Tag Archives: Review

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The Kooks Get Them Bouncing

March 8th, 2012

The Kooks – Terminal 5 – March 7, 2012


With a decade of experience under their belts, the Kooks showed Terminal 5 last night that they’re more than just Britpop. Add that to lead singer Luke Pritchard’s nonstop charm and you had a great setting for some screaming fandemonium. Sure, the band played hits like “Always Where I Need to Be,” with its chorus of “do do’s,” and “Shine On,” both off 2008’s Konk. But instead of speeding through those to get to their newer tracks, they obviously made sure to give those older songs some love.

Pritchard used his acoustic guitar on “She Moves in Her Own Way” to get the crowd bouncing like a British rock club, rather than the normal shove-and-sway mentality we so often adopt at packed shows here in America. The set picked up about halfway through, when Pritchard shimmied along on the riser at the front of the stage during a dizzying version of “If Only,” and then stayed onstage while his bandmates took a break for the swoon-inducing “Seaside.”

When the other members rejoined him, they played a stripped-down, nearly island-jam version of “Tick of Time,” complete with three acoustic guitars and just one drum. The ultimate display of the band’s maturity came right at the end of set, with the heavy, fuzzy rocker “Do You Wanna,” and when they began the encore with the multiple-time signatures and all-out bravado of “Gap.” —Sean O’Kane

Photos courtesy of Joe Papeo | www.irocktheshot.com

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Tennis Sells Out Music Hall of Williamsburg

March 6th, 2012

Tennis – Music Hall of Williamsburg – March 5, 2012


There’s something kind of adorable about the band Tennis. This is in part due to their unusual origins. Led by Alaina Moore and Patrick Riley, Tennis started after the two met in college and, upon graduating, decided to set out on a seven-month sailing expedition down the East Coast. Inspired by their time at sea, the two decided to write music based off their experiences. Now married and fresh off the heels of their latest release, Young and Old, produced by the Black Keys’ Patrick Carney, the two continue their voyage on land bringing their sea-inspired sounds to new audiences.

Moore and Riley’s relationship is worth noting in part because of how much it’s likely to have inspired their sunny sound. With organs backing Moore’s warm voice, their music almost sounds like a sunnier version of the organ-heavy Beach House. Moore seemed genuinely appreciative of the sold-out crowd last night at Music Hall of Williamsburg, noting that New York City is usually seen as the high point of any band’s tour. She rewarded the crowd by divulging that a few days earlier she was promised an opportunity to fulfill a childhood dream and be a part of a “girlie magazine’s” stylized photo shoot (she wouldn’t disclose which one), only to find out that they were actually being shot as a part of a Tic-Tac advertisement. “What the fuck? I thought I would be promoting my band!” joked Moore. They decided not to go through with the shoot and left instead.

Tennis ended with the dangerously catchy “Origins,” which the audience simply refused to accept as the last song, so the band returned to the stage for two more, ending with the sing-along “Marathon.” Also worth noting is the on-the-rise openers Hospitality, who powered through a killer set of their own filled with bursts of unexpected catchy guitar riffs followed by lulled moments of lead singer Amber Papini’s straightforward lyrics. Expect much more to come from this New York City-based band. —Dan Rickershauser

Photos courtesy of Mike Benigno | mikebenigno.wordpress.com

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Ladies and Gentlemen, Korallreven

March 5th, 2012

Korallreven – The Bowery Ballroom – March 4, 2012


Korallreven made its U.S. debut last night at The Bowery Ballroom, bringing its electro-dream pop all the way from Sweden. Comprised of founding members Marcus Joons, on vocals, and Daniel Tjäder, manning the keyboards and various electronic components, the group performed as a trio last night, with Tjäder’s brother Niklas adding live guitars and drums to the lush mix.

The stage was a study in black and white, with video images of flying flocks of birds and beaches and palm trees overlaid with geometric shapes and patterns projected onto the members (who were also sharply dressed in simple blacks, whites and grays). Mirroring their subdued color palate, the members of Korallreven performed with modesty, nodding their heads slightly to the beat and occasionally letting loose with a bit—just a bit—of swaying along to the music. Despite the restrained personas, the band was evidently very pleased to be performing in the U.S. “It’s like…unreal,” commented Joons between songs.

