Posts tagged with muse

Day 2 started out with extremely low expectations. I was up really late the night before and couldn’t sleep in that late, so I thought I would be a little out of sorts all day. But luckily after 3 breakfast burritos (the third with extra jalapeno and hot sauce) and a few bottles of water, I was feeling a little more like myself again. I took a look at the set times for the day and while I was looking forward to a few acts, I hadn’t made any decisions about the night, and nothing really struck me as must see.

And I think its because of these low expectations that day 2 of Coachella was one of my favorite festival days of all time. It started out simply enough, with us sitting outside the Mojave tent to listen to a few tunes from Camera Obscura. I’d decided that since I just saw Beach House, I would head over to the Outdoor Theater to see The Temper Trap, but not until I met up with my cousin who was also in town for the fest. By the time he and his friends were ready to head to the Outdoor Theater, we could only catch “Sweet Disposition”, which was good and kind of made me wish I’d seen the rest of their set.

But up next was one of my festival must-sees, none other than Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros. Their album is a favorite of mine, and it’s one of those that I just love every single song so much, so I couldn’t wait to see it live on stage, complete with their huge cast of characters. They opened up with “40 Day Dream” and went into “Janglin’” and their performance was exactly what I’d expected (though this was one part of the day that I did have high expectations for). About 10 people on stage, all playing various instruments from trumpets to pianos to guitars to washboards, and some of the happiest music on Earth. The love and energy up on the stage really carried through. My personal favorite was “Up from Below”, which really came to life on stage. A few songs after that were a bit out of key at times, but the set finished strong with perennial favorite “Home”. Various members of the band jumped in front of the stage to crowdsurf at various times, and Alex Ebert lent his shirt to a young man in the front who had a cut on his head. Hopefully that young man doesn’t have any sort of infection now. Just kidding, Alex, we love you kids. And special thanks to girl on guy’s shoulders #2834 for taking a few pics for me from up there.

Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros – Om Nashi Me

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At this point, my two highlights of the weekend were hilarious because they were COMPLETE 100% opposites. The upbeat, free-love Edward Sharpe et al, and the dark, haunting Fever Ray. The mere fact that I got to experience both within just a few hours of each other said enough about this weekend.

Next up, we decided since we were already at that stage that we would just stay for the XX. I wasn’t particularly excited to see the XX mostly because I thought that it would not live up to the happiness of Edward Sharpe, but I gave it a shot and really enjoyed it in all its minimalist glory. I was surprised to see that they didn’t have a drummer, but rather a sort of live beat-maker. And Jay-Z even showed up, since he loves the indie rock now. Also notable was that during their set, the top of the main stage seemed to catch on fire, with black smoke billowing away. But it stopped after about a minute fortunately.

After stocking up on water for the rest of the night, we headed back to Mojave to catch some of the Dirty Projectors. It was great to see them again with their interesting compositions and incredible and versatile voices. We didn’t stick around too long because we all needed to stock up on some food and water before spending some time at the Sahara tent.

Now, let’s take a minute to talk about the Sahara tent. If you recall from my Lollapalooza recaps, I spent a lot of time at Perry’s last summer. Perry’s, which was expanded last year and I believe is being expanded again this year, is the DJ section of Lollapalooza. It’s all open air and under the trees, and the crowd forms a sort of semi circle around the DJs, and there’s always some great dance music going on. It’s the perfect place to spend some time when there isn’t really another act going on that you want to see.

The Sahara tent is the same concept, only it is in a humongous tent which has a crazy light setup both on stage and throughout the whole ceiling. I described it on twitter today as Perry’s times a million on crack. Just unreal. I can’t wait to get this video put together next week so I can show some of the radness that goes on there.

After devouring a delicious falafel wrap and some garlic fries, we headed into the Sahara tent to catch the rest of Kaskade’s set. It was fun beyond belief and we had such a great time that we decided to stay for David Guetta, who, as you may recall, I had a ticket to see in Rio last summer before we unexpectedly cancelled the trip. So it was sort of fate that I was going to see him on this night. And wow, did he deliver. Some of the hotter drops that I can remember were Imogen Heap’s “Hide and Seek” (she seems to be a positive recurring theme this weekend) and with Major Lazer performing at the same time next door in the Mojave tent, Guetta paid tribute dropping in “Pon de Floor” at one point.

