To The Butter Room, built to spread live music goodness.
A Random Post >>
Join Martin as he takes us along to his weekly therapy session with the Grateful Dead. Read More >>
Live performances that start & end w/ the same tune, but packed with tasty jams in between. Listen >>
Our live coverage of live music all across the country. View >>
Set I
Party Time, Chalkdust Torture, Moma Dance, NICU, Stealing Time From the Faulty Plan, I Didn’t Know, Poor Heart, Cavern, Beauty of a Broken Heart, Ocelot, Time Turns Elastic
Very nicely worked up since I saw it when first played at Merriweather. CDT had an uncharacteristically laid back non-rock out Jam, a welcome change, building to the rock out end. The Moma was super funky right from the get go. Really well done. Matt called and said those first three were really a great way to get things started. NICU was a standard version, but at as always fun. PLAYYYY IT LEO! Rockin. Stealing Time was great. My favorite new song, except Sugar Shack and maybe Party Time just because. Not your typical Stash…This one is fire. They went a little out there with the jam, one of the better ones I’ve heard in a very long time. Vacuum busted out the first night. The return of Henrietta! Comments from Trey about Fish playing the sound in the shape of an 8. Poor heart was well played, started nicely out of I Didn’t Know. Trey rocked out Cavern, it was very on point. Great jam in Ocelot, otherwise standard. For whatever reason I actually really liked this TTE. Something I wasn’t able to say about most versions this summer.
Trey’s tone and voice both sound really great. Better, brighter and tighter than summer.
SET II
Punch You In The Eye > Down With Disease > Prince Caspian > Wolfman’s Brother>Piper>Joy, David Bowie, Harry Hood, Golgi Apparatus
Umm holy crap. Set II is melting my face and I’m sitting at home in bed with my laptop. That disease was just sick. The jams from one song to the next have be wondrous. The dissolve of Wolfman’s into Piper was like nothing I’ve heard from this band in a very long time. I believe it was teasing the Who’s I Am The Sea. The Piper itself was out there and interesting, very dreamy/floaty sounding jamming and a flighty vocal jam tease of Light at the end. Then we have a 1-2 punch of a colossal Bowie and Hood combo…followed by a curiously placed, but very well played Golgi. This set was a monster.
Trey hints at David Bowie being the possible Halloween pick just before Bowie.
And yeah, the boys are finally and officially in Take>A>Set>To>Jam>Into>Other>Songs>Mode…
ENCORE
Character Zero
I think the statement I could make that would best sum up this show for me is that they’ve all finally got their legs back 100%. The whole show sounded completely comfortable and, right now, those legs are as big around as California Redwoods.
3am here. Signing off.
For the best Theater Tickets and Concert Tickets like White Stripes Tickets go to Vividseats.com! We have the best deals on all Sports Tickets, including Baseball Tickets and Football Tickets, such as Panthers Tickets, Lions Tickets, and Titans Tickets.
The Butter Room was built to spread and discuss live music. The contributors of this site all volunteer their time to provide the content. We do this as a labor of love. Our name, The Butter Room, references an small, low-lit room in a Virginia Tech Fraternity with nothing but a few benches and tables. You go there to get away from all distractions and have a conversation, which is what we want to foster here: a place where you can get away from all the distractions of life to enjoy and discuss live music.
Get To Know Our Influences
Contact Us
All tracks available for download are of live concert recordings from trade friendly artists. Please support these artists by seeing them live. However, if you are an artist or The Man and would like to see any file removed or have a request, please email TheButterRoom [at] gmail [dot] com directly -- We will take it down.
Send Us Music!
©2010. Original theme is Postage by Greg Cooper. We hacked it up to meet our needs. Icons by P.J. Onori. Thanks to Jamie Cassidy & Panic.
Comments