Phoenix @ First Avenue

I wanted to write a review with a witty opening metaphor about Phoenix and rebirth and the changing of the seasons, but I couldn’t really figure it out. Yesterday being the first day of fall, said metaphor would probably have fit more appropriately with Phoenix’s blazing hot (literally and figuratively) last show at The Varsity Theatre at the beginning of summer. This band’s ascendancy has been straight up, Varsity Theater to a very sold out First Avenue in a few months is impressive. That didn’t stop the band from playing a rare acoustic in-store performance at The Electric Fetus earlier in the day. I missed it, but apparently the band remarked that they had been waiting all their lives to play First Avenue, and it definitely showed.

Brooklyn-based Chairlift opened the show almost exactly at nine with a very short concise set. I haven’t listened to the band much, it was mellow but entertaining, the sort of music you would want playing in the background while on the beach or at the park. The lead singer Caroline Polachek’s voice reminds quite a bit of Maggie Morrison of Minneapolis-based Lookbook.

The crowd was a bit unexpected, I was bro-blocked several times while trying to catch up with friends in the center of the floor; a couple of creatine-enhanced frat dudes actually had their arms linked blocking the entire stairs to the left of the soundboard, that was a first for me. Luckily we got up to the front where the energy was high and everyone was just happy to be in the moment.

Phoenix came on shortly after 10 pm and started with Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix album opener Lisztomania, which was fairly standard minus an amped up bridge and extended outro. Most of their live show follows closely with the studio versions of their songs, and they don’t deviate their setlists from show to show very much (this set was nearly identical to the Varsity show). Normally I would have a problem with the lack of variation, but their studio work is so polished and tight that seeing that recreated flawlessly in a live show is a treat. The band has stated that during the recording process for their latest album they’ve played each track literally thousands of times, working out all the kinks and perfecting each song (Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix took over three years to complete). The set was concise, and there’s not a whole lot more to say about it. “Love Like a Sunset” was definitely a highlight, with the house lights turned off completely and gradually brightening as the song peaked, the crowd quieted down as the audience said shh (sorry for the Atmosphere reference, I couldn’t help myself). The only song I thought really lacked energy was “Fences,” surprisingly.

Consolation Prizes


video by Eric Bass

But the real highlight was the encore, it was perfect. “If I Ever Feel Better” was the song of the night, with a reworked metal-ish section that really rips. And of course, “Too Young” and “1901″ were crowd-pleasers and executed perfectly. The show ended with front man and lead singer Thomas Mars crowdsurfing during “1901,” as he did at the Varsity show.

If I Ever Feel Better

video by Eric Bass

1901

video by Eric Bass

A great show, and a great way to start the fall. Setlist (feel free to correct) and iPhone photos below.

Litzomania
Long Distance Call
Lasso
Napoleon Says
Armistice
Fences
Girlfriend
Love Like A Sunset
Consolation Prizes
Rally
Run Run Run
Rome
Funky Square Dance
Rome Reprise

Encore:

Playground Love (Air)
If I Ever Feel Better
Too Young
1901

:::CAVE:::JEALOUSY:::SKOAL KODIAK:::WHITESAND/BADLANDS:::RATT POISON:::

This show tonight will be sure to melt your face and your heart..

Cave – Machines & Muscles (Mp3)

Cave are a few lewd dudes from Chicago with an album called Psychic Psummer..

Jealousy – Intro Track (Mp3)
Jealousy – “Churn” (Mp3)
Jealousy – “Night Stalking” (Mp3)

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Walker Art Center presents…BLK JKS @ The Cedar

Thursday, September 24, 2009
9:00 pm
Cedar Cultural Center
416 Cedar Avenue South, Minneapolis
$15 ($12 Walker and Cedar members); $18 ($15) day of show
Doors open at 8:00 pm

With a wrecking-crew rhythm section, debonair vocals, and a guitar concoction that’s one part shred and two parts soul, it’s easy to understand why South Africa’s BLK JKS took music mega-gathering SXSW by storm last year. Now on its debut U.S. tour, the band shoots an African musical sensibility through the tenets of rock, electronic, and soul, reclaiming styles that have been stolen, watered down, and regurgitated for generations. BLK JKS’s fresh, forward rhythms, layered harmonies, elliptical guitar vernacular, and infectious urban Zulu mbaqanga blues combine in a swirl of experimentation and tribal energy. Catch the newest voice in African music’s 21st-century sound on this blistering opening night of the Cedar Cultural Center’s four-day Global Roots Festival. – (Walker Art Center, Buy Tix)

BLK JKS – “Molalatladi” (MP3)

Walker Art Center presents.. Micachu & The Shapes & Dessa @ The Cedar

*UPDATE*

Created with Admarket’s flickrSLiDR.

The Cedar is truly a world renown room and will soon host the Global Roots Festival, featuring BLK JKS, Os Mutantes and more.. They will also make UK babies Micachu & The Shapes feel at home when they play tonight. Tickets are still available and will also be at the door. Doors open @ 7pm.

Micachu & The ShapesGolden Phone (Mp3)

Dessa – Into The Spin (MP3)

SAVE THE UPTOWN BAR

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Well, we can’t actually save the current location. However, it is possible that the Uptown Bar gathers enough signatures to convince the city to let The Uptown Bar move locations. I’m not quite sure if they will keep the same name or not. Here is a message from Brian about how you can help..

If you want to see The Uptown reopen at a new location, I need everybody to gather as many signatures as they possibly can and get them to me at The Uptown. If you live out of town, please email me a message or mail me a letter saying that you would like The Uptown Bar and Cafe to be able to reopen and operate as it currently operate in the neighborhood. In order to do this, we need the city to allow us to move the current liquor license to a new location. Please come to the bar and sign a piece of paper or email me at brianpmbooking@gmail.com or anything you can do to say “yes, we want this to happen” so that the city knows how much it means to have an Uptown Bar in Uptown. Get all of your friends to do it too. This is very important to the possibility of The Uptown reopening.

Uptown Bar
attn: Brian McDonough
3018 Hennepin Avenue S
Minneapolis MN 55408

brianpmbooking@gmail.com

Flaming Lips throw Naked Bike Ride for Music Video Shoot (Portland, OR)

flaming_lips-balloons
NPR’s Carrie Brownstein reports for “Monitor Mix”

As every nude-cycling enthusiast knows, The World Naked Bike Ride only occurs in June, so this Flaming Lips video is your chance to strip down for a second time this year! If you’re feeling shy, however, and wondering about the nature of the event — no pun intended — here’s a bit of encouragement:

As with other naked rides, the event is meant to be freespirited rather than lewd, [Wayne] Coyne said. “There’s a difference between pornography and just freaks who are naked. This is about unrestricted freedom and a good lawlessness that’s always sort of implied at our shows.”

On the other hand, it is The Flaming Lips, so be prepared for this:

I’m having one of my giant space bubbles covered in fake fox fur,” Coyne said. “It’s going to look like some giant fur egg, and the people on bicycles are gonna sort of be born and erupt out of this fur, vaginalistic thing.

The video is for the song “Watching the Planets” from the Lips’ upcoming album Embryonic.

Event details:
Flaming Lips naked bike video shoot
Wednesday, Sept. 23, 10 a.m. – 10 p.m. (drop-in)
The top of Mount Tabor, by the basketball courts
No RSVP needed. Just show up wearing clothes, please.
For more information, contact bikeforthelips@gmail.com