The Echo Project | 10.12 - 10.14 | GA

Words by Brian Bavosa

The Echo Project :: 10.12.07 – 10.14.07 :: Bouckaert Farms :: Fairburn, GA

The Echo Project by Dave Vann
This, my friends, is not your granddaddy's music festival. In fact, it's not our parent's fest, and in some ways, it's not even the same kind of festival we went to two, five or 15 years ago. Sure, the surroundings look the same, the music is still at the forefront, but the first ever Echo Project, held on Bouckaert Farms just outside of Atlanta, was either the first environmentally conscious event of its kind or at least the biggest effort by our generation to date. An ambitious project, Echo brought in some heavy hitters to headline - festival staples The Flaming Lips, MTV phenoms The Killers and the ever-present force that is Phil Lesh and Friends.

One key player in the conscious effort was the company Sustainable Waves. Even though they have been around for a decade, many fans got their first taste of what they were all about at Echo. Their website reads:

Sustainable Waves specializes in sustainable solutions for the entertainment industry. We provide solar powered stages & sound systems and a variety of conscious products and services. From pollution free concerts to innovative products, Sustainable Waves is a logical approach to creating value. With artistic inspiration, we integrate with existing business models. Taking one step at a time, we strive to inspire the currents of the global economy.

On top of the environmental agenda, there were social ones as well. Taking place in the Echo System, a strategically placed tent at the center of the concert grounds where organizations such as HeadCount and Rock the Earth which held panels and meetings to help raise awareness about topics like "Social Change Through Music," "Clean Vibes Recycle Olympics" and "Greening the Music Industry," amongst many others.

And, of course, there was some music, too.

FRIDAY – "RENEW"

GZA :: The Echo Project by J. Jones
Upon arriving at the picturesque farm, a few things were readily apparent from the jump. One, there would definitely be some schedule conflicts. With five stages, this place had ample space for everyone and a smaller crowd than expected - approximately 10,000 fans showed up. Things kicked off with local favorites Dubconscious, followed an hour later by international star Stephen Marley satisfying reggae lovers. Marley was tough to pass up, but I settled into the Eclipse Stage, which was a covered white tent, where The Duo played a very strong set.

The schedule on Friday boasted tastes ranging from the southern pickings of Col. Bruce & The Quark Alliance to the almost spiritual party known as The Polyphonic Spree (who covered Nirvana's "Lithium") to the raw freestylings of GZA (Genius) and Slick Rick featuring The Fyre Department. The weather switched from one extreme to the other. Reaching the low 90's during the day but dipping into the 50's at night, there was no middle ground. Also of note was the dust, which seemed to multiply as the weekend wore on, mainly due to the well-documented drought that has been plaguing the South in recent months.

One Friday highlight was The Egg, who've been around for a while but with a certain level of anonymity. Hailing from the U.K., they are a live band that produces trancey electronic sounds. They were the first band that I saw over the weekend that I was somewhat unfamiliar with. That will change from here on out. It was a high-octane dance party and light show with a few guest DJs.

The Flaming Lips hit the Echo Stage around 9:00 p.m. and proceeded to do what they do best - entertain. Their live show is as much a circus as anything else, with the music sometimes seeming to take a backseat to frontman Wayne Coyne's antics. Confetti, giant balloon balls and one hell of an LCD screen helped keep the crowd feeling warm and fuzzy during sing-a-longs like "Yoshimi Battles The Pink Robots."

The late night boasted The Disco Biscuits playing two sets accompanied by Bassnectar spinning at set break. Meatcamp Productions, which had a hand in putting on Echo, also plans Camp Bisco, making this a very natural decision. The Biscuits' sets were well received, simply due to the patient, relaxed jamming. They even encored with their first attempt at Beethoven's "Moonlight Sonata." Bassnectar was also a crowd favorite with infectious smash-ups of The Beatles and head-bangers Metallica, leaving many amped for Saturday.

