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NYCTaper Upcoming Schedule: Spring Awakening

April 13, 2011
By

63_taperbird
[image by Songbirdnest]

We’ve had a few productive months since the last update, so its time to take us through the Spring and into Summer. We are still experimenting with alternative download locations and hopefully this coming season will see no more downtime.

[Below is the updated schedule. We expect to attend and record these events. However, circumstances will prevent some of these from being done, and others will be added in the meantime.]

If you want nyctaper to record your band, a band you represent, a show you’re promoting, or even your favorite band in the world, get us in the door and make sure everyone who needs to approve of the recording gives permission. Also, remember each person on the nyctaper crew does this all for free — the recordings, the post-production, the reviews, the links, etc. — so treat us fairly.

Schedule:

Wye Oak:
April 14, 2011 Bowery Ballroom NYC

Eternal Summers:
April 15, 2011 Glasslands Gallery Brooklyn

Sharon Van Etten:
April 16, 2011 Music Hall of Williamsburg

Maps & Atlases:
April 19, 2011 Bowery Ballroom NYC

Mogwai:
April 21 and 22, 2011 Webster Hall NYC
(Tour Postponed)

(new)
British Sea Power:
April 21, 2011 Bowery Ballroom NYC

(new)
Man Forever / Turn To Crime:
April 22, 2011 Union Pool Brooklyn

Jason Isbell:
April 22, 2011 Bowery Ballroom NYC
(confirmed from new mgmt, no taping)

Wires Under Tension (and others):
April 26, 2011 Glasslands Gallery Brooklyn

Low:
April 27, 2011 Bowery Ballroom NYC

Buffalo Tom:
April 28, 2011 Bowery Ballroom NYC

Elvis Perkins / Martha Wainwright / Jesse Harris:
April 29, 2011 Noncerts, Cameo Gallery Brooklyn

Surfer Blood / And You Will Know Us By the Trail of the Dead:
April 29, 2011 Bowery Ballroom NYC

Of Montreal:
April 30, 2011 Webster Hall NYC

The Fiery Furnaces:
May 4 and May 5, 2011 Rockwood Music Hall NYC

Wakey Wakey:
May 4, 2011 The Rock Shop Brooklyn

Big Tree:
May 7, 2011 Union Hall Brooklyn

Dax Riggs:
May 7, 2011 The Rock Shop Brooklyn

Yo La Tengo:
May 10 and May 11, 2011 Bell House Brooklyn

Cass McCombs:
May 12, 2011 Bowery Ballroom NYC (permission pending)

The Feelies:
May 13, 2011 Bell House Brooklyn

John Vanderslice:
May 13, 2011 The Rock Shop Brooklyn

The Antlers:
May 19, 2011 Music Hall of Williamsburg Brooklyn
May 20, 2011 Bowery Ballroom NYC

Thurston Moore:
May 20, 2011 Music Hall of Williamsburg Brooklyn

Real Estate / Julian Lynch:
May 20, 2011 Bell House Brooklyn

Tune-Yards:
May 21, 2011 Music Hall of Williamsburg

Real Estate:
May 21, 2011 Maxwell’s Hoboken NJ

Our Band Could Be Your Life:
May 22, 2011 Bowery Ballroom NYC (permission pending – very tentative)

The Melvins:
June 6 and June 7, 2011 Music Hall of Williamsburg Brooklyn

Kurt Vile:
June 11, 2011 Bowery Ballroom NYC

Northside Festival:
June 16, 17, 18 and 19, 2011 Various Venues TBA

Dean Wareham:
June 17, 2011 Bell House Brooklyn

Jeremy Messersmith:
June 18, 2011 Mercury Lounge NYC

Deer Tick (“Deervana”):
June 19, 2011 Brooklyn Bowl

Dinosaur Jr.:
June 23, 2011 Terminal 5 NYC

Archers of Loaf:
June 25, 2011 Music Hall of Williamsburg Brooklyn
June 26, 2011 Webster Hall NYC (permission pending)

The Blasters and the Hi-Risers: March 11, 2011 Maxwell’s – Flac and MP3 Downloads + Streaming Songs

April 3, 2011
By


[photo courtesy of Steve at Culture Schlock]

mrsaureus reports:
“Here’s a confession: I know almost nothing about Hoboken, in spite of being proud resident of NJ since I decamped from Manhattan in the early 90’s (though I try to keep up my dual citizenship). I know that it has pretensions about being the sixth borough, and geographically it’s sort of a counterweight to Brooklyn across the centrifuge spindle of Manhattan. It makes demographic sense that coolness could diffuse over that way, and with Brooklyn almost full to capacity with hip (I heard recently about some trucker hats and beards in Woodside, for goodness sake), Hoboken might reasonably aspire to graduate from counterweight to counterpart: Jersey Brooklyn. Brooklyn on the Hudson. Brooklyn Sinistro. Most of the people I saw there on my recent visit wouldn’t have looked out of place in Williamsburg, but there sure weren’t many of them. Ten o’clock on a Friday night and not much happening on Washington Street. The big question I had was, where the hell is everybody? Then I got it. Of course. It’s Friday night: everybody went to NYC (you know, the real NYC).

Maxwell’s is the smallest venue I have ever been in that features nationally known acts. You walk through the bar/restaurant with it’s nice tin ceiling to a back room that is maybe twenty by sixty feet with a small stage at one end and a bar over by the door. It’s smaller than the typical “great” room featured in all that doomed suburban real estate, those tract houses for the wealthy. There isn’t even any back stage. The bands actually walk through the audience, guitars in hand, and climb up on the stage from the front. It’s about as intimate a performance space as you could actually sell tickets for, and it’s not hard to see why people love it so much.

On stage right it’s Keith Wyatt, whom I didn’t even know was the Dave Alvin du jour, but I recognized him right away from a bunch of guitar instructional videos that I have. He still got his 80’s movie star Judge Reinhold good looks, but seemed a little tired and pale, washed out, like just being in The Blasters starts to pull your soul loose. From the time I first saw them in Streets of Fire, I’ve thought the Blasters operated in a sort of Mephistophelian haze, as if instead of selling their souls outright Robert Johnson style, they’ve been parcelling them out in small transactions over decades, JIT Fausts, shopping at Satan’s 7-11 for essentials only. Fame and fortune is a big ticket item, out of reach with this parsimonious approach, but for the soul in your left little toe you can probably get a mixed review in NME, leaning positive, and a really good chicken fried steak. Well, that’s one theory. Maybe he was just tired: the show didn’t start till almost midnight and went till almost 2 AM. That’s late by Manhattan standards. For all that it’s the city that never sleeps, shows tend to start and end early in borough number one: Beacon has a hard stop at 11 PM, and I haven’t been to hardly any shows that go past midnight. Score one for night life in borough number six, I guess.

