I wrote on my FB page, ‘should I make the trip to Seattle to
see Teenage Fanclub tonight? It’s 75
miles each way,” and Luiz wrote back from sunny Lisbon: “I’d do it on my bike. In the
snow.” Happily it wasn’t snowing when I took off up the Five that night around
7:30, though it had been pouring most of the day, and I’m skittish about
driving in the rain.
Just past Lakewood, there is an enormous emporium on your
right called “Bass Pro Shops.” It’s the length and breadth of a CostCo and has a sign the
size of the Emerald Queen Casino; I think the complex it sits on includes a
bowling alley, a seafood restaurant and a shooting range. I might be wrong
about the latter, but it generally gives the impression that going shopping
there will be the time of your life. Judging from its logo, which involves a
large fish, it sells every type of fishing rod and lure known to man, as well
as, inevitably, guns. This makes sense since practically everyone here has some
kind of a boat and also a bit of a death wish. But whenever I see it, I prefer to
pretend that it actually provides basses
to bass players, and that it’s size is indicative of the enormous need here in
the Seattle and South Sound area for people to have a wide array of choices in bass guitars.
This idea fits in with my fantasy notion of Seattle the
mecca for my people, that is, as a place where literally everyone on the
streets owns a copy of Big Star 3rd and deeply understands it’s beauty, and
I must say, attending a Teenage Fanclub show is not going to disabuse anyone of
that concept. From where I sat two hours later, my view of the
band was totally enhanced by a guy standing center front in a homemade football
jersey with the number 13 emblazoned on the back. (In joke. “Thirteen” is the
title of a TF album and also an iconic Big Star song, but it was doubly funny
since football jerseys in Seattle are supposed to say ‘12’ – it’s some kind of
magic fan number for the Seahawks.) Rationally, I know that Seattle has its
share of Bon Jovi fans and gun nuts. But in my mind it is a place of super
intense fandom, the likes of which you will encounter nowhere else.
TFC Neptune Theater 3/24/17 Note 13 jersey in front. |
That effect is only heightened by the rightness of the venues here. The Neptune is a converted movie theater in the U District,
right by the UW campus. It reminds me of an old theater in my home town, the
Varsity, where we used to go see midnight movies – “Ladies and Gentlemen, The
Rolling Stones” and “Gimme Shelter” – with its cruddy loud carpet and
low-hanging balcony seats. But the Neptune has something that makes it much
more rock ‘n’ roll than the Varsity, and it’s not just the bar that’s been
installed in the back of the orchestra section or the old fashioned décor,
replete with fake stained glass windows of Poseidon and mermaids that looks
like it’s going to crumble into dust in front of your eyes. It’s not really
speakable, that thing that it has, it’s more like a sense you get when you walk
in that you are about to enter a state of mind.
When I entered the Neptune for the first time on Friday, the
opener, Britta Phillips, was already on stage. I took one look and went, “oh
HI, it’s Luna,” because it was so Luna-like, in my opinion: that’s what it looked like,
minus a member or two, and that’s what it sounded like in timbre and tempo if not in actual song choice. But that's cool, I like Luna's timbre and tempo and it's never not a good time to hear echoes of the Rainy Day. And then came the Fannies, as they used to be affectionately called by the UK press. (“Fanny” is a worse word
in England than it is in America, where it merely sounds like something your
grandma might say she’d paddle if you stole a cookie, but being a Teenage Fanny
is definitely a good thing.) And the crowd pressed forward, hushed; expectant:
it looked, I thought, like a group that loved this band with a passion but had
somehow never seen them. I don’t know how a young person gets to hear of
Teenage Fanclub these days, but the audience was not entirely elderly. Maybe
Nirvana is still working its weird magic from beyond the grave, whispering into
the ears of the children the names of their most beloved bands, and then forcing
them to buy the vinyl. Or maybe it’s just the final result of the long-tail
theory, and if you gather all those plot points together they aren’t as
negligible as you’d think.
