Re: [MMouse]: Shins/764-HERO/Modest Mouse

2000-09-11 Thread Diaz Andrew W

Did anybody record this show?

-andrew-

On Mon, 11 Sep 2000 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

> First thing to mention, and I don't think anyone on the Mouse list has 
> brought this up, is what an interesting opening band The Shins are.  They're 
> like a very very early (circa 1976) Talking Heads, and their sound was tight 
> enough Sunday night to make people start howling.  Unfortunately, their CD 
> EP/7" doesn't carry any of the strength and eclecticism of their live show.  
> Here's hoping the new release on Sub-Pop will be better.
> I've seen 764-HERO on better nights, because their bass seemed to be 
> mixed up too high for this show.  You know how sometimes a band like Bardo 
> Pond can kind of overwhelm you with low frequencies til you want to fall 
> asleep?  That was kind of the HERO show last night.  James B. was full of 
> energy, though.  But it's become more apparent over time that Polly, their 
> drummer, is the backbone of 764-HERO, she was great.
>  Modest Mouse, though, was in top form, and played what was essentially a 
> greatest hits collection, starting with "Trailer Trash" as the opener.  Yes, 
> they played "Talkin Shit About a Pretty Sunset," and they also played "The 
> Way Down" from their early Fruit period.  Isaac was in as about an animated 
> mood as he ever gets.  The songs I remember, in no particular order, were 
> Convenient Parking, Doin' the Cockroach (great version), Cowboy Dan (ditto), 
> Dramamine, Breakthrough, Might, Third Planet, Dark Center of the Universe, 
> Tiny Cities Made of Ashes, Alone Down There, Wild Packs of Family Dogs, Paper 
> Thin Walls, and Lives.  Their encore (only one, about 20 minutes long), was a 
> drawn-out medley of Broke, Truckers Atlas, and Tundra/Desert.  Great show, a 
> full sellout with people everywhere, I got toasted.
> 
> Loring Wirbel
> Monument, Colo.
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> 




[MMouse]: Shins/764-HERO/Modest Mouse

2000-09-11 Thread LWirbel

First thing to mention, and I don't think anyone on the Mouse list has 
brought this up, is what an interesting opening band The Shins are.  They're 
like a very very early (circa 1976) Talking Heads, and their sound was tight 
enough Sunday night to make people start howling.  Unfortunately, their CD 
EP/7" doesn't carry any of the strength and eclecticism of their live show.  
Here's hoping the new release on Sub-Pop will be better.
I've seen 764-HERO on better nights, because their bass seemed to be 
mixed up too high for this show.  You know how sometimes a band like Bardo 
Pond can kind of overwhelm you with low frequencies til you want to fall 
asleep?  That was kind of the HERO show last night.  James B. was full of 
energy, though.  But it's become more apparent over time that Polly, their 
drummer, is the backbone of 764-HERO, she was great.
 Modest Mouse, though, was in top form, and played what was essentially a 
greatest hits collection, starting with "Trailer Trash" as the opener.  Yes, 
they played "Talkin Shit About a Pretty Sunset," and they also played "The 
Way Down" from their early Fruit period.  Isaac was in as about an animated 
mood as he ever gets.  The songs I remember, in no particular order, were 
Convenient Parking, Doin' the Cockroach (great version), Cowboy Dan (ditto), 
Dramamine, Breakthrough, Might, Third Planet, Dark Center of the Universe, 
Tiny Cities Made of Ashes, Alone Down There, Wild Packs of Family Dogs, Paper 
Thin Walls, and Lives.  Their encore (only one, about 20 minutes long), was a 
drawn-out medley of Broke, Truckers Atlas, and Tundra/Desert.  Great show, a 
full sellout with people everywhere, I got toasted.

Loring Wirbel
Monument, Colo.
[EMAIL PROTECTED]