Monday, October 12, 2015

Landmark Music Festival, September 26-27, 2015, Washington DC, National Mall

I’ve been excited about the first year of the Landmark Music Festival on the National Mall since Dana first brought it to my attention, before we even knew the lineup. A metro-accessible music festival from the producers of ACL and Lollapalooza, during the best time of year to be outdoor in DC? What’s not to like about that? We bought tix within the first 24 hours they went on sale, when they were dirt cheap. Dana even made a contact with their marketing department and scored some extra free tickets, so Eric had planned to use one and go with me for one of the days.  Then he ended up on crutches, so his ticket went to a co-worker of mine. Still, I was happy and excited to cap of my YEAR OF FESTIVALS (four in twelve months!) with Landmark.  On Saturday, Jill, Dana, and I all took the metro down together to Foggy Bottom and hiked the 1.5 miles to the FDR memorial, where the concert took place. All told, we walked about 10 miles a day.  Here’s what I remember, two weeks later.

Saturday, September 26, 2015

12:30 pm  - Ex Hex – Slow-motion girrl power punk-infused pop rock  Hot and Cold is the song I recognize most. Dana said “they look exactly like they sound”, which is true – they look the part of empowered punkish rockers, like Sleater-Kinney.  Not really our thing.  We went to the photo booth and Lemonade Love and for lunch during this act.


1:30 pm – Hunts – Seven siblings (last name Hunt) from Virginia in a folk band.  I didn’t care for their sound – very same old to my ears – but Dana was really impressed when they played the wood of a chair like a drum. Their dad produces and their mom does merchandise. The siblings trade instruments often. They were very smiley. We sat with a friend of Dana’s who was called away because her daughter had some sort of accident.  The daughter turned out ok, but she had to rush home. I was antisocial and sat for most of the act, so I didn’t actually see much with my own eyes.

2:30 pm – Mowgli’s and Twin Shadow.  I watched a bit of the Mowgli’s, but I will forever be spoiled by my initial contact with them in a parking lot in Austin. No stage act can compare to that experience. I think we hit the “experience” tents then, or maybe I just wandered off for a bit. I know I sat by the water for a little while with Twin Shadow playing in the background. The water right next to the stages was so very wonderful. It’s an amazing view out onto the Potomac under the weeping willows. Too bad the port-o-potties were right there, too. Seemed like bad placement to me.

3:30 pm – Vandaveer – I stopped by this country act before I left because there was nothing better from my perspective. (Honestly, the lineup was very dull for this entire festival.) The lady had white-blond hair and could really belt it out.  If I liked traditional country music, I think I would have liked this act. They seemed talented and interesting.  I left early to go to my college reunion that evening at GWU, conveniently the closest metro to the festival.  I was slightly jealous when I discovered that GW has its own Whole Foods now where the dining plan card is accepted. I remember cruddy cafeteria food.

Sunday, September 27, 2015


Sunday was the day that I took Natalie to the festival. Kids 10 and under went for free!  She was super excited. We put sticker jewels on our faces, like Chvrches, and took the metro to Foggy Bottom. We walked through the campus and I pointed the few things I recognized out to her (GW overhauls buildings at an amazing rate!) We even ran into someone I knew from school. (It was alumni weekend.) We saw some ducks on the way and eventually made it to the gate, early enough to hear the Star Wars music when the gates opened. First stop was Tag A Kid, then the port-a-potties and food. Natalie felt slightly let down by Lemonade Love because it had kale in it. We stopped by the kids zone where Natalie got her hair painted with red streaks and an airbrush tattoo, then took photos in some tents wile Avers (garage rock) played in the background. We also grabbed a recycle bag for later to earn Natalie a free shirt.




12:30 pm  - In the Valley Below – Not the band I expected. I expected hippy, they looked fashionista, with a very cool vibe. I only recognized the song Peaches. Natalie didn’t want to say even one word during any of the acts. Apparently, assemblies have drilled quiet respect into her. We sat in the middle of the crowd and listened.

1:30 pm  - Dr. John & The Nite Trippers – Dana and Jennifer (plus 2 sons)  found us and we all sat for a while at this old blues guy’s act, then we went to do more activities, like tattoos.

