Updated with footage!
Hit Allston last night with Tall Dan, Slama and Repucci to see three Scottish bands we know and love play at Great Scott. Met up at the Sunset Bar & Grill, place blew my mind with their beer selection. Had no idea they were fucking around that little. Pilsners, Triple Bocks, Double IPAs, you name it. Slama and I had a few there discussing our job while Pucci advised and TD was bored to tears. Heading out I threw Dan money for the tickets, which the dude then totally ignored and left for the waiter as a tip.
Great Scott turned out to be a pretty mellow little hole in the wall with a narrow back section and stage at the end. A few rounds happened, good times were had. First I've ever gotten a chance to watch three bands I like all play ten feet away while sitting on a Golden Tee drinking PBR. Not bad.
The bands themselves were BrakesBrakesBrakes, who I knew the least but seemed pretty good, We Were Promised Jetpacks, who I'd gotten into the most though only recently, and The Twilight Sad, who I'd listened to for over a year since Repucci first sent them. And who'd come to be known as the "Groundskeeper Willie Sings" band. Of these We Were Promised Jetpacks kicked the most ass with songs like "Quiet Little Voices" and "It's Thunder And It's Lightning" (below), the latter of which has been stuck in my freaking head for two weeks now ever since driving extremely hungover down to the Block Island ferry one Saturday morning a few weeks ago. It came on and not only convinced me that I wasn't going to die but that life could actually be cool. Ended up screaming along with it.
From that night. YouTube's audio quality recently starred in "Paranormal Activity" as the "thing of horror".
This song cures hangovers and makes evil hide.
Dan and I wandered back up toward the door halfway through the Twilight Sad set and realized the Jetpacks' lead singer and drummer were hanging out in front of us. The guys turned out to be extremely legit. The singer said they were off on their bus after the last set to play Montreal the next day but it'd been a great trip so far, most surprising to date was the turnout they'd gotten in Nebraska. Apparently some crazy WWPJ fans in Omaha. Like a good Scot the drummer -- who I'm pretty sure was also Topher from Dollhouse -- was trying to dominate a half-pint of whiskey the bartender had handed him. Dan and I got a photo, I bought a signed LP for the house wall (guys, you gotta get cockier with your signatures than "Thank you!"), and we were out.
Dan, Darren Lackie, Adam Thompson, Ballard
Way to make the night happen, Dan. Wouldn't mind every Wednesday going that well.
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