Column 150 — It’s the End of the Music Industry as We Know It (And I Feel Fine); Noah’s Ark, Cloven Path tonight…

Category: Blog — @ 1:35 pm November 15, 2007

The bottom line: Change is good. Change is inevitable. Change is unstoppable. It’s like that ol’ slogan used by challengers in political campaigns: Are you better off now than you were four years ago (or eight years ago or 20 years ago)? For an industry and a genre that’s dying, I’ve never listened to more good music than I have in the past couple of years. Change is here. And things are only going to get better.

Column 150: Alive and Well
The reports of music’s death are highly exaggerated.
Is anyone else getting tired of hearing how music — indie or otherwise — is dying or already dead?

Seems like you can’t pick up a publication these days without reading how the music industry is in its final days, its death knell is being tolled by a digital bell. Just ask Rolling Stone. The once-great arbiter of all things rock ‘n’ roll has been publishing the music industry’s obituary in almost every issue for the past couple years, documenting the slow decline of CD sales and the rise of digital downloads.

As part of the magazine’s 40th Anniversary, Rolling Stone just published a special issue that includes a section titled, “The Future of Music.” Inside, 21 “top artists” were asked about “technology, inspiration and what’s next for the record industry.” Among them, Lily Allen, Wayne Coyne, Michael Stipe, Justin Timberlake and our very own Conor Oberst.

The consensus: We’re all screwed. Music is dying on the electronic vine. MP3 files are causing our ears to wither into dried tortellini noodles. Revenue streams are drying up faster than Atlanta’s water supply. Once proud rock stars soon will be hocking deodorant and Cadillacs (Just ask Bob Dylan). While music has never been more available to the masses, it’s all bad music (except, of course, for the interviewees’ own records), and people are starting to lose the ability to tell good shit from bad shit. Record companies have seen the writing on the wall and are adjusting to the downturn by screwing artists with contracts that not only take away most of their album revenue but also a big chunk of their auxiliary income — i.e., merch sales. Wave goodbye to your luxury tour bus and back that converted ’97 Chevy Beauville right into the driveway.

Sounds bleak. Too bleak.

The industry will survive. It won’t be the industry that folks in their 30s knew growing up, but something completely different. Something better. The industry will change from being a group of record labels that sells products, to a business that provides a service to both artists and consumers. Yes, you’ll be able to find just about any song or album online for free — all in high fidelity, brought to you in convenient digital chunks. Just download and listen. So how will artists survive? By performing, by selling merch at venues including limited edition CDs and vinyl — i.e., collectors’ items. And yes, by making endorsements and selling their music to Madison Avenue. And those who refuse to “sell out” will have other, more noble options for their publishing rights, including movies and television.

As for the death of indie — when was indie ever alive? It’s always been an underground phenomenon whose bands have survived on record sales that count well below 100,000 units. Those numbers come with the territory. Indie music isn’t supposed to break into the popular culture, because after it does, it’s no longer indie music.

People constantly fight over what “indie” means. My definition: Indie music is generally anything not released on a major label that doesn’t get FM radio airplay for one reason or another. Some would say all good performers were “indie” at one point in their careers. I disagree with those who say indie has a distinct audio fingerprint. It doesn’t. Take any indie song, put it in heavy rotation on Clear Channel, and it’s no longer an indie song. Perhaps a better definition: Indie music isn’t written for the broadest consumption — in other words, the songwriter wasn’t trying to write a “hit.”

Most indie artists I’ve interviewed over the years never expected to sell 100,000 copies of anything. Sure, they would love to, but they never deluded themselves into thinking it would actually happen. That’s not why they became musicians. Their reticence to sign with major labels has more to do with an unwillingness to “play the game” than it does any “cool factor.” The price for being an arena rock star means the loss of your creative freedom.

And indie has always been about creative freedom — the ability to write and perform whatever you want. Sometimes the cost for that freedom is only having 20 people at your shows. 100,000 albums? Most indie bands would feel successful selling 10,000. Many would be happy selling only 1,000.

