Photos & Live Review: Mos Def & Erykah Badu, Paramount Theatre, Sept. 4, 2009

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Photos &Review by David SasonMos Def‘s Oakland stop on his Ecstatic Tour got off to an awful start Friday night, with an hour delay and a sophomoric and at times annoying opening set from Jay Electronica, Erykah Badu’s current beau. The New Orleans rapper spent about 10 minutes just talking to the crowd. He went from a lame black vs. white noise-off, to sincerely thanking the Bay Area for opening its arms to the displaced from his native New Orleans, to asking the crowd for weed & lighting up the joint he received on stage – all before his first song. His spoken-word, mostly acapella post-Katrina tales show promise, but his poor showmanship overshadowed his chilling work.

His lady Ms. Badu, on the other hand, is an expert in that field, and had the crowd in the palm of her hand from the moment she strolled onstage in her red summer dress, introduced by way of Lil Wayne’s name check in “A Milli”: “Where is Erykah Badu at?” Surrounded by a potent and unique band set-up – with seven (yes, 7!) DJs with laptops and turntable, each playing a synthesized band part – Badu worked her way through a surprisingly up-tempo set that all but shattered her former image as Afro-centric “Queen of Neo Soul”, from opening anthem “The Healer” off last year’s brilliant apocalyptic album New Amerykah Part One (4th World War).

Badu enthralled the crowd – who danced & sang along throughout, seemingly supportive of her artistic growth and eclecticism – by singing, rapping, twirling her dress, posing, and playing her own drum pad, which started off an accelerated 808-beat version of old mellow favorite “Apple Tree”, a highlight of her set. During a rousing version of “Soldier”, Badu poignantly spoke of the documentary The Fourth World War, which inspired her album’s concept and whose portrayal of peaceful Zapatista protesters in Mexico touched her deeply. After an inspired call for the audience to scream their own names aloud, Badu ended the show with a thought-provoking question mark: “Remember: One smile can cause a million…” [then the Lil Wayne joint again to take her out: “A milli, a milli, a milli, a milli…”].

After such an amazing performance, headliner Mos Def had his work cut out for him, especially since the cult figure has even fewer well-known numbers than Badu. But Mos Def is such a charismatic performer (as evinced by his numerous, equally successful careers) that he didn’t need hits – or more than a DJ – to rock the crowd (albeit a smaller, thinned-out one). Opening the show from behind a drum kit (a real one, this time), Mos Def proceeded to (simultaneously) rap, sing & James Brown-dance his way through a few songs off his new album The Ecstatic, including his Middle East-themed Slick Rick collaboration “Auditorium”.”Let’s give it up for ‘the ruler’,” he yelled, as he danced gleefully to Rick’s recorded voice, which perfectly encapsulated Mos’s success as a performer; he’s a hip-hop fan like the rest of us & he’s having a blast. Everything was a tasteful tribute to his musical heroes, from his song “Close Edge” (a reworking of the classic Grandmaster Flash & the Furious Five song “The Message”), through his riffing on Run DMC’s “Down With the King”, to his dazzling performance of “Billie Jean”, moonwalk and all. The latter made everyone sing and dance along, and its spirit somehow cut through all the recent Michael Jackson media over-saturation.

The loafers & visible socks he wore in tribute to MJ were the flashiest thing about Mos’s visual aspect, which featured one DJ, a blank t-shirt, and of course the persistent red lights referencing The Ecstatic‘s album cover. This in itself was a bold move considering the impeccably dressed sneaker-heads comprising the audience, but that’s what makes Mos Def one of the realest around, and proof that hip-hop can succeed without all the flash & aggression. His confidence and skills – apparent without any pomp whatsoever – were nothing short of inspirational.“All you chest-thumpers, just stop it and be grateful,” he told the crowd at one point. “I’d rather be a genius than a gangster.” Hopefully, the Bay Area’s next generation of rappers were listening.—David SasonMos Def’sThe Ecstatic and Erykah Badu’s New Amerykah Part One (4th World War) are available now.

America, Watch Out!

09.02.09

I’ve thoroughly read President Obama’s proposed healthcare plan. And by “read” I mean I’ve heard what other commentators on AM talk radio have had to say about the various versions floating through Congress. And in these versions there are a lot of devils in the details. Bad devils who look like John Carradine, with curly mustaches and opera capes. All of them from a place called “Hell.”

Chief among these details is the so-called public option. Not only does this “public option” need to be taken off the table, the table itself should be chopped up into little pieces and burnt. In fact, it’s not a table, it’s a board—a “death board” to decide whether or not you’re healthy enough to live. Federally funded doctors, some of them from Muslim countries, will decide to send old people off on an iceberg.

