The 2010 Coachella festival for us was about as professional as you could get, with a small group of us -- Andrew, Vanessa, Noa, Jenn, Jonathon, Jenn's friend Rami -- all Coachella veterans, most going more than twice now. We had the usual plan -- get there on Thursday, Sizzler that night, the Royal Plaza Inn as our hotel, get there early Friday afternoon to pick up our passes, leave Monday morning to come back -- and it worked just fine. There wasn't much that was different for the festival for us than every other year, though the festival had some changes. One was an extra 15,000 people, going from 60,000 people to 75,000, and that never bothered me since I rarely notice the crowd, but there were some complaints about it, even from our own quarters. This also caused some problems on Friday afternoon when everyone was trying to get in, mostly likely L.A. people who had left work early to drive out to Indio, expecting to cruise in, instead encountering a bottleneck that took more than a few people three or more hours to get in (including our Noa and her friends, who were often doing their own thing but it was good to meet some new people and have our groups come together). Getting in was never a problem for us, since we wanted to see some of the early bands on Friday and, well, we've done this before. It's always nice to get to the festival early on Friday and get acquainted, get the lay of the land, get a look at things, see some of the things you might not be able to get to later in the weekend, not to mention seeing some of the bands in the worst slots that might be the next big thing in the coming years. It was great to be with such good friends, as it always is, but also folks who appreciate the experience, don't complain about the people and the heat (which wasn't a problem this year, being downright pleasant most of the entire time), chip in for groceries and drinks and gas, and just have a good time. I couldn't imagine a better group of people to spend that weekend with. Needless to say, from that point we made plans to do the same thing together the next year.
We got in early Friday to see Baroness, a suggestion from Andrew. Fairly heavy metal with a dash of roots rock and quite loud, loud enough to make you sorry for any band that had to play at the same time as them, even those on the bigger stages; we had been talking in our e-mail circle since the line-up was released about DJ Lance Rock and if he was, indeed, the same guy from Yo Gabba Gabba (a show my three-year old daughter enjoys). Certainly they couldn't have the guy from a kids' show doing a set in the DJ tent, right? Coachella isn't usually one for irony. So we had to check it out. Even that early in the day, being the second on stage, he had the tent packed. They handed out paper glasses like the plastic ones that he wears. And if he didn't end up putting on an amazing performance. It was all pre-recorded with a bunch of the musical performances from the show displayed on the giant screens and Lance Rock just jumping around the stage, but it was enough to get everyone dancing and jumping around, us included. I didn't think there would be any way they'd get the other guys from the show, in the gigantic, elaborate, boxy costumes, on stage, but finally they came out a few songs in and everyone went wild. The rest of the weekend there were numerous, random sightings of the characters in costume checking out other bands, most notable Plex watching Grizzly Bear, and this just made the weekend even more fun; saw a little bit of the Avett Brothers, and I've heard that they're great, but I didn't get enough of them for it to set in and spur comments. That happens a lot over the weekend; Andrew let me borrow a bunch of music before the weekend and I was able to hear a lot of stuff I didn't know about and most of it was really great. Yeasayer and Hockey were two of those bands, and I liked the albums of both but they were playing at the same time so I had to choose. I picked Yeasayer since that's what everyone else was going with but they seemed dull and I was tempted by the element I didn't know so I took off to see Hockey and I was well rewarded for my switch in loyalties. They had an energetic set, maybe the most of the entire day. I never would have taken them too seriously just based on their name but they were a lot of fun; Dillinger Escape Plan were so out-of-place among the line-up that I knew there had to be something special about them, being brought in among so many indie and alternative acts. There aren't a lot of acts at Coachella that could also play the Warped Tour. Coachella branches out to a lot of bands that would defy what they're usually known to be about, and that's exciting, and most of their odd-ball picks are notable. Andrew had talked about them for years and I had wanted to check them out for a long time but I knew I might not be able to handle, say, a club show with them (and their fans). They played the smallest tent, though not even the main stage could have contained their ferocity. A lot of bare-chested dudes and maybe some folks who didn't know this was going to be a rough crowd, certainly not as rough as the band usually gets, but rough for the desert crowd. The band couldn't have been louder or faster, a hurricane of chaos on stage, and exploding the short time they were given. I don't know how many new fans they turned there but the set was a jolt to a weekend that usually rocks but not like that; there weren't a whole lot of cops around so my restraining order didn't keep me from seeing Zooey Deschanel with She & Him. I like M. Ward and I like them on their albums but live all they could offer was sunshine and we already had plenty of that. Of course they're not meant to be a live band and a desert festival in front of a few thousand people who may or may not be fans (and may or may not be there only to see Ms. Deschenl) probably wasn't their best venue but they were a nice contrast to the rest of the bands. I didn't see too much before I went. I don't need to compete with anyone for Zooey's love; I had a conflict between Lucero and the Specials: Lucero I had one album from, out of almost a dozen apparently, before the show, and I liked it well enough, but they were