And finally, for god’s sake, quit blaming everything on iPods. This idea that people love their gadgets more than the music they play is both contrived and nothing new. When I was growing up, it was cool to have a bitching stereo system. Most of the guys I hung out with in high school spent a sizable chunk of change on their stereos, and were proud to show them off to ear-bleeding effect. Who remembers going to World Radio and Stereo West and all the huge stereo stores before the rise of Best Buy? Back then, few could afford a high-end stereo, but even us “disadvantaged” kids were proud of our Realistic and Spark-o-matic systems.

Technology is a good thing. Do MP3 files sound as good as CDs? No. Do most people care? No. Most people don’t have stereos good enough to tell the difference. What they do have is the ability to carry their entire music collection with them wherever they go. And unlike the old stereo days, the technology is affordable and continues to drop in price, unlike Compact Discs.

I’ve seen the future too, and it’s going to be okay. Honest. We’ll make it through this. And Homer’s will be there, too. And there will even be a sound track to live by. And it won’t cost you a dime.

We go a couple days without shows around here and you think it really is the death of music. Well, there are a couple good ones tonight, and the weekend’s looking pretty crowded as well. As mentioned yesterday, Cloven Path plays at O’Leaver’s tonight with or without a vocalist. Along for the ride is opening band Slough Fed. $5, 9:30 p.m. Meanwhile, over at The Waiting Room, it’s the full-throttle grinding head-rush of Noah’s Ark Was a Spaceship with Yuppies and Bazooka Shootout. I haven’t seen Noah’s Ark in about a year and a half. Judging from the tracks on their Myspace page, they’ve changed their style somewhat since then. “Adult Sized Skeletal” is filthy slacker indie punk that reminds me of Vitreous Humor. I don’t remember Noah’s having vocals back then. They’ve got ’em now. And what is it about Bazooka Shootout that reminds me of Chavez? Probably the way the lead singer does his thing. Vitreous Humor? Chavez? I’m really dating myself with these references. If you’ve never heard of either band, run out and buy their shit now, then head to The Waiting Room. $5, 9 p.m.

–Got comments? Post ’em here.

Lazy-i

Quiet time…

Category: Blog — @ 6:45 pm November 14, 2007

It been kind of quiet the past few days musicwise. Something worth mentioning… Remember how I said there were only four shows slated for O’Leaver’s for the balance of the year? Turns out the bar just hadn’t gotten around to updating their myspace calendar. That number has doubled (actually, one of those dates is a chili cookoff), and includes a Cloven Path show tomorrow night, which should be interesting as the band recently lost its singer and was contemplating either finding a new singer or going without one as they had for so long before Kat showed up.

And… that’s all, folks. Tomorrow’s column discusses the bleak vision so many people seem to have for the future of the music industry. As pre-reading, go find the current issue of Rolling Stone. You can’t miss it, it’s the magazine with the giant holograph for a cover.

–Got comments? Post ’em here.

Lazy-i

Live Review: Saturday night at O’Leaver’s…

Category: Blog — @ 6:46 pm November 12, 2007

I didn’t get rolling until 10 on Saturday, so it came down to: 1) I’ve never liked Trail of Dead, 2) That Nirvana Tribute will be packed/require waiting in line to get in, 3) that touring band at SCB probably already played (as SCB has touring bands open so as not to get Omaha’d). That left The Rayguns/Sleep Said the Monster at O’Leaver’s, which is where I intended to go in the first place, specifically to see the Rayguns. I got there just in time for their last song — a Jazz Odyssey-style noise symphony that reveled in its own improvisational excess. I’m told it wasn’t a typical Rayguns’ song, and made a note to make sure I get to The Waiting Room early on Nov. 30 when they open for McCarthy Trenching.

Reagan and friends were followed by Nashville band Happy Birthday Amy, a four-piece fronted by a woman seated behind a keyboard. By her side, a bassist, drummer and a guy who plays a variety of horns (trumpet, trombone, other brass that I wasn’t familiar with). The music felt like indie cabaret, with leader Amy Smith belting out one rousing ballad after another, sort of like an alt-Bette Midler meets Joanne Newsom. Rocking enough where you didn’t miss the lack of electric guitar.