On the walk back to the other stages, I noticed the large string of balloons again in the air that stretched from basically one end of the fest to another, blowing violently in the wind, which had changed in color from white the day before to purple today. They were also flying free in the morning and tied down in the evenings, or so I thought. I’d been wanting to check out the pot of gold at the end of the balloon rainbow, basically to see how this thing was held in place without going away. And today I found out. There is a human being who literally holds this GIANT string of balloons down all day. I was so shocked that I had to take a picture. And all the while he’s just chatting up a storm with whoever’s around, as if it’s no big deal. But believe me, it’s a big deal, and crazy.

So, I skipped Hot Chip, MGMT, and Faith No More, but it was all worth it. We danced our behinds off for hours between Kaskade and Guetta, but the best part was, Tiesto was still to come. We made it back to the main stage in time to catch the end of Muse’s set, which I wasn’t planning on since I’d just seen them, so that was a nice added bonus. Then, like salmon swimming upstream to fertilize their eggs, we fought the crowd leaving Muse to see just how close we could get for Tiesto’s night-closing set. Amazingly, we ended up nearly dead center, about 20 rows back. This is not that impressive unless you’ve been to a night-closing set at a main stage of a major music festival. I’ve never even been remotely that close before in a similar scenario, so I was pretty pumped.

After the 40 minute wait between sets, it finally began. I couldn’t believe that the day had turned into a straight up electronic music festival, and had not planned on that at any point throughout the day, but as Tiesto killed it over and over again (man, those lights/lasers were intense!), I was glad that this was the way the day had turned out. Some of my favorites were his take on Editors “Papillon”, a song I didn’t particularly care for when it first came out but that I loved on this night. The other songs I recognized that found their way into the mix were Yeah Yeah Yeahs’ “Heads Will Roll” as well as “Feel it in my Bones” and Tiesto’s Adagio for Strings remix, which he introduced by saying “Here’s the old Tiesto classic of the night”, or something like that. Once energy had reached a fever pitch, the set ended with a Flaminglipsian touch, with gobs upon gobs of confetti being thrown into the crowd. As we walked out of the show, the ground was pretty much completely covered.

Then we left the parking lot with no wait, again driving over the fence that someone had knocked down the day before, and proceeded to blare fantastic 80s tunes the whole way home. A great ending to a great day and night.

So, the moral of the story is, sometimes music fests turn out exactly the opposite of how you expected them to, and sometimes that’s for the best. Looking forward to day 3, which features some of my favorites. Plus I get to see my friend Sarah spin at 3:45 in the green zone area, or whatever it’s called, between Mojave and Sahara.

I probably forgot a lot, but I’m glad I’ve been able to get down in writing whatever I can remember from each day, and I hope you’re enjoying it too. How I wish, how I wish you were here.

Again, sorry for the lack of pics, but I promise you I will make up for it with my video, if I can figure out how to use iMovie once this fest is over. My goal is to get a full glimpse of all aspects of the fest, and I think I’ve done a decent job at capturing lots thus far. But I really really like the picture below of the girl on the guys shoulders. So I’ve got that going.

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Last weekend was exhausting, but for all good reasons. After hitting up the RJD2 show at the Magic Stick on Friday night, we were headed to the exact opposite, the gigantic Muse arena specatacle at the Palace of Auburn Hills. I’m not a big fan of giant arena shows just because I like the intimacy of a lot of the smaller shows that I go to, but I’m such a fan of Muse, with their combination of metal, rock and classical melodies, that I knew I had to go, and as expected they did not disappoint.

I was also really looking forward to seeing openers Silversun Pickups because I’m a fan of theirs as well, and they are one of those groups that I’ve had plenty of chances to see at festivals and whatnot, but it just has never worked out. We planned on arriving around 8 PM because for some reason I thought there were two opening acts. But when we got there, I realized that I was wrong and that sadly we already missed them. Blerg.