Now at last we can see why Democrats and other liberals are concerned about so-called global warming. They need those icebergs for their euthanasia schemes! Former governess Sarah Palin knows of these icebergs—she could see them from her window. And as an Alaskan, she knows the special horror of watching the old, the unfit or even just slow learners made to “ride the snow-cone,” “go visit Frosty” or even “take the Polar Express.”

Having patriotically refused to ever visit a foreign country, I know perfectly well, perhaps better than anyone alive, what goes on in foreign public clinics. Don’t get me started about Michael Moore and his visit to Cuba in Sicko, because once I start, I can’t stop for hours. He’s really very fat, you know. Cuba, an example? A slave nation that treats brain tumors with banana leaf poultices and Santeria rituals?

How much better it is in Honduras, the Switzerland of Central America, where for a few hundred dollars, doctors will perform any medical procedure from a tummy tuck to a leg transplant. Thanks to the unregulated free market, one Tegucigalpa hospital has developed an innovative surgery. Here, a live Chihuahua is implanted to take the place of a diseased kidney, preventing dialysis and also giving the patient a loyal and friendly animal companion.

Bloviate.com has an important essay on the situation in countries that have made the mistake of installing government healthcare. Take Australia, a country of shut-ins. From Perth to Brisbane, nothing but coughing, unwell physical ruins. After a few decades of public health, these trembling Antipodeans are now so weak they are routinely thrashed by the kangaroos they once easily defeated in boxing matches. The Outback is now overrun with futuristic, leather-clad punks on motorcycles. They know the injuries they sustain from wrist-mounted crossbows and razor boomerangs will be patched up by the long-suffering Australian taxpayer.

Take Canada, please! The reason why British Columbia advertises vacation all the time is because everyone in the nation is too ill to take one themselves. Rosy-cheeked from consumption or something, these sufferers overindulge in skiing, tobaggoning and mountain climbing in hopes of retrieving enough strength to make it to the hospice. Mounties and lumberjacks lean on one another like cripples, trying to stagger to the U.S. border in hope of treatment. Fortunately, the Canadian government is doing its best to underfund hospitals to prove the error of this single-payer system.

Sadly, this reign of error continues: Norway, packed with diseased wretches; Sweden, “the sick man of Scandinavia”; Finland, a land of stunted men and women barely taller than concrete garden trolls . . . I could go on, but everyone else in the world has it wrong and we’ve got it right. Further examples would just muddy the issue, and reading just makes you effeminate anyway. I’ll continue to get the news I need from the airwaves: from people as physically fit as Rush, as mentally healthy as Glenn and as calmly objective as Bill O’Reilly.

R. W. Goatlips, Esq., is a senior fellow at the Institute for Counterintuitive Studies in Washington, D.C.

Open Mic is a weekly feature in the Bohemian. We welcome your contribution. To have your topical essay of 700 words considered for publication, write op*****@******an.com.

 


Letters to the Editor

09.02.09

Educational values

I loved this issue of the Bohemian (“Degree of Panic,” Aug. 19). I read it and laughed so hard and realized that I had it really good going to college. Thank you Santa Rosa Junior College and Dominican University. The article written by Jackie Johansen, “A ‘Useless’ Degree” had me laughing so hard since I know how she felt. The line “I could make sure that money is never a problem. However, I would rather live humbly, have the time to dip a Madeleine into lime blossom tea and let the taste of it urge my own version of Combray to bubble up from the depths of my being” is really for some what college is about. I, like Jackie, went to college to study what I am passionate about, creative writing and humanities. When I attended Dominican University, I was taught a new, independent way to think and view the world. This recession is teaching a lot of people who are able to go to college just how lucky they really are. A college education is worth the price since it is not about what one learns in the classroom but what one takes away from it for life.

N. Sartain

Santa Rosa

Scandal and the mlpa

Thank you for publishing one of the best Marine Life Protection Act articles I have seen to date (“Coastal Conundrum,” Aug. 26). The unethical political maneuvering that it took to ensure the 2XA loss has left me quite disgusted with the process. There was open and transparent negotiation until the end when the Blue Ribbon Task Force felt the need to give the high-dollar eco side more of what they were paying for. Then, when it looked like 2XA could still win, the governor’s office had to get involved in a bullshit move to invalidate the whole process (but ensure a win for the side that paid for the process).

I consider myself an environmentalist first and a fisherman second, but what happened was just wrong.

Dale Della Rosa

Martinez

The public option

Letter-writer Michael Zebulon is dead wrong (Letters, Aug. 26). No “very deep resentment” of Obama has been building “almost since Inauguration Day,” except for the sore losers who voted for McCain.

Obama has said repeatedly that if you like your current insurance, you should be able to keep it. If you don’t, there should be a “public option.” That’s a medical insurance plan offered by the federal government, like Medicare, that you can choose as your insurance coverage. The private plans would be required to compete with the federal plan for quality and cost.

