My wife dragged me to see O.A.R. on Friday night. I'd heard a few of their tunes - alternative music, if yiou wnat give it a genre, but wiht the bonus of a Chicago-style brass section, sax trumpet and trombone.
I've found a lot of alt music (as I hear on the radio) to be endlessly repetitive - the same 1 or 2 chord patterns throughout the song, no bridge, usually no blinding guitar solo, etc.
OAR's songs have a little more going for them, but the sound at the BoA Pavilion in Boston can really suck if they crank it up.
When I saw RIngo there in June, the volume was kept low enough that you could actually talk to the person next to you in a normal tone of voice (I was in row 11) but not so on Friday. The volume was cranked to 11 - lucky we were back in about row 30. The sound was muddy, couldn't hear the words in the vocals most times, and the lead singer/guitarist's acoustic could only be heard when no one else was playing. Many times the lead guitarist would start a lead and his sound would not get turned up until several bars in the lead. When the sax player took a lead, the sound was buried in the mix until he hit the high notes. Same thing with the keys - only during solos could you distinguish them at all.
Yet the huge crowd of 20-somethings loved them. Is this was listening to music on I-devices and earbuds does for people?
I've found a lot of alt music (as I hear on the radio) to be endlessly repetitive - the same 1 or 2 chord patterns throughout the song, no bridge, usually no blinding guitar solo, etc.
OAR's songs have a little more going for them, but the sound at the BoA Pavilion in Boston can really suck if they crank it up.
When I saw RIngo there in June, the volume was kept low enough that you could actually talk to the person next to you in a normal tone of voice (I was in row 11) but not so on Friday. The volume was cranked to 11 - lucky we were back in about row 30. The sound was muddy, couldn't hear the words in the vocals most times, and the lead singer/guitarist's acoustic could only be heard when no one else was playing. Many times the lead guitarist would start a lead and his sound would not get turned up until several bars in the lead. When the sax player took a lead, the sound was buried in the mix until he hit the high notes. Same thing with the keys - only during solos could you distinguish them at all.
Yet the huge crowd of 20-somethings loved them. Is this was listening to music on I-devices and earbuds does for people?
My reverbnation site: http://www.reverbnation.com/mikebirchmusic
Youtube: http://www.youtube.com/mikebirchmusic
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Youtube: http://www.youtube.com/mikebirchmusic
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/mikebirchmusic