Sleep Said the Monster played last. A guy watching the set next to me screwed up my evening by saying, “Don’t they sound just like Coyote Bones?” I’ve seen SStM a few times and that comparison never dawned on me. Afterward, it was all I could think of, though honestly, their songwriting style is somewhat different. Coyote Bones’ songs have a stronger central melody; SStM sounds more closely married to traditional indie rock. The biggest similarity sonically comes from their keyboard arrangements; whereas similarities performance-wise come from their frontman (don’t know his name/it ain’t on their myspace) who’s stage presence is equal to or eclipse’s CB’s David Matysiak’s. SStM’s frontman pushes his music with his eyes and facial expressions — I mean, when was the last time you saw a singer’s eyes at O’Leaver’s? He sings well, too, but his performance style makes you think he’s belting it out in front of a TV camera, reaching out to those viewers watching at home. On the minus side, I can remember what SStM sounds like, but I can’t remember a single song from their set. They still need to write that song where, when you’re talking to someone about them, you can say, “They’re the guys that do that song about…” Halfway through the set, someone asked me what I thought. I passed on that Coyote Bones comment, and afterward, he told me that’s all he could think about, too. Sorry dude.

Looks like a quiet week ahead…

–Got comments? Post ’em here.

Lazy-i

Live Review: SCB and The Matt Whipkey Three; crowded Saturday night…

Category: Blog — @ 6:14 pm November 10, 2007

Another lonely night at The Saddle Creek bar. Like O’Leaver’s, SCB isn’t getting out of the live music business altogether, they’re just going to become extremely choosy as to who they let perform on their stage, a stage that unfortunately never lived up to its potential. I was hugely excited when I heard more than a year ago that someone was taking over the venue and turning it into a club that would cater to all types of music, including indie. The size and location are made to order. You can come up with your own list as to why so few people ever came to shows there. I point to the booking, the ever-changing sound system and the fact that the club was launched by a guy who came from outside the current music scene. Mike Coldewey is a musician who’s played in rock bands for years, but none of them were part of Omaha indie collective. As a result, most of the bands that I talked to about SCB always looked at the club as an oddity among all the other clubs doing shows these days. So, as I said, Coldewey says he’ll still do music, but only shows that he thinks are positively going to draw well. He can’t afford nights like last night, where by the end of the evening, the headlining band was essentially only playing to the other bands on the bill and a couple stragglers like myself. The irony of it all is that the PA never sounded better. Part of the reason has to do with the bands themselves, who know how to make the best out of any PA.

I only caught the last three Scott Severin and the Milton Burlesque songs, which included a cover of Ian Hunter’s “Once Bitten Twice Shy” (you probably remember the version covered by Great White). I need to see an entire Severin set, but from what I could glean from last night, he’s trying to create something in the purest essence of rock ‘n’ roll (and he has the history and chops to pull it off). I’m redundant with this comment: The Matt Whipkey Three is the best band that Whipkey’s ever been involved in, and after last night, that includes The Movies. I’m an enormous fan of perfectly balanced trios. It doesn’t get more balanced than this. If you like alt-Americana rock, you’ll be hardpressed to find a better band. Last might was more proof that they should have been in The Reader top-20. Something tells me that if they get this new album recorded and get out on the road (all three work at Dietz, so there’s nothing stopping them other than booking the tour), I have no doubt they’ll be on that list next year.

As for the Saddle Creek Bar, well, they’ve got another show going on tonight — Midwest Dilemma and the Southpaw Blues Band, and according to the Saddle Creek website, St. Louis band Grace Basement, which was chosen as the Best New Band of 2007 by The Riverfront Times. The band’s new album, New Sense, recalls Wilco, Kinks, and laidback indie rockers like The Reivers. Grace Basement frontman Kevin Buckley’s work includes contributions to the new New Pornographers album. Check out their myspace. $5, 9 p.m. It would be a shame if they played to 10 people, but with everything else going on tonight, that’s what will probably happen. The only things left on the SCB calendar is Sarah Benck next Saturday and a benefit show Dec. 15.

So your choices again tonight:
— the SCB show just mentioned,
— Reagan and the Rayguns opening for Sleep Said the Monster and Birthday Amy at O’Leaver’s
— the Nirvana tribute showcase at Slowdown
— and Trail of Dead with Virgasound at The Waiting Room.

Something tells me I’ll be doing some bar-hopping…

–Got comments? Post ’em here.

