Thursday, October 23, 2014

Givers at Vinyl, Atlanta, October 22, 2014


We last saw Lafayette, Louisiana's Givers back in 2011 during MFNW (RIP) at a great show at the Doug Fir that also featured Pickwick (the best band you never heard of) and Ages and Ages, as well as Portland's Lost Lander.  Damien Jurado was in the audience for Pickwick (he's a fan) and the whole night was overall as much fun at a live show as you can reasonably expect to have.


And then we heard nothing from Givers for three years.  Nothing. Nada.  Zip.  But they've apparently hit the road again and last night they played Atlanta's Vinyl Lounge in the Center Stage complex. Could they possibly be as fun as they were that magical night three years ago?  Do they still have that special something they displayed that night?

The short answer is an emphatic "yes," but first another Lafayette band, Kind Cousin, opened. 


Kind Cousin is the band of singer Allison Bohl DeHart, whose raspy vocals and eerie harmonies with her backup singer make the band interesting.  It was a good set by a band I hadn't heard before, but one I'd certainly like to hear more from.



DeHart's raspy vocals are a good match for Givers' Tiffany Lamson, who joined them on stage for one song.  


After that, Givers took the stage.  They  were still selling their fine 2011 album In Light at the merch table, and didn't have anything new for sale (I still bought a vinyl copy of In Light last night anyway). Fortunately, during their terrific set last night, they announced that they would be playing a bunch of new songs, "songs even our friends back in Lafayette haven't head yet," and that they would be working on a new album soon.  So there's that. 


The audience clearly knew the band and their music, and also clearly adored the band, and there was a great give and take of energy all night between the band and the audience.  There's something about Givers that causes listeners, at least this listener and apparently several others at Vinyl last night as well, to form some sort of deep emotional bond with the band, and the affection and the mutual admiration were apparent.  Singer Taylor Guarisco mentioned it several times, but everyone in the audience felt it whether he mentioned it or not.


The set ended with an encore performance of Up Up Up, after the regular set ended with In My Eyes.


Givers are a great band and put on fun shows.  It would be a shame if I have to wait three years to hear them again.

Wednesday, October 22, 2014

Beach Day

Beach Day at L5Fest, 2013
Which reminds me, what happened to L5Fest 2014?  Did I miss it, or did it never occur?  Or is it still yet to come (better get going if that's the case)?

Anyhoo, here's Florida's Beach Day at the KEXP studio.

Tuesday, October 21, 2014

Sharon Van Etten at The Earl, Atlanta, 10/20/2014


Another mid-Rocktober mini-post, I'm afraid.  Not that I have a show tonight to run off to, but it took me so long today to catch up on the work I've fallen behind on that I have scarcely any time left to post.  More soon (and on Warpaint, too), but here's last night's show opener, Tiny Ruins from New Zealand (we saw another Kiwi opener, Liam Finn, on Sunday night).


And here's headliner Sharon Van Etten.


Oh, yes. The show was at The Earl.


Monday, October 20, 2014

Warpaint at Variety Playhouse, Atlanta, October 19, 2014


This is the mid-Rocktober, OMG-I-gotta-run-to-the-next-show, short-form post for last night's show at Variety Playhouse.  Also, my phone is still on the fritz and I don't have many pictures to share anyway. 

New Zealand's Liam Finn, who for as far as I could tell is not a former Split Enz, opened. 


L.A.'s Warpaint headlined, and included their trademark 15-minute jam to Elephant to end their four-song encore.


A great show, but that's all I have time to post tonight until I figure out what's wrong now with my phone and before I'm off to tonight's show.  Will give this a bit more coverage at a later date.

Sunday, October 19, 2014

Foxygen Video


Let's be honest, here.  The new Foxygen album, . . .And Star Power, is two good songs followed by 3 1/2 sides of filler.  Not that the filler doesn't have its moments of brilliance, but filler none the less.

Foxygen already released a video of the first of the two good songs.  Here's the new video for the second.

Saturday, October 18, 2014

Little Five Points Halloween Parade, The Musical


In addition to the usual (and unusual) marching bands and assorted Halloween-themed floats, the L5P Halloween Parade featured a number of bands or possibly people pretending to be bands.  I couldn't tell - they all passed by so quickly, I couldn't really hear what they were playing or pretending to be playing and to be perfectly candid, unlike years past, I didn't hang around after the parade to catch any of the real, bona fide bands playing the stages tucked in and around Little Five Points.

In any event, here are the parade bands, as well as some other characteristically quirky characters from today's parade.




I didn't even notice the Big Lebowski impersonator in front of the faux Scooby-Doo band until after I came home and started editing my pictures.












The crowd was the largest I can recall seeing at this annual event.  The Atlanta Journal-Constitution unhelpfully estimated the crowds as vaguely in "the thousands."

Friday, October 17, 2014

Courtney Barnett and San Fermin at The Loft, Atlanta, October 16, 2014


Last night, the mighty San Fermin played The Loft in Atlanta.  Last night, Courtney Barnett finally made it to Atlanta.  And Rocktober's only getting warmed up.  


I didn't get a chance to see opener Mikhael Paskalev.  I somehow got roped into meeting some former work colleagues for a few beers about 35 miles outside of Atlanta, and by the time I finally got back inside the Perimeter and to The Loft for last night's show, Courtney Barnett was about to take the stage.



I've been waiting for almost a year now, but this was my first time seeing Barnett perform and was certainly expecting a loud, electric set of garage-rock anthems, but the band's sound last night was much more muscular and aggressive than her records or videos suggest, perhaps in part because of an apparent change in lead guitarist, and they now thrash more than they used to just noodle around.  



There's an interesting balance in excelling at garage rock:  if you play too poorly, you don't sound any different than any other band in any other bar in any other city, but if you play too well, it's not garage rock any more.  Part of the brilliance of Barnett's band was they've found that perfect, Goldilocks sweet spot between too slack and too tight.

On another note, I was surprised to see that Barnett was opening for San Fermin and not the other way around.  Both bands are great, although very, very different, and although I've seen more internet buzz about Courtney Barnett than I have about Sen Fermin, last night was nonetheless San Fermin's first headlining performance in Atlanta, 


And,  man, did they ever knock it out of the park. With two horns (baritone sax and a very extroverted trumpet), two singers, a violinist, keys, bass, and, of course, drums, they were able to project to the very back of the intimate Loft space (but fortunately for me, I was at the very front, and could hear every and see everything). 


We first saw San Fermin at Shaky Knees (above) where they just about stole the entire show, but missed them this year during Day Two of Bumbershoot (below, which reminds me - I need to post my Day Two retrospective sometime soon), partly because some sadist in the scheduling department put them on at the same time as Pickwick, the best band you've never heard of, and partly because I already had tickets to last night's show and knew that I'd be able to see them soon.  


Two very different bands, but one great night of fun music.