Monday, June 5, 2006

Death by Mustache

Posted by Eric Barton on Mon, Jun 5, 2006 at 3:23 PM

Grab onto Jesse Hughes' stash.

The Eagles of Death Metal last night at the Record Bar was one hell of a satisfying show. That band knows how to take all the bad parts about being at a crowded rock show — the sweat, the claustrophobia, the smoke, the drunken idiots — and turn those into the best parts about being at a crowded rock show. Best, that is, except for the music and the stage presence of singer Jesse Hughes, he of the mighty 'stache.

EODM's music, actually, is all the '70s FM hard rock you've ever heard combined with a few muddy, punky chugs of Queens of the Stone Age, the band fronted by the Eagles' founder and permanent, non-touring drummer Josh Homme, on whom I would have a man crush if I didn't think he'd hunt me down and kick my ass simply for thinking about him like that.

So, the strength isn't in the music so much as Hughes' testosterone-addled, single-minded desire to rock out for the ladies and pander to the crowd. He's damn good at it, though, and he had the entire audience beliving that (a) Kansas City is his favorite place to play ever, and (b) he genuinely wants to have sex with every girl in the house. "Can I get one for the ladies?" he'd say, guiding the swell of cheers upward with one arm. "Oh, God, I love you so hard, Kansas City. Can I get one for rock and roll?" Woooooo! We ate it up. And there was authentic solidarity in the room, too. I even high fived a random dude who was standing in a chair next to his girlfriend, whom Jesse Hughes pointed and winked at repeatedly. I also got in about three months' worth of fist pumping and devil-horn throwing.

Unfortunately, I missed the opening act, the Giraffes, because I thought they were playing at 10. Instead, that was when EODM went on, so I got nothing for you on that.

Now, I'm going to take a break and direct you to something very non-local. It's a Web site I often visit to listen to stuff that hasn't come out yet, as well as weird European electronic and hip-hop stuff that may not even see U.S. release. Kansas City, meet LUISTERPAAL. When you follow this link, click on the LUISTERPAAL tab. Then you'll see four albums, plus two weird Dutch O-words. The top one scrolls up, the bottom one scrolls down, and you start off at the top of the list. Just scroll and click on albums to start 'em blasting through your PC speakers or headphones. This week, Primal Scream's Riot City Blues and Midlake's The Trials of Van Occupanther are my picks. The latter doesn't come out until mid-July. I got an advance copy last week and have barely listened to anything else. There's also the new Futureheads, which I'm listening to right now and enjoying. I've always been more of an album listener than radio person, so I dig this site a lot.

I wonder what that word means, anyway. I bet it's something along the lines of, "You have a white collar job where you sit at a computer all day but work still sucks so listen to this." Or maybe "warm milk." Sprachen zie Dutch?

Comments (3)

Showing 1-3 of 3

Add a comment

You made some good points there. I did a search on the topic and found most people will agree with your blog.

report   
Posted by Katherine Schildknecht on January 1, 2010 at 4:42 PM

I congratulate all Soon Christmas
Here some sites about the Christmases, a lot of interesting here
new year celebration
christmas gift
santa claus email
new year
christmas card
christmas flower
christmas
christmas tree
christmas ornament
christmas song
happy new year
chinese new year

report   
Posted by tooosevenf on December 13, 2006 at 9:57 PM

Nothin' beats a Dutch website with a photo of a snarling Morissey.

Ahhh just want to beeeeee luuuvveed! Jus' like everbooodee else does.

report   
Posted by pressman on June 6, 2006 at 9:02 AM
Subscribe to this thread:
Showing 1-3 of 3

Add a comment

Slideshows

All contents ©2012 Kansas City Pitch LLC
All rights reserved. No part of this service may be reproduced in any form without the express written permission of Kansas City Pitch LLC,
except that an individual may download and/or forward articles via email to a reasonable number of recipients for personal, non-commercial purposes.
Website powered by Foundation