Event: Austin City
Limits Festival 2016, Weekend 1, Day 1
Venue: Zilker Park
Location: Austin, Texas
Date: 30 September 2016
My
fourth year! Much like last year, the lineup seemed a bit weak to me,
but it still wasn't hard to find a day I wanted to see. Actually,
there were a few of acts scattered across the weekend that interested
me, but they were thinly spread out and I was unconvinced to go for
more than a single day. Since
I had to work most of the
day and I
got inside the festival
grounds a bit later than I was hoping, I missed Chairlift and
Bombino,
but I've seen the latter twice before, and I caught the former on the
webcast the next morning.
I
wasn't particularly excited about any of the bands playing
for a couple hours, so I just picked things that seemed like they had
at least a slight chance of being good. I started with Foals,
a British band that kept switching contexts between indie rock and
hard rock. The indie rock parts were tolerable,
particularly when they
leaned in an 80s new wave direction, but the harder stuff was just
bland heavy riffing and some jarring screaming. I wasn't very
impressed by the instrumental performances at any point. They kept
threatening to break into big solos, but instead they just kept
riffing more. They were
missing something in the ways of nuance.
From
there I wandered over to St. Lucia
on the Miller stage while eating a burrito. I was totally unimpressed
by their
generic electronica, and the sound
from the Cirrus Logic stage
was fiercely interfering.
I gave up and ended up going to that stage for Cold War
Kids, who weren't much better
and were also suffering from the cross-park noise. (Seriously, there
were three stages all facing into the same section of crowd.) Cold
War Kids at least had a decent piano rock vibe, but they came off as
fairly generic pop rock. A few hints of Erasure
slipped through, but filtered through acoustic piano and electric
guitar. It struck me that when they stuck to keyboards, they had
something going for them, but every time they'd switch to more
guitars and it'd go downhill.
I
was supposed to be meeting a friend around this time, but cell phone
reception was so spotty near the entrance that we managed to miss
each other and I gave up trying to find him after an initial search.
I took the opportunity to see Flying Lotus
after I missed my chance earlier this year due to the cancellation of Levitation. He was definitely as weird as I was expecting
(seemingly just for the sake
of weirdness),
and he lived up to the reputation of being difficult to classify and
categorize. However, this very confusion makes him rather fascinating
to behold. He draws you in by forcibly keeping your attention purely
with his creative instrumentals. His raps were fine, but the real
draw is his skill with blending a psychedelic collage of samples.
Eventually
I realized I'd better find my friend, so aided
by better reception I went
in search of him in the Tito's tent, where Corinne Bailey Rae was playing. She was
nominally playing a pleasant take on soul, but she frequently
diverted
into dancier electronic pop territory. I was less excited by that,
but she had a solid band and a great voice at
any rate. The bassist was
superb
but unfortunately kept switching to keyboards to synthesize the
instrument in a far inferior
fashion.
[Corinne Bailey Rae.]
After a detour to the
food stalls and the merch booth, we headed towards the Samsung stage
to get a decent spot for Radiohead. Despite that we missed out
on some other options in the meantime, it was probably worth it.
Here's the setlist:
01. Burn the Witch
02. Daydreaming
03. Ful Stop
04. Airbag
05. How Soon Is Now?
[The Smiths cover tease]
06. 2 + 2 = 5
06. The National Anthem
07. Bloom
08. Lotus Flower
09. The Gloaming
10. Exit Music (for a
Film)
11. The Numbers
12. Identikit
13. Reckoner
14. Everything in Its
Right Place →
15. Idioteque
16. Bodysnatchers
17. Street Spirit (Fade
Out)
Encore:
18. Give Up the Ghost
19. Paranoid Android
20. Nude
21. Weird
Fishes/Arpeggi
22. There There
23. Karma Police
[Radiohead.]
Radiohead, again
augmented by second drummer Clive Deamer, began the show predictably
and rather inauspiciously. "Burn the Witch", nominally a
song driven by rapidly bowed strings, was simulated by a chugging
bassline and what seemed to be synth strings, but the energy suffered
from the substitution and Thom's voice wandered a little too far
off-key. "Daydreaming" works fine as the follow-up track on
A Moon Shaped Pool, but on
stage its loose, drifting atmosphere
didn't help ground things any more than the opener did. Thankfully,
the band opted to skip a few more low-key album tracks and dove
straight into the higher-powered "Ful Stop", finally
kicking things off in earnest. "Airbag" solidified the deal
and was greeted by huge applause.
Pausing
briefly for a breather, Thom Yorke started singing lines from The
Smiths' classic "How Soon Is Now?". The audience sang
along, but before they got too far, the band launched into "2 +
2 = 5". From that point onward, they basically played a
conventional greatest-hits set, interrupted only briefly for two more
songs from the new album: "The Numbers" and "Identikit".
While those may be two of the best songs on the album, I was
surprised that they only ended up playing five songs from A
Moon Shaped Pool. (At
least they skipped the redundant version of "True Love Waits"
that is a downgrade from the I Might Be Wrong
live version, which itself was a downgrade from the original 1995
live version.) They similarly only played three songs from the
previous album, The King of Limbs,
and they didn't play any of the non-album singles they released
around that time.
In
fact, they didn't play anything at all that could be considered
unexpected or surprising. Even "Exit Music" is one of their
regular numbers, and this performance was marred by a brief loss of
sound amplification and by an unruly group near me that decided to
shout at each other during the quiet start of the song. I
was hoping for "Let Down" (which they've been playing
surprisingly often on this tour), "Climbing Up the Walls",
or anything they hadn't
played in a long time, but to
no avail. The last time I saw them, they played an obscure b-side ("The Amazing
Sounds of Orgy") and a song that wouldn't be released for four
years ("Identikit"), so
my hopes weren't entirely unfounded.
That
said, what they did play was superb after the first couple duds. I'll
take "Reckoner" and "Nude" any day, and the
audience was exceptionally excited for "Weird
Fishes/Arpeggi". I still
think "Everything in Its Right Place" works best in its
right place as a set- or show-closer, and while it seemed a little
too brief this time around, I liked they way they ran it straight
into "Idioteque", which they in turn brought to an
uncommonly frenzied pitch. "Karma Police" would be hard to
complain about, and Thom graced us with a singalong coda of the
chorus before leaving the stage for
good.
Considering the limits
of the festival stage and the fact they haven't toured in four years,
Radiohead still maintained a high standard of performance, and they
covered a wide breadth of material from the large catalog they have
available to draw from. The show was a good time, but it seemed like
they were playing a bit by the numbers. There really weren't any
surprises and little to make the show stand out in a positive way.
Their stature is such that they could afford to experiment and play
around, so it was disappointing that they didn't take the
opportunity.
[Radiohead again.]
After leaving the
festival grounds, I went to Stubb's to catch a late night show of
Andrew Bird, which I will cover in the next post.
Scores:
Foals: C-
St. Lucia: C-
Cold War Kids: C+
Flying Lotus: B
Corinne Bailey Rae: B-
Radiohead: B+
P.S. Foals' setlist is
here,
St. Lucia's is here,
Cold War Kids' is here, Flying Lotus' is here, and Corinne Bailey Rae's is here.
P.P.S. Thanks to Jacob!
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