
After work, I headed down to Beantown to meet-up with my brother-in-law, John. It's a 2 hr. 45 min. drive but, in general, it's an easy drive in good weather because it's basically two interstates the whole way there. Straight shot and no traffic. So, after hanging out with him and his wife for a while, we walked over to the show.

I had never been to the Paradise before so it gave me a chance to check it out. Nice space. Wider than it is deeper with a balcony wrapping itself around three sides of the stage. Plus, the stage was nice and high so you could get a good view from a lot of different places. My brother-in-law had caught the Sun Volt/Fruit Bats show the prior week and raved about the sound. So, I was starting to get excited to see the gang from London/Brighton.
While we were waiting for the show to start, John and I noticed a guy hanging out to the left of the stage with a console of electronics. The sound board was up in the balcony, so we weren't sure what this guy's job was. We figured he was just a roadie but when The Go! Team hit the stage, he didn't leave. In fact he worked throughout the entire show spinning his dials and switches.

If you aren't familiar with The Go! Team and their story, it basically goes like this: Ian Parton created the songs that are on Thunder, Lightning, Strike on his own in his apartment using clips from various obscure albums. He'd take the piano from this song and the guitar from that song and the trumpet from another song, etc. and put them together to create new tunes. So, there wasn't a band of musicians developing these songs and the tunes were largely instrumentals. There are some vocals but they tend to be in the background, indecypherable and act more like another instrument than a classic lyric. That's one of the things that makes Thunder, Lightning, Strike such an interesting album. It doesn't sound like anything else. However, someone had the bad idea that a live band needs a lead singer and he/she has to sing. So, they added Ninja and gave her a bunch of lyrics to sing.
The other thing that is annoying about Ninja is the way she talks to the crowd. She's sounds more like a late-night infomercial host than the front person of a band. She would say stuff like "Everybody yell 'GO TEAM'!" or she would have to tell you what album each song was off of so you could go out and buy it. "This is a song called "We Listen Everyday" off of the Junior Kickstart album!" There was zero couth to her. She actually detracted from the show for me.
Now, back to the guy with the gizmos along the side of the stage. I circled him in the top picture above. The other thing that disappointed me about the show was the number of samples mixed into the show. The most obvious was the horns. There are a lot of songs on Thunder, Lightning, Strike that include trumpets or bass sax. So, rather than hire someone to play those parts live, they hired the ponytailed guy in the tight black t-shirt to mix them into the sound. The biggest problem with this is that it doesn't allow for any improvisation by the band. They have to hit their parts perfectly to keep up with the clip of the horns. I can listen to the labum at home. In concert, I want to hear a live version of the tunes. Whether it's a radically different take on the song or just minor changes, it's one of the things that makes concerts so exciting. By using didgital horm clips throughout the songs, they killed any chance for that live excitement.
They would have been better off hiring a horn player or a DJ who would share the stage with them to mix and scratch the sounds into their live show. It would have made for a much more daring and exciting live show than what we saw.

The one last thing that was disappointing about the show was the new tunes. There were about three of them and they didn't hold up very well at all in comparison to the stuff Parton created in his apartment. In fact, the song when Chi came out from behind the drums to sing while someone played piano and the others rested was downright laughable. If they had presented it as a joke, that would be one thing but they didn't.
There were a few tunes when Ninja wasn't singing and there weren't any horns which sounded great. It was only for about 3-4 songs but it proved my point to myself about how much cooler the show would have been without Ninja and or the samples.

Hello Brian. Just wanted to say I've killed about an hour on your blog and enjoyed it very much. Kinda scary how much we have in common. I just moved over here to Danville VT from Essex. I was faculty advisor at WRUV for a long time and am a hard-core soccer fanatic. What the hell, we were at some of the same Pavement shows in '97. So if anyone's going to enjoy your blog it's me. And I did. Hope to meet you at a show sometime. Wish I'd run across it earlier because this is the first I've heard of the free Mtn Goats show. But I doubt I could have gotten a babysitter anyway, so whatever. Keep up the good work and good luck at 7Days.
ReplyDeletePaul Searls
Saw the team last year in Manchester and was equally disappointed - and how annoying is that cheerleader routine? It just made me surly.
ReplyDeleteI hate it when a band sucks live. HATE it. Fortunately I've been choosing well and haven't seen a stinker since last fall.
ReplyDeleteWish you'd seen them on Kimmel last week...my wife's exact words were "woah! they blow live!".
ReplyDeleteBut you are right, that's an incredible album.
Paul,
ReplyDeleteThanks for the kind comments. It's great to have a sympatico in the Green Mountains. There aren't too many indie rock/soccer fans (although there are a few) so it's good to hear from you.
I know Danville is a good 40 min drive from Montpelier, but a few of us get together for US National Team matches. If you ever want some folks to watch a game with let me know.
I don't know if we are getting together for the Scotland friendly since it'll be on a Saturday morning, but I'll let you know. You can reach me at jamkids@gmail.com.
Which Pavement shows did you see?
yankunian, I agree. Ninja is really distracting. Sufjan Stevens cheerleader routine was basically a joke or performance art. Ninja deal seemed as if she really thought that was what people wanted to hear.
ReplyDeleteAre you going to either the Black Keys or I&W|Calexico shows in Montreal over the next month?
Bob, did they suck on Kimmel for the same reasons I saw or did they suck differently that night?
ReplyDeleteIf you wife sees anymore bands and think they suck, please let me know before the band rolls through New England.
Well, to be honest, she thinks most bands I like suck, but they were pretty bad on TV...mostly because of Ninja's concentration on jumping around rather than singing at or near the mic, the 2nd singer not really being in sync with Ninja, and the rest of the band looking ridiculous "playing" as all matters of horns and drums that were not on stage were being heard loud and clear.
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