2:30 pm – Manchester Orchestra – We found Jill and her son here. It was VERY loud. Same old experience. Great sound, nothing special about the performance.

2:30 pm – Houndmouth – This was a hidden gem of the festival and we missed most of it. They are just a random mellow rock band, but they did a 50’s cover that was so much fun, and they had some energy on stage.  I wish I’d seen more. Natalie and I spent part of this act picking up cans. We filled her bag in about 20 or 30 minutes at Houndmouth and Lord Huron.

3:30 pm – Lord Huron -  Typical 4 white dude rock band. I thought nothing of them. We just focused on can collection.

3:30 pm – The Suffers – We passed by this jazz/funk/soul act on the way to turn in the cans. This woman really belts it out. Not my thing, but impressive.






3:30 pm – Rhiannon Giddens – My favorite of the entire festival, by far. She does traditional roots music in the same vein as the Carolina Chocolate Drops. I think she must be a prodigy. Her voice is impressive and clear, her stage presence commanding.  I loved this act.





4:30 pm  - TV on the Radio – We stayed for a song or two, checked out Joy Formidable, then got food. During our break for eating, we could hear Chromeo in the background.







4:30 pm – The Joy Formidable – Only caught a small amount of this act.









6:30 pm alt-J – We finally found Trish and Jack for this act.  We were very close to the front and filmed “Left Hand Free” for Sidney, since he’s fond of that song.







6:30 pm  We saw the neon lights for George Ezra on his stage as we made our way to Natalie’s favorite of the festival, Chvrches. We heard “Budapest” In the background.




7:30 pm CHVRCHES – Dana had hoped to get Natalie into the deaf area. She knew some of the interpreters working the festival. Unfortunately, her friends were at other stages, so Natalie had to settle for front row (boo hoo.) Dana wanted to see all of Chvrches, so I took and quick detour to see other acts and circled back to Natalie and Dana at the end. We all particularly liked her banter about Busboys and Poets and about the first DC critic to review them. Dana commented that every time we've seen Chvrches, the lead has improved her stage act.



7:30 pm Red Baraat – A world fusion band I had heard about and intended to see for a while. The reputation I recalled was that they had a ton of energy on stage. My experience watching them did not match that expectation. And there were next to no vocals with the music, so I really wasn’t into them. Interesting tidbit: they look like a very purposely multi-cultural band.




7:30 pm boots – This one was a weird experience. Boots is a critic’s darling. All Songs Considered did an entire podcast on why you should love boots. His music is interesting and sounds different that anything else out there. At least one of his songs reminds me of a mellowed out Nine Inch Nails, but others sound entirely different.  Problem was, he was up against Chvrches, which should have significant overlap with his potential fan base. I came to his set late and was able to walk up to the front row barricade.  There weren’t more than 100 people watching, total, in a crowd of (maybe) 25,000 people.  That’s really disappointing. Another disappointment, his sound mixing. You couldn’t hear the vocals over the instruments, and there was feedback sometimes. He was very nice and when the crowd said they couldn’t hear the vocals, he asked the sound tech to please adjust accordingly – points to him for that. He was also theatric and bold in his movements on stage, which is a really good sign in a new artist. I heard the one song and know and like by boots, and then a few songs later, there was a song that had a lot of anger and angst in it. It ended with him leaving the sound running, hopping the barricade, and walking away through the crowd, seemingly either pissed or theatric. I genuinely couldn’t tell if he was upset about the crowd or the turnout or if it was supposed to be part of the act. Enigmatic? Perhaps.  It was a little too abstract for me, but where his music intersects with slightly more mainstream sounds, I feel there’s a good chance I could like more by him. His set ended early, allowing me to return for the last few songs by Chvrches.

Natalie and I left right after Chvrches, walking back with Dana, who got us all to sing the Star Spangled Banner to distract from Natalie’s “Zombie Feet.” (More dead than even ghost feet.) It was another 10 miles of hiking that day – much more than Natalie is accustomed to. She liked it, though, and said she’d do it again.