SATURDAY – "REUSE"

The Killers :: The Echo Project by Kenny Pusey
I awoke Saturday - my 27th Birthday - in extremely high spirits as the day started with another cornucopia of bands including Telepath, Son Volt and rising stars Toubab Krewe. With a focus on African drumming and just enough rock guitars and bass, these boys definitely have an extremely unique sound. Boasting remarkable technical skills and a love for their trade, it's not long till they blow up. From there, I bounced around catching parts of Clap Your Hands Say Yeah (my indie fix), a second helping of the Biscuits (who dropped a monster "Magellan") and San Francisco's favorite sons, Tea Leaf Green. TLG has real potential but sometimes I don't see eye-to-eye (or ear-to-ear) with them. Saturday's performance was high-energy rock & roll, and I shook my head at ever doubting them.

Also of note was HeadCount's "town meeting" at the Echo Stage. Not only was it an open discussion hosted by board member, Al Schnier of moe. and co-founders Marc Brownstein and Andy Bernstein but it also kicked off HC's official start towards registering voters and accumulating volunteers for their 2008 presidential campaign. They showed a trailer titled "A Call to Arms" along with video of onsite artist interviews and volunteers in action from last year's Langerado. They also properly introduced their first paid employee, executive director Virginia McEnerney.

As night crept into the fold, Thievery Corporation dropped quite possibly the best performance of the weekend. Featuring no less than nine players at any given time, their live band set was tighter than a ball of rubber bands. Not to be confused with their DJ sets, the full band tore through number after number, even dedicating "The Richest Man in Babylon" to George W. Bush.

With a looming Halloween gig in Atlanta, local heroes Perpetual Groove, from nearby Athens, played what many fans considered to be their best festival set ever. It was not your typical set, opening with the 25-minute "Teakwood Betz" and mixing my name into Brock Butler's freestyle sampling during "Macumba." This song exemplifies Butler's versatility, and he had the Eclipse Stage waving along to his every word.

The Killers, who headlined Saturday, rocked out but also stuck out a bit. Obviously paid handsomely - they came, they played, they got paid and left. Their set wasn't bad but I felt in the spirit of Echo, where many of the artists stuck around to see how this scene ticks, The Killers just didn't seem a good fit. However, the music was solid and they even covered Joy Division.

Late night saw jam band veterans' moe. absolutely shred, with MSTRKRAFT spinning a Daft Punk-esque party with stage dancers, members of the Brazilian Girls and Thievery Corp. until 2:00 a.m.

SUNDAY – "REGENERATE"

Umphrey's McGee :: The Echo Project by Kenny Pusey
I have always found Sundays at festivals to be a "positive" day. Whether a gospel brunch, funk in the morning or reggae in the afternoon, there is something undeniably spiritual about it. This Sunday it was the straightforward, feel good vibes of Michael Franti and Spearhead. Another HeadCount supporter, Franti covered Bob Marley's "Get Up, Stand Up," a fitting anthem for the weekend.

Indie rockers Spoon offered a very clean performance that was further evidence of what a spawning ground Austin, Texas is for good music of any genre. Shortly after Spoon, the guitar work of Umphrey's McGee's Jake Cinninger whipped the whirling dust into a frenzy, much to the delight of the patrons' eyes, until the dust flew in them! Sunday's lineup was rounded out by The Roots, ALO, RAQ and the final headliner, Phil Lesh and Friends.

For many, this was their first look at a Jackie Greene, a young singer-songwriter who is the spitting image of a young Bob Dylan. Maybe it was the atmosphere of the weekend, maybe it was a nod to the drought or maybe it was pure coincidence but the encore was none other than Dylan's "A Hard Rain's A-Gonna Fall" sung by Greene.

Overall, The Echo Project was the first of what will hopefully be a continuing trend - a conscious, community effort to change the way we live. As the program guide said, "The Echo Project is committed to changing the way events are powered and creating a sustainable energy experience. This way, we can have a weekend that we'll never forget, and yet it won't be just a memory — we'll be able to do it again and again."

