Tour Dates

09/25/12 Portland, OR Roseland Theater
09/26/12 Seattle, WA Moore Theatre
09/29/12 Los Angeles, CA Bootleg Theater
09/30/12 Santa Ana, CA Constellation Room
10/01/12 San Francisco, CA The Fillmore
10/04/12 Las Vegas, NV Boulevard Pool
10/08/12 St. Louis, MO The Pageant
10/09/12 Tulsa, OK Cain’s Ballroom
10/11/12 Houston, TX House Of Blues
10/12/12 Helotes, TX Josabi’s
10/13/12 Dallas, TX House Of Blues

10/14/12 Austin, TX Zilker Park
10/14/12 New Orleans, LA House Of Blues
10/27/12 Manchester Royal Northern College
10/28/12 Leeds The Cockpit
10/30/12 Norwich Waterfront
10/31/12 Birmingham O2 Academy
11/02/12 Oxford O2 Academy Oxford
11/03/12 Bristol Trinity Centre
11/05/12 London Electric Ballroom
11/08/12 Paris, France La Boule Noire
11/10/12 Lorient, France L’Espace Cosmao

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Alt-J

UK art rockers, alt-J are certainly no strangers to the awkward task of assigning context to obscure subjects. The quartet met at Leeds University in 2007…
With the announcement of An Awesome Wave, the debut album from Alt-J (∆), to be one of the shortlist for the Mercury Prize, Alt-J is getting a lot of attention. That’s certainly the case at last night’s sold-out show at the Triple Rock in Minneapolis, as Alt-J played to their adoring fans.


JBM

Starting off the show was JBM (aka Jesse Marchant), a Canadian singer/songwriter who expressed gratefulness to have been on the brief tour through the United States (last night was their last stop on their tour).



I got the sense that JBM’s music was very personal to him, as he closed his eyes and sang out his heart.
Just look at his lyrics for “Moonwatcher”, as he paints this vivid picture: “The wind blew down through the cracks of the home and the frozen sides of it creaked. One day I’d of liked to see you come. Stay the night and fill me warm with your sunlight…



He mostly played guitar, but switch to the keyboard for two songs, including “Thames” and his last song on the set.



Although JBM’s storytelling songs sounded nothing like Alt-J’s more upbeat music, the audience didn’t seem to mind one bit.



As for Alt-J, I felt their music had a very Caribbean breeze to their music, especially with the percussion on some of their tracks, but people are saying they’re more “avant pop”, which translate to art-rock. Whatever they’re classified as, their fans knew all their songs and it often turned into a sing-along show. Although their album just came out September 18th, I got the feeling that fans were already privy to An Awesome Wave well before the official release date.



If you look at their setlist, they did their entire debut album, An Awesome Wave, live. The live set is very similar to their track listing (minus the various interludes) from the album:
“Intro”, “Interlude 1” (aka “She She She”),
“Tessellate”, “Something Good”, “Dissolve Me”
“Ms”, “Fitzpleasure”,
“Matilda”,
“Breezeblocks”,
“Bloodflood”,
“Hand-Made” and
“Taro.”



There was no encore, which didn’t surprise me because they’ve played every song known to them. Yet, the audience was still clamoring for more Alt-J, even when the Triple Rock started playing their closing out songs over the speakers.



Alt-J is currently on tour in North America, in support of An Awesome Wave, which is out now on Canvasback Music. Catch the wave now to see the band at smaller/intimate venues, rather than paying for the price later when they really blow up.



Alt-J at Triple Rock Social Club, Minneapolis (09/22/12)



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