Saturday, September 26, 2015

Jeremy Messersmith Concert, Sept 17, 2015, Genevieve’s back yard

Jeremy Messersmith, 9-17-2015
Thursday, September 17 was a crappy day for me. I was crazy stressed at work and my head throbbed with pain for a big chunk of the day. My boss had resigned and it had finally hit me how much work I would have to cover after she left (with no possibility or desire to be promoted into her job.)  So all told, a sucky day. Also, the kid’s back to school party had been moved from the week before to that Thursday that we had to miss, and there was a school meeting after for the 5th grade trip, so it felt like a no-win day.  And the logistics of a 6 pm homemade-food-only potluck on a Thursday night were crazy tough. I had to do all the prep work, and most of the cooking, the night before.

Still, I was glad I went to the show.

First, it was at my friend Genevieve’s house. Not only was it great to support a friend, but she lives only a couple miles from us, and Genevieve was the one who went to the last Jeremy Messersmith Supper Club Tour house concert with Eric and me. Plus she has a beautiful home (She’s an architect extraordinaire), and a dog and 2 guinea pigs (selling points for Natalie.) She had even set up a “stage” in the back yard from logs and candles. Very pretty.

Second, it was a house concert. There is no better way to experience music than a house concert. It’s intimate, relaxed, not loud, and you can interact directly with the musician. The tricky part is just hearing about them while an act is small enough to want to do them, and knowing who you might like.

Third, it was an early show. We were out of there by 9, which was great for a school/work night.

Fourth, it was a perfect fall night: clear, crisp, not buggy, with a hint of fireplace wood smoke in the air- idyllic.

Fifth, it was (mostly) kid-friendly.  Most of the lyrics were clean. There were a few f-bombs and references to getting drunk, but lots of humorous lyrics too that made Natalie laugh. The dog also let her pet him, which was a highlight for Natalie. We did get a sitter for Sidney because we didn’t think he’d be able to stay quiet and it was past his bedtime.

Sixth, dinner was included. It might have been hard to cook in the hour before the show, but it was very nice to go to a potluck where everyone was asked to label ingredient on the dishes. Jeremy’s super club tours all have potlucks attached to them.

Seventh, Jeremy Messersmith delivers a great show. It was an entirely acoustic set, and Jeremy’s diction is clear over the music, so even for people who don’t know all the words, they could understand the clever nuances of the songwriting. I particularly loved the inappropriate question jar. It’s a mechanism for him to interact with overly polite, quiet, audiences. He made a point about how he added “inappropriate” as a social engineering trick to get fun, interesting questions into the mix. They added laughter to the event, and hearing his answers made you feel closer to Jeremy.

I’d say, if you’re having a bad day, there’s no better way to make it better than to go to a Jeremy Messersmith concert.@jmessersmith

Sunday, July 19, 2015

Holychild, The Family Crest, and The Lonely Wild at the Rock and Roll Hotel, July 2015

I went to two shows at Rock and Roll Hotel this week, after at least a year of avoiding that venue. I really don’t like the space. It’s a long rectangle with low ceilings and therefore a low stage at the far end. If you’re my height (5’ 5”), you can’t see much of anything unless you are close to the front.  There’s no seating at all, no public transportation, and difficult parking. It’s also hot, and they have a bad habit of shining laser lights into the audience, blinding us. But, the art won out over the venue this time, and so I went.

Holychild did a free show that was underwritten by Audi and was recorded as if it would become part of a commercial or online video. The duo was a trio this time, and the lead singer was every bit as vivacious and fun as last time I saw them at Sweetlife Festival. She wore a velvet cat suit this time, with feathers at the cuffs, and her signature gems on the middle part of her hair. She also left the stage twice to come hug people and dance in the audience. It was very entertaining, and I still have earworms playing in my head from their “brat pop” sound.  Jill and I liked the show.  (July 15, 2015)

Holychild,  Rock and Roll Hotel, July 2015

Two days later, Eric and I went to see one of my top favorite bands from last year, The Family Crest. I’ve missed two of their shows in DC in the last year (I was out of town), and I wasn’t about to miss this one. Their opening, The Lonely Wild, was very good, but a little too 70s/folk/Stevie Nicks for my taste. I did like their use of brass and the female singer seemed to know a little bit about a whole lot of instruments. The male singer had a really good voice, too. Everything sounded lovely, I just didn’t care for any of the songs. The performance was average, but that’s ok if you are talented.