domestic and would tour again, and the Specials appearing was a big deal and a once-in-a-very-long-while thing. I peaked in on Lucero and they had only about a dozen people watching them so I switched to the Specials, hoping to catch “Gangsters”, certainly their biggest song (and one that reminds me of a chick from years ago). I saw the second half of the set, and kept waiting for the song, but it just didn't come (since apparently, I find out months later, they bafflingly played it at the beginning of the set). I couldn't feel too cheated since it was still a good set, I'm just not usually down with ska, as old-school as it might be; I then caught the very last of Lucero and it was good enough but the crowd, what little there was, were barely into it so it was hard to get excited about; shortly after that it was dark and time for Them Crooked Vultures: Grohl, Homme, and Jones on stage together -- pretty impressive. Grohl behind the drums and Jones on bass (including what looked like a lap-guitar at the beginning) and that's pretty amazing but they serve only as the rhythm section, leaving Homme as the frontman, who is still an amazing talent, but his stuff in Queens since Oliveri left hasn't engaged me at all and this new group is along those same lines – it just sounds like a new version of Queens and that left me a little limp. But still a powerful set and crazy to see those titans of music working together; Echo & the Bunnymen was the only other full set I saw all day but they were also, on the biggest day of this year's festival, the band I most wanted to see. I was a late-comer to the band, coming well after their heyday (which was in the early '80s, well before my time of being aware of these things), but I'd like to say I've made up for lost time. I didn't get to see any of their full-album performances of Ocean Rain so I had to make do with this festival performance but, for what it was, it was enough. They stuck to the hits, and at least the stuff that weren't hits fit in so well that it didn't drag down the show. McCullough has always had a pretty big head about his band and its place in the music world (if not the rest of the world at large) but a lot of the time he's been right (though more right 20 years ago): “The Killing Moon” is the greatest song ever written, as he will also, and often, tell you. “The Cutter” is second, as he will also note. And even if that's not completely and utterly true on most days, at that moment, in the early, chilly (for the desert) evening, with floodlights raining on the crowd, it's wasn't completely just bragging (though it might be hard to totally trust a man wearing a raincoat in Indio); I wandered over to see LCD Soundsystem to fill in some time before the next thing (though I was pretty much do with the day after Echo). It took me a while to get into LCD, though every time I hear them I like them exponentially more than I did the time before, and I've seen them in concert before and they didn't set me on fire but I admit I should have been into them more. In any case, I caught about the middle part of their set and they deserved all the accolades they got in reviews for the show; the only reason I (or probably anyone) know about Public Image Ltd. is for Johnny Rotten/Lydon and even then I'm not a big enough Sex Pistols fan that I'll follow him around to anything. PIL at least hold their own and it's good to see Lydon making a bit of an effort, even with a project that isn't nearly as legendary; Andrew told me about Fever Ray, that it was extremely rare that they play shows, and I try to make it a point to get to the special performances at festivals, in case they really don't come around again and I missed a band I got into later and would have been able to see if I was just a little more adventurous. And there was definitely an element of adventure with Fever Ray. Especially since they didn't go on on time (I don't care how often you don't play live) and I was anticipating something great, after having to tolerate the tardiness. The music was certainly an acquired taste, which is most of the music I listen to, but I could sink into it, helped by the megawatt laser show and floodlights. I still didn't hang around for the whole thing but what I saw was an unique experience, though I'd probably only see them at a festival at this point; I always love the line-up for the festival and even some of the years where I think the line-up is just slightly weak (though better than just about any other American festival), including this one, I always know that they'll get some bands worth checking out, even if I don't know them before the show. This year I had more of a problem with the headliners. Not that I'll say they're bad acts and not that I'll say I don't understand why they got who they did, but it just wasn't the headliners that got me excited. Jay-Z I have nothing against, I'm just not familiar with his stuff. I know he's the best MC alive today and that the entire rest of the world knows his entire discography by heart, and apparently it's worth getting everything he's ever touched, but it just passed me by (save for the years living with Rick, who would play his stuff endlessly) but that was only a sampling and it was years ago, not enough for me to be familiar with any of the set I saw, which wasn't much, though it included the Beyonce appearance (not that I knew that was happening at the time or that I would even be able to see her from where I was standing, while I was waiting for everyone else). And I missed "99 Problems", the only song I would have recognized and been excited to hear. Judging simply from Jay-Z's popularity, he was a good choice of headliner, though a bit of a challenge considering the usual rock/indie/"alternative" mix that the festival usually boasts. But the festival world already got enough of the negative judgments when he headlined Glastonbury in '08 and he proved them all wrong then. From everything I heard, he proved himself again, even if he didn't need to; every day of the festival was great and there as a great line-up but we had picked Friday to be the best. If numerous conflicts with favorite bands playing was any sign of how good that day was, Friday was far and away the best.
