Search Results for: bonnaroo bottle

Live Review: David Byrne And DeVotchKa, Morrison, CO, June 20, 2009

david-byrne-22What’s different about David Byrne in 2009? His suit fits. The notorious image from Stop Making Sense of Byrne in the big-and-tall suit, undulating like a used-car-lot figurine, is burned in the brains of the YouTube generation. These days? He’s that weird guy with white hair who curated a stage at Bonnaroo two weeks ago. Thankfully, neither of these preconceptions was visible at Saturday’s show at Red Rocks, where Byrne played to an audience who more than likely bought original Talking Heads releases on vinyl.

Known mostly as a “newgrass” and jam-band hub, Colorado has seen a recent wave of indie-leaning acts, highlighted by Denver’s own DeVotchKa. The foursome came dressed for the occasion in matching black suits, save tubist/bassist Jamie Schroder in a black polka-dot dress and red cardigan. Singer Nick Urata crooned in usual fashion over the tribal-orchestral beats supplied by the rotating violin, accordion, tuba, stand-up bass and drums behind him. As made famous by the opening credits of Little Miss Sunshine (for which DeVotchKa played the score), “The Winner Is” was a crowd favorite.  The group closed with a raucous European polka jam that sparked droves of uninhibited Coloradans to dance in their rows, Fat Tire cans in hand.

Like every element of his set, Byrne’s entrance was carefully choreographed. The 57-year-old took the stage at the stroke of 9 p.m., leading a parade of white-clad musicians and back-up singers. Generously offering to forego his customary pre-show babble (he told us this through two minutes of pre-show babble), Byrne opened with a lush version of “Strange Overtones.” It was the first of several songs off of last year’s Everything That Happens Will Happen Today with Brian Eno, quickly followed by the heaven-reaching “One Fine Day.” Throughout the set, Byrne was sporadically joined by three interpretive dancers. In the usual style of his live show, their moves seemed to exist independent of time or contemporary culture. But, in the end, that’s a large part of what David Byrne is. Old, but not really. Corny, but still somehow cool. At one point late in the performance, Byrne led the ensemble in a choreographed “sitting” office-chair routine, complete with a high-speed rolling slide across the diameter of the stage to conclude the song.

The natural acoustics of Red Rocks boded well for Byrne and his 10 stage performers, with warm reverberating bass tones and vocals that seemed to carry miles away from the hills of Morrison. The audience contributed to the late-show appearance of power duo “Once In A Lifetime” and “Life During Wartime,” the latter releasing a bottled-up dance blowout in the aisles. Byrne returned for three encores, the first of which included Al Green cover “Take Me To The River.”

—John Hendrickson

David Byrne And Brian Eno’s ”One Fine Day” (download):

DeVotchKa’s ”You Love Me” (download):

Posted in FREE MP3s, LIVE REVIEWS | Leave a comment

Win A Limited Edition Bonnaroo Stainless Steel Water Bottle

waterbottle1Don’t be a Bonnarube: This year, stainless-steel water bottle manufacturer Stanley is helping Bonnaroo go a little greener by providing free drinking water to all festivalgoers and selling a limited-edition nineteen13 bottle (pictured, $22). The water is free regardless of whether you buy the bottle, and $1 from each purchase goes toward the Global Water Challenge to support worldwide fresh water supply and sanitation. Artists performing at Bonnaroo (June 11-14 in Manchester, Tenn.) will be using the bottles onstage as well. We don’t have to tell you how bad plastic water bottles are for the environment. Find out more about the Less Bottled Water Program here.

We’re giving away Stanley water bottles to the first three people—even those not going to Bonnaroo—who correctly answer the following trivia questions. Email your answers to tips@magnetmagazine.com.

Who got their first recording credit with a 1980 song called “R2-D2 We Wish You A Merry Christmas”?

Former Rosebuds guitarist Justin Vernon currently performs under what name?

Which singer’s final album ended with the words “Shazbot, nanu nanu”?

This contest has ended. Congrats to the winners. The answers to our trivia questions are Jon Bon Jovi, Bon Iver and Bon Scott. Thanks to everyone who played.

Posted in NEWS | Leave a comment

My Morning Jacket: Line Of Duty

mmj_tunnelhorzc5251Many are called, but few are chosen. After four albums of classic new songs and another summer of onstage heroics, My Morning Jacket has become America’s best live rock ’n’ roll band. By Noah Bonaparte Pais

You are putting your life in danger.”
It’s well past midnight on the third and final night of Lollapalooza 2007, and the only things missing from Jim James’ Almost Famous moment are a suburban swimming pool and a plastic cup of acid-spiked Kool-Aid. On the Kennedy Expressway, one of several primary traffic arteries feeding Chicago’s downtown Loop, a white limousine carrying James’ My Morning Jacket crew is speeding away from the city. Tonight, along with the usual suspects—MMJ drummer Patrick Hallahan, keyboardist Bo Koster, guitarist Carl Broemel and bassist Tom “Two-Tone Tommy” Blankenship—the band’s entourage has expanded to include a few new faces: Craig Pfunder (frontman of Louisville, Ky., homeboys VHS Or Beta), Peter Bauer (organist for New York City rockers the Walkmen) and MAGNET (packed like a sardine between the bear-sized Hallahan and his exceedingly gracious wife, Brigid).

Read More »

Posted in FEATURES | Leave a comment