Radiohead @ Blossom Music Center, Cleveland

Cleveland, Indie, News, Reviews, Rock, Shows

I can finally scratch off Radiohead from my list of favorite bands (that are still alive/together/not retired) that I have yet to see.  They were the last and most elusive one, as they don’t make many trips to the states.  Radiohead are somewhat of an enigma, being one of the most influential and important bands of the last twenty years.  They’re just one of those bands that you plain have to see, and I finally got my chance.

My buddy and I bought tickets immediately after they confirmed a show in Cleveland, OH at the Blossom Music Center on August 4th.  We waited a few days last time and the D.C. show sold out.  (Yea, we were willing to drive the five hours from Pittsburgh.  After all, it’s Radiohead!)

It was my first trip back to Blossom since my very first concert ever there when I was five years old to see Donnie Iris and the Cruisers.  We got stuck in a bumper-to-bumper line trying to get off of the Turnpike and down the local road to the amphitheatre and then into a parking space.  We sat for a good hour in traffic, hoping that they would delay Radiohead’s start since it was sold out and thousands of people were still parking.

No luck.  During our mile walk from the lot to the amphitheatre we heard the crowd erupt.  They had just lunged into “15 Steps” as we broke into a sprint.  Thankfully, that was all we missed of the set, although we were disappointed to miss them initially take the stage.

The whole experience of a Radiohead concert is just that-it is a whole experience.  Not just a drunk-fest with fan sing-alongs.  From the music-which is intricately and expertly played–to the light show, to Thom Yorke’s frantic on-stage persona, it was something completely new and exciting that I had never witnessed before.  You almost sit there waiting to learn something and be enlightened.  I was totally expecting to be blown away.  Besides, it’s Radiohead!

Particularly, the light show was insane!  Above the stage hung several dozen columns that I expect were made of some sort of fiber optics.  Light and animation were then either projected or beamed from the columns.  It was absolutely mesmerizing and added such a huge visual element to what was happening sonically on stage.  And the crowd was fueled by the changes in the light show that punctuated the music.

Radiohead kept things pretty mellow and mid-tempo, as most of their music is anyway.   They played the entire In Rainbows disc, with “House of Cards”, “Weird Fishes/Arpeggi”, and “Reckoner” being standouts for me.  (Check out my crappy-quality camera phone videos below) -We’re trying to get those up…and we’re failing bigtime. More word on those videos soon…-Eddie

Absent were “Karma Police,” “The Bends,” “Fake Plastic Trees,” “High and Dry,” and of course “Creep,” which Thom utterly hates playing.  This did not surprise me as the set was kept pretty liberal and experimental.  Although, I would have liked to hear them play “My Iron Lung.”

The band left the stage only an hour into their set and thanked the crowd.  This was to be the first of two encores they took that night.  Presumptuous?  Maybe.  But when you witness how well they play, what they do, and how well-written the songs are, it is perfectly within their right.  After all, it’s Radiohead!

During the first encore came the highlight of the night for me and the rest of the crowd.  “Paranoid Android” was absolutely mind-blowing live with its ups and downs and tempo changes.  It also saw the band rock out more than any other selection that night.  Add to it just how awesome a song it is and the explosive light show (see videos) -again, we suck- and you have your quintessential Radiohead moment.

They barrage your senses from all angles with sound, light and emotion that you don’t need any drugs to feel a high.  This was the first big concert that I didn’t drink at.  I really wanted to be able to remember this one.

However, there was more marijuana smoking here than any Tom Petty show I’ve ever been to.  The clouds of smoke from joints and cigarettes were smothering for an outdoor venue.  And unfortunately I was standing by Thom Yorke’s echo for half of the show.  Don’t ever be “that guy” that sings the words to every song and says “Oh Sweet!” when the next one starts.  I came here to hear Thom sing, not some scenester douchebag.  We eventually relocated.

I am not going to dissect their music here.  You either love it or you don’t.  But the one thing I most appreciate is that they reproduce everything live.  All of the swirling effects and feedback are performed live–even the synth beats.  There are no canned samples or recorded tracks.  Radiohead are a band that believes that if you can’t replicate it live, it’s not worth doing, and I am a subscriber to this.  It may not be appreciated as much or even realized by someone who is not a musician, but it is the Holy Grail of live performance for those that play.

