Wednesday, March 26, 2008

Peter Bjorn & John @ The Vogue


A swinging combination of 60’s pop, surf guitar, and Swedish intonation, PB & J were much livelier than their gentle single, “Young Folks.” The show had tons of dancing, especially from Peter and Bjorn, along with great big yelps and shouting vocals. The energy the trio possessed seemed almost out of place from their uber-hip image, but if anything I was damn sure that PB & J were enjoying themselves and wanted the entire audience to as well. When he wasn’t leaping off of the monitors, Peter would grab the mic and run back and forth between each side of the stage before sprinting off into the crowd, the mic cable still attached like an airtube connecting a deep-sea diver with his ship.

The ironically titled new album, Writer’s Block, gave them plenty of upbeat material to work with throughout the night. They played it cool with songs like “Amsterdam” and “The Chills” but they always had a humorous sense of self-mockery that kept them human. Everything on stage with an empty space had “Peter Bjorn & John ____” labeling it; the backdrop said “Peter Bjorn & John Backdrop,” the bass drum said “Peter Bjorn & John Bass Drum;” and so on with the amps, monitors, and merch. They never called attention to this fact either, and it remained a subtle laugh throughout the show. Like, “if you weren’t sure which concert you’re at, please check the names on the 20 ft. banner behind the band.” Classic.


PB & J - The Chills

Friday, March 07, 2008

The Mountain Goats @ The Canopy Club


Finding a way to turn an off balanced home life into quirky and oddly humorous albums, John Darnielle and company played to a packed crowd of maybe 100. He was tender and unpolished with a very honest. His stage persona is one hell of a friendly guy. Some of the best stage banter ever: “This is a song about when you were 17 and you got really drunk, then decided it’d be a good idea to go over to your step dad’s house and tell him he’s ruining you and your mom’s life. But when you get there your mom answers the door and all the powerful things you thought of to say come out: ‘You asshole.’ And I’m playing it now because I wrote it about you, and I knew you’d be here.”

The songs The Mountain Goats play are typically about situations like this: slightly dark and dysfunctional, yet they have some twinkle to them that keeps each song from being wholly depressing. Darnielle puts a little twist on everything in this way, and he rocks harder than any guy holding an acoustic guitar normally would. The band has always had this set up over the years, starting out fiercely lo-fi and working up to their current, and charmingly modest, sound.

I haven’t heard their brand new album yet, but I’d be willing to be that it’s one hell of a work. Their live show certainly would suggest the same.


The Mountain Goats - Dance Music

Wednesday, March 05, 2008

Modest Mouse & Man Man @ The Egyptian Room



Man Man sounds like childlike, sea-faring schizophrenia and Issac Brock from Modest Mouse sounds like full on dementia. Brilliant at times and unintelligible at others; certain moments find him delicately drifting through starlight, but in the next song Brock’s yelps and barbaric yawps break under his over exertion. The majority of the show felt thick in this energy and only rarely broke from this track. To behave this way makes the members of both bands seem more like characters from a dark novel instead of real people hailing from Washington state and Philadelphia.

The performances of both bands at the Egyptian Room were solid and I was happy to have seen them. Man Man was more of a “You’ve got to see this” experience, exploding through song after song dressed in white t-shirts and pants with neon war-painted faces.

I’ve been a fan of Modest Mouse for years, though, and
wanted to see them recreate their songs live. The played a good mix of b-sides and new releases, although I’d have been happy if they only played songs from The Lonesome Crowded West and The Moon & Antarctica. The varied set list covered all the bases anyway, and the two bands set the stage ablaze with their antics and wild music.


Modest Mouse - Beauty samples

Modest Mouse - Crazy samples