Archive for the ‘Photos’ Category

12.13.2011

Best of 2011: Concert Photos

Best of 2011

View all my best concert and portrait shots of 2011 over in our new giant-size gallery. Because we care!

11.19.2011

Live: Jon Brion (and Fiona Apple) at Largo, 11.18.11

Jon Brion
Jon Brion in 2008 / photo by Yenna

Friday night was a very unusual night at Largo. Not that any evening in Los Angeles’ best venue is ever uneventful, but Friday felt strange from the moment I took my seat. Jon Brion’s usual set-up–a drum set, bass, guitar rack and his trusty piano on stage right–was transformed, the rhythm section replaced by a second, larger piano. His looping pedals were notably absent. He took the stage in a pinstriped three-piece suit and performed the only completely acoustic set I’ve ever seen him play, running through a handful of unreleased (LP2?) tracks such as “Please Stay Away From Me” and “The Love Of My Life So Far” (played gorgeously on a nylon-string guitar) as well as several that I’d never heard. He played one song — “It Should’ve Been With You,” perhaps? — that he said no one ever had, though its high piano melody seemed familiar.

All that would’ve been treat enough, but he was joined mid-set by Fiona Apple (!) for the duo’s usual jazz standards and an exuberant, if imprecise, version of When the Pawn... classic “A Mistake.” Largo is a place where it’s O.K. to make mistakes; it’s almost better that way. It reminds you that the geniuses you see on stage are still human, an epiphany I had for the first time ever during a Jon Brion set when he casually told Apple he didn’t know the harmonies on a particular song. I’ve probably seen him a dozen times since 2004 — the thought of him missing a page of his musical encyclopedia seemed about as likely as faster-than-light particles. It appears we live in the future.

It happened again during one of his several encores, when he worked his way through what he could remember of “Song for Caden,” from the Synecdoche, New York soundtrack. “I haven’t played that since I recorded it,” he told the crowd apologetically. Then he turned in a transcendent Thelonius Monk version of Kiss’ “Rock and Roll All Night.” Brion may be a mere mortal after all, but he’s still the best one we have.

11.18.2011

Live: Ryan Adams @ Berkeley Street Studios, 11.16.11

Ryan Adams
Photo by Jeremiah Garcia

If 2011 brings me no further musical accomplishments than seeing Ryan Adams three times, I’d say it’s been a banner year. The Rawkblog hero returned for a third Los Angeles date on Wednesday, coming to legendary producer Bob Clearmountain’s Berkeley Street Studios to play a private session for KCRW‘s Morning Becomes Eclectic. The show will air on Dec. 2, but a few highlights: the intimate space allowed him to play an even quieter show than his Largo or Hollywood Forever appearances, with his falsetto barely above a whisper on songs such as “Like Yesterday.” It’s astounding how much control Adams has over his vocals; to call him alternative country’s Mariah Carey is a clumsy analogy, but you get the point. Ever the charmer, he spent as much time joking and tuning as playing songs, managing to pull plenty of new material. (An Adams/Jeff Tweedy comedy tour would be as funny as anything at Largo. Hell, they should just do a night there.) In his interview with KCRW’s Jason Bentley, he gave an exhaustive analysis of black metal and laughingly discussed the “failure” of his mid-career: “All it took was the live shows and everything else was poop icing on the shit cake.” Not sure if they can play that on the radio.

Adams is nothing but enthusiastic: he’s a metal nerd, I imagine, because being a nerd about anything is intensely satisfying. (Unless you’re a message-board Ryan Adams nerd, in which case you probably need a vacation.) It’s felt pretty special to see his enthusiasm in safe spaces this year, and judging by the quality of his performances on Wednesday, it doesn’t get any safer than having Clearmountain on the boards. Seeing Adams play these stripped-down shows makes you focus on the details — the intricacies of the guitar picking and the emotional colors of his rising and falling voice. I went home, put on Cold Roses and heard subtleties in his performances I’d never noticed. The gulf between hearing and listening can be enormous, but when you have the chance, I encourage the latter.

11.14.2011

Live: Real Estate, Big Troubles and James Ferraro @ the Echoplex, 11.12.11

All photos by David Greenwald

Enjoy the photos. All I have to say about Big Troubles and Real Estate’s sets is that they were really great; James Ferraro’s, which was half pointless synth-ambient and half pointless cavewoman skronk, was either performance art or the worst set of 2011. Please note the Wedding Singer-era Adam Sandler look-a-like on the hot sax.

