See you there.
The Warfield, SF 20110414
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- Hell and High Water
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- Pitifuljoy
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Re: The Warfield, SF 20110414
Jealous! Oh so jealous!
- 12fingered
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Re: The Warfield, SF 20110414
The wait is the worst. My feet already hurt 
the correct term would be f****d-up
Re: The Warfield, SF 20110414
Twitter comments about tonight's gig:
http://twitter.com/search?q=pj%20harvey" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
http://twitter.com/search?q=pj%20harvey" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
Wiggins is so superbly unassuming, he looks like he's about to say 'Pop the gold medal in the post, I'm nipping out for some biscuits'
Mark Steel
Mark Steel
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Re: The Warfield, SF 20110414
It was great! But not a festival show, I'm not sure how that will go over. Not rock and roll, more literary or something. I'm still absorbing it though it was two hours ago.
I think it was pretty much the same set list they've been doing, hopefully a list will turn up. I tried to record it, but something went wrong and I didn't get a peep.
Oh well.
I think it was pretty much the same set list they've been doing, hopefully a list will turn up. I tried to record it, but something went wrong and I didn't get a peep.
Re: The Warfield, SF 20110414
Hell and High Water wrote:It was great! But not a festival show, I'm not sure how that will go over. Not rock and roll, more literary or something. I'm still absorbing it though it was two hours ago.
I think it was pretty much the same set list they've been doing, hopefully a list will turn up. I tried to record it, but something went wrong and I didn't get a peep.Oh well.
I can't say I'm happy not to be the only one as I pushed twice the recording button to PAUSE instead of RECORD. So, for the first time in my all life I got nothing of a concert on my SD card.
It was in Brussels second night Feb 19th, 2011 (and i'm still looking for another taper's boot since).
Re: The Warfield, SF 20110414
http://www.insidebayarea.com/timesstar/ci_17854822" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
Review: PJ Harvey highlights brilliant new album at Warfield
By Jim Harrington
Oakland Tribune
Posted: 04/15/2011 03:12:44 AM PDT
Updated: 04/15/2011 03:12:57 AM PDT
PJ Harvey was channeling her inner Bjork.
She appeared onstage on Thursday night at San Francisco's Warfield Theatre wearing a vintage white gown, more appropriate for the Victorian era than modern times, and then stood nearly motionless in front of the microphone as she clutched an autoharp to her chest.
The most arresting visual was what topped Harvey's head like a crown -- a two-tiered black feathered headdress that made it look like two wings had sprouted from her skull. When she moved, the "wings" flapped.
It wasn't quite Bjork's famed "swan dress," but it also wasn't that far off.
The 41-year-old vocalist looked as if she'd stepped straight out of the pages of some bizarre fantasy graphic novel, one that freely mixed Tolkien, Grimm Brothers and Wagnerian imagery. Inhabiting this persona, she seemed perfectly "out of time" as she set about sharing tales so resonant for our times.
The bulk of the concert hailed from "Let England Shake," Harvey's eighth studio album and an early contender for record of the year. The highly moving concept work addresses the impact of war, in all its many shapes and sizes, yet not in an overly preachy way. Harvey simply plays the storyteller on these songs, leaving the morals to be discerned by the individual listener.
"Let England Shake," as fans found out at the Warfield, is also a very difficult work to translate to a rock club. That's not due to the complexity of the music, but rather because of its simplicity. These are delicate numbers, built from centuries-old British folk traditions and sung with a vastly softer voice than what we've come to expect from Harvey, and they don't mingle well with clinking bottles, idle chitchat or T-shirt sales.
More so than any album in recent memory, "Let England Shake" is a work that you must be able to hear the precise lyrics to get the full effect. Even a symphony hall might not do it full justice -- this music whispers out for an even more intimate setting, like a private concert in some British manor's library.
That's as impractical as it is improbable, I know, but there were still times at the Warfield when I wished I could block out the other 2,199 people at the sold-out show and just listen to the music on my headphones.
Not surprisingly, the slightly more up-tempo songs -- especially the ones where Harvey traded in the autoharp for the electric guitar -- worked best at the Warfield. Some of the standouts from the new album were "The Words That Maketh Murder," "Written on the Forehead" and "In the Dark Places."
Backed by a nimble three-piece band -- which included multi-instrumentalists John Parish (a longtime Harvey collaborator) and Mick Harvey (best known for his work with Nick Cave) -- the vocalist opened the show with the title track to "Let England Shake" and then veered from the track listing.
The decision to mix up the numbers, and even throw in a few older songs, worked better than expected. "Let England Shake" fits together so seamlessly that my initial impression was that it should only be heard from start to finish, in order. My thoughts on that matter changed midway through Thursday's set, as I realized that these songs -- which are really short stories -- could offer different things through new juxtaposition; that context, as it does with most great artists like Harvey, would come into play.
I left the concert with the strong desire to immediately put on the record. That's not a sign that the Warfield performance was inferior to the album, but rather a compliment to Harvey, who had somehow managed to make me even more intrigued by a batch of songs I was already enamored with.
Review: PJ Harvey highlights brilliant new album at Warfield
By Jim Harrington
Oakland Tribune
Posted: 04/15/2011 03:12:44 AM PDT
Updated: 04/15/2011 03:12:57 AM PDT
PJ Harvey was channeling her inner Bjork.
She appeared onstage on Thursday night at San Francisco's Warfield Theatre wearing a vintage white gown, more appropriate for the Victorian era than modern times, and then stood nearly motionless in front of the microphone as she clutched an autoharp to her chest.
The most arresting visual was what topped Harvey's head like a crown -- a two-tiered black feathered headdress that made it look like two wings had sprouted from her skull. When she moved, the "wings" flapped.
It wasn't quite Bjork's famed "swan dress," but it also wasn't that far off.
