I have no choice but to deem this year's festival a success. It's hard to not consider it a success when you have the chance to see so many great bands over the span of two days for just $35. I'm going to keep this short, because there has already been a ton of coverage of this festival on other blogs. I'll just tell you my brief opinions/thoughts, and you can ask me questions if there's something else you want to know.
My favorite acts...
1. Battles (they reproduced the sound from Mirrored incredibly well in a live setting. great energy. crowd loved them.)
2. Dan Deacon (his set was all about dancing and having a good time, all while trying to avoid crowd surfers falling on your head from behind and/or falling down and being trampled to death. his set was cut short because the crowd was getting too out of control.)
3. Menomena (musically, these guys were better than Dan Deacon. they played a really solid set, and the reminded me of how awesome Friend and Foe is. i've been listening to it a lot again since the festival ended.)
4. Stephen Malkmus (i was really excited for his set. he was first or second for my most anticipated acts to see going into the festival, next to Battles. i did enjoy his set, but it wasn't really what i was expecting. he played a solo set, and he played a fair amount of Pavement songs. unfortunately for me, i'm not that familiar with Pavement. it's really a shame, so i'm working on changing that in the coming weeks.
I don't feel the need to rank any more of the bands from the festival, as they were all pretty much on par with each other, from the shows that I actually caught. I felt like I missed a lot of potentially great acts, however.
I wanted to see, but didn't see: Of Montreal, The New Pornographers, Cat Power, Clipse Mastodon
Of those four bands, I'm actually most upset that I missed Of Montreal, and I've seen them live more than any other band. I watched their set from a distance, and it was spectacular. I know what it's like to be up front for an Of Montreal show, and it's one of the greatest things in the world. Fortunately for me, I might be catching them in October in Minneapolis (they announced a fall tour).
Overall, Pitchfork was a great time. The festival is so laid back that it's hard to not enjoy it, even if you're not there to watch bands play.
p.s. I didn't mention the sound problems (there were plenty of them), and I hope Pitchfork gets their crap together before next year. The problems didn't stop me from having fun, but minor annoyances like these can certainly hurt the festival in the long run.
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1 comment:
musically, these guys were better than Dan Deacon haha, what, Dan Deacon's iPod shuffle strapped to a banana wasn't musically impressive enough for you?
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