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Monday, December 01, 2008

Live Review: Fortnight, Answer Team, No Blood Orphan…

I listened to No Blood Orphan from the bar at The Barley St. Saturday night -- I was too glued to the Oklahoma/Okla St. game, and besides, there was no place to sit/stand in the music room anyway. As the third quarter rolled into the fourth and the Sooners began to pull ahead, the crowd began to overflow into the bar. I don't know if it was because of the Thanksgiving holiday or a pseudo family reunion, but there were lots of older folks (re: older than me) cramming up the place. I think they were probably there to see either Answer Team or Fortnight.

BTW, it didn't matter that I was in the bar when NBO was playing -- I could hear them just fine. I don't need to see Saklar's guitar ballet to hear its splendor and beauty. My take on NBO and their new music: They've never sounded so poppy and so hooky and embraceable as on their new CD or on stage Saturday night. The sound is kick-back but not rustic or rural or Americana. It's modern indie rock with a definitive beat.

By the time The Answer Team came on the game was pretty much over or at least no longer interesting. I've never heard of these guys -- a five piece that included a lady on violin and a guitarist who looked like McLovin' with a perm and headphones. Their instrumentals-only music sounded influenced by Tristeza or The Album Leaf. One person compared them to Race For Titles without vocals, though Answer Team was no where as hard as those guys. I do like what they did, though inside the Barley St. their overall sound was tinty, with no low-end at all. Their guitars sounded too bright and metallic and I wondered how they'd sound on the Waiting Room's stage with beefed up amps.

Finally, on came Fortnight, a combo that includes Jenn Bernard (ex-Park Ave, ex-Magic Kiss). Bernard looked like she hadn't aged a day since I last interviewed her more than seven years ago. They began playing a song during their pseudo soundcheck -- just started playing -- and it was among the coolest things they did all night. The guitarist walked onto the dance floor and faced the band and began riffing and everyone joined in. I'm not familiar enough with their music to say if that was just an interlude from another song or not, but they should consider starting their sets that way.

As a whole, Fortnight came off as a fun loving indie band featuring two vocalists -- Bernard and frontman Corey Degner -- taking turns and singing together without harmonies a la Tilly-style. Sitting in on bass was intern Brendan Walsh-Greene -- no idea what that was all about, but he did a yeoman's job with just a week's worth of practices. This is a band to keep track of.

--Got comments? Post 'em here.--



posted by Tim at 10:45 AM

1 Comments:

Blogger Daydream Pizzeria said...

I think you mean I looked like Bob Dylan at the firing range, though I've heard everything from Jonathan Safran Foer to 1970s Lindsey Buckingham.

2:11 PM  

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