Lazy-i

Live Review: Georgie James; the weekend ahead…

Category: Blog — @ 1:15 pm November 9, 2007

Well, if you missed the show last night or got there late like I did, then you missed the last-ever performance by Kite Pilot (for real this time). Whether the band is breaking up or not isn’t the question. Todd and Erica Hanton and Jeremy Stanosheck have instead decided to simply quit playing Kite Pilot music. Call it a long-term hiatus, though the chances of the three of them playing again as Kite Pilot are slim outside of a reunion show in eight years. They aren’t giving up music altogether. Instead they say they’re going to explore new sounds that are a long way from conventional guitar/drum/bass rock music. Erica also said that she’s tired of fronting a band, preferring to simply be in the background. What will they come up with next? Stay tuned.

I showed up halfway through Aqueduct’s set. I thought I’d seen them before, but I would have remembered their style — straight-up melody-driven rock (indie or otherwise). The highlight was their cover of Warren G’s “Regulate,” (You know, the one with the sample from Michael McDonald’s “I Keep Forgettin'”). It’s a perfect example of why a band shouldn’t cover a song that’s more memorable than their own material. Afterward, I heard a couple people say how much they liked the cover, but neither mentioned Aqueduct’s own songs, which included a number of tunes off Or Give Me Death, their latest album. Aqueduct is a great match for a band like Georgie James — both bands obviously have a love for ’70s rock.

This was the first night back for Georgie James after a break due to illness. They sounded tight, running through songs off their new Saddle Creek album, Places, essentially replicating the recording almost too much to a T. Maybe it was because they haven’t stepped into the ring for awhile, but they seemed to be going through the motions, finishing the last song and then saying goodnight somewhat abruptly.

* * *

You’ve got a lot of choices this weekend, starting tonight. Let’s just go down the list:

At The Waiting Room it’s Toronto band Do Make Say Think, yet another act coming through town associated with Broken Social Scene. Their music is moody instrumental fare, and to be honest with you, I like the opening band, Apostle of Hustle, a little more. Lead apostle, Andrew Whiteman, also has played with BSS. $10, 9 p.m.

At Sokol Underground it’s Portland punk trio The Thermals with Reporter and Thunder Power!!!. Judging from the scuttlebutt the past few weeks, this one will be well attended. $10, 9 p.m.

Finally, over at The Saddle Creek Bar, it’s The Whipkey Three, Scott Severin and the Milton Burlesque, and Kyle Harvey. The Third Men originally were on this show but apparently had to cancel. $5, 9 p.m.

Saturday is just as crowded:

Slowdown Jr. is hosting a Nirvana tribute featuring more than 11 bands including Baby Walrus, Flowers Forever, Coyote Bones, Bear Country, The Shanks, Thunder Power!!!, Outlaw Con Bandana., Steph Drootin, Jake Bellows, Flamboyant Gods, and Ascetics. Each band has chosen a different Nirvana song to cover (there will be no duplicates). Should be interesting and you can’t beat the price — FREE. Starts at 9.

Still not sold out (surprisingly) is … And You Will Know Us By The Trail of Dead at The Waiting Room with Virgasound. Odd, considering that this band has drawn huge over the past few years. $12, 9 p.m.

Sadly, if you look at O’Leaver’s online calendar, there are only four shows listed through the end of the year. Saturday night it’s Sleep Said the Monster with Happy Birthday Amy (from Nashville) and Reagan and the Rayguns. $5, 9:30 p.m.

Of course Sunday you’ve got your Meat Puppets with Ha Ha Tonka at The Waiting Room. $13, 9 p.m.

–Got comments? Post ’em here.

Lazy-i

Column 149 — Secret Social Scene; Georgie James, Kite Pilot tonight…

Category: Blog — @ 1:21 pm November 8, 2007

I already talked about missing the Broken Social Scene show last week. I have no regrets, though it still stings a little.

Column 149: Only the Lucky Ones…
…get to see the “secret shows.”
They call them “secret shows,” but really they’re just last-minute concerts set up on a whim, performed to a lucky few, and remembered as legend. Afterward, most will say they were there, but most are liars. They create feelings of envy and betrayal, these secret shows. The same envy and betrayal people feel when hearing about the “party of the year” the day after — a party in which they weren’t invited.