Koralleven’s set showcased different facets of sound, from lounge-y, mellow songs like “The Truest Faith” and  “Shine On,” where the live vocals blended seamlessly with the samples and synth melodies played by Tjäder, to new song “This Time” with its aggressive, driving beat, a departure of sorts, hinting more toward the sound of fellow Swedish countrymen the Knife. Perhaps beneath the calm and polite demeanor and delicate, hazy pop, Korallreven really just want to go wild and ignite the dance floor. Judging by all the smiling, dancing people in the crowd, the band is welcome back anytime to do just that. —Alena Kastin

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Matthew Dear Brings on the Weekend

March 5th, 2012

Matthew Dear – The Bowery Ballroom – March 2, 2012


There’s just something about a Friday night, the way it straddles the workweek and the weekend, with one foot in each. And Matthew Dear playing a sold-out show at The Bowery Ballroom was the perfect soundtrack for a rainy Friday night, straddling both the indie-rock and electro-dance worlds with aplomb. Following an inside-the-rubber-band warm-up dance set from Brooklyn’s Blondes, Dear kept the audience waiting just a moment, lights down, bodies ready to move.

It began with vocals, Dear singing, his voice echoing in digital loops while lights below the band illuminated their skinny-tie-and-cardigan-chic attire. But after that moment, it was all boogie. Dear let slip at one point that it was only the third show with this band, but they played like a veteran groove machine. Buoyed by mushroom-cloud bass, never-quit drumming and an intense, echoing trumpet, Dear’s lyrics came off like some sort of modern-day beat poetry. Often he’d sing a line and it would hang in the air, looping about while he left the microphone and strutted across the stage, the words like the smoke left behind by a cartoon roadrunner, holding their shape for a second and then poof!

Once the audience was warmed up, Dear offered a one-two punch: highlight versions of “Tide,” with its sing-along lyric of “I don’t care about you anymore,” and “You Put a Smell on Me.” Between songs throughout the set, the punchy dance beats dissolved into simmering ambient bleats of sound that cleared out one tune making way for the next, like Friday straddling the weekend border, it was nothing but party time ahead. —A. Stein

Photos courtesy of Diana Wong | dianawongphoto.com

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School of Seven Bells (Sort of) Celebrate a New Release

February 29th, 2012

School of Seven Bells – Mercury Lounge – February 28, 2012


Mercury Lounge is too small a venue to contain the School of Seven Bells’ expansive sound. With sprawling guitar melodies reminiscent of shoegazers My Bloody Valentine, the band’s very first instrumental almost knocked all the air out of the place as if there weren’t enough room for anything other than their colossal sound. After years of almost nonstop touring, as a group and opening for Interpol, School of Seven Bells have their live sound remarkably tight. There was no squeak or sound that wasn’t exactly where it belonged.

In a 2008 interview with NPR, lead singer Alejandra Deheza described how the band writes songs the opposite way of most others, starting with the lyrics and writing a song around them. The unusual creative process shows in the final product. It’s almost as if each song crafts its own unique world for Deheza’s voice and lyrics to call home. With her gold jewelry, dangling earrings and jet-black hair, Deheza looked almost like Cleopatra. Yet onstage she remained modestly elegant, never trying to take the spotlight from any other band member. She did that with her voice, one that’s gentle yet assertive and cuts through everything else.

Last night at Mercury Lounge marked the official release of the School of Seven Bells’ third full-length album, Ghostory, a special occasion guitarist Benjamin Curtis only really hinted at throughout the show before humbly stating, “We had a record come out today” during their encore, as though it were an afterthought. And with a set list sampling from all three of their albums, the set was not by any means an “album-release party.” Why let anything else be the highlight of the show when the music’s so good? —Dan Rickershauser

Photos courtesy of JC McIlwaine | jcmcilwaine.com

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An Entertaining Sunday Night

February 27th, 2012

YACHT – Music Hall of Williamsburg – February 26, 2012

(Photo: Dan Rickershauser)

“It’s not a place you go, it’s a place that comes for you/ It’s not about who you know, or who is in your heart/ It may come as a surprise, but you are not alone/ All that you have, is not what you own.” Those are the closing refrains of YACHT’s “The Afterlife.” Imagine these sobering contemplations of life after death being sung to a dance mob by a short blonde-haired woman (Claire L. Evans) in an all-white jumpsuit over a Krautrock beat and you have a slight glimpse of the bizarro spectacle that is YACHT’s live show.