The Lonely Wild,  Rock and Roll Hotel, July 2015

The Family Crest was excellent musically.  They do beautiful chamber pop, and the lead singer is opera trained.  He is amazing, and the musicians made the music soar. There was a lot of energy on that little stage.  I’m pretty sure the two singers (male and female) are married to one another. She was super sweet and endearing on stage. LOVED that their merch included onesies for babies. I wracked my brain trying to think of someone who would appreciate one; alas, I failed to come up with anyone who had a baby recently and is a fan of the band. I only wish the lights guy hadn’t spent the evening shining the lasers into the audience’s eyes every other beat. I felt like I missed half the show. I would definitely see them again.
The Family Crest,  Rock and Roll Hotel, July 2015


Packing for a festival


earplugs
trash bags
towel
mud-approved sandals or old sneakers
cargo pants/shorts
rain gear
sunscreen -some festivals only allow LOTION
bug spray wipes - no aerosol allowed at some festivals
stadium seat
empty water bottle
flashlight
blinking bracelets
backpack
wet wipes
Kleenex
bandaids/tums/Lactaid
a book in a plastic bag
hot weather clothes
chilly weather clothes - include light sweater or sweatshirt
hairbands
hat
sunglasses
sanitary napkins
cords
battery charger
phone
camera
bandana
Snacks for the ride/breakfast foods
PJs/toiletries 
sports bras, shirts, underwear, sleepwear
extra ziplocks
swimwear for the beach/pool before or after the festival




9/26/15
And I add to this  notepad and pen, cash and credit card, ID, TICKET
Local shows: metro card, car keys


Thursday, June 25, 2015

Firefly Festival, June 18-19, 2015

Day One (Thursday) – first impression: I'm at the Firefly Festival, learning that most festivals pale in comparison to Austin City Limits. It's day one and I'm contemplating skipping half the festival, especially if it rains again. Mud pits; undersized, low-slung stages for the crowd size with too few, too small screens; outdated app; inadequate signage; poor lighting near dangerous terrain at night; hidden port-a-potties; no frozen non-alcoholic drinks; no labeling of vegan food; very drunk 20-somethings; not the best lineup; not enough water refill stations; horrible mud pit choke points between stages. I'm scared of what Saturday brings when the other 2/3 of the crowd arrives. ‪#‎fireflysucks‬‬

My friend Jill described the Firefly lineup as very alt-nation, but all of us that went are more XMU. That difference in taste skews my perception of the performances. The only acts I remember from that horrible first day were Grizfolk and the Kooks. I saw others, but none of them made any impression, and that was before I started taking notes.

Grizfolk had their name big on the screen behind them, which always makes me happy – festival and opener bands should never assume you know their name. The lead singer cursed a lot, and not because it made sense to do so. I think he must have thought that the audience would like the cursing. It made him sound stupid.  I honestly remember nothing about the music.  Before I go to a music festival, I make a spreadsheet of all the acts and preview each of them, keeping notes. The purpose is to not miss an awesome act just because I haven’t heard the name before. My preview of Grizfolk was “boring pop.”  I stand by that description.  According to Dana, we also say Ryn Weaver, Panama Wedding, and Young Rising Sons that day.  I took photos of these bands, but I really don't remember them:




The Kooks sounded wonderful. I’ve got to give it to Firefly for hiring the best sound techs I’ve ever come across. There wasn’t a single performance all weekend where I thought the bass was overwhelming the vocals. That’s a very rare and appreciated experience.  The Kooks are British alt rock. (“Bad Habit” is the biggest hit right now.) We were close enough to see, but there was nothing special in the performance that stood out. Just fun, danceable, sing-along rock.

The forecast for Friday was a little hot, but no rain at all and some breeze, which was promising as we left the gorgeous AirBNB house we were staying in. (SO much better than glamping!)  We arrived at the festival and were immediately impressed by the effort they had put into mud abatement overnight. The worst problem – the path between the two sides of the park – had mud bulldozed to the size and gravel laid down, creating a very nice walkway. Other areas had some extra mulch, and over the course of the weekend, plywood and wood shavings appeared in other locations. I give it to them for trying. Friday, there were INSANE lines for the water stations – they needed about 4 times as many stations.

