|
Has Pitchfork become ‘establishment’? The online music
magazine has been the
biggest coverer of the indie music scene for a while now (at least in
America),
and its reviews, while seemingly as often disagreed with as agreed with,
are
certainly talked-about. When they
grew to holding a festival in Chicago's Union Park every summer,
Pitchfork
tempered it by making it an unusual festival, from its indie-heavy,
massive
headliner-light line-up, to such arrangements as bands playing whole
albums
(such as Sonic Youth's Daydream Nation - QRO
Daydream Nation live review) to last year's ‘Write the
Night’ fan-chosen set
lists. But this year, Pitchfork
Music Festival seems to play it a bit straighter, with no special
nights, and
some indie-festival mainstays (though Night One has a comedy stage - but
that's
not that novel these days, either).
Whatever - what's important is that it's still a killer
line-up, top-to-bottom, July 16th to 18th:
FRIDAY, 7/16
|
ALUMINUM STAGE
Modest Mouse, 8:30 PM
Washington State's Modest Mouse (QRO photos)
broke through to mainstream success in 2004 with Good News For People
Who
Like Bad News, and followed that
up by
adding Smiths guitarist Johnny Marr for 2007's We Were Dead
Before
the Ship Even Sank (QRO
review) - unfortunately, Marr has since left to join the even
younger Cribs
(QRO
live review).
But they're still big enough to headline Day One (QRO photos
headlining a festival).
|
 |
| |
|
Robyn, 6:25 PM
Robyn (Robin Miriam Carlsson) gained international fame with
nineties dance-pop hits like "Show Me Love", but then retreated to her
home
base of Sweden until relatively recently.
Back-up vocals on Britney Spears' "Piece of Me", opening for
Madonna in
Europe, and being featured on Röyksopp's Junior (QRO
review) all set the stage for her three-part Body
Talk series, with Part 1's "Dancing On My Own" made the top ten in
the U.S.
this year.
|
|
| |
|
El-P, 4:35 PM
Brooklyn's Jaime Meline, a.k.a. El-P, has been an important
factor in the alternative hip-hop scene, bringing together the two
otherwise
divergent scenes. So he's a
perfect fit for the rather hip-hop-heavy Pitchfork.
|
|
| |
|
Sharon Van Etten, 3:30 PM
While there's a ton of stripped songstresses out there, one
of the nicer ones is Sharon Van Etten (QRO photos
at a festival), who evoked the
sad strains of Appalachia on her
debut last year, Because I Was In Love (QRO
review). In
October she'll drop her follow-up, Epic, so look for new
songs
getting live try-outs.
|
 |
|
BALANCE STAGE
Eugene Mirman, 8:00 PM
The alt-comedy world of today gets a whole stage on Day One
of Pitchfork, headlined by the man who maybe did more than anyone else
to found
it, stand-up artist Eugene Mirman (QRO photos) - who's no stranger to sharing a stage
with musicians, such as
recently opening for She & Him (QRO
live review) and previously for
the first performance by Julian
Plenti (QRO
live review of that show), a.k.a.
Paul Banks of Interpol (QRO
album review).
|
 |
| |
|
Michael Showalter, 7:15 PM
Coming along with Eugene Mirman from Brooklyn is Michael
Showalter. While he's been
hilarious on screen, such as in last year's Michael & Michael
Have
Issues (with longtime collaborator
Michael
Ian Black), his stand-up routine, unfortunately, needs work.
|
|
| |
|
Wyatt Cenac, 6:30 PM
You can't have a comedy stage at a music festival without at
least one correspondent from The Daily Show,
and filling that role at Pitchfork Day One is Wyatt Cenac - but he's already friends with indie-rockers (QRO photo of Cenac with The National after a show).
Hannibal Buress, 5:45 PM
|
|
|
CONNECTOR STAGE
Broken Social Scene, 7:20 PM
Since being part of the indie-rock ‘Canadian Invasion’ of
2003/2004, Toronto's own Broken Social Scene (QRO photos)
have also become one of the most sought-after festival bands in the
alternative
music arena, whether indoors at industry showcases (QRO photos
at a
festival) or outdoors at more traditional fests (QRO photos
outdoors at a festival), to the point where they're headlining (QRO photos
headlining a festival).
