Friday, August 14, 2009

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Lollapalooza: Sunday, Day 3 @ Grant Park, Chicago IL

Posted: 14 Aug 2009 09:13 AM PDT

As much as I love music, sun and Chicago, it is a very fortunate thing that Lollapalooza is only a weekend long. Next year I am wearing a pedometer just so I can see how much I walked, although I’m not sure why this festival was so much more brutal when I have survived SXSW, Bonnaroo and even Lollapalooza before.

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Though it was early in the morning and the final day, a large crowd had already amassed for Sam Roberts Band. Canadian flags with pot leaves in place of the maple were in no shortage as the jam rockers played their songs. While I doubt that I’d go out of my way to buy an album, it was fun to pick up on the choruses and singalong._MG_7501

Friendly Fires was next on my agenda and I must say that the Brits (oh Los Campesinos, why couldn’t you play every day?) and all the other European bands that crossed the great pond for this fest owned it. Friendly Fires didn’t have that large of a crowd, but they had everybody dancing as they sang “Jump into the Pool” and other tunes. It was difficult to pull away from their set, but I knew my beloved string players in Ra Ra Riot had started their set at the opposite end of the festival.

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Usually when watching Ra Ra Riot, I geek out over the strings, but today I finally saw how talented of a performer singer is as he was practically skipping about then even ran out to sing as close to the crowd as he could get from the barricade. Even though lyrically they can be a downer band, I was beaming as I watched his glee at performing at Lollapalooza.

Bat for Lashes tried to mystify with ethereal vocals, creepy angel dolls and shiny spandex.  The only thing I was really mystified by was why she played the piano by just poking it with her pointer fingers. I mean even if that’s all the song needs, the norm is to record the pattern then let it loop. It was just confusing. But she does have a great Bjork voice. I do think their stage show just might fit a little better in a foggy club than the bright outdoors.

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I really wanted to see Cage the Elephant after Joshua told me their Bonnaroo made him think they were the next Nirvana. Not only were they late to the stage, but it was just a messy performance. I couldn’t even force myself long enough to hear the radio tune “Ain’t No Rest for the Wicked”.

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Severely disappointed, I went to the Airborne Toxic Event, whom have always impressed me in the past. The sound seemed off and I was in need of some more tunage that wasn’t so nostalgic, so I again band jumped to the Kaiser Chiefs.

I had an interview scheduled far too many blocks away, so I missed the next few acts, which was a bummer because I couldn’t even find the band I was supposed to interview and by this point, all the walking was making me feel like I would never move again (I later learned that my body aches were a bit more severe than I thought and not quite from the walking, but other problems. Eeks!).

The Raveonettes greeted me as I walked back into the fest. Finally, a band that was worth the hype! The vocals were amazingly powerful and I immediately was bummed that I didn’t run to see them in their entirety. Alas! Perhaps in the future, they’ll swing through my neck of the woods.

Preppy indie darlings Vampire Weekend came out in thick shades and brightly colored shorts in contrast to their usual khakis and cardigans. A more appropriate dress choice in the unbearable heat. They started off with a new number, but one I had heard before and as Ezra led the crowd through his little yelps and he rocked up on his toes, there was one clear thought I had about this band: they have the most tone deaf fans ever. The audience tries really hard to singalong with this band. They try really, really, really hard, but they are awful. At least the band is good. I know that it is just as popular to hate on this band as it is to love them. I happen to love them and find them and their tunes absolutely adorable (plus I’m a communications major and let’s be real–who gives a fuck about an oxford comma?).

The next bit of the festival is a bit of a blur as severe dehydration started to set in, my leg problem worsened and Ezra’s brilliant idea to make the crowd dance turned into a mosh pit that caused me to get pushed all the way to the front of what would later be a 200,000 person crowd. Exciting, but scary. To be honest, I wasn’t sure how I felt about my new spot by the barricade. On one hand it was exciting. On the other, it was sad because there was no way I could get back through the crowd and see bands on other stages.

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I did get to hear Cold War Kids and Silversun Pickups, but I couldn’t really see them. It was hella fun to be stared down by Snoop Dogg’s guards on stage and be able to see his phenomenal drummer. I have to hand it to Snoop, he really knows how to work up a crowd (especially considering everybody up front seemed to be waiting for .

I guess I missed out on some excitement at the other end of the venue. Lou Reed went well over his set time, cutting into Band of Horses‘ set. A pissed off crowd apparently yelled “Fuck off, Lou” and “Boo,” but Band of Horses politely started their set and even kept playing after “The Funeral” ended and Jane’s Addiction started.

