I caught two shows Saturday and another Sunday. Here's a rough draft of the concert reviews I'll have running in the Creative Loafing that hits newsstands Wednesday (or Thursday, if you in Pinellas).
Photos of The Hold Steady's Craig Finn by Gabe Loewenberg.
The Hold Steady w/This Bike Is a Pipe Bomb/Young Livers
Sat., Jan. 19, Czar, Ybor City
Perhaps youâve heard: Brooklyn-based rock quintet The Hold Steady has become somewhat of a sensation âround here. Their romanticized tales of last-call lovers â sung over big guitars and stately keyboards â would have likely won the critically-acclaimed indie band fans across Tampa Bay sans a local angle. But surely it hasnât hurt that one of The Hold Steadyâs best-known songs (âKiller Partiesâ) includes a reference to Ybor City. Unsurprisingly, The Hold Steady played to a full, lively room of several hundred last Saturday at the Ybor City venue Czar. And yes, the band closed with âKiller Parties.â Virtually every mouth in the room sang along to the line âYbor City is tres speedyâ and then lead singer Craig Finn (pictured) invited audience members to join the band on stage.
Attendees ranging in age from late teens to baby boomers filled the nightclubâs large back area. The diversity of the crowd spoke to the concert being Skatepark of Tampaâs 15th Anniversary bash as well as The Hold Steadyâs ability to hook mature listeners. Their marriage of highly literate lyrics about lowlifes and glorious, bar band rock ânâ roll replete with flashy guitar solos rightfully appeals to an ardent group of enthusiasts.
At the show, though, some of these enthusiasts took to moshing, crowd surfing, and even trying to climb the lighting scaffolding. Considering the rather cerebral nature of The Hold Steadyâs music, this type of crowd reaction caught me off guard. I mostly remained a safe 20-25 feet from the stage and grappled with a pillar blocking my view and a sound system unable to highlight Finnâs vocals â until about halfway through the show, when I found a great spot in front of a speaker off the right side of the stage.
Finn doesnât look like a rock star. Heâs balding, bearded, wears eyeglasses and sports a formidable paunch. But he sells each lyric with engagingly exaggerated facial expressions and hand gestures, working the stage like a roly-poly Mick Jagger â even busting out the occasional, white-boy dance move. This anti-rock star routine makes Finn an ideal hero for the indie set members who need ironic cover in order to pump their fists and get down with testosterone-driven histrionics. Luckily, Finn & co.âs performance proved gloriously sincere.
Click here for more Hold Steady pics by Gabe Loewenberg.
George Strait w/Little Big Town/Sarah Johns
Sat., Jan. 19, St. Pete Times Forum, Tampa
Performing in the round before a crowd of over 18,000 Saturday at the St. Pete Times Forum, George Strait showed why he has been country musicâs most consistent and respected hitmaker and touring act for the past couple decades. Yeah, critics knock Strait for being wooden in concert. And, yeah, Iâve seen him twice now and he basically stands there with his guitar the whole time as if afraid to wrinkle his pressed shirt or those blue jeans with the dress-pant creases down the front. But watch him up close (we had great seats) or on the big screen, and every lyric comes to life on that famous face â even early â80s hits like âAmarillo By Morning,â one of the great cowboy songs of the modern era.
I caught the first hour of Straitâs set before heading to see The Hold Steady (see above) and was treated to carefully recreated (courtesy of Straitâs excellent Ace in the Hole band) oldies like the heart-string-tugging ballad âOcean Front Property,â the bawdy two-stepper âFiremanâ and the recent âI Hate Everything,â a number as gripping as anything in Straitâs impressive back catalogue.
Ronny Elliott and the Nationals
Sun., Jan. 20, Skipperâs Smokehouse, Tampa
NFL playoffs and bad weather kept people away, but the fervent folks who did show for Ronny Elliottâs CD release party Sunday left happy â albeit a bit numb from the cold. Backed by his longstanding band The Nationals, Elliott debuted material from his new album Jalopypaint and offered spirited renditions of fan faves like âSame Three Chordsâ and âBurn, Burn, Burn.â
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