Continue reading for LOTS more pics from The Echo Project...

Backstage at The Echo Project with Dave Vann

March Forth Marching Band
The Avett Brothers
Barrel House Mamas
Col. Bruce & The Quark Alliance
Louis XIV
Greenskeepers
Perpetual Groove
The Roots
The Frequency
Tea Leaf Green
Jamie McLean
The Bravery
ALO
Michael Franti

Continue reading for more pics from The Echo Project...

The Echo Project by Jeremy Jones

The Avett Brothers
Mike Dillon & Skerik with Les Claypool
Man Man
MMW
MOFRO
Polyphonic Spree
Thievery Corporation
Spoon
Tea Leaf Green
Toubab Krewe
Wood Brothers
Brazilian Girls
Brazilian Girls
Cat Power
Cat Power
Clap Your Hands Say Yeah
Col. Bruce & The Quark Alliance
Benevento/Russo Duo
Marc Ford
Michael Franti
Lyrics Born
March Forth Marching Band
Stephen Marley
Son Volt
Spoon
Thievery Corporation

Continue reading for more pics from The Echo Project...

The Echo Project by Kenny Pusey

The Disco Biscuits
The Disco Biscuits
The Bravery
Brazilian Girls
Brazilian Girls
Cat Power
Cypress Hill
Benevento/Russo Duo
Benevento/Russo Duo
Michael Franti
Grimace Federation
GZA
The Killers
Lyrics Born
Les Claypool
Skerik with Les Claypool
The Flaming Lips
The Flaming Lips
Stephen Marley
MMW
Perpetual Groove
Phil Lesh
Polyphonic Spree
Thievery Corporation
The Roots
Umphrey's McGee
Umphrey's McGee

JamBase | Georgia
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Comments

johnnygoff starstarstar Mon 10/22/2007 07:59PM
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johnnygoff

dave vann - great shots - thanks for the "The Frequency" band shot.

also bb, thanx for the brief rundown on echo and "The Egg" mention. (i bought their first album years ago and loved it"...one question though:

what did this line from the review mean: "Tea Leaf Green. TLG has real potential but sometimes I don't see eye-to-eye (or ear-to-ear) with them. Saturday's performance was high-energy rock & roll, and I shook my head at ever doubting them.

So what were you saying there?

thanks jambase for the coverage of this.

aaronjl1 Mon 10/22/2007 08:42PM
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aaronjl1

sounds like a great festival... minus the flaming lips! isn't it about time people got over these posers?!?! i've seen the lips a hand full of time, and the first time i was like, "wow! this is really cool. it would be a whole lot better if they played some music to go along with it." then the next time and the next time and the next time, it was the same thing except with larger spectacles, more talking, and less playing. whatever...

i may be in the minority here, but i enjoy going to concerts to experience music, not to hear someone rant and rave about the desperate state of the world today (as the delightfully induldge themselves while burning more resources than could be afforded with a budget equivalent to that of the gross national product of boliva).

ABSOLUTE HYPOCRITS! The epitome of commercial gluttony served up to a consumption driven society...

And don't chime in with that "satiric metaphoric personification microcosm - 'it's objectifying excess to bring awareness to the serious consequences of living an excessive lifestyle within an exploitative society' BS"!

gmoo Mon 10/22/2007 09:01PM
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gmoo

Wow I really wish I could have made it. So much music to see in three days. I feel you on the Flaming Lips, Aaronjl1. One cannot deny that they do perform a spectacular event, but they certainly do burn through a lot of resources to put on one show. Saying that, I do believe Wayne and the boys have the best intentions for all of us.

