August 14, 2006

What A Waste
 
Sonic Youth @ McCarren Park Pool 8/11/2006
Incinerate / Reena / Catholic Block / What A Waste / Mote / Do You Believe In Rapture? / Turquoise Boy / Rats / Jams Run Free / Pink Steam // The World Looks Red / Shaking Hell

Sonic Youth "The World Looks Red" -

Pros:

1. McCarren Park Pool is a fantastic venue, especially when the weather is as ideal as it was in New York this weekend. The sound is surprisingly good, as are the sight lines, and it seems like the venue undersold the show to limit overcrowding, which was awfully considerate of them.

2. After a decade of seeing Sonic Youth at a rate of about once or twice per year, I finally got to see them play "Mote," which is an incredibly common song on most tours, though they normally opted for "Eric's Trip" whenever I was around. It ruled, as did the subsequent performance of "Do You Believe In Rapture?," which was the prettiest, most delicate thing I've ever seen the band play live.

3. Also, oh my God, "The World Looks Red"! I was thinking not too long ago that they ought to bring that one back, and I'm so glad that they did. I'm not totally sure if this was the first time they played it on this tour, but either way, it's been missing from setlists since the Washing Machine era, and it totally destroyed the original album recording, though that's probably not too shocking.

4. Mark Ibold! Dude hasn't aged a day since the Terror Twilight tour, apparently. (Though he has thankfully abandoned the little goatee from that period.) Mark still looks totally beatific whenever he's on stage, as though he's fully aware that he somehow lucked into playing in two of the five or six greatest bands to ever exist on the planet and he's not sure how that happened.

5. "Jams Run Free"! See the previous entry.

(Click here to buy it from Insound.)

The Yeah Yeah Yeahs @ McCarren Park Pool 8/11/2006
Fancy / Rich / Honeybear / Machine / Gold Lion / Phenomenon / Art Star / Mysteries / Cheated Hearts / Miles Away / The Sweets / Maps / Turn Into // Y-Control / Poor Song / Date With The Night

The Yeah Yeah Yeahs "Maps (Live at the Roseland Ballroom 2006)" -

Cons:

1. Thanks to the effing Yeah Yeah Yeahs, Sonic Youth played about 30-40 minutes less than their normal set time in their long-awaited hometown shows. On top of that, the tickets were more expensive than usual, and Sonic Youth fans basically paid 30% more for 30% less. Hopefully SY will book some proper headlining shows in NYC in the fall so that their hardcore base can get a full gig.

2. The Yeah Yeah Yeahs were wildly inconsistent and played a very poorly paced setlist that cut out too many of their good songs ("Way Out," "Our Time," "Mystery Girl," "Bang," "Modern Romance") in favor of unlistenable duds from the new album, and shunted most of the better songs to the final third of the set rather than spreading them out through the show. They played far too many dirges, which were especially grating when you were forced into realizing that had essentially stole the time from Sonic Youth, and were making you sit through crap like "Fancy" when you should have been hearing "Schizophrenia" or something.

3. I'm never going to stop hating that song "Art Star." Oh my God, so dreadful. (On the bright side, "Y-Control" and "Maps" were pretty awesome.)

4. Going on immediately after one of the best bands in history did not flatter the YYYs at all -- if they knew what was good for them, they would have insisted on going on before Sonic Youth both nights rather than alternating the headline slot. Whereas bands like Wilco, The Flaming Lips, Pearl Jam, and R.E.M. have the fanbase, history, chops, and general gravitas to relegate Sonic Youth to a subordinate or co-headlining role on a bill, the YYYs simply do not, and almost certainly will not ever. This is not to say that they suck -- they definitely have a handful of great songs and Nick Zinner and Brian Chase are both very good musicians -- but they were hopelessly outclassed, and playing after a bunch of geniuses still going strong in their third decade together just made their set seem unnecessarily flimsy and amateurish, whereas if they were playing with most any random band from their own generation, they would have looked more like the rock stars that they so desperately want to be, and not like a so-so group with an annoying lead singer.

5. Unrelated to the YYYs, but opening act Blood On The Wall were pretty decent, but inexplicably opted not to play "Mary Susan," their best song by a considerable distance. Why do small bands like that so often make these sort of boneheaded decisions, especially when they are playing in front of a very large audience and have a lot to prove?