Silversun Pickups – Well Thought Out Twinkles

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We got there and took our spots on the floor about halfway through the crowd on the left side of the stage and were having a good time with the great music they were playing before the set began. There was some good music from Adam Freeland, The Presets and ending with a cool Animal Collective remix. Then the lights went down and the huge fabric covered towers on the stage lit up. They were illuminated to appear to be a large staircase with nondescript figures climbing and filling the staircase, then the top figure tumbled over, knocking down the rest like dominoes. As they fell, the fabric covering the towers fell as well, revealing the three band members each in their spot in the middle of each of the towers. Very dramatic, very Muse. Just what I came to see.

They opened up with the huge anthem “Uprising” and continued through the set that never really gave up on energy and tempo. I was really hoping they wouldn’t kill the mood with one of their slower tunes which, while great, are a bit of a letdown live when you are rockin out and want to continue to do so, and luckily they didn’t. The light show was pretty spectacular with the towers essentially becoming video screens that were constantly changing, always keeping things interesting. There was an abundance of green laser lights throughout the arena which amped up for a few songs, probably more than I’ve ever seen.

While the stage setup was a bit restricting in terms of the band moving around on stage, the band was lowered down to ground level a few times where they made good use of the stage. There was also a pretty cool musical interlude with bassist Christopher Wolstenholme and drummer Dominic Howard where they both took spots on the center drum tower which spun around and moved up and down as they played. And singer Matthew Bellamy was pretty on point all night too, sometimes allowing the audience to lead the vocals, but without overdoing it. The highlight may have been during the set closer “Plug In Baby” when a bunch of giant eyeball balloons descended upon the crowd full of confetti. But really, the whole show was a highlight. It reminded me how much I really dig Muse and that I can still love them even though they are one of the biggest bands on the planet right now. I think even though a lot of us are jaded and against big rock shows, it really can be good for the soul every now and then.

All in all, despite the less than ideal venue, I feel like that’s really the only type of venue where Muse can really be felt to the fullest. All of their music is so loud and powerful that it only seemed appropriate. There’s a rumor that they’re going to be playing a small show at SXSW this coming week, and I can’t even imagine how that’s going to work out. I hadn’t been to a show at the Palace since Red Hot Chili Peppers in 2006, so I’m glad that Muse was able to exceed my expectations yet again. It’s tough to have a bad time at a show with so much continuous energy, unless you’re a terrible person.

Here’s the full setlist:

Uprising
The Resistance
New Born
Supermassive Black Hole
MK Ultra
Interlude
Hysteria
Nishe
United States of Eurasia
Feeling Good
Helsinki Jam
Undisclosed Desires
Starlight
Time is Running Out
Unnatural Selection
Plug In Baby

Encore:
Exogenesis: Symphony, Part 1: Overture
Stockholm Syndrome
Knights of Cydonia

I couldn’t help but thinking the entire time what could have been if I were able to bring in the good camera, but hopefully these crappy camera pics can provide some sense of what was going on. And we make the best with what we’re given.

And now one of my favorite Muse songs, one that they sadly didn’t play last night but that I think sums them up pretty well.

Muse – Map of the Problematique

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deadmau5 @ the fillmore detroit 11.21.09

first off, i know its the state theater. i figured i need to be somewhat official for all of the web searchers out there in cyberspace tryna get all up on this post. now, two show reviews two days in a row? well, last week was just that kind of week, which is never a bad thing. for all of you who hate these recaps of detroit music events, sorry bout your luck. but for the rest of you, there will be another one next week too, and then probably another the week after, so get excited for that.

ive been pretty excited to see deadmau5 ever since lollapalooza and i arrived at the venue at about 830 or so because diana and julie didnt have tickets and the show was sold out. after some sneaky detective work and a bit of negotiation, we found ourselves all with general admission tickets, which was pretty huge because it sounds like there were not too many tickets to go around after they snagged theirs. we waited outside for a half hour or so but finally made our way in. i took a lovely picture of the marquee outside, but i must have accidentally deleted it during my 3am deletion of all completely ridiculous pictures that could never be salvaged. so that was kind of sad. but i did see my next door neighbor zack just before going inside.

we made it inside after some thorough camera bag searching and got a couple of $9 drinks (i always forget how expensive the drinks are there) and i ran into niki who i hadnt seen since college many moons ago. in fact, i believe her quote was, “really? i havent seen you since college and i see you at deadmau5?” then we ran into jonny who we ended up hanging with for the better part of the evening. we wandered around for a bit noticing the large and elaborate deadmau5 masks that littered the crowd (i think i counted 7 or 8 throughout the night but its hard to tell) and finally burns began. he started out a bit slow but really pumped it up near the end of his set (i wonder if the opening djs are contractually obligated to do that because it seems like they usually do) and then it was on to the main event. (again, all pics plus many more can be viewed in higher quality on the dailybeatz flickr page.)