By Saturday, they’d jerry-rigged about double the number of faucets. Still not enough, but they were aware and responsive, which counts for a lot.  They never did fix the signage for the port-a-potties. The problem was that they used the same color green fence covers around the restrooms as they did the perimeter fence, so it all blended together visually from a distance, and restrooms and water were not on the maps.  I was still discovering restroom locations late Saturday. That’s ridiculous. They should have used neon yellow or something contrasting so you could tell where they were at a distance. The lawn stage toilets were in a prime spot near the stage that was always crowded, so most people couldn’t reach them – bad planning. They also needed more hand sanitizer stations – the ones in the port-a-potties were usually empty.

Another permanent problem: the screens by the stages were much too small and placed too low to the ground. The people in the back couldn’t see anything. And all the stages were fairly low to the ground. Put them higher so that people can see the acts over the crowd and the totems!  This part of my review is going to be emailed to Firefly. Maybe they will improve, but I won’t be coming back to this festival, mostly because of the crowd.

Food: Wok on the Wild Side and Tico’s Tacos were my staples. The blackberry lemonade at Tico’s was my crack all weekend – mostly for the ice. I also went to the place that sold salad and giant hunks of watermelon – yum! Loved the veggies in the Wok noodle stir-fry. Loved the pork carnitas at Tico’s.

About the crowd: I think that Dewey Beach must have been pretty empty this weekend, because all the drunk, doped up college kids were with me at Firefly. A couple of the housemates we stayed with commented that at 25 years, they felt old for this crowd. My peeps of the middle-aged persuasion were few and far between. Plus: the half-naked crowd often had pretty bodies that could pull off half-naked. (And I mean that literally. I saw girls with just pasties on top. Plenty of men in just speedos, too. One girl in a thong bikini.) Minus: pot smoke and vomit. Dover, DE is also the middle of nowhere. That’s why we had such a hard time finding a place to stay other than camping. Plenty of people drove an hour or more each way each day just because there are no hotels near, and the town itself is run down with lots of vacant store fronts and dilapidated homes. That’s a shame, because there’s some pretty architecture in that town.

Since I’m on a roll, I’m going to comment on random memories. I wanted to have ribbons to give out for best totem, most courageous fashion choices, most festive, etc. The totem award would have gone to Ross, who wrote his name in glow in the dark tubes and held it up on a stick. You could see through it to the stage, but couldn’t miss it. There were lots of 20-somethings that seemed to misunderstand the purpose of the totems (finding your friends in a big crowd.) Instead, they used them to wave to the singer, blocking the view of everyone behind them. There were lots of face cutout totems that blocked views very effectively, and one jellyfish totem that pissed me off. I barely saw one of the bands because it was so big and blocked so much of the view.

 
A few of the courageous fashion choices included crochet afghan capris and a paper mache cat headdress. There was one death metal dude in full leathers in a head index above 100. There was a gay guy in speedos with a photo of a cat on his crotch. That was probably the closest a pussy every got to his penis. There were a LOT of cat clothes, on the guys and the girls, both. There was the happy drunk boy and his sober friend/babysitter who joined Jill and me for lunch. One lady with a rocking body wore the perfect sundress – casual, light weight, flattering. Win. Others wore fancy lace and couldn’t sit down because of the mud. Fail. There was this mismatched couple that drew my eye – a gorgeous, youngish, statuesque dark black women in skimpy outfits and a grizzled old white man with a leg brace that looked former military to me. He was smiling like he won the lottery, staring at her. I wondered if he’d hired her, or if he was her sugar daddy. There was an old dude with awesome tats, and he was standing near a guy with a romance-cover worthy chest. Might have even had a nice face, but I can’t remember anything but that chest. Wowzers! There were lots of pretty muscles on display, and some not so pretty guts, but mostly better than average. One nice thing about the party-hard camping and pot smoking: no one gave me a hard time about napping or reading a book in the back of the audience during a so-so act. They were all napping too. I dyed my hair pink for this festival and was in good company – tons of others had dyed their hair too.