Fronted by singer/guitarists Kevin Drew and
Brendan Canning (QRO
interview), this giant collective includes The Apostle of Hustle,
Andrew
Whiteman (QRO
interview), Do Make Say Think's Charles Spearin (QRO
interview), and a rotating female vocalist spot that's included
Metric's
Emily Haines (QRO live
review), Leslie
Feist (QRO
live review), and Land of Talk's Elizabeth Powell (QRO
interview). While the previous releases were ‘BSS
Presents:’ albums
focused on Drew (Spirit If... - QRO
review) and Canning (Something For All of Us... - QRO
review), this year's Forgiveness Rock Record (QRO
review) is a return to the Broken Social Scene (QRO photos
outdoors at a festival), and their live show (QRO
live
review) has included everything from Spearin's fascinating Happiness
Project (QRO
review) to the old ‘hits’ like "K.C. Accidental" (QRO
video) and "Fire Eyed Boy" (QRO
video) - as well as numerous guest stars (QRO photos
outdoors at a festival).
|

|
| |
|
Liars, 5:30 PM
Though 2001's They Threw Us All In a Trench and Stuck a
Monument On Top got Liars (QRO photos
outdoors) labeled ‘dance-punk’, they've since shifted radically,
losing
old fans, but gaining new ones (QRO photos
at a festival),
especially with this year's Sisterworld (QRO
review).
|
|
| |
|
The Tallest Man on Earth, 4:00 PM
There are a lot of alt-folk solo singer/songwriters out
there these days. Sweden's Kristian Matsson, a.k.a. The
Tallest Man On
Earth (QRO photos
at a festival), first
got notice for his Dylan-esque ways when opening for fellow alt-folk
solo
singer/songwriter Justin Vernon, a.k.a. Bon Iver (QRO
album review).
|
|
SATURDAY, 7/17
|
ALUMINUM STAGE
LCD Soundsystem, 8:30 PM
There was a time when ‘dance-rock’ was synonymous with LCD
Soundsystem (QRO live
review).
Singer/frontman Daniel Murphy was the first to play Daft Punk to
the rock kids
(immortalized in both "Losing My Edge" and "Daft Punk Is Playing
At My
House" - QRO
video), but after 2007's Sound of Silver (QRO
review), he took time off from LCD and touring (QRO
live review in 2007) to focus on his label DFA, which has become as
influential - if not more so.
But LCD is back (QRO
live
review of return show) with This Is Happening (QRO
review) and songs such as "Drunk
Girls" and "I Can Change" (QRO
video).
|
|
| |
|
Wolf Parade, 6:15 PM
Sometimes overlooked in the ‘Canadian Invasion’, Montreal's
Wolf Parade (QRO
live review) delivered
a strong debut in 2005 with Apologies To Queen Mary, and
kept
that up with 2008's At Mount Zoomer (QRO
review). One reason the
attention hasn't been as high is because it's been diffused into not
only the
Parade, but also the acclaimed side-projects of singer/keyboardist
Spencer Krug
(Sunset Rubdown - QRO
live review) and
singer/guitarist Dan Boeckner (Handsome Furs - QRO album
review). But
they're back to the Wolf this year with Expo 86 (QRO
review).
|
|
| |
|
Raekwon, 4:15 PM
A member of the ultra-acclaimed Wu-Tang Clan, Raekwon put
out his solo debut, Only Built 4 Cuban Linx... in 1995 and reached the Top Ten - only to
match that feat last year
with sequel Only Built 4 Cuban Linx... Pt. II. And
this year he looks set to drop Shaolin vs. Wu-Tang - and you know they ain't nothing to fuck
with...