burns @ the fillmore detroit 11.21.09

burns @ the fillmore detroit 11.21.09

burns @ the fillmore detroit 11.21.09

then it was time for the main event. we saw the black objects all over the stage and figured that they were probably some sort of lighting mechanism but when the show began, they all turned into mini video screens that worked together. it was sort of like a much smaller scale version of the radiohead set from last summers tour except coming up from the ground rather than hanging from the ceiling. which inevitably led to a conversation over stalagmites vs stalagtites. we decided that none of us knew which was which.

the crowd was just as wild as lollapalooza if not more (since they had not just endured an entire day of 90+ degree heat) and it turned into an all out party. we each acquired a glowstick bracelet so that we would have something around our wrists for the inevitable fist pumping that was going to take place and tried our best not to get trampled and/or contract shingles from the sometimes questionable crowd. i made my way to the front where i breathed a breath of fresh air and tried to snap some pics, which was made more difficult because of my short stature and the tall video screen in front of deadmau5. i was pleasantly surprised that i had some decent shots of the mask when i got home cuz i thought i had nothin.

as the night continued i made my way up to the balcony for some shots from the left and right and of course it never occurred to me to, you know, maybe take some shots from dead center. that would be way too logical for me. diana and julie headed out a bit early just in time to miss the crowd going nuts when daft punks “harder, better, faster, stronger” was mixed with muse’s “knights of cydonia”. i luckily had just returned to the pit up front a last ditch attempt to take some more pics before this. i think my favorite part of my recent stint shooting shows is just how much people love getting their pictures taken. the couple below asked me to take their picture, at which point the proceeded to try to eat eachothers throats, but hey, at a show like this, anything is fair game. to the two lebanese guys, i know i said your picture would be up here but i got home and the picture was complete shite. sorry about that. the energy was thick on this night, and deadmau5 delivered. please enjoy the photographs below and check out mah flickr page for more shots.

deadmau5 @ the fillmore detroit 11.21.09

deadmau5 @ the fillmore detroit 11.21.09

deadmau5 @ the fillmore detroit 11.21.09

deadmau5 @ the fillmore detroit 11.21.09

deadmau5 @ the fillmore detroit 11.21.09

deadmau5 @ the fillmore detroit 11.21.09

deadmau5 @ the fillmore detroit 11.21.09

deadmau5 @ the fillmore detroit 11.21.09

deadmau5 @ the fillmore detroit 11.21.09

deadmau5 @ the fillmore detroit 11.21.09

deadmau5 @ the fillmore detroit 11.21.09

deadmau5 @ the fillmore detroit 11.21.09

deadmau5 @ the fillmore detroit 11.21.09

deadmau5 @ the fillmore detroit 11.21.09

deadmau5 @ the fillmore detroit 11.21.09

deadmau5 @ the fillmore detroit 11.21.09

deadmau5 @ the fillmore detroit 11.21.09

deadmau111909-77

deadmau5 @ the fillmore detroit 11.21.09

deadmau5 @ the fillmore detroit 11.21.09

deadmau5 @ the fillmore detroit 11.21.09

deadmau5 @ the fillmore detroit 11.21.09

deadmau5 @ the fillmore detroit 11.21.09

its pretty tough to review a dj set, because while you dont really remember more than one or two specific moments or songs that were played, you always remember how much fun you had. man, im exhausted just thinking about how exhausted i was when i got home saturday night. it was a total blast as expected. enjoy this song while you think about how much you wish you were there and how you will make sure never to miss a local event like this again. this song should strike your fancy as it features one of the most recognizable video game theme songs of our generation, but have no fear,in true deadmau5, the rest of the track does not fake the funk on a nasty dunk.