And there in the center, with Fedora worn backwards in a sly wink, John Bazz stands facing the audience, eyes closed to slits throughout the entire song, beatific expression with a trace of wry smile, a slim, serene Buddha on bass guitar. He’s the calm, meditative eye of the Blasters storm. Behind him on the drum kit, is the storm, Bill Bateman, a cyclone with a greased pompadour and hands (and feet) he can’t keep to himself. The two lock in rock solid rhythm: the very anvil on which you can hammer out the blues.

Anchoring stage left, counterweight to both John and Keith, is a big man. These days health mania abounds, and whenever you see anyone who was famously fat (Meatloaf, say) you expect that they’ve slimmed down look good (Meatloaf, check). Well, not Phil Alvin. He’s still impressively rotund. And he doesn’t look good, at least not from the point of view of, say, a health care professional: with a flush creeping over a pasty pallor under shiny beads of sweat, his head looks like a big scoop of cherry vanilla ice cream just starting to melt. He’s Gluttony, that most American of the Deadly Sins, Blasters the well chosen house band in the Lido Circle of Hell on the Infernal Cruise. But I, for one, have about had it with our national obsession with good health. We’ve lost our admiration for big appetites, for the glory of carnal excess, and we’re the less for it, a smaller people in spirit as well as in girth. Phil would have done better in the age of the robber barons: a William Howard Taft of Rockabilly with a waistline to match his chops. Bright penetrating eyes darting over the audience, then closed as his face contracts into his famous skeletal rictus of a smile, he is rigor mortis animated, an atherosclerotic monument to an American life well lived. I consider a massive coronary to be an honorable and clean death for a man, the pathological equivalent of the firing squad, and if Phil takes one last exit stage left one of these days after a rousing final chorus of “Marie, Marie”, I’m going to take a guess and say it’s how he would have wanted it.

How’d they play? They played great, they’re the Blasters. Very generous thirty song set, over two hours. Keith Wyatt really takes flight: considering his extensive GIT/instructional video background there’s an instant of worry about that whole “if you can’t do” thing but it’s immediately shredded into little pieces and blown out of the room with his first guitar solo. And song after song, he’s inventive, melodic and precise. And when’s the last time you saw a guitar player change his own string onstage while the lead singer stalls by reciting the Confession? I hadn’t realized how much charm guitar techs take out of live music till that moment.

The Hi-Risers drove down from Rochester to play a short opening set. They’re a fun band: bright and pleasant, eager to please, and it’s good to see the young’uns still have a taste for the rockabilly. Easy, breezy, and excellent in the novelty department, what with the kazoo, and the one note guitar solo, what they lack is any whiff of sulfur, nothing dark to be seen when you peer down the chute. Rockabilly always teeters on the edge of being the blues exorcised, and one reason the Blasters are the masters is that you don’t have to have much second sight to see the Devil trying to pull Phil Alvin into Hell right in front of your very eyes. If the Blasters drive a hard bargain, The Hi-Risers seem not to have made any deal with the devil whatsoever. Kids these days! I don’t know if it’s internet distribution or what it is, but when you cut the cord, sometimes the dog runs off.

Hmm. What else. OK, here’s something: it really struck me at this show how thoroughly, as a people, we’ve lost our ability to dance. Back in the first half of the 20th century most people could pair dance (that is do real dances with actual steps in the company of other dancers where you move all over the floor and don’t bump into each other) competently enough for this skill to be assumed and for entertainment to accommodate this assumption. Then sometimes in the Sixties I guess, we more or less made a conscious decision to abandon that skill and replace it with improvised but still more or less rhythmic singles dancing. Then disco came and fought a skirmish, a brief last spasm, and was repulsed as dancing flatlined. As we begin our long slog through the 21st century it was hard to identify any dance skills whatsoever in a group of maybe 200 people self-selected to go to a rock and roll show in Hoboken NJ on a recent Friday night. And this music has a very strong, simple rhythm: it was what we said we liked when we said we hated disco. Most people stood rock solid still and didn’t even tap their feet. A few did sort of “dance”, but it was mostly orgiastic spasming without much reference to the music or the immediate surroundings, to be read semiotically as “Having drunk alcohol, I must now have fun.” Actually, there was exactly one couple who could properly dance, and it was the shadow that they cast that got me to thinking about it. And in case you’re wondering, no, I’m no Fred Astaire myself, but I’m thinking about taking some lessons.”

Recorded and minimally produced by mrsaureus, standing center floor ten feet back from the stage, Core-Sound High End Binaurals to Sony PCM-M10 (48 kHZ, 24 bit), WavePad Sound Editor to chop and FLAC only.

Stream “Long White Cadillac” (The Blasters):
[audio:https://www.nyctaper.com/B1103Blasters1112/02-Long%20White%20Cadillac.mp3]

Stream “That Rock & Roll Beat” (The Hi-Risers):
[audio:https://www.nyctaper.com/B1103Blasters1112/12-That%20Rock%20and%20Roll%20Beat.mp3]

Direct download of complete show in MP3 files
The Blasters (HERE)
The Hi-Risers (HERE)

Download the Complete show in FLAC
The Blasters [HERE]
The Hi-Risers [HERE]

The Blasters and The Hi-Risers
Maxwell’s
Hoboken, NJ
03-11-2011

The Blasters
01-Daddy Rollin’ Stone
02-Long White Cadillac
03-Well, Oh Well
04-Sugar Momma
05-Lonely Over You
06-All Your Fault
07-Arkansas Traveler – Technical Difficulties
08-Red Rose
09-Bipolar Blues
10-Please, Please, Please
11-I Love You So
12-4-11-44
13-Band Intros – Rockabilly Man
14-American Music
15-Love is My Business
16-I’m Shakin’
17-Window Up Above
18-Everything’s All Right
19-Boneyard
20-No Nights By Myself
21-One Bad Stud
22-Cryin’ For My Baby (Give Me a Big F Chord)
23-New Orleans $2 Whore
24-Man Trouble Blues
25-So Long Baby Goodbye
26-Trouble Bound
27-Help You Dream
28-Dark Night
29-Blue Shadows
30-Marie, Marie
31-Rock Boppin’ Baby
32-High School Confidential

The Hi-Risers
01-Soundcheck
02-She’ll Be My Ruin
03-I Like the Way She’s Mine
04-Johnny, Jim and Jack
05-Rockin’ Spree
06-Tamales
07-Sparkplug
08-Wild Romance
09-Top Shelf
10-One Note Joe
11-Gear Bustin’ Sort of a Feller
12-That Rock & Roll Beat

If you email nyctaper for access to this recording, we expect that you will PLEASE SUPPORT The Blasters, visit their website, and purchase their official releases from the Evangeline Records website [HERE].

