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Archive for March, 2022

[DID NOT ATTEND: March 19, 2022] Khruangbin / Nubya Garcia

I’m intrigued by Khruangbin.  I wanted them to sound a little different than they originally did.  And then they made some EPs with Leon Bridges and they did sound different–more trippy, but more catchy as well.

I thought they’d be fun to see live.

S. likes the EPs even more than I did, but she didn’t really want to see them.  So I refrained from buying tickets.  Then the Kim Gordon show was announced, and I was sue I’d go see that one.  But I didn’t get tickets to any of the shows today.

Go figure.

I know Nubya Garcia from a Tiny Desk Concert.  She’s a jazzy saxophonist who would probably go well with Khruangbin, although I don’t know that I’d want to see her on her own.

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[DID NOT ATTEND: March 19, 2022] Tame Impala / Junglepussy

I saw Tame Impala back in 2019. The crowd annoyed me–the band is huge in circles of people I don’t like to be at shows with–but the band sounded amazing.  And the visuals were spectacular.

When they announced a new tour (I had forgotten that they had put out a new album–I guess I haven’t listened to The Slow Rush at all), I was definitely interested.  But when they announced that it was at the Wells Fargo Center, I lost interest.

The Wells Fargo Center is huge (19,000 capacity).  There’s very few bands that I would be willing to go there to see and Tame Impala isn’t one of them.

I have seen pictures and reviews that make the show seem huge and the lights look amazing.  I’m sure it will be a great show, but I wasn’t willing to go to the trouble for it.

Junglepussy is a rapper.  She has a new album out that blends elements of nu-metal, alt rock and funk.  Seems like an odd opener, but it’s a great way for her to get some extra exposure.

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[ATTENDED: March 16, 2022] Girl in Red

My daughter, T., became a huge fan of Girl in Red a little while ago.  When Girl in Red announced a show at my favorite club, Union Transfer, I knew I had to get tickets.  So, I got this pair back in June of 2021.   It seemed like the show was a lifetime away.

And then it finally arrived.

Our friends had recently gone to a show there and had arrived at 5 (doors opened at 7) to ensure a prime spot.  I have been to Union Transfer dozens of times and have never arrived earlier than 7:30 and always gotten a decent spot (sometimes right at the front).

But I’ve clearly never been to a sold out Girl in Red show.  Because we arrived at 7:30 (a wee but later than I wanted to, I admit) to find a huge line outside!  (I’ve never seen that before).  By the time we got in, the place was packed!  The one okay thing about this is that we decided to get merch first since we had no hope of getting any closer.  The other okay thing was that Girl in Red fans seems to be pretty short, so even though we were pretty far back, we could see the stage pretty clearly.

Girl in Red’s band came out–five guys dressed in black–and made a U at the back of the stage.  They started playing music and Marie Ulven bounced onto the stage and just started rocking all over the place to “You Stupid Bitch.”  Swinging her hair and bounding from one side of the stage to the other.

The crowd was insane from the get go.  They screamed and yelled and sang along.  A girl behind us must have been told that it was important to shriek at the top of your lungs at the end of each song because she did so in the exact same pitch and frequency (one long, two short) after each song.  T. and I decided that she sounded like when a fox screams at night–that ear piercing, spine chilling sound. And, she was perfectly at ear level with me.  Good grief.

I knew most of Girl in Red’s album from multiple in house plays, but I clearly didn’t know what the big songs were going to be because she played “girls” third and I thought sure that was going to be a much later song.

Before introducing “we fell in love in October,” she told us that she had a new girlfriend, although they didn’t fall in love in October.

The ban left and she brought out her acoustic guitar to play “I’ll Cal You Mine.”  It was great to hear her sing without the rest of the band.

I also assumed that “Serotonin” would be the big set ender, but she played that right in the middle  It sounded fantastic.

