Wednesday, April 27, 2022

Echoes of Pink Floyd Dazzle Kalamazoo

 

The beautiful State Theatre in Kalamazoo hosted a wonderful night of solid classic rock greatness from Echoes of Pink Floyd, Michigan’s premiere tribute to the prog-rock legends, who themselves stopped touring in 1994. A few recent line-up changes aside, Echoes performed with well-rehearsed focus and captured the emotion of most songs’ original recordings live on stage and against an amazing light and laser show that engaged fans and newcomers alike throughout the night. While they are not the first or the last rock band to pay tribute to Pink Floyd, Echoes has built a loyal regional fan base and puts on a fantastic show every time they perform.

Structured similar to a traditional Floyd concert, with no opening act and a 20-minute intermission half-way through, the night began with a slow, moody introduction on the first half of the “Shine On You Crazy Diamond” suite (parts I-V on the original album’s track listing), and the band immediately followed with the three biggest surprises and least-predictable songs of the night. Syd Barrett’s psychedelic assault, “Astronomy Domine,” paired well with the flashing lasers and strobe lights, even if many in attendance were not familiar with it. Two songs from Pink Floyd’s later, David Gilmour-led, era were included next, and then the band got into its core repertoire of Floyd classics from ’73-’79, the band’s peak years in terms of both songwriting and overall success.

A spirited take on “Pigs” from the Animals album featured a great talk box guitar solo from Rich Martin and excellent bass work from Tom Beller, especially during the high notes in the pre-verses. Without specifically announcing or explaining they were doing so, the band next launched into a track-for-track run through the entire Dark Side of the Moon LP, but unlike other performances where this is an advertised selling point, they allowed the audience to piece it together themselves as the show progressed. They also notably placed the intermission half-way through that portion of the show during what would be the side break on the original vinyl edition and continued with the entire second side to open the second set.

Following the show-stopping vocal performance by Shelby Jo Zemla on “The Great Gig in the Sky,” the intermission break,  and the rest of Dark Side of the Moon, Echoes leaned mostly into highlights from The Wall, including the first five songs in order and a powerful conclusion of “Young Lust,” “Comfortably Numb,” and, as an encore, “Run Like Hell.” The performance of “Wish You Were Here” near the end of the second set was well-played but stood out even more due to the inclusion of a technical, extended flute solo by Dan Giacobazzi in lieu of the traditional guitar and vocal outro.

As a replacement for an actual Pink Floyd show, Echoes of Pink Floyd don’t completely capture everything, but they do a consistently good job of executing transitions and changes within and between songs and provide an opportunity for Floyd fans to gather together to enjoy and celebrate the excellent music of one of their favorite bands whom they no longer have the option to see perform. Unlike Beatles tributes and others where the musicians are actors playing the roles and musical positions of the individuals for whom they are standing in, Echoes does a great job of doling out vocal duties among different members of the group based on whose voice would best handle the different segments of signing. For younger fans recently discovering Pink Floyd’s music, Echoes’ show is a great opportunity to connect with the songs a bit more by seeing them live and getting introduced to a few songs they may not already know while enjoying the lights and lasers at the same time. For long-time fans, Echoes provides a chance to re-live favored live moments from different eras of the band and to celebrate their magical music with others in their families and with a room full of other Pink Floyd fans alike. Don’t miss a chance to see this dazzling tribute experience!


Echoes of Pink Floyd set list:

Shine On You Crazy Diamond (pts. 1-5)

Astronomy Domine

What Do You Want from Me?

Learning to Fly

Pigs

Speak to Me

Breathe

On the Run

Time

Breathe (reprise)

The Great Gig in the Sky

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Money

Us and Them

Any Colour You Like

Brain Damage

Eclipse

In the Flesh?