So, when you hear Teenage Fanclub, what do you think of? Do
you think of 1991? I do. But it turns out that the Fanclub’s sound is more
durable than that. You can go see them and be pelted back to that fantastic
summer, or you could just as easily belong to the magic circle where, forever
after, they will remind you instead of 2017 and that one great night in March
when we were all so happy because the Republican administration finally had to
eat shit in front of us all. Or, if you’re me, they can do both, amalgamating
past and future in an aural shake and bake of the Byrds and Black Sabbath; of
Husker Du and the Everly Brothers, or the Mammas and the Pappas minus all the
Mammas. They are and always will be the zenith of jangly guitars, hooky melodies, and creamy-sweet
harmonies, not ringing but actually tolling like a massively mid-tempo church
bell, with a beautiful mix of voices that sound like they swallowed a magical potion made of Beach Boys DNA and are now
expelling it in a gaseous cloud directly into our faces. That sound is so beautiful
it is practically visible, so rich and creamy that at one point I felt like I
could see its actual waves blasting out from the mouths and their guitars and
coating every one of us with a thin layer of sonic frosting.
It’s been over fifteen years since I reviewed a show and I’m
not going to do it here. If you want to find out what they played you can go
online; someone may even have posted the show (although from my vantage point
in the balcony I was incredibly happy to see that almost no one in Seattle had
their phone up for more than a snapshot: it was like entering a classroom where
no one was looking at Facebook, i.e. truly unprecedented.) Suffice to say they
finished with “The Concept” from Bandwagonesque, and the crowd bounced up and
down and ROARED out the words as if they were Smells Like Teen Spirit - “She’s
gonna get some records by the Stay-tus Quo, whoa-oh!” – and that being the case, you
can only imagine what the final encore, of “Everything Flows” was like. Or maybe you'll never know which way it flows...though if you've read this far that seems unlikely.
And I’ll leave it there, that is, in your imagination, as I get in my
car and drive home down the Five, first past a vista of Seattle that never
fails to enchant, then down the long boring five past Tacoma, the casino, and
of course the Bass Pro Shop where the reverie began five hours earlier. Thank god I wasn’t on a
bicycle, and it wasn’t snowing. But I knew exactly what Luiz meant.
* Credit for this headline goes to Steve Michener of Big Dipper.
* Credit for this headline goes to Steve Michener of Big Dipper.
We get older every year, but you don't change |
5 comments:
Man, are you in your wheelhouse or WHAT?!?! I feel like I was there!
Ah yes, in the link from The Guardian about Teenage Fanclub in San Francisco with Tony Bennett in 1993, I have my notes:
1 2 / 1 0 / 9 3 C o n c o u r s e E x h i b i t i o n C e n t e r , S a n F r a n c i s c o , C A P O R N O F O R P Y R O S / T H E W O N D E R S T U F F / G E N E R A L P U B L I C / C R A C K E R / E V A N D A N D O / T H E Y M I G H T B E G I A N T S / T E E N A G E F A NC L U B / T O N Y B E N N E T T / M A Z Z Y S T A R / N I C K H E Y W A R D R E D D K R O S S o p e n e d K I T S G r e e n C h r i s t m a s B e n e f i t
KITS was an SF "modern rock" station. My notation that "REDD KROSS opened" means they were on the bill but we missed them. We must have seen the rest of the bands, because of the way my notes read (and I wrote them down as soon as I got home). I do not for the life of me recall seeing Tony Bennett but we must have. Could it be because we spent a large portion of our time there at the Merch table with John Flansburgh of They Might Be Giants? It's really to bad that he didn't have some sort of cable tv talk show, because I couldn't stop laughing.
I remember Cracker, Evan Dando, TMBG, sort of Fanclub and Porno For Pyros. P For P were a big deal at the time, they were in fact a big bore. I think they had the same electric violin player as Cracker (Morgan something?), but perhaps my memory is frayed. The Exhibition Concourse was some sort of T-shirt Mart, the sound was just horrible. Most of the people there had won tickets or something, it was a strangely detached crowd.
May all plus ones take such good notes!
I am so sad I missed this show. They continue to amaze me to this day. I adore them.
Talk about your Hidden Panel of Expert. Corry is the ultimate. Proof that database can be a force for good. Surely that was a KITS holiday fan concert, free if you proved you listened (called up the station I guess); thus the eclectic line up and detached vibe. My highly inaccurate memory thinks that P for P was a Jane's Addiction spinoff.
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