This review runs live and in color on Bowery Presents House List blog.
Venture a look into the vaguely wounded visage of James Mercer—the
soft, tight-knit eyes, a curious combination of a furry Moby and a less
self-important Kevin Spacey. From the moment of his band’s inclusion on
the 2003 Garden State soundtrack,
Mercer carried the weight of the indie-rock universe: praise,
stereotype, epithet, all of it. Seeing him now, it had to wear on him,
and even the most glib reading of the Shins’ last album title, Wincing the Night Away,
would offer as much. Mercer openly admitted to insomnia during the
round of interviews that accompanied the disc. It risked being a bad
joke. He was, after all, an institution, and one that needed to equally
hold our affection and our sarcastic disdain. So, for his first run of
live shows in nearly four years, the songwriter strode to the stage at a
very sold-out Bowery Ballroom trying to figure out if any of this was
to be recaptured or if being a big enough deal to be picked upon alone
was, in and of itself, enough.
Mercer winked at any burden of being in a band that launched a thousand others, opening with “Caring Is Creepy,”
the song that Zach Braff ensured nearly every high school and college
student of the early 2000s would have an opinion about. The group moved
methodically through “Australia,” “Mine’s Not a High Horse” and “Phantom Limb,”
a mix of the jangly, glossy sounds that define where this band began
and from where it has traveled. Sounding rehearsed and tight, this
vastly different version of the Shins (Mercer fired the drummer and had
creative differences with the rest) than the one that recorded the
previous record, featured the very excellent Jessica Dobson on rhythm guitar, an improvement by any measure.
In the spirit of return, the Shins folded a few new songs from a
record due early next year into the middle of the set. But each time,
Mercer returned to familiar material, in one three-song sequence playing
the beautiful “Saint Simon,” with its line about blue-eyed girls, “Girl on the Wing” and “Know Your Onion.” The set closed with “New Slang,” a pathological pop song that bookended any movie-soundtrack jokes (this writer’s included), and “Girl Inform Me,”
replete with a prog-rock inspired jam. Mercer cracked a smile that
registered just between a wry laugh and knowing that there is power in
being someone’s punch line.
Phantom Limb by theshins
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