|
|
| |
|
Delorean, 2:30 PM
Iceland may have long been the oddest place for a pop star
to come out of, but challenging that is the Spanish Basque country
(better
known for its incomprehensible language, bullfighting & ETA
guerillas) in
Delorean. While they toiled in
obscurity for a while, an appearance at SXSW 2007 (QRO
recap) saw the synth-pop outfit
finally get some
attention, with worldwide release Subiza.
|
|
| |
|
Free Energy, 1:00 PM
The seventies-rock inspired (and looking - QRO photos)
Free Energy (QRO
photos at a festival) somehow found themselves on electro-dance
label DFA
(LCD Soundsystem, The Juan MacLean, YACHT) for debut Stuck On Nothing (QRO
review), which has only earned
them more attention (QRO photos
at a festival) as they try to
bring back the cowbell.
|
 |
|
BALANCE STAGE
Freddie Gibbs, 7:40 PM
Originally from Gary, Indiana (hey, that's the same hometown
as the Jackson clan...), Freddie Gibbs has been compared to none other
than Tupac
Shakur (but was Tupac that great, or just his posthumous cult of
memory?...).
|
 |
| |
|
Bear in Heaven, 6:45 PM
Brooklyn band Bear In Heaven (QRO photos)
first got notice in 2007 with Red Bloom of the Boom (QRO
review), and kept it going with last year's Beast Rest
Forth
Mouth (QRO
review), which has garnered massive praise as the band has moved up
the
rungs of the tour (QRO
live review outdoors) and festival
hierarchy (QRO photos
at a festival).
|
|
| |
|
WHY?, 5:45 PM
Jonathan ‘Yoni’ Wolf and his band, WHY? (QRO live review),
combine
indie, hip-hop, rock, pop, folk & more (QRO photos),
most
recently with last year's (somewhat underwhelming) Eskimo Snow (QRO
review).
|
|
| |
|
The Smith Westerns, 4:45 PM
Locals Smith Westerns (QRO photos
outdoors) have been getting some
definite attention, but is
that for their rock, or, like Girls (with whom they're touring - see
below),
is it for their persona - none old enough to drink yet, and notorious
for
getting kicked out of clubs for breaking that rule...
|
|
| |
|
Dâm-Funk, 3:45 PM
Pasadena funk singer/DJ Dam-Funk is coming off throwing down
five full-lengths worth of new material last year, edited and compiled
into
double-disc Toeachizown.
|
|
| |
|
Kurt Vile, 2:50 PM
The lead guitarist in Philadelphia's The War On Drugs (QRO photos),
Kurt
Vile has been busting out on his own (though sometimes with back band
The
Violators) with a more psychedelic sound.
Sonny & The Sunsets, 1:55 PM |
|
| |
|
Netherfriends, 1:00 PM
Netherfriends (QRO photos
at a festival) return to their
hometown of Chicago, after
crisscrossing the country in their '50 Songs, 50 States' project,
writing &
recording a song in each.
|
|
|
CONNECTOR STAGE
Panda Bear, 7:25 PM
One of the founding members of Baltimore's ultra-relevant
experimental electronic outfit Animal Collective (QRO
album
review), Noah Lennox - a.k.a. Panda Bear (QRO photos
at a
festival) - broke out of the zoo
and is
now on his own. His anticipated Tomboy, the
follow-up to
2007's Person Pitch (QRO
review), comes out in September, so look for new material as well as
old.
|
 |
| |
|
The Jon Spencer Blues Explosion, 5:15 PM
Today's garage-rock and party-rock revivals wouldn't be
possible without The Jon Spencer Blues Explosion. Spencer's
also featured in other
more-notorious-and-influential-than-successful acts such as Heavy Trash,
Boss
Hog & Pussy Galore, but he returns to explosion, celebrating twenty
years
with their first-ever compilation, Dirty Shit Rock and Roll: The
First Ten
Years.
|
|
| |
|
Titus Andronicus, 3:20 PM
Straight outta Jersey comes Garden State pridesters Titus
Andronicus (QRO photos
at a festival),
who have been hitting all fifty hard (QRO photos
out-of-state) even before (QRO photos)
the release of their Civil War-inspired The
Monitor (QRO
review), and
now bring it outdoors (QRO photos
outdoors).