Jonny in particular swapped picks for cello bows, guitars for synth pads, and standing for crouching over his effects board, making the strange sounds and atmospheres that make Radiohead what they are.  He also used a lot of E-Bow for sustained notes and feedback.

Thom played a lot of piano and Rhodes and swayed his head back and forth so much while singing, it was hard to understand how he could do it so smoothly.  He of course was spot-on and dominant for such a small guy.  Vocals never faltered and hearing Thom live was even more soulful than on the recordings.

Not enough credit is given to drummer Phil Selway.  He managed to keep the beat throughout all the odd time-signature changes and chord progressions.  If you are familiar with Radiohead’s writing style, you know that is no easy feat.  He was solid as a rock and kept everything simple:  no gaudy flourishes or over-the-top rolls.  Just solid pocket drumming with lots of kick, snare, and ride.

The rest of the musicians (Ed O’Brien-guitar; Colin Greenwood-bass) filled out the sound with layers and textures that were hard to pick out separately but joined together to make one heck of a sonic landscape.  Not many bands can achieve that.

The band ended the night and second encore with “Everything In Its Right Place.”  As they thanked the crowd and left the stage, the title “Everything In Its Right Place” was scrolled across the light columns.  It wasn’t immediately obvious–you had to pay attention to see it.

But, an important note to Radiohead production crew:  they spelled “Its” wrong, using the contraction “It’s” instead.  Call me a grammar nerd for noticing, but the band just got done making a sly political reference to Big Oil during the song, and the title is significant.  You wouldn’t want a simple spelling error to mar your objective.

Besides, it’s Radiohead!

Videos

House of Cards

Paranoid Android

Reckoner

Weird Fishes

Everything in its Right Place

Post comments 3 Comments »

Tours of Note: MIT

Audio, News

Maybe it’s because it’s late at night or my sleep deprivation, but i really dig this band right now. The robotic-techno beats thumping in my head and the fact there’s a short dude in the group. Rock on.

MIT are three dudes (up there) from Germany. MIT is also the name of a college in Cambridge, MA, just deterred me from checking them out since I assumed it was going to be music about how to use the right equation to score the slutty math chic in your class (you know, the one who just lets her tangent hang out there for all to see. Yea. She’s hot).

But I was wrong. This is music that hits you hard, sometimes in German (one of the fiercest and angriest languages ever). And in the state I’m in (how the HELL am I still in the same clothes I wore to work??), this music makes sense to me in the same way cheesy 1970 Bronson films make sense to me at 3 a.m. (hey, if someone fucked with my watermelon patch, I’d be pissed too).

They aren’t coming to the States anytime soon, but I sent someone in their management team an email stating that they should.

MIT – “Rauch” coma remix
[audio:http://www.52shows.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/08/rauch-coma-remix.mp3]

Aug 15 2008 8:00P  dockville festival hamburg
Aug 16 2008 8:00P  summerize festival berlin
Sep 25 2008 8:00P   reeperbahnfestival hamburg
Sep 27 2008 8:00P   de mode club, kset zagreb
Nov 15 2008 8:00P  festival music allemand paris

Post comments 1 Comment »

Jay-Z at Glastonbury video: I really don’t know what to think

Festivals, News, Video

Prior to this performance, Noel Gallagher said having hip-hop at the Glastonberry Glastonbury rock festival was a bad idea and that hip-hop would have “no chance” at the festival. Jay answered this by coming on stage with a guitar strapped on (he didn’t really play it) and a mic stand decked out a la Steven Tyler (from Areosmith who, as we all know, helped break hip-hop group Run DMC to the MTV world).

He opened with a “cover” of Oasis’ “Wonderwall” and I put that in quotes because Jay was simply “singing” with the song, the same way drunk dudes “sing” to songa in their car after a heavy night of boozing.

It was, however, a noble effort and did silence critics about Jay being at Glastonberry Glastonbury (and not to mention boasted his album sales in Britain).

But is this weird? Should hip-hop be at Glastonberry? Especially as the main act? I’m not sure. I love Jay-Z, but I have to wonder the reasoning behind him showing up at Glastonberry Glastonbury.

