The Mother Hips | 09.12.08 | SF
By Team JamBase Sep 16, 2008 • 12:55 pm PDT

Words & Images by: Andrew Quist
The Mother Hips :: 09.12.08 :: Café du Nord :: San Francisco, CA

Now it has come and gone. My most anticipated show of the summer is done and all I have right now are some beer soaked memories and a ragged setlist scrawled out in the low light of the club. How do I bottle what happened? Let me start with standing in line to pick up my tickets. As we waited outside, a taxi pulled up and slammed to a stop. All in the same motion the door opened and a man leapt out, hauling a suitcase behind him, “In from New York!” he proudly shouted as he presented his ticket and went off in search of awaiting compadres. He was one of many out-of- towners that had come from Arizona, Washington D.C., Oregon, Utah and Colorado, among others.
We came from up and down California, from the Humboldt nation and the beaches of Southern California and east from the gentle Sierra foothills. Together we composed a mildly aging, hip-ass crowd. Now, I’m not old but I tend to wax a little nostalgic these days, and it was easy to see others like me that night. We’ve grayed a bit but we can still rage to the sounds that got us through college and life, while our equally salt and peppered bards led us through songs we know so well. Once it started it was nothing short of communal. We reveled in the past and rejoiced in, as I heard a friend say, “The future retro.” To try and review this thing song-by-song would be a small novel. Rather, kind reader, I beg your indulgence for a handful of standout tunes mixed in with some flashes of relevance.

I think the most poignant part of the night came on as Tim Bluhm picked the opening notes of “Pull Us All Together” over the top of Hoaglin’s droning bass. The song, from Green Hills of Earth, begins, “One good thing that bad things do is pull us all together.” Could it have been more perfectly placed? This night was literally book-ended by the memory of 9/11 and the impending landfall of Hurricane Ike in Galveston. Did anyone else get that? And as though cued, the chants of “Craig, Craig, Craig” following the tune.

Craig’s second set was a little more in the present rather than the past, and I liked that. It became a sing-along and at times the crowd’s crooning rivaled the P.A. “Shootout” from the album of the same name was perfectly played. “Transit Wind” from the same record loosened Loiacono’s guitar prowess in a way that turned the crowd into a writhing, head banging mass of thirty-something’s intent on his incendiary stoke.
There was a place for all of us in Craig’s setlist – the old college buddy of the band that has been on the scene since ’92 got down alongside the guy only recently turned on by the latest album, Kiss The Crystal Flake. The music was equally contagious and grooving to both camps. It was a band and its fans mutually thankful for the past and that special brand of “future retro” set against a night of music that rivaled any show played at anytime. The stars were lined up and the moon was fat for this predetermined barnburner. From the searing heat of “Rich Little Girl” to the beautiful notes of “Sleepy Eyes,” it fulfilled expectations in spades. This night at Café du Nord was one man’s “Greatest Hips,” but we were all immersed in California Soul, perhaps hoping that some day it will be our turn to call the tunes. My list is saved and itching to be taped to a stage next to some effects pedals anytime they’re ready.
09.12.08 :: Café du Nord :: San Francisco, CA
Set One: Two River Blues, Mountain Time, Showing It All to Bad Marie, Esmerelda, Don’t Go So Fast, Fumbling Parade, Poison Oak, Pull Us All Together, Cosmonaut, Bent Carousel, Do It on the Strings, Ball Game, Hey Emilie, Are You Breathing, Spotless As You, Been Lost Once, Pet Foot, Song in a Can
Set Two: Stoned Up the Road, Later Days, $100 Blues, Transit Wind, Shootout, Singing Seems to Ease Me, Hamburger Nancy, Stephanie’s for LA, Barefoot Sea Chanteys, Sarah Bellum, Third Floor Story, Desert Song, Rich Little Girl
Encore: Sleepy Eyes, Lady Be Cool, Superwinner
JamBase | By The Bay
Go See Live Music!