So, onward to the acts.  First up Friday was Phebe Ryan. I’ve never heard of her – she’s a pop girl who went viral with a cover mash up of R. Kelly’s Ignition and Miguel’s Do You. She had green hair and took a video of the audience to show to her mom. We saw the last part of her act for Dana because Dana is a fan. I thought she was unremarkable.







Stetson Rose was my second stop on Friday. It was an acoustic set in the Coffee House tent. She had a sweet, nice voice. Typical inward-looking girl music done well. Not my thing.



Next was Clean Bandit at the main stage. The vocalist was an awesome British black lady who had a big personality. I loved the use of strings in this electronic dance group. This act was more interesting than most. The black lady is not in their publicity photos, so I wonder if she might have been hired for the tour.






Knox Hamilton was next up on the Lawn stage. This is a band fronted by a long-bearded dude who looks like he belongs in a folk ban, singing like he’s in the Bee Gees. The had an electronic dance sound and all wore black on the black stage (a pet peave of mine.) Work It Out is the song you might know from them. Pretty standard alt rock.




We tried the “beercade” for the air conditioning. I don’t know why they put beer in the name, and calling it air conditioned might have been a bit of exaggeration.  All the game were free though, and it was shaded, so we tried dance revolution while cooling off. The machine told us we’d all FAILED. Not going to be winning any dance-offs anytime soon. Bummer.

Wolf Alice was next. It was an English band with a harder rock edge, okay in the background, but we didn’t stay long.

Manchester Orchestra was exactly the same as the last time I saw them. They just stand there and sound awesome. I listened while resting in the shade. The inadequate screens made it impossible for me to see anything.



Sylvan Esso was a highlight of the festival. They played on the Backyard stage, and I couldn’t help but comment that the dude in the duo got so lucky when Amelia agreed to work with him. She owned that stage and the audience. Fun, vibrant, confident, engaging – she’s the bomb. She told the audience that she practices dancing by seducing herself in front of the mirror and they should too. Then maybe they would sometime be performing in front of a thousand people in a full spanx onsie. She had impressive platform shoes and still MOVED in sinuous, unexpected ways. She’s not perfect bodied or classically beautiful, but it didn’t matter – she was sexy. Great voice and music, too. It made me more of a fan to see this show.

There was a very festival moment at his act where a college kid asked the beer vendor for some ice from his empty bucket and the beer vendor offered him an ice bucket challenge – the kid was very into it. I loved that vendor for it.

Walk on the Moon was next for me. It made me cringe to hear the pretty boy front man appeal to the crowd for positive energy. So young and naïve, so hippy-dippy. Shut Up And Dance With Me sounded good, though.

Bear Hands was one of the acts I was looking forward to most, but they turned out to be unremarkable live. They do a dancy alt rock, like most of the acts at this festival. The jellyfish totem was my enemy at this set.

Awolnation came out in white outfits, which is a plus for me, but this was the only act were I thought the sound quality was bad, though in retrospect, it could have also been the singer’s voice was bad. I left quickly to go see Big Data, which was a HORRIBLE disappointment. They didn’t use the screen behind the band for Siri, and she makes the show fun. Big Data doesn’t have good vocals. Epic fail.

Odesza used recorded music and appeared as silouettes against a pretty screen. I didn’t stay. I wonder if Amelia from Sylvan Esso made a guest appearance for her song with them?

Morrissey was poorly attended. He went on stage a little late after a film montage intro that felt out of touch and inspired by a cool-factor that was dated a couple decades. He looked his age and had changed some arrangements, perhaps for his voice.

All the people who weren’t at Morrissey were at the small Forest stage for Glass Animals.  It was packed. I couldn’t get even a glimpse of the band. They were bass-heavy on some songs, and sounded good for others.

We finished Friday with most of Modest Mouse’s set. I had been picturing a different look for the lead singer, and had no idea the band had so many members.  Was it 7 people on stage? We were pretty far away, so it was hard to tell. There were fun songs I loved and some jamming that bored me. We left a little early to avoid the max exodus.