And that, ladies and gentlemen, is why the private health insurers, the American Medical Association, and the big pharmaceutical companies, are spending millions and millions, and are spreading lies, to defeat this healthcare reform bill.The rabble are roused by hearing such lies as the creation of a “death panel” in the reform bill.

The insurers have agreed to accept that part of the plan that would require them to take everyone who applies. The trade-off, however, according to the companies, would be that Obama would sign off on an “individual mandate.” That means everyone would be required to buy insurance—quite a bonanza for the insurers. This can only work if we have an affordable and adequate public option, which the insurers are trying so desperately to kill.

Philip Ratcliff

Cloverdale

Higher standards

No review of Oliver at the Sixth Street Playhouse? We could expect that much from the PD, but the Bohemian? Are we to assume that the production is so bad, your reviewer, David Templeton, thought it best not to embarrass the theater and cast? Any comments from the esteemed Mr. Templeton?

Chris Lucas

Cotati

David Templeton responds: I do not review shows directed by Holly Vinson, because, as an occasional actor, I have been directed by her in past and hope to be again, I consider her a friend and mentor, and even if I could be objective about her work, reviewing it would open me to negative speculation and accusations of conflict of interest. I do look forward to seeing Oliver, though, as a fan of Ms. Vinson’s work.


Jigga What?

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09.02.09

Sure, Jay-Z and Beyoncé hardly ever show up in public together, and yet it wasn’t the weirdest thing in the world that the royal couple showed up to Grizzly Bear’s outdoor concert in Brooklyn over the weekend. Grizzly Bear, of course, is the buzz band of the year, and much like the Arcade Fire secured the older generation’s nod of approval through collaborations with David Bowie and Bruce Springsteen, Grizzly Bear have appeared onstage and in the studio with Paul Simon, Michael McDonald and the Los Angeles Philharmonic. So Jay-Z and Beyoncé? It’s not unusual.

What was unusual was Jay-Z’s explanation for being at the show, from an MTV interview earlier this week, and it is strangely and satisfyingly on point.

“The thing I want to say to everyone—I hope this happens because it will push rap, it will push hip-hop to go even further—what the indie rock movement is doing right now is very inspiring,” he told MTV on Monday. “It felt like us in the beginning. These concerts, they’re not on the radio, no one hears about them, and there’s 12,000 people in attendance. And the music that they’re making and the connection they’re making to people is really inspiring. So I hope that they have a run where they push hip-hop back a little bit, so it will force hip-hop to fight to make better music. Because it can happen. Because that’s what rap did to rock.”

In the past few years, Jay-Z’s been more a galvanizing figurehead of hip-hop than rapper of great artistic vitality, so his stance is important in several ways, and not just because he’s drawing attention to a very good band. His undercurrent here is twofold: one, that operating independently outside of the mainstream music industry is the right way to do things; and two, that hip-hop kinda sucks these days.

“Indie rock” is a funny phrase, especially since, like “alternative rock” before it, it signifies a style of music that has become widely accepted. But its etymology remains proper. Though there are exceptions in the form of Modest Mouse and the Yeah Yeah Yeahs, the most successful indie-rock bands right now—Grizzly Bear, Arcade Fire, Animal Collective, Vampire Weekend, Dirty Projectors—record for thriving independent labels and intentionally avoid venues under the corporate stranglehold of the despicable behemoth Live Nation.

Jay-Z is under that stranglehold; he’s in the same company as U2, Madonna and Nickelback by signing a “360 Deal” that gives Live Nation, a spinoff of Clear Channel, the rights to all of his recordings, live shows, merchandising and tours for the next decade. It’s a $152 million contract, so Jay can’t be completely ashamed of signing his career away, but it is nice to know that there’s a small kernel of his brain that remembers his own independent label he founded long ago, Roc-a-Fella Records, and that sees a band like Grizzly Bear and says, “Yeah man, that’s the way.”

As for the second subtext, that hip-hop sucks these days, it’s true to an extent, insofar as one is willing or able to dig. In other words, look underground. The most promising hip-hop debut this year is by a former automotive engineer from Detroit named Finale, who left the assembly line eight years ago to focus on rapping full-time. A Pipe Dream and a Promise, released this year on Interdependent Media, is the sound of Detroit that Eminem could never hope to capture, a pastiche of the city’s rich musical history, from Motown to house music to J. Dilla, with Finale’s own tales from one of the most hard-hit, economically depressed cities in America.