As for Noel, he’s somewhat backtracking his previous comments and now may be looking to do something with Jay, thanks in part to the overwelming postive reaction Jay got at the festival.

So check the video out

Post comments 3 Comments »

Free Giveaway: Warren Haynes Benefit Concert Vol. 8

News

I love NPR. I don’t normally catch it on the radio, so I rely on the various podcasts to keep me up-to-date (and I’ve already gone on about NPR’s collection of recorded concerts).

But there’s one podcast that continues to surprise me. It’s called “This I Believe,” a show/concept originally conceived in the ’50s where Americans revearled their philosophies and core values about life.

So for 52 Shows, I’m taking that idea and applying it to concerts. We want your philosophy and core values about concerts. Finish this statement in the comments below: “I believe a concert should be…” and you could win a free music DVD.

It can be as long or as short as you want. I’m gonna let this go on for a couple of weeks. After that, we’ll pick one at random and one that we personally like. Both will receive a copy of  Warren Haynes Benefit Concert Vol. 8 on DVD.

The DVD has performances by Gov’t Mule (who play with Dave Matthews and Branford Maralis),  The John Popper Project, and The New Orleans Social Club. It  was recorded live at Warren Haynes 18th Annual Christmas Jam in Asheville, NC on December 16th, 2006 at the Asheville Civic Center.

When the contest is over, Dave and I will reveal our philosphy about concerts. For now, comment and get free stuff.

Post comments 5 Comments »

Live Tracks: Wakey! Wakey! “Live At Bowery Ballroom”

Albums, Audio, Indie, MP3, News

Weren’t we just talking about live albums and how some fool thinks they are dead?

This one came to us free from Wakey! Wakey!, a piano-playing, fun-loving guy who has a soul of jovial humor.

To be honest, I was put off by the name. Just looking at “Wakey! Wakey!” sends obnoxious chills down my spine and produces images of a strict parental figure.

But, I’m happy to report, the music is closer to Ben Folds than your crazy aunt.

Wakey! Wakey! “Blame You”
[audio:http://www.52shows.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/07/04-blame-you.mp3]

If you like that, download the entire live album for free. It was taped on June 25, 2008 at the Bowery Ballroom.

i wasn’t expecting this. I was expecting children’s music or irritating lyrics about the morning time. Instead, Wakey! Wakey! gave me piano-based ballads that warm my indie rock mind. Oh, he also does a cover of Gnarls Barkley’s “Crazy,” which seems to be the thing people do.

Enjoy…and let me know if anyone has seen this cat live.

Post comments 2 Comments »

Reader Request: Is the Live Album Dead?

News, Reader Request

What was the last live album you bought? I know, took me a while too. I have some DVDs I’ve gotten and some live tracks that I either got off mixes or “found” on the Internet. But other than that, I really can’t think of the last one I seriously went out of my way to buy.

And that thought made this article in The Independent with the headline “Live Albums are Dead, and Music is the Lose” all the more interesting.

The one album that sticks out for me is AC/DC Live, one of the first CDs I bought for myself. I liked three-chord rock and songs about sex (wait, I still do). But I also liked hearing the crowd chant and hearing them explode when Angus Young started “Dirty Deeds Done Dirt Cheap.” It was like another crazy world and I knew I wanted to be a part of it.

After that, the only other live album I can really remember is Nirvana’s Unplugged one that came out a couple of months after Cobain’s suicide. I remember initially taping it off the radio before buying it. (Oh! I also remember that crazy Pearl Jam experiment when they sold live recordings from their national and world tour). And Johnny Cash’s prison albums are still in heavy rotation on the iPod.

So with that, is it true? Is the live album dead? The article blames shoddy live recordings found on Youtube (and even more on Songza) that have led to the live album’s demise.

I hesitate to call the live album dead, especially when iTunes has its iTunes Live sessions (those may just be available in digital format), the most recent one featuring R.E.M. There’s also NPR’s Live in Concert from All Songs Considered, where the public radio station records a concert and posts it as a podcast on its site (the Swell Season one is my favorite so far).

So I really don’t think the live album is dead…it’s just in different forms and I think the article shows just how angry an old man can get when he doesn’t understand technology and long for the days when music only came in a physical form.

Thoughts?