Saturday was a bit of contention. When we saw the line-up it was pretty much universally agreed that Saturday was the weakest day. Which makes sense: they could shift the best bands onto Friday, since that would probably be the most sparsely-attended day, then have a less-powerful line-up Saturday, since the most people would be there on that day. Though they only sold three-day passes this year so you could assume that folks would be there for all three days but still. And that's not even to say that Saturday was bad, it still had more than enough great acts. And though there were fewer bands that I wanted to see, the ones that I wanted to see I really wanted to see. We wandered in lazily on Saturday and Vanessa wanted to see Shooter Jennings. Not only did he rock, which surprised me, but he rocked really hard. Vanessa wanted to see him again (with or without the music); Rick got me into Camera Obscura a few years before and I've come to love them. They're very twee, right along the lines of Belle & Sebastian but I'll give them the advantage since they have a female singer, who, in addition to being more pleasant and potentially more sexy, also seems more fitting for that type of music; I have in my notes that I saw Girls but I just don't remember. They were probably very messy; I couldn't figure out Tempter Trap but that's nothing against them, I just couldn't come into them cold; a band that named themselves Beach House played in the middle of the desert. They clearly never thought they would play Coachella. I think I watched them while I was eating; the Gossip were one of the bands I was really excited to see at the festival overall. I got into them late and I thought I'd really missed out, never seeing them at a club or, well, anywhere. And they didn't disappoint (though they came on later than they should have). Not only can Beth Ditto rock a house but she can rock an entire tent. So much energy, from the stage to the audience and back again, amplified with every beat and every shriek, just incredible. Exceeded my expectations, just blew me away. Even if they hadn't slowly morphed their biggest hit into “Psycho Killer” it would have been one of the all-time great Coachella performances. That more people didn't know about it is those people's problem. That they didn't put them on the main stage is our benefit, but they could have held it down; I didn't intend to see the entire XX set but I wandered by, just to see how they were. They're amazing on record but I knew they'd be out of place in the middle of the desert at the height of the day. Still, they drew the biggest crowd for the second stage that I've ever seen, extending to twice the capacity that I've ever witnessed, way back into the food stands and near the next stage. Just a strategic placement in time for their set and/or everyone is really into them, which is fine, but they couldn't have performed as well as they should have out there. Hopefully they didn't lose any fans because of it; around this time there was a plume of smoke coming from the main stage during Coheed & Cambria but no one panicked and I never checked to see if it was on purpose or not; I just never was able to get into the Dirty Projectors. I like art-rock as much as anyone, maybe more, but I don't know what those people are on about. It's just weird noise to me. I stopped by to see if I could be convinced otherwise – no – or to check if the female singers were hot enough to endure the music – maybe -- but I found something else to do anyway; the Icelandic volcano that had happened the day before grounded a number of planes out of England and a few bands had to cancel, and while we had to miss some acts, it actually helped us make some hard decisions about what bands we'd have to choose between. Most notably for me it was going to be Bad Lieutenant vs. Faith No More. Bad Lieutenant are, of course, the