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acousticrock87 09.27.2006 06:06 PM

Wiltern
 
So who's going? I've been offline for a while cause I moved on campus into an apartment a couple weeks ago and I've been busy as hell. But I have a ticket for the Wiltern show tomorrow. Couldn't find anyone else that wanted to go and had enough money to this time, but I can't pass it up.

Danny Himself 09.27.2006 06:36 PM

It's good to have you back.

noisemachine 09.28.2006 11:09 AM

Im going. Im not a huge fan of the Wiltern- its a bigger than what I usually like. But it should be a great show nonetheless.

dunststruck 09.28.2006 02:24 PM

i got a ticket for the down general adnmission section. thats the floor,it's actually five seperate sections. they take your ticket and give a wrist band to bein the very first section.

guitarpro 10.02.2006 01:02 PM

I was there great set great sound great time

noisemachine 10.02.2006 01:14 PM

The show was good but Im just not a fan of the Wiltern. Its much bigger than what Im generally used to (at least for seeing SY). You just dont get that intimate feeling that smaller clubs or theaters provide. Also, I thought they could have played a few more old songs. I was really in the mood to hear an EVOL song, either Tom Violence or Expressway. But whatever they play, SY puts on a great show and this was no exception.

satirejohn 10.02.2006 03:00 PM

what was the set?

SeaConeTeeth 10.02.2006 05:43 PM

they played expressway at the OC museum of art! it was fantastic

noisemachine 10.02.2006 06:53 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by satirejohn
what was the set?

For the Wiltern, I dont know the order, but they played everything from RR except Sleepin Around. Plus they did Candle, Teenage Riot, Eric's Trip, Shaking Hell, and World Looks Red.

Moshe 10.02.2006 11:37 PM

http://today.reuters.com/news/articl...C-SONIC-DC.XML

LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) - When Sonic Youth began its encore Thursday at the Wiltern LG with the eloquent, longish "Turquoise Boy," it was the set's sixth consecutive song from the band's new album. And the fans who had been yelling for oldies all night were practically begging.
Some audibly groused. Others split. But all was made right with the opening chimes of "Teen Age Riot," from the landmark 1988 album "Daydream Nation." The onstage ruckus devolved into precision chaos as Lee Ranaldo ran a bow across his guitar during a four-piece feedback fest that ended with Ranaldo and Thurston Moore crossing their guitars overhead and mashing the strings together.
It was the showiest display -- aside from Kim Gordon's uninhibited free-form dancing -- of a 95-minute set that saw the New York postpunk faves focused squarely on the present. The band played all but one of the dozen songs on its three-month-old album "Rather Ripped" (Geffen). And while those who only came to hear nuggets from Sonic Youth's 25-year career might have been mildly miffed, anyone who actually listened to the new material had to admit one thing: It's good.


The band is back down to a quartet with the departure of Jim O'Rourke after two albums. With the classic lineup of Moore, Ranaldo, Gordon and drummer Steve Shelley intact (augmented by Pavement bassist Mark Ibold on the tour), Sonic Youth has produced a gem of a 15th album. Among the high points of the record and show were the skewed tunefulness of "Incinerate" with its harsh imagery ("You doused my soul with gasoline/You flicked a match into my brain") and "What a Waste," a Gordon-sung bounce-along that evoked the Noo Yawk sound of "Dreaming"-era Blondie.
And the new ones kept comin': "Jams Run Free" was spiked with mini-riffs and a breathy Gordon vocal; "Pink Steam" rose from an almost swampy opening to a long instrumental bang; "The Neutral" had a tweaked sweetness; and the hypnotic, dirge-paced "Or" featured Ranaldo tossing in "The End"-like guitar fills.
But amid all the frequent guitar changes and onstage tunings, one new song stood out most. Moore's near-yelping, half-cracking vocal lent a discomforting immediacy to "Do You Believe in the Rapture?" The performance built from an appropriate doomsday intro to a ticking-clock guitar recessional. If this is any indication, the rapture will be beautiful.
The catalog-starved fans did get a few chances to cheer, with the Ranaldo-fronted "Eric's Trip," the shrieking show-closer "Shaking Hell" and a couple others, but this night was about now. And now, as then, Sonic Youth is a live beast. And it showed no hint of laurel-resting.
Reuters/Hollywood Reporter


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