Previous: Coachella: Friday
Next: My first and last Coachella: Photos and notes from Saturday

Coachella: Saturday

by Linda Immediato
April 29, 2007 1:04 PM

Lessons Learned Day One: Don't be a hero and fuck fashion.

I'm in flip-flops. Fuck it, that half inch of high density foam is better than having to trod barefoot, through discarded food and spit, s I flippity-floppity my way to the main stage.
reginaspektor.jpg

3:55 p.m. Regina Spektor, has all the red-hair, milky skin, and voluminous breasts of a Jane Austen heroine. I am mesmerized by her heaving bosom larger than life on the screens. "It's so fuckin' hot, I'm sorry !" she offered her condolences. Spektor is like a humorous Joni Mitchell, in a way, a softer Liz Phair, but with a good voice, and there's a touch of Tori Amos, though that's an easy comparison, red-hair, piano, but where Amos is fragile, Spektor is tough, less like a fairy and more like a hearty barmaid. In her song "Bobbing For Apples" she sings "someone next door is fucking to my songs" and then there was the crowd-rousing Mariane is a Bitch, about a girl who doesn't put out. I decide being on your feet for over 12 hours is misery and try to sit often. This is the perfect mellow sun soaked set to lounge on the grass and listen to.
travis.jpg
5:00 p.m. Travis. "Hell is tuning a 12-string for ever and ever," says the lead singer frustrated with his instrument. I'm not that familiar with this late 90s band, but the crowd seems to adore them. "Y'all look so attractive," the lead singer says in his thick Scottish brogue. Flattery always works. And then there's water. The group up front is dancing so much, the singer worries about their hydration and has the security guards toss them some bottles of water. Apparently the bassist's classic move is a little hip swing that looks as if he's screwing his instrument. That was fun to watch. Their sound is hard to describe, Brit pop, a little folky, a little pop-y but not as shiny as most pop, there's a little more nutrition in the songs than the high fructose pop we're used to nowadays.

5:45 p.m. Panasian. Ok, I get the food court thing sort of, I found three distinct eating areas named after different cuisines, European, Panasian, and Americana, though once you get inside, there's basically all the same stuff. Eating now turns out to be a bad decision. DON'T EAT AT DINNER TIME. I was salivating watching all the Hawaiian BBQ roasting on large pits. I had paid for a plate, and went to stand in line, but after 15 minutes I noticed the Gobi Tent filling up fast. My eyes shifted from barbecued meats to the now crowded tent. I abandon the crazy idea of eating, got my money back, and ran to try and nab a spot to see Andrew Bird.
andrew-bird.jpg
6:03 p.m. Andrew Bird , the jazzy violinist, is playing inside my head. That's because I'm standing two feet from the tower of speakers in front of the stage. There's a weird two sided phonograph looking thing on a red box, and another black and white striped phonograph on stage, kind of looks like sculpture but I hear they may actually be speakers. Bird, a skinny dude in jeans,and glasses and man-dals, trades back and forth between the violin and the guitar, swinging the latter behind his back while he picks up a bow to assault his violin. Two young girls in front of me record him on their digital cameras, then immediately share their pictures with each other. While they giggle, I notice every time Bird leans in toward the mike to sing, he kind of whips his head back and grimaces. I realize he's being shocked my the mike. After repeated shocks I can't watch it anymore. It's like watching someone being tortured for your enjoyment. And besides, the Decemberists just began their set across the field.
decemberists.jpgdecemberists-whale.jpg
6:32 p.m. "Just so you know, seersucker is the perfect fabric for this type of weather," says Colin Meloy, his band the Decemberists are playing Coachella for the first time. Somehow I knew he'd be in seersucker. The whole band look like they're at a Gatsby garden party, crisp white linen and fedoras. They play mostly songs off their new release Crane Wife, but you kind of never know what you're going to get at a Decemberist show. For this one, we carved huge circles into the crowd so that Meloy could host an impromptu dance contest. "You never thought you'd have a dance contest at a Decemberists show did you?" He asks. Fans have come to expect the audience participation, maybe even crave it, and clap rhythmically without any prompting from Meloy, "watch your tempo," he warns when the claps quicken. He makes us wave our fingers during "The Perfect Crime #2," he makes us jump up and down as if we were on pogo sticks. I know we are doing all of this in some reason to appease Meloy, but it is kind of fun, and gives even the uptight an excuse to bounce. For the last song, they play an oldie, off their first EP, the Mariner's Revenge, you know, back when they were drama nerds. And I think to not disappoint, Meloy instructs us to scream as if our lives were in danger, when Chris Funk, pretends to be a whale. They jig, and dance through the sea chanty, and the big pay off, a giant fake whale comes out on stage and swallows mellow while we screech in mock horror. And that might sound really dorky to a lot of people but it was actually the most engaged with a band I felt so far at Coachella, but I realize not everyone wants to be that engaged.
arcade.jpg
7:40 p.m. The Arcade Fire. I don't even know what to say. So far, if I had to write about only one band this would be it. They are a force, there was so much raw power coming off that stage, I felt that cars could be fueled in the future by Arcade Fire. And even if it weren't for the organ on stage, the religious sort of altar, it would still feel like going to church. Win Butler, the lead singer, was like a preacher singing to us. He was intensely focused on delivering the message of the song, and only that. The rest of the band looked like his disciples, they were enraptured, they looked possessed, speaking in tongues, taking on different instruments, trading one for another, running around the stage channeling the song like possessed musical mediums, but always getting to their part on time. The Napoleon Dynamite looking dude smashed a keyboard in his fervor. One of the girls squatted low and looked out to the crowd, put her hands up to her mouth in astonishment. It looked as if she were savoring the moment. They played a few songs off of their latest release, Neon Bible, which is getting great reviews, but the crowd really got into it when they played stuff off their last album, Funeral, I felt this unity in the crowd, the mass of moving bodies, without instruction, getting it. We were all getting it, and the power's out in the heart of man," Butler sings, "take it from your heart, and put it in your hand." It felt like a call to arms. And when he sang, "Scare your sons, scare your daughters...every time you close your eyes, lies, lies," it felt like this band was speaking to my generation and for the moment we were all hearing it, feeling it, feeling empowered, and connected, like we have control in our uncertain days. At one moment, the energy of the crowd and the band, whose members sang and wailed, moved me to an ecstatic state, I'd never gotten high off a band before. I never felt so connected to my generation. The crowd became a congregation, and for a while in the desert we believed we can be saved, and more than that, we have the power to change. As I walked through the crowd, it was apparent , at least to me, everyone was feeling this. From the bare chested frat boys slapping five, to the indie kids, we walked around smiling at one another. To prove the unity was there, when a guy knocked over my wine, only a little spilled but he offered to buy me a new one.