deadmau5 – you need a ladder

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thom yorke

well kids, its happened. the twilight phenomenon has officially taken over the indie music world. as im sure many of you know by now, the next movie in the twilight series, new moon, is being released later this year and along with the release of the movie is the release of the soundtrack which is strangely full of many of our favorite artists like grizzly bear, muse, sea wolf, editors, lykke li, bon iver, and yes, even thom yorke. while im pretty tired of how twilight has taken over the world, i think the fact that we get some new tracks from all of these great artists is enough even to make perpetually bitchy looking twilight star kristin stewart smile.

the song sounds like classic thom yorke. pretty dark and pretty electronic. fortunately, i like this song way more than the last new thom yorke song i heard, the hollow earth. i have a feeling that most of the soundtrack is going to have this really dark feel about it, and i guess it will expose the teenybopper twilight fanatics to some of the excellent music thats out there, which i guess is a good thing, assuming that any shows of these acts are 18+. this intolerance of youngers is perhaps rooted in my seeing “where the wild things are” this past friday with tons of little children in the theater, and from my passion pit experience at lollapalooza. sorry kids.

thom yorke – hearing damage

Thom Yorke - The Twilight Saga: New Moon (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) [Deluxe Version] - Hearing Damage buy this track on itunes

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muse – uprising

waiting for an american muse tour

i had this great master plan of posting my current favorite track from the new muse album, “the resistance”, today to coincide with the release of the album. but then i found out that the album was actually released last week, leaving me embarrassed and humiliated. but then i remembered that nobody reads this so nobody will ever know. the good news is that im really feeling the british band’s fifth studio release, one that weve been waiting a few years to hear. im really really hoping this means that an american tour is in order because their live show is really something else. there are not many bands that can play a huge loud stadium anthem with an over the top visual show and then immediately follow it up with a classical piano solo.

“uprising” is the opening track of “the resistance” and it picks up exactly where their last album “black holes and revelations” off. well, unless you count “glorious” as being the last song of the album, then i guess it doesnt. but otherwise, the last album ended with the musethemic “knights of cydonia” (thats a word i just made up to describe the huge intense anthemic muse songs, of which there are many) with lead singer matt bellamy shrilly singing “no ones gonna take me alive/the time has come to make things right/you and i must fight for our lives/you and i must fight to survive”. this time, the band sings a few lines that are even more aggressive and triumphant sounding “they will not force us/they will stop degrading us/they will no control us/we will be victorious.” kind of makes you want to start a revolt while you sit at your 9-5 desk job reading this, doesnt it?

aside from the musethemic lyrics, this track has everything else that defines muse. the pounding beat of the bass, the minor melodies, which start out with a synth and the subtle sounds of a muted trumpet and remind you just a bit of halloween, though youre not quite sure why (the halloween thing is probably most evident in the track “time is running out” from their third album “absolution”), and of course those signature bellamy vocals and harmonies that sound just as good singing a slow ballad as they do singing a huge rocker like this. and dont worry when this song is over, because the rest of the album holds up to it too. and just for the record, anyone who ever tries to compare muse to radiohead is an idiot.

muse – uprising

Muse - The Resistance - Uprising buy this track on itunes
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live mew

after yesterdays post, did anyone figure out that today would be all about danish band mew? id heard one or two songs by mew but didnt really know much about them, except that the word mew always came in handy playing facebook scrabble when i didnt have a lot of vowels. im only just now working through their whole discography and its really impressive. like muse, they take hard rock to the next level with ear-pleasing melodies, unthinkable chord progressions and the most unusual of time signatures. especially evident on their latest single “introducing palace players” where it takes some time just to figure out the beat. they just played the pitchfork festival but i missed their performance to be in the midst of the flaming lips confetti/balloon extravaganza and kind of wish i hadnt now (especially since the wind blew most of that away from us anyway).

todays track is one of the first id ever heard by mew and has everything ive talked about above. from their 2003 album “frengers” (get it? friends and strangers?), “am i wry? no” starts out with definite elements of heavy metal, but not in a dark, screaming way. it starts out in 4/4, then theres a little musical interlude into 3/4 thats just so nice to listen to. then back to 4/4, and to close out the last minute thirty of the song, in true mew fashion, a whole new theme is introduced in a whole new key. thats what i love about this group. theres always something interesting to listen to and even within one song, the mood is always changing. and in most cases, all of the things mentioned above are even more apparent then in this track. in their 2005 album “and the glass handed kites”, they take it even a step further, with many of the songs flowing seamlessly into one another. the worst part about festivals is the post festival regret. shows you know you should have seen that you didnt.