newly reconstituted New Order, and it's no secret that I'm a huge New Order fan, even after their disastrous performance at Coachella in '05. But the debut album is pretty good and I heard they still did New Order stuff, some of the better stuff, as well as some Joy Division cuts, which seemed more appropriate somehow, with them doing those rather than as New Order. I'm not nearly as big a Faith No More fan, really just being a best-of fan most days, but this was (at the time) one of the few U.S. dates they were doing and their only American festival appearance. And I'd never seen them in concert before and I knew they'd be great live. It was going to be a tough choice, one I knew I'd probably regret. But Bad Lieutenant didn't make it, canceling a second U.S. tour, so that avoided a lot of heartbreak for me. (Frightened Rabbit were also stranded from the festival.) FNM put on a predictably incendiary set, no disappointment there, and it was even a surprise how well they seemed to be getting along and how tight they were after so much time (and a noticeable addition of a lot of gray hairs and bald heads). They played most of the hits but they could only do so much in the hour they were given, and most bands are able to deal with this, but here FNM opened with a rendition of "Reunited", which went a lot longer than any tolerance for irony would give them, then a mid-set, momentum-killing rendering of "Ben", both of which might have been funny if they had had more time and weren't wasting it with pointless guffaws. They could have burned that place down if they had been more focused but instead we got a Faith No More that rocked but were almost overpowered by just trying to be weird; the headliners for that night were Muse. It's well-documented that I'm not a huge Muse fan. I've seen them a number of times, including previously at Coachella in '04 but they've never done much for me. Generally they're just too much Queen for me and I'm still perplexed by how a very British, early-Radiohead-knock-off band with a nasally singer with songs that are more epic-sounding than good-sounding have become such a big deal in the U.S., enough that they're headlining such a notable festival. But it's not a big deal to me, I don't have to love every band, even the headliners, and I can find other stuff to do. Vanessa was more or less in the same boat, and we both wanted to check them out enough to see what the show was like but we also wanted to drink so we decided to take it easy and watch them from the nearby beer garden. This was a pretty good plan, until we got to talking some locals who gave us some vodka so we weren't paying much attention, then we got more drunk than we did all weekend (or at least I did). Once the band were done (or as done as we wanted them to be) we started wandering around, first to check out the Dead Weather, which we'd already seen before, and who had amassed one of the biggest person-per-person crowds of the whole weekend, and we got bored and moved on. We wandered around, meeting people and just enjoying the feel of the whole festival (though not the ferris wheel since it was closed by the time we got to it) and eventually made it to the last act of the night; I love Devo but they've never been much of a live show when I've seen them. They rely on their name from the '80s but you have to respect that they're still making new music, even if no one is much interested in hearing much more than "Whip It" (which they usually play early in their set). But certainly more people than me love them enough to see them live and they still pull a crowd. We were mostly waiting for everyone to get together to leave but I was able to see them through "Girl U Want". I knew they wouldn't play "Gut Feeling" so it was okay to leave. And a fine way to end the day, getting out to beat the traffic and get ready for the even bigger next day.