If you email nyctaper for access to this recording, we expect that you will PLEASE SUPPORT The Hi-Risers, visit their website, and purchase their official releases from The Store at their website.

Woods: February 4, 2011 Monster Island Basement – Flac and MP3 Downloads + Streaming Songs

February 7, 2011
By


[photo by PP]

Friday night’s Woods show at Monster Island was billed as an acoustic duo, but soon evolved into a near full band Woods show. Jeremy and Jarvis were originally scheduled to perform the entire set together, but were ultimately joined by Lucas, and Matt and Alex from Real Estate/Ducktails. The set’s unique nature was further enhanced by the fact that the band performed seven new songs among a 13-song show. Opening with two pieces of new material presented a challenge for the young-ish and packed-in crowd, but after the band began to play in earnest, they received full attention. The crowd was rewarded with a stunning ten-minute “Bend Beyond” (streaming below), which has taken on the role of Woods jam piece during recent sets. The four new songs performed in the middle of the set were quiet minor-chord folk numbers, but thereafter “Born to Lose” (also streaming below), began quietly and developed into a seven minute full band psychedelic jam. The set closed with two familiar numbers, and despite calls for an encore the lateness of the hour required that the band call it a night. Woods will continue with two final shows in their tour with Ducktails, tonight in Philadelphia and Tuesday in Baltimore, before heading to Europe for much of March.

I recorded this set with the Neumann microphone mounted on a pole fifteen feet from the stage, and mixed with a feed from the board. There was some minor hiss in the system and in the PA that is evident during quieter moments, but its not distracting to this overall excellent recording. Enjoy!

Stream “Bend Beyond”:
[audio:https://www.nyctaper.com/W2206Woods2990/03.%20Bend%20Beyond.mp3]

Stream “Born To Lose”:
[audio:https://www.nyctaper.com/W2206Woods2990/12.%20Born%20To%20Lose.mp3]

Direct download of complete show in MP3 files (HERE)

Download the Complete show in FLAC [HERE].

Woods
2011-02-04
Monster Island Basement
Brooklyn, NY USA

Digital Master Recording
Soundboard + Audience Matrix

Soundboard + Neumann KM-150s > Edirol R-44 (Oade Concert Mod) > 2x 16bit 44.1kHz wav files > Soundforge (level adjustments, mixdown, set fades) > CDWave 1.95 (tracking) > Flac Frontend (level 7, align sector boundaries) > flac

Recorded and Produced by nyctaper
2011-02-05

Setlist:
[Total Time 53:19]
01 Pushing Onlys
02 I’m Not Gone
03 Bend Beyond
04 [tuning]
05 Be All Be Easy
06 Rain On
07 To Clean
08 Get Back
09 Pick Up
10 Wouldn’t Waste
11 Say Goodbye
12 Born To Lose
13 Suffering Season
14 Blood Dries Darker

If you email nyctaper for access to these recordings, we expect that you will PLEASE SUPPORT Woods, visit their website, and purchase their official releases, including their latest At Echo Lake from Woodist Records [HERE].

Our Top 25 Concert Moments of 2010 (with MP3 Download and Streaming Songs)

December 31, 2010
By

We were treated to a lot of amazing music this year, and the site has continued to grow. This year, we reached our 600th recording posted since 2007 – a pretty incredible number considering that this is only the fourth year of the site.  As a final New Year’s treat to our readers, we thought we would share a “mixtape” with you of some of our favorite concert moments of 2010.

Out of the two hundred-plus shows that we saw, we selected 25 moments that we thought were particularly memorable (among the shows we recorded, at least). There is a wide range of music, styles and artists represented: folk, rock, Scandinavian pop, punk and much more. There are new bands who are just breaking into the mainstream, as well as mainstream acts continuing to perform at a high level. The only consistent theme is that these artists all touched us in some way, giving performances that stayed with us long after the last notes were played.

The following list is in no particular order. Links to download the entire compilation, as well as selected numbers streaming, are below.

Want to keep up with the latest concert updates and recordings on the site? Follow @nyctaper and @acidjacknyc on Twitter.

Download the entire mixtape [HERE]

1. Built to Spill – “Carry The Zero” – September 20, 2010 Rocks Off Concert Cruise. This show was nuts – on a boat, with a tiny main floor, with a crowd that was loud, drunken and rowdy, and a veteran band doing what they do best. We saw Built to Spill a ton of times over the past two years, but this show was the clear standout. [audio:https://www.nyctaper.com/2010Best20/BTS-CarryTheZero.mp3]

2. Oh Land – “Lean On Me” – November 8, 2010 Brooklyn Bowl. We first saw this young Danish artist play Brooklyn Bowl back in July. Although she was still getting comfortable with her new material, her talent and unique stage presence were already on display. After seeing her again at the Backyard Brunch Sessions, we caught her again a month later at Brooklyn Bowl. Her evolution blew us away – displaying newfound poise and confidence, designer clothing and a new percussionist, Nanna dominated the stage. Though many of her songs lend themselves to dancing, I have always been partial to this more precious number. She may now be the face of Missoni, but Oh Land is far, far more than a pretty face. [audio:https://www.nyctaper.com/2010Best20/OhLand-LeanOnMe.mp3]

3. John Vanderslice – “The Parade” – October 21, 2010 Mercury Lounge. On the night after our Unofficial CMJ Day Party at Cake Shop, we caught one of our favorite acts, the inimitable songwriter John Vanderslice at Mercury Lounge. John has always been a supporter and friend of the site, but we were especially gratified by his heartfelt intro to this song when he thanked nyctaper from the stage. [audio:https://www.nyctaper.com/2010Best20/JV-TheParade.mp3]

4. The Dirty Projectors – “As I Went Out One Morning [Bob Dylan]” – September 11, 2010 Terminal 5. After this band blew us away at the tail end of 2009, we were thrilled that Johnny Fried Chicken Boy was able to catch their show at the massive Terminal 5. This Dylan cover was among many special songs played during another show that wowed us with its musical skill. [audio:https://www.nyctaper.com/2010Best20/DirtyProjectors-AsIWentOutOneMorning.mp3]

5. Pavement – “Fight this Generation” – September 19, 2010 Williamsburg Waterfront. Pavement‘s return was probably my personal musical highlight of the year – nobody ever thought it would happen, and when it did, they were exactly as nonchalant about the whole thing as you would expect. Everything went right at their first NYC show in ten years, and the irony of Pavement – an iconic band for Generation X – playing “Fight This Generation” on the Williamsburg waterfront to an entirely new generation of fans was perfect. This loose, jammy rendition killed, too. [audio:https://www.nyctaper.com/2010Best20/Pavement-FightThisGeneration.mp3]

6. Superchunk – “Digging For Something” – September 19, 2010 Music Hall of Williamsburg. While I was checking out Pavement, nyctaper was down the street taking in an equally amazing performance from another 90s indie darling, Superchunk. Supporting their first new album in almost a decade, Superchunk gave us even more than we could have imagined when special guest John Darnielle joined them for this number. [audio:https://www.nyctaper.com/2010Best20/Superchunk-DiggingForSomething.mp3]

7. John Roderick w/ Nada Surf – “The Commander Thinks Aloud” – March 26, 2010 Bell House. Nada Surf‘s multi-night series of full album performances had many memorable moments, but my favorite of all came from John Roderick of The Long Winters, the opening act at the Bell House/The Weight Is A Gift show. With Nada Surf as his backing band, Roderick capped off his acoustic set by tearing through a fully electric version of this big number that showcases Roderick’s unique voice. You can stream and download this song, and the entire show, on the Live Music Archive [HERE].