As a snapshot of Detroit, the album is vivid with abandoned neighborhoods, struggling families and old auto-industry friends out of work. As a snapshot of Finale’s personal life, the album contains unflinching honesty like “Brother’s Keeper,” a moving account of his family laying blame on him when his brother landed in jail. And as a snapshot of who’s who in production, the album boasts beats by Los Angeles electro whiz Flying Lotus, Motor City producer Black Milk and the late, elevated J. Dilla, who recognized and gave Finale a huge early push.

Finale has already signed, regretted and wrangled out of various business contracts, so he knows what the industry can do to earnest young artists. So far, staying independent is paying off, probably much more so than any ill-fated major-label deal he could sign. Just like Grizzly Bear’s done. And just like Jay-Z, somewhere deep down, beneath his $152 million deal with Live Nation, recognizes.


Slow Uphill Crawl

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09.02.09

Old-timers will complain and complain about how young bands have it easy these days, swallowing the baited cliché of the overnight hit single, the fashionable haircut and the glossy magazine cover. The reality of the situation is far more grim, exacerbated by the level playing field of the internet. In order to get noticed amid the constant barrage of MySpace pages and blog reviews, musicians have to take matters behind their own steering wheel and follow a constant regimen of touring and playing live as much as possible. After 16 years, as long as you’re talented, good-looking, have a reliable band and haven’t yet burnt out, overdosed, lost your creative impetus in a messy divorce or found Jesus, you might get lucky enough to break even. Just ask Eric Lindell.

After putting out Gulf Coast Highway, the best record of his long career, Lindell in 2009 is the living disputation of the idea that kids get rich overnight in the music business. He’s been patiently clawing his way up since playing small bars in Santa Rosa, doing things the slow but right way. He’s constantly on the road, tirelessly playing with anyone and for anyone along the way. And though he doesn’t have that big hit or that glossy magazine cover, he’s got something worth far more: respect. Those who haven’t kept tabs on Lindell in the last few years are encouraged to pick up a copy of Gulf Coast Highway, or better yet, see him live on Friday, Sept. 4, at the Cloverdale Plaza (Downtown Cloverdale; 7pm; free; 707.894.4410) or Saturday, Sept. 5, at the Last Day Saloon (120 Fifth St., Santa Rosa; 8:30pm; $15&–$18. 707.545.2343).


New Release: Whitney Houston – I Look to You

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Neither rehash or rebirth, Whitney Houston’s new album becomes a wake for one of America’s greatest voices.  Whitney Houston’s comeback campaign – announced two years ago by benefactor Clive Davis – has arrived today in the form of I Look to You, her first album since 2002 and since ending her tumultuous marriage to Bobby Brown. Of course any Tina Turner comparisons would be inaccurate, and it’s clear from bouncy opener “Million Dollar Bill” that Houston differs from Turner in another important way: sadly, Whitney’s voice did NOT survive the marriage.

Gone is her distinctively clear timbre, appearing slightly rougher and even nasally at points, as if she’s holding back from full projection. Houston fares better on piano ballads like the R. Kelly-penned title track, which could sound like an old Bodyguard soundtrack outtake if not for her muddled lower register (thankfully, her sweet falsetto cooing is in tact).

This is definitely a sad moment for American music, considering the influence of Houston’s talent on everyone from Mariah Carey to Christina Aguilera. Since her stellar 1985 debut, Whitney’s forceful voice and its range transformed decent pop songs (let’s face it, much of her 80s output could’ve fit Celine Dion as well) into still-enduring classics. Can you imagine “The Greatest Love of All” or “I Will Always Love You” without her vocal acrobatics? Since she was never a songwriter (she co-wrote only two songs on what will certainly be touted as her most personal album), her gift was her voice, and for years she was the best around. She even turned the national anthem into a hit single.

The forced production doesn’t help her comeback bid either. A slew of producers from David Foster to Swizz Beatz place her in bad situation after bad situation, from an ill-informed duet with Akon (the latest in a long time for Houston) on the vocoder-using “Like I Never Left”. She very well may be dating the much-younger Ray J, but the 46-year-old sounds awkwardly out of place throughout the uber-trendy thumping dance tracks.

Houston is a product of the pre-hip-hop age, where pop songs didn’t require a strong beat (check the AM-radio, soft-rock arrangements of her first few records). Her rich, soulful voice transcended the pop confines early on, but didn’t exactly fit in after the age of “New Jack Swing”. (Although she couldn’t swing a transformation like Mariah, Whitney’s My Love is Your Love was tastefully done.) She’s always occupied a strange realm in between the pop world and urban music world. In 2009 the two are indelibly linked, but for Whitney it just doesn’t work. Ironically, the production of her sincere bubblegum songs like “I Wanna Dance With Somebody” would’ve fit in much better, what with Lady Gaga and Katy Perry selling like hotcakes.