The Thin Ice

Another Brick in the Wall (pt. 1)

The Happiest Days of Our Lives

Another Brick in the Wall (pt. 2)

Wish You Were Here

Young Lust

Comfortably Numb

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Run Like Hell

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Friday, April 15, 2022

The Flaming Lips Rock Royal Oak

The Royal Oak Music Theatre rocked again last Sunday with legendary psychedelic punk rockers, The Flaming Lips, triumphantly returned for a night of powerful, emotional, and very loud music. One of the first bands to announce tour dates as the long, covid-moratorium on concerts was beginning to end just under a year ago, this show ended up being rescheduled from November due to issues related to not being able to cross the Canadian border to perform at that time (again due to covid). To say the sold out crowd was enthusiastically expecting a great show would be an understatement, and the band delivered a multi-sensory experience with something for everybody (as the often do). 

The evening began with a 50-minute opening set from veteran touring rockers, Heartless Bastards, who were well-received as the audience gradually filled the room. This was the last show of the tour's current leg, and the last to feature Heartless Bastards as openers, so a bit of their stage banter was both gracious for getting to be a part of it and melancholy for it coming to an end. Featuring a variety of songs from their growing catalog, the band's engaging rhythms and well-balanced mix earned applause and appreciation throughout their performance.

Quietly approaching their 40th anniversary, The Flaming Lips have continued to grow and to change, most notably in the last decade. Now down to only one original member (singer/songwriter, Wayne Coyne) following the recent retirement of founding bassist, Michael Ivins, the group has plowed forward with new original songs, interesting collaborations, and innovative covers albums which often feature vastly-rearranged versions of songs that are sacred to some, such as those of Pink Floyd's Dark Side of the Moon, or The Beatles' Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band. Currently touring in support of their most recent traditional LP, 2020's American Head, the current shows are featuring fewer songs from that release and a few more deep cuts from as far back as 1987. Especially notable was the inclusion of two such songs from 1993's, Transmissions from the Satellite Heart, which paired well against more recent material and had notably not been featured regularly until Ivins' departure.

The Lips dazzled with all their traditional live features, including super-powered confetti cannons, Coyne performing much of the show from within his famous bubble, surreal and cartoonish inflatables and other props, an amazing light show, and most of all, the giant wall of ultra bright LED screens behind the band at all times. These are a very important part of the show as they are synchronized with pre-recorded performance videos and sometimes the lyrics of the song being performed, one line or even one word at a time, often emphasizing the most heartfelt or the funniest parts. The concert began with a soft opening, as Coyne addressed the audience informally with the house lights still on and introduced "My Cosmic Autumn Rebellion" and followed immediately with "Do You Realize??," both from 2002's Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots, one of their very best and most successful albums, also celebrating its 20th anniversary.

After a detour into 2017's psychedelically dark, "How??," the band returned to Yoshimi to play the title track, allowing two big singalong moments within the first four songs of the show. This was also significant as the mid-section of the two-hour performance alternated between deep cuts and new songs, some of which were probably being heard for the first time ever by at least a few in the audience, and which got more varied reactions. One of the most arguably painful elements of many Flaming Lips concerts is their need for a bit more time between songs than most bands (whether due to having more people and more instruments, the props and other things on stage, or to be properly synched with their screens). Add to this the fact that their fan base is middle aged and older for the most part, and what's left are sometimes awkwardly quiet transitions between songs, usually accentuated by Coyne's comical begging to less-comical pleading or even pandering with the crowd to continuously make noise between the songs and even during quiet or vocal-less parts within them. This comes across better in a festival situation by comparison, but it has been a part of the band's performances for over 15 years now and can sometimes take away from the vibes established by the song that just ended or the next one just beginning. 

Multi-instrumentalist and long-time member, Steven Drozd, rarely moved from his keyboard station, also often singing and playing 12-string electric guitar, but the many replacement band members (and replacements of replacements) that have accumulated over the last 10 years stand inconspicuously off to the side and back of the stage, participating but receiving almost no focus or attention at all. While they each added to the songs well, it's clear the focus is now Coyne and Drozd, and the supporting cast is appreciated but also lucky to be along for the ride.

