» Staging an after-hours concert series in New York’s American Museum of Natural History was a good idea; getting Four Tet to headline the most recent even was downright brilliant.
Text by Alex Littlefield
Posted on March 16, 2009
Kieran Hebden, a.k.a. Four Tet
Kieran Hebden’s mathematically informed laptronica couldn’t ask for a better venue than the Rose Center for Earth and Space, an enormous glass-paneled cube dominated by a hovering orb-shaped planetarium, it evokes the same quiet wonderment as Hebden’s music without overshadowing the performance. (Okay, the aquarium globe next to the stage was kind of distracting. Were those sea monkeys in there?)
Hebden sidelined his mellow, folky material for more aggressively danceable, trance-infused tracks, and the audience responded accordingly. Before his set, the scene looked more like a professional meet-and-greet mixer than an electronic show, although it’s entirely possible that the uptown location was as responsible for that as anything else. And of course every show-goer had to check out the space-rock exhibits and climb the corkscrewing Cosmic Pathway before settling down to watch the music, a venue-related hazard that made for a somewhat scattered first few sets.
Sceney and scientific distractions aside, though, the earlier music was just as hypnotic as Four Tet’s. Hebden’s second opener, Jon Hopkins, is a British composer with some serious chops—he’s worked with the likes of Herbie Hancock and Brian Eno, and has crafted a sound that lands somewhere between Squarepusher and Debussy. (If you're in possession of any maps that help chart that territory, let us know.) More atmospheric than Hebden’s set, Hopkins’s performance provided the evening’s cosmic flavor. There were also some frenzied moments, especially during songs like “Wire” and “Small Memory,” both tracks from his upcoming album Insides.
But Hopkins’ biggest hit was definitely “Vessel,” also from Insides. A sneaky little number, it alternates between slamming, fuzz-backed drum breakdowns and an elegant piano melody that could have been lifted straight from Amadeus. Tricky to dance to, but ultimately rewarding—at least, for those who could break away from guessing their lunar weight on the specialized digital scales for long enough to get some footwork in.
Woodsman at Death By Audio Woodsman played a show at Death By Audio on Thursday, February 2 with Hubble, Man Forever, and Images. #Scene and Heard
EULA at Brooklyn Bowl On Tuesday, January 31, EULA, Wild Yaks, Gross Relations, and Lost Boy? played a show at Brooklyn Bowl. #Scene and Heard
Japanther at Shea Stadium Japanther played Shea Stadium on Saturday, January 28 with Bosco Delrey, Fuzzy Cloaks, and The Pharmacy. #Scene and Heard
Dustin Wong at Floristree On Saturday, January 28, Dustin Wong returned to Baltimore with a show at Floristree with Sprayer, Touch, and John Jones and Shaun Flynn. #Scene and Heard
Cass McCombs at Bowery Ballroom Cass McCombs played Bowery Ballroom on Saturday, January 25 with Frank Fairfield. For more from Gretchen, please visit her website. #Scene and Heard
The Gories at The Bell House On Saturday, January 28, The Gories played The Bell House with Mark Sultan and Mighty Fine. #Scene and Heard
OWS on MLK Day On Sunday, January 15, OWS supporters met at Cathedral Church on the West Side, continuing on a candlelit march to Riverside Church (Riverside Dr at 1... #Scene and Heard
K&K Buffet with Babies, Real Estate + Black Dice Please don't waste food. #Scene and Heard
Ava Luna at Shea Stadium Ana Luna played Shea Stadium on Friday, January 20 with Total Slacker and Caged Animals. For more from Daniel Doherty, please visit his tumblr.... #Scene and Heard
Big Freedia at Brooklyn Bowl Big Freedia brought her booty-shaking to Brooklyn Bowl last Saturday, January 21 with DJ Rusty Lazer, Nicky Da B, and Shane Shane. #Scene and Heard
Gordon Voidwell at Glasslands Gordon Voidwell played Glasslands on Friday, January 20 with Work Drugs and Sunglasses. #Scene and Heard
Sharon Van Etten at Mercury Lounge Sharon Van Etten's been selling out venues like Bowery Ballroom of late, but on Wednesday, January 18 she played an intimate show at Mercury Loung... #Scene and Heard
Mission of Burma + EULA Mission of Burma played a show last night, Thursday January 19, at Music Hall of Williamsburg with EULA and The Static Jacks. EULA rocked an ora... #Scene and Heard
OWS Takes Back Zuccotti Park Police barricades were removed last Tuesday evening, January 10, 2012 from Zuccotti Park, what had been known as Liberty Plaza for the Occupy Wall Str... #Scene and Heard
Radical Dads at Cameo Radical Dads played Cameo Gallery on Friday, February 13 with Backwords. #Scene and Heard
Night Birds at Lulu's Night Birds played a free show at Lulu's on Thursday, January 12 with LIVIDS, Pampers, and Nuclear Santa Claust. In the words of our photogr... #Scene and Heard
is it ironic that you like his stuff or that you interviewed him? in this post-irony life, its so hard to differentiate.
— blake on March 16, 2009
just interviewed Jon Hopkins ironically, i really like his stuff.
— Always Right on March 16, 2009
Looks like some mad wizard type shazz. I'm stoked Four Tet is coming to PDX next week, but it is too bad Hopkins won't be joining him. Alas, the sun still shines...
— Matt on March 16, 2009