Sunday we showed up ready to go full-blast. Though Noa and her part of the group hit it a little too hard too early in the day and I still don't know how they got through it. We started with King Khan & the Shrines, perhaps the most fun I've ever had at the festival, dancing uncontrollably, laughing with and at each other, jumping up and down, relishing the contagious joy, just having a good time. Other bands would stop playing if they saw those guys. Those guys – both the band and my crew – know how to party. Maybe started off too strong but it was worth it . If only there could be a band as fun as that every day at music festivals; Owen Pallet and Deerhunter kinda ran together to me. We were watching from the beer garden and had some food and I think I dozed off for a little bit; then it was over to Florence and the Machine, who (after going on late) nearly killed themselves to please a crowd that was about three times the capacity of the tent they were in. I really think this was a crucial moment on their trajectory to become a pretty big name, and they were up to the task of impressing everyone who squeezed in (even outside) to see them; Julian Casablancas (maybe) pulled a diva move and showed up late. Of course I’m a Strokes fan and I came to really like his solo album but I wasn’t expecting much from this performance. Turns out I should have had higher expectations because he would have met them. The band didn’t have the personality of the Strokes but they could hold their own. And I never would have expected a Strokes tunes, and I never could have wished for “Hard to Explain” but it came second and that was a highlight in a weekend of highlights. I nearly pooped my pants. The rest of the set held up the sam amount of energy, including a Christmas song in the middle of the high heat of the afternoon and it rocked harder than anything else in the set. Then he played the single about halfway through and half the crowd left but that was fine by me, I moved closer; I admit to having an interest in Charlotte Gainsbourg because of her father (though if she was in a movie it would be much more about that but it doesn’t translate to a concert festival) and that's got to be most of the rest of her fans (unless you're a really obsessed Air or Beck fan). There were a good number of people in the tent for her performance, but it wasn’t much of a surprise since it was one of the very few shows she did and there wasn’t much competition for the time-slot. As it was, I saw as much as I did from outside the tent, and not all of it but just a bit because it ran over past the time she was supposed to have. Not as sleepy as I thought it would be but close; everyone else went to see Miike Snow but what I heard was while I was eating and it wasn’t much different from when I saw them at Lollapalooza;
as much of a big deal it was supposed to be that Pavement were back together and playing, by that time maybe it wasn’t such a huge event. Phoenix easily eclipsed them on the second stage, enough to make you think that there must have been some mix-up in the program. But they still turned in a great, ebullient set, a lot more exciting than when they played the first Coachella festival (though they’re probably getting paid a lot more now). A lot of young people in the crowd (maybe not a lot camping out for Gorillaz since it was pretty simple to get close enough to the stage at that point), maybe showing their longevity (or at least younger music fans getting over there to see what all the talk of their being legends is about). Their set stuck to the most predictable stuff (even though they never really had any hits), though they closed appropriately with “Cut Your Hair”. They played “Stereo” and into “Shady Lane” so their set-list was fine with me (as I like the poppy Pavement). “Range Life” hasn’t aged well but it was a fun inclusion (maybe in spite of its irrelevance). They’d been away for ten years and maybe they should have more fans and interest as their legend has grown but they can still hold down a main stage (especially since there was no reason to see Phoenix anyway); I watched the Big Pink while I had a funnel cake (since I couldn’t find any ice cream). Their set was sparsely attended, at best, since there were two headliners on at the same time but that only means a lot of people missed out. Some heavy, sexy sounds and a lot of smoke. You couldn’t even say where they were from, maybe Europe, maybe space, but you’d be glad they were there. Then I was deaf. And that funnel cake almost killed me, as they so often do; if you heard the most ridiculous story about Sly Stone being (or not being) at Coachella then you heard the right story. I’m sure there were a lot of people who were roundly incredulous that he was even on the bill and people older than me probably knew how it was going to turn out (if at all). But I had hope. Maybe I shouldn’t have. It would be hard to believe what happened if you read it -- Yes, he was supposed to be on at 7 and wasn’t there (though his band was. He might not even have been in or anywhere near Indio at that time). Yes, they switched him with Little Boots (or so I was told, and while his being gone was accurate, the other act going on at a different time wasn’t and that screwed up Noa seeing her after I told her of the supposed time-change). Yes, they switched him to a different tent (though the necessity for this, and how anyone was supposed to know is beyond me). Yes, the band was ready to go... and still ready... and still ready. Yes, to everyone’s utter amazement (for the hundred people who showed), he appeared. Yes, he came on four hours late. Yes, he didn’t really start any songs. Yes, he scrapped what the band had rehearsed and he put on a CD of music he’d been working to play off a computer. Yes, the music was a mess. Yes, he was reading lyrics (for barely-formed songs) off a sheet of paper. Yes, he tried to explain why he was crazy. Yes, he kept stopping songs that the band started. Yes, they almost got through “Stand” (which I didn’t realize was his song). Yes, 11 band-members on stage, almost as many stage-hands, and none of them knew what was going on. Yes, he jumped every time a stage-hand came to help him. Yes, he ended asking a guy in the front of the crowd what other song he wanted. Yes, he asked how long he had to be on stage to get paid. Yes, he was clearly drugged out of his mind (though I don’t know how this is different from any other time in his life). Once they carried him off the stage I had to leave, though the band kept playing, instrumental versions, maybe just to have had something to do or justify their making it all the way out there and being ready to play -- it was all true. By far the worst set in Coachella history and also the most magnificent slow-motion train-wreck ever. Not a fitting end to a great weekend of music and good times, but maybe to show that you really can never know what's going to happen.
