Author Topic: Top 5 September shows  (Read 1981 times)

amnesiac

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Re: Top 5 September shows
« Reply #15 on: August 15, 2007, 02:27:00 pm »
Okkervil River (maybe more than once)
 Animal Collective or Bob Dylan / Elvis Costello
 Rilo Kiley
 Girl Talk
 The National

ratioci nation

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Re: Top 5 September shows
« Reply #16 on: August 15, 2007, 02:30:00 pm »
The Thermals - Crystal Ballroom (if it doesnt sell out)
 Imperial Teen - Lolas Room at Crystal Ballroom
 Dolorean - Towne Lounge

ConversationDiva

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Re: Top 5 September shows
« Reply #17 on: August 15, 2007, 04:17:00 pm »
i wish i was seeing black rebel motorcycle club in september but instead plans for september are polyphonic spree and adam green!

xneverwherex

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Re: Top 5 September shows
« Reply #18 on: August 15, 2007, 05:17:00 pm »
Quote
Originally posted by SalParadise:
  metric @ webster hall
 spank rock @ the apple store
 chemical brothers/ladytron @ mccarren pool
 maps @ (not sure yet which one)
 m. ward @ somewhere next to wtc
oh thanks. forgot about maps. i think im def seeing them in brooklyn as i need/want to see the silent league. been ages since ive seen them.
HeyLa

mrpee

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Re: Top 5 September shows
« Reply #19 on: August 15, 2007, 11:23:00 pm »
Quote
Animal Collective
 
Damn, damn. I didn't know about this mutha. Same knight as Bobby Zimm. Mutha... the Collective can friggin bring it on stage.
 Prob. gonna miss 'em this time. But I saw 'em once:
 
 The first tune Animal Collective??s played at the Black Cat Monday night lasted nearly 90 minutes. That long, entrancing ??song? was actually a nonstop, free flowing set, but the strategy served the Brooklyn-based outfit well, as they slowly shaped scattered tones, drones and beats into a kaleidoscopic, spine-tingling trance.
    The Collective often appears as a duo, but were a quartet Monday: core pair Panda Bear (drums, vocals) and Avery Tare (guitars, vocals) were joined by guitarist Deaken and electronics twiddler Geologist. Despite the spacey, straight-outta-the-Commune monikers and their near-constant hopping and swaying around the stage, they maintained a remarkable musical alliance, coalescing on a common pulse that veered from a barely audible nature thrums to searing interior nightmares.
    Lumped unjustly into a movement with ??freak-folk? singers like Devendra Banhart and Joanna Newsom, Panda Bear??s intense drumming casts them as a unearthly rock band . Their most recent record, ??Sung Tongs? (and an upcoming EP with rediscovered hippie darling Vashti Bunyan) feature delicate acoustic dreamscapes, but their live set drew power from effects-laden electric guitars. They weaved suggestions of their own deeply skewed pop songs (??Kids on Holiday?,??We Tigers?) into the show and even dreamed their way into Stevie Wonder??s ??I Just Called to Say I Love You? at one point, but the entire set??s ebb-n-flow  took precedence over individual compositions. And when the Collective finished their main set ---what was left of the the surprisingly large crowd did manage to shout them back for a encore--- with a hopping, whooping, clapping drum circle, the ensuing silence was like emerging from a dark forest into a harsh, bright world.