SOUNDTRACK: WAVVES-Live at Sasquatch, May 28, 2011 (2011).
I learned about Wavves from NPR–in fact I listened to their other NPR concert before even getting their album. So this marks my second concert from them. What makes me laugh about Wavves is that the songs are really short and Nathan Williams is a total chatterbox. When I burn these concerts onto CD, I use Audacity and I make tracks for songs and band chatter. Which means that this Wavves show, which is just under 40 minutes has 20 tracks. (Whereas S. Carey, at about the same length, has only 11).
This show has 14 songs. Four of the songs are from their second album, called Wavves (which is also their second album called Wavves). The rest come from King of the Beach (except “Wavves” from their first album and a couple of newer tracks).
The band blasts through these songs (I’m not even sure who is in the band, since the Wavves albums are a solo endeavor), and they all sound very good. The album has kind of a tinny sound (on purpose, I suspect), whereas live the songs sound a bit fuller.
Lead Wavves guy Nathan Williams wasn’t that friendly in the previous show; he seems to be having a bit more fun here. But really it doesn’t seem like you don’t go to a Wavves show to hear him talk, you go for what is undoubtedly the pogofest that is Wavves’ punk. It’s a good set.
[READ: July 2, 2011] “Friendly Fire”
Pam runs a small but successful cleaning business–but her workers are pretty unreliable. So her friend Shelley, the real protagonist of the story, helps out once in a while. Shelley enjoys the work once in a while (she has a real job after all)–she can use the extra cash.
This job was cleaning a warehouse–not the warehouse section itself, but the bathrooms, kitchens and offices. They arrive early, but the workers come in while they are working and Shelley enjoys teasing/flirting with the men when they come in to use the bathroom and find her bent over, ass waving in their face.
The story is really about Shelley as she cleans by herself and thinks about her family–her daughter, seventeen, who nine months ago gave birth to a daughter, and her son who is presently in Afghanistan. He ran with a rough crowd when he was young, but the military has made a decent man out of him. And it’s all Shelley can do to keep from thinking about friendly fire.
There wasn’t a lot to this story in terms of plot. It was more of a small slice of one woman’s life as she tries to cope with that life. It felt very real and was quite good.

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