Bands I missed: Passion Pit (since I was just about done with them at the time); Grizzly Bear (who weren't of particular interest to me but I heard they were one of the best acts of the weekend); La Roux (who I didn't really get into until after the show); the Raveonettes (I wandered by but didn't stop to watch. I'm a big fan but I figured it would be the same show I've seen before. Vanessa saw them and said that the rest of their band couldn't get to the show and Sharon and Sune had to perform as a two-piece. That would have been a unique thing to see. And she said they were still great); Sia (since I had already seen part of a perfect performance by her at a previous Coachella and didn't know how it could be topped); Sunny Day Real Estate (up against Florence and the Machine -- yeah, tough call. I only hope I picked right); Matt & Kim (who I had seen before then, and considering how many festivals they play, I knew I'd see them again); Jonsi (I can't say I'm a gigantic Sigur Ros fan and I know he had a great album but I wasn't really pulled toward it); De La Soul (I know they had an impact on music but I only knew one song of theirs from back in the day so I didn't have the historical or cultural perspective on them so I didn't bother); Spoon (I didn't love their newest album and I figured I'd see them again before too long, so I spent the time wandering the grounds for a little while); Yo La Tengo (another band I knew of but didn't really know. I wasn't a big indie kid when these guys were big (relatively)); Thom Yorke (another weird scheduling miscalculation. Assume that as many people are there for Thom as they would be for Radiohead, and Radiohead could play to the biggest part of the crowd on the main stage, so it's perplexing that they'd put him on the smaller stage, which can still be massive but not enough to accommodate who shows up to see him, which was considerable. I knew I wouldn't get anywhere near to see even far away from the stage (as the smaller stage isn't set up as well as the main stage is to be enjoyed by a bigger crowd or to be seen from a greater distance). You could still hear it from a ways away and they actually scheduled him in a dead period of the evening but I knew it would be more trouble than it would be worth. Besides, I had already seen him in a theater and got a lot closer to the stage and had a better show than most of anybody else got in Indio. I heard that he played some Radiohead songs as part of his encore but I've heard those in concert too. Now, if he had used the opportunity to play “Killer Cars” I'd be cursing myself into eternity but that didn't happen so I was fine seeing the Big Pink instead); Gorillaz (I was really anticipating this performance since they didn’t seem like a headlining band but if they were going to do it they’d have to bring something really special. I always thought it was interesting that a cartoon band would try to tour but there could be something really creative to bring them to life. There was other stuff I figured I’d see instead but I wandered over to see this set and all it was was the band playing the music and some videos behind them on a screen along with some surprise guests, which did not include Snoop Dogg or Lou Reed, and were as predictable as they weren’t exciting. It’s good music but there wasn’t anything extraordinary about the performance. Though I heard it was still awesome so maybe I missed out but I was still good with what else I saw instead).
Jay-Z's set-list:
"Run This Town"
"Takeover"
"Diamonds From Sierra Leone"
"My Name is Hov"
"On to the Next One"
"DOA (Death of Auto-Tune)"
"99 Problems"
"Is That Yo Bitch?"
"Can I Get A…"
"Beware of the Boys"
"I Just Wanna Love U (Give It 2 Me)"
"I Wanna Rock"
"Izzo (H.O.V.A)"/"Jigga What, Jigga Who"/"Jockin' Jay-z
"Wonderwall" (Oasis cover)
"A Dream"
"Empire State of Mind"
"Already Home"
"Heart of the City (Ain't No Love)"
"Dirt Off Your Shoulder"
"Hovi Baby"
"Show Me What You Got"
"Thank You"
"Fiesta"
"Money Ain't a Thing"
"Big Pimpin'"
"Hard Knock Life"
"Young Forever" (with Beyoncé)
"Encore"
Muse's set-list:
"Uprising"
"Supermassive Black Hole"
"New Born"
"Resistance"
"Hysteria"
"Nishe"
"United States Of Eurasia"
"Feeling Good" (Leslie Bricusse & Anthony Newley cover)
"Helsinki Jam"
"Undisclosed Desires"
"Starlight"
"Unnatural Selection"
"Time Is Running Out"
"Plug In Baby"
"Stockholm Syndrome"
"Knights of Cydonia"
Pavement's set-list:
"Frontwards"
"Father To A Sister of Thought"
"Two States"
"Shady Lane"
"Gold Soundz"
"Grounded"
"Perfume-V"
"Date With Ikea"
"Fight This Generation"
"Range Life"
"Trigger Cut"
"Starlings of the Slipstream"
"Summer Babe"
"Unfair"
"Cut Your Hair"
LCD Soundsystem's set-list:
"Us v Them"
"Drunk Girls"
"Losing My Edge"
"All My Friends"
"I Can Change"
"Pow Pow"
"Yeah"
"New York, I Love You But You're Bringing Me Down"
Faith No More's set-list:
"Reunited" (Peaches & Herb cover)
"From Out of Nowhere"
"Caffeine"
"We Care a Lot"
"Last Cup of Sorrow"
"Ben" (Jackson 5 cover)
"Surprise! You're Dead!"
