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Music: So much better live

Posted: Thursday, September 04, 2008 7:00 AM by Paige Newman
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As I stood in the Seattle Center stadium on the last night of the Bumbershoot festival, listening to the crowd sing along as Death Cab For Cutie played “I Will Follow You Into the Dark,” the smell of the nearby bay filled the air and the seagulls that flew overhead gleamed white against the darkening sky. People in the stands sported twinkling, blue, glow-in-the-dark pins that looked like thousands of open cell phones and I found myself thinking about how completely invigorating it is to see a band play live.


AP
Ben Gibbard of Death Cab for Cutie belts one out.

It’s the only art form that happens in front of you without the degree of separation that occurs when you watch a movie or read a book or even view a painting in a museum. Earlier that weekend, watching Neko Case, my friend Lisa showed me the goosebumps that rose on her arms when Neko sang.

I’ve loved live music ever since my first show (the Alarm at the Hollywood Palladium -- don’t judge). I love the way a driving baseline can actually quicken your heartbeat or how listening to a singer hold a note, the way Neko did on Saturday, feels sort of like a miracle.

Watching the band Battles at Bumbershoot, I was amazed to discover that this funky electronica band (though, really, they defy conventional description) didn’t use the sound loops that I had assumed; they produced quickening beats themselves, live. It was exhausting just watching drummer John Stanier (drenched with sweat after the first song). I didn’t even think I was a fan of that kind of music, and I was dumbfounded.

But that’s what a good live show does to you. It leaves you without judgment, totally open to drink in the experience. This, in my opinion, is why musicians always get the girls (or the boys). I mean, if they can make you feel that way from the stage ... just think about what they could do up close and personal.

And watching that band, or that person, you are guileless. And it’s the pure pleasure of feeling taken back to that perfect space of innocent pleasure that makes a great live show so satisfying.

Yes, summer may be coming to a close, but that doesn’t mean the music has to stop. I still have TV on the Radio, The National, Sea Navy and Okkervil River on my September calendar.

Did you see a concert that left you speechless this summer? Tell us about it in the comments section.

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Comments

i saw Kiss in Sturgis, SD.  they played a set from Alive and then came back to play an 1 1/2 hour encore.  i know that they have not changed much in 35 years but they still rocked to 50,000 plus considering that kelli Pickler and Kid Rock were about 6 miles away at another campground. i do not think that their light show or pyro has changed since day one but who cares.  what did suck is that Peter and Ace are no longer with the band but Eric Singer and Tommy Thayer do a fantastic job.  some other that i think are good live are Toby Keith, Big & Rich w/The Musiq Mafia and Garth Brooks put on a hell of show when he was onstage.
Loving the Lettuce love!  I saw them this spring (as well as Soulive, they share band members) and will go see them as often as I can!  To the guy who said they're trying to be Tower of Power, they are not trying to be anything other than who they are.  I am lucky enough to know a member (as well as a guest on the new album) they just love to play and Rage!  

Dicky Barrett (lead of The Mighty Mighty Bosstones, who I saw 2x this year!) always said if you can't kick it live you shouldn't kick it at all(paraphrasing obviously).   I usually see at least 1 live show a week (yay for having a thriving local music scene!)  Coming up....Flogging Molly and later this month NKOTB (shut up, it's my childhood and I'll celebrate it if I want to!).
Nothing better than music in the live. It's almost gotten tothe point that it's an addiction to be able to watch the sounds, the technique and the passion in the music come alive in front of me. I've lost track of how many shows I've seen already this year.

And Tim from Wallingford, CT...I saw Lettuce at The Key Club in Los Angeles earlier this year: they owned the room. Black, white, middle-aged, 20-somethings, music elite, surfer dudes, fashionable and casual, those guys know no boundaries. Lettuce is fierce!
I agree with cArrie. The Swell Season/ The Frames was an awesome concert. I've been to quite a few and it is definitely the top so far.  The Swell Season is soft, melodic, and moving.  The Frames can be that way...but they are much heavier rockers.  The cool thing is that they have the same frontman, Glen Hansard, and he can go from quietly whispering to screaming in one song.  The movie he did with Marketa Irglova, Once, is my favorite film.  It's the movie that has the song that won the Oscar for best song in a film at the last Oscars.


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