Her band was really great, too.  Her lead guitarist was really quite impressive and her bass player was a lot of fun, jumping around.  But really, none of us were looking at them.  She did acknowledge them a few times and when she spoke to them, her Norwegian accent came out on force.  Her normal stage speaking voice is completely un-accented.  I was amazed at how non-Norwegian she sounded until it slipped out.

She talked about an old racist homophobic uncle that she had who told her to make her songs “less gay” and we all mocked him.  She said she used to think that he was old and couldn’t change.  But there are plenty of old people who are neither racist nor homophobic.  So there.

For the remainder of the show she kept the energy high.  Even in the somewhat more mellow songs, the energy remained high.

When she ended the show with “I Wanna Be Your Girlfriend,” the crowd, which I didn’t think could get any more wild, ramped it up even more.  And when Marie dove into the crowd at the end of the song the place erupted.

The song faded when she got back up onstage and some people even started to leave, but she told us it wasn’t done yet, and she grabbed a water bottle and doused the front row and sang the chorus a few more times.

It was quite a show.

And even though it was kind of short (relatively speaking), it was the the perfect length for the amount of music she has released and it got us home at a fairly reasonable hour on a school night.

The stage for the show was flanked by large banks of really bright lights.  Not an expensive display, I wouldn’t think, but very effective.  And I left the show thinking that girl in red could easily be playing much much bigger venues.

  1. You Stupid Bitch
  2. Body And Mind
  3. girls ©
  4. .
  5. i’ll die anyway.
  6. we fell in love in October §
  7. I’ll Call You Mine (acoustic)
  8. hornylovesickmess
  9. Serotonin
  10. bad idea!
  11. 4am ©
  12. dead girl in the pool. 
  13. midnight love
  14. Rue
  15. Did you come?
  16. I wanna Be Your Girlfriend. ©
© chapter 1
chapter 2
§ A Collection of Every Song I’ve Ever Posted on Soundcloud

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[ATTENDED: March 12, 2022] Holly Humberstone

I thought there was some excitement that Holly Humberstone was opening for Girl in Red, but it turned out that T. had never heard of her.

Well, I was impressed by her.  She played guitar, keyboard, piano and created live beats on the drum machine while singing.  And her voice was really lovely too.

Her songs are on the pop side but with some good loud guitars from time to time.  “Please Don’t Leave Just Yet” was the synthy song (that featured sped up samples of her voice trilling in the background.  I enjoyed the way she jumped from the synth rack to the piano mid-song.

Humberstone has a couple of EPs out.  And I had to laugh when she said she was going to play the first song she’d ever released–way back in 2019.  But it was a sweet song she’d written for her sister called “Deep End.”

She also played a new song called “London is Lonely,” which was far more plaintive than the other songs and showed Holly’s range. (more…)

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[ATTENDED: March 14, 2022] Glen Hansard and Marketa Irglova

Back in November, I was surprised and delighted to see that Glen Hansard and Marketa Irglova had announced a small tour (like six shows) celebrating the fifteenth anniversary of Once.

S. and I loved the movie and the music and she insisted we get tickets.  So I grabbed them in a pre sale.  Not as close as we would have liked, but not bad at all (there’s really no bad seats in the Merriam).

In the meantime, shows were cancelled and rescheduled, but this show fell in the safe zone and didn’t get moved at all.

We arrived just barely on time–I always forget what a pain it is to get to the Kimmel Center.  But then it took a while for the show to start.  Start time was 7, but they didn’t get on stage until 7:30 (he told us why later).

It was wonderful. (more…)

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[ATTENDED: March 12, 2022] The Tallest Man on Earth [rescheduled from May 8, 2020 and March 6, 2021]

I first heard The Tallest Man on Earth back in 2014.  I had a ticket to see him play Union Transfer in November 2018.  But I had to skip that show because of a Scout hike that I was asked to go on.

I promised myself I’d see him the next time he came to town.  That was October 2019.  But at the least minute he had to cancel the tour because of personal problems back home in Sweden.

He rescheduled the show for 2020.  The show was on my birthday, and I like to spend the day with my family.  I bought at ticket anyway, just to see how the day went.  And then Covid struck.

