. Scruffy and unsigned, the band throws itself into āNew York City Copsā and āSomaā from the tiny stage. Three years later, the group would appear on the cover of Rolling Stone. Along with Interpol and the Yeah Yeah Yeahs, the Strokes became part of the sleazy indie rock epoch chronicled in Lizzy Goodmanās book āMeet Me in the Bathroom,ā and the documentary based on it.
It is the romance of the early aughts that the Brokes recreate for their fans, who are not, as you might expect, aging millennials who grew up listening to āIs This Itā on iPods during the George W. Bush administration. Instead, the crowd at Arleneās was made up predominantly of Gen-Zers who had discovered the Strokes through later albums like āComedown Machineā (2013) and āThe New Abnormalā (2020) and now find themselves yearning for the bandās gritty genesis.
āThey sound just like them,ā said Bonnie Astrid, 23, who came to the show from New Haven, Conn. āSeeing them feels like Iām seeing the Strokes if they were young again. If Julian was young again.ā
Caroline Anchor, 26, concurred. āBeing here feels like being at a Strokes nerd fest,ā she said. āThe Brokes play deep cuts, songs the Strokes would never play live at some big stadium today.ā
Sammy Moran, 25, said he felt a fanās excitement when he bumped into a member of the Brokes on his way to the bathroom. āMy parents didnāt create me early enough to see that time when the Strokes were the ultimate New York band,ā he said. āI feel robbed because of that.ā
He added, āIād rather see the Brokes a million times over than the Strokes.ā
Hours before the show, the Brokes pulled into the Lower East Side in a silver Dodge Caravan and hauled their gear into the venue. Before sound check, they took a walking tour of sorts to visit sites of Strokes history.
Their first stop was 171 Ludlow Street, the former address of Luna Lounge, an early venue for the Strokes that closed in 2005. Now itās a boutique hotel ā Hotel Indigo ā but that didnāt stop the Brokes from nerding out as guests with shopping bags stood outside waiting for Ubers.
āWeāre on sacred territory,ā Mr. Chaplin, the frontman, said. āThis is where it started.ā
Mr. Traub-Rees, the guitarist, noted the line of tourists outside Katzās Deli.
āWe know a lot has changed here, but to me thereās still an energy on the Lower East Side,ā he said. āMaybe itās the tourist in me, but even despite the Luna Lounge now being a hotel, I am still seeing ghosts and resident spirits. Iām not ashamed to get a pretzel and walk across the Brooklyn Bridge.ā
Dan Bedard, the groupās bassist, dropped the G word. āWe know what New Yorkers think of the Lower East Sideās gentrification,ā he said. āBut weāre not too cool to be in a tribute band, and weāre not too cool to say we love New York.ā
The Brokes continued their ruminations as they marched to the Mercury Lounge on Houston Street. āThis was their Cavern Club,ā Mr. Traub-Rees said, referring to the Liverpool, England, venue that served as a testing ground for the Beatles. āStanding here, I can visualize the long lines that formed for people to see the Strokes as they started to take off.ā
The Brokes ambled into the East Village to seek out the graffiti-marked doorway that once led to Transporterraum, the basement studio where the Strokes recorded their debut album, released in 2001. Itās still a recording studio, known now as Flux Studios. When an engineer stepped out for a smoke, he said a hip-hop session was underway. The Brokes craned their necks to peer inside before the door slammed shut.
Finally, they stepped into 2A, a bar that was once a hangout for the Strokes. Over Brooklyn Lagers, the Brokes reflected on their journey.
It all started, Mr. Chaplin said, on a night out with some friends in Toronto in 2017. They ended up at a karaoke event, and Mr. Chaplin took the stage on a whim to sing the Strokes song āSomeday.ā
āWhen I got offstage, everyone said I sounded just like Julian,ā he recalled. āA guy at the bar told me he was convinced it was a Strokes recording playing on the speakers.ā
It wasnāt until 2022 that Mr. Chaplin assembled some friends to perform as the Brokes, pretty much as a gag, for a Halloween party. Three months later, when they played a Toronto club, The Baby G, they had to turn people away at the door.
āThatās when we realized we had something,ā he said.
The Brokes still have day jobs. Mr. Traub-Rees (Albert) is a carpenter. Mr. Bedard (Nikolai Fraiture) works at a nursing home. Mr. Wall (Nick) is a guitar teacher. Mr. Chaplin (Julian) is a video director and editor. And the drummer, Connor MacArthur (Fabrizio Moretti), recently graduated from Toronto Metropolitan University.
Have they heard from the Strokes?
Not yet. But they claim that Mr. Hammond had watched one of their Instagram stories. And Mr. Traub-Rees hugged Mr. Casablancas onstage when he was performing with the Voidz at a Toronto club. āIām still trying to find someone who has footage,ā he sighed.
Mr. Traub-Rees said they occasionally hear from trolls.
āOn the internet and in social media comments, people say, āHey, donāt you think itās a little early for a Strokes cover band?āā he said. āWell, Iām sorry to tell those people that 20 years have gone by, but they have.ā
Later that night, after the Brokes finished performing at Arleneās, some fans made the band members feel like the real thing as they mobbed them for autographs and selfies. Others bought Brokes stickers and T-shirts from a merch table. By the bar, a woman tried to get Mr. Chaplinās number.
But with a long road ahead of them the next day ā a six-hour drive to Buffalo to play their last tour date ā the Brokes were eager to catch a few hoursā sleep at their Airbnb in Elizabeth, N.J. And their day jobs awaited them on Monday.
While his bandmates lugged gear back into the Dodge Caravan, Mr. Bedard, now wearing reading glasses, had a smoke outside the venue.
āPlaying here tonight, that felt like the New York Iād always romanticized,ā he said. āThat was a joy playing to those people, seeing them get teleported.ā
āSome musicians turn their nose up at playing in a tribute band, but I think weāre an anti-cynical act,ā he added. āThe irony is that the Strokes always had the ultimate frosty ātoo coolā attitude. They never wanted to become icons. But weāre happy to play for their fans on stages 365 days a year if they donāt want to.ā
By Alex Vadukul
Source link