|
|
| |
|
Real Estate, 1:45 PM
Pitchfork loved Ridgewood, New Jersey's Real Estate's (QRO
photos at a festival) self-titled
debut,
so see for yourself if they were right.
|
|
SUNDAY, 7/18
|
ALUMINUM STAGE
Pavement, 8:30 PM
It's the
reunion we've all been waiting for. Ever since the Pixies (QRO live
review)
kicked off the eighties/nineties alt-rock reunion trend in 2004 at
Coachella
(well, really first was Mission of Burma - QRO
live
review), they've been coming at a pretty good clip (see: Dinosaur
Jr. - QRO
live review), but one everyone had been hoping for was Pavement. The
acclaimed
indie-rock act split up ten years ago, with singer/guitarist Stephen
Malkmus going his own way alongside his Jicks (QRO
live
review). Deluxe edition re-releases of prior records
like Brighten
the Corners
(QRO
re-release
review) and Wowee Zowee(QRO
re-release
review) did keep the flame burning, but the rumored reunion
seemed like just that - a rumor.
Until September
2009, when the news finally broke that the reunion was real.
It started
with the announcement of four shows at Central Park SummerStage (QRO
venue review) for September of 2010 (QRO
concert listings) - which sold out immediately (a fifth was recently
added/sold-out - QRO
concert
listing - at Williamsburg Waterfront - QRO
venue review).
Since then, they've made it a full-fledged reunion
tour, starting earlier this year in New Zealand, and are hitting up
festivals
all over the world (QRO photos
at a foreign festival).
What brought
about the reunion? The anniversary? The money? Greatest hits
record, Quarantine the Past (QRO
review)? Singer/guitarist/Malkmus rival Scott Kannenberg coming
back
solo, using Pavement-era moniker Spiral Stairs on The Real Feel (QRO
review)? Jick Janet Weiss reforming her old band, including new
member/Jick Joanna Bolme, Quasi (QRO
spotlight on), leaving Malkmus free? Malkmus no longer being the
coolest
ex-member of Pavement, since bassist Mark Ibold joined Sonic Youth (QRO
live review) full-time on The Eternal (QRO
review))? Or did everyone just get tired of them asking about a
reunion?
Whatever the
reason, the dream has become reality.
|

|
| |
|
Major Lazer, 6:15 PM
The collaboration between DJ/producers Diplo and Switch made
a serious breakthrough last year as Major Lazer, with Guns Don't Kill
People... Lazers Do, and just
recently followed
it up with tour EP Lazers Never Die.
|
|
| |
|
Lightning Bolt, 4:15 PM
Before there was the plethora of wild guitar-and-drums duos
that there are today, there was Lightning Bolt - a bass-and-drums
duo
known for guerilla-style shows who put out their fifth noise-rock
LP, Earthly
Delights, last year.
|
|
| |
|
Girls, 2:30 PM
The band with maybe the least creative titling ever (their
debut is ‘Album’ - QRO
review
- at least there's no actual females in the band...) got notice largely
because
singer/frontman Christopher Owens was raised in the actually scarily
crazy
Children of God cult.
But the neo-pop sounds of Girls (QRO photos)
have kept on finding fans.
Allá, 1:00 PM |
|
|
BALANCE STAGE
Sleigh Bells, 7:40 PM
Somewhere between noise and pop lies Brooklyn's Sleigh
Bells (QRO photos). The duo of Derek E. Miller
& Alexis Krauss all of a sudden became the hottest thing out there
with
debut Treats, including touring
with
M.I.A. (QRO photos)
- but are they, like M.I.A., all hype?...
|
 |
| |
|
Neon Indian, 6:45 PM
Alan Palomo works solo as VEGA (QRO photos
at a
festival) and recruits a live band as Neon Indian (QRO photos
at
the same festival), where he's far stronger (QRO photos with his band).