While the piano-driven, gospel-themed songs make the record listenable, the confessional lyrical possibilities are squandered since hit makers like Alicia Keys to Diane Warren wrote the words. We don’t learn anything about Whitney herself on this album, despite its shamelessly suggestive exploitation of her personal struggles. (If that album cover doesn’t scream “rebirth”, I don’t know what does.)

The rehabilitation/coming-out-of-the-dark theme grows wearisome by mid-album because it’s done in such a forced, clichéd, impersonal way. By the time you reach the closer “Salute”, which desperately tried to emulate Mary J. Blige’s genuine survivor aesthetic, you’re sick of Houston mentioning “haters” or people who think their “shit don’t stink”. When she quotes LL Cool J (“Don’t call it a comeback / I’ve been here for years”), you hope she hasn’t replaced one toxic male influence (Bobby “Humpin’ Around” Brown) for another (Clive “out of touch” Davis).

These days, singing well isn’t a prerequisite for superstardom (take the lovely yet limited Beyonce, for instance), but that particular feature comprised Houston’s musical identity more than anything. Without that vocal fire that made the beautiful couplets of “Exhale (Shoop Shoop)” sound downright effortless, Whitney needs a new game plan. One reason “I Didn’t Know My Own Strength” is easily the record’s best singing performance is because it hints at the possibility of a flinty-throated new direction for her. In the meantime, I’ll cross my fingers & revisit my copy of The Greatest Hits. Perhaps Whitney should check out some late-era Billie Holiday.—David Sason

UPDATE: Whitney Houston’s Voice Cracks at Comeback Show, She Blames Oprah (Video & article on Huffington Post)

Wheels of Steel

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09.02.09

If you’re in a framing shop in the next few weeks and you see Travis Kennedy picking out a choice frame, feel free to walk up and shake his hand. The muscular, tattooed owner of Daredevils & Queens hair salon in Railroad Square and founding member of the Dirty Jerks Car Club was recently clocked driving 95mph in Wendover, Utah, and he was issued a speeding ticket he’s more than proud to hang on his wall.Why? Because Kennedy was going 95mph . . . in a 1931 Model A.

This Saturday, the Dirty Jerks Car Club hosts “Wrong Side of the Tracks,” a car show in Santa Rosa’s Railroad Square designed to promote the idea that vintage cars are meant to be driven. “It’s a car, not a trophy,” Kennedy insists, who along with driving his ’31 Model A to Bonneville and back also drives a 1952 Chevy to work every day. “Wrong Side of the Tracks” focuses on pre-1965 traditional hot rods, custom cars and low riders with an emphasis on owner maintenance, “instead of some rich guy who can afford to pay some shop to build his car for him, who puts it in his trailer to take it to Hot August Nights once a year, and then it just sits in his garage.”

Don’t expect a Harrah’s showroom atmosphere at “Wrong Side of the Tracks.” The flyer advises “No Billet•No Trailer Queens•No Bullshit.” Chances are, there’ll be guys covered in axle grease poking under each other’s dented hoods talking about carburetors alongside older people reliving bygone memories (a 70-year-old woman once saw Kennedy’s car and confided to him that she was once “compromised” in a ’52 Chevy). Loud, fast and out-of-control bands in the form of Ashtray, Moonshine, Snipers and more will keep the festivities hopping, and the next day, participants are invited to join in the “Lucky Bastards Reliability Run”—the lucky bastards being the ones whose 60-year-old cars don’t break down while driving around.

Reliable or not, old cars will always have a way with turning heads. “You can go spend $80,000 on some bad-ass new truck, lifted and everything,” Kennedy says, “but I can drive by one of those trucks and I guarantee you, that girl that’s sitting passenger in that big ol’ expensive truck is gonna be looking down at my car going, ‘That’s a cool car.'”

“Wrong Side of the Tracks” features pre-1965 custom cars and the music of Ashtray, Moonshine, Snipers and more on Saturday, Sept. 5, at Depot Park. Railroad Square, Santa Rosa. 10am–7:30pm. Free for spectators; $10 entry for car owners, no pre-registration. 707.577.8674.


Museums and gallery notes.

Reviews of new book releases.

Reviews and previews of new plays, operas and symphony performances.

Reviews and previews of new dance performances and events.

Ennui Go!

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09.02.09

Sonoma County in the mid-’90s was a magical place for music, if you could find it. Long before MySpace, bands photocopied fliers and risked vandalism fines by stapling them to telephone poles in the hope of getting 20 people to a show. It was a scene that encouraged tone-deaf people like me to learn how to play bass guitar, write a zine and actually participate in something other than watching television. These bands changed my life, and they offer a shot of that same inspiration on Sept. 5 at the Phoenix Theater for a one-night reunion.

