Pitchfork Fest | 07.13 – 07.15 | Chicago
By Team JamBase Aug 8, 2007 • 12:00 am PDT

Pitchfork Music Festival :: 07.13.07 – 07.15.07 :: Union Park :: Chicago, IL
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Deeming the experiment a success, Pitchfork brought its festival back in 2007, tacking on a special treat for Friday night – three revered artists performing seminal albums from their catalogs, dubbed Don’t Look Back by the All Tomorrow’s Parties organization, which has put on similar happenings all over the U.S. and Europe for years. It might sound like nostalgia, but it was a testament to artists involved that the innovation of these albums actually infused the spirit of the festival itself.
Friday
The biggest problem I anticipated going in was that everything might be anticlimax after Friday’s triple bill. Slint‘s Spiderland was sure to be a monstrous force live, even though the band refuses to admit that it’s back together. The GZA performing Liquid Swords was one of the biggest lineup surprises, but the Wu-Tang Clan‘s legacy resonates throughout modern hip-hop. And what could top Sonic Youth performing Daydream Nation, arguably the most influential album of the past 20 years?
With the sun beginning to set, the grounds were already pretty packed when Slint came onstage. I grew a bit anxious as the faint sounds of “Breadcrumb Trail” wafted over the crowd. Pitchfork has an intrinsic hurdle to jump every year – how to broadcast into the open air music best experienced in smoky clubs. Slint didn’t quite overcome this hitch, but the group was not entirely to blame. The sound system was far too quiet, and not for the last time of the weekend. Slint started off a bit shaky but grew confident by the middle of the album, and by set’s end the crowd was sucked in by its heavy math-grunge pulse. The band then unveiled their first new song in 13 years, “King’s Approach,” a wicked slab of instrumental rock more energetic than almost anything in the band’s catalog. While the atmosphere was all wrong, the set was an impressive start to the fest.
GZA had flown in from a European Wu-Tang tour just for this event, and he came out guns blazing. However, it soon became evident that there were severe limitations to performing an album heavy on guest appearances with no guests present. Most of the allocated verses were skipped, resulting in an energetic but abbreviated performance. GZA also bore the burden of performing for a young, mostly white crowd itching for Thurston Moore & co. He certainly had heads bobbing amongst those not taking the opportunity to grab a beer or a piss.
When Sonic Youth took the stage, the whole of the grounds was packed. Unfortunately, it seemed that 19 years had blunted SY’s enthusiasm for Daydream Nation. The constraints of playing an old album all the way through proved decidedly un-Thurston-like, and while the material itself provided plenty of dynamics, the potential for really stretching out on tunes like “Silver Rocket” or “The Sprawl” was completely unrealized. Only on set highlight “Total Trash” did they really delve deep. It was the only tune that didn’t seem rushed. “‘Cross The Breeze” fell apart just where it could’ve gotten really interesting. Like much of the performance, it lacked the imagination that made the album a landmark. The group exhibited very little of its usual fervor (Kim Gordon, in particular, was leaden and almost deadpan) until the encore, which showcased three songs from 2006’s Rather Ripped. Here, the band finally came alive, Gordon thrashing about with the energy level cranked to 11. This cast an even more drab light on the main set, but these final moments almost saved the show, and certainly left the audience hankering for more. It was a raucous end to a mixed-bag evening, but the overall effect may have been to the benefit of the rest of the fest by not having to live up to the monumental evening that could have been.
Continue reading for Saturday…
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Day two got rolling with The Twilight Sad, Scottish post-rock at its finest, with intelligible, passionate vocals to boot. Chicago’s own Califone was another early highlight of the day. Califone’s set started out sloppy and somewhat lethargic but worked its way into a lackadaisical cohesion, building in intensity with each song and really churning by set’s end.
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Battles was another very bright spot on the day. They reproduced their studio technicality very well but also allowed for some great improv. It had a stark weirdness that occasionally locked into a tight groove before being dismantled and reconstructed over and over again. Enthralling.
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The only set I saw that fell totally flat on Saturday was Cat Power and Dirty Delta Blues . There really was no power at all to Chan Marshall‘s vocals, and one can only hope that the Dirty Delta Blues moniker (cobbled together from the names of other groups the band members play in) is completely ironic. The music was often subtle to the point of near-nonexistence, with only a passing nod to anything resembling actual blues. The songs sometimes held potential but the band wasn’t up to the task, and there was none of Marshall’s trademark idiosyncratic stage presence. Her bouts with stage fright are well publicized, and this may have accounted for her overall timidity and the occasional apology. But, that’s still no excuse for the rest of the band’s rudimentary, recycled groove, a gritless thing devoid of emotion. In fact, it was basically the exact opposite of the performance that followed it.
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Continue reading for Sunday…
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Following Menomena was the blandest stretch of the weekend. Junior Boys came off better than expected live but were still underwhelming, stuck-in-the-’80s synth pop. The Sea And Cake was the closest thing to a jam band all weekend, but their rambling never really went anywhere. It was occasionally interesting music but it was seriously lacking in oomph. Jamie Lidell provided a mid-afternoon high point with his rousing neo-soul set. This one-man band created some body-movin’, beatboxed soundscapes in-between his admittedly derivative (read: Stevie Wonder crossed with Cee-Lo Green) crooning, and his boundless energy onstage was contagious and much needed.
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Then we all did a complete 180 to watch Of Montreal, a group whose stage performance brings the non sequitur to a whole new visual level – pink wings, a five-headed blob, a dancing Darth Vader and a lingerie-clad football were just a few of the onstage oddities. There was nothing subtle about these guys. Musically, they were about halfway there, with moments of brilliance and stretches of pretty standard dancey rock, but the exuberance they played with made up for any underdeveloped sonic ideas. The band eschewed its tradition of covering David Bowie in favor of a near-perfect encore of The Kinks‘ “All Day And All Of The Night.” This is an act in its adolescence but showing true phenomenon potential. Let’s just say I now understand what all the fuss is about. While its antics may not make much sense, you owe it to yourself to see this band live. Sometimes you just need to be purely entertained.
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I could say virtually the same thing about the Klaxons set. Their music isn’t very complex, but the energy was kinetic and the crowd was energized in the dying light. Klaxons get dirtier than most druggy club bands, and it sets them apart both live and on record. A guest appearance by Cadence Weapon made it a real festival set, and then I had to head back over to the big stage to catch the end of De La Soul.
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Stage announcements throughout the weekend ranged from “Um, this is Battles” to the Wavy Gravy-est of love-junkie meandering. In all the inconsistency there was a hesitant but noticeable camaraderie amongst the crowd that was absent in 2006. Maybe the heat stifled it last year, or maybe the more extreme genre-bending this year turned people on to things that made them look at others in a new light, but at the end it felt like a community. A hodgepodge to be sure, but a good community needs all flavors. We’d witnessed the first forays of metal into the lo-fi crowd, and watched gangsta rap infiltrate the sensitive crowd and get it jumping. We bristled as studio wizards struggled to translate technology to the open air, and were thrilled when they succeeded. And if anybody walked away on Sunday night without plans to buy a record by an artist they’d just discovered, he or she missed the point. Pitchfork is the one festival you can go to and not worry about catching the three-hour set you can count on. It’s about the half hour performance that jolts you into the future and rekindles the quest for the cutting edge. As indie rock prepares to take over the airwaves, maybe we can still say we were there first.
JamBase | Chicago
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