Showing posts with label Vampire Weekend. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Vampire Weekend. Show all posts

Saturday, May 25, 2013

RED ROCKS PART 2 - VAMPIRE WEEKEND

Loved the performance by Vampire Weekend.  What's great about sitting up close is that one can watch the band on stage, not what's projected on the big video screen off to the side.  They played their old favorites and handful off of their new album, some which work for me, some that don't.

Reverb wrote:

This balance of old and new speaks to Vampire Weekend’s growing catalog — one that feels deeper than only three albums. At one point Koenig dug out the old track “Ladies of Cambridge,” an early single from Vampire Weekend’s days of playing the Hi-Dive. A bit rough around the edges, paying homage to those close quarters bars that clashed with Vampire Weekend’s clean cut pop, the tune seemed like a waypoint for the growth in the last six years. And this was all the more apparent beneath the understanding reflection of the Coachella mirror and the thoughtful, mature new material.

Koenig stuck to one spot through the majority of the set, weighed down by the demanding vocals. Reaching, dipping and shouting and cooing he pirouetted through the songs with only a few tumbles here and there. For the most part he made it work, though, when he did miss it was all the more noticeable given how perfect his voice is recorded. Despite the ease of which the band acted on stage, there was little showboating from Koenig, guitarist/keyboardist Rostam Batmanglij or bassist Chris Baio. Meanwhile, drummer Chris Tomson kept things on point with his fun and thoughtful indie-pop beats.

Read it all here:
http://www.heyreverb.com/blog/2013/05/21/vampire-weekend-at-red-rocks-amphitheatre-5-20-13-photos-review/69180/

Westword wrote:

The band's new record, Vampires of the City, just dropped about a week ago, and this live outing gave the outfit a chance to spotlight its old and new material at once. That side-by-side structure showed just how much the quartet has come along, even since 2010's Contra. Fresh off the rush of releasing a new record, the band seems confident as it heads into its creative future.

Read it all here:
http://blogs.westword.com/backbeat/2013/05/review_vampire_weekend_red_rocks_may-20-2013.php

Download the full show here:
http://www.filefactory.com/file/69g06uktg4p/n/VW_Red_Rocks_Colorado_May_20_2013_rar





















Sunday, April 28, 2013

COACHELLA PART 2

Second weekend of music from the Coachella 2013 music festival.

THE xx
The xx are a Mercury Prize-winning trio formed in 2005 in London, United Kingdom and signed to Young Turks. The band members are Romy Madley Croft (vocals, lead guitar), Oliver Sim (vocals, bass guitar), and Jamie Smith, known as Jamie xx (beats, MPC sampler). Second guitarist and keyboardist Baria Qureshi was dropped from the band mid-tour in 2009. The reasons behind her ousting remain unclear. On 17 August 2009, the group released their debut album xx on Young Turks label. The album was recorded in a small garage and produced by the band. It garnered critical acclaim and has been generally well-received, scoring an average of 86/100 based on 24 professional reviews. Also it ranked on “best of the year” lists with Rolling Stone placing it at #9 and NME placing it at #2.

Download it here:
http://www.filefactory.com/file/4ofpp5ppu6e3/n/XX_Coachella_Indio_CA_April_12_2013_mp3




NEW ORDER
New Order are an alternative rock/electronic dance band which formed in 1980 in Salford, England, United Kingdom by the three remaining members of Joy Division. The band’s classic lineup consists of Bernard Sumner (vocals, guitar, keyboards), Peter Hook (bass, electronic percussion), Gillian Gilbert (keyboards, guitar) and Stephen Morris (drums, keyboards). The group effectively disbanded in 1993 but reformed in 1998. Gilbert left in 2001 to look after her and Morris’ children and was replaced by guitarist/keyboardist Phil Cunningham. Hook left acrimoniously in 2007 and declared the band to be defunct. Initially, Sumner, Cunningham and Morris denied the band had split up, but in 2009, following the release of the trio’s Bad Lieutenant album, they admitted that that they could not continue on without Hook and officially disbanded. However, the band reformed in 2011 for a pair of charity dates without Hook, with Gilbert returning to the fold and Tom Chapman replacing Hook on bass. Pioneers of dance music in the 1980s and one of the first bands to effectively and popularly synthesize keyboard- and guitar-based music, New Order’s members hailed from Salford and Macclesfield, England out of the ashes of Joy Division, are noted as being one of the first bands to bridge the gap between post-punk and dancefloor.