It’s not as if all of these people just faded away—some moved on, but many stayed. Ben Saari of Mickey and the Bigmouths is one of the founders of the Free Mind Media Center. Darwin Meiners of Caffeine still plays music, directed the film Fairfield, Idaho, and puts on the “Look Ma, No Band!” shows. And Kevin McCracken of Twine is the Chief Operating Officer of Social Imprints, a forward-thinking screenprinting company that makes shirts for Metallica and Grizzly Bear.

There isn’t enough space to chronicle all of the bands spawned by these folks: the Crux, Santiago, Edaline, Secret Courtesy, Holy Rolemodel, Aim Low Kid, the Drone, Semi-Evolved Simians, Desert City Soundtrack, the Listening Group, the Aphrodisiacs, Luv n’ Rockets, and How to Lie are just a few. With punk, hardcore, ska, and what people would later deny was “emo,” this bill covers a lot of ground in a half-day festival of feedback and barbecue. Bring some extra bucks for the merch table, come back home to the Phoenix, and pay homage to Sonoma County’s roots!

Nostalgia Fest features reunions by Kid Dynamo (above), Ground Round, Blindspot, Caffeine, the Invalids, Schoolbox, Mickey & the Bigmouths, Twine and the Catnips on Saturday, Sept. 5, at the Phoenix Theater. 201 E. Washington St., Petaluma. $10. 5pm. Yes, it is true: 21 and over only. 707.762.3565.


Live Review: Outside Lands Festival 2009 – Day One

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I love San Francisco. I love Ocean Beach, and I love biking through Golden Gate Park past the eucalyptus and bison, and I love getting closer and closer to tour buses, road barricades and the sound of distant bands warbling in the wind. I love dropping my bike off with the San Francisco Bike Coalition, and I actually kinda love running from stage to stage to see as many bands as I possibly can before riding back to the beach.
It didn’t used to be this way. I hated festivals. Too many bands, not enough time, way too much marketing, and the worst offense of all—no free water. All of these symptoms are present at the Outside Lands festival, and yet what can I say? I love Golden Gate Park, and love is blind.
The Outside Lands festival returned this year to a flurry of neighborhood complaints about noise and fan complaints about lineup, and the first thing we notice is that there’s way fewer fans and way more people shoving handbills in our faces than last year. Other than that, and the near-universally recognized weakness of this year’s headliners, the Outside Lands festival is pretty much the same as last year—with batting cages.

 

Right before Built to Spill goes on, a girl, about 19, asks me if I’ve ever seen them before. “Yeah, about 12 or 13 times!” I tell her. “I’ve never heard them,” she says, “but my friend told me they’re like Band of Horses. Are they like Band of Horses?”
I admittedly am biased when it comes to Built to Spill, and I feel bad that they’ve been given the unprestigious 2:30pm time slot on a Friday. What’s it like being a hugely influential band, only to have the younger generation care more about your stylistic debtors? The old way of thinking was to raise a bitter ruckus and let as many people as possible know that you haven’t been given your due.
The new way of thinking is that through either Zen or humility, Built to Spill are unfazed at their spot both on the festival schedule and in the tight-jeans handbook. They play “The Plan,” “Else,” “Car,” “You Were Right,” “Big Dipper”—perfect songs that don’t sound old. They play a new song from their upcoming album, with lyrics about Canada and locks on the door, and it sounds just as fresh. Guitarist Jim Roth breaks a string and changes it himself mid-song. Doug Martsch chirps his simple “Thanks.”
Afterwards, a fan is overheard saying, “Dude, Built to Spill and Vicodin… soooo good.”

 

The Dodos recorded an album recently and said fuck it, let’s just stream it online for everyone to hear. In this day and age, that isn’t shattering news, but in light of Visiter and its huge success, it’s admirably surprising that their record label was cool with essentially giving the anticipated follow-up away for free.
Even more surprising, for me, is that live, the Dodos are imbued with the full-on spirit of thrust. Their records have their mellow moments, but the noise made by just Meric’s acoustic guitar and Logan’s drums on stage is baffling. They have a guy playing vibes. Everyone sings along to “Fools.” Their San Francisco friends are out and about, but no one’s razzing them ‘cause they’re ruling it.

 

The best thing to do in San Francisco when there’s a lull in the day is to ride down to Amoeba to score some records by Dinah Washington, Jeru the Damaja, Dirty Projectors, Larry Young, Sunn o))). Hit up the liquor store on Stanyan and pound an entire 32 oz. Gatorade on the sidewalk. It’s hot, man. Bad day to wear black jeans.

