Body Games...
Took a short break before the night shows. I was going to take a longer one, but I heard a rumor that Andre 3000 was gonna hop on stage with Big Boi at some point during his set... or at minimum, that his show would feature a lot of Outkast material. So I head back to City Plaza. No Andre, but yes, Ms. Jackson was apologized to yet again. Fun show with or without Andre (I'm sure that rumor goes around before every Big Boi show).
Big Boi...
Due to me taking the bait, I missed locals Naked Naps and most of Advance Base at Lincoln. Caught just the last couple of songs of the latter. While I'm not too familiar with his music other than generally, I like what I've heard (as Advance Base and Casiotone for the Painfully Alone). It was very downbeat and unfortunately not very crowded. He would have worked well at Neptune's, given the general vibe of that venue for the fest (see later).
Advance Base...
So speaking of Neptune's, my Plan A was to close out the fest seeing Japanese Breakfast there (Plans B & C were Slim's & Pour House in no particular order). The two acts before her/them looked good, too. And my past Hopscotch experience told me this would be one I'd need to get into well before the show (thus the Plans B & C). But I still had a few minutes before Truth Club started there, so I popped back into the HUGE "Basement", the new festival venue at the Convention Center.
In the wide open space of the Basement, Alessandro Cortini was "playing". I say that in quotes not because he's a producer/experimentalist (I learned a long time ago that a good DJ/producer "plays" their instruments, too). I say "playing" because all you saw when you walked in was a very large screen projecting what looked like old home movies, an empty table on the stage, and experimental music seeming to come only from the speakers. Okay, maybe he's a recluse. He's played with Nine Inch Nails, his own band, and various others. He's paid some dues. Stepping to the back to get the wide view, an older guy (probably a festival hire) was working the projections. But in the dark, in front of him, was Cortini... tweaking knobs and controlling the music, unbeknownst to most of the crowd lounging on the floor taking in the atmosphere. It was a pretty good atmosphere to take in. One of those unexpected little side-jaunts that Hopscotch always provides, if you're open to them.
Alessandro Cortini...
On to Neptune's. I had recently been pleasantly surprised to find that this new-ish Raleigh band Truth Club featured Travis from Wilmington's late-great Astro Cowboy. Similar sound, maybe a little poppier (but I never saw Astro enough live to really compare); another great drummer!
Truth Club...
Staying in the (much smaller) "basement" of Neptune's, I prepped to close out my Hopscotch with a pair of Brooklyn bands. I know, imagine that! 😄 Cende kicked out a restless pop that very much brought me back to my days of first discovering Cali pop punk when it was new: Lag Wagon, Descendents, early Green Day... yeah, I'm old. But these guys aren't just completely re-hashing. They do it with a fresh take, good songwriting, and ample skills.
Cende...
Michelle Zauner of Japanese Breakfast, who's been touring with Cende, popped up to sing the last number with them before her set...
I had heard a lot from Japanese Breakfast, mostly on 'KNC. Frankly, they were overplaying them there for a while (as I'm sure other college stations were). So much so that I thought they were local for a bit. But every time I heard them, I liked what I heard... "Oh, it's that Japanese Breakfast band again!" Unlike a lot of bands that generate such buzz, they deserve itJapanese Breakfast is the solo project of Michelle Zauner (who is of Korean ancestry and not Japanese, thankyouverymuch... the name is meant to juxtapose Asian and European values, or something). Though her own thing, she's touring with what is a great band. But Zauner is the unequivocal focus, a stage presence that calls to mind Annie Clark or Sam Herring. A little warmer than the former, not as ferocious as the latter, but like them, she puts it all out there and leaves it. It was a tiny setting, but I think she'll be taking over (and taking to) much larger stages soon. And the music... I thought it would be a mellower show given the bedroom pop feel of the records. But live, Japanese Breakfast lean more towards the indie of indie-pop. Very fun, energetic show. As I posted the night they played, Michelle Zauner is a punk rocker with a lounge singer trying to get out, or vice versa. Amazing show. Amazing end to Hopscotch 2017.
Japanese Breakfast...
That's it for my photos. One day I'll get around to going through my Hopscotch 2017 videos. Stay tuned...
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