Hardcore and old school fans certainly appreciated renditions of "Moth in the Incubator," "Oh, My Pregnant Head" and "Love Yer Brain" the most, but the new songs sounded great too and were strong between the older ones. The long-standing crowd favorite, "She Don't Use Jelly," was another high point and is always one of the most engaging songs of the night, and the inclusion of "Feeling Yourself Disintegrate," from 1999's, The Soft Bulletin, was a beautiful way to end the main set.

A strong four-song encore included a B-side, two deep cuts, and ended with the bombastic, "Race for the Prize," usually featured as an opening song and all the more appropriate following or during a pandemic as the lyrics describe two scientists competing against one another to discover an important cure. The encore section also featured some of the most engaging visual and physical elements of the night, including a giant inflatable bubble filled with costumes, props, and balloons being launched onto the top of the crowd on the venue's floor and passed around frantically throughout "Worm Mountain," and during "Race for the Prize," an overdose of confetti and the band's famous inflatable letter balloons, always shouting out the town they are in, and always including an enthusiastic, "Fuck Yeah!"

The future for this band is always unpredictable, but it appears that Coyne and Drozd, at least, are in for the long haul, which after 38 years, could be closer than they and most of their fans would like. In spite of that if not because of that fact, they continue to gather to share and celebrate the band's music with them and with each other, and after the recent stretch of shut downs that prevented that very important part of engaging with one's favorite artists, being able to do that has never been more significant.

The Flaming Lips set list:

My Cosmic Autumn Rebellion

Do You Realize??

How??

Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots (pt. 1)

Moth in the Incubator

Ego Tripping at the Gates of Hell

Will You Return/When You Come Down

Oh, My Pregnant Head

Love Yer Brain

She Don’t Use Jelly

At the Movies on Quaaludes

Dinosaurs on the Mountain

Feeling Yourself Disintegrate

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Enthusiasm for Life Defeats Existential Fear

Worm Mountain

All We Have Is Now

Race for the Prize

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(Louis Armstrong-“What a Wonderful World” outro tape)

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Tuesday, April 12, 2022

Jack White’s Masonic Matrimony

 

Superstar modern rocker, Jack White, had a very big Friday in his hometown of Detroit. Aside from being the release day for his excellent new solo LP, Fear of the Dawn (review to come), he also performed “The Star-Spangled Banner” for the first time ever (at the Tigers’ opening day game), launched the tour for the album at his favorite hometown venue, and, oh yeah, got engaged and married within about 15 minutes during the concert, surprising and shocking everyone in the audience.

Similar to the launch of The Raconteurs' most recent album era in 2019, White chose to perform first at Detroit’s Masonic Temple, an amazingly ornate, 98-year-old building which is said to be the world’s largest Masonic Temple. White’s affinity for performing there goes back to childhood memories of running around the venue when his mother was an employee and undoubtedly attending concerts there in his younger days. Friday’s performance was White’s 14th time playing the venue with one act or another, and the 15th came the following night to a second sold-out crowd (followed by a quick drive to Grand Rapids to perform Sunday night, completing three Michigan shows during the first three nights of the tour).

As on the tours for his previous solo album and the most recent by The Raconteurs, White has again partnered with Yondr to provide security pouches for all cell phones, taking the no phones policy to a more-extreme degree than Maynard Keenan’s bands, such as Tool and Puscifer, which say security can remove someone from the venue for using their phone during the performance rather than physically restricting phone access. This is unfortunate for his opening acts especially as there is less opportunity for them to have exposure even while being part of a high-profile tour, but to each their own; it’s honestly refreshing to look around a dark audience with no flickering screens or lights every now and then.

Friday’s show began with a short, opening set from SugarTradition, a garage rock combo with music not unlike the general style of TheWhite Stripes and many others, and then a longer set from Olivia Jean, who went from being introduced to those who arrived early enough to see her to being married in front of them in a span of a few hours. Jean’s backing band rocked along with her through mostly up-tempo, original rock songs and a nice cover of Pixie’s “Broken Face” about half-way through.