mew – am i wry? no

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muse – glorious

muse live

starting today, im not trying to come up with cutesy names for posts. just straight up artist-song. cuz the cutesy names are never good anyway. also, im now including links for the songs just above the players where you can right click and save the songs. so perhaps that will be more motivation to visit and tell your friends. the next two days, we will be bringing you tracks from two bands who have a similar approach to music. theyre both pretty much hard rockers and borderline heavy metal (especially todays), but extremely melodic at the same time. and they have ridiculously similar names. todays band, muse (can you guess tomorrows group?), seems to almost take melodies from classical music and turn them into huge rock powerhouses. in general im not a huge fan of screaming heavy metal, but these guys take the loud overthetopness of heavy metal and turn it into something thats much more pleasing on the ears. and they have one of the best live shows ive seen. i was lucky enough to see them at the 89x birthday bash a few years back at a pretty small outdoor venue. while it was still a pretty big crowd, it seemed tiny when noted that just 2 days later they would be headlining one night of lollapalooza. besides their intense visual show, complete with everything on stage covered in video screens, they really showcased how musically talented they were as a band, with one of the members at one point playing some intense classical piano, right in the middle of a rock show.

there were about a million songs i wanted to post by these guys as my favorite tracks of theirs change all the time, but in the end i picked the song i did just because some of you may not have heard it before. the song is “glorious” (my second choice was “map of the problematique”) and its a bonus track off the japanese version of their 2006 album “black holes and revelations” and also as a track on the “invincible” single. this album is what really threw them into the mainstream in america, even though they had a pretty strong following here before and of course were huge across the sea. i like the transitions between the keyboards and guitars playing the backup music. and the chromatic choruses. and how its one of the more major-sounding muse songs. seems like a lot of their stuff is in a minor key, but im all about that too. im looking forward to hearing some new music from them (hopefully accompanied by a tour?) coming up pretty soon. aside: whats with all the haters of “united states of eurasia”?

muse – glorious

Muse - Black Holes and Revelations - Glorious buy this track on itunes
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tortoise

today im going to take you a magical instrumental avant-garde journey courtesy of tortoise. i dont exactly know what avant-garde means, but im pretty sure that it sums up tortoise pretty well, but ive been wrong before when it comes to describing music using words whose meanings i dont really know. the other day someones facebook status said “listening to neo-classical metal, yes it exists”. i replied that i think a lot of muse songs sound like neo-classical metal. melodic like classical music, but heavy like metal. imagine my embarassment when someone else chimed in to say “technically, no”. i was humiliated and defeated. luckily we only have 1 mutual friend, so nobody else will ever know about it. the point is, i dont know what a lot of fancy words mean.

just to be safe, i just looked up the definition of avant-garde (but i stopped at the part about modernism and postmodernism, because i for sure dont know what those mean). according to wikipedia, however, the debate is really whether tortoise is post-rock or progressive rock. no mention of avant-garde (what about the dinner party scene in beetlejuice? does that qualify?). wrong again. all i know is that the tortoise show at the blind pig last year was definitely the first non-orchestral show ive ever been to that included three to four xylophones and/or marimbas and/or vibraphones, all of which were played simultaneously during “ten day interval” with drums and keys chiming in. and everyone in the band played just about every instrument, and it was pretty sweet. and thats all i need to know. you can keep your fancy words with their fancy definitions that include other fancy words.

as for this specific song, it was like at first listen. im pretty sure this was the last song of their encore at last falls show. whats not to love about jazzy interludes, quasi-tempo fluctuations and tons of key changes? my other top choices for this post were “six pack” and the aforementioned “ten day interval”, but i thought this track summed up tortoise more completely. if youre new to the group, i would recommend starting out with their “standards” album and seeing how that goes. i dont think i knew this, but they share drummer john mcentire with the sea and cake, who are overall much jazzier and less blatantly experimental and not all instrumental. looking back, i was introduced to both bands on the same day, and ive kind of thought of them as a pair ever since. this post was kind of bad so i hope you think the song is better than kind of bad.

tortoise – blackjack

Tortoise - Standards - Blackjack buy this track on itunes
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