8. Natureboy – “I’ll Keep It With Mine” – May 15, 2010 Piano’s. This show was a special day for us, as we celebrated the third anniversary of the site with some of our favorite bands. Natureboy drew a strong crowd as our first act of that evening, and they made our night by performing, our request, their cover of this Dylan-via-Nico classic.[audio:https://www.nyctaper.com/2010Best20/Natureboy-KeepItWithMine.mp3]

9. Fucked Up – “Son the Father” – February 18, 2010 Maxwell’s. I had the pleasure of seeing Fucked Up three times this year, and each show was awe-inspiring. Damian “Pink Eyes” Abraham is a punk rock showman without parallel: on the mic, he is extremely hardcore; in between songs, he chats up the crowd like each person is his best bud. “Son the Father” is one of the band’s best songs, and it was at about this point during the Maxwell’s show that (as has to be the case at every Fucked Up show) all hell broke loose. [audio:https://www.nyctaper.com/2010Best20/FuckedUp-SonTheFather.mp3]

10. The Black Keys – “Same Old Thing” – July 28, 2010 Terminal 5. There was a huge response to our post of The Black Keys‘ show at Terminal 5, and for good reason – it is an excellent recording of a band that is rapidly ingratiating itself with the mainstream. This song is a four-piece version of this song, with Leon Michaels on keyboards and Nick Movshon on bass. [audio:https://www.nyctaper.com/2010Best20/TBK-SameOldThing.mp3]

11. Panda Bear – “Song For Ariel (Guys Eyes)” – September 11, 2010 Governor’s Island. On the same day as the epic Dirty Projectors show back in Manhattan, Panda Bear was giving a magical performance on Governor’s Island that blew our minds both for the incredible quality of the sound (which did not always receive such good reviews for other shows) and the clarity and focus of the performance. This guitar-heavy and reworked version of this song was one of many highlights of an amazing show that also featured some new songs. [audio:https://www.nyctaper.com/2010Best20/PandaBear-SongForAriel.mp3]

12. Soft Black – “I’m Not Afraid of You” – August 7, 2010 A Backyard in Bushwick. This whole show was a testament to the power of the local music community and the DIY spirit of the moment. Soft Black were supposed to be playing on a rooftop elsewhere in the ‘hood as part of a benefit show for the people of the Gaza Strip. That show was shut down by the cops three acts in, while it was still light outside. But instead of giving up and calling it a night, the fans and bands rallied to move the show to one of the musicians’ backyard. Soft Black dedicated this haunting song, with its defiant refrain, to a kid who got arrested when the police shut down the rooftop show. The song itself is quite dark, but the moment was joyful, and powerful, in a way that I will never forget. [audio:https://www.nyctaper.com/2010Best20/SoftBlack-I’mNotAfraidOfYou.mp3]

13. Real Estate – “Reservoir” – June 25, 2010 Music Hall of Williamsburg. Real Estate is another band that has wowed us both with their consistent playing as well as their respect for their fans. We had seen them open for labelmates Woods a number of times, but this time, they found themselves as the headliner of the Woodsist showcase at the Northside Festival. This showcase was one of the best experiences of the entire Northside Festival, but Real Estate’s set in particular stood out, as the more mature band showed off some new songs, including the excellent “Reservoir.” Download the entire set [HERE].

14. Maps & Atlases – “Solid Ground” – August 12, 2010 Mercury Lounge. I caught Maps & Atlases back in 2009 touring behind their previous record, the EP You, Me and the Mountain. I liked what I saw – the unusual combination of freak folk and math rock, vocalist Dave Davison’s vocals, the dual percussionists – but they didn’t seem quite there yet. For one, while I liked their sound, I wasn’t completely blown away by the songs. That all changed with the release of this year’s Perch Patchwork, which was one of my favorite records of the year, and a massive leap forward artistically. For this show, the band was greeted by a spirited crowd literally screaming for more, and in particular, this song (you can hear a drunk dude yelling “Solid Ground!” in between every other song on the set before they finally play it). When the band finally played the song, the payoff was huge, and the jam at the end clinches it. After an outstanding set, Maps broke down their gear and put some chairs and drums in the center of the floor and played an acoustic set for those willing to wait. The performance was not only the most improved of any band that I saw this year, but also one of the flat-out best. It didn’t hurt any that the recording came out flawlessly, too. Download the entire set [HERE]. [audio:https://www.nyctaper.com/2010Best20/M&A-SolidGround.mp3]

15. Holly Miranda – “I’d Rather Go Blind [Etta James]” – May 26, 2010 Bowery Ballroom. A Bowery Ballroom headlining gig has become a barometer of a band’s success these days – for a New York band on their way up, there is your time on the scene before Bowery, and your time after, and after, things are never the same. This show represented Holly Miranda’s Bowery breakout, and she treated the event with the reverence due it as she ripped off a lengthy set representing her latest record The Magician’s Private Library, and played two covers, including this jaw-dropping rendition of an Etta James classic. [audio:https://www.nyctaper.com/2010Best20/HollyMiranda-RatherGoBlind.mp3]

16. Wilco – “Thank You, Friends” – April 2, 2010 Wellmont Theatre. The challenging acoustics of this venue did not deter Wilco from delivering one of the most epic sets we have seen of theirs (well over three hours long). This Big Star cover played tribute to their singular frontman, singer and songwriter Alex Chilton, who sadly passed away this March. Alex and his many contributions to rock music will be dearly missed. [audio:https://www.nyctaper.com/2010Best20/Wilco-ThankYouFriends.mp3]