But with secret shows, it’s not so much that you weren’t invited as you were out of the loop.

One of my favorite secret shows happened in February 2006. Cursive had just finished writing the songs that would become Happy Hollow and wanted to test drive them in front of a crowd. What better place than tiny O’Leaver’s? Word got out the day before, though even the guys at Saddle Creek Records didn’t hear about it until a few hours before it all went down. That night O’Leaver’s was a crush mob, but no one was left outside when the music started. By the end of the evening everyone knew they saw and heard something special, something that they probably would never hear or see again in such intimate confines. We felt lucky, and we were.

Another example: Two weeks ago, while half-dozing on my couch, my phone rang. Who the hell was calling so late? I glanced at the caller ID — Matt Whipkey! Forget it, Matt, I’m not picking up. I went to bed only to wake up the next morning to see the following text message on my iPhone, time stamped 11:51 p.m.: “Bright eyes at barley with friedman.”

It turned out that Bright Eyes drummer Clay Leverett had thrown together an impromptu country band that included Mike Friedman on pedal steel, Josh Dunwoody (Filter Kings) on upright bass, and Dave Rawlings on electric guitar. The band played country classics for about 90 minutes at the Barley Street Tavern — a hole-in-the-wall in downtown Benson. Conor Oberst was in the audience, and after the band wrapped up and most people left, he decided to join in on the fun, playing a set of seven or eight new songs backed by Leverett and Co. Whipkey said only about 20 people were in the crowd. Twenty lucky people.

Why keep these shows secret? Because Cursive and Bright Eyes regularly sell out large venues all over the country. If word got out about these shows in these tiny venues, well, someone might get hurt. Best to keep it on the down low. If you were meant to be there, you’ll be there.

That was the philosophy for what may be one of Omaha’s all-time best secret shows, which happened just last Friday night. Between gigs in Boulder and Chicago, Kevin Drew, Jason Collett and the rest of Broken Social Scene decided to spend their day off in Omaha. Broken Social Scene is one of the hottest indie bands in the country, spawning such acts as Feist (she’s the woman in the iPod Nano commercial) and Stars (who played at Slowdown last Sunday).

Wanting to make up for always missing Omaha on BSS tours, Drew got the idea of doing a “secret show” at the legendary Hotel Frank, an apartment used for house shows located near The Brothers Lounge on 38th and Farnam. By 6:35 that evening, Omahype.com posted the rumor under the headline “Holy Crap Breaking News!” Ian Atwood, who runs Omahype.com with Andrew Bowen, said he heard about the show via an e-mail from Aaron Markley of Slumber Party Records. It could have been one of the best house shows in house-show history.

But eventually Drew decided he needed a venue with a better PA — he didn’t want to shred his voice. That’s where Slowdown came in. Val Nelson, who runs hospitality at Slowdown, said Drew and Collett were hanging out at the bar in the early evening and approached her about doing a last-minute show on Slowdown’s small stage. All their gear was available except for a drum kit. Nelson called Clark Baechle of The Faint, who said he’d be happy to let them use his. With that, the show was on.

I heard the “BSS rumor” well past 11 while drinking a Rolling Rock at O’Leaver’s, waiting for Life After Laserdisque to play its final show. The story seemed far-fetched. I knew I could confirm it with a single phone call, but what was the point? There was no way I was going to miss Laserdisque’s last hurrah.

The only thing worse than missing a great show is hearing how great it was from people who were there. It’s like listening to your co-worker blather on and on about his trip to Hawaii when you’re stuck in Omaha in January. That’s how I felt when Omahype reviewed the show the next day, complete with photos. Val at Slowdown said that if they could have, BSS would have played until 2 a.m., then she twisted the knife by saying Kevin Drew told her it was the best show they’d done on their entire tour.

Diehard Broken Social Scene fans who missed it had to be heart broken. In fact, Val said she heard a few sob stories the next day. But the fact was, if they didn’t have friends “in the know” there’s no way they could have found out about the show except for reading Omahype. And even then, chances are, like me, they could either have been asleep or indisposed and missed it anyway. Sometimes even being lucky isn’t enough.