Since certain people who message on this site seem to have huge problems with Bisco and their core fan base (you know who you are), it's hard to not mention how much Brownie and the guys actually care about the world we live in. Think about how much all of us could do to improve the lives of children in need, and think about the time we all take to unproductively criticize our brothers and sisters on a daily basis. I know I'm just as guilty as anyone else, but the last thing we ought to do is stop caring about each other. I hope those who went to Echo had an awesome time and took away lifetimes of memories :)

deftone984 Mon 10/22/2007 09:14PM
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deftone984

i hate to be critical, but this review doesn't come close to doing the echo project justice. i realize there was a lot going on at once and its impossible to see it all, but come on. a mere few sentences about the late night shows? i would personally rather read in depth, unique accounts of 10 performances than get a review full of generic name dropping and generalized summaries. we can all read the lineup. 2 cents.

deftone984 Mon 10/22/2007 09:46PM
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deftone984

i hate to be critical, but this review doesn't come close to doing the echo project justice. i realize there was a lot going on at once and its impossible to see it all, but come on. a mere few sentences about the late night shows? i would personally rather read in depth, unique accounts of 10 performances than get a review full of generic name dropping and generalized summaries. we can all read the lineup. 2 cents.

samtarmstrong Mon 10/22/2007 11:15PM
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samtarmstrong

The Echo Project was awesome. That is about all that can be said. One exception, the Flaming Lips. I didn't go, but I am certain that the circus was really entertaining and the 'music' was extremely contrived. I think that is why they have the whole to-do in the back, to distract the crowd from the pieces of shit they call music. I thought that the festival was supposed to be eco-friendly, yet the first headlining band shot ass-loads of confetti into the atmosphere and all over the farm not once, not twice, but three times. Come on. Everything else was great, though. No further complaints. They were expecting a ton of people and very few showed up, making all of the shows really spaced out (with the exception of Tea Leaf Green. That tent was packed). I will most definatly be back next year, and I will see you all there.

harpua331 starstarstarstarstar Tue 10/23/2007 06:27AM
-1 Votes Thumbs down! Thumbs up!

Bavosa...great review!!! What a weekend it was. Even though I was out at the Front Gate 90% of the weekend, you could still feel the vibe from inside. Out of the few bands that I got to see...Perpetual Groove and Umphreys brought down the house. Best festival set form Pgroove by far....Teakwood opener??!! Macumba??!! What a set it was...even had a stage diver.

From dust covered everything to birthday cakes...the weekend was great! Great pics by David Vann!!!! You and Fernando rocked it out all weekend!! Cheers!

katlyn2828 Tue 10/23/2007 08:29AM
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GREAT FESTIVAL! First time seeing Theivery Corporation and they blew me away, their sound is so uniquie and entrancing. I have to agree with people when they say...Flaming Lips are fun to see but the music? definetly takes a back seat to the "show", fun to watch on mushrooms though. moe late night absoloutly brought the heat (as always)!!!! Michael Franti sunday was wonderful and brought such positve vibes to everyone on a beautiful sunny day. Everyone was kickin up dust dancing all around! wonderful weekend, great staff!!!, great vibes!! we all did our best to keep things clean, I only wish some would've tried harder. We left monday afternoon and it was sad to see people couldn't even put their campsite trash in bags...

can't wait for next year!

stealyourface Tue 10/23/2007 08:32AM
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stealyourface

overall, great review. AMAZING weekend.

agreed about the lips..this was my second time seeing them in a short time span, and there was hardly any variation between the shows. but its all good, i'm just so glad i got to be a part of the first echo project. well worth the 10 hour trek from south florida!

xlenoxx starstarstar Tue 10/23/2007 08:57AM
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xlenoxx

Great festival! Great venue! Great music! i have to agree though about the flaming lips. The crowd i went with were all major flaming lips fans so i have to say getting as close as we did, the show itself was really great, but honestly Wayne talked about bush and voting correctly next election for a good 20% of their set list. The second you'd think "oh great hes done talking, a new song!, he would jump back on the mic and basically regurgitate the exact same shit he said before. Disco biscuits were great and i completely agree with the pgroove comments, it was one of their better sets ive seen. i especially loved brock's freestyle.

top shows:

1. Pgroove

2. bassnectar - kid kept me raging through his whole set and i was sad to see him end.

