mine

index
plans
freesfthings
norcalmusicscene
music :: radio
propaganda
csgeek
archive
trip
about
contact

not mine

google
m-w

skmdc :: rot
kexp :: 96k
woxy :: 64k :: 97X boards
rville :: daily
tothevolcano
monosyllabic
mighty girl
subtle sweetness
radioslack
dtmhlm
flavorpill SF

economist
reason :: h&r
lileks
instapundit
virginia postrel
tim blair
volokh
kausfiles
matt welch
samizdata
drudge
corner
best of the web
blowing smoke
mark steyn
daily kos

homestar
wfmu blog
pitchfork
gostanford
the onion
sa


Search entries:

Powered By Greymatter

Search web:

Google

slow-dog.entry26.02.2003: "music: noise pop 2003"

[Previous entry: "web: flash fun"] [Main Index] [Next entry: "world: and so it begins"]

Last night was the first night of Noise Pop 2003 in San Francisco. I went to Bimbo's with Nick to see Stephen Malkmus and a bunch of other bands. We managed to miss the opener, then caught The Velvet Teen who were not bad. They could not distract me, though, from the drunk guys who we stood behind. I immediately flashed back to my days in the Midwest. You know these guys. You could tell that they were there to Stephen Malkmus, but hadn't bought an album since Slanted and Enchanted, and thought anything newer was crap. Predictably, one of them started jabbering at some other guy, and pretty soon tensions were escalating. In the Midwest, this is the point were shoving ensues, random people in the crowd start fanning the flames, and then someone throws a punch and you try to avoid having someone spill their drink on you (unintentional or otherwise). In California, they actually "took their business outside", thereby sparing the rest of us. Score one for California.

Next up was Track Star. I had enjoyed the first album, but had not been impressed when I saw them live last year. This time, though, was better. Many people were impatiently trying to get through the third band, and Track Star could sense this. And they slowed everything down. In-between song banter, jokes, tuning time, false starts--they pulled out all the tricks. They even replayed part of one song after it was done, so we "could hear how it was supposed to sound." People heckled them. People booed. It was brilliant. It was like seeing Tony Clifton sing, and knowing that it was really Andy Kaufman. At least, in my mind, that's what it was like. I was hoping Track Star was going to tell the audience that they had one more song, hear the cheers, and then launch onto the 33 minute song that closed the first album. Alas, although I believe that's the song they closed with, they kept it to a reasonable length, as if winking to those in the know that they could've...........you know.....if they'd wanted to.........

Malkmus was good. It wasn't amazing, but how can you complain too much about him? The new songs sounded promising, and I left happy.

09:04 PM PST

Replies: 2 comments

Just gotta say, I really liked your desciption of Track Star's set. Felt like I was there.

Posted by Schnitz @ 03/08/2003 01:56 PM PST

Thanks, Schnitz. Sorry I didn't have similarly interesting things to say about the rest of the show, but it was good--the Track Star bit just stuck out at me.

Posted by sean @ 03/08/2003 10:02 PM PST