There’s no secret about tonight’s must-see show: Georgie James with Aqueduct and Kite Pilot at Slowdown Jr. It’s a terrific line-up for only $8.

–Got comments? Post ’em here.

Lazy-i

Georgie James interview; Reagan and the Rayguns tonight …

Category: Blog — @ 1:26 pm November 7, 2007

Just placed online, an interview/feature with John Davis of Georgie James. Davis talks about his love of soft rock derived from a life growing up in the radio business. His father, Don Davis, even did a tour of duty in Omaha at the now-defunct WOW FM, a short-lived rock station. Davis also discusses Georgie James’ influences, the break-up of his former band (Q and Not U) and getting signed to Saddle Creek Records. Read it here. Some tidbits that didn’t make into the story:

— Tomorrow night’s show at Slowdown Jr. is the first one back after the band took a break due to “illness.” James said he’s now nearly 100 percent, that constant touring without a break took its toll on him. “I’m not normally an anxious person, but it’s starting to wear me down,” he said last Saturday. “At this moment, I’m fine.”
— While Georgie James is primarily Davis and Laura Burhenn, the band also includes bassist Michael Cotterman, who used to play in Kid Dynamite and The Loved Ones, and drummer Andrew Black, formerly of The Explosion. “Those guys are the live band,” Davis said. “The reason it’s presented as a duo is that Laura and I do the writing and recording. Originally it was just the two of us for a year. These guys have been friends of mine for a long time.”
— The band’s name, Georgie James, is a play on Georgie Fame and the Blue Flames. “We kicked names around for three months,” Davis said. “What about Tall Grass? What about The National Zoo? We were desperate. I always thought Georgie Fame and the Blue Flames was a great name. I’m not a huge Georgie Fame fan, but what an awesome name. I suggested Georgie James because I just read a book about James Taylor. Laura liked it.”
— Though Q and Not U broke up in September 2005, Davis said the breakup had been in the works from the beginning of that year. “We half-assed a tour. It didn’t go well and afterward we said, ‘See? Our time’s up.’ It was intentional on our own part; it gave us a reason to get out of it. Harris (Klahr) and I were feeling the same thing about not wanting to do it anymore. We felt if we kept the band together when we were doing new things, the (new projects) wouldn’t get the attention we wanted them to get. People would say, ‘Oh, the side project is great, but when are you going to get back to the real stuff?’ Forget that.”
— Davis is a vinyl music fan and is proud that Places has been released on vinyl. “I think in some ways it’s a better format, both the way it sounds and the bigger artwork. It’s just a better experience,” he said. “In an era of free downloading, vinyl has its place. You can’t download vinyl.”

Now go read the whole darn article, and go down to Slowdown Jr. tomorrow night for Georgie James along with Kite Pilot and Aqueduct. It’s only $8 ferchristsake… But before you do, go down to Slowdown Jr. tonight for Reagan and the Rayguns (that’s Reagan Roeder’s band) when it opens for Will Hoge along with Brad Hoshaw. $12, 9 p.m.

–Got comments? Post ’em here.

Lazy-i

Vverevvolf Grehv (Dapose from The Faint) signs to Relapse…

Category: Blog — @ 6:46 pm November 6, 2007

Relapse Records, home to such artists as The Dillinger Escape Plan, Mastodon, Cephalic Carnage and Alabama Thunderpussy, announced yesterday that it signed Vverevvolf Grehv, the one-man metal project of Faint guitarist Dapose (a project formerly known as Precious Metal). “Metal has always been the most extreme form of music since its creation, and I’ve always felt a calm and a peace from it,” Dapose said in the Relapse press release. “Something like the intensity of a Buddhist monk’s chant, or the sounds one hears when riding a train, relentless repetition becomes meditative and allows a reflective process aiding our well being. Which to me is why many people in the metal world are among the nicest people you’ll ever meet.”

Dapose’s Relapse debut, Zombie Aesthetics, is slated for release March 4. Omahans may get a sneak peak at Dapose’s new album when VG opens for The Show Is the Rainbow at Slowdown Dec. 8.

Tomorrow, look for an interview with John Davis of Georgie James.

–Got comments? Post ’em here.

