Belated Andrew Bird 'live' review. [Archive] - Audio & Video Forums

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Swish
05-19-2012, 08:32 AM
So the day after the Canadian Invasion, Fall Girl, her better half, and Audio Bill rode to Philly with me and my current spouse in my somewhat-cramped mid-size sedan. I drove extra fast to get there as quickly as possible. Actually, I always drive 'extra fast'.

Bird was playing at Union Transfer, a fairly-new (less than a year old) venue on Spring Garden St. in Philly, just a couple blocks north of Vine Street. We arrived much earlier to check into our hotel and did some walking around the city to see the Liberty Bell and Independence Hall, among other things. We also saw a girl wearing high-heeled sneakers, which was much more interesting than the historical crap.

We ate some pub grub at the funky Standard Tap, along with some most excellent libations. After dinner, we headed over to the Union Transfer and were able to park right in front of it on the street. Lucky? Nope, just really freakin' early, so we walked across the street to the Llama Tooth restaurant and were greeted with the most bizarre service I've ever encountered. Okay maybe the second most bizarre, but still quite bizarre.

We each got a drink while I kept commenting on how many people were already in line for the show. Everyone knew I was on edge and drank a bit more hurriedly, something they couldn't really help since I was lifting the bottom of their glasses to assist them.

We got in line and, after a short wait, they opened the doors. We were about to get in one of the lower boxes (sort of a loge on each side of the first level) and I got the staff to bring us a couple seats because at least two in our group were old and feeble. Your guess as to whom I'm referring.

It was an awesome show and I'm so glad I was able to see it. I found this stellar review of the show and couldn't this of anything to add, so here you go...

Andrew Bird takes unpredictable turns in Union Transfer concert
May 05, 2012|By Sam Adams, FOR THE INQUIRER

Union Transfer boasts some of the best sight lines in the city, but even with the stage at Thursday’s Andrew Bird concert in full view, you might have been tempted to crane your neck to see where he was hiding his orchestra. Even when he was alone at the microphone — or rather, microphones — with only a violin in his hands, Bird used loop pedals to layer swooping solos on top of sprightly pizzicato, seamlessly integrating snatches of styles ranging from the Wild West to the Middle East.

Bird recorded his new album, Break It Yourself, in a weekend-long jam session in a converted barn, with the same three-piece band that joined him on stage. The songs built slowly, in part out of necessity, since Bird needed time to record and embellish his intricate loops, which dove around each other like aquatic mammals or birds cartwheeling in an open sky. For “Desperation Breeds ...,” he built a gauzy mass of vocal harmonies, adding to his own vocal parts each time the musical figure swung around to its beginning, which faded into the background as the band steered the song into rockier seas. Additional instability was provided courtesy of a spinning speaker topped with what looked like a two-headed gramophone horn, making Bird’s violin and guitar echo and shudder.

Bird’s onstage process roughly mirrors that of more recent arrival Merrill Garbus, who performs as Tune-Yards. But while Garbus builds towering, African-influenced polyrhythms, Bird expands along the horizon line, broadening his scope rather than setting each new element atop the last. Technically speaking, Bird’s method is no less demanding — a single misplaced note could easily collapse the structure — but it feels like less of a high-wire act, mainly because his songs are less about locking into patterns than straying from them. “Orpheo Looks Back” began with Bird playing his violin like a ukulele, morphed into a Romany dance, and then gave way to his quavering, almost ghostly whistle.

Twice during the show, including for an encore cover of Townes Van Zandt’s “If I Needed You,” Bird switched off his electronics and gathered his band around a single microphone, as if they were performing on some old-time radio hour. Even without enhancement, the songs took unpredictable turns, as if Bird were not their master, only their keeper.

Here's the setlist for anyone interested:

Hole in the Ocean Floor (solo, just the album intro)
Why? (solo)
Nyatiti (band joins)
Danse Caribe
Desperation Breeds...
Polynation
Action/Adventure (first time with band he said)
Lusitania
Orpheo Looks Back
Eyeoneye
Give It Away (shared mic)
Effigy
Dear Dirty (brief jam)
The Crown Salesman
Near Death Experience Experience
Plasticities
Fatal Shore
Tables and Chairs
Fake Palindromes
Encore:
If I Needed You (Townes Van Zandt cover with shared mic)
I'm Goin' Home (Charley Patton cover with shared mic)

ForeverAutumn
05-19-2012, 08:55 AM
The experience at the Llama Tooth is a story in it's own right, but really more of a "you had to be there to believe it" experience. Here's a photo of one of the many altered pictures hanging in the restaurant (where they wouldn't serve us food). Just to give you a sample of the bizarre...

ForeverAutumn
05-19-2012, 09:02 AM
And here's one of the Bird-man himself. :)

dean_martin
05-21-2012, 07:23 AM
We also saw a girl wearing high-heeled sneakers, which was much more interesting than the historical crap.



Were they yellow?
Did she have her red hot pants on?
A yellow low-neck see-through blouse, without a brassiere?
Was she shakin' like two big ol' balloons in a hurricane?
Was she wearin' a purple afro-wig?

If so, you're talkin' 'bout my baby.