There has been no shortage lately of concerts in the
name of hurricane relief – benefits have been held practically daily
since the day after Hurricane Sandy pummeled New York and New Jersey.
However, the show held yesterday to benefit Occupy Sandy
– the grassroots relief organization fueled by the Occupy Wall Street
community’s infrastructure – was especially good and perhaps the
highest-profile show held specifically for Occupy. The stacked bill
included Vampire Weekend, Dirty Projectors, the Walkmen, Devendra
Banhart, Real Estate and Cass McCombs – a tremendous, solid assembly of
indie rockers.
The show was held at St. Ann & The Holy
Trinity Episcopal Church in Brooklyn Heights, a beautiful neighborhood
built on high ground and lined with stately brownstones. The attentive
audience sat respectfully in wooden pews, and the hulking, Gothic
revival church felt more like a sanctuary than a concert venue,
illuminated by surreal, autumnal light beaming through stained glass
windows. Largely unaffected by Sandy, Brooklyn Heights seemed an entire
world away from the decimated neighborhoods in the Rockaways. This scene
also stood in stark contrast to those swarmed churches that serve as
"hubs" for the Occupy Sandy movement in Brooklyn, at 520 Clinton in
Clinton Hill and St. Jacobi’s Church in Sunset Park. There, the
laterally organized movement dispatches truckloads of supplies and
thousands of volunteers. Hurricane Sandy exposed the severe disparities
among the citizens of New York City, and the social media-driven Occupy
Sandy worked quickly on the ground to meet need where government
agencies couldn’t.
This show’s purpose was primarily to
raise money for Occupy Sandy’s operations, but like the movement, it
came together swiftly and organically, thanks to two brothers who had
volunteered last weekend and a staff of Occupy volunteers. Jesse Lebus
is an Episcopalian Franciscan brother who serves in the North Brooklyn
area and also acted as the show’s MC. His brother, Morgan, works for
Domino Records and Ribbon Music and knew most of the performers through
professional connections. The pair’s initial vision was a completely
acoustic show to be held in solidarity with those still without power,
but the end result was a slightly more practical event. All of the
bands’ sets were brief and stripped down – the performers had to share a
Spartan stage with only a couple of tiny amps and the church’s grand
piano angled on the side. The exposed setting encouraged some refreshing
diversions from the bands’ regular stage shows.
Real Estate
came on just after noon. St. Ann’s vaulted ceilings and echo-y stone
interior elevated the North Jersey crew’s trademark shimmer, and tempos
were slightly laid back. When strummed into the vastness, breezy singles
like "Easy" sounded more melancholic, nostalgic for things lost, not
past.
Vampire Weekend focused their set on fan
favorites like "Oxford Comma" and "Cape Cod Kwassa Kwassa," but the
highlight came in an inventive 4-hands piano arrangement of "White Sky"
that featured Rostam Batmanglij and Chris Baio sharing the bench. The
band also trotted out their newest cut, "Unbelievers," this time without
the opulent orchestration from when the group debuted the song on
Halloween. Frontman Ezra Koenig cherished the concert as an opportunity
to experiment: "when we play a normal show, we’re always changing our
songs a bit because we can never fully recreate them live, but this
morning we all just got in here really early with some coffee and sat
around the piano. It was really fun."
Devendra Banhart played
the shortest (12 minutes!) but most delightful set. The folkie wild man
came dressed for church, sporting a neat haircut and a shave in lieu of
his typical long hair and beard. He appeared sans guitar, accompanied
only by an upright bassist. He sang with a beatnik whimsy, wiggling
around the stage in a heated musical conversation with the bass player,
occasionally wagging the mic in his face. The duo achieved remarkable
dynamics, and the combo sounded chilling and beautiful when Banhart sang
in a low whisper. When he whistled or chirped in a girlish falsetto, he
was warm and funny – the crowd laughed.
Banhart’s act was spontaneous, unpretentious and intimate. He later admitted to Rolling Stone
that the arrangement was "completely thrown together," since he thought
there wasn’t going to be any amplification. "I haven’t played acoustic
guitar in like, 6 years . . . I don’t own one," said Banhart, "So I
called my buddy Jason (Ajemian) who’s got a stand up bass and said,
'let’s do this.'" But despite his light-hearted performance, Banhart
somberly reflected upon finding the body of a dead woman in the darkened
streets of Manhattan, minutes after she had been struck dead by falling
scaffolding. "It certainly brought neighbors closer together," he
added. "When did I realize how bad it was? It was when actually we got
the power."
The Walkmen delivered the most majestic set of the
bunch. The band was down two members, but four trumpet players augmented
their sound. The sharp, brassy chorale bolstered Hamilton Leithauser's
dark, soulful pipes, combining into an epically rich texture.
Considering the cold, snowy nights after the storm for those without
power, the lyrics from "Stranded" assumed a special significance: "Why
does the rain fall cold/ when I’m stranded and starry-eyed."
Cass
McCombs was the one performer who isn’t based in New York, and his
shadowy, subdued finger-picking served as a solemn meditation in
preparation for Dave Longstreth, Amber Coffman, and Haley Dekle of the
Dirty Projectors. Without the rhythm section, the group’s meticulous
vocal work was overwhelming. The songs seemed less tightly wound, voices
filling up the tall room in a wash, punctuated only by the peculiar,
skewed twang of Longstreth’s guitar playing. The band skipped hits
"Stillness Is the Move" and "Gun Has No Trigger." Instead, Swing Lo Magellan
cuts like "See What She Seeing" and "Impregnable Question" stood out
thanks to slower, more delicate interpretations. For the band’s last
song, Longstreth revived the title track from his 2007 Black Flag covers
project, Rise Above. The song’s opening lyrics evoked the
spirit of the Occupy movement: "Jealous cowards try to control/ They
distort what we say/ Try and stop what we do/ When they can’t do it
themselves."


Post a Comment