17. Sharon Van Etten – “One Day” – October 8, 2010 Rock Shop. It is no secret that this site has been a huge booster for Sharon Van Etten, and we are thrilled to see her career taking off in a big way (you can hear one of her songs, “I Fold” in the closing sequence in a recent episode of the Showtime series The Big C). In the two shows she played at Rock Shop this year, Sharon’s maturity and outstanding songwriting made us fall in love with her music all over again. [audio:https://www.nyctaper.com/2010Best20/SVE-OneDay.mp3]

18. Woods – “Bend Beyond” – May 13, 2010 Abrons Arts Center. In a music scene that is strong but fragmented, Woods have emerged as bi-coastal scene godfathers of sorts, in the way that Sonic Youth have been for a generation. The Woodsist label, for which the band is the anchor, has produced a roster of like-minded acts from the East and West Coasts that share a common affinity for the psychedelic, folk-influenced sound the label is known for. While they have been building a formidable presence with the label, Woods themselves have evolved far beyond the “freak folk” tag into a full-blown indie rock jam band of sorts, turning four-minute album tracks into epics that showcase their virtuosity on their instruments. This show, featuring the band backed by the Joshua Light Show, was especially sprawling, and never moreso than on this nearly twenty minute “Bend Beyond.” This show proved that this was a very different band than the act I saw opening for Dungen in 2009 – that band was a great “freak folk” act, if you will. This band is legendary. [audio:https://www.nyctaper.com/2010Best20/Woods-BendBeyond.mp3]

19. Spoon – “Car Radio” – September 13, 2010 Cake Shop. After we caught their set opening for Arcade Fire at Madison Square Garden, we weren’t sure we would have another chance to record Spoon this year. But then along came this secret show at Cake Shop, a live video recording for “Nobody Gets Me But You,” that proved to be one of the most exciting and intimate performances we saw all year. These guys remember where they came from (Austin) and we trust that they will never stop being one of the most consistent, most fan-friendly acts in the country. Download the entire set [HERE].

20. The Loom – “The First Freeze” – October 10, 2010 Backyard Brunch Sessions. We enjoyed many of the Backyard Brunch Sessions sets we saw this summer and fall, but perhaps none more than this performance by our friends The Loom, who proved that great musicians do not need extra amplification or trickery to make powerful music. Set up in a humble backyard in Bushwick, rocking a homemade bass made out of a washtub, they wowed us with their modern, folk-influenced sound. This song was my favorite of all, not least of which because of the added humor of some rowdy neighbors making noise in the background (who cannot be heard on the recording) – making a bunch of noise right before this (the quietest song of the set) song began. Once it got going, it was the most mesmerizing vocal performance of the day. [audio:https://www.nyctaper.com/2010Best20/Loom-FirstFreeze.mp3]

21. Yo La Tengo – “Little Eyes” – December 7, 2010 Maxwell’s. If you have read this site once in December, you know that Yo La Tengo’s 2010 Hanukkah shows have been our main focus this month. These eight nights of unique setlists, special guests, and fan camaraderie at one of our favorite venues in the city, Maxwell’s, are some of the best nights of the year every time that YLT decides to do them. This song, from the Summer Sun album, is an expanded version augmented by the guitar wizardry of the legendary Nels Cline, who joined the band for most of this night’s set. Although we loved the December 5 show featuring Mission of Burma, this show on the 7th turned out to be our favorite of them all – a perfect balance of the band’s harder and softer dynamics that showcased them at the height of their powers. [audio:https://www.nyctaper.com/2010Best20/YLT-LittleEyes.mp3]

22. Bear In Heaven – “Lovesick Teenager” – November 19, 2010 Music Hall of Williamsburg. Bear In Heaven was another band that stepped up in a big way in 2010. A year’s worth of touring took what had been a great album act but somewhat uneven live band and turned them into the juggernaut that we witnessed at Music Hall of Williamsburg. Whereas previous shows had always faced technical limitations (primarily with respect to sound), everything was perfectly dialed in for this show, with the Music Hall sound system delivering crystal clear sound and a light show that dazzled the sold-out crowd. Not but twelve months ago this band was playing the cozy Zebulon down the street. This show was obviously this band’s “Bowery moment.” [audio:https://www.nyctaper.com/2010Best20/BearInHeaven-LovesickTeenager.mp3]

23. The Joy Formidable – “Austere” – January 12, 2010 Pianos. Whereas a Bowery Ballroom show tends to cement a band’s status in the scene, Pianos is Manhattan’s best incubator. Shows there tend to capture the nervous energy of bands trying to make their break who know that this could be it. We are pleased to say that since this show, The Joy Formidable did make it in a big way (including their own Bowery moment), playing tons of NY-area shows (almost all of which we saw) and bringing their music to new fans each time. Their massively loud sound is probably better suited a bigger venue, but we loved this Pianos show best of them all (and our recording sounded great). [audio:https://www.nyctaper.com/2010Best20/TFJ-Austere.mp3]

24. The National – “Terrible Love” – December 8, 2010 Maxwell’s. Though it borders on heresy (and is not an opinion shared by all who work on this site), I was not an instant convert to The National‘s critically acclaimed High Violet. I didn’t hate the album, but after a three year break from recording, I was not sure what I should expect from the band. High Violet didn’t grab me in the way that earlier records like Alligator did, and it didn’t help that I first saw the songs live in the sonically deficient Terminal 5, where the sound was so poor that even The National’s sound engineer commiserated with us about the venue’s challenges. Luckily, I was given a second chance at this rare set opening in the (relatively) tiny Maxwell’s for Yo La Tengo on the final night of their Hanukkah shows. This time, in this intimate setting, the subtle beauty of the High Violet songs shone through, especially on the set’s closer, this fantastic rendition of “Terrible Love.” [audio:https://www.nyctaper.com/2010Best20/National-TerribleLove.mp3]

25. We Were Promised Jetpacks – “It’s Thunder and It’s Lightning” – February 15, 2010 Knitting Factory. I went to this show on a lark, having never heard this Scottish trio before. Apparently I had missed the memo, as the Knitting Factory was so packed I was literally crushed against the soundboard. In the best of ways, We Were Promised Jetpacks are what I like to call Scotland’s answer to U2 – their songs rely on anthemic riffs and vocalist Adam Thompson’s throaty choruses. The band worked this crowd into a froth, the energy seething through the room, as Thompson belted out song after song in a way that could have melted the ice outside. In a show full of them, this song was a particularly stirring anthem. [audio:https://www.nyctaper.com/2010Best20/WWPJ-Lightning.mp3]

Special thanks to all of the artists, management, labels, photographers and other music sites that have supported NYCTaper this year. And of course, a huge thank you to our readers, who we hope to continue to provide with high-quality, artist-sanctioned recordings, reviews and photos throughout 2011. Happy New Year!