After the final set change, and anxious crowd enthusiastically welcomed Jack White and his band of extra sharp musicians (both in their attire and their technical abilities) to the Masonic Temple stage. Returning veterans from some of White's previous tours, drummer, Daru Jones; keyboardist, Quincy McCrary; and Detroit native bassist, Dominic Davis, were both well-rehearsed and able to adjust to improvised moments throughout the night with ease. White opened with a powerful one-two punch of “Taking Me Back” and “Fear of the Dawn,” both live debuts and the first two tracks on the new LP, before dipping back into The White Stripes’ “Dead Leaves and the Dirty Ground,” a song that has been performed many times over the years in the venue. Most in the crowd were engaged throughout, but areas further away from the main floor seemed to wane and vary in energy at different points. Exactly three of the next five songs began with the word, “love,” including a rare cover of U2’s “Love Is Blindness” and the lead single from White’s next album, scheduled for release in July. A spirited rendition of The Dead Weather’s “I Cut Like a Buffalo” was also featured during this portion of the show, but this time around, no other members of The Dead Weather were present to join in as they did during White’s famous Masonic Temple performance for the Lazaretto album in 2014.

The second half of the show was entirely made up of White Stripes and Raconteurs songs, somewhat surprising considering it was a Jack White solo concert and that there were ten or more additional new songs to feature in celebration of releasing the new album from which only two songs were performed. Included among them, a sing along on “We’re Going to Be Friends,” more audience participation during “I’m Slowly Turning into You” (woo!) and the electric blues attack of “Ball and Biscuit,” dedicated to Stripes’ drummer, Meg White. The Raconteurs,’ “You Don’t Understand Me,” sounded almost as sharp as when it is performed by that band, and Friday’s show was White’s first inclusion of it in the set as a solo artist. However, these song choices and arrangements were all by White’s design, as usual, and the audience began to piece things together as the personal events unfolded on stage during the show in progress.

Prior to introducing The White Stripes classic, “Hotel Yorba,” White invited Olivia Jean back to the stage to join him on guitar and vocals. As she was plugging in, White explained she was his girlfriend (for most who didn’t already know) and after duetting nicely on the first two verses and choruses, things changed quickly into the third verse where White sang the first two lines (It might sound silly for me to think childish thoughts like these/but I’m so tired of acting tough, and I’m gonna do what I please) before stopping the song and producing an engagement ring, asking Jean to marry him right in the middle of the verse. The audience erupted with applause as she shockingly agreed, and then the song continued from the point it ended with even more prophetic lyrics that set up the second big surprise of the night (let’s get married in a big cathedral by a priest/’cause if I’m the man that you love the most, you can say, “I do” at least!)

Following a short encore break as the celebratory applause continued, White returned to the stage and next invited his mother, Jean’s father, and a few other family members to the stage along with a priest who then performed a brief but very in-character wedding ceremony (including White leaning into the mic to say, “I do,” three times, exactly). The first words the priest spoke as the short ceremony began were, “Ladies and gentlemen, we are gathered here today to get through this thing called life,” quoting Prince’s immortal, “Let’s Go Crazy,” which was certainly an appropriate sentiment for the scene that had unfolded at that moment. Following the wedding and a long standing ovation with plenty of loud, congratulatory applause, White and his band got back to music and capped off the night with The Raconteurs’, “Steady, As She Goes,” another song mentioning marriage and lifestyle changes, and finally, The White Stripes’, “Seven Nation Army,” which at this point includes more people singing along to the melody of the main guitar riff than the actual lyrics themselves. White encouraged this crowd vocalization by asking the band to stop playing as he sang most of the third verse with only the audience’s chanting as an accompaniment.

Overall, Jack White’s tour launch was clearly a highly successful one, and not only was the performance itself top-notch, well-rehearsed, and very professionally staged, this show in particular was extra unique due to the wedding celebration within. Having said that, it is notable that White was on stage for just under 90 minutes, including the proposal, the encore break, and the wedding, compared to the following night which contained ten more songs, and the Grand Rapids show which included seven more than the Friday show. Clearly, it was a very big, busy, and probably long day for White, so it’s hard to fault him for keeping things a bit shorter for once, and with good reason, but when the music is as good as his, there’s always a desire to hear a few more songs.