The 41-year-old vocalist looked as if she'd stepped straight out of the pages of some bizarre fantasy graphic novel, one that freely mixed Tolkien, Grimm Brothers and Wagnerian imagery. Inhabiting this persona, she seemed perfectly "out of time" as she set about sharing tales so resonant for our times.
The bulk of the concert hailed from "Let England Shake," Harvey's eighth studio album and an early contender for record of the year. The highly moving concept work addresses the impact of war, in all its many shapes and sizes, yet not in an overly preachy way. Harvey simply plays the storyteller on these songs, leaving the morals to be discerned by the individual listener.
"Let England Shake," as fans found out at the Warfield, is also a very difficult work to translate to a rock club. That's not due to the complexity of the music, but rather because of its simplicity. These are delicate numbers, built from centuries-old British folk traditions and sung with a vastly softer voice than what we've come to expect from Harvey, and they don't mingle well with clinking bottles, idle chitchat or T-shirt sales.
More so than any album in recent memory, "Let England Shake" is a work that you must be able to hear the precise lyrics to get the full effect. Even a symphony hall might not do it full justice -- this music whispers out for an even more intimate setting, like a private concert in some British manor's library.
That's as impractical as it is improbable, I know, but there were still times at the Warfield when I wished I could block out the other 2,199 people at the sold-out show and just listen to the music on my headphones.
Not surprisingly, the slightly more up-tempo songs -- especially the ones where Harvey traded in the autoharp for the electric guitar -- worked best at the Warfield. Some of the standouts from the new album were "The Words That Maketh Murder," "Written on the Forehead" and "In the Dark Places."
Backed by a nimble three-piece band -- which included multi-instrumentalists John Parish (a longtime Harvey collaborator) and Mick Harvey (best known for his work with Nick Cave) -- the vocalist opened the show with the title track to "Let England Shake" and then veered from the track listing.
The decision to mix up the numbers, and even throw in a few older songs, worked better than expected. "Let England Shake" fits together so seamlessly that my initial impression was that it should only be heard from start to finish, in order. My thoughts on that matter changed midway through Thursday's set, as I realized that these songs -- which are really short stories -- could offer different things through new juxtaposition; that context, as it does with most great artists like Harvey, would come into play.
I left the concert with the strong desire to immediately put on the record. That's not a sign that the Warfield performance was inferior to the album, but rather a compliment to Harvey, who had somehow managed to make me even more intrigued by a batch of songs I was already enamored with.
Re: The Warfield, SF 20110414
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JyvGcYqIwDA" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
"All and Everyone" 1080p
"All and Everyone" 1080p
- Hell and High Water
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Re: The Warfield, SF 20110414
Thanks for those - the review does a pretty good job of explaining why I don't think this was a festival show, maybe in a side tent but not a main stage "event."
Nice video though it cuts it short. Hopefully there will be more!
Nice video though it cuts it short. Hopefully there will be more!
Re: The Warfield, SF 20110414
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3GGQ_9PC2bQ" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
"Big Exit" 780p (full song)
"Big Exit" 780p (full song)
Warfield show Marvelous!!
The only artist I was hot on seeing at Coachella and she came to my home area of the SF Bay area! Now I feel $300 richer for not needing to go to coachella. Great show! She looked so innocent with those fiery lyrics! What a treat.
Re: The Warfield, SF 20110414
Let's put video links to this in the Amusement park forum (please start a new thread). For pics, lets start a new thread in the pics forum for this gig (also start new thread).
I was there last night, it was great.
Like Hell, I struck out recording it!
I don't know what the heck happened. Still trying to diagnose what went wrong. I think there's a good chance others taped it though since it was apparent the Warfield is not strict about this. I do have hopes for my video (entire gig, 720p, left side balcony front). A quick look this morning shows that it looks pretty good. Haven't listened to the sound though. There was a plexiglas barrier between my camera and the balcony edge which probably impacted things.
I'm fairly certain I got the whole thing though. We'll see. The timing was ideal: swapped the battery during the encore.
I was there last night, it was great.
- Pollyphoniac
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Re: The Warfield, SF 20110414
perhaps for the festivals Polly will pull out some other songs (from her back catalogue).Hell and High Water wrote:It was great! But not a festival show, I'm not sure how that will go over.
I'd do anything
To see you again
I'd do anything
To see you again
I'd do anything
Re: The Warfield, SF 20110414
^ As per other recent gigs, Polly stood off to herself to the left and said absolutely nothing during the show. She only spoke to introduce the band and "Thank you for coming" at the end.
The older material received noticibly stronger applause. The audience was very well behaved, no shouted out requests and only a couple 'crazed eruptions' (We/I love you Polly!). The show was sold out. Doors opened at 7, show supposed to start at 8, but it didn't actually start until 8:45 I think. The crowd was quite patient. I was actually glad there was no opening act to wait through.
The older material received noticibly stronger applause. The audience was very well behaved, no shouted out requests and only a couple 'crazed eruptions' (We/I love you Polly!). The show was sold out. Doors opened at 7, show supposed to start at 8, but it didn't actually start until 8:45 I think. The crowd was quite patient. I was actually glad there was no opening act to wait through.
Re: The Warfield, SF 20110414
http://www.soundspike.com/news/article/ ... rvey_news/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
http://www.sfbg.com/noise/2011/04/15/li ... ield-41411" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
"This then, made for a night that was far less rock concert and more of an artistic exploration of sorts. With most artists, that may have made it tedious, but with Harvey it was spellbinding."
http://www.sfbg.com/noise/2011/04/15/li ... ield-41411" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
"This then, made for a night that was far less rock concert and more of an artistic exploration of sorts. With most artists, that may have made it tedious, but with Harvey it was spellbinding."