Last night's show at The 529 was sold out and the club was packed. The performance-room wall on the far side from the bar, which had been torn down when I went to see Om and Daniel Higgs there last November but had mysteriously reappeared for Lonesome Leash and Iron Jayne in January, was once again gone, effectively doubling the size of the tiny club but still offering no more room in front of the narrow stage. Only about five or six people at a time can stand in front of the stage and everyone else has to stand behind them, and since the stage is elevated by only about six inches, if some tall people are at the front, the rest of the audience's view is blocked. As a result, the extra room due to the absent wall offered more elbow room but no more sight lines, and a group of bros had clustered at the front of the stage.
But one of the odd things about 529's layout is that the entrance to the performance room is near the stage, so that latecomers, instead of approaching from the back and having to worm their way through the crowd up to the front like at most clubs, actually squeeze into the room at the front of the crowd.
Portland's Wampire were already on stage when I arrived uncharacteristically late last night (it seems that I usually can't help myself and typically arrive for a show in time to be the first and only person at the club). But I still managed to squeeze into the performance room only about two or three rows back from the stage due to the club's odd entrance. However, during the course of the evening, as more and more people squeezed in after me, I found myself further and further back, although the bros tenaciously held their position at the front of the stage.
Anyhow, although Wampire sounded crisp and good and satisfyingly loud, I really don't have much to say about them as I had barely got settled in before their set was over. My loss.
Until I saw them perform last night, I've really had a hard time getting a handle on Los Angeles-based Foxygen. The band is primarily the songwriting duo of 22-year-olds Sam France (vocals, Olympia, Washington) and Jonathan Rado (guitar/keyboards, NYC), and their touring band includes a backup vocalist, a bassist, and a drummer. But what is that music they're playing? Glam-folk? Psych-pop? Sixties cabaret on acid?
They sound all over the place on records, but now I understand that's the point. Seeing them perform and clown around on stage (Sam France must have declared "I don't care" at least a half dozen times to as many situations), I get it now - they're simultaneously musical archivists and ironists - archironists, if you will. They reverently channel 60s-era flower-power folk-pop while skewering the genre at the same time, as you can hear on their song San Francisco, which is actually one of their more cohesive songs - most other songs turn and bend at unexpected moments, frequently morphing into something altogether unexpected.
San Francisco is from their recent album, the aptly named We Are the 21st Century Ambassadors of Peace & Magic, which was produced by Richard Swift (Damien Jurado, The Mynabirds) and is currently tracking at Number 3 on the College Radio Top 10 Albums list.
Wearing a black-and-red velvet cape on stage, Sam France was the very personification of the rock star. Depending on how he wore his shades, he was able to channel Joey Ramone, Mick Jagger, Robert Smith, or Ray Davies, all of whom also have had obvious influences on Foxygen's music.
The crowd of bros at the front of the stage enthusiastically greeted each song with fist pumping, pogo dancing and sing-alongs. In all, it looked like everybody, band and audience alike, had a lot of fun.
Headliners were Portland's Unknown Mortal Orchestra. We last saw UMO perform at the Doug Fir during MFNW 2011
Unknown Mortal Orchestra at MFNW, September 8, 2011 |
Since that time, the band got a new drummer and released a fine new album with the sequel-y title, II. The epic cover photo from II hung as a backdrop behind the bands during last night's show.
UMO's music has been described as "funky psych-pop future-breakbeats that sound like the product of a group that ate a bunch of acid, turned on the four-track and tried to copy a Meters record" (Willamette Weekly). Led by the extraordinary guitarist and New Zealand ex-pat Ruban Nielson, UMO are riding the current popular wave of psych-rock enthusiasm, a wave they started in part with songs like Thought Balune, Ffunny Ffrends, and How Can U Luv Me.
The band lists Syd Barrett, Love, Wu Tang Clan, Captain Beefheart, the Mothers of Invention, Soft Machine, Jimi Hendrix, Ariel Pink, Os Mutantes, J Dilla, Stevie Wonder, Sly and the Family Stone, Led Zeppelin, The Rolling Stones, Miles Davis, Al Green, The Zombies, King Tubby, and Prince among their influences, and their current sound includes even more doses of soul than before, as evident in So Good At Being in Trouble from the new album, II.
The set was terrific, covering songs both new and old, with lots of guitar exploration and feedback thrown in for good measure. The band of bros lapped it all up with every bit as much enthusiasm as they had for Foxygen. They even hung in for one of the longest encore calls I can remember in a long time.
I don't know of any of these bands ever playing Atlanta before, but I find it encouraging to see such enthusiastic reception here for them. Their sound may be slightly or majorly on the fringe of popular taste, but Unknown Mortal Orchestra will be on Late Night with Jimmy Fallon tomorrow (Monday, February 25, 2013).
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