I doubt that anybody is surprised that I wanted to see over Jane’s Addiction and reports of crowd sizes between the two headlining stages make it sound like I was not in the minority. It also sounds like from other reports that I picked the better of the two shows. Perry may have started this festival, but it has outgrown him and his gaudy tactics.  A helicopter shined a spotlight on the audience, the band was joined by vaudevillian (cough prostitutes cough) characters and even invited Aerosmith’s guitarist to join them for “Jane’s Says”. Yes, I am very glad I missed that abuse of music.

have a big stage show and lights, but at the heart of their performance, they don’t rely on the gimmicks that the night’s other headliner used. Their stage show was more so used to compliment the theme and vibe of the latest album. It enhanced the music instead of detracting. They had their palm trees and lights, and in the heat, it really did feel like transported all of us from Chicago to their home of Las Vegas.

The band has really grown into their element and while they have headlined countless European festivals, just this past year have they received that same honor in the States. I think this might have been their largest audience on U.S. soil.

As played, each song got better and bigger than the last. Singer Brandon Flowers seemed especially chatty and happy this night as he told the tale of how he and first met and wrote “Mr. Brightside” (true story) to a mystical tale of the band’s travels to get to Lollapalooza (slightly exaggerated). Flowers’ extra happiness might be attributed to the fact that his second son was born the week prior to the festival.

Though I’ve seen this band many times before, they still brought out a few surprises like an extra verse addition to “Bling”, a song that was never a single, but has easily become one of their most popular live hits. And while there was no Lou Reed guest spot as many–myself included–speculated, this set still took Lollapalooza out with a a nice “twist with a shout.” Reference to obscure? Get yourself to an iPod or a Killers show asap.

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Lollapalooza: Sunday in summary:
Best set of the day: We know I loved . What a great way to end the fest. I guess I’ll throw Friendly Fires a bone here, too.
Best surprises of the day: Aerosmith members during Jane’s is a surprise, but not a good one (please don’t let them headline 2010 like Perry joked). Band of Horses making up for Lou Reed stealing their set time and playing against Jane’s Addiction is pretty awesome.
Breakthrough of the day: Friendly Fires.
Biggest let downs of the day: Cage the Elephant. Ugh. Lou Reed. And no Lou Reed at , but my understanding is that again was Lou Reed’s fault and tried to get him to join them. Oh and that the root of my pain was not all the walking, but was a spider bite that has caused my leg to swell, turn red, give me a fever and is serious enough that I need to go the ER like asap.
Crazy crowd moment: Let’s just say that Snoop Dogg made some people who had just met feel extra close. I feel a bit scandalized.

Lollapalooza: website | schedule | set lists

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Green Day Photo Essay and Setlist @ Scottrade Center, St. Louis

Posted: 14 Aug 2009 08:35 AM PDT

It had been four long years since Green Day had grace us in the gateway to the west, but the boys in black made sure to dazzle thousands of screaming fans with a set stretching to 30 tracks covering their whole catalog. While the first half of the set was dedicated to material from 21st Century Breakdown and American Idiot, the last half  was crammed with as many of their past hits as possible. Rarely is a band so open with fans, inviting them on stage and allowing them to show off their best Billie Joe impression as the band pulls no punches with their live show complimented with lots of fire and explosions. With that close relationship with their fans, it’s no wonder Green Day is where they are today.

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Setlist:
Song of The Century (played over the loudspeakers)
21st Century Breakdown
Know Your Enemy
East Jesus Nowhere (interlude of Elvis Costello's “Alison”)
Holiday
The Static Age
Before The Lobotomy
Are We the Waiting/St. Jimmy
Boulevard of Broken Dreams
2000 Light Years Away
Johnny Be Goode (Chuck Berry)
Hitchin' a Ride
Welcome To Paradise
When I Come Around
teases of Black Sabbath's "Iron Man", The Kinks "You Really Got Me" and Motley Crüe's Shout at the Devil
BrainStew
Longview
Basket Case
She
King for a Day
Shout! (Isley Brothers) with fragments of The Doors' “Break on Through” and Tom Petty's  “Free Fallin'”
21 Guns
American Eulogy
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American Idiot
Minority
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Macy's Day Parade
Coming Clean
Good Riddance (Time of Your Life)

Green Day: website | myspace

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Miles Benjamin Anthony Robinson signs to Saddle Creek Records

Posted: 14 Aug 2009 08:05 AM PDT

Miles-Benjamin09First announced via his Facebook page, and now made official through the Saddle Creek web site, PopWreckoning’s favorite NYC hipster has been signed to Saddle Creek Records. His sophomore efford, Summer of Fear will be released October 20th on the label.

It’s been well known that MBAR has been shopping for a label for his next record. Both Summer of Fear and his debut self titled album, were recorded a couple years ago. Since then it has been a long process of trying to find a good fit for the folk rocker and his intense, emotionally gut wrenching sound.

Congrats to MBAR, and we hope this is a sign of more good music to come.

: myspace | @ johnny brenda's, june 2008 | @ monolith 2008 | @ johnny brenda’s, nov 2008

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