3. polyphonic spree - never really given them a listen, and probably wouldnt outside of a show, but man it was quite the good mid-day event.

btw did anyone happen to catch rabbit in the moon? i had never heard of them but a friend of mine stressed over and over to see them cause they rarely tour, and man what a fucking freak of a show that was. Overall a great weekend!

milesgone starstarstarstarstar Tue 10/23/2007 09:15AM
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milesgone

next time there is a GREEN festival, lets keep the N2O OUT.

it depletes ozone!!!!!

shacklefordwantsapizza Tue 10/23/2007 10:57AM
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I would say there are several more convincing and valid reasons to discourage the use of nitrous at festivals. With respect to the compounds effects on the ozone layer, it has a very short life span in the trophosphere (less than 3 years) as compared to the more potent ozone depleting gases; CFC’s last between 70-140 years. All in all, inhalation anesthetics (N20, Halothane, enflurane, and isoflurane) are considered to be responsible for only 0.0005% of the ozone destruction at present. And no, i don't work for some giant multinational corporation that distributes anesthetics.

orgwell Tue 10/23/2007 01:41PM
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orgwell

-----Nitrous isn't even the tip of the iceberg. I worked Clean Vibes for the first time following Echo, and boy was it an experience. Yes, it was certainly a positive thing, and I felt great for my efforts, but how ironic that our greater majority cannot even respect the ideals of this fest? For anyone who's ever stuck around through a Monday, you might know what I mean. Half-eaten campsites dotted the landscape, tarnishing what I felt to be a potentially conscious event.

-----Would anyone reading this leave trash on the Appalachian Trail, for example? We espouse a certain reverence for nature, and claim to care about the environment; but when it comes down to it, how many of us are really willing to make an effort to lessen the impact that we, as individuals leave upon this earth? Nitrous is one thing, cigarettes are another; I may have picked up more than 1,000 butts in the days following. Does anyone know what field striking is?

-----I'm sure that many individuals attending this festival (among others) may, in fact, do a great job in terms of minimizing their own "wastefulness." I'm certainly doing my best to improve as well -- it's not an easy battle to undertake. But how mature is it to callously leave one's belongings strewn about, as if someone were eager to clean up?

-----In the days following, a friend said to me, "People pay these ticket prices so they can let loose and have a good time." Of course, but would any of us intentionally wish additional hardship, muck, grime, and frustration upon another? I should hope not.. I don't know if I've ever felt more cynical about humanity's plight as I did the few days after Echo.

-----Where do we go from here? The name of the game is personal responsibility. Do your best to not litter -- put trash and recyclables where they belong. Try not to buy things that you may not really need, in terms of festivals or in general. Finally, if these issues seem important to you, don't wait around for someone else to improve the situation -- that might be why we're in this mess in the first place. Find some way to get involved and make things better!

-----I really do hope everyone had a great time at Echo. I also hope next year will be better, and I'm not talking about the lineup.

zgja2 Tue 10/23/2007 02:41PM
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zgja2

Amazing fest! all the sets I saw were amazing! great vibe. And ill end with just just 4 words RABBIT IN THE MOON!

Gribblecake Tue 10/23/2007 04:14PM
+1 Votes Thumbs down! Thumbs up!

Gribblecake

I think orgwell hit the nail on the head. Alot of my frustrations with these things is the lip-service ideology that I hear. Oh, we care about the environment and hate the evil republicans, but we're not gonna do a damn thing about it except go to big festivals. It's rather disappointing when you see all these people that seem to be so different, yet so many are just talking and not too much different than any other middle-class person their age.

shame it was so late and in georgia, that was a good lineup. oh, if only PA would get something nice like this.

johnnygoff Tue 10/23/2007 05:46PM
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johnnygoff

bavosa, are you out there? I really was wondering what you were getting at there:

""Tea Leaf Green. TLG has real potential but sometimes I don't see eye-to-eye (or ear-to-ear) with them. Saturday's performance was high-energy rock & roll, and I shook my head at ever doubting them."

why didn;t you dig TLG and more specifically, exactly what did "I shook my head at ever doubting them" mean?

really not trying to be a dick here. I like TLG and they have been getting some really decent reviews lately...so I am kind of intrigued why BB didn't like them.

cheers.

deftone984 Tue 10/23/2007 06:55PM
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deftone984

i will second those four words: rabbit in the moon!

