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October 28, 2005

The American Analog Set, Doug Fir, 10.27.05

Thursday's show was the fourth time I'd seen the AmAnSet play in Portland. Two shows at the Blackbird were wonderful, tightly-packed intimate affairs, and last years appearance at Berbati's gave the group a bit more room to breathe. Appearing at the Doug Fir was kind of bittersweet, since I knew they would sound great with the pro sound-system, but lose a bit of intimacy and warmth.

I suppose I should mention I wasn't into the opening acts--Super XX Man and Vervein--but at least the dudes in XX Man had matching shoes, and Vervein were more interesting when the cello was involved. Plus they were all ladies, and the cellist/guitarist looked a lot like a friend of a friend.

By the time the AmAnSet took the stage it had filled out pretty well on the floor, and Azure and I planted ourselves up close to insure a good view of the action. After embarrassing myself with feeble explanations of how a vibraphone works and a funny exchange with lead guy Andrew Kenny (he thought I wanted to take a photo of the mic stand, but I was trying to capture the set list), I was ready for them to play some songs. As always the sound was full and vibrant, with rhodes organ and auxillary percussion adding to the usual guitar, bass, and drums and those aforementioned kind vibes.

Check out this video excerpt for a sample of the show. I wish I would have taken more video, but I was able to get deeper into the music without worrying about breaking out my camera all the time. However, I did take this photo of AK during his one stint on the vibes, and in my drunkenness didn't properly turn off the flash. I felt better when I went and apologized after the show, and he was totally cool and wondered if he had messed up. No, but I did feel pretty stupid regardless.

Azure was kind enough to swipe this setlist from the show, and I can only make out about 75% of the songs--they are totally using pseudonyms (in-jokes?) for some of the names--I think "Cho Chang" is some kind of Harry Potter reference, but I'm not really able to remember what the actual titles of all these tracks are, because once again I was totally swept up again by the beauty of this band (and I was pretty drunk).

Posted by j_john at 09:20 PM | Comments (1)

October 07, 2005

CMJ Belated Wrap-up

This is totally late but other things beckoned. First tour, then courting an x-boyfriend and then job hunting. Despite the majority preference for SxSW over CMJ, I had the best musical time of my life. I got a silly badge complete with DKNY advertisements on it and if I lost it I was told I would have to pay $480. As dumb as the pass looked, it was my key to cavorting around New York, seeing old friends and some of my favorite bands—as well as some I’ve never heard of. I wish this was a party review site too because I would tell you an interesting story about Nikki Hilton and big city anomie at work. Anyway, let’s get to the CMJ highlights!

GANG OF FOUR

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My excitement leading up to this show was great and arduous. Courtesy of our friend, Matt Wright, I got into this corporate-y show at the new Hard Rock. This was my only opportunity to get up close and personal with a band I’ve been waiting years to see but never wanted to put up with the crowds. That certainly wasn’t a problem here. As you can see, I was about 20 ft. from stage and had all the dancing room in the world—not to mention free tequila. Okay, enough bragging. The performance was simply staggering. The obtuse dorkiness of their old-men status was overcome by their care to instill an argosy of energy into the show (for these corporate dick-sucks none the less). They didn’t care. I’m usually pretty good at detecting a facade from a genuine performance and this most surely seemed the latter. The highlight was when Jon King took a bat like instrument and bashed a sound box over and over until it was flat. The noise it made blended in quite nicely and made for an accented kick bass. The following are my turn ons and turn offs summarized for your childish reading pleasure:

Turn Offs:
- People in tank tops lip-syncing into each others faces near the front the stage
- The crowd jumping 3x higher when “Damaged Goods” begins to be played
- Andy Gills elongated guitar solos

Turn Ons:
- The bashing of the metal box
- A solid three-song encore
- Go4 dressing their age

CUT COPY

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Matt Wright and I were on our own now and left to the devices of navigationally creative taxi drivers. When we finally got to Northsix—where the DFA showcase was close to over—we were just in time for the second half of Cut Copy’s set. Am I dumb that I didn’t know who they are? Matt enlightened me and seemed very excited. When they busted out the song “Future”, I realized I had downloaded it a while ago and chilly bumps ran down my leg. Funny how familiarity seems to be the most potent element to please a crowd.

These boys were totally animated on stage and the guitarist (on the right) did this violent head bang thing that was so unrestrained for his fragile little waif body, I thought he was going to snap his head off. The place was not packed to the max but for sure populated—including the bleachers—and the crowd was responsive and jumping all around on command. Their music is the epitome of crowd friendly electronic pop that captures the essence of the excitement that was happening during CMJ/Fashion Week. Some of their songs were overly vanilla and predictable but later I found that five solid tracks on their album more than compensate.

DELIAH & GAVIN

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Just as Matt and I were awkwardly shuffling in front of the juke box, the guitarist and drummer from the Kingdom walked in and joined us for the next show—which I knew they would hate. Deliah and Gavin have been close to my heart since the release of DFA compilation #2. You may remember their track “El Monte” which sounded like a modern take of the theme from Risky Business. It always made me want to make money. Seriously, listen to it if you need monetary motivation, it’s fool proof.

Unfortunately, when they hit the stage, they were motionless, completely and utterly still. I’m not saying there is anything wrong with stillness, but this was almost degrading. As Deliah robotically plunked on keys for their 10-minute long songs, she actually thought to chew gum. Wow, what was she thinking? ‘Let’s chew gum and show everybody how nonchalant I really am!’ The keyboard backs were so high you couldn’t even really see what they were doing with the hands and I was really looking forward to seeing what Gavin was using for sounds. It was just a boy and a girl standing there.

Now, when you close your eyes at a Deliah & Gavin show, that’s a different story. All I can say is it’s hard to keep your balance and a bit too emotional to be hearing in public. Their sound is atmospheric and serious which was a sharp dichotomous departure from Cut Copy. Needless to say, both with my eyes open or closed, I was uncomfortable—to be bored or sobbing in public are not fun. However, one of the vocalists from Wolf Parade looked like he was having an aural orgasm wilst chicken-bopping his head and making up words to the songs.

Getting back to Portland after constant nights and days of music, playing it or watching it, has not exhausted my hunger for shows but rather exacerbated it. I always believed that huge events like this become more trouble than they’re worth with all the cost, crowds and hype. This, to my misfortune, did not phase me. I just may be a festival groupie in the making. Ugh.

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Posted by Jenna at 06:34 PM | Comments (0)

Hustler White, Wet Confetti, Channels 3&4, Ikebana @ Hotel, 9/23

Soooo I actually didn't end up making it to this show, which sucks, but Jason Quigley sent me an email with some rad photos so here they are. If you went to this show and want to review please send an email and I'll post here. Enjoy!

All photos by Jason Quigley

HUSTLER WHITE

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WET CONFETTI

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CHANNELS 3&4 (or is this Ikebana? Help?)

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Posted by TRMW at 04:50 PM | Comments (0)