Despite being fond of
Arcade Fire since the beginning, I never truly got into them until
the last six months ago or so, when my spouse started playing their
albums around me. When we heard they were coming to town, it wasn't
hard to be convinced to go.
Artist: Arcade
Fire
Venue: Austin360 Amphitheater
Location: Austin, Texas
Date: 10 April 2014
Opening Acts: Lost Bayou Ramblers, Kid Koala
Venue: Austin360 Amphitheater
Location: Austin, Texas
Date: 10 April 2014
Opening Acts: Lost Bayou Ramblers, Kid Koala
Setlist (see here
for a slightly different tabulation):
01. Normal Person
02. Rebellion (Lies)
03. Reflektor
04. Flashbulb Eyes
05. Neighborhood #3 (Power Out)
06. The Suburbs →
07. The Suburbs (Continued)
08. Ready to Start
09. Neighborhood #1 (Tunnels)
10. No Cars Go
11. We Exist
12. My Body Is a Cage (tease) → Afterlife → Temptation (New Order cover tease) →
13. It's Never Over (Oh Orpheus)
14. Heart of Glass (Blondie cover) →
15. Sprawl II (Mountains Beyond Mountains)
Encore:
16. Controversy (Prince cover)
17. Here Comes the Night Time
18. Wake Up
01. Normal Person
02. Rebellion (Lies)
03. Reflektor
04. Flashbulb Eyes
05. Neighborhood #3 (Power Out)
06. The Suburbs →
07. The Suburbs (Continued)
08. Ready to Start
09. Neighborhood #1 (Tunnels)
10. No Cars Go
11. We Exist
12. My Body Is a Cage (tease) → Afterlife → Temptation (New Order cover tease) →
13. It's Never Over (Oh Orpheus)
14. Heart of Glass (Blondie cover) →
15. Sprawl II (Mountains Beyond Mountains)
Encore:
16. Controversy (Prince cover)
17. Here Comes the Night Time
18. Wake Up
I can't review this
concert without explaining the venue. The Austin360 Amphitheater is a
new addition to Austin, just about a year old. It is part of a larger
complex: the Circuit of the Americas, a motor racing circuit that
opened in 2012. It is located on the edge of town, past the airport,
apparently just outside city limits (as far as I can tell). It is
difficult to get to by car and essentially impossible to reach by any
other means. Once you arrive, it costs about $20 to park in a massive
unstriped lot located approximately a mile from the seats. Tickets
can be purchased in advance online, supposedly for $12, but because
it's through Ticketmaster, it ends up being about $17.50. (What a
deal!) Naturally, this is after the cost of tickets, which were
nominally $46 for a decent seat, but again, because it is through
Ticketmaster, there are about $11 in additional fees (per ticket).
Lawn seats were slightly cheaper, but better seats ran the gamut up
to $200.
I think the preface is
necessary to understand the general mood as we approached the venue.
There was still some fun to be had, because the band (apparently controversially) asked fans to dress up, and most did. However, I
had made a key mistake in planning by not correctly predicting the
set times of the opening bands. Since Kid Koala had gotten the lowest
billing, I assumed he would go on stage first, followed by Lost Bayou
Ramblers. Kid Koala didn't interest me, but Lost Bayou Ramblers did,
so naturally I wasn't upset that being delayed by the atrocious
commute and parking situation meant we missed whoever went on stage
first. Or at least, I wasn't upset until we neared the actual venue
and heard Lost Bayou Ramblers leaving the stage, followed by Kid
Koala beginning a DJ set. It turns out he was set up on a second
stage in the crowd, and so he filled the void between the bands. It
wasn't a bad idea, but the nonstandard arrangement led to my
disappointment in missing a band that I wanted to see and catching
another that I didn't.
I think I would have
liked Lost Bayou Ramblers if I'd seen them. I think I would have
liked Kid Koala if I hadn't seen him. He didn't do much for me except
fill some space; I didn't find much merit in his particular style,
and I really didn't appreciate his offhand remark about strippers.
But anyway, eventually
there was some movement on the main stage. A person came out on with
a rather unique headpiece consisting of a four-sided television
screen broadcasting Rick Perry's face. He addressed us and then
introduced another person with a giant Barack Obama bobblehead.