YACHT is a music project headed by Evans and Jona Bechtolt. The show’s openers, musicians Rob “Bobby Birdman” Kieswetter and Jeffrey “Jerusalem” Brodsky, referred to collectively as the Straight Gaze, joined the two onstage last night at Music Hall of Williamsburg. Together as YACHT and the Straight Gaze, they entertained a sold-out and ready-to-dance crowd. It was the group’s latest stop on a long series of tour dates promoting their new release, Shangri-La. The show also involved a semi-elaborate PowerPoint presentation describing who the band was and where they were from (Portland, Ore., Marfa, Texas, and Los Angeles), where they were currently (Brooklyn), which they referred to as a “temporary autonomous zone,” a brief question-and-answer session with the audience and a moment to explain the band’s belief in extraterrestrial life.

But none of this detracted too much from the music—danceable electro-pop delivered with a punk-rock attitude. Seen live, it makes perfect sense that YACHT’s signed to DFA Records, a label founded by James Murphy of LCD Soundsystem, who helped pioneer the dance-punk revolution with his own music. YACHT closed the set by inviting everyone next door to Public Assembly for their DJ sets and dancing “until the wee hours of the morning.” Judging how quickly people filed out of Music Hall, they likely had most of the crowd sold for more. —Dan Rickershauser

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Mardi Gras Mambo

February 27th, 2012

Galactic – Terminal 5 – February 25, 2012


It’s not often that the sound of funk-ified brass and woodwind echoes throughout Terminal 5, but New Orleans jam musicians Galactic made it happen on Saturday, eight groovy bars at a time. It was a “post-modern rock party,” as honorary band member Corey Henry (of Rebirth Brass Band) called it. And while the six-piece band was doing just fine jamming on their own as they started the set, they quickly enlisted the help of a few friends.

Living Colour’s Corey Glover, first to join them, balanced the set list with his still-killer voice. A perfect example was Glover’s vocal range on “Out in the Street,” which offered fans even more than just the excellent, solo-based instrumental tunes the guys in Galactic were playing on their own. After Glover helped wind up the rowdy crowd, openers the Soul Rebels Brass Band came out and dueled through some wailing solos.

Galactic used the rest of the set to feature each member’s talents, including saxophone player Ben Ellman’s handful of gritty, mean harmonica parts and a particularly lively drum (and cowbell) solo from Stanton Moore. Wild as some moments were, the musical balance showed up again in the encore, starting with “Ash Wednesday Sunrise,” a tune that blended radio smooth with Galactic’s signature funk, and finished with Glover nodding his head to each stuttering shout from Henry’s trombone during the cover of Living Colour’s “Cult of Personality.” —Sean O’Kane

Photos courtesy of Greg Notch | notch.org

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Sharon Van Etten Charms The Bowery Ballroom

February 27th, 2012

Sharon Van Etten – The Bowery Ballroom – February 25, 2012


Sharon Van Etten looks different. She doesn’t usually wear dresses. And especially not heels. All her tattoos are visible: Two bold lines wrap around the flesh of her left forearm, a bird sits near her right biceps and a guitar’s sound hole and strings are on the tracks of her veins. In other words, she is exposed. But exposure is central to Van Etten’s music. Many singer-songwriters tap into heartbreak as a resource for material. Few, however, do it as effectively as she. With emotional honesty, beautiful counterpoint harmonies and simple, catchy melodies, Van Etten takes the individual experience of lost love and makes it accessible. Pain pop.

The crowd was especially receptive at The Bowery Ballroom on Saturday, perhaps because it was the singer’s 31st birthday. Her family was in the audience and made it known, shouting encouragement in between songs. Van Etten kindly responded, half embarrassed and half pleased to have material for stage banter. Because impromptu speaking doesn’t come easy to her and there are tense silences—but her kind ethos made up for it. She is, simply, charming.