SuperSpacePhunk Tue 10/23/2007 07:11PM
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SuperSpacePhunk

GOFF>>>

What I meant was this: the first few times I saw TLG, I was split on them. One show would be AWESOME< others at festys, so-so. Sometimes I felt Josh Clark and Trevor Garrad were un-real. Other times, just another mediocre band.

After ECHO, I am on board, and realize what all the buzz is about: these boys can play. SanFran is lucky.

That's all...my .02

BAVOSA

SuperSpacePhunk Tue 10/23/2007 07:12PM
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SuperSpacePhunk

i guess that sentence wasnt crystal clear. I shook my head at ever doubting them IN THE PAST. They delivered at ECHO.

Sorry for the unclear statement.

Suave starstarstarstarstar Tue 10/23/2007 08:49PM
Show -5 Votes Thumbs down! Thumbs up!
orgwell Wed 10/24/2007 06:07AM
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orgwell

Anyone else interested in keeping general drug comments off of this website? I thought that JamBase existed to spread word about music, not about getting fucked up. Understandably, that might be important to some people in terms of "adding to the overall experience," but I wonder if this sort of mentality is why we now have John E. Law showing up at festivals left and right, "ruining" Wakarusa '06 (so I heard). Whether or not you drink or otherwise, the scene exists to provide access to music, not other stuff..

stealyourface Wed 10/24/2007 07:00AM
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stealyourface

agreed orgwell. That was maybe the one negative part of my echo experience. Where I was camping there were a handful of people that seemed to solely be there just for the drugs. I did not see them venture to the stages once...not to say that they didn't at all, I can't be 100% sure, but still....its about the music! And we need to keep it that way. I hope this is "only there for the drugs" mentality is not a growing fad at festies. talk about a shame.

jennywithani starstarstar Wed 10/24/2007 07:30AM
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jennywithani

MAN what a great time! RABBIT IN THE MOON WAS NUTS. I really couldn't believe what I was seeing at some points! THe giant LED suit and those prism glasses they threw out... awesome. Slightly scary at times (chainsawing FACES?!?!?!) but nevertheless entertaining for sure. Didn't really enjoy the music too too much, but it was an adventure :)

Brazilian girls were AMAZING as usual... sabina is my hero :)

O1Roggae Wed 10/24/2007 08:26AM
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O1Roggae

Great festival. no offense to whoever wrote the article on Echo, but that is one of the weakest fest reviews i have read in a while, and I didnt hear a single thing on Claypools intense set or anything really that described how great a festival this was. in fact there were a few hippiecrites(heads who litter, steal, and spread bad vibes) at echo who ruined some of the green vibes, but other than that I think it was a great turnout. I was happy that some of the bands like moe. encouraged waste cleanup after the show stating to " just please on your way out pick up at least one piece of trash", I really thought that was cool, because we need to stop being lazy americans and start thinking about the world's future. Ohter than the tent-robbing which occurred right by camping area I think echo was probably one of the friendliest fests i've attended

O1Roggae Wed 10/24/2007 08:31AM
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O1Roggae

by the way no one really gave Phil & friends the review they deserved a 4 hr time slot in which I thought was very solid and fun. Hes 67 and still is playing 4 hrs of music for us, and we give him this weak ass review, I think it is bs. Hes playin 10 shows in Ny and I think he deserves a little bit more applause because is still keepin the vibes alive for all of us.

pdsuperfly00 Wed 10/24/2007 08:33AM
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aaron...flaming lips are good...listen to the yoshimi battles pink robot album...i havent seen them live but to say they suck is kind of whack..coming from someone who likes pearl jam

orgwell Wed 10/24/2007 10:10AM
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orgwell

-----Yay, another dispute! "This band sucks." "No they don't!" I certainly respect the Lips and enjoy their albums to an extent (01Roggae's right about Yoshimi), but their stuff is just not really what I prefer to see and hear in terms of live music. They definitely have a very grandiose show, and that's possibly a lot of their appeal -- their shows are freakin' ridiculous! But if you're not into a band, then you shouldn't have to say anything negative about them. There are some bands out there that I think suck a**hole, but nobody really wants to hear someone spouting a bunch of negativity.

