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Blonde Redhead At MASS MoCA

Saturday June 27th, I saw Blonde Redhead play at MASS MoCA. In case you’ve never been, MASS MoCA (Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art) is a quality museum in North Adams, MA, in a refurbed industrial site. (The whole project and N. Adams itself is a prime model of revitalizing these dead industrial towns all across the US.) In addition to a lot of great, rotating exhibits, they also have a solid music line-up throughout the summer months.

Depending on weather, concerts can be held inside or out. There was the constant threat of rain on Saturday, so Blonde Redhead played inside. In either case, space is limited and sell-out crowds happen (not this time, it looked like). The upshot to a small, modern venue is good acoustics and seating. We sat mid-audience and it was plenty loud with a clear view of the entire stage. The crowd was a little dead and so got heckled a bit by Kazu Makino. But as expected, they played a good live show. No opening act so the evening was a little short, but I’ll take an enjoyable short show over a less enjoyable long one anytime.

Lolla ’08

Courtesy poppagoth @ Flickr

So this past weekend we drove to Chicago for Lollapalooza. For those not in the know, the touring Lollapalooza of the 90s has given way to a one-stop, multi-day festival held in Grant Park, along the shores of Michigan Lake. Last time we went was three years ago. This year’s was twice as large, taking up the entire park. More than 100 bands played on multiple stages spread out over a mile of park. I was able to catch Radiohead, Bloc Party, Rage Against the Machine, Nine Inch Nails, Kanye West, Gnarls Barkley, The Raconteurs, The Black Keys, Stephen Malkmus & The Jicks, Mark Ronson, and a few others I’m forgetting at the moment.

Highlights? Radiohead’s fireworks display, Rage doing their thing just as I remember, having to climb 8 stories because the elevator was broken (again), and Reznor’s varied set. It was a very enjoyable time with nice weather, beautiful people, lots of shade, clear views of the stages, and even a variety of good vendors selling food and schwag. There was rumor of Barack Obama showing up to introduce an act (perhaps Chicago natives + Obama supporters Wilco or Kanye West) but that didn’t pan out. Shoot.

The drive from our doorstep to Chicago is about 14 hours, which is definitely a haul. We had a little spare time to spend around the city and ate some tasty food (including a Thai restaurant around the block from our hotel, and an African restaurant where I had fufu with spinach sauce, which was unexpectedly great).

It was one of the most enjoyable concerts I’ve attended and a really nice escape from the 9-5 drudgery.

Want pics? I didn’t take any (they don’t allow SLRs in without a press pass), so check out what’s on Flickr.

Life, Hersh & Shark

Thursday night I saw Seymour Hersh speak. The talk was great, and I had grand seats. Arrived about fourty-five minutes early, got a lot of reading done that I wouldn’t have otherwise. The place started filling in at seven, and by the time he began at 7:30 the place was packed. He covered a wide variety of issues, mostly centered around the Bush Administration and the war in Iraq. Truthfully I could of had a bit less about Bush. But Hersh also discussed other topics like Vietnam. The personal anecdotes alone were worth going to see.

A few hecklers in the crowd. Well, only one, but bound to be others. The crowd itself was pretty old, I was sort of disappointed in that respect. From what I could see most of the people were elderly locals. Which is great, but it would have been nice to see more students.

Of course, maybe I was just sitting in the blue-hair section. I saw the people I knew I was going to see there.

Ultimately after an hour and a half, walking away I was filled with an immense feeling of.. disenchantment. It’s hard not to talk politics or current events these days without feeling depressed, but the sort of issues that Hersh raised for me were all pretty dark.

How a bunch of rural poor reservists couldn’t have possibly thought up the sort of torture schemes at Abu Ghraib confirmed that it wasn’t just a few “bad apples.” The inevitable psychological trauma that our troops will endure, something I had somewhat blocked out. Recounting one trip Hersh made to see a Vietnam veteran involved in the My Lai massacre, and the conversation between Hersh and the veteran’s mother, was particularly chilling. Undoubtably we’ll see the same sort of thing here.

For some reason they moved the Q & A session with Hersh from 2:30pm on Thurs to 9am on Friday. I didn’t go, way too early. But Hersh was a charismatic, highly effective speaker. The very fact that he was able to make the crowd laugh somewhat when discussing such troubling matters is indicative.

Friday night I went to the Buzzsaw benefit concert. Three local bands (or two local and one from.. Jersey or something, wasn’t counting) and then the main event. We Versus the Shark. And they were great. I really recommend their album Ruin Everything, which you should be able to pick up off their website soon. They put on a great, high-energy performance. Was a really great show. I can tell because my hearing still has a comfortable humming to it.

After-party then, for a good four or so hours of typical college nonsense. My only regret is that I didn’t actually buy the album (have a burned copy..) and that I didn’t personally congratulate We vs Shark for the great performance. But ah well. Will be hearing more from them.