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Semantics aside, Tomson and his bandmates — singer/guitarist Ezra Koenig, bassist Chris Baio and keyboard player Rostam Batmanglij — have accomplished quite a bit in their short time together. The four met at Columbia University, where they attended school and played together in various projects before forming Vampire Weekend in the spring of 2006. Since then, they've released the EP that garnered so much attention, quit their day jobs and mounted tours of the U.S. and Europe. And right now, the guys are in a position that most groups would kill to be in. They may not be making any money yet, but people are clearly enthused and attentive.
"Sales," Tomson muses, "are like...I guess they're important to some people. As we kind of know, that's becoming less and less an actual thing, because people don't buy records. For me, anyway, personally — not speaking for the band, necessarily — touring is one of the coolest things. When we play Seattle and, because the radio station there has been playing us, a couple hundred people come out and they're all really excited and they know the words, that's exciting. If that can continue and that can keep going, then I think all this stuff and attention will be worth it."
For the members of Vampire Weekend, the challenge now becomes sustaining their current momentum while building upon it, winning over music fans who don't necessarily take their cues from music blogs but still buy albums. Shouldn't be too difficult. Driving that attention is the presence of certain sounds and influences that haven't been heard in indie circles for quite a while. The EP kicks off with "Cape Cod Kwassa Kwassa," a poppy track that incorporates some of the same African elements apparent in the music of the Talking Heads and the work of Paul Simon and Peter Gabriel in the late '80s. "A-Punk" uses some of the same tricks but leans heavily in a ska direction, while "Oxford Comma," the closer, is reminiscent of the reggae-informed work of Graham Parker and Elvis Costello. The songs themselves are all clever and catchy, and the whole thing is cemented together by a sunny, chipper and clean approach that's been called "preppy." Within those few songs, the members of Vampire Weekend manage to incorporate a fairly broad range of influences, but it's the Afrobeat connection that most critics have seized upon as the crucial element of the group's sound. Tomson acknowledges the inspiration but thinks pundits have made too much of it.
"Those songs, the EP songs, more heavily have the African influence," he admits. "While that's certainly a part, and we like African music, that's not the defining characteristic of our music. I think that was just something where that wasn't even a conscious thing; that was just something we'd all been listening to. It certainly has been a part of what we've done. I don't think its quite as limiting as I've seen, or like people write: 'Oh, they're just this African-influenced group.' Which we are, but I think there's a number of other things as well that are equally there."
Of course, with a near-infinite number of bloggers writing about the same three songs and brief band history, it was almost inevitable that the act would get typecast early on the web — not to mention in the mainstream coverage that followed. When you're a darling of the blogosphere, though, that almost comes with the territory. "I wasn't too into the blog world and stuff before people started writing about us," Tomson confesses. "It's kind of new to me. I'm not really sure how to gauge it, I guess. It seems like a lot of the people are just kind of like dudes — at least a lot of the ones I read are like random people in Ontario or something who are like, 'Oh, I like this band, you should check them out.' I don't know who really reads them. I don't know, it's a weird thing."