9:00 p.m. We had a lull in our schedule, so we walked around all the art installations. There is sort of a big Burning Man feel to the festival this year, from the steam powered and bike powered rides, to iron fire breathing dragons. We walked through this fabric coiled snake, we walked into it not expecting much, we had passed it all day long, not realizing the tube hid a surprise, as we walked around the tunnel shrank, it felt like Alice in Wonderland, all of a sudden we were bent at the waist walking with our heads ducked until we actually had to get on our hands and knees and crawl for a while. The shrinking was hidden from the outside cause it coiled inside itself. It was a lesson in commitment, crawling through this tunnel, a line of people a head, a line behind, there was no turning back. Your expectations were fucked with, your commitment and trust, trust that there was a safe exist, was tested, At the end, there was a dome filled with people, talking and hanging out. But the experience left us excited to see what else was out there.

9:30 p.m. We went to go check out some music we ordinarily wouldn't listen, We checked out the DJ, dance party known as Girl Talk in the Gobi tent, it was cool to watch people having so much fun, dancing to their thing, but then the giant screen lit up with the words, "that's all I need to know about that" and it pretty much was how I felt, so we moved on to the dome to check out some live rapping, a battle between these two dudes. A couple of girls ran up on stage, looking pretty ecstatic, it may have been drugs, or it may have been that these guys were sort of their Arcade Fire.

10:00 p.m. Sparklehorse. We found a passive civil war inside the Mojave tent, half the crowd was sitting, the other standing as close as they could to the stage. Once we got inside we realized why, you could hear the Chili Peppers in the quiet spaces of songs. And depending where you were, the Peppers might be all you heard, we heard them from the other side of the festival. It was so hard for us to focus on the Ariel Pink like band, with all that Red Hot invading our sound space,h we threw in the towel and went to see them on the main stage.

10:15 p.m. We sat on the edge of the crowd, watching Anthony Keidis in a Dr. Spock hair-do do his thing, we caught Under The Bridge, and a pretty good cover of Donna Summer's I Feel Love. But if you've seen one Peppers show you've seen 'em all. All of a sudden a strong wind started picking up. You could see large dust clouds blowing.