"The Gentle Art of Making Enemies"
"Midlife Crisis"
"Epic"
"Ashes to Ashes"
"Just a Man"
Them Crooked Vultures' set-list:
"No One Loves Me & Neither Do I"
"Dead End Friends"
"Scumbag Blues" (extended solo)
"Gunman"
"Caligulove"
"Spinning In Daffodils"
"Mind Eraser, No Chaser"
"New Fang"
Echo & the Bunnymen's set:
"Do It Clean"
"Rescue"
"Villiers Terrace"/"Roadhouse Blues" (The Doors cover)
"Bring On the Dancing Horses"
"Bedbugs & Ballyhoo"
"Nothing Lasts Forever"/"Walk on the Wild Side (Lou Reed cover)
"The Back of Love"
"Lips Like Sugar"
"The Killing Moon"
"The Cutter"
Deerhunter's set-list:
"Wash Off"
"Fountain Stairs" (Lockett Pundt on lead vocals)
"Never Stops"
"Revival"
"Hazel St."
"Nothing Ever Happened"
"Helicopter"
"Cover Me (Slowly)"
"Agoraphobia"
"Disappearing Ink" (with Rob Pope of Spoon on guitar)
Devo's set-list:
"Don't Shoot (I'm a Man)"
"Peek-a-Boo"
"What We Do"
"Going Under"
"Fresh"
"That's Good"
"Girl U Want"
"Whip It"
"Planet Earth"
"Satisfaction" (Rolling Stones cover)
"Secret Agent Man" (Johnny Rivers cover)
"Uncontrollable Urge"
"Mongoloid"
"Jocko Homo"
"Smart Patrol/Mr. DNA"
"Gates of Steel"
Florence and the Machine's set-list:
"Howl"
"Kiss With a Fist"
"Drumming Song"
"Cosmic Love"
"Dog Days Are Over"
"Hospital Beds" (Cold War Kids cover) (with Nathan Willett)
"You've Got the Love" (The Source cover)
"Rabbit Heart (Raise It Up)"
Gossip's set-list:
"Dimestore Diamond"
"Pop Goes The World"
"Four Letter Word"
"Standing in the Way of Control"/"Psycho Killer" (Talking Heads cover)
"Listen Up!"
"8th Wonder"
"Love Long Distance"
"Heavy Cross"
"Pull Up to the Bumber" (Grace Jones cover) (with LCD Soundsystem)
Camera Obscura's set-list:
"My Maudlin Career"
"Swans"
"Teenager"
"French Navy"
"Let's Get Out Of This Country"
"Lloyd, I'm Ready To Be Heartbroken"
"If Looks Could Kill"
"Come Back Margaret"
"James"
"Razzle Dazzle Rose"
Julian Casablancas' set-list:
"River of Brakelights"
"Hard To Explain" (The Strokes cover)
"11th Dimension"
"Out of the Blue"
"I'll Try Anything Once" (The Strokes cover)
"I Wish It Was Christmas Today"
"Left & Right in the Dark"
"4 Chords of the Apocalypse"
Dillinger Escape Plan's set-list:
"Panasonic Youth"
"Fix Your Face"
"Milk Lizard"
"Room Full of Eyes"
"Chinese Whispers"
"Black Bubblegum"
"Sunshine the Werewolf"
"Good Neighbor"
"43% Burnt"
"Farewell, Mona Lisa"
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