Firefly Festival, June 20, 2015

Saturday started off with Andrew McMahon in the Wilderness, a singer-songwriter, on the main stage. I don’t really care for his music, but he was a great performer. He stood on the piano, entered the crowd, sent parachutes into the crowd, and used charges to pop giant helium balloons that dumped confetti on the crowd. As Dana pointed out, nothing original or expensive, but still tons more entertaining tham 98% of all acts. Dana loves his song “Cecilia and the Satellite.”

Next act was Griswolds – and I’m feeling déjà vu as I type this. I honestly don’t remember anything about them, but my notes make them sound almost exactly like Grizfolk from Thursday: too many f-bombs, endorcing drunkenness, same stage, name in big letters on the screen behind them. The only difference: Griswolds are from Australia.

Next up: Phoebe Ryan (again.) She has green hair and is famous for a cover mashup of R. Kelly’s “Ignition” and Miguel’s “Do You.” I’ve never heard either of those originals, and hadn’t heard her cover until Dana emailed me the link. (Where does she get all the pop? Eek! Bleh!) I thought she was an entirely average female pop singer. It was in the coffee house, but not acoustic. At least there was shade. It was packed, so I sat almost under a table and read.

Gary Clark Jr. is a black dude who does Texas blues rock with extremely fuzzy guitar. I hate his sound, but if you like that kind of music, he’s talented. I could not see the stage from where I was, so I have no idea how he performed.

Night Terrors of 1927 were an unexpected joy to watch. I’m not a huge fan of their music. They are good enough, but I don’t know any of their songs well enough to butcher in the shower. The lead singer has a big, soaring voice, but it was his entertaining banter that endeared him to me and the rest of the crowd. At one point he threw away the line “It would be an honor to have my heart broken by you” to introduce a song. Another time, he offered the HUG ME sign hairy dude a big hug after the show, then commented on how the sweat would make a slurping noise as they pulled apart. A little funny, a little wry, altogether endearing. Also loved the smile on the keyboardist.

Betty Who was another winner. I went for Dana, who is a huge fan. Betty was vivacious and engaging. She has big girl curves and a Marilyn Monroe face with platinum blond hair. She invited the crowd to dance with her and we all did – her energy was contagious. At one point, she took her shirt off and just wore her black bra. Pretty voice with great range, but uninspired lyrics. A fun, dancy pop show with a lot of gay men in the audience.






Matt and Kim were on the main stage, and I was WAY far in the back, but I could still see their 1,000 watt smiles. They have the exact same act as always, but it’s still not old. They curse and saw outrageously sexual things while looking disparately wholesome. Kim does the booty dance. They send confetti into the crowd and run around on platforms on stage like hyped-up monkeys. (Bonus – they were high enough to see!)



I caught a bit of Alison Wonderland, who is just another loud DJ. Her set continued FOREVER.

Foster the People had no personality, as usual, but my friends were excited to see them and got some good photos. The lead singer always looks like a deer caught in headlights to me. I found them boring and left quickly.

I caught the folk trip Wind and Wave next. I thought they were average, and the crowd was tiny. I did love their retro-sounding song “Raising Hands Raising Hell Raise 'Em High.”

I ended up in the Coffee House again, mostly to have an easy place to meet up with my friends, and I’m pretty sure the Milo Greene show I stumbled into was a late addition to the schedule. I texted that I was alone in the coffee house with my twelve friends – it really was rather empty. (There was some confusion-at first I thought I was seeing Echosmith because I looked at the wrong day’s schedule.) The set was beautiful and entirely acoustic vocals and guitars. I videotaped one song.

Trish came to meet me to go to Kid Cudi together. We were both hugely disappointed.  I happen to love Kid Cudi, but I didn’t realize he can’t sing. He missed SO many notes – so sad. He did have quite a light show, though.

We were evacuated during our traverse to see Kings of Leon. We joined a flood of people headed to the parking lot. I particularly liked the lightening and the spontaneous sing-alongs. We got back to the car and waited to confirm that Dana had found her way to our car or Jill’s. She eventually found us just as it started to pour rain, with a 17 year old in tow who was deathly afraid of lightening and needed to find her dad to get a ride home. Trish did some fancy Frogger-style driving to bypass most of the line out of the parking lot, then we took our teen refugee to the meeting place and waited for her dad to arrive. We still beat Jill home. She was more polite and waited her turn in the car line.