He rescheduled the show for March of 2021, but that had to get pushed back as well.

And here it is, March of 2022, four and a half years after the initial date, and I finally got to see him.  Interestingly, four and a half years isn’t really that long given who infrequently some other bands tour.  But for him, that’s a lifetime and a half.

The Tallest Man on Earth is Kristian Matsson, a Swedish folksinger with a great guitar picking style and a deep powerful gritty voice.   The lights went down and the stage was full of pointy shards of plastic (?) standing upright as a backdrop.  They were primarily white, but I loved the way the lights played off of them changing the colors of the stage.

After a recording of a Swedish song, Matsson came out on stage.  I don’t know if he is usually solo (I assume so).  He was dressed in a white T shirt with light pants that were rolled up.  And he scampered and leapt around the stage with lightness (if not always grace).  He capered.  From one side of the stage to the other, he checked in with the audience while he was singing.

He played two songs on electric guitar (“The Foothills” which I think is new and “The Gardener,” which is very much not new).  His voice is deep and gruff and incredibly powerful.

After two songs he switched guitars.  This time to an acoustic 12 string.

There’s something really fantastic about his guitar playing that just fills a room.  With just the one guitar (okay, like a dozen guitars, but one at a time) his songs never sound like a guy with a guitar.  He has a very percussive style of play and he uses a lot of opening tunings so his notes ring out and fill the room.  It’s pretty wonderful.

He also let us in on a secret.  After the third song, he stopped to tell us that his nail had come off. He told a lengthy story about himself and Jose Gonzales and how they both glue extra fingernails on the tips of their fingers to help the with their playing style.  And one of them had just popped off so he needed some glue.  He told us that he took off the nails at the end of the show so he could look normal, but that he couldn’t play without them.  So we waited while he talked and fixed his nail(s).

Then he switched over to an acoustic six string for the next couple of songs.

Joking that SHE doesn’t need fake nails, he called Daughter of Swords to perform a lovely duet of The Velvet Underground’s “I Found a Reason.”

When Alexandra left the stage, he went over to the piano that was at the side of the stage for There’s No Leaving Now.”

With a new six string acoustic, he played a few more songs like the fantastic “1904” and “King of Spain.”  Then he brought out his banjo for “Somewhere in the Mountains, Somewhere in New York.”  And he ended the set with an electric and electrifying version of “The Stranger.”

When he came back out for the encore, he sneaked around through the sculptures, hiding behind them and peeking out above them.

He started the encore with “The Wild Hunt,” and we all sang along.  Then he ended the show with piano version of “Like The Wheel.”

At the end of the song he stood on the piano and waved to everyone in turn, rotating to make sure he got everyone.  And then he leapt off the piano and scampered off stage.

What a fun show!  (I didn’t even need to mention the group of ten drunks behind me who were talking really loudly about New York and their drinks and who knows what else.  They sucked).

  1. The Foothills
  2. The Gardener
  3. Wind and Walls
  4. Dark Bird Is Home ♠
  5. Rivers
  6. A Lion’s Heart
  7. I Found a Reason (The Velvet Underground cover) (with Daughter of Swords)
  8. There’s No Leaving Now (piano)
  9. The Running Styles of New York ♥
  10. I’ll Be a Sky ♥
  11. 1904
  12. Love Is All
  13. King of Spain
  14. Revelation Blues
  15. Somewhere in the Mountains, Somewhere in New York ‰
  16. I’m a Stranger Now ♥
  17. The Dreamer §
    encore
  18. The Wild Hunt
  19. Like the Wheel (piano) §

♥ I Love You, It’s a Fever Dream (2019)
‰ When the Bird Sees the Solid Ground EP (2018)

♠ Dark Bird is Home (2015)
⊗ There’s No Leaving Now (2012)
€ The Wild Hunt (2010)

§ Sometimes the Blues is Just a Passing Bird EP (2010)
⊄ Shallow Grave (2008)

