ONE NIGHT DOWN, TWO TO GO.

Them Drive-by Truckers are in the middle of a 3-night run to New Year’s Eve at Washington DC’s legendary 9:30 Club. Above is video for Zip City from the first night.

No Southern Rock Opera last night, though we did get the above and also Life in the Factory, Let There Be Rock, Women Without Whiskey, and Shut up and Get On The Plane from said LP. They also cranked out their killer cover of Zevon’s Play It All Night Long as well as Jim Carroll’s People Who Died.

They sent out Feb. 14 to Barr Weissman and his wife; he directed a film about the band. The stage set has those dark, grim Cooley birds on either side, flanking the band, and a few more on the tapestry behind them. Sugar’s David Barbe (also the band’s long time producer) is doing a great job on bass, which I suspect is a major challenge in a band that famously declines to make setlists ahead of time.

Our prediction about SRO may not come true, but this run of gigs feels like they’re building to a pause point where they take a break, maybe make a new record, or just take some time off. They’ve been hitting the road so hard these last few years, it may be a point at which to take some family time out.

WANT.   Thanks for posting, Jalyn!

jalynhenton:

Very Exciting!


(Source: jalynhenton)

Over at Mojo there’s a blog post about the trend of performing entire albums live - and whether that’s a bad trend for rock.  I’ve seen a few albums performed live:

Brian Wilson - Pet Sounds, SMiLE
Love - Forever Changes
The Who - Quadrophenia (twice in 1996)
The Musical Box  - The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway
[note: TMB is Peter Gabriel-era Genesis tribute, with full staging, original instrumentation, costumes & slideshow]
Sugar - Beaster

And all of these were excellent shows.  They were albums I was absolutely enamored of, and seeing them in concert was truly an experience.  That being said, I recall my cousin discussing seeing Husker Du on their Warehouse tour and they just came out and played the album in sequence.  He said he left because it was boring.

It’s interesting to note that all of these shows were decades after the album’s original release, apart from Sugar’s tour, but Beaster was really only an EP.  That suggests to me that some measure of distance is required before the appreciation of an album in a live concert setting.  Either that or the presence of Bob Mould!

Albums I’d probably enjoy seeing performed live, start to finish:

Big Star - Radio City or #1 Record or Third
Drive-by Truckers - Southern Rock Opera or Decoration Day or Brighter Than Creation’s Dark
My Bloody Valentine - Loveless
The Twilight Singers - Blackberry Belle
The Afghan Whigs - Gentlemen or 1965
Bob Dylan - Blood on the Tracks
The Affordable Floors - Drumming on the Walls
Sugar - Copper Blue

What do you think about classic albums played live?   Any you want to hear?

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