Post comments 7 Comments »

Tours of Note: Stars

News, Tours

Stars, the epic melodramatic pop band will be back on the road. I saw these guys last year and enjoyed their howling the phrase “after the war,” which was initially intended to mean the end of the single life on their album, but took on political undertones at the show.

As of now, my personal war is the with the with newspaper industry and it’s complete lack of sense.

7/5/08 – Vieux-Quebec, PQ @ Festival D’ete de Quebec
7/8/08 – Ottawa, ON @ Ottawa Bluesfest
8/24/08 – San Francisco, CA @ Outlands Festival
9/16/08 – Boston, MA @ Wilbur
9/17/08 – Northampton, MA @ Pearl Street
9/19/08 – Philadelphia, PA @ Trocadero
9/20/08 – New York, NY @ Terminal 5
9/24/08 – Chicago, IL @ The Riviera
9/25/08 – St. Louis, MO @ The Pagaent
9/26/08 – Lawrence, KS @ The Granada
9/28/08 – Austin, TX @ Austin City Limits
10/1/08 – Los Angeles, CA @ Avalon
10/2/08 – Anaheim, CA @ House of Blues
10/4/08 – Santa Cruz, CA @ The Rio Theatre
10/6/08 – San Francisco, CA @ The Fillmore

10/8/08 – Portland, OR @ Wonder Ballroom
10/9/08 – Seattle, WA @ The Showbox

Post comments No Comments »

Tours of Note: Conor Oberst

News

Conor Oberst, epic frontman for Bright Eyes, inches closer to releasing his solo eponymous album (slated to drop on Aug. 5). Click on his name back there and you’ll be able to stream two new songs, “Danny Callahan” and “Souled Out!!!”

“Danny” has Oberst trademark frail-sounding voice that makes me immediately think of guys with large heads on tiny thin bodies clad in super tight t-shirts and jeans (am I wrong?).

“Souled” is a catchy tune, which is strange to say since so many Bright Eyes songs leaves me sad and depressed (and sometimes sleepy). There’s even a point when Obrest laughs. I didn’t think he could smile.

07/16/08 Sao Paulo, Brazil @ Studio SP
07/17/08 Sao Paulo, Brazil @ Studio SP
07/18/08 Santiago, Chile @ Cine Arte Normandie
07/19/08 Buenos Aires, Argentina @ La Trastienda
07/25/08 Billings, MT @ Bones Brewing*
07/27/08 Calgary, AB @ Calgary Jazz Festival, Prince’s Island Park
07/29/08 Vancouver, BC @ Richard’s On Richards Cabaret<
07/30/08 Seattle, WA @ Neumo’s<
07/31/08 Bend, OR @ Midtown Ballroom<
08/01/08 San Francisco, CA @ Bottom of the Hill<
08/02/08 San Francisco, CA @ Bottom or the Hill<
08/03/08 Santa Cruz, CA @ Rio Theatre<
08/05/08 Los Angeles, CA @ Troubador<
08/08/08 Nashville, TN @ Mercy Lounge**
08/09/08 Carrboro, NC @ Cat’s Cradle**
08/10/08 Norfolk, VA @ The NorVa**
08/11/08 Philadelphia, PA @ Trocadero**
08/12/08 New York, NY @ Bowery Ballroom**
08/17/08 Saratoga, NY @ Saratoga Music Festival^
08/22/08 Leeds, UK @ Leeds Festival
08/23/08 Birmingham, UK @ Academy 2
08/24/08 Reading, UK @ Reading Festival
08/26/08 Portsmouth, UK @ Wedgewood Rooms
08/27/08 London, UK @ Electric Ballroom
08/28/08 Manchester, UK @ Academy 2
08/29/08 Inveraray Castle, Scotland @ Hydro Connect Music Festival
08/30/08 Belfast, Ireland @ Spring and Airbrake
08/31/08 County Laois, Ireland @ Stradbally Hall / Electric Picnic
09/02/08 Amsterdam, Netherlands @ Melkweg
09/03/08 Brussels, Belgium @ Botanique
09/04/08 Luxembourg, @ Den Atelier
09/05/08 Zurich, Switzerland @ Rote Fabrik
09/07/08 Munich, Germany @ Backstage Werk
09/08/08 Zagreb, Croatia @ Studenski
09/09/08 Vienna, Austria @ Arena
09/10/08 Prague, Czech Republic
09/11/08 Berlin, Germany @ Columbia Club
09/12/08 Cologne, Germany @ Gloria
09/13/08 Paris, France @ Nouveau Casino
09/14/08 Salisbury, UK @ End of the Road Festival
09/20/08 Omaha, NE @ Anchor Inn
09/21/08 Nashville, TN @ Ryman Auditorium%
09/23/08 Fayetteville, AR @ George’s Majestic Lounge%
09/24/08 Oxford, MS @ The Lyric%
09/25/08 Tulsa, TX @ Cain’s Ballroom%
09/27/08 Austin, TX @ Austin City Limits
10/02/08 Melbourne, AUS @ The Palace
10/03/08 Brisbane, AUS @ Tivoli
10/04/08 Sydney, AUS @ Enmore
10/05/08 Sydney, AUS @ Great Escape