 

Q-Tip takes the stage with a full band—guitar, bass, drums, DJ, and a wacky dude with star earrings and dyed red hair who plays Fender Rhodes, saxophone and keytar. I loved Q-Tip’s album from last year, The Renaissance, and he comes out to its lead-off track.
Q-Tip, of course, is commanding the stage; he’s one of the most charismatic hip-hop performers in history. He breathes in rhythm like the Meters, he throws his head back and howls like James Brown, and, in a brief tribute to Michael Jackson, hammers falsetto after falsetto. His band follows his every cue, hitting the floor and cutting the volume at the right times, rising with each scream.
People sometimes ask me who my all-time favorite rapper is. I won’t choose just one, but if all of the hip hop records in the world disappeared tomorrow, I might be placated if the albums made by A Tribe Called Quest were spared. So it’s exciting when Q-Tip hits the first verse of “Oh My God,” and when he flips the beat on “Sucka Nigga,” and when he closes out “Find a Way” with a full-on talk box solo by the wacky keyboard player. When he beatboxes the Brady Bunch theme song into “Bonita Applebum,” the crowd loses their minds.
“Turn off your phones, your iPhones, your Blackberries!” he shouts during an extended jam on “Electric Relaxation.” “We feelin’ the music right here!” The energy level keeps rising and rising. “Check the Rhime” follows, then “Scenario,” and every Tribe Called Quest fan in San Francisco is losing their mind.
And then, oh shit, it happens.

 

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Phife and Q-Tip on the same stage performing “Award Tour” at Outside Lands may just be the highlight of the entire festival, for me and a handful of others. My only question: Why in the world didn’t Q-Tip bring him out on Tribe songs sooner, especially for the back-and-forth of “Check the Rhime”? Phife’s voice may not be in the best form, but any rapper who evidently carries a microphone around in his pocket is obviously ready to go on a moment’s notice.
Q-Tip acknowledges the history of the moment, says, “I don’t know when you’re ever gonna see that again,” and lets the crowd trickle away to “Life is Better.”

 

To answer your question, no, nobody threw panties at Tom Jones—at least not for the first few songs. I’m stumped. I remember hearing about Tom Jones issuing a statement about ten years ago asking people to stop throwing panties at him, but no one took it seriously. What’s the deal?
Jones sings “I’m Alive,” “Give a Little Love,” and “Green, Green Grass of Home.” During the fourth song, “If I Only Knew,” a lone red pair of panties flies through the air and alights near Jones’ feet. He ignores it. 40 seconds later, another pair of panties arcs toward the stage. Then another, and another, and another. By the end of the song, it’s just a crazy hailstorm of panties falling on Tom Jones, and I sort of feel sorry for him but I gotta admit, it’s also funny as hell.
He does “Hard to Handle,” “Mama Told Me Not to Come” and “Delilah,” and saves “It’s Not Unusual” for the end, when most of the curious and ironic onlookers have bailed to catch a painfully boring band called Pearl Jam.

 

 I hope that eventually, someone will chronicle a history of the walk-on music that bands use to take the stage. Fans of Morrissey seem especially devoted to this, as are fans of Depeche Mode, who even released their pre-concert mix on a CD for their fans. Tom Waits played old blues 78s through tinny cone speakers on his last tour; Springsteen plays “Take Me Out to the Ballgame” when he’s at a baseball stadium; classical recordings of great bombast are popular. Like so many other ephemeral pieces of the concert experience, walk-on music is something that’s forgotten halfway through the first song—and yet for a brief minute, after the lights go dim, it unites the entire crowd in an innervating herald.
Pearl Jam’s walk-on music is “Metamorphosis 2,” by Philip Glass. There’s some other songs that happen between that and our walking back to our bikes, and Eddie Vedder seems like a nice guy and all, telling the crowd to “keep track of each other and make sure that no one goes down,” but you know. It’s Pearl Jam: The Sound of the ’90s. They are completely and hopelessly dated. Sorry, grunge fans.

Jump to Outside Lands Review – Day Three.
More photos after the jump.

Album Review: Radiohead – Kid A (Collectors Edition)

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This week, EMI reissues the first 21st-century album worth canonizing.

The well-respected rock-snob “indie” website Pitchfork Media just named its top 500 songs of this quickly fading decade, with the overrated Outkast’s “B.O.B.” inexplicably topping the list. Sure, this intentionally left-field hipster move is irritating, but at least they had sense enough to give a top 10 spot to Radiohead’s “Idioteque”. This song from the year 2000 is truly deserving of commemoration, as does the whole Kid A album, which is reissued this week in a Collectors Edition. While nine years seems a short time, the premature repackaging is fitting for the polarizing record, which more than any other work reflects our accelerated age.

Much like Nirvana’s Nevermind was the symbolic musical kickoff for the 1990s, the landmark Kid A heralded the dawn of the 21st century. Everything about it is firmly entrenched in the modern age: Its homogenous, genre-defying blend of rock instruments, jazz, ambient instrumentals, orchestral arrangements and sampling/programming reflected a new heterogeneous mash-up culture. And Kid A was the first major release to be plagued by Internet leaking (via the original Napster a month before its release).

