Soundbites
Maybe you heard, but there were some big doings at Higher Ground last Thursday, as now-legendary proto-punk band Death [1] took to a Vermont stage for the first — and, if you believe the rumors — last time. Predictably, excitement and expectations for the show were unusually high. In fact, I don’t recall any local show in recent memory as hotly anticipated or inflated with hype as the reunited trio’s debut VT date.
There was all manner of Facebook pimping and Twitter … um, tweeting preceding the show. There were several local radio interviews with the band. There was a preshow press conference at 242 Main. There was even a television commercial advertising not only the gig but a forthcoming documentary film about Death [2] directed by local filmmaker Jeff Howlett. Oh, and I whipped up a pretty decent feature story [3] in last week’s edition. Maybe you saw it? The one in which I interview Mos motherflippin’ Def, bitches! Ahem.
So, yeah. A ton of hype. In fact, maybe too much.
(Please hold while I feverishly wring my hands trying to come up with a diplomatic way of phrasing this next bit.)
This gives me no pleasure to write, but the show was disappointing.
I arrived in time to catch the tail end of the opening set by local punk rockers Folk Heroes [4], who were ragged, energetic and fun. And very, very loud.
During an intermission, waiting for Rough Francis to take the stage, I began to take stock of the unusual surroundings. An enormous camera and boom arm — like, 15 or 20 feet tall — dominated the room. Uniformed film crew milled around with expensive-looking gear. The band’s merch table was a mountain of T-shirts and records. Higher Ground felt less like a rock club than a movie set. Weird.
Rough Francis [5] tore through a typically excellent set, whetting the audience’s collective appetite for Death — BTW, there is not a more exciting hard-rock drummer in Burlington than RF’s Urian Hackney right now. Period. Holy hell, that kid can play.
Finally, Death took the stage. They dove right in, unleashing a few choice classics from …For the Whole World to See. And it sounded … great, actually. But then things took a turn south. Like, to Jamaica.
The remainder of the evening felt more like a retrospective of the Hackneys’ projects since Death than a celebration of the band we all came to see. They marched through one Lambsbread [6] number after another, sporadically tossing in a few tunes from their old Christian-rock outfit the 4th Movement and, every once in a while, a Death song. By the time they got around to playing “Politicians in My Eyes,” my excitement had been carried away in the trade winds.
I left feeling disheartened and a little duped — a sentiment echoed by a number of folks on the way out the door. Nothing against Lambsbread, who really are a solid reggae band and certainly part of the larger story. But we came to see Death, and, unfortunately, that’s not really what we got.
Maybe it’s because I fell so head over heels in love with Death’s story. Maybe it’s because I, too, bought into all the hype, and my expectations were unreasonably lofty. Or maybe I just wanted the show to be more than it really was, which was simply the epilogue to a fantastic story 35 years in the making, the coming full circle of three marvelous, visionary musicians and a celebration of their wondrously talented and loving family. And, just maybe, contrary to the crowing of certain folks in the blogosphere and other social-media outlets postshow, the evening was supposed to be less about “making history” and more about appreciating it.
BiteTorrent
Listening In
And finally, this week’s totally self-indulgent column segment, in which I share a random sampling of what was on my iPod, turntable, CD player, 8-track player, etc., this week.
Links:
[1] http://www.dragcity.com/artists/death
[2] http://www.wheredowegofromheredoc.com/
[3] http://7dvt.com/2010death
[4] http://www.myspace.com/folkheroes
[5] http://www.myspace.com/roughfrancis
[6] http://www.lambsbreadband.com/
[7] http://vermontjoyparade.com/
[8] http://www.myspace.com/httpwwwmyspacecomannapardenik
[9] http://www.myspace.com/thesketties
[10] http://www.myspace.com/wetiktok
[11] http://www.facebook.com/splittonguecrow?v=app_2405167945
[12] http://www.7dvt.com/2005/will-will
[13] http://www.myspace.com/rayandruss
[14] http://www.myspace.com/zackdupont
[15] http://www.myspace.com/stackedband
[16] http://www.myspace.com/lowellthompson
[17] http://www.myspace.com/burntgtd
[18] http://www.myspace.com/keithmurray
[19] http://www.myspace.com/deerhunter
[20] http://www.myspace.com/markronson
[21] http://www.lostinthetrees.com/
[22] http://trampledbyturtles.com/
[23] http://www.thekingsolomonburke.com/