Tuesday, March 6, 2007

Explosions In The Sky @ Emo's, Austin (03.05.2007)

Last night, Explosions In The Sky returned to Austin for their first hometown show since the release of their most recent album All Of A Sudden I Miss Everyone (which by the way is excellent!). I was pretty damn pumped to see the show, but apparently so was the entire city of Austin. The show ended up selling out a couple weeks ago, which, for a venue where you can usually show up and just pay cover at the door, is pretty impressive! To put it in perspective, both Isis and Mastodon played this venue in the past few months, and I don't think either sold out until possibly the night of the show. The place was PACKED, but oddly enough it wasn't annoying at all. The anticipation and excitement were pretty thick, and everyone just seemed happy to be gearing up for a great show from the hometown heroes.

The opener was Eluvium, who I had never seen before. Its one guy with a keyboard and a guitar. He would basically repeatedly play a bit and loop it, so that over the course of 10 minutes or so he would gradually layer different piano and guitar parts over each other until it built a wall-of-noise type crescendo, and then he would peel the layers off one at a time to wind it down. Each part on its own would be something fairly mellow, but by the time it reached the climax it was extremely loud and somewhat distorted. He also had a couple songs that were shorter piano-only pieces, and they were actually quite pretty. Overall, it was decent, and it fit fairly well as an opener for Explosions. But it didn't interest me to the point where I would buy it or anything.

Then Explosions In T
he Sky came on a little after 11pm, to a thunderous greeting from the crowd. Munaf, one of the guitarists, spoke to the crowd for a couple minutes, about how amazed they were with the opening ovation and how much the hometown support really means to the band. Then they launched into their set, which was as follows:

01. Greet Death
02. Welcome, Ghosts
03. With Tired Eyes, Tired Minds, Tired Souls, We Slept
04. The Birth And Death Of The Day
05. The Only Moment We Were Alone
06. Catastrophe And The Cure
07. Memorial


Excellent set! Although I suppose just about any set of theirs would be a great set. They did an amazing job of fading one song into the next seamlessly, I don't know if they ever had an actual complete break during the show. It made it quite a bit tougher to keep track of the setlist, hehe. The sound was amazing, the bass came through very cleanly, and you could hear every detail of the guitar work. The drums may have been a tad on the quiet side, but if so it was very slight, they still sounded fine. Most importantly, the energy was astounding. The band was really into it, and the crowd just fed off that. And the band really rocked the climax of the closing song, "Memorial". Everything came together as a huge crashing peak, it was the perfect conclusion to the show. For a few minutes, the crowd hung in there hoping to possibly get an encore. But after a few minutes, Munaf came back out and told the crowd that they couldn't play any more. He said they were a bit out of practice, since they had spent so much time working on the record and not playing shows, and that they were completely exhausted. He sounded really sincerely apologetic, but he said that in the coming months they are hoping to play a lot more shows, especially with a couple more in Austin. It came off as a very classy move to come out and explain things to the crowd, because he really didn't have to. As it was, they played continuously for about 80 minutes, which if I remember correctly is slightly longer than they had played at shows I had seen previously.

Anyway, the bottom line is that the show completely kicked ass, in every way possible. I highly recommend seeing this band if they happen to come to your town. They are genuinely nice guys who obviously put a lot of work into their music and into really trying to connect with the fans. They definitely deserve all the support they can get.

0 comments: