How's the new Deerhoof tour?

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Anyone caught one of the shows? I don't really like the new album too much but one of my friends wants me to go with them. I liked them on the Runners Four tour (mostly due to the insane drumming) but I liked that album quite a bit better, too.

Ted Kennedy (50 Bourbon St), Wednesday, 14 February 2007 03:55 (seventeen years ago) link

I missed their DC show but here's what the Washington Post reviewer said:

Washington Post Tuesday, February 13, 2007; C08
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/02/12/AR2007021201416_pf.html
Deerhoof

Some rock bands struggle to retain their edge, but that's not even a consideration for Deerhoof, which performed at the Black Cat on Sunday night.

Entering its second decade of recording, the San Francisco trio makes music that is mostly sharp angles and off-kilter juxtapositions, put together in a way that suggests everything's about to fall apart. Thus it hardly mattered that the musicians were plagued by technical problems throughout their hour-long set. The chaos just seemed like part of the musical schema, which shifted from singer-bassist Satomi Matsuzaki's childlike chants to John Dieterich's deconstructed arena-rock guitar to Greg Saunier's jazz-metal drumming.

Less than four years ago, Deerhoof played to a small group of enthusiasts at the Warehouse Next Door. On Sunday, the band sold out the Cat, a club that holds nearly 10 times as many people. The band's increased following owes much to its 2006 album, "The Runners Four," which boasted a two-guitar attack the trio no longer has. After the departure of guitarist Chris Cohen, Deerhoof recorded the new "Friend Opportunity," which experiments with keyboards and electronics and gives more room to Matsuzaki's soprano.

At the Cat, Deerhoof played such "Friend Opportunity" songs as "The Galaxist," but in a style more reminiscent of "Runners Four." The blend of chirpy Japanese pop and squawky art-metal was both aggressive and abstract, offering more than enough little jolts to keep things interesting. And if some of those upsets came as a surprise to the musicians themselves, that just added to the sense of adventure.


-- Mark Jenkins

curmudgeon (DC Steve), Wednesday, 14 February 2007 17:05 (seventeen years ago) link

Saw 'em a week or two ago. Fucking fantastic. Show draws heavily on The Runners Four and Milk Man (in addition to the new stuff, of course), but they're playing songs from the whole catalog. And it all sounds great. If you liked 'em last time around, you won't be disappointed.

as in 'powdered feet' (pye poudre), Wednesday, 14 February 2007 17:08 (seventeen years ago) link


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