05/10/07
Laura Veirs with Lake and eric Metronome (not pictured)
Columbus, OH – Little Brothers

05/10/07
Laura Veirs with Lake and eric Metronome (not pictured)
Columbus, OH – Little Brothers
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05/07/07
Peter Bjorn and John with Fujiya & Miyagi adn Au Revoir Simone
Columbus, OH – Wexner Center
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Photo by Johnny Cashola
Later this week, I intend on giving a brief history of the late 90’s Hip Hop indie rap boom, EL-P’s place in it, and how all of those things relate to Columbus Hip Hop (ie RJD2, Blueprint, Camu Tao etc) in a really simplified manner.
With that said, EL-P aka Jamie Meline appearing in Columbus last Saturday was way over due. Early that afternoon, EL did an instore at Mags. It rained heavily so the turn-out wasn’t amazing. As the Hip Hop buyer at Magnolia, it is always embarrassing when an instore doesn’t work out. You always feel like you are gonna bruise the artists ego. He took it in stride. I had interviewed EL for the Alive, so his opinion that artists need to connect with fans and all people in between out of shear fact that people like music was in practice.
Watching a notoriously cynical New Yorker sincerely be nice to people once again proved to me the EL-P really gets it. The juxtiposition of nihilism that anyone living in this world should possess and a respect of the fact that anyone gives a fuck about his music was something that other malcontents could learn from.
Like… Photo-op’s are retarded, wanting someone’s autograph is silly, the whole fishbowl process of an instore is awkward. But he would take the photos and sign the cd’s. He would talk to anyone that had anything to say. This might sound basic, but a lot of artists don’t get this.
I have had notable indie rappers in the store that treated their fans like idiot followers which caused people to stop buying the artists records.
You don’t have to pander. No need to be a prick.
Just as you aren’t a moron, your fans aren’t either.
Well maybe I am a moron sometimes. But usually I don’t smile for the camera either.
Photo by Danielle Kline
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2/03/07
Donewaiting Anniversary IV featuring: Brainbow, Greenhouse Effect, Miranda Sound, Chris McCoy and the Gospel, Marcy Mays, Eric Metronome (not pictured), and Megan Palmer.
Columbus, OH – Little Brother’s
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10/14/06
eric Metronome CD Release featuring the Randy’s and Megan Palmer
Columbus, OH – Little Brother’s
Comments Off on Photos: eric Metronome CD Release featuring the Randy’s and Megan Palmer
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Last night, Sonic Youth‘s Thurston Moore played a kind of/not really secrety show at Bourbon St in Columbus Ohio with Athens musician Leslie Keffer. I say “kind of secret” because it was promoted on Bourbon’s Myspace, there was a donewaiting.com message board discussion, and some flyers were up around town, but it was otherwise kept under the radar. Hell, when I first saw the flyers on Thursday I thought it was a joke.
Let me back up. If you’ve never been to Bourbon St., you probably don’t understand how crazy it is to think Thurston Moore would be playing the club. See, Bourbon St probably comfortably holds about 30 people. There’s a DIY soundboard for the musicians, and the stage is small. This is about as intimate as you can get for a show without it being in your basement.
We got word that they’d only be letting about 100 people in and doors would be opening at 7pm. Around 3pm I started driving by the club to see if any sort of insane lines had started to form, but it was a ghost town until around 6pm. I finally stood in line with about 30 other people at 6:30pm.
At 7pm the doors finally opened and Bourbon St had made the smart move of giving wristbands out to people so you didn’t have to sit in the club for five hours until Thurston played (there was four opening bands). Not that spending an evening in Bourbon is a bad thing – the Taco Ninja makes some delicious food – but sometimes you just can’t be in a club that long waiting around. (Besides, I live a few blocks from the place and Deadwood was having a season finale!)
I went home, had dinner, watched some of the Emmys, Deadwood, and the Entourage season finale. I went back to the club around 10:45 wondering if there was going to be thousands people hanging around. As luck would have it, the crowd was pretty small. I imagine most people thought that the idea of Thurston Moore playing Bourbon St was the most insane thing ever and kept away a lot of people. That plus Bourbon St’s handling of the crowd made it a surprisingly comfortable show from a “personal space” point of view. I bet there was about 50ish people when they played, but I am never good at judging crowd numbers.
Thurston and Leslie went on close to midnight and played about a half hour set of noise and feedback and it was pure bliss. It was more about creating an atmosphere and mood over any sort of resemblance to melody. I won’t lie and say that this is music that I typically listen to, but having Thurston play such an intimate club on his day off really was something special. Seeing Kim Gordon walk around Bourbon St was surreal. The whole thing was just crazy, and even when I paid the cover at 7pm I still wasn’t sure that it was actually happening. But it did, and it was a blast.
I heard some people complain about how short the set was, but I was happy with it. With things like this, expectations get pretty high and you really don’t know what’s gonna happen.
Thurston was taking pictures with people, videotaping the opening bands, and generally having a good time (from what I could tell). Later today he’ll be playing with Sonic Youth in front of thousands, so it was a really amazing experience to see one of my musical heroes play in such a small venue.
I have a few OK photos that I am posting, but if anyone has any better pixx post a link in the comments or email me and I’ll get them up.
more pix after the jump…
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