
Saturday night at the
Rickshaw Stop was a beyond-sold-out affair of tightly wound and very playful tunes. The club is smaller than some yuppies' garages, all draped in red velvet fabric and strung up with globe lights with a stage barely elevated above the heads of the voluminous crowd. The indie kids turned out full force in their Vans, leggings, chunky glasses and skinny jeans, ready to
dance. Featuring sets by
The Old-Fashioned Way,
The Changes,
Dios (Malos) and capped by
The Spinto Band, this was one show I was most excited about at Noise Pop. I was not disappointed.
The Old-Fashioned Way opened with an enjoyable set, and had the quirky dork-rock vibe down to a T. Their music was multi-instrumental and lighthearted. I jotted in my little notebook (
yes, I took notes. With so many shows, my memory ain't what it used to be) that they sounded a bit like the rumbly baritone of Nick Cave meets the playful music and harmonies of Mates of State. There were seven members packing the tiny stage, with most of the girls in frocks that looked handmade and a frontman that defied typical lead-singer stereotypes.
Before the set by
The Changes, I was flagged down by Noise Pop photographer
Peter Ellenby, whose work
I've written about here. He asked me to photograph the next set for him and handed over his camera.

I was a rock photographer for a spell, and was
ridiculously excited, as that is a job I have long thought would be so interesting and cool. I perched atop a piano by the stage and happily started clicking. If only I had known better how to operate all the bells and whistles on the camera, I could have possibly done some neat things, but as it was I told Peter that I'd be happy if even one or two shots turned out worth keeping. I was so thrilled to get to try.

The music from Chicago's
The Changes is infectiously good power-pop with hummable choruses and jangly guitars. I am expecting their album
Today Is Tonight in the mail shortly, which was recorded at the same Chicago studio as The Redwalls. I hear a little bit of similarities in the vibe of the two bands, and I am looking forward to enjoying the entire album.
VIDEO: The Changes, "Water Of The Gods"
1 Comments:
Friday morning, I walk up to my box and find a package in my box. It is the R+J soundtrack. I am excited and go straight my room to play it. We had it on continuous loop all Friday. My freshmen were not too thrilled but my older kids (well mostly the female ones) loved the album. Thanks for brightening up our Friday at Lynbrook!
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