11 p.m. Not really all that anxious to sit in the car again, we walked around, sat and watched the tesla coil, which I was surprised to hear, gets lots of applause. All of a sudden we heard this booming voice, and we followed it. It was Tiesto,I don't know anything about this guy, cause I'm not big on the Dj thing, but he was like a maestro, a conductor, leading a symphony of artists, cutting between Bjork and Moby. The crowd was huge, I had no idea so many people came out here for this sort of thing. We wound up dancing and I gained a whole new appreciation of this kind of music, it's sort of our modern day symphony.

12:30 a.m. We find the Jeep relatively easily, though I feel like I'm choking on the all the dust.

2:00 a.m. I fall asleep on the couch to Adult Swim, deciding to transcribe my notes, tomorrow.

Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBacks (0)
 

Trackbacks

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://mt.laweekly.com/mt-tb.cgi/36663

 
Comments

There are 2 comments posted for this article.

Arcade Fire: A Neon Bible Study [21 Questions and Answers]
By David Buckna

http://www.assistnews.net/Stories/2007/s07030103.htm

[...] how to bring it. After seeing Arcade Fire open up for David Byrne in June of '05 and reading reviews of the show at Coachella this year, I was ready for these guys put on one hell of a live show. They [...]

(If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be approved by the site owner before your comment will appear. Until then, it won't appear on the entry. Thanks for waiting.)

 
LA Weekly - The Essential Online Resource for Los Angeles

Featured Stories

Air Apparent: Photos from China's Most Polluted Province

Air Apparent: Photos from China's Most Polluted Province

In Shanxi Province, the pollution problem is even worse than you thought… View Slideshow »

 
 

Latest Blogs

Behind every great leader is his behind

Catch of the Day
Tue, Aug 19, 9:59 pm

The $64,000 Answer

LA Daily
Tue, Aug 19, 5:24 pm

Culver City Graffiti and Art

Lurker
Tue, Aug 19, 4:12 pm

Is Ryan Seacrest Now In Play? His Agent About To Become His Production Partner

Nikki Finke's Deadline Hollywood Daily
Tue, Aug 19, 3:11 pm

The Smell's Fantastic New Website

Play
Tue, Aug 19, 9:51 am

Downtown L.A. Film Fest: The Good, The Bad, and The Booze

Style Council
Mon, Aug 18, 11:28 pm

Cyd Charisse, Dead at 86

Foundas & Taylor on Film
Tue, Jun 17, 5:48 pm

Continuing elsewhere . . .

Another Green World
Wed, Apr 16, 11:39 am

News

Branding Griffith Park: Heirs of Land's Bequeather Fight Commercialization Plan

Branding Griffith Park: Heirs of Land's Bequeather Fight Commercialization Plan

By David Ferrell

Griffith J. Griffith's great-grandson: "It’s not a theme park. It’s not a movie studio. People don’t want to see it turned into Disneyland ..."

Metro Sales-Tax Shell Game

By Max Taves

A $40 billion promise fuels suspicion of an agency that has lied large before

R.I.P. Bernie Brillstein

By Nikki Finke

They don’t make ’em in Hollywood like him anymore

"Parks and Wreck": Reporter's Wide-Open Spaces?

By L.A. Weekly readers

Also, Palisades residents respond to Weekly's "Rathouse" cover story

Who's Your Daddy? Why John Edwards' Sex Life Is Our Business Too

By MARC COOPER

He was right about two Americas -- if only one didn't exist in his swollen head

Villaraigosa: Faking an Economic Miracle

By MAX TAVES

Mayor sought a study saying East and South L.A. are booming. They're not

Space Race Two: SoCal Loses Fight for Private Space Terminal to New Mexico

By MICHAEL GOLDSTEIN

State turns instead to manufacturing ships, suits, even diapers

Food

Crudo Bar & Ristorante: Getting Raw on the Strip

By Jonathan Gold

The Italian mood is swell, but why so little crudo?