Previously: Review: Real Estate – Days

11.7.2011

Live: In One Wind, Big Moves and Gothic Tropic @ The Silverlake Lounge, 11.03.11

An excellent show from L.A.’s Big Moves (sounding exceptionally smooth), Gothic Tropic (sounding reasonably reverb-y) and Brooklyn’s In One Wind. The New York band’s latest, How Bright a Shadow, is one of the year’s most promising debuts, a chamber-folk plate piled high with male-female harmonies and intricate songwriting. At times, the songs twist into knots they can’t untie — puzzles that Dirty Projectors, In One Wind‘s most obvious influence, would slice in two with sheer virtuosity. But getting within spitting distance of their Brooklyn neighbors’ sonic ambition is an achievement nearly all of this year’s new bands failed to attempt: credit for that, and for the moments that make it look easy.

Big Moves – “Groundbreaking Studies”: mp3

10.14.2011

Live: Wild Beasts, EMA @ the Echoplex, 10.13.11

All photos by David Greenwald

The worst thing an artist can do is have nothing to say. EMA, like a magpie, has plucked at convenient bits of rock history (Debbie Harry’s style, Kurt Cobain’s guitar playing) and stitched them together into the facsimile of something fresh. Watching her was like watching the Gus Van Sant version of Psycho. Were she performing in a warmer genre — twee-pop, maybe, or folk — she would’ve been easier to like, but as it was, her sour punk rehash was icy and airless. The band was painfully competent, avoiding the technical virtuosity that might’ve made them intellectually compelling and the amateurishness that could’ve turned them human. To her credit, Erica M. Anderson is a fine student of the rock playbook, prancing and prowling about the stage with leonine confidence. But it has to be said: if she wasn’t a pretty, stylish young woman with a choppy haircut, she would have a deserved thin sliver of her current popularity. Do you know how I know this? Show me an unpretty indie singer and I’ll show you a band you’ve never heard of.

By contrast, Wild Beasts offered dazzling musicianship and charisma hairy and powerful enough to climb the Empire State Building. Despite Radiohead’s ubiquitous American popularity, growing up in their shadow has had a more profound effect on the musicians of their native Britain; there’s an intensity and ambition in Wild Beasts’ music that’s simply absent from most of their domestic counterparts. The group opened with “Lion’s Share” and immediately established their hold over the room: unlike this year’s terrific Smother, the band’s live performance is anything but gentle. The rhythm section boomed with sub-bass eruptions and Bonham-esque drumming, hammering the crowd into the ground even as dueling singers Hayden Thorpe and Tom Fleming’s melodies and guitar lines pirouetted skyward. Either Thorpe or Fleming could offer the band a sterling full-time lead singer; watching them balance each other’s raw charisma was to witness an act of staggering generosity.

None of their material was less than gripping, but Smother‘s songs, removed from their bedroom atmospherics, were the hardest to deny. If their set had a flaw, it was location: Wild Beasts could’ve played to Coachella’s polo fields on Thursday night and still struck each listener in the heart. Or whatever part of them was most susceptible to thunderous bass.

10.10.2011

Live: Ryan Adams @ Largo, 10.09.11

Ryan Adams
photo via Facebook

The notion of objectivity is always a convenient ruse in pop criticism, but I have to admit I’m probably not emotionally equipped to tell you what I saw last night with any degree of reality. I might as well have been watching the Beatles. Yes, dear reader, I am a Ryan Adams Fan, and last night he played maybe the best concert I’ve seen in my life. It helped that the performance came at Largo, the only club in Los Angeles — maybe the world — where there are no cell phones, no cameras, no conversations, no clinking drinks, where artists truly let their hair down and take their shoes off and play the kind of shows you wish they’d play every night. Read the rest of this entry »

10.3.2011

Live: Jens Lekman, Geoffrey O’Connor @ Hollywood Forever Cemetery, 9.28.11

Last Wednesday, a particularly strange quote appeared on Matthew Perpetua’s Tumblr blog, in reference to James Blake:

This is a microcosm of a lot of what I am finding increasingly infuriating in indie culture, i.e., a total rejection of overt masculinity, and this feeling that anyone who is at all macho is the enemy. Why does this culture have to be entirely the domain of skinny, sniveling beta males? Why is aggression, sexuality and physicality in music automatically conflated with a bad scene? We need to really think about this.

This perspective is off-putting for a handful of reasons, not least of which being Perpetua’s ostensible R.E.M. fandom — would he prefer that Michael Stipe be more butch? — and the long-standing existence of punk and metal and other musics designed to meet these needs, leaving recent indie rock, folk and twee to the domain of bookish romantics. But the growing, seemingly antithetical diversity of indie listeners’ tastes — epitomized perfectly by Kanye West and Justin Vernon’s collaborations — does need a middle ground. Something between Vernon’s forlorn strumming and West’s pictures-of-my-dick braggadocio.

Read the rest of this entry »