Download it here:
http://www.filefactory.com/file/1owksyzv5lgj/n/NO_Coachella_Indio_CA_April_13_2013_mp3




FRANZ FERDINAND
With their foppish good looks, skinny trousers and sly, sexy post-punk tunes, Franz Ferdinand were one of the U.K.'s best pop exports in the 2000s, four suave Scotsmen who helped indie kids learn to dance. The Scottish quintet first scored a minor U.S. hit with "Take Me Out," which combined a spiky riff with a shout-along chorus, and subsequent singles — including the blatantly homoerotic rocker "Michael" — only upped the pleasure principle.

Download it here:
http://www.filefactory.com/file/38ry4sn5p05t/n/FF_Coachella_Indio_CA_April_14_2013_mp3




VAMPIRE WEEKEND
Vampire Weekend is an indie rock band which formed in February 2006 in New York City, New York, United States. The band consists of Ezra Koenig (vocals, guitar), Rostam Batmanglij (keyboards, guitar, vocals), Chris Baio (bass) and Christopher Tomson (drums). The band has released two albums: Their successful 2008 self-titled album and 2010’s “Contra”. The band has gained positive comparisons to such artists as Paul Simon, Haircut 100 and The Walkmen. Vampire Weekend received much buzz from local blogs throughout 2007 during their rise to a record deal with indie label XL Recordings. Rolling Stone placed Cape Cod Kwassa Kwassa at number 57 for the top 100 songs of 2007.

Download it here:
http://www.filefactory.com/file/7czrhto2yg0d/n/VW_Coachella_Indio_CA_April_14_2013_mp3





RED HOT CHILI PEPPERS
Red Hot Chili Peppers are an American rock band formed in Los Angeles in 1983. The group's musical style primarily consists of rock with an emphasis on funk, as well as elements from other genres such as punk rock and psychedelic rock. When played live, they incorporate many aspects of jam band due to the improvised nature of much of their performances. Currently, the band consists of founding members Anthony Kiedis (vocals) and Michael "Flea" Balzary (bass), longtime drummer Chad Smith, and guitarist Josh Klinghoffer, who joined in late 2009, following the departure of John Frusciante. Red Hot Chili Peppers have won seven Grammy Awards, and sold over 80 million records worldwide.[2] The Red Hot Chili Peppers came in at # 30 on VH1's 100 Greatest Artists of Hard Rock. The Chili Peppers ranked # 72 on VH1's 100 Sexiest Artists, as well as placing # 128 on the Top Pop Artists of the Past 25 Years chart. In 2012, they were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. The band's original line-up featured guitarist Hillel Slovak and drummer Jack Irons, alongside Kiedis and Flea.

Download it here:
http://www.filefactory.com/file/1pxp8wtre1sn/n/RHCP_Coachella_Indio_CA_April_14_2013_mp3







Sunday, November 27, 2011

GIVING THANKS FOR THE MUSIC

The Thanksgiving Day holiday had arrived, the family driving up to grandma's house while I worked in the basement, inking and hand pressing block prints for this years Christmas card and newsletter.  The boredom of standing in one place for seven or eight hours, broken only by listening to the radio and later the television.  After printing, my dinner was a foot long turkey sandwich made by Subway.  At that point I was so happy having finished the printing, for at least that day.  The process was repeated on Saturday with one more weekend being needed to make more prints before I can say I'm truly done.  Friday was spent in the office, one of the few people to show up.  I biked down to Jack Jensen's just to say hello, learning that he was selling a few different and very interesting works of art from the early 1990's, stashed away in his studio.