Somewhere in this process, masked bandmembers came out on stage to
the tune of "Deep in the Heart of Texas". Eerily, a large
section of the audience sang along, and even clapped in time at
appropriate points. (Texas is strange sometimes.)
Finally, the masks came
off and Arcade Fire kicked into "Normal Person", a hilarious
and biting song from their new album, Reflektor.
Whereas the prominent lead guitar on the album is almost
exaggeratedly loose, live it was stronger and tighter. "Rebellion"
also exhibited a little more strength on stage, where almost the
entire band shouted the "lies, lies!" backing vocals
instead of just Régine
Chassagne,
as on the record. This began
a pattern of alternating among
highlights from each of their three biggest albums. (Neon
Bible was represented merely by
"No Cars Go", coincidentally also found on their debut EP,
and a tease of "My Body Is a Cage").
I
tried to make sense out of who all was on stage and what everyone was
doing. This was a challenging
task. The band nominally
consists of six members, with two additional regular contributors who
seem to come an go as "official" members (Sarah Neufeld and
Owen Pallett). They were augmented on stage by four additional
musicians: two percussionists and two horns players. While Sarah and
Owen mostly stuck to their violins, the core members drifted between
instruments throughout the show. Even Jeremy Gara, the primary
drummer, switched to guitar for some songs. Régine and Richard Reed
Parry, the most notable multi-instrumentalists, both sat in on drums
on occasion (usually on a seemingly redundant second set) when they
weren't switching between keyboards, celesta, vocals, vibraphones,
guitar, bass, and steel drums. It was quite fun to see who played
what parts, and impressive to behold the quality of the musicianship.
Other
highlights were the heavy dub
beat
and bass
of "Flashbulb Eyes" and
a rousing rendition of the band's first single, "Neighborhood #1
(Tunnels)", the only song on which Régine drummed alone.
"Neighborhood #3 (Power
Out)" was also a strong performance, but I was surprised to see
that one of the dominant instrumental melodies was actually a bass
solo!
Win
Butler introduced "We Exist" with a clear statement that
the song was intended as a demand for acceptance and respect for
gays. "Afterlife" was an
odd performance; it was
preceded by a brief,
minimalist version of "My Body Is a Cage", and near the end
of the song, Win sneaked in a few lines from New Order's "Temptation"
("Thoughts from above hit the people down below / People in this
world, we have no place to go"). The weirdest part was the
presence of a strange, shiny, reflective figure that arose from a
third
stage in the middle of the crowd.
This
was immediately followed by "It's Never Over (Oh Orpheus)",
in which Régine went to the third
stage and sang her parts from there. I suppose this was done in some
sort of spirit of the Orpheus and Eurydice myth, but it was a little
strange, since she was rather hard to see, and the people in the lawn
were probably totally of out luck on that one. After that, Régine
reappeared on stage, ready to sing another part as the band began to
play what sounded like "Sprawl II (Mountains Beyond Mountains)".
However, the band subtly switched gears and they did a full-blown,
awesome cover of "Heart of Glass", before jumping right
back into "Sprawl II" and doing the song it's fair justice.
The
encore was another strange affair, started off by Win
coming on stage with a giant Pope Francis bobblehead. He was
accompanied by what I presume was a recording of the pope speaking in
Latin. Eventually the rest of the band joined him for a version of
Prince's "Controversy", which naturally includes a
rendition of the Lord's Prayer. This led into a great take on "Here
Comes the Night Time", complete with confetti cannons. The final
song was their standard closer, "Wake Up", but at its
conclusion, the band marched through crowd and kept playing on any
instruments they could carry.
I
found the performance to be quite strong and the setlist to be
excellent. The sound was good, but not quite up to the standard of
other Austin venues. (The fact that it was very windy probably didn't
help.) The biggest downside of the whole thing was certainly the
venue. I suspect that the band didn't quite know what they were
getting into by playing there, and they apologized several times
during the show for the trek we had to make to get there. While they
were quite thankful that we put up with it, they seemed a little
disengaged at times as a result. The show was great, but I think they
asked for a lot from their audience, and it made them uncomfortable
as a result. Hopefully they learned a lesson and won't return there.
Scores:
Kid Koala: D
Arcade Fire: B+
P.S.: Since I didn't
actually see Lost Bayou Ramblers, I can't really give them a score.
P.P.S. Thanks to Alyssa for countless reasons!
P.P.S. Thanks to Alyssa for countless reasons!
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