Tag Archives: Spoon

Lollapalooza 2005: Day Two

Lollapalooza 2005Also read Glorious Noise’s coverage of Day One of Lollapalooza 2005.

After the relatively mild weather on Saturday, everybody was hoping the forecasters would be wrong again for Sunday. But when my dogs woke me up at 7:30 and it was already 85 degrees outside, I knew it was going to be a rough day. Still, it might cloud up at least, right?

Wrong. But there were a lot of bands I wanted to see so I jumped on the train and headed down to Grant Park for the second day of Lollapalooza. The CTA expanded its service for the weekend (I can’t imagine how much the organizers had to fork over for that!), so we made it downtown in record time for a Sunday.

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Various Artists – The Amos House Collection, Volume III

Various Artists – The Amos House Collection, Volume III (Wishing Tree Records)

A house is a place where people escape rain and snow, where parents raise babies, and sometimes where musicians record. Some people own their houses, some live in others’ houses, some live in condemned houses, and some have no houses, by choice—but more often ill fortune.

Guilt is a powerful tool. However, a tool even more powerful than guilt is the knowledge that someone is already fighting pain in one way or another, with no personal gain in mind, and no fear of sacrifice. Here, even those with no idea where to begin need only make an easy decision: buy one hell of a collection—two compact discs with a surprisingly consistent lineup—and simultaneously help some lost Providence, Rhode Island residents.

Similarly, anyone interested in beginning a rewarding search for new music can turn to this collection. Even set aside the fact that twenty groups contributed new or previously unreleased songs with a selfless goal in mind. Volume III is basically a list of lower-profile musicians who write songs more skillfully than nearly everyone in the mainstream.

Wishing Tree’s own elf-ish lady, Emily Sparks, immediately steps back from the rest of the set’s philanthropic feel with her song, “Find Your Own Fire,” and although it is gripping and well-realized, her first words “Find your own fire / Stop playin’ with mine” seem to imply the kind of selfishness found in the streets and among people with little or nothing to share.

Skipping tracks is basically unnecessary on this collection. Spoon‘s acoustic, energetic “Jonathan Fisk (Demo)” complements Sparks’ uniqueness, A quiet track from another Wishing Tree artist, Richard Davies, is similarly different, and a medieval-sounding track from British folk hero James William Hindle follows perfectly.

The mood picks up with Wheat‘s “Long Shadow, USA—Wheat vs. Tim Rutili,” (recorded in Califone-friendly Clava Studios and mixed by indie superman Brian Deck) in which Scott Levesque’s “Come on, come on, come on,” challenges and comes head-to-head with T.R.’s crushing, explosive guitar. An epic battle ensues, and in the dust clouds that follow, amazed listeners witness Rutili’s victory celebration, as he leads Califone in an intense rendition of the Stones’ “Ventilator Blues.”

The second disc is just as good, and even boasts a sorrow-drenched track by Wilco called “Let Me Come Home.” In all, The Amos House Collection, Volume III is near-perfect in its lineup, contribution, and message.

Truly, this collection invokes a multiplier effect: although charity alone should leave buyers with a kind of satisfaction, the music is equally rewarding. Each listen brings new appreciation for what’s hidden in the independent underground—certainly, whatever the mainstream is, this is something entirely new and different, and reinforces the notion that rock and roll will never die. Just as the charity helps to jumpstart some near-lost lives, this collection brings new sparks to rock and roll.

Johnny’s Musical Memories, 2002

The Chinese lunar calendar declares 2003 will be the year of the goat. While this definitely portends danger for many musicians who are currently heroes or heroines in hearts of millions (Kelly Rowland should be very worried), let’s take a moment to look back on what the same calendar called the year of the black horse, 2002. Some musical highlights are described below. In the meantime, let’s all look forward to “American Idol 2”, “Joe Millionaire”, “Star Search: Live!”, “The Bachelorette”, and “Celebrity Mole: Hawaii”, which curiously features no actual celebrities. (Aside to Stephen Baldwin – It’s true. You’re not really a celebrity. Get a real job and leave us alone.)

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Spooning on a Sunday Night

Hot freaks, girls with perfect indie style, and T-shirt’d dudes with that 70’s hair – it was a raveup at Chicago’s Abbey Pub, with Spoon as the main attraction. “Thanks for coming out on a Sunday night like this,” main Spoonman Britt Daniel said. “This is a great place.” Daniel was referring to the packed house and gorgeous new sound system at The Abbey. But he could have been summarizing the twisting road that led he and his band to the stage Sunday night.

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