(Click here to buy it from CD Universe.)

Please Note That MP3s Are
Only Offered For a Limited Time
And Are Changed Frequently
Songs Mean A Lot
When Songs Are Bought
So Please Buy The Records
If You Like Them


Fluxblog Endorses These
High Quality Web Products


I Also Write For:
Fluxtumblr
Fluxcast
Pop Songs 07
NY Mag Vulture
Fair Game (RIP)
Spin
The Movie Binge
ASAP (RIP)
Urge (RIP)
Artistdirect

POP
The Cold Inclusive
Marathon Packs*
Clap Clap
Said The Gramophone*
Hello, Poindexter
For Your Pleasure
Alex Balk
Hipster Runoff
Idolator*
What A Fool Believes
Pterodactyls
Status Ain't Hood*
Player Piano Party
Star Maker Machine*
Pretty Goes With Pretty
Offnotes
Moistworks*
Soft Communication
Paper Thin Walls
Jezebel
Stereogum*
Golden Fiddle*
Fairytale In The Supermarket
Shake Your Fist*
Cokane's Bloggery
Ned Raggett
SF/J @ The New Yorker
Architectural Dance Society
The Cure For Bedbugs
WFMU's Beware of the Blog*
Discodust*
Antidisingenuousmentarianism
Taylor Long
Into The Groove*
Pop Justice
Zoilus
fansofsoft
Move Still
Wayne and Wax
Loose Strife*
Feministe
Discobelle*
Fluokids*
Chemistry Class
Destination: OUT*
No Rock N' Roll Fun
Green Pea-ness*
Yer Mam!*
Homo Eclectic*
Le Fou
Troubled Diva
Failed Pilot
Malcolm Gladwell
S/FJ
Lacunae
Who Needs Radio?*
Law of Sympathy
One Louder
Her Jazz*
Videogum
Lindsayism
Too Many Teeth
20 Jazz Funk Greats*
Recidivism*
Jane Espenson
Wrestling Entropy
Merry Swankster
Coolfer
Fractionals
Seaworthy Southeast Thesaurus
Byron Crawford
Ruined Music
Orbis-Quintus*
Hip Hop Music
The Suburbs Are Killing Us*
So Many Shrimp*
Government Names*
Soulsides*
The Prettiest Pony*
J Edward Keyes
Music For Robots*
Gorilla Vs. Bear*
You Ain't No Picasso*
Brooklyn Vegan
Arjan Writes*
Cocaine Blunts & Hip Hop Tapes*
Blackmail Is My Life*
Anthony Is Right
Tikun Olam*
Philip Sherburne
Antipopper
The Tofu Hut*
The Mix Hut
Daughters of Invention*
Benn Loxo Du Taccu*
Headphone Sex*
Chromewaves
Attentiondeficitdisorderly Too Flat
Tuwa's Shanty*
Jack Fear
* = hosts mp3s

Radio/Audio
WFMU
The Best Show On WFMU
Friends Of Tom
Ed Shepp
Aircheck
Downtown Soulville
Cherry Blossom Clinic
Liz Berg
Irwin Chusid
Ken Freedman
Brian Turner
WPRB
East Village Radio
This American Life

Comics
Living Between Wednesdays
Pretty Fizzy Paradise
Absorbascon
Warlock Magazine
The X Axis
Crisis/Boring Change
Comics Should Be Good

Film
THE FACE KNIFE
South Dakota Dark
The House Next Door
Milk Plus
Onion AV Club

NYC
Gawker
Young Manhattanite
Forgotten NY

Edibles
The Knowledge For Thirst
The Blognut
A Hamburger Today
Slice
Serious Eats

Email Fluxblog
perpetua @ gmail.com

If you want to send music to Fluxblog, please inquire via email. If you want to send me mp3s, please send them to fluxblog @ gmail.com Please note that while I am always glad to be sent new music, there is no guarantee that what you send will be mentioned here.

If you are an artist (or represent an artist) being featured on this blog and want me to take down a song, let me know, and it will be removed from the server immediately.


Site design and illustration by
Deric Holloway

troninmorocco @ gmail.com


Fluxblog on MySpace

Fluxblog on Livejournal

Powered by Blogger

Weblog Commenting by HaloScan.com

FeedBurner.com Logo