Showing posts with label Ben Folds Five. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ben Folds Five. Show all posts

Thursday, July 25, 2013

Ben Folds and Guster, PNC Bank Arts Center 7.20.13

There are few bands that define the nearly 20 year old relationship I have with my wife.  When we met she was very much into Widespread Panic, the Athens jam band.  I was still learning the rock canon before gradually moving into more left of center fare like eels.  Somewhere in the middle we met at Gomez, and ultimately, a shared fondness for Ben Folds Five.   The North Carolina band made their self titled debut in 1995 (the year we met.)  Their super successful follow up, Whatever and Ever Amen, was a staple in our house in the CD era.  We related to the angst of "Underground" and progression toward adulthood Folds warned of in "Brick" and "Jackson Cannery".    They were albums for us.  More importantly they were not angry and pessimistic.  I, for one, could not be bothered with Kurt Cobain and his reluctance to live.  That was a downer man and who needed it?  

How will I make I living?  How will I get through my 20s?  And beyond?  Unlike Cobain, it appeared I had no talent either.  That's friggin grunge my friends.  Paycheck to paycheck living and flannel shirts cause they kept you warm, not cause they look cool.  Music better lift my spirits damn it!  Otherwise, a long drive in the garage might sound tempting.  

Ben Folds Five was the up tempo piano rock the mental doctor ordered.  They were a kind of Joe Jackson for the 90s set.  They even shared Jackson's sarcasm and wit.  Robert Sledge plays a heavy bass and provides harmony.  Darren Jesse keeps the beat and does it like a professional.  Ben Folds steers the ship with lightning fast piano licks and ironic, funny and heartfelt lyrics.  It's our warm musical blanket in an ever freezing musical landscape.  

Saturday night the boys were back in NJ and brought back many good feelings.  They are the middle act in The Last Summer on Earth tour between Guster and Barenaked Ladies.  It's a good spot for them, although you can make the argument they should headline.  The truth is Barenaked Ladies have sold more records, had more hits and are indeed the bigger band.  That did not stop us before leaving before they came on.  Ben Folds Five performed like headliners and left us all very satisfied.  Their set was filled with older gems like "Alice Childress""Song for the Dumped" and the aforementioned "Brick."  That track brought tears to the eyes seated next to me.  It was good to a) hear it and then b) hear them perform it without any tricks or gimmicks.  It was played as it sounds on record.  Sometimes a faithful and true adaptation is the BEST interpretation.  

The band wasn't all ballads.  Their latest single "Do It Anyway" was high on energy and had the decent crowd pumped.  "Army", their final song, was a boisterous and joyous ending to an efficient, solid and wonderfully nostalgic set.  The format of the show prevented Folds to extend his sometimes endless song prologues.  A digital clock stared him and his bandmates right in the face and they hit all their marks.  They took stage around 8:40 and left promptly at 9:30.  Gone was the happy horsesh*t that can often plague a veteran band.   Simply put, it was well performed song after well performed song.  "Good night, thanks for coming."

No guys, thank you.  For everything.

The night started, also right on time (7:25 to 8:15 isn) with Boston band Guster.  These guys have also been making quality music since they early 90s.  It's funny, I thought I had a grasp on their catalog, and more specifically, their style.  It is, so I thought, a mix of cool, laid back rock.  Their radio hits, soft sing-a-long "Do You Love Me?" pop psych diddy "Satellite", and trippy stoner anthem "One Man Wrecking Machine" are all fun, but never really broke new ground.  Who knew they had so much more depth and a live act filled with tribal beats, blistering guitars, and epic harmonies?  Slide guitars shifted to acoustic back with a stop on bluegrass land as the night unfolded.  It was a welcome mixed back

Guster, with their rabid fan base, (including two adolescent boys who sang, danced and cherished every moment), left an indelible mark on the event.

It shows how much quality and volume is out there.  My friends and I, this blog, and everything else that espouses to know something...  it is all nonsense.

Guster has been playing and performing for decades and this was the first time I was able to see them.  They were so good it makes me question the validity of anything I do.  I should have known how good these guys are.  I should be screaming from the hills to get on the Guster bandwagon.  

But it is impossible to know all the talent out there.  It is impossible to see everyone live.  

The beauty is that at any moment you can be surprised.  You can head to an event sight unseen and with a very open mind and come out a devoted fan.  

