Thank you. Somehow you just knew. You knew that I had been having a string of awful weeks and you knew that I hadn’t seen any live music in quite a while, due to the awful weeks and the soul-sucking day job, and you knew that I needed this to be good. You knew that the particular qualities of the awful weeks would need to be remedied by Scotch and sweating and furious dancing. You even knew that I had moaned an hour before the show that “Louisiana” was not going to sound the same without horns, so what did you do? You brought a trumpet.
Please ignore the haters who dismiss you as another affected study-in-cool New York City band. They don’t know you like I do, baby, and they’re just jealous that you have so much style. Don’t listen to the people who show up to your shows and scream for “The Rat” a third of the way through because they’re bored or that’s the only song they know. You can’t help that it’s among the best songs you’ve ever written or the fact that we live in a society where impatience is rewarded. They’ll come around. I think some of them even did that Friday in Milwaukee.
You didn’t say much from the stage, and that’s okay. Not every band has to do stand-up comedy between every song (nothing against bands who are also funny, it’s all love)—sometimes, you just want to play. I know that I said that if your new record—A Hundred Miles Off—were a person, I would ask it to hang out but then act all quiet and weird because I thought it was way too cool for me, but also I would secretly wonder why it was wearing a cowboy hat. But I meant that as a compliment, honestly. And my editor and I were totally joking when we were talking about how the best interview question ever would be “Hey, do you guys have iPods? Because you’re called the Walkmen. That’s funny. Don’t you think that’s funny?” and that was before the Onion asked you to do that iPod shuffle thing anyway.
Basically what I am trying in a haphazard, overzealous, slightly fangirlish way is to say that in a certain sense, you really did save me from myself that Friday at the Miramar, if only for a couple of hours; that I did end up sweaty and full of love for the world at large and all of its guitars and people. I’m trying to say that you were pretty much why people go to see live music. And I can’t thank you enough for that.
Yours truly,
Sarah Horne
See more of Sarah’s photos of the Walkmen at the Miramar Lounge in Milwaukee on June 2, 2006.
Catch the Walkmen on tour:
06.08.06 Berbati’s Pan – Portland OR
06.09.06 Showbox Showroom and Lounge – Seattle WA
06.10.06 Richard’s On Richards – Vancouver BC
06.12.06 Great American Music Hall – San Francisco CA
06.13.06 Great American Music Hall – San Francisco CA
06.14.06 Glass House – Pamona CA
06.15.06 El Ray Theater – Los Angeles CA
06.16.06 House of Blues – San Diego CA
06.17.06 Clubhouse – Tempe AZ
06.19.06 La Zona Rosa – Austin TX
06.20.06 Numbers – Houston TX
06.21.06 Granada Theater – Dallas TX
06.23.06 Exit/In – Nashville TN
06.24.06 Headliners Music Hall – Louisville KY
06.25.06 Desdemona Festival – Cincinnati OH
06.27.06 The Phoenix Concert Theatre – Toronto ON
06.28.06 Cabaret la Tulipe – Montreal QC
06.29.06 Avalon – Boston MA
06.30.06 Warsaw – Brooklyn NY
I couldn’t agree with this any more. Saw them last night in SF and it was totally brilliant. Catch them if you can.
I thought the same thing, when I saw them open up for The Strokes. In fact, quite frankly, they kicked The Strokes ass. I sure hope I can catch a few shows this summer.
Plus, I just really love Hamie, err, Hambone, I mean, Hamilton.