Congeniality is important when playing songs with such emotional heft. You don’t want people to get the wrong idea when singing, “Serpents in my mind, looking for your crimes.” The songs may be dark, but goodness permeates Van Eetten’s demeanor. The Antlers gave her a giant balloon man made out of balloons for her birthday and she proudly displays it onstage. She is confident; more confident than earlier concerts and albums. She looks different. She sounds great. —Jared Levy

Photos courtesy of Diana Wong | dianawongphoto.com

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A Showcase at the Merc

February 24th, 2012

Zeus – Mercury Lounge – February 23, 2012

Last night Mercury Lounge, along with taste-making Canadian label Arts & Crafts, hosted a good old-fashioned showcase gig. Shows like these are a dime a dozen during weeks like SXSW in Austin, Texas, or CMJ in NYC, but that doesn’t mean we can’t get turned on to some great new music in the middle of February! After a nice warm-up set of two guitars, one drummer and lots of energy from locally grown Radical Dads, the crowd was treated to a threesome of north-of-the-border pop and rock up-and-comers.

First, Gold & Youth took the ’80s synth-pop revival as a starting point, employing multiple synths, a lead singer with a voice made for the classic MTV days and a leather jacket with the sleeves pushed up to match. But the music expanded in all directions, often expertly squeezing five or six different musical ideas into a song at once. Next the bass-free trio Eight and a Half performed in a Radiohead-meets-R.E.M. style. The set, only the group’s second live show ever, began atmospheric and static. As they grew comfortable, the songs twisted, starting with former Broken Social Scene member Justin Peroff’s wonderful drumming and evolving from there. The highlight was the moody but lively “Walked into Diazapene,” with welcome bursts of guitar and a bouncing drum beat.

Headliners Zeus delivered from the get-go, taking all those everyday, lovable rock and roll tropes—dueling double guitars, share-the-microphone backing harmonies, controlled-chaos drumming and killer facial hair—and brewing up their own bet-you-can’t-stand-still sound. The first three songs featured three different guys on bass spurring three different games of “you know, this kinda sounds like….” The band played most of their underrated gem of an album Say Us and previewed material from their forthcoming disc. They were in top form, evoking favorites from the sweet vocal-driven pop of the Beatles and the Beach Boys to more cerebral keys-and-bass grooves of Steely Dan before letting loose with some shredding Southern rock guitar solos. But no Zeus show would be complete without their signature, pitch-perfect cover of Genesis’s “That’s All.” Like the other bands on the bill, Zeus’s new album will be out soon, and hopefully they’ll return shortly thereafter. Don’t miss ’em when they do. —A. Stein

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Ska Legends Take the Stage in Brooklyn

February 20th, 2012

The Skatalites – Brooklyn Bowl – February 18, 2012


Ska isn’t dead! It never died. You can, in fact, still hear it from the people who started it all. And on Saturday night the Skatalites came to Brooklyn Bowl to play to generations of rude boys who couldn’t get enough of those Jamaican rhythms. To provide just a little background for those who aren’t familiar, the Skatalites formed in 1964 in Jamaica. Many of the founding members met at the renowned Alpha Boys School in Kingston, a historic Catholic school known for its strong music program. Tommy McCook, Johnny Moore, Lester Sterling and other founding members took what they learned at music school and made the sound their own, in the process creating a new sound called ska. While the founding members disbanded in 1965, the group reunited in 1983 and has been together since, playing with a rotating cast of talented musicians. Alto saxophonist Lester Sterling is the last surviving member of the 10 original founders.

The set included Skatalites classics plus a random assortment of ska versions of Dave Brubeck’s “Take Five,” Dandy Livingstone‘s “A Message to You, Rudy” and the James Bond theme. Almost every song featured solo improvisations, giving each musician the chance to display his talents against the backdrop of ska upbeats. The show also had several guest appearances, including one by tenor saxophonist Rock Steady Freddy, who stole the show for a few moments with wailing sax improvisations that showcased musicianship usually only seen in jazz performances.

Doreen Shaffer, the Queen of Ska, provided vocals on favorites “Simmer Down,” “My Boy Lollipop” and “Nice Time,” a tribute to the late Bob Marley. The band closed with what’s now considered its theme, “Freedom Sound.” But the show’s best moments were in between songs with Lester Sterling flashing smiles. It was moving to see a legend alongside a talented roster of young and old musicians. And with their help, the Skatalites carry on the banner of ska, a genre Sterling helped create almost 50 years ago. One can’t help but wonder what he makes of such an extraordinary legacy. —Dan Rickershauser

Photos courtesy of Dan Rickershauser

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The Voice

February 20th, 2012

Zola Jesus – Webster Hall – February 18, 2012


For all the arguments about which subcategory of Goth Zola Jesus may be a part of, the fact is it’s her instrumentation—whether it’s the discarded cheap electronics from her debut, The Spoils, or from her three-piece backing band, which includes a violin—that serves her voice. A voice that pursued classical opera training in rural Wisconsin at age 10 and battled crippling stage fright to record The Spoils at age 20. Isolated in the long country winter, the singer-songwriter combined her talent with the modest tools at her disposal to record the sparse, industrial-sounding album. It’s filled with remarkable vocals that build on female innovators like Diamanda Galás and Lydia Lunch, who combined their impressive vocal abilities with the pop sensibilities of their respective eras, something that remains unmatched in indie circles by their male counterparts.