Lazy-i

Live Review: Stars, Slowdown notes…

Category: Blog — @ 6:52 pm November 5, 2007

Nearly 400 diehard Stars fans got more than their money’s worth last night at Slowdown — a set that lasted nearly two hours. The whole time, you could tell that Torquil Campbell and the rest of the band were thrilled to be there. In fact, they told the crowd so, over and over throughout their set, saying such glowing things like Slowdown was a gem “built on music.” All night, band members would make their way to the microphones and say how proud they were to be there. It was kind of sweet and charming.

The band came on at around 10:15 to a stage adorned with bouquets of flowers and abstract artwork on easels. It almost looked like a funeral, except for the computer-controlled strobes that blared from behind the stage. Talk about your theatrics, at one point Torq strolled out in a jacket covered in lights, looking like a walking Christmas tree. Glam!

I’m not a long-time fan of Stars, having only discovered them with this last album. Obviously they have a strong back-catalog judging by what I heard last night. I had a couple people tell me to check out Set Yourself on Fire, which I’ll definitely do after hearing some of the lush songs performed last night. Gorgeous stuff. The six-piece included a guitarist, bass, drummer, keyboard player, Torq on a Casio-style keyboard, trumpet and vocals and Amy Millan on guitar and vocals. It was the best-sounding set I’ve heard on Slowdown’s big stage (and that includes Cursive, Two Gallants and The Rentals). They finished at around 11:15, then went on to play an encore that lasted nearly 45 minutes. I didn’t get out of there until midnight.

A few notes about Slowdown while I’m thinking of it. First, they’ve installed a huge, white Habitrail-looking piece of artwork that hangs from the ceiling over the main floor (see homepage pic). The installation is from Brooklyn artist Jason Peters who currently is working at The Bemis. I’m told that the tube actually lights up in different colors. For some technical reason, it didn’t light up last night, but it was still impressive and fit right in with Slowdown’s overall aesthetic. It’s not a permanent feature. Proprietors Nansel and Kulbel tell me that it’ll only hang in the rafters for about a month, but that we can expect to see more artist installations in the future.

The other bit of news is the new capacity rating for Slowdown. The city originally gave the room a capacity of around 470. The new number is a whopping 615. That’s a huge jump based solely on having the inspectors come out and take another walk through the venue. There’s no question that the new number will have a positive impact on the size/stature of bands that One Percent and Slowdown can book for the venue.

Tonight at O’Leaver’s, Athens band Casper and the Cookies with Pat Fleming. $5, 9:30 p.m.

–Got comments? Post ’em here.

Lazy-i

Yep, I was there…

Category: Blog — @ 8:20 pm November 3, 2007

I know what you’re wondering and the answer is yes, I was there, too. I actually heard about it a lot earlier than most, but I couldn’t get over there until around 11, and by then, well, as expected the place was packed. They started off by thanking the crowd for coming out and then tore into a number of songs off their last record, which made the crowd go completely apeshit. In fact, I thought there was going to be a riot when they said that their next song would be their last, but as luck would have it, they had time for one more (which I think they had intended to play anyway). When they finally finished, everyone was on their feet begging for more, but that was it, not only for last night, but forever.

Waitaminit. You didn’t think I was talking about the Broken Social Scene show at Slowdown last night, did you? I heard about that one, too, at around 10:30 last night, but as much as I like BSS, there was no way I was going to miss LALD’s last show ever. From what I can tell, Omahype was the first to get the scoop online, and also is the only one with a full review of the show, complete with pics. Check it out. It will go down as another in a series of amazing “secret shows” that everyone will say they were at, but few actually were. The same will be said for LALD’s last show, too. What’s the old adage? The biggest crowds that bands play for are at their CD release show and their farewell gig. That probably also was the case with LALD. It was the biggest show I’ve seen at O’Leaver’s in quite a while. It was also the best performance I’ve ever heard from the band, so good, in fact, you wonder why they’re hanging it up. I’m sure they have their reasons, and I’m sure we’ll be seeing these guys performing around town again in other bands in the near future.

Tonight, the not-so-secret Mountain Goats show at Slowdown, or the pop-rock stylings of Black Tie Dynasty at The Waiting Room.

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Lazy-i