Sonic Youth - Capital Music Hall, Ottawa, 6/8/2004

  by Andrew Carver

published: 17 / 8 / 2004




Sonic Youth - Capital Music Hall, Ottawa, 6/8/2004

Sonic Youth recently played Ottawa as part of their current world tour. While not as overwhelming as their reputation would suggest, Andrew Carver still finds them able to play a " very coo" show





Article

The first week in August was a busy one for the Capital Music Hall – Wilco one day, Modest Mouse the next, then Sonic Youth the following day. Ottawa music fans were most likely thanking the gods of tourdom for sending Lollapalooza down the spout, since the latter two were refugees from the cancellation of Perry  Farrell’s travelling circus. Originally, Bulb artists Wolf Eyes were supposed to open, but by the time Sonic Youth hit town they had been replaced by Montreal’s Les Georges Leningrad. Part X-Ray Spex, part no-wave, mostly a joke, the drummer’s antics seemed to provide the crowd with the most amusement – striking muscleman poses … falling over backwards … tearing his own shirt with his teeth … eating his shirt … Bobo – his nom de percussion – is in fact a skilled drummer, but the one-chord keyboard and nonsense vocals provided by his two accomplices were a little underwhelming. As they began, one person near me loudly declared “They’re awful!” On the way home, another showgoer walking down the street said “That opening band was something else …” to his companion. Both statements were correct. The loudest cheers were reserved for Kim Gordon during 'Kool Thing' (unsurprisingly, since the video got a lot of play in Canada), and the announcement of “a little song called ‘Sister’” but the entire show surged. Thurston Moore was the most antic performer, shoving monitors, leaping and sliding, thrusting his guitar against the hall’s speaker system. (I was joking with a fellow showgoer at the stress involved in being a Sonic Youth guitar tech, with all the alternative tunings the group uses, but I noticed during the show that there’s a strip of reflective tape on the headstock below the tuners with the appropriate info scribbled on – so all they have to cope with is Moore’s instrument abuse.) Lee Ranaldo and Jim O’Rourke’s put on a less athletic performance (the latter was particularly low-key), but still definitely there – Ranaldo provided excellent lead vocals on two occasions. Like the group’s albums, the sound moved from the delicate to full on blast (though I confess that they seemed quieter than I thought they’d be … or maybe I’m getting deafer). While not as overwhelming as their reputation would suggest, the show was still very cool.



Band Links:-

http://sonicyouth.com/
https://www.facebook.com/sonicyouth/
https://twitter.com/thesonicyouth


Picture Gallery:-

Sonic Youth - Capital Music Hall, Ottawa, 6/8/2004


Sonic Youth - Capital Music Hall, Ottawa, 6/8/2004


Sonic Youth - Capital Music Hall, Ottawa, 6/8/2004


Sonic Youth - Capital Music Hall, Ottawa, 6/8/2004


Sonic Youth - Capital Music Hall, Ottawa, 6/8/2004



Post A Comment


Check box to submit




Interviews


Interview with Steve Shelley (2004)
Sonic Youth - Interview with Steve Shelley
Remaining constantly inventive, Sonic Youth are soon to release their nineteenth album, 'Sonic Nurse'. Mark Rowland talks to drummer Steve Shelley about its creation,and their recent turn as curators at the All Tomorrow's Parties alternative rock festiva

Live Reviews


Roundhouse, London, 1/9/2007
Sonic Youth - Roundhouse, London, 1/9/2007
In the iconic recently opened venue of the Roundhouse in London, Dominic Simpson watches Sonic Youth in a 'Don't Look Back' show give a dynamic and forceful perfomance of their classic 1988 album, 'Daydream Nation'
Live at Shepherds Bush Empire, London,

Favourite Albums


Daydream Nation (2007)
Sonic Youth - Daydream Nation
Jon Rogers looks at Sonic Youth's 1988 opus 'Daydream Nation'which has just been re-released with both additional songs and a whole extra disc of live versions of the album
Daydream Nation (2002)

Features


Sonic Youth 'EVOL' and 'Sister' (2011)
Sonic Youth - Sonic Youth 'EVOL' and 'Sister'
In our ‘Soundtrack of Our Lives’ column, in which our writers reflect upon music that has had a personal impact on them, Jon Rogers writes of Sonic Youth’s 1986 and 1987 albums, ‘EVOL’ and ‘Sister’
Reissues (2006)


Digital Downloads




Soundcloud




Reviews


Smart Bar-Chicago 1985 (2013)
Forceful and raw live album from Sonic Youth, recorded at a 1985 Chicago club gig, which will be of appeal only to hardened fans
Simon Werner A Disparu (2011)
The Destroyed Room (2007)
Rather Ripped (2006)
Goo (2005)
Sonic Nurse (2004)
Dirty (2003)


Most Viewed Articles






Most Viewed Reviews




Related Articles


Thurston Moore: Live Review (2014
Thurston Moore - Thurston Moore/Mark Gardener - Bodega, Nottingham, 12/11/2014
At the intimate Bodega in Nottingham, Anthony Strutt watches ex-Sonic Youth front man Thurston Moore, with Ride's Mark Gardener as support, play an intense but versatile set