NYCTaper Upcoming Schedule — Fall Preview

August 12, 2010
By

63_taperbird
[image by Songbirdnest]

As the Summer season comes to a close, its time for a look at the Fall taping schedule. The Summer was very good to NYCTaper, as we have covered an abundant amount of amazing shows, in particular within the last few weeks. We have also welcomed Johnny as a full-time contributor — his Black Keys recording from last week has been incredibly popular and indicates the kind of superb recordings he will provide.

[Below is the updated schedule. We expect to attend and record these events. However, circumstances will prevent some of these from being done, and others will be added in the meantime.]

If you want nyctaper to record your band, a band you represent, a show you’re promoting, or even your favorite band in the world, get me on the list and make sure everyone who needs to approve of the recording gives permission. Also, remember I’m doing this all for free — the recordings, the post-production, the reviews, the links, etc. — so treat me fairly.

2010 Schedule:
Deerhunter / Real Estate:
August 12, 2010 Pier 54 NYC

Common Prayer (+ special guest):
August 13, 2010 Rock Shop Brooklyn (Jonny Leather Presents)

MGMT:
August 17, 2010 Radio City Music Hall NYC

Titus Andronicus:
August 18, 2010 Glasslands Gallery Brooklyn

Julian Lynch:
August 18, 2010 Pianos NYC (acidjack)

O’Death:
August 20, 2010 Rock Shop Brooklyn

This Will Destroy You:
August 26, 2010 Bowery Ballroom NYC

Benevento Russo Duo:
August 27, 2010 Highline Ballroom NYC

Black Mountain:
August 30, 2010 Knitting Factory Brooklyn

Lou Barlow:
September 1, 2010 Mercury Lounge NYC

New Model Army:
September 3 and September 4, 2010 Bell House Brooklyn (permission pending)

Wooden Shjips:
September 6, 2010 Music Hall of Williamsburg Brooklyn (acidjack)

Dirty Projectors / Owen Pallett:
September 11, 2010 Terminal 5 NYC (permission request pending)

Deakin:
September 13, 2010 Glasslands Gallery Brooklyn

Tommy Keene:
September 15, 2010 Rock Shop Brooklyn (permission pending)

Nicole Atkins:
September 16, 2010 Glasslands Gallery Brooklyn

Ween:
September 17, 2010 Central Park Summerstage

Unicycle Loves You:
September 18, 2010 Cake Shop NYC

Thee Oh Sees:
September 21, 2010 Santos Party House NYC

Garotas Suecas / Babies:
September 24, 2010 Cake Shop NYC

Mark Olson:
September 29, 2010 Rock Shop Brooklyn

Belle & Sebastian:
September 30, 2010 Williamsburg Waterfront

Sharon Van Etten / She Keeps Bees:
October 8, 2010 Rock Shop Brooklyn

Swans:
October 9, 2010 Bowery Ballroom NYC (permission request pending)

Primus:
October 9, 2010 Wellmont Theatre, Montclair NJ (acidjack)

Deerhoof:
October 13, 2010 Le Poisson Rouge NYC

Tom Tom Club:
October 14, 2010 Santos Party House NYC

Casiotone For The Painfully Alone:
October 15, 2010 Monster Island Basement Brooklyn

Parts and Labor:
October 15, 2010 Glasslands Gallery Brooklyn

Xiu Xiu:
October 15, 2010 Maxwell’s Hoboken NJ

Tom Tom Club:
October 16, 2010 Brooklyn Bowl

My Morning Jacket:
October 19, 2010 Terminal 5 NYC (acidjack and Johnny)

NYCTaper CMJ Day Party:
October 21, 2010 Cake Shop NYC

JEFF The Brotherhood:
October 28, 2010 Music Hall of Williamsburg Brooklyn

Jonsi:
November 10, 2010 Hammerstein Ballroom NYC

The Joy Formidable:
November 16, 2010 Bowery Ballroom NYC

Woods: June 25, 2010 Music Hall of Williamsburg – FLAC and MP3 Downloads + Streaming Song

July 5, 2010
By


[Woods at Music Hall on March 12, 2010.  Photos courtesy of Frank Siringo]

Each time we see Woods (and it’s been quite a few lately) we are struck by the evolution of the band.  Despite not being a particularly longstanding act (though I suppose they are by the scene’s current standards), they already feel, in a sense, like godfathers of the scene.  Part of that is that comes from their status as the foundation of Woodsist Records, a label that has spawned groundbreaking acts coast to coast (the West Coast feel of many of their offerings is undeniable).  But it also comes from their music itself, which evolved from the typical 3-4 minute rock format into sprawling, layered psychedelic compositions. I cannot call what they are doing “jamming”, for one because it is so anathema to the local aesthetic, and also because it feels pejorative and limiting.  What Woods are doing is gradually expanding their sound and sharing their virtuosity on their instruments with us – not aimlessly noodling for a bunch of wookies.  Being part of the Woodsist showcase at the 2010 Northside Festival, this performance at Music Hall of Williamsburg did not boast anything as massive as the 16-minute “Bend Beyond” we witnessed at the Abrons Arts Center performance, but it did feature a stretched out “I Was Gone,” “Blood Dries Darker,” “The Hold” and a still-respectable 9-minute “Bend Beyond.”  The show was packed, and the audience was treated to another can’t miss performance that cued up another fantastic set from Real Estate to close out the night.

The NYCTaper team recorded this show from our usual spot at the soundboard booth using two separate recorders and a combination of six mics.  The results are exceptional and even better than the Real Estate recording.  Enjoy!

Stream “To Clean”:
[audio:https://www.nyctaper.com/W2206Woods2990/Woods2010-06-25_nyctacid_t03.mp3]

Direct download of MP3 files [HERE]

Download the Complete show in FLAC [HERE].

Woods
2010-06-25
Music Hall of Williamsburg
Brooklyn, NY  USA

Six-Track Digital Master Recording
Recorded from Front of Soundboard Booth

Neumann KM-150s + DPA 4021’s + Schoeps CMC641s > 2xEdirol R-44 (Oade Concert Mod) > 3 x 24bit 48kHz wav files > Soundforge (level adjustments, mixdown, set fades) > CDWave 1.95 (tracking) > Flac Frontend (level 7, align sector boundaries) > flac

Recorded and Produced
by nyctaper and acidjack
2010-07-02

Setlist:
[Total Time 48:02]
01  I Was Gone
02  Blood Dries Darker
03  To Clean
04  [banter]
05  Suffering Season
06  Down This Road
07  The Hold
08  Rain On
09  Bend Beyond

If you email nyctaper for access to these recordings, we expect that you will PLEASE SUPPORT Woods, visit their MySpace page, and purchase their official releases, including their latest, At Echo Lake, from Woodsist Records.

Wild Nothing: February 13, 2010 Monster Island + March 12, 2010 Music Hall – Flac and MP3 Downloads (Streaming Samples)

June 19, 2010
By


[photo by nyctaper]

Wild Nothing is a band who we have been hearing much about lately. They are scheduled to play one of the free Governor’s Island shows tomorrow (Saturday June 19), after having played a “secret show” last night at Death By Audio. We had the opportunity to catch this current buzz band twice during the winter, and left impressed by their skillful presentation of 80’s influenced dream pop. After Wild Nothing was discovered and signed by Captured Tracks’ Mike Sniper, Jack Tatum’s Virginia-based bedroom songs formed a four-piece live band and came to NYC in February to play two shows at Monster Island. The second night lineup including sets previously featured at nyctaper by Frankie Rose and So Cow. These two debut NYC shows were in conjunction with the release of their single “Summer Holiday”, which closed the set. A month later, we saw Wild Nothing at a much larger venue, opening for Woods and Real Estate (also previously featured on nyctaper) at Music Hall of Williamsburg. In June, the band’s debut full length was released and received “best new music” from Pitchfork, and glowing reviews elsewhere. These two recordings were captured at divergent sized and sounding venues, but give an excellent indication that Wild Nothing is worthy of such neat praise.

The Monster Island set was recorded with microphones mounted ten feet from the stage and a direct soundboard line. The four-track mixdown enhances the strengths of both feeds. The Music Hall set was recorded with four microphones at the front corner of the soundboard. Both recordings, although quite different in feel, have outstanding sound quality. Enjoy!

Streaming Samples of Wild Nothing:
“O Lilac” at Monster Island

[audio:https://www.nyctaper.com/W1302WildNothing1020/5%20WildNothing2010-02-13_nyctaper_t05.mp3]
“Summer Holiday” at Music Hall
[audio:https://www.nyctaper.com/W1302WildNothing1020/6%20WildNothing2010-03-12_nyctaper_t06.mp3]

Direct download of MP3 files:
Monster Island (HERE)
Music Hall (HERE)

Download the Complete show in FLAC:
Monster Island [HERE]
Music Hall [HERE]

Wild Nothing
2010-02-13
Monster Island Basement
Brooklyn, NY USA

Digital Master Recording
Soundboard + Audience Matrix

Soundboard + Neumann KM-150s > Edirol R-44 (Oade Concert Mod) > 2x 16bit 44.1kHz wav files > Soundforge (level adjustments, mixdown, set fades) > CDWave 1.95 (tracking) > Flac Frontend (level 7, align sector boundaries) > flac

Recorded and Produced by nyctaper
2010-06-13

Setlist:
[Total Time 30:22]
01 Confirmation
02 Live In Dreams
03 Nothing’s Wrong
04 The Witching Hour
05 O Lilac
06 Gemini
07 Summer Holiday

*******

Wild Nothing
2010-03-12
Music Hall of Williamsburg
Brooklyn, NY USA

Four-Track Digital Master Recording
Recorded from Front of Soundboard Booth

Neumann KM-150s + DPA 4021’s > Edirol R-44 (Oade Concert Mod) > 2x 24bit 48kHz wav files > Soundforge (level adjustments, mixdown, set fades) > CDWave 1.95 (tracking) > Flac Frontend (level 7, align sector boundaries) > flac

Recorded and Produced
by nyctaper
2010-06-13

Setlist:
[Total Time 26:53]
01 Nothing’s Wrong
02 The Witching Hour
03
04 O Lilac
05 Gemini
06 Summer Holiday

If you email nyctaper for access to this recording, we expect that you will PLEASE SUPPORT Wild Nothing, visit their MySpace page, and purchase their debut album Gemini from the Captured Tracks website [HERE].

NYCTaper Upcoming Schedule — The Long Hot Summer

June 4, 2010
By

63_taperbird

There are many new additions to the schedule, but it is becoming increasingly difficult for two people to cover the shows that really need to be recorded and featured on nyctaper. The simple reality is that we need more tapers. We are still trying to figure out how to make that happen.

[Below is the updated schedule. We expect to attend and record these events. However, circumstances will prevent some of these from being done, and others will be added in the meantime.]

If you want nyctaper to record your band, a band you represent, a show you’re promoting, or even your favorite band in the world, get me on the list and make sure everyone who needs to approve of the recording gives permission. Also, remember I’m doing this all for free — the recordings, the post-production, the reviews, the links, etc. — so treat me fairly.

2010 Schedule:

Jay Farrar:
June 4, 2010 Maxwell’s Hoboken NJ (acidjack)

Les Claypool:
June 8, 2010 Brooklyn Bowl

This Will Destroy You:
June 8, 2010 Knitting Factory Brooklyn (acidjack)

School of Seven Bells / Arpline:
June 10, 2010 Mercury Lounge NYC

JEFF the Brotherhood:
June 13, 2010 Santos Party House NYC

Warpaint:
June 14, 2010 Mercury Lounge NYC (permission request pending)
PERMISSION DENIED (yeah, really!)

The National / The Antlers:
June 16, 2010 Radio City Music Hall NYC

Melvins:
June 18, 2010 Webster Hall NYC (acidjack)
June 19, 2010 Music Hall of Williamsburg

Eddy Current Suppression Ring:
June 18, 2010 Cake Shop NYC

Tortoise:
June 23, 2010 Le Poisson Rouge NYC (acidjack)

Fiery Furnaces:
June 24, 2010 Maxwell’s Hoboken NJ

Real Estate / Woods:
June 25, 2010 Music Hall of Williamsburg

Liars / F*cked Up:
June 26, 2010 Newtown Barge Park Brooklyn

Memory Tapes / Twin Sister:
June 26, 2010 Music Hall of Williamsburg (acidjack)

Matt Pond PA:
June 27, 2010 Bowery Ballroom NYC (acidjack)

Heartless Bastards:
July 14, 2010 Music Hall of Williamsburg (acidjack)

Thee Oh Sees:
July 16, 2010 South Street Seaport NYC

Deer Tick:
July 19, 2010 Maxwell’s Hoboken NJ

Antlers / Dinosaur Feathers:
July 22, 2010 Pier 54 NYC

Flaming Lips:
July 26, 2010 Central Park Summerstage NYC

The National:
July 27, 2010 Prospect Park Brooklyn (acidjack)

Built to Spill:
July 28, 2010 Irving Plaza NYC

Avi Buffalo:
July 30, 2010 South Street Seaport NYC

Sonic Youth:
July 31, 2010 Prospect Park Brooklyn

Deerhunter / Real Estate:
August 12, 2010 Pier 54 NYC

Benevento Russo Duo:
August 27, 2010 Highline Ballroom NYC

Black Mountain:
August 30, 2010 Knitting Factory Brooklyn

Dirty Projectors / Owen Pallett:
September 11, 2010 Terminal 5 NYC (permission request pending)

Ween:
September 17, 2010 Central Park Summerstage

Belle & Sebastian:
September 30, 2010 Williamsburg Waterfront

Swans:
October 9, 2010 Bowery Ballroom NYC (permission request pending)

NYCTaper Upcoming Schedule: Spring Into Summer

March 22, 2010
By

63_taperbird
[image by Songbirdnest]

Its about time for a new “upcoming” post. There are many new additions.

