Black Keys, Jay Reatard
The Wiltern, April 1
By Jonah Flicker
We’ll get to the white-boy blues-rock in just a sec, but first we have a very serious matter to discuss: the awesomeness of Jay Reatard. I have had his most recent release, Blood Visions, playing on repeat for the past few months, and I arrived at tonight’s concert armed with the conviction that the opening act would upset the headliner. I was right. Jay and his band (guitar, bass, drums, done and done) goosed the Wiltern with their reincarnated-Ramones punk rock, a trio of Comic Book Guys completely unconcerned with cool – I mean, dude’s drummer looks like Bruce Vilanch.
The polish of his recorded sound may have been removed from the equation, but Jay’s prepubescent punk fury, augmented by V-shaped guitars, long hair, and tight jeans, more than made up for it. The barrage of songs literally left almost no room to breathe, as Reatard and company launched into one tune as soon as the previous one ended – but that’s the way it fucking should be. Stage banter is awkward, annoying, and overrated unless you’re really good at it. Jay is now signed to Matador, so expect to hear a lot more from him real soon.


All photos by Timothy Norris
OK, I’m not gonna even mention John Spencer Blues Explosion, Two Gallants, or the Rolling Stones in this review of the Black Keys live performance. Oops. I am going to mention their stage set piece, a cheesy inflatable tire that said “Black Keys” on it. You’re from Ohio, electoral battleground state and part of the “real” America, we get it. But that doesn’t give you the right to pretend you’re in the movie Tommy Boy and you have to help Chris Farley ingratiate himself with the Ohio autoworker community. I’m also going to mention the White Stripes, because I would choose the blues-infused sweat of the Black Keys’ Dan Auerbach and his ruggedly soulful vocals over Jack and Meg any day.

Anyway, the music: Auerbach’s guitar work and Patrick Carney’s drumming aren’t the most nuanced, as they seem to quite capably pound out the same riffs over and over again. In its live, stripped-down form, I missed Danger Mouse’s production on their latest, Attack & Release, just a little bit. But playing as a duo is hard, and cribbing your catalog from the musical greats of the Mississippi Delta is a slippery slope that often lands in a heap of mud.

Fortunately, Black Keys mostly manage to handle both challenges with aplomb, respect, and technical proficiency. And I’ll be damned if they aren’t one of the more popular indie rock bands in America right now, judging by the crowd’s enthusiasm at this sold-out show. Hippies, frat boys, and indie-rockers alike seem to really dig this band. After the tenth sludgy blues progression, I was ready to call it a night, but kudos to Black Keys for doing what they do the way they do it, and doing it and doing it and doing it well.