I’ll always remember Kid A’s online leak and the intense buzz it created on campus at the start of my senior year in college. There were descriptions like “spacey” floating around, theories that the title denoted a concept album about cloning, and the rumors that the British quintet had made the (best case scenario) Sgt. Pepper or the (worse case) Metal Machine Music of my generation.

Neither narrow assumption turned out exactly right, but Kid A’s importance is tantamount to Dylan going electric in 1965. Just as the rise of rap music drew a cultural line on the sand (It’s safe to say that those who didn’t grow up with hip-hop anywhere at all on their appreciation radar are decidedly “old”), Kid A’s use of electronics and sampling in what’s essentially still a rock record reflected a social shift toward accepting electronic and sample-based music as valid tools for creating aural art.

The importance of their status as the most widely recognized “saviors of rock” since the grunge era cannot be overstated. At the time of its release, with hip-hop’s new commercial dominance and the late-90s electronica craze in modern rock (not to mention rave culture’s pervasiveness), Radiohead was one of the few vital western bands still creating traditional rock music, most notably on 1997’s OK Computer, the prog-rock-ish critical smash. Kid A was definitely reactive to their new status (like Nirvana’s consciously rawer In Utero), but showed that computers could be trusted, not just as flourishes here and there, but as the basis for a 4- or 5-minute rock song. It’s a big reason groups like LCD Soundsystem, Justice and Thievery Corporation get a fair shake these days from rock fans & critics alike. The aforementioned “Idioteque” is actually one of their most melodic and “rocking” compositions, despite its sparse, taut production and instrumentation comprised of only programmed beats and keyboard chords (taken from pioneer Paul Lansky).

The rest of the album is just as compelling as ever, from the free-jazz coda of the throbbing “National Anthem” to the awkward yet accessible rhythms in the organ-driven “Morning Bell” to the more traditional guitar-based songs like “Optimistic”. Musically, the set seems to encapsulate the whole of modern music throughout, from jazz to arena rock.

The vocals remain just as impressive, especially how entrancing & catchy Thom Yorke’s odd vocals are. His robotic voice has, dare I say, soul throughout. The surreal, repetitive vocal loops spew catch phrases that were personal or universal, at times vaguely political or socially didactic, but always thought-provoking (“Yesterday I woke up sucking a lemon” / “Release me” / “Cut the kids in half” / “Women and children first” / “Big fish eat the little ones” / “Ice age coming” / “This is really happening” / “I’m not here, this isn’t happening”). Lyrically, a sense of confusion, panic, distress & horror appears throughout, which, as writer Chuck Klosterman pointed out, makes the album seem eerily tailor-made for the impending post-9/11 world.

While these lyrics make the strangest arena sing-alongs ever, that’s just what happened the following spring, when they embarked on their American tour shortly after my graduation. The bonus disc and DVD, which both feature live performances of the tunes, are actually fortuitous in their riches, giving an accurate portrayal of the band’s live show, the other triumph. The question at the time was if the electronic songs would be enjoyable live, but the most experimental songs from Kid A (and companion album Amnesiac) have endured in their live repertoire, especially “Everything In Its Right Place,” which comes alive with an insistent beat and live vocal looping/TV news sampling by Jonny Greenwood.

2001 was their peak, as far as I’m concerned (they haven’t released a uniformly great album since Amnesiac). I’ve seen them live a couple times since, but their June 2001 show at the Shoreline Amphitheatre is by far the best. They were on fire. Pick a cliché: they still seemed hungry, still had something to prove, & still were trying something entirely new for them. This was years before even Kanye West was in awe of them. I remember the lawn packed to the rafters, standing room only, and everyone jamming just as jovially to the unusual songs as they did to the few conventional numbers like “Fake Plastic Trees”. The thousands in attendance even enjoyed the cover of an obscure Can song, which is no easy feat for any band. Through Radiohead’s albums and show, the entire arena rock-show audience unwittingly became more adventurous.

This is, perhaps, Kid A’s most important victory. They’re currently the most beloved “indie” band in the world, although they were never on an “indie” record label. They went backwards, starting out “mainstream” and gaining credibility, which is the way it should be. Their rep was built on the integrity of the music itself and their staunch belief in it. Wouldn’t it be wonderful if all musicians, well-known and subversive, could transcend their pigeonholing in such a way? It’s funny but kind of fitting – in this unimpressed, post-everything age we live in – that I didn’t fully realize just how special Radiohead was at the time. Wow.The “Collectors Editions” and “Special Collectors Editions” of Kid A, Amnesiac, and Hail to the Thief are available now.

—David Sason

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