Kamiyama: The Way California Rolls

By Jonathan Gold

Waterpillars, Krunch rolls and Philly Slurs — South Bay sushi mecca has it all

Earlez Grille: Hot Dog Thrillers

By Jonathan Gold

Sit at Duane Earle's place long enough, and all of Crenshaw passes by

Columns

Reviving Dead Kennedys, Rolling Over Beethoven and Revisiting Tennessee

HoopLA

Reviving Dead Kennedys, Rolling Over Beethoven and Revisiting Tennessee
By SIRAN BABAYAN

What to do in L.A., August 15-21

¡Ask a Mexican!®

Angry About "Anchor Babies"
By Gustavo Arellano

Dear Mexican: As a Mexican, I’m always ashamed of the fact that a lot…

Theater Reviews: <i>Freedom of Speech</i>, <i>Just Like White People</i>

Theater Reviews: Freedom of Speech, Just Like White People

By L.A. Weekly Theater Critics

Also, Winter, the Groundlings' latest and more

Chekhov and Gogol in Moscow, 2008

By STEVEN LEIGH MORRIS

Classical gas

Theater Reviews: Gulls, Mrs. Warren's Profession, Howlin' Blues and Dirty Dogs

By L.A. Weekly Theater Critics

Also Tennessee Williams' Suddenly Last Summer and more

Art / Books

Art Around Town

Art Around Town

By CHRISTOPHER MILES

Flashism

Art Openings

By SIRAN BABAYAN

For the week of August 15 - 21, 2008

A Meeting of the Strange Minds: Peter Ivers, David Lynch and Devo

By JOSH FRANK

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

John Lurie Never Left

By CHRIS MARTINS

Still strange, still beautiful

A Considerable Town

Retired Russian Army Colonel Criticizes U.S. Actions in Iraq Even as Tanks Roll in Georgia

By STEVEN LEIGH MORRIS

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

Signs of the Dov: The American Apparel Flea Market and the Search for the Next Top Billboard Model

By GINA POLLACK

Shoppers wait five hours just to browse for T-shirts

For Those Who Stand Long . . . A Led Zeppelin Reunion?

By RANDALL ROBERTS

Checking out the rumors at the Sunset Marquis' Gibson Through the Lens reception

Living Room On the Street: Public Parking on a Sofas Level

By ADAM GROPMAN

San Francisco landscape architect takes the indoors outside in L.A. neighborhoods

Pucker Up

Straight Men Who Have Sex With Men

By Tristan Taormino

Inside the secret world of the straight guise

Choose Your Path: Sex-Demon or...Uh, a Walrus

Wed, Aug 20, 11:00 am

DC unveiled the fourth wave of their World of Warcraft figures, but let's not fool ourselves—all you guys really care about is the sexy figure, […]

1920s Batman Returns in "Mark of the Mad Hatter"

Wed, Aug 20, 10:05 am

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 […]

Savage Love

Bottom Line on Anal: Gentlemen First

By Dan Savage

Does sex with a cock make you gay?

Bottom Line

By DAN SAVAGE

Bound and determined to find femme dom porn

Now Read This!

Woody Allen's European Vacation

By Scott Foundas

An interview with the director of Vicky Cristina Barcelona

Movie Reviews: The Midnight Meat Train, Mirrors, Star Wars: The Clone Wars

By L.A. Weekly Movie Critics

George Lucas, that greedy visionary, is now in the infomercial manufacturing business

Retired Russian Army Colonel Criticizes U.S. Actions in Iraq Even as Tanks Roll in Georgia

By Steven Leigh Morris

Yuri Yuryevich, also a former journalist, says idea of Russian censorship was concocted by the West

The Downtown LA Film Fest: Grand Opening, Shaky Day 2

By Luke Y. Thompson

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

Earlez Grille on Crenshaw

By Anne Fishbein

I would really consider getting a hot dog...

Features

China's First Gold: Carbon Dioxide Emissions

China's First Gold: Carbon Dioxide Emissions

By Teun Voeten

Air apparent: a photo essay from Beijing and beyond

Exiles on Main Street: Searching for the Ghosts of Bunker Hill's Native American Past

By Matthew Fleischer

Resuscitated 1961 documentary recalls stark lives of L.A.'s urban Indians

Lonnie Kane

By Steven Mikulan

In a land of sweatshops, Karen Kane Inc. stands out by paying its workers full medical benefits even in hard economic times

Making Fiends: Amy Winfrey's Animated Vendetta

By Gendy Alimurung

Already a Web hit, Winfrey's monster series prepares to attack kid TV

Movies

Woody Allen's European Vacation: <i>Vicky Cristina Barcelona</i>

Woody Allen's European Vacation: Vicky Cristina Barcelona

By Scott Foundas

He lived the young man's dream in Spain; next, he directs Larry David in NYC and Puccini for L.A. Opera

