Manufactured content took a well earned break last week so we could focus on the draft. This week we're doing another question that I think will be some fun, will highlight that the majority of us are bitter old men, that I have the best taste in music, and will paint a better picture of everyone.
So, the questions on the table today are about concerts. Bands. Music. Professionals. We're not talking about your kids recorderpalooza here.
What was the first concert you went to?
We'll define as first concert you initiated the decision to attend, whether or not you were chaperoned or not. So, your parents dragging you to a Burl Ives Christmas when you were 3 is not what I'm going for here.
What was the last concert you attended?
I mean. duh.
What was the favorite concert of a single band you attended?
Define as you wish! But, let's keep this to a single band and not "Lillith Fair 94 when I saw Indigo Girls, Joan Osbourne, Blue Femininity - Canada's Preeminent Indigo Girls tribute band, Jewel, Lisa Loeb, Melissa Etheridge, and Strange Fire - an instrumental didgeridoo tribute to Indigo Girls"
What is the one band you haven't seen that you wish you would have? Again, you define. Bands that no longer exist? Before your time? Ones you intend to get next time they come through?
I'm a huge concert goer, and if anything I've upped my attendance over the years. Wear earplugs and see your favorite bands people. Take your kids! Take your spouse! Find a Concert Buddy. My wife HATES concerts and I cannot convince here otherwise (maybe the fact she was an audiologist?). No matter, I'll go alone or with a couple of friends that like me dig concerts. The world is crazy and weird, trust me, you'll never look back and wish you hadn't spent an evening seeing something that brings you joy.
Cool? Cool.
First
- Foreigner and Billy Squier at Mecca Milwaukee, WI November, 1981. Foreigner 4 was first album I paid for with allowance money. Billy Squier was even more of a thing by this time for me as "Don't Say No" was hitting it big, and lemme tell you, nothing was better than hearing In The Dark at the Roller Skating Rink. Parents dropped me and a buddy off, and picked us up, and I'm sure my parents were sitting in the car waiting for us for at least an hour. I still contend Billy Squier holds up pretty well to this day.
Last
- Swervedriver and Failure at Crystal Ballroom, Portland, 4/17/19.
Swervedriver is a band I've followed since mid/early 90's. They are as classic a "shoegaze" band as you can get. Just released a new album, still sound great. I can't pretend that they are "famous" or anything, but they did have a song called "Rave Down" that was a staple on MTV/120 Minutes for a bit. Great song, like the ultimate driving song to me. Failure is just a classic band that fits my tastes. What used to be called alternative or post grunge, little bit "weird" (cuz gosh, they play instruments and sing), but lots of cool sounding stuff. Give "The Heart is a Monster" a listen. Previous 3 before that were Bob Mould April 5, Deafheaven March 18, Interpol Feb 1. I like going to concerts.
Favorite
Where do you go with this? Go with your favorite band, like one of the many times I've gotten to Pixies play for 2+ hours in a tiny club? Getting to see a band you thought disbanded and you'd never see again, but they get back together, like when I got to see Faith No More? Is it based on who you went with like when I took my special lady friend in high school to see Rush from a suite my dads employer had at Rosemont Horizon? Hearing Nine Inch Nails for the first time at Lollapalooza? The pure and stupid fun of any Flaming Lips show? A show so freaking loud you think you're going to die like when I saw Social Distortion? But I'm going with...
- Radiohead at Moda Center 4/9/17.
I have a weird relationship with them. I was peak grunge, Nirvana, Seattle sound age when Creep hit. And of course, loved it. Their next albums just didn't click with me at the time. I thought The Bends was ok at the time, but some weird stuff. Kept getting weirder and less "grungey". Nothing like Creep. I lost touch and didn't actively listen. Then as I started listening to Pandora, I kept hearing more and more of them. And then got super into them. This was the first time they had played Portland since 1996. Was in the general admission floor. My buddy and I arrived perfectly as the opener left stage, and everyone on the floor went to get beers, etc. We ended up about 3rd row deep stage right. Sound was super given the venue and really great and diverse setlist, including ending with Creep, which even playing that song anymore is super rare for them. - David Bowie is probably 1B here.
Jesus, what a show. Look at that setlist man! I mean, really, my god.
Regret
- Prince
I mean. goddammitsomuch. I was dumb when I was younger and didn't think it was "cool enough". He came through Portland to a 1000 seat small club in 2013, and I was too late to get tickets and I didn't make enough of a point to find some. I will always kick myself for this. So stupid.