Below is the updated schedule. We expect to attend and record these events. However, circumstances will prevent some of these from being done, and others will be added in the meantime.

If you want nyctaper to record your band, a band you represent, a show you’re promoting, or even your favorite band in the world, get me on the list and make sure everyone who needs to approve of the recording gives permission. Also, remember I’m doing this all for free — the recordings, the post-production, the reviews, the links, etc. — so treat me fairly.

2010 Schedule:
Love Is All:
March 27, 2010 Maxwell’s Hoboken NJ
March 28, 2010 Knitting Factory Brooklyn (acidjack)

Drive-By Truckers:
April 1, 2010 Webster Hall NYC (acidjack)

Wilco:
April 2, 2010 Wellmont Theatre Montclair NJ (acidjack)

So Cow / Babies:
April 7, 2010 Death By Audio Brooklyn

Acid Mothers Temple:
April 7, 2010 Knitting Factory, Brooklyn (acidjack)

Ted Leo / Obits:
April 9, 2010 Irving Plaza NYC

Cymbals Eat Guitars / Bear in Heaven:
April 9, 2010 Music Hall of Williamsburg Brooklyn (acidjack)

The Wedding Present:
April 11, 2010 Bowery Ballroom NYC

-and/or-

Shark? / Sundelles / Lil’ Daggers:
April 11, 2010 Glasslands Brooklyn

Liars:
April 15, 2010 Bowery Ballroom NYC

Wussy:
April 16, 2010 Cake Shop NYC

and/or

Real Estate:
April 16, 2010 Market Hotel Brooklyn

Liars:
April 18, 2010 Music Hall of Williamsburg Brooklyn

Owen Pallett:
April 22, 2010 Webster Hall NYC

Vivian Girls:
April 23, 2010 Maxwell’s Hoboken NJ

Titus Andronicus:
April 24, 2010 Maxwell’s Hoboken NJ

Here We Go Magic:
April 30, 2010 Maxwell’s Hoboken NJ (permission pending) (acidjack)

The Joy Formidable:
May 1, 2010 Mercury Lounge NYC

The Clean:
May 7, 2010 Bell House Brooklyn

Broken Social Scene:
May 8, 2010 Music Hall of Williamsburg (permission pending)

Jonsi:
May 9, 2010 Terminal 5 NYC

Woods:
May 13, 2010 Abrons Arts Center NYC

ArpLine / Dinosaur Feathers / Uninhabitable Mansions / Natureboy:
May 15, 2010 NYCTaper 3rd Anniversary Show, Pianos NYC

Buffalo Tom:
May 21, 2010 Mercury Lounge NYC

NYC Popfest:
May 23, 2010 Littlefield Brooklyn (acidjack)

Holly Miranda:
May 26, 2010 Bowery Ballroom NYC

Jay Farrar:
June 4, 2010 Maxwell’s Hoboken NJ

Les Claypool:
June 8, 2010 Brooklyn Bowl

The National / The Antlers:
June 16, 2010 Radio City Music Hall NYC

Flaming Lips:
July 26, 2010 Central Park Summerstage NYC

The National:
July 27, 2010 Prospect Park Brooklyn (acidjack)

Pavement:* (permission pending)
September 23, 2010 Central Park Summerstage NYC

Woods: March 12, 2010 Music Hall of Williamsburg – Flac and MP3 Downloads

March 15, 2010
By


[photo courtesy of Frank Siringo]

These days, any attempt to pigeonhole Woods as a “freak folk” band seems trite and wholly inadequate. On Friday night at Music Hall, the unique quartet opened their set with a lengthy psychedelic-style instrumental piece, mixed in a few songs that weren’t folk songs as much as deconstructions of the genre, and ended with two completely divergent covers — Blind Melon’s “No Rain” and Graham Nash’s “Military Madness”. The sheer breadth of the stylistic variations of Woods’ music is not necessarily evident in their albums, the latest of which, At Echo Lake, was announced last week and will be released on May 11. But it is the live Woods which stretches the material to these lengths and Friday’s show was an excellent example. Woods tour continues through the Midwest to SXSW before finishing up through the end of March down South. Woods next plays NYC on May 13 at the Abrons Arts Center.

We recorded this set from the same location as the Real Estate set and the sound is excellent. Enjoy!

Direct download of MP3 files (HERE)

Download the Complete show in FLAC [HERE].

Woods
2010-03-12
Music Hall of Williamsburg
Brooklyn, NY USA

Four-Track Digital Master Recording
Recorded from Front of Soundboard Booth

Neumann KM-150s + DPA 4021’s > Edirol R-44 (Oade Concert Mod) > 2x 24bit 48kHz wav files > Soundforge (level adjustments, mixdown, set fades) > CDWave 1.95 (tracking) > Flac Frontend (level 7, align sector boundaries) > flac

Recorded and Produced
by nyctaper
2010-03-14

Setlist:
[Total Time 1:14:32]
01 Creeps
02 Blood Dries Darker > To Clean
03 [banter]
04 Get Back
05 Rain On
06 Suffering Season
07 Down This Road
08 The Hold
09 The Dark
10 Twisted Tongue
11 I Was Gone
12 Death Rattles
13 [crowd]
14 Keep It On
15 [banter – set up]
16 No Rain (Blind Melon)*
17 [encore break]
18 Military Madness (Graham Nash)*
*with Real Estate

If you email nyctaper for access to this recording, we expect that you will PLEASE SUPPORT Woods, visit their MySpace page, and purchase their official releases from Woodsist Records.

SUPPORT NYCTaper




DISCLAIMER and LEGAL NOTICE

nyctaper.com is a live music blog that offers a new paradigm of music distribution on the web. The recordings are offered for free on this site as are the music posts, reviews and links to artist sites. All recordings are posted with artist permission or artists with an existing pro-taping policy.

All recordings and original content posted on this site are @nyctaper.com as live recordings pursuant to 17 U.S.C. Section 106, et. seq. Redistribution of nyctaper recordings without consent of nyctaper.com is strictly prohibited.

nyctaper.com hereby waives all copyright claims to any and all recordings posted on this site to THE PERFORMERS ONLY. If any artist posted on this site requests that recordings be removed, those recordings will be removed forthwith.