Considering it was a midweek evening, I only chose to listen to one show the night before Thanksgiving Day.  Coldplay, an incomplete soundboard recording of their live show at the Glastonbury Festival in Pilton, England on June 25, 2005.  I was looking to listen to something slower paced than the normal high energy shows I've been listening to.

Scholars they are not
We glorify their rudness
National disgrace

Fast years have gone by
The vessel has been broken
Crys, his time has come

The disembodied voice
A sound of childhood friendship
And the phone goes silent

Download it  and another live performance by them here:
http://www.fileserve.com/file/kayPNbz/Coldp.2005-10-30.Copenhaen.by.T.U.B.E.rar


Friday night began with an early performance by the Pretenders, their performance at the Heatwave Festival in Mosport, Ontario on August 8, 1980.

Canada's legendary 1980 Heatwave Festival was the brainchild of concert promoter John Brower, who was based in Toronto. Brower established his reputation a decade prior, as the man behind the 1969 Rock and Roll Revival concert at Varsity Stadium (AKA "Live Peace In Toronto," which featured John Lennon's debut live performance outside The Beatles) and the three-day Woodstock-esque Strawberry Fields Festival held at Ontario's Mosport Park the following summer. For Canadians, as well as thousands of Americans and Europeans who traveled to this event, Brower's Heatwave Festival would become one of Canada's most memorable musical events.

This 1980 Heatwave Festival performance literally captures The Pretenders at that breakthrough moment, just as their debut album began climbing the North American charts and their first American single, the soulful and sensual "Brass In Pocket" had become a bona fide hit. That same week, the New York Times began coverage on the band in anticipation of The Pretenders' upcoming Central Park performance (also available here in The Concert Vault) a week after the Heatwave Festival.

Performing in the afternoon between Rockpile and the B-52's, The Pretenders performed during the major influx of the 15,000 ticketless radio listeners descending on Mosport Park. With a take-no-prisoners approach, they kick things off with a lacerating "Precious," signaling to the audience that this is a band with plenty of attitude and swagger. This pummeling opener is followed by the taunting and playful "The Adultress," a full year prior to its release. Destined for the lead off spot on The Pretenders' second album the following August, this features one of Hynde's most immortal couplets of "I'm the adultress I didn't want to be" with "But I'm convenient and I make good tea." These two challenging openers are next counterbalanced by the sweet vibrato purr of "Kid," displaying the two extremes of Hynde's songwriting.

Read it all here:
http://www.wolfgangsvault.com/the-pretenders/concerts/heatwave-festival-august-23-1980.html





Find it here (note the need for a password):
http://bootlegtunzworld.blogspot.com/2010/04/pretenders-heatwave-festival-1980.html


Nirvana blasted their music late into the night, performing in the East Ballroom in the Husky Union Building at the University of Washington in Seattle WA on January 6, 1990.  An excellent soundboard recording.   Kurt and Krist were banned for life from all University of Washington venues for destroying so much gear at this show.



Download it here:
http://www.mediafire.com/?8aod51vlazpqu#undefined


Saturday night began slow with Vampire Weekend, live at the French television show De La Semanine.  An excellent recording of course, if you don't mind the talking at the beginning and end of the show.

Download it here:
http://d01.megashares.com/?d01=3a744a7


Late Saturday night was spent with Echo and the Bunnymen, listening to their last release Do It Clean.  There were a few things about it that sounded familiar because of a few comments made by Ian and coming from the audience. The woman calling out for "Steve-o" about whom Ian commented on the recording was the one who thought I was Larry (yeah, she and I met the previous year). The guy always calling out for Broke My Neck stood next to me that night.  I did not realize it but it turned out to be the December 11, 2010 show at the Olympia theater in Liverpool, a show I also recorded.  There was a lot they edited out to make this clean version of the show.   Listening to it made me wish I were going to Liverpool in a couple weeks to see them on their home turf again.








But it here:
http://www.bunnymen.com/Test/?p=952