Bardem Farce: Javier Makes Whoopee With Scarlett, Rebecca and Penelope

By Scott Foundas

Leave it to Woody Allen to make a romantic comedy in which all the…

Tropic Thunder: Jungle Feverish

By Scott Foundas

If only Ben Stiller and company were as hot and naughty as the P.C. protesters complain

Movie Reviews: The Midnight Meat Train, Mirrors, Star Wars: The Clone Wars

By L.A. Weekly Movie Critics

Also, Henry Poole Is Here, Jack Brooks: Monster Slayer and more

TLA Releasing's Combination Platter: A Queer-Film Minifest

By Chuck Wilson

Sexy hitmen, gay life after 40 and French promiscuity

Driving Men: Mini Mogul

By Holly Willis

A vanguard Los Angeles video artist maps out her love life

Soul and the City: Kent Mackenzie's The Exiles

By Jim Ridley

A "lost" classic makes its long overdue theatrical debut

Dope Test: The One John Edwards Didn't Pass

By ROBERT ABELE

I watched a good deal of the sweat, struggle and crushing loss over the…

The Anime Collective: Baka Deshi Productions

The Anime Collective: Baka Deshi Productions

By Liz Ohanesian

Where the otaku world and music geekdom collide

Record Reviews: Bodies of Water, Conor Oberst

By L.A. Weekly Music Critics

Also, the Pinker Tones

From Decor to Door Whores

By Lina Lecaro

A peek inside some Hollywood hot spots. Plus, LCD Soundsystem and Mondo Hollywood shows

Rock Picks: Warped Tour, Glen Campbell, Pop Levi, Valient Thorr

By L.A. Weekly Music Critics

Also, Previously on Lost, Raphael Saadiq, Liz Pappademas

Brick's Picks: Requiem for a Heavy Cat

By Brick Wahl

A tribute to Dave Carpenter, and more

The Many Moods of Rock the Bells

By JEFF WEISS

Hip-hop's been in a lull. Meet the new torchbearers

LA Vida

The Chumby Diaries: A Partial-Attention Love-Hate Story

The Chumby Diaries: A Partial-Attention Love-Hate Story

By Gendy Alimurung

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?

Greenwashed and Dyed: Nori's Eco Salon

By GENDY ALIMURUNG

Nontoxic hair color under the shredded-denim ceilings of a Greenopia-recommended beauty parlor

Is Ryan Seacrest Now In Play? His Agent About To Become His Production Partner

Tue, Aug 19, 4:11 pm

 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 [...]

New Line About To Party Like It's 2007...

Tue, Aug 19, 2:37 pm

 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 [...]

Best of L.A. '07

Best of L.A. 2007 Armageddon it!

Best of L.A. 2007 Armageddon it!

The last things we'd ever do

L.A. People '08

Lonnie Kane

Lonnie Kane

By Steven Mikulan

In a land of sweatshops, Karen Kane Inc. stands out by paying its workers full medical benefits even in hard economic times

Jerome Joseph

By STEVEN MIKULAN

A long story short

Benjamin Ball and Gaston Nogues

By LINDA IMMEDIATO

Lighting Ants On Fire

Captain Charles Moore

By BOB MAKELA

Fighting the plastic plague in the Deep Blue Sea

John Fantz

By STEVEN LEIGH MORRIS

The bell of San Gabriel

Wed
20
Thu
21
Fri
22
Sat
23
Sun
24
Mon
25
Tue
26
To Do List
Wednesday, August 20
Tribute groups are nothing new. From Abba to ZZ Top, it seems like... More »
These performers may have little in common stylistically except that... More »
Been waiting patiently for Jurassic Park IV ? In the meantime,... More »
Find a Restaurant
Editors' Picks
Wat Thai
8225 Coldwater Canyon Ave., North Hollywood
At the northern end of drab, endless Coldwater Canyon Boulevard lies this massive, gold-encrusted...
Nanjing Kitchen
706 W. Las Tunas Dr., San Gabriel
Jollibee
3821 Beverly Blvd., L.A.
Why do we love Jollibee? Is it the happy plastic mascot outside that looks like Big Boy crossed...
Find a Concert
Wed
20
Thu
21
Fri
22
Sat
23
Sun
24
Mon
25
Tue
26