Sonic Youth and The Feelies, Battery Park, July 4th

Hometown post-punk heroes Sonic Youth played a free show for approximately 7,000 fans in Battery Park on July 4th as part of the River to River Festival. The decades-old band started the set with a spellbinding, spacey rendition of “She is Not Alone,” followed by the Kim Gordon-led classic “Bull in the Heather.” By the third song, a blistering “Silver Rocket,” 50-year-old frontman Thurston Moore seemed to have had enough of the photographers separating his band from the frenzied crowd, so he climbed down into the photo pit to thrash through the scrum, before getting back onstage to finish the song.

Other highlights from the 80 minute show: Kim Gordon forgetting the lyrics to “Drunken Butterfly” (teleprompter time?), prompting a big hug from Moore. (Later she said, “Not to make excuses but those lyrics don’t mean anything. Except the ‘I love you’ part.”) Moore sarcastically name-checking the NYC Waterfalls (“spectacular”) and, later, announcing that “Kim says I’m being annoying.” At which point he sank to his knees in front of Gordon for a dissonant slide-guitar solo, which culminated in a nasty “100%” to close the show. (Set list after the jump.)

And after a nearly 17 year absence from performing, The Feelies opened for Sonic Youth with a tight, upbeat set of new wave songs made incandescent by the propulsive guitar work of Glenn Mercer and Bill Million. There’s a great article in the Times about how the band resurfaced for the gig at Thurston Moore’s request: “I had this fond memory of the Feelies always playing on American holidays,” Mr. Moore said. “I thought, ‘Why don’t we get the Feelies? Do they exist?’ ”

She is Not Alone
Bull in the Heather
Silver Rocket
Skip Tracer
The Sprawl
World Looks Red
Cross the Breeze
Hey Joni
Jams Run Free
The Wonder/Hyperstation
Drunken Butterfly

FIRST ENCORE
Making the Nature Scene
Pink Steam

SECOND ENCORE
Schizophrenia
100%


Comments (6) [rss]

Damn, I forgot about this!
I've got the Feelies on my itunes library (from a real CD i bought...)

I saw Sonic Youth live once. I think someone needs to explain the difference between feedback and edgy rock to them. There's a point where it just gets boring..

The Feelies are a great band. Their album "Crazy Rhythms" is a masterpiece. Half the songs on that album are featured in the film Smithereens, which is an amazing time capsule of New York in the early '80s: the Peppermint Club, Pac-Man, Cafe Orlin, ESG, Gina Harlow Cutthroats, skinny ties, St. Mark's Place, poor kids, punkers, and a young Richard Hell as a rockstar, and a Chris Noth as a cross-dressing prostitute.

Damn-- missed this show. Seen SY a bunch of times and the one time I decide to skip, they play all their best songs -- from when their albums were actually good.

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