Several albums later, that voice headlined historic Webster Hall on Saturday night. The venue has long been a part of the rave and house-music scene but it was strangely fitting for the pop experimentation on Zola’s latest, Conatus. With platinum blonde hair and draped in a sheer white full-length dress, her minimal sounds that had populated previous efforts were epically drawn out with pounding live beats and walls of pulsating, blinding LEDs. Live, the tracks changed from a personal morbid confession to a forum for publicly celebrating her melancholy romanticism. She became something like a bygone pop crooner or cabaret singer, capable of making the darkness universal and popularizing electronic avant-garde with the strength of her voice. But after the last song ended, she’d managed to transcend labels altogether. —Jason Dean

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A Duo Firing on All Cylinders

February 13th, 2012

The Kills – Terminal 5 – February 11, 2012


All other music duos take note: The Kills are doing it better than you are. Saturday night’s show at Terminal 5 showcased all the ways Alison Mosshart and Jamie Hince know how to work a room. His guitar grumbled to life at the start of show-opener “No Wow” and the crowd swayed toward her as she sneaked the first line into the microphone: “You’re going to have to stand over my dead body/ Before you walk out of that door.”

The line perfectly foreshadowed the next two hours and warned the sold-out venue that Mosshart and Hince were about to give everything they had. As the song kicked into overdrive, four bandanna-masked drummers—seemingly appearing out of thin air—pounded away in darkness while spotlights at the back of the stage followed the duo’s movements. There wasn’t a wasted moment to be found over the rest of the set. Hince contorted and jerked his body with every wicked note he played, and the number of Mosshart hair whips would have humbled Willow Smith.

The two worked their magic separately on songs like “U.R.A. Fever,” but returned together for others, at times crossing microphone stands, staring each other down at center stage or even physically embracing—literally leaning on each other to get out every note. Everyone in the audience served more purely as spectators than at a lot of other shows, really only getting a part in the “oohs” of the ghoulish, bayou-tinged “Satellite.” Luckily for them, Hince more than once leaned out over the stage waving his guitar chest high like a fisherman reeling in his catch, shaking them awake from their awed daze. —Sean O’Kane

Photos courtesy of Diana Wong | dianawongphoto.com

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A Jam Sandwich

February 13th, 2012

Tea Leaf Green – The Bowery Ballroom – February 10, 2012


Playing the first of two area shows at The Bowery Ballroom on Friday night, San Francisco’s Tea Leaf Green seemed to be operating at double strength. Opening the show with “Soldiers of Kentucky,” they quickly raced out to the first of what would be countless high-quality jams over the course of two sets. Josh Clark’s guitar, Reid Mathis’s bass and Trevor Garrod’s keys seemed to overlap and resonate with one another, confusing the source of each sound but overpowering the crowd and compelling them to keep up. Behind the front three, two drummers propelled the band like a souped-up dragster with dual exhaust itching to go.

As Tea Leaf Green slalomed through the entire catalog, all five musicians played to an impressive level. Clark’s happy-go-lucky guitar traveled along the plane defined by Keith Richards, Dickey Betts and Eddie Van Halen, thoughtfully building solos within the songs from which they came and then exploding into a fury of axe-shredding delight. While Mathis’s played a perfect foil, often picking like a guitar and employing octave pedals to generate extraterrestrial sounds. The bassline in “Out in the Woods” bounced groovily between the two drummers. And every fourth song seemed to be a well-constructed instrumental, each feeling like three separate movements of pure rock and roll, body moving funk and impossible prog.