 

Jack White set list:

Taking Me Back

Fear of the Dawn

Dead Leaves and the Dirty Ground (The White Stripes)

Love Interruption

Love Is Selfish

I Cut Like a Buffalo (The Dead Weather)

Lazaretto

Love Is Blindness (U2)

We’re Going to Be Friends (The White Stripes)

You Don’t Understand Me (The Raconteurs)

I’m Slowly Turning into You (The White Stripes)

Ball and Biscuit (The White Stripes)

Hotel Yorba (The White Stripes) (+proposal!)

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*Wedding Ceremony*
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Steady, As She Goes (The Raconteurs)

Seven Nation Army (The White Stripes)

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Monday, April 4, 2022

Grammy Awards 2022 Summary and Re-Cap

 


We’ve now made it through a second year of the modern, updated Grammy awards, forever changed from the more formal affairs of years past, and it could be said this year’s televised broadcast was at least as insignificant, overall, as last year’s though there were a few more notable performances this time around compared to the 2021 show. Notable performers included Brandi Carlile, Nas, Silk Sonic, Chris Stapleton, and most notably, a medley from H.E.R. that saw her go from a drum solo and a portion of one of her own songs into a strong cover of Lenny Kravitz’s, “Are You Gonna Go My Way?” featuring Kravitz himself and drums from Blink 182’s Travis Barker (for some reason).

This years in memoriam segment did not have the same class and presentation as last year’s, but it did begin with a short tribute to Foo Fighters’ drummer, Taylor Hawkins, who had passed only a week prior and who was also featured on Billie Eilish’s T-shirt during her performance.

Rather than repeating the major changes in tone and presentation in style that were already ranted about last year (see the 2021rant here), it’s still worth a moment to look a quick summary of rock and rock-related artists who were honored, mostly, as usual, during the non-televised portions of the ceremony and events held prior.

Record of the Year, Best R&B Performance, Best R&B Song, AND Song of the Year: Silk Sonic-“Leave the Door Open”

Best Dance/Electronic Recording: Rufus Du Sol-“Alive”

Best Rock Performance: Foo Fighters-“Making a Fire”

Best Metal Performance: Dream Theater-“The Alien”

Best Rock Song: Foo Fighters-“Waiting on a War”

Best Rock Album: Foo Fighters-Medicine at Midnight

Best Alternative Music Album: St. Vincent-Daddy’s Home

Best Traditional R&B Performance: H.E.R.-“Fight for You”

Best Melodic Rap Performance: Kanye West (w/The Weeknd & Lil Baby)-“Hurricane”

Best Rap Song: Kanye West (w/Jay-Z)-“Jail”

Best Rap Album: Tyler, The Creator-Call Me If You Get Lost

Best Country Solo Performance: Chris Stapleton-“You Should Probably Leave”

Best Country Song: Chris Stapleton-“Cold”

Best Country Album: Chris Stapleton-Starting Over

Best New Age Album: Stewart Copeland & Ricky Kej-Divine Tides

Best Americana Album: Los Lobos-Native Sons

Best Bluegrass Album: Bela Fleck-My Bluegrass Heart

Best Folk Album: Rhiannon Giddens with Francesco Turrisi-They’re Calling Me Home

Best Compilation Soundtrack for Visual Media: Andra Day-The United States Vs. Billie Holiday

Best Score Soundtrack for Visual Media: Jon Batiste, Trent Reznor & Atticus Ross-Soul

Best Boxed or Special Limited-Edition Package: George Harrison-All Things Must Pass 50th Anniversary Edition

Best Album Notes: Louis Armstrong-The Complete Louis Armstrong Columbia and RCA Victor Studio Sessions 1946-1966

Best Historical Album: Joni Mitchell-Joni Mitchell Archives, Vol. 1: The Early Years (1963-1967)

Producer of the Year, Non-Classical: Jack Antonoff

Best Remixed Recording: Deftones-“Passenger (Mike Shinoda Remix)”

Best Immersive Audio Album: Alicia Keys-ALICIA

Best Music Film: Summer of Soul 

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