This month, I went around taking advantage of what Nashville’s music scene has to offer.
Generally speaking, Nashville can be a pretty boring place as far as actually seeing bands you’d like to see. The majority of bands I’d like to see skip Nashville altogether. They will usually go to Memphis, Chicago, or Atlanta instead. That’s perfectly understandable, Nashville probably isn’t the Holy Grail of ticket sales.
Our town probably also leaves a bad impression on many artists given the fact that nobody ever dances. At least, very rarely does the audience become engaged.
I had liked Mono for quite a while already. This show was utterly amazing and it was everything I thought it was going to be. I really wish there was more to say, but everything about this show was spot on. The venue even had a nice balcony for recording, something the other two shows did not.
httpvp://www.youtube.com/view_play_list?p=DBEC2A73309FDA85
I considered the next concert to be more of a chiptune show; however, it was a mixture of chiptunes, metal, and a bit in between.
The Collapsed Desires Tour 2010 featured Smiletron, rainbowdragoneyes, Nullsleep, Destroy Destroy Destroy, and Magic Hammer. I had already seen Magic Hammer, but I was most interested in seeing Nullsleep.
His music isn’t exactly something I listen to on a daily basis, but it has its place. When I listen to chiptunes, it has to be much more aggressive. Nullsleep wasn’t like that. The other bands were.
Smiletron was sort of a chiptunes version of Dot Dot Curve with less perverted lyrics. Rainbowdragoneyes was chiptunes mixed with death metal screaming. I accidentally deleted the video of his performance, but I did get a few seconds worth of audio before a very hilarious snafu occurs. Destroy Destroy Destroy used to be a local band that I never got around to seeing. This group was very energetic, and played a variation of symphonic metal.
I didn’t stick around for Magic Hammer. I had seen enough metal/eurobeat fusions for one year.
Then there was the Ke$ha concert.
Not exactly sure why I went. I like her music to the extent that a normal person can like mainstream pop music. The music isn’t the deepest trench in the sea, nor were most people in the audience. Let’s just say that amid the heat and the inane amounts of bratty high school girls trying to dress as slutty as possible (Hey girls let’s dress ASAP!) one could say that I amounted a great deal of stress.
Burning up, and three people were already sent to the hospital for heat stroke, I struggled maintaining good angles. There was a frat boy in front of me making out with his sweetheart the entire time, and kept switching hats with her. And apparently, there where little girls poking me and snickering until my wife gave them an evil glare.
The concert was fairly flashy. I was led to believe there would be a condom machine shooting condoms and glitter. There was only glitter.
Her set was relatively short, and it felt like only five or six songs. Then again, it’s an all-ages flood benefit concert. I’d expect either Nashville’s curfew to blame, or the extreme heat. Granted, she doesn’t have an armada of songs to pick from.
I don’t think I was necessarily ‘let down’ by the Ke$ha concert, but as it was the final show of the month perhaps I had misjudged what sort of expectations I should rationally maintain.
So what’s in store for July? The agenda dictates that I am going to go see Ear Pwr, Future Islands, Sleigh Bells, Everything Is Terrible, and maybe The Liars.
