Filed under Boston

tame impala, yuck, yawn @ the ‘dise

so, i went to this last night. it was sort of a surreal experience because i was there with the person who was largely responsible for the bulk of my forlorn listening to tame impala’s innerspeaker and its “will you or won’t you” lyrics, and we wound up having a pretty serious conversation during the show. but looking beyond that, at least for a minute or two…

yawn opened. they’re a band from chicago that very much subscribes to the latter day animal collective music model (i’m talkin’ samplers, synths, and echoey vocal harmonies). i have a hard time knowing how to feel about them: i love the style of music they create; it is that of my favorite band, after all, but something about these guys doing it just didn’t feel right. i will say that their song “kind of guy” is the exact sort of gauzy quirk-pop dapple of deliciousness i want to be listening to at any point in time, and that they’re accomplished musicians for sure. they should really try to find their own voices (literally and idiomatically) – if they pulled that off, they’d be wonderful. their hearts were in the right place, in the sun-soaked lounge of where ambient electronics and folk meet (some might call that the chillwave room), and they seemed to satisfy the quarter-full ‘dise and its not-drunk-enough-to-dance-yet patrons well enough.

yuck were next. i unfortunately missed the bulk of their set because of a few extenuating circumstances involving a dark BU alley, but apparently they weren’t as good as when we caught them at sxsw. just as well; i’m not wild about their music though i understand why people are. isn’t it weird when that happens? anyway, i know more than a few people who stumble upon this blog via google searching are going to be disappointed to see that i don’t have anything more to say about them, but (contrary to popular belief, all y’all “allston ladies’ room” hatas) i’m not gonna make stuff up.

and then came tame impala. i saw them at the same place in november and i do have to say that was the better performance, but last night they certainly weren’t bad. they’re one of the few straight-up rock bands that i have a stomach for these days, and they gave us a bona fide rock show: stringed-instrument mashing, soaring vocals, and a monster onslaught of drums. highlights for me included “alter ego,” the song from innerspeaker that i feel is their best (and the least similar to the other tracks on the album, which is definitely a valid criticism one could make about this group), the rompin’-stompin’ riff fest that is “solitude is bliss” – replete with all its on-album catchiness and aplomb, and a totally unexpected but entirely welcome psych-rock cover of massive attack’s “angel,” the trip-hop mega-anthem that opened their classic mezzanine album.

i was woefully distracted throughout the night so i wish i could say more about the actual performance. but i will say that this music, all of this music, all night long, provided the perfect soundtrack for what i was going through. yawn’s music has a sense of wide-eyed wonderment to it, an almost childlike sort of curiosity (admittedly this too is quite animal collective of them, but still, i’ll give credit where credit is due); when i got there, before things got difficult and, yeah, i’ll say uncomfortable, i was feeling that, being there at a show with a new guy (and the one i was lamenting over in this blog a few months ago at that). yuck kept that feeling going, but drenched it in nostalgia and post-adolescent life-questioning as well. and by the time tame impala came on, their songs about second-guessing and indecision and frustration in general were almost preternatural soundtracks to the goings-on of my brain.

i know i’m partially guilty of twisting lyrics and stuff around to seem like they better fit my situation here. we all do this to some extent, but therein lies the framework for our obsessions with musicians, or our identification with them (at least for those of us who pay close attention to lyrics and wind up applying their contents and meanings to ourselves). and i think that goes beyond music/lyric relationships and is true of any sort of art. why do we like the books and movies and paintings and poems we like? isn’t it because we hear a little bit of ourselves in those words, or see a flicker of our mind’s eye in those pictures, or see ourselves as framing things in the same mindset as the creators of those works were in when they framed those works? i think so.

bottom line, though: great fucking show, and it feels great to write about it. i’m trying hard to get back in the swing of blogging again. i just don’t feel like i can safely speak my mind here sometimes, y’know? but… where can you do that?

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i always

* prep for upcoming shows i’m going to see by overlistening to the artist for the week or two before they come to town.

* overpsych myself for everything i see.

* manage not to be disappointed by concerts, unless they really and truly suck (see: passion pit at governor’s island in june last year).

* test the limits of the boston public transit system by staying ’til the end of the headliners’ sets.

* blow a few too many bucks on a vodka tonic. or two.

* wish i was in these bands i pay to go see, that it was my full-time job, too.

* will be a screaming, hyper, obsessive 13-year-old girl when it comes to music.

tame impala and yuck, here i motherfuckin’ come.

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60 second review: the kills w/ cold cave @ royale

one of the first shows i’ve paid to see in a while, and an extremely worthwhile one to do so at that. didn’t know much about cold cave before but i’m enamored now: their synth player straight killed it, rocking the fuck out on what appeared to be a full workstation of some kind (M3, perhaps?), supplying maddeningly dancy licks to counteract the noisy murk that used to be this band’s main export. singer had the go-to andrew eldritch-style affected voice but what other voice could have complimented this direct descendant of the ’80s’ finest goth-pop? to bring in even more of a seance feel, a sampler channeled their absent female singer’s voice, intertwined as seamlessly as standard backup vocals at all the right moments. a+, would goth out again.

the kills, though: what beasts. just the two of ‘em, jamie hince and alison mosshart, sounding like hell’s chorus turned up to 13. those chugging, deep-dark-blues guitars; those rattling, half-broken-sounding drum machine drums; those hair-raising, chest-beating, ball-breaking VV vocals. alison owned that stage: she stalked it, climbed it, slithered across it; she grabbed the hands of the front row and whipped her head around to maximize the splash damage of her sweat. they mostly stuck to newer fare, but “no wow” and the handful of tracks from midnight boom were extra delectable – as wide-eyed intense and dictionary-definition visceral as one would expect from their records. the crowd licked up every last droplet, gyrating and head-swinging like the ragtag bunch of indie rock miscreants they most certainly were.

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