Apparently Blondie
played at this same venue almost exactly a year ago, but with Devo
opening. That would have been cool. This was pretty cool, too,
though, so I can hardly complain.
Artist: Blondie
Venue: Stubb's (outside)
Location: Austin, Texas
Date: 26 September 2013
Opening Act: X [the LA punk band]
Venue: Stubb's (outside)
Location: Austin, Texas
Date: 26 September 2013
Opening Act: X [the LA punk band]
Setlist:
01. One Way or Another
02. Rave
03. Hanging on the Telephone (The Nerves cover)
04. Union City Blue
05. A Rose by Any Name
06. The Tide Is High (The Paragons cover)
07. Drag You Around
08. Maria
09. Winter
10. Rapture → No Sleep Till Brooklyn (Beastie Boys cover)
11. Atomic
12. What I Heard
13. Wipe Off My Sweat
14. Sugar on the Side
15. Heart of Glass
01. One Way or Another
02. Rave
03. Hanging on the Telephone (The Nerves cover)
04. Union City Blue
05. A Rose by Any Name
06. The Tide Is High (The Paragons cover)
07. Drag You Around
08. Maria
09. Winter
10. Rapture → No Sleep Till Brooklyn (Beastie Boys cover)
11. Atomic
12. What I Heard
13. Wipe Off My Sweat
14. Sugar on the Side
15. Heart of Glass
Encore:
16. Take Me in the Night
17. Mile High
18. Call Me
19. Relax (Frankie Goes to Hollywood cover)
20. Dreaming
The X in question here
is the LA punk band formed in 1977, not the Australian punk band, nor
any of the many other bands that happen to share the same name. As
best as I could tell, the current version of the band features all of
the original founding members. They played a bunch of songs with
hardly a pause, which they said was probably preferable for everyone
involved instead of babbling too much. I was surprised that bassist
John Doe probably sang more than frontwoman Exene Cervenka did, but
otherwise they were about what I expected. They play decent punk
music, but they aren't pushing boundaries. The weirdest part was
guitarist Billy Zoom. He seemed like a cartoon character: he was
smiling nearly the whole time, hardly noticing the riffs that he
kicked out, focusing rather on staring semi-creepily into the
audience.
Blondie has retained
singer Debbie Harry, guitarist Chris Stein, and drummer Clem Burke
from their earliest days, but have more recently added lead guitarist
Tommy Kessler, bassist Leigh Foxx, and keyboardist Matt Katz-Bohen.
Harry came on stage wearing a X shirt and sunglasses (despite that
the sun had already gone down); she sang and spoke enthusiastically
but regularly wore a frown whenever she wasn't singing. She finally
took the sunglasses off after five or six songs, although Stein never
removed his. While Harry glowed in the spotlight, Stein and Burke
mostly kept to the back. Burke regularly twirled and tossed his
drumsticks but otherwise was hardly a showman; Stein only played a
handful of the lead guitar parts and even then, he still usually hid
behind the other guitarist.
The newer members were
a little more active. Kessler, noticeably younger than most of the
others, happily took the front of the stage for his leads and even
shredded up a few solos. That was perhaps a little more than I had
bargained for, but I suppose it wasn't completely
out of place. Katz-Bohen sang backing vocals while handling several
keyboards; he too seemed a bit younger and more energetic than the
old hands, but maybe that was just because he was wearing a glittery
keyboard-pattern vest with no shirt underneath. Lastly, but certainly
not least, was Foxx, who seemed like he would have fit right in with
Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars. He stood out mostly because
his instrument was the loudest in the mix.
Actually,
I think the mix of the entire night was probably the oddest part of
the whole venture. X's mix was fairly typical of rock concerts: drums
were way too loud, guitar was a little too loud, the bass was hardly
present, and the vocals were somewhat muddy and thus hard to
understand. Blondie's mix was more confusing: while the drums were
loud, the bass was really
loud. After that, everything else was a bit congested. The guitars
were
often indistinguishable unless
one watched
the players' hands, and even then that didn't always help. The
keyboards and vocals were a crapshoot – sometimes they were
discernible and clear, but often they were dark and difficult to pick
out.
That
being said, Blondie has always had a knack for good melodies, and by
playing almost all of their greatest hits, they showed off a
continual stream of talented songwriting. I was pleased that they
didn't only take the predictable route; they incorporated several
songs from their 2011 album Panic of Girls and their upcoming
album Ghosts of Download into their setlist, and even if I
didn't know them and I didn't find them quite as appealing as the
classics, I still appreciated it. The biggest surprises were the
unexpected covers. When "Rapture" was extended into a heavy
rock jam, I didn't even realize at the time that the song had morphed
into the Beastie Boys' "No Sleep Till Brooklyn", which made
for a fairly hilarious homage. Similarly, choosing the near-novelty
classic "Relax" as their penultimate song was almost too
hard to take seriously, but they rocked it. Apparently, the song will
be present on their upcoming album, which I'm sure will result in a
delightfully absurd listen.
The
other highlight was probably the keytar solo in "Call Me".
Yes, out of nowhere, Katz-Bohen suddenly had a keytar strapped on,
and he came to the front of stage to work his magic. For the rest of
the night, he stuck to his keyboard racks, but I'm glad he got at
least one moment in the spotlight.
Actually,
I was a bit surprised that "Dreaming" was the closer, but I
suppose I'm probably not the only one that really likes that song,
and the band probably knows that.
Scores:
X: C
Blondie: B
P.S. I probably would
have enjoyed myself a lot more if the mix had been better and if
three pushy jerks hadn't shoved themselves into my spot halfway
through the show.