|
|
| |
|
Here We Go Magic, 5:45 PM
After releasing two albums under his own name, folk musician
Luke Temple branched out into full outfit Here We Go Magic last year,
with
their self-titled debut, and they are hitting up a ton of festivals this
year (QRO
coverage
at a festival).
|
|
| |
|
Surfer Blood, 4:45 PM
Shooting up very quickly in indie-circles has been West Palm
Beach's Surfer Blood (QRO photos at a
festival), who
were gaining tons of fans (QRO photos
of a packed house) long before
acclaimed debut Astro Coast
(QRO review) finally hit the shelves
(or whatever you say in today's digital age...). Are they the first wave of a new ‘South Florida
Invasion’ (QRO photos
at home)? But hopefully no covers of Lit's "My Own Worst Enemy" (QRO photos)...
|
|
| |
|
Local Natives, 3:45 PM
Silver Lake's Local Natives (QRO photos
at a
festival) have been riding the alt-country/folk wave, but seem to be
doing
it better than most (QRO photos),
charting
in February with debut Gorilla Manor, moving up to headliner tours (QRO live review),
and
well-received on the festival circuit (QRO photos
at a festival).
|
|
| |
|
2:50 PM, Stage B - Washed Out
Slowly percolating up has been the new ‘chillwave’ movement,
whose sound is about as defined as that term, but one of those artists
is
Ernest Greene, whose recently moved his work out of the bedroom (where
he
recorded Life of Leisure EP - QRO
album review) and onto the live stage.
1:55 PM, Stage B - Best Coast
1:00 PM, Stage B - Cave |
|
|
CONNECTOR STAGE
Big Boi, 7:25 PM
Still probably best known for being one-half of massively successful
duo OutKast, Big Boi first showed off his solo skills in the Speakerboxx half of OutKast's 2003's double-LP, Speakerboxx/The
Love
Below (the latter half being
partner
Andre 3000's own solo debut). But
the hip-hop artist is out with his own, fully-solo Sir
Luscious Left
Foot: The Son of Chico Dusty right
before
Pitchfork.
|
 |
| |
|
St. Vincent, 5:15 PM
After the one-and-only Annie Clark (QRO
interview) made 2007 her break-out year, both as part of The
Polyphonic
Spree on The Fragile Army (QRO
review) and with her own debut as St. Vincent (QRO photos),
Marry Me (QRO
review), she followed that up with even-better years, gracing
festivals (QRO photos
at a
festival), charming and surprising crowds with winning humor live (QRO
live
review), and bringing a stable of new songs (QRO
live review).
Those new songs, like "Laughing With a Mouth of Blood"
(QRO
video) and "Actor Our of Work" (QRO
video) formed into last year's Actor (QRO
review), which vaunted her into the even bigger time (QRO photos
at a
festival), including playing Lincoln Center (QRO
live
review) and other storied concert halls (QRO photos
at a festival).
|
|
| |
|
Beach House, 3:20 PM
The guitar-and-keys pair of Victoria Legrand and Alex Scally
may hail from Baltimore, but there's a Francophile expanse to Beach
House (QRO photos).
2008's Devotion (QRO
review) earned them many fans that felt that way, and this year's Teen
Dream
(QRO
review) is already being shortlisted for ‘albums of the year’, and
they're
working the festivals (QRO photos
at a festival).
But will
the sweet sounds work as well in the bright sunlight (QRO photos
outdoors)?
|
|
| |
|
Cass McCombs, 1:45 PM
Alt-musician Cass McCombs (QRO photos
outdoors) defies easy
categorization.
|
|
Pre-Party - Thursday, July 15th at Bottom Lounge (1375 W
Lake St.)
Toyota Antics are hosting a bunch of pre-parties at
festivals across the country, including at Pitchfork. So head to Bottom Lounge to pick up your will call tickets a
day early (the same
day/time
as their pre-party for Brooklyn's Siren Music Festival - QRO
preview) & groove to Pitchfork performers like Neon Indian & Dâm-Funk (see
above).
RSVP for the pre-party here: http://www.uptheantics.com/pitchfork
For festival website, go here:
http://www.pitchforkmusicfestival.com/
|