* w/ A Weather
< w/ Dri
** w/ Evangelicals
^ w/Bob Dylan, Levon Helm, The Swell Season, Gillian Welch, Steve Earle & Raul Malo
% w/ Jenny Lewis

Post comments 1 Comment »

Tours of Note: Black Kids

Indie-pop, News, Tours

My good buddy Austria from AZ told me about Black Kids a while back and, as is always the case, whatever band Austria tells me about inevitably becomes one of the “it” bands down the road.

They play some funky, indie-pop goodness and have the special power of stirring people’s racial emotions due to the fact that only two out of the five people in the band are actually (says in whisper) black.

A clever marketing plot or a statement about race in our country? You can decide for yourself when you see them on tour.

Friday 07/25/08 New York, NY @ Santo’s Party House
Friday 09/19/08 Jacksonville, FL @ Freebird
Saturday 09/20/08 Orlando, FL @ The Social
Tuesday 09/23/08 Atlanta, GA @ Earl
Wednesday 09/24/08 Athens, GA @ 40 Watt Club
Thursday 09/25/08 Carrboro, NC @ Cat’s Cradle
Friday 09/26/08 Baltimore, MD @ Ottobar
Saturday 09/27/08 Washington, D.C. @ Black Cat
Monday 09/29/08 Philadelphia, PA @ First Unitarian Church
Thursday 10/02/08 Boston, MA @ Paradise
Saturday 10/04/08 Montreal, PQ @ Cabaret Music Hall
Sunday 10/05/08 Toronto, ON @ Mod Club
Monday 10/06/08 Chicago, IL @ Metro
Tuesday 10/07/08 Minneapolis, MN @ 7th Street Entry
Friday 10/10/08 Seattle, WA @ Neumo’s
Saturday 10/11/08 Vancouver, BC @ Richards
Sunday 10/12/08 Portland, OR @ Hawthorne
Monday 10/13/08 San Francisco, CA @ Fillmore
Wednesday 10/15/08 Los Angeles, CA @ Mayan

Post comments 16 Comments »

Monday Hangover Cure: Video of Aimee Mann in concert…from 1985

News

I promise…this will be the last Aimee Mann post for a while…maybe. @#%*! Smilers (I fucking HATE typing that album name because I can never remember which symbols go where) came out last week.

So in honor of that, and all the Aimee Mann posts we’ve done, here is an old school video of Mann performing “Voices Carry” (oh, you didn’t know Mann was part of Till Tuesday? She had a holy other life pre-Magnolida).

And if you ever curious about the Mann transition from the above video to now, check out this 1995 interview.

Is it me, or has Mann gotten hotter as she’s gotten older?

Post comments No Comments »

« Previous Entries Next Entries »

52 Shows

A live music blog written by and for regular folks.

52 Shows Feed Subscribe to 52 Shows

email: info@52shows.com
twitter: 52 Shows
flickr: 52 Shows

Turn the Page

Read our series of posts on the live experience from the artist perspective:
Turn the Page

Contributors

Interested in writing for 52 Shows? Drop us a line.

MP3's / Videos

All music and videos posted on this site are here in support of the artists. If you find anything that should not be posted, please let us know and we'll remove it immediately.

Links

Blogs

News

MP3 Sites

Categories

Reviews

Genre

Location

Credits

This site is powered by WordPress. Theme inspired by Huddle Together.