Teppy, your mix includes "Talkin' Softball'. For that, it makes me happy.
Buffista Music II: Wrath of Chaka Khan
There's a lady plays her fav'rite records/On the jukebox ev'ry day/All day long she plays the same old songs/And she believes the things that they say/She sings along with all the saddest songs/And she believes the stories are real/She lets the music dictate the way that she feels.
I am very excited, and feeling a bit live music spoiled at the moment.
Am going to see the Red Hot Chili Peppers live this evening, and apparently James Brown is appearring as one of the support acts!!!!!!!
I saw Bob Dylan perform last Friday, and was impressed that at his age, he could still remember all the words....
I wonder if the Godfather of Soul can remember any of his funky dance moves....
James Brown opening for the RHCPs is wronger than a wrong thing. t sigh
No kidding. Flat out shocking.
I hear most of the Lollaetc. bands are planning on proceeding with summer tours.
So, the Decemberists and the Long Winters were fairly disappointing live. The Long Winters relied on Let's Active-ish power pop versions of their songs (both the guitarist & bassist had Rickenbachers, which was my first clue that things were amiss [subdigression - I quite like Let's Active, but I don't think of the Long Winters as having the chops to pull off the janglepop effectively]), which unfortunately served to flatten the pleasurable nuances of their songs into three-chord-plus-lousy-solo blahness. The Decemberists were just kinda boring. No improvisation, very little stage patter, just a few songs from Her Majesty. The high point was "The Tain," which is exciting with the different parts and such.
In fact, I'm a bit interested in how both the Decemberists and the Fiery Furnaces, two of the more aurally adventurous indie-rock artists working today, are producing complex multi-part works about pirates. The FF are better at it, for sure, with their sonic montage and wacky, clearly metaphorical lyrics, but it's just fascinating that the Decemberists have chosen to challenge their Randy Newmanish soft-rock tendencies in EXACTLY the same manner as the FF, when I can't see how either band could have known about the other's new direction.
James Brown opening for the RHCPs is wronger than a wrong thing.
Yes, but I can't complain as at least I get to see both. Hoping for a nice long set from him.
Maybe the Decemberists had an off night. They've been quite engaging and friendly when I've seen them.
I hear most of the Lollaetc. bands are planning on proceeding with summer tours.
The problem is that it's kinda late in the game to book the mid-sized & large clubs at which most of them would normally play. Most places probably already have their schedules set through August.
Maybe the Decemberists had an off night. They've been quite engaging and friendly when I've seen them.
It might have been. They seemed remote and a bit stiff.
Most shows don't start until about 10 unless it's a pretty big name playing an all-ages show. Then it might start at 9.
Same in D.C. Differences: a) Most of our venues are all-ages; b)It used to be that most shows ended by 12 or slightly after because Metro closed then. Now Metro is open until 2 on weekends, so clubs ignore that.
And I would have bought Lollapalooza tix, except both of their D.C. dates are weekdays and the bands I wanted to see were split between Thursday and Friday. I think they wuld have done better with a one-day concert on the Friday only.
The problem with Lolla was that most of the bands playing appealed to a slightly older crowd who were less likely to want to spend all day (or two days) at an outdoor festival mixing it up with those pesky kids.
That could be -- I mean, it was a mix of bands that I was interested in therefore -- yes.