 

~~~~~

On February 2, Union Transfer posted this update:

The Tallest Man On Earth show has been officially moved to March 12 2022. With a date this far out, it ensures there will be no issues with TMOE entering the country and most important – we are near guaranteed to have a safe and normal show (finally!).

My first show for 2022!

I wonder if Courtney Marie Andrews will still open?

I have wanted to see The Tallest Man on Earth for a few years and things always seem to come up to cancel my opportunity.

In 2018 I had a ticket to see him, but then a camping trip came up.

In 2019, he had to cancel his tour for the first time because of a personal crisis.

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[ATTENDED: March 12, 2022] Daughter of Swords [rescheduled from May 8, 2020 and March 6, 2021]

In my head, I thought that a show that started at 6:30 would be over in plenty of time for me to make a show that started at 8 a few blocks away.

I guess I hadn’t counted on Wet Leg having an opening band (of course, they couldn’t really charge a full price ticket for 45 minutes of music, right?).  So Wet Leg ended at roughly 8:15.  It took me about 10 minutes to walk to Union Transfer and get situated.  I saw the end of one Daughter of Swords song and by the time I found the much closer spot where I wanted to stand, she announced that she had one song left.

So I saw the final Daughter of Swords song. (more…)

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[DID NOT ATTEND: March 15, 2022] Ryley Walker / Tonstartssbandht.

I’ve seen Ryley Walker four times, but never on purpose.  He’s been the support band for every show that I’ve seen him in.

So I thought it would be interesting to see what he was like when he was the headliner.

But this show was in between two days that I was going to shows and my brother-in-law was in town, so I decided to give it a miss.  Walker plays all the time so I’m sure I’ll see him again.

I’d never heard of Tonstartssbandht.  On their blurb for the concert, all it said was Andy & Edwin.  Wikipedia tells me they are

an American psychedelic, noise rock band consisting of brothers Andy (guitar and vocals) and Edwin (drums and vocals) White.  They formed c. 2008 when Edwin was 20 years and Andy was 18. Their influences include the Beach Boys, The Velvet Underground demos, and Can live recordings. As of December 2017, the band has released 17 live and studio albums, as well as a series of solo recordings and collaborations.

Woah.

Markit Aneight has a full show video of both Ryley Walkerand

and Tonstartssbandht

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[ATTENDED: March 12, 2022] Wet Leg

Wet Leg became a huge sensation on the basis of one song.

“Chaise Longue” was suddenly everywhere.  And it’s a weird, catchy, funny song with lots of talking a lot of repetition.  It hit all of my buttons and I was immediately a fan.

But it was so strange that the band had just this one song out–nothing else online or anywhere.  NPR Music introduced me to the song in July 2021.  They had a second single “Wet Dream” out in September.  And that was that–two songs and an album promised in 2022.

And they announced a tour of the States in November.  Somehow I missed the announcement because I would have totally gotten tickets at PhilMOCA.  And it sold out pretty quickly.  Then at some point it was announced that it was moved to Underground Arts and more tickets were available.  I grabbed one immediately and it soon sold out at UA as well.

I thought the show would be fun, but I also thought that the band was a kind of left-field, one hit wonder who it would be fun to see because they’d probably never come back.  Heck, they seemed like they might just make the one album and be done.

So my expectations weren’t super high, but I assumed I’d have a good time. (more…)

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[ATTENDED: March 12, 2022] Lowertown

I had a great plan for this evening  I would drive into Philly early–this show was at 6:30!  I’d stop in at Federal Donuts for treats for the family.

Then I would park near Underground Arts on the street.  I would see Lowertown and Wet Leg, then I would hop in my car and drive to Union Transfer–just a few blocks away, and see Daughter of Swords and The Tallest Man on Earth–a double header!

And then it snowed.

I wasn’t even sure if I could make it.  But it stopped snowing with enough time for me to get to the venue and do my plan without the donuts.  But when I got to Underground Arts, it was packed.  There was a huge line out the door and nowhere to park! (more…)

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