
So I've noticed how the types of concerts I go to have evolved. My first rock concert ever was Dave Matthews at Lakewood in 1997. I spent about $250 to get 5th row seats and despite the hundreds of concerts I've been to since then that one still remains one of my favorites. It was an awesome experience that I tried to replicate by going to about 15 more Dave shows over the next three years. Some of them were pretty great but none rivalled that first show. Through that I learned it's pointless to try to relive the past because it's never going to be the same again, you can only go forward in life. So that's what I tried to do...I saw Pearl Jam and U2 at massive amphitheaters. No Doubt and Oasis at Music Midtown (I also admit to loving Collective Soul at the time and seeing them there which is undeniably questionable [Dosage had just come out and you liked it too] but I could just chalk it up with the other things I thought were good ideas in high school like wearing jean shorts).
All of these shows were at big venues at a time in whichever groups career when they were as much an act as a band. This is quite distinct from the types of shows I see now. There is the occasional mid range band at a venue like the Tabernacle or the Fox but more and more it's smaller bands at smaller clubs that cost like 10 bucks to see where the music is the focus. Don't get me wrong, style and charisma (theatricality) are extremely important when you go to see a show but these smaller shows seem more authentic, more pure.

Andrew Bird definitely gave off that feel. The show was very intimate and it made me think of they way music was like before it was so infinitely accessible through modern technology. Before television and cds and ipods. When the only way for you to hear music was to play it or have someone you knew share what they could do with you.
That's what I felt he was doing, sharing with me. He played the glockenspiel, the violin, the guitar (which he actually kind of sucked at) and had a bad ass whistle. He had differing degrees of technical proficiency at each instrument and it was obvious but it was also earnest and therefore satisfying in it's own way.
When he finally decided to play Scythian Empire, which is one of the best songs of 2007, he failed miserably. If you're not familiar with his style he plays pretty much all the instruments/parts during his songs. He'll play one melody and loop it and frantically pick up another instrument and play something else and loop it over top of the previous one and so on and so on. He just couldn't get the song right and kept messing up the loops and what I thought was going to be the most memorable part of the show was, but not for the reasons I thought. Strangely, his inability to play the song correctly didn't ruin the experience. It simply reminded me that I was watching another human being trying to make something beautiful. It added a childish simplicity to it. Now I'm not saying I want every show I go to to be somewhat amateurish because I love seeing the tightness of The Strokes or the theatricality of U2 but everyone once in awhile it's good to remember that these people, these rock stars, are just like us.Check out his latest cd Armchair Apocrypha:


