Saturday, May 19, 2012

Great Lake Swimmers @ The Troubadour (5.18.12)

Great Lake Swimmers @ the Troubadour
Went to the Troubadour tonight to see the Great Lake Swimmers and was able to get right down front. This allowed me to get shots like this:

Great Lake Swimmers @ the Troubadour
and this:

Great Lake Swimmers @ the Troubadour
It's usually a crapshoot if you can bring a DSLR into the Troubadour so I was pleasantly surprised when they said "yes."

As expected the band started off the night mellow and heavy on songs from their latest album. While good, I am not a big fan of the new sound as it takes away some of what makes them unique. Too much electric, not enough banjo in this humble author's opinion.

Great Lake Swimmers @ the Troubadour
Tony Dekker is a true singer songwriter, giving descriptions of what songs are about, and even admitting that one of the songs he played during his solo set had slowly started to change it's meaning.

Great Lake Swimmers @ the Troubadour
I found myself expecting to hear a bunch of their upbeat songs going in. For the most part they all came in the second half during which they really started to pick up steam and rock out. While trading solos at the end I think the fiddle player really showed off her till then hidden skills. For a live show they really need to have that energy throughout, but then I suppose the audience's ears wouldn't get a chance to "bleed tears" as their very enthusiastic announcer said during the introduction.

The night concluded with an odd encore. The full band came back and played two songs. After that, the band unceremoniously walked off stage and Dekker played one more song (one of my favorites). It was kind of anti-climactic to hear it as just guitar and vox, as opposed to with the full band especially right after they walked off. It would have been better to have them all walk off and do a second encore with him alone like that. Even though it's a band built around Dekker, it would have been nice to make it seem like they all mattered.

Great Lake Swimmers @ the Troubadour
I guess if I were to sum it up, the band really needs to think a bit on it's live show. Not so much how they play or even song choice, but more how to mix it up better. You don't want to peak too soon, but you really dont want it to be constant low with an exponential ramp at the end. It should rise and fall all the way to the climax at the end, where the audience is left wanting for more. I would suggest they take a page from high fidelity about how to make mix tapes.

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Authors Note:

Both times I have seen Badly Drawn Boy at the Troubadour he has bitched about the sound. Namely the low end. When Great Lake Swimmers took the stage, the bass was overpowering everything else, not just on the stage, but in the crowd as well. The banjo/ guitar player spent the first 10-15 minutes fighting with the sound guy to explain what the heck was wrong. Pointing and pantomiming really seems to have had little effect. It took one of the guys coming down on the stage and talking to him to understand what was wrong.

Great Lake Swimmers @ the Troubadour
I guess BDB was vindicated, but in true Canadian style the GLS were polite about it rather than throwing a hissy fit.