All photos by Timothy Norris. Click here for more photos from the show.
TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://mt.laweekly.com/mt-tb.cgi/54336
|
Monthly |
Category |
In Shanxi Province, the pollution problem is even worse than you thought… View Slideshow »
In Shanxi Province, the pollution problem is even worse than you thought… View Slideshow »
Resuscitated 1961 documentary recalls stark lives of L.A.'s urban Indians
It’s a Sunday night in downtown Los Angeles and my friend, Kumeyaay Indian filmmaker Cedar Sherbert, hits me with an interesting question. … Keep Reading »
Griffith J. Griffith's great-grandson: "Its not a theme park. Its not a movie studio. People dont want to see it turned into Disneyland ..."
PERHAPS NOWHERE IS THE CURRENT PUSH led by Los Angeles City Hall and its platoon of private lobbyists for an overbuilt, overcommercialized, re-engineered L.A. better epitomized than in the unfolding struggle over the so-called Melendrez Master Plan for Griffith Park. … Keep Reading »
Where the otaku world and music geekdom collide
Anneke knew that she hadn’t won the competition. She said this to a group of four people — a friend, a reporter and two random college students, one wearing blue plastic sunglasses and another dressed as the lead character of the vampire anime series Hellsing — while standing outside the Nokia Theatre. … Keep Reading »
Flashism
Kori Newkirk at LAXART (Click to enlarge) Kori Newkirk, Rank, (2007) … Keep Reading »
Griffith J. Griffith's great-grandson: "Its not a theme park. Its not a movie studio. People dont want to see it turned into Disneyland ..."
A $40 billion promise fuels suspicion of an agency that has lied large before
Also, Palisades residents respond to Weekly's "Rathouse" cover story
He was right about two Americas -- if only one didn't exist in his swollen head
Mayor sought a study saying East and South L.A. are booming. They're not
State turns instead to manufacturing ships, suits, even diapers
The Italian mood is swell, but why so little crudo?
Waterpillars, Krunch rolls and Philly Slurs — South Bay sushi mecca has it all
Sit at Duane Earle's place long enough, and all of Crenshaw passes by
What to do in L.A., August 15-21
Dear Mexican: As a Mexican, I’m always ashamed of the fact that a lot…
Also, Winter, the Groundlings' latest and more
Also Tennessee Williams' Suddenly Last Summer and more
History is made at midnight: Excerpt from Josh Frank's In Heaven Everything Is Fine: The Unsolved Life of Peter Ivers and the Lost History of New Wave Theatre
Yuri Yuryevich, also a former journalist, says idea of Russian censorship was concocted by the West investigative journalism no problem as long as president isn't criticized
Shoppers wait five hours just to browse for T-shirts
Checking out the rumors at the Sunset Marquis' Gibson Through the Lens reception
San Francisco landscape architect takes the indoors outside in L.A. neighborhoods
Inside the secret world of the straight guise
The good news: the guy doing the silent film version of Batman let himself use some of the 1940s Batman serial, so Batman looks like […]
By Summer MullinsThis golden age of nerdery has led to one very strange side effect: nerd crafts. Sure, nerds were certainly celebrating their favorite books, […]
An interview with the director of Vicky Cristina Barcelona
George Lucas, that greedy visionary, is now in the infomercial manufacturing business
Yuri Yuryevich, also a former journalist, says idea of Russian censorship was concocted by the West
One of the catches of this festival -- the venues aren't all near each other. You can break a real sweat walking from the Orpheum to the Laemmle Grande
Air apparent: a photo essay from Beijing and beyond
Resuscitated 1961 documentary recalls stark lives of L.A.'s urban Indians
In a land of sweatshops, Karen Kane Inc. stands out by paying its workers full medical benefits even in hard economic times
Already a Web hit, Winfrey's monster series prepares to attack kid TV
He lived the young man's dream in Spain; next, he directs Larry David in NYC and Puccini for L.A. Opera
Leave it to Woody Allen to make a romantic comedy in which all the…
If only Ben Stiller and company were as hot and naughty as the P.C. protesters complain
Also, Henry Poole Is Here, Jack Brooks: Monster Slayer and more
Sexy hitmen, gay life after 40 and French promiscuity
A "lost" classic makes its long overdue theatrical debut
I watched a good deal of the sweat, struggle and crushing loss over the…
Where the otaku world and music geekdom collide
A peek inside some Hollywood hot spots. Plus, LCD Soundsystem and Mondo Hollywood shows
Also, Previously on Lost, Raphael Saadiq, Liz Pappademas
Is the ambient widget device a friend who will share corn-bread recipes and glimpses at its panda cam, or a foe who will steal your passwords?
Nontoxic hair color under the shredded-denim ceilings of a Greenopia-recommended beauty parlor
EXCLUSIVE: I have huge news for the Hollywood tenpercentery world. Network sources tell me that Adam Sher, who has been Ryan Seacrest's longtime William Morris agent for 8 1/2 years, is leaving the rep business to run Ryan Seacrest Productions. This means that Seacrest may now be in play, so watch every major agency make a pitch for [...]
Say you're a downsized Hollywood studio that recently laid off almost all your employees. Well, if you're New Line you throw the annual summer staff party for those remaining few. Ex-New Liners are emailing me that the pool party on Thursday at Skybar will cost $35,000 and "all 48 employees will be there to swim in the blood [...]
The last things we'd ever do
In a land of sweatshops, Karen Kane Inc. stands out by paying its workers full medical benefits even in hard economic times
Comments
There are 1 comments posted for this article.
In spite of the "cheesy" tire, I thought the great light show, ferocity by which the Keys rolled through their songs and their adaptation sans Dangermouse on stage was impressive.
Granted, I missed the ghostly undertones of his album production but at the same time, felt fortunate to hear the two man version.
Also, Auerbach's energy playing the keys on "Those Days Are Gone" blew everyone away.
Great pics.
Posted on April 5, 2008 9:57 AM by J