It's like the coaching cliche every kid grows up hearing:  "You will miss 100% of the shots you don't take." 

Thanks to Guster (Ryan Miller, Adam Gardner, Brian Roseworcel, and Luke Reynolds) this summer just got a lot more interesting.  Who else can I discover for the first time?  Are their other veteran bands that may have evaded me?  Of course.  What of some newer talent?  You bet.

Stay tuned to this blog for more discoveries.  And should you want me to take a chance on somebody we are all all ears.


Special Thanks to Rory C for the amazing seats and for contributing the beautiful photos below.  







Ben Folds Five, 7.20.13 PNC Bank Art Center   photo by Rory C

Ben Folds by Rory C

Darren Jesse by Rory C

Robert Sledge by Rory C.  This upright howled during a flawless 'Brick"
Guster, by Rory C

Ryan Miller of Guster, by Rory C

Adam Gardner of Guster, by Rory C

Ed from Barenaked Ladies joined Guster, by Rory C

Friday, September 21, 2012

Still Fighting It

Ben Folds Five released a new record (hate the title:  The Sound of The Life of The Mind) this week.  Yes, the same Ben Folds that judges singing contests and has produced a steady stream of solo records over the last decade.  He managed to get back with the old band and put out new material.  The results are pretty darn good.  The single, "Do It Anyway", has all the manic energy as their earlier work.  The video boasts The Fraggles (great to see them!!) and Anna Kendrick.  Fun stuff.  Stick around (or fast forward to the end) and watch the cast sing The Fraggles theme.  It is great to see Mr Folds and Co (bassist Robert Sledge and percussionist Darren Jessee) back creating relevant music.  They are especially important to me because they have been around for a great deal of my "adult life."  They performed a free show back in State College, PA in the late 90s as I wandered aimlessly through my early 20s.  They broke up, but Folds music remained a soundtrack to my life.   The new record brought me back to many times.

"Underground" reminds me of playing NBA Jam at the best bar Wilkes-Barre (you know who you are Par 4 Cafe) ever saw.  Mitch Richmond was a beast in that game!!  Auction Chicken and Veal Moose on the menu.   Bold Belgians in bottles.  Endless goofing around, laughing and "wondering who to be."  Immaturity, laziness and abject carelessness spent mostly looking for a quality buzz.  Wasted potential.  Worse, wasted words.

"Still Fighting It" is rocking my daughter to sleep in our tiny apartment and wondering how on Earth do you "father?"  Wondering if we would be able to make rent.  Would I ever get a job best suited my skill set?  What the hell is my skill set?  Guilt and uncertainty coupled with joy and euphoria.    Does that sound like your 30s??  Was it just mine???

"You Don't Know Me At All" featuring Regina Spektor  A more recent track again conjures up mixed thoughts.  Some good, some bad, but all very clear.  Some memories need not be repeated here. 

That is the wonder of music, and all art for that matter.  Seeing or hearing something can instantly take you to a place, a time, a moment.

Now, new material to bring me up to age 40.  And with it new questions, new uncertainties.

Is this house too small?  Can a man with two woman in the house live with 1 shower?  How much could I get for a pure bred Whippet?

Is Private education better than Public?

Is this a Recession or Depression?  Will it get better in my lifetime?  Or more importantly my daughter's?

Will Matthew Perry ever have a career post Friends?

Does the NHL not realize losing a season, again, would be a colossal failure?

How does Facebook make money?  Why does everyone who has an Iphone have to get the newest Iphone the moment it is released?

Does joining a gym automatically make you lose weight?  Is it indeed tougher to shed pounds at this advanced age?

If I go full midlife crisis and buy a convertible does that mean I surrender my hair?  Seriously, what is the percentage of bald men driving Porsches???

Will I ever have to know the difference between a Sirrah and Noir?

Should I take up golf?

When do I pick up one of those days of the week pill holders?  Is this the year I no longer subscribe to a newspaper, periodical?

Should I buy white Reeboks and wear high waisted dungarees.  I'm gonna start saying "dungarees" naturally.

Verbally abusing waitresses and clerks is acceptable at 40, right?  And saying "Come Again" or "Beg Your Pardon" when I can't hear a damn thing.

Lots to look forward to, or not.

And I guess what I'm trying to say is I'm glad to know that music will be right there with me.  Now if someone can find the darn clicker I need to turn it up.


Have a terrific weekend everyone.  And let's all hope Michigan beats ND.