After 70 nonstop minutes, the band took a break before picking up right where they left off with a second set that was more of the same, if not for a scaled-down, more determined audience. “Fallen Angel” was representative: great songwriting with a mix of twang and groove that folded midway like musical origami into a darker, mysterious thing for a healthy stretch before righting itself back into its original form. This was late-night-infomercial music, bringing delight after delight but constantly screaming “but wait … there’s more!” —A. Stein

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Some Bands Just Sound Dirtier Live

February 10th, 2012

Veronica Falls – Music Hall of Williamsburg – February 9, 2012


Listening to the self-titled debut record by London quartet Veronica Falls, it may be tempting to describe them with the oft-maligned label of twee. Certainly, the band displays several of the signifiers of the contentious genre, with sunny, surf-rock guitar riffs and sweet male/female harmonies (not to mention press photos filled with studious button-downs and cardigans), but their show at Music Hall of Williamsburg last night may help them shake off the wimpy trappings of twee.

Opening with the upbeat “Right Side of My Brain,” guitarists Roxanne Clifford and James Hoare stood side by side, harmonizing with drummer Patrick Doyle, while bassist Marion Herbain, focused and solemn, played along. As colorful lights quickly flashed in time with the pulse of the drums, over the course of just a few songs, Veronica Falls’ live sound contained more urgency and aggression than hinted at in the recorded versions. While still polished and poppy, the music was louder and messier, and satisfyingly so. Smiles, another twee staple, were few and far between.

As the band efficiently tore through the set list, such songs as “Stephen,” “Bad Feeling,” and “Beachy Head,” contained some fleeting sonic references to groups like Camera Obscura, Belle and Sebastian and the Vaselines, replacing the latter group’s humor and mischief with an intriguingly skewed and darker take (see for example, the girl-ghost unrequited love tale plaintively told in “Found Love in a Graveyard”). A standout of the night was the band’s rendition of album closer “Come on Over,” with its slow-building instrumental intro growing into a fast-paced, intensely catchy onslaught of harmonies and riffs—just rough and tumble enough to subvert twee. —Alena Kastin

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You Got Satin Shoes

February 9th, 2012

Karl Denson’s Tiny Universe and Anders Osborne – Webster Hall – February 8, 2012


Sometimes you see a concert listing and it raises more questions than it answers. Take last night’s show at Webster Hall, billed as Karl Denson’s Tiny Universe playing the Rolling Stones’ classic album Sticky Fingers with special guest Anders Osborne. A look at that billing and you might be asking, “Hasn’t that cover-a-whole-album thing been played out?” And if not, “Karl Denson playing the Stones? How does that work?” And “How is Osborne’s gritty, soul rock going to mesh with Denson’s acid-jazz grooves?” Well, of course, the devil is in the details.

After a scintillating fire-in-the-belly set from the Anders Osborne Trio and a dance-floor-lubricating warm up from the Tiny Universe, it was time for the main attraction. Denson reintroduced Osborne to the eager crowd like introducing a date to his parents for the first time and then described the opening song, the quintessential “Brown Sugar” as a “song about interracial sex.” It took the mind a minute or two to wrap around the buried subtext and risqué hilarity of the comment, and by then the band was already deep into it. To pull off the full-album replay, a balance between faithfulness and adventurousness must be struck, and Denson and crew pretty much nailed the dichotomy. In the end, it was the small details that transformed a bunch of covers into a transcendent deconstruction: a punch-in-the-gut slide guitar solo from Osborne during “Sway,” Denson’s surprisingly emotive vocals on “Wild Horses”—the microphone looking like a toy clutched in his muscular hands—the improbably harmonies during “You Gotta Move” and, of course, the impeccably jammed, don’t-let-it-end coda to “Can’t You Hear Me Knocking.”

It was clear that there were three pro veterans on stage: Denson, who has been making people dance for decades, from Sexual Chocolate to the Greyboy Allstars to the Tiny Universe, and Osborne, who has been getting impossibly better every year for just as long. Last, but not least, Sticky Fingers itself, which has served as the keystone for the Stones’ heyday output, but also one of the greatest albums of all time (of which the original LP had the one of the greatest album covers of all time). The unexpected highlight came late in the set as the band stretched “Sister Morphine” into a delicious, almost ambient mind jam. As Osborne’s raunchy slide mellowed around the dreamy, long notes from the horns, the question of the night changed from “Why is Karl Denson covering Sticky Fingers?” to “Why doesn’t everyone?” —A. Stein

Photos courtesy of Mike Benigno | mikebenigno.wordpress.com