We entirely missed Dutch opener Chef’Special. I just listened to them on Spotify, and I’m not heartbroken. They seem to be popular in Europe, but they are just another dude band.
Mutemath was playing as we entered and finally got a spot on the lawn. They declined video projection and instead just posted their band name on the screen. That was a jerk move – no one on the sold out lawn could see what was on stage. Since I care a lot about the live performance, this was a big fail for me.
Twenty One Pilots had a really good stage show that Eric and Natalie raved about. They started off in the suits and hoods of their promotion pics, then changed outfits a couple times. The drummer ended up shirtless for most of the show, and he’s the kind of guy who looks great that way, so no complaints. There was a lot of standing on the audience while singing (or playing drums!) and acrobatic jumping. (How did the singer jump onto a piano? Springs in his feet?) There were some cover songs with the openers coming out on set. There were some great graphics on the large screen behind the act. Natalie was impressed by the dancing skeletons. There was a mini-movie during the wardrobe change that was a bit spooky involving death-outfitted minions who where lonely. Natalie was very impressed by the creativity. I was surprised by how much of their music is reggae-inspired. I don’t know much of their catalog and didn’t love it. Eric compared them to 311 (and that’s not a compliment.)
Sidney had a one track mind – he asked at the beginning of every song if this one would be “Stressed Out.” He had to wait an hour for anything we recognized. Sidney stood for a couple songs, but then got tired and sat down in the sea of legs. I joined him, so we missed a big chunk of the visuals. We left during “A Tear in My Heart” to beat traffic out of the lot.
Not a total success, but not a fail either. It would have been a much better experience if the show had not sold out.
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