-----I used to look at festival lineups solely in terms of bands that I liked or didn't. "Sweet! -Band Name-'s gonna be at -Festival-! Heck yeah!" Sure, that's great; you get to see some music that you love dearly. "Crap! -Band Name-'s gonna be at -Festival-. Man.." Sure, you're technically paying for an artist that you don't enjoy, but that's almost a good thing, because you can use that time slot for something else: rest/sleep, wander around, check out vendors/info. tables, or -- giving some smaller artist a chance whom you never would have otherwise. One thing that frustrates me about Bonnaroo is the insane amount of musical competition going on at once; I really do want to see Everything. But it's a lot easier when you absolutely don't prefer some band; would you rather the entire lineup was all of the music you listened to? I think that'd be much worse..

-----While I personally don't like the Lips' confetti (because I did Clean Vibes), it is a part of their whole package. I will say, however, that most of it seems to be of a very thin, easily biodegrable nature. This could be planned on their part, maybe not. While I probably would not have chosen to see them Friday night ('cause again, I'm not too into them and I would've rather used my time otherwise), isn't it a little better when saying that you don't like some music -- that you actually went to one of their shows just to be sure?

-----Let's keep it nice y'alls, with much love and respect!

orgwell Wed 10/24/2007 10:25AM
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orgwell

-----Yay, another dispute! "This band sucks." "No they don't!" I certainly respect the Lips and enjoy their albums to an extent (01Roggae's right about Yoshimi), but their stuff is just not really what I prefer to see and hear in terms of live music. They definitely have a very grandiose show, and that's possibly a lot of their appeal -- their shows are freakin' ridiculous! But if you're not into a band, then you shouldn't have to say anything negative about them. There are some bands out there that I think suck a**hole, but nobody really wants to hear someone spouting a bunch of negativity.

-----I used to look at festival lineups solely in terms of bands that I liked or didn't. "Sweet! -Band Name-'s gonna be at -Festival-! Heck yeah!" Sure, that's great; you get to see some music that you love dearly. "Crap! -Band Name-'s gonna be at -Festival-. Man.." Sure, you're technically paying for an artist that you don't enjoy, but that's almost a good thing, because you can use that time slot for something else: rest/sleep, wander around, check out vendors/info. tables, or -- giving some smaller artist a chance whom you never would have otherwise. One thing that frustrates me about Bonnaroo is the insane amount of musical competition going on at once; I really do want to see Everything. But it's a lot easier when you absolutely don't prefer some band; would you rather the entire lineup was all of the music you listened to? I think that'd be much worse..

-----While I personally don't like the Lips' confetti (because I did Clean Vibes), it is a part of their whole package. I will say, however, that most of it seems to be of a very thin, easily biodegrable nature. This could be planned on their part, maybe not. While I probably would not have chosen to see them Friday night ('cause again, I'm not too into them and I would've rather used my time otherwise), isn't it a little better when saying that you don't like some music -- that you actually went to one of their shows just to be sure?

-----Let's keep it nice y'alls, with much love and respect!

Gribblecake Wed 10/24/2007 01:15PM
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Gribblecake

heh, hippiecrites. Maybe Bob was right about people feeding off the table scraps of the 60's. If you're going to act like a hippie, at least try to do the good parts.

lotusfuckinrocks starstarstarstarstar Wed 10/24/2007 03:59PM
0 Votes Thumbs down!