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The Tallest Man on Earth Setlist
09/02/15 Columbus, OH Newport Music Hall
Read More09/03/15 Cleveland, OH House Of Blues 09/04/15 Toronto, ON Massey Hall 09/05/15 Holland, MI Knickerbocker Theater 09/05/15 Holland, MI Hope College 09/07/15 Columbia, MO The Blue Note 09/08/15 Wichita, KS Orpheum Theatre 09/09/15 Tulsa, OK Cain's Ballroom 09/10/15 Tulsa, OK Cain's Ballroom 09/11/15 Dallas, TX House Of Blues 09/12/15 Houston, TX House Of Blues 09/13/15 Austin, TX Austin City Limits Live 10/03/15 Oslo, Norway Oslo Opera House 10/04/15 Goteborg, Sweden Konserthuset 10/05/15 Stockholm, Sweden Cirkus 10/06/15 Umea, Sweden Idunteatern 10/08/15 Linkoping, Sweden Konsert & Kongress 10/09/15 Falun, Sweden Magasinet 10/10/15 Aarhus, Denmark Fonden VoxHall 10/12/15 Cologne, Germany E-Werk 10/13/15 Berlin, Germany Huxleys Neue Welt 10/14/15 Vienna, Austria Arena Vienna 10/15/15 Milan, Italy Alcatraz 10/16/15 Zurich, Switzerland Volkshaus 10/17/15 Paris, France Le Bataclan 10/19/15 London Roundhouse 10/20/15 Glasgow ABC1 10/21/15 Dublin, Ireland Vicar Street 10/23/15 Manchester Albert Hall 10/24/15 East Sussex De La Warr Pavilion 10/25/15 Brussels, Belgium Ancienne Belgique 10/27/15 Copenhagen, Denmark VEGA
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Thankfully, The Tallest Man on Earth did not live up to his name—
Just seventeen days prior, a 30 x 30’ piece of the 1930’s-era ceiling on the venerable First Avenue club fell down, injuring five and forcing them to close to tear out the remainder and safely refurbish the venue. The ceiling itself is now more exposed, with more pipes and beams showing, all painted black, with sounds carrying and bouncing around a touch more, though all still clear and well-mixed.
Despite his slightly oddly named stage moniker, Swedish singer/songwriter Kristian Matsson stands only at 5’ 7” (coincidentally same height as Bob Dylan) and he and his band became the first touring act to reopen First Avenue since the ceiling collapse, playing a 90 min. headlining set to a near-capacity packed crowd.
Someone with another strange stage name, Lady Lamb, opened the evening with a focused 40 min. solo acoustic set featuring songs from her latest, After (on Mom + Pop Music). AKA Aly Spaltro, the singer/guitarist/banjo player from Maine mesmerized many in the folk-ready crowd, opening with ‘Crane Your Neck’, and played songs with peculiar titles like ‘Bird Balloons’ and ‘Spat Out Spit’.
Taking the stage to the taped intro of Håkan Hellström’s ‘För sent för Edelweiss’, Matsson and his four-piece band emerged (keys; viola/guitar; sax/bass; and drums) with the new album’s (Dark Bird is Home on Dead Oceans Music) opening track, ‘Fields of Our Home’.
Matsson’s sound and musical vision has expanded courtesy of this new and most personal work, chronicling his recent divorce and death of a close family member; but he gratefully doesn’t take it to “Iron and Wine” heights, whose touring members numbered more than Pink Floyd’s live show, the last time they were here.
‘1904’ written “about and in Minneapolis” from Matsson’s previous album, got warm applause, though it’s never been revealed if it’s about the tornado that year or something else, but Matsson himself proved to be a fierce tornado; usually singing a verse then darting away to stumble to one side of the stage or the other, strumming wildly. While many hip-hop MCs end with “dropping a mic”, Matsson has a habit of spiking his guitar pick in celebration, putting the exclamation point on each of his songs, and making the need to have a stack of picks on a side amplifier.
Matsson’s on stage fragility was evident when he responded with doubt to cries of “I love you”, mistook a “woo” for a “boo”, and warned the crowd he would only play soft and low if they continued to talk, which thankfully resulted in polite shushing by people for the rest of the set.
‘Singers’ was a song about Matsson’s grandfather, ‘Darkness of the Dream’ uses the same brooding synth sound from Kate Bush’s ‘Running Up the Hill’, and Matsson hasn’t forgotten his own solo roots, letting the band go (which includes Bon Iver/P.O.S. collaborator and falsetto background vocalist Mike Noyce) for a mid-set string of three solo songs.
“Sad songs only…on the ticket, I know”, Mattson mused, as each rustic folk number seemed to be pinned with an undercurrent of sadness, even the more uptempo ones like ‘Timothy’ about his “best friend ever”, who was with Matsson last time here, though was not this time.
‘Sagres’ has a very Dylan/Bon Iver feel, perhaps the result of finishing the new album’s songs in Wisconsin, and is one that local station The Current, has embraced for airplay. Noyce joined Matsson on stage for a pair of duo songs- ‘Little Nowhere Towns’ which had Matsson move to keyboard and featured Noyce’s high harmonies, and the contemplative ‘Where Do My Bluebird Fly’.
2010’s ‘The Dreamer’ and ‘Like the Wheel’ ended the evening as a two-song encore, with the appropriate final lines sung, “Like the branch that keeps hangman hanging on, like the branch that will take me home”; the latter featuring the band huddled acapella, around a pair of microphones. And with that, The Tallest Man on Earth stood tall to a standing ovation, though happily not tall enough to scrape the new ceiling.
Just seventeen days prior, a 30 x 30’ piece of the 1930’s-era ceiling on the venerable First Avenue club fell down, injuring five and forcing them to close to tear out the remainder and safely refurbish the venue. The ceiling itself is now more exposed, with more pipes and beams showing, all painted black, with sounds carrying and bouncing around a touch more, though all still clear and well-mixed.
Despite his slightly oddly named stage moniker, Swedish singer/songwriter Kristian Matsson stands only at 5’ 7” (coincidentally same height as Bob Dylan) and he and his band became the first touring act to reopen First Avenue since the ceiling collapse, playing a 90 min. headlining set to a near-capacity packed crowd.
Lady Lamb |
Kristian Matsson
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Matsson’s sound and musical vision has expanded courtesy of this new and most personal work, chronicling his recent divorce and death of a close family member; but he gratefully doesn’t take it to “Iron and Wine” heights, whose touring members numbered more than Pink Floyd’s live show, the last time they were here.
‘1904’ written “about and in Minneapolis” from Matsson’s previous album, got warm applause, though it’s never been revealed if it’s about the tornado that year or something else, but Matsson himself proved to be a fierce tornado; usually singing a verse then darting away to stumble to one side of the stage or the other, strumming wildly. While many hip-hop MCs end with “dropping a mic”, Matsson has a habit of spiking his guitar pick in celebration, putting the exclamation point on each of his songs, and making the need to have a stack of picks on a side amplifier.
Matsson’s on stage fragility was evident when he responded with doubt to cries of “I love you”, mistook a “woo” for a “boo”, and warned the crowd he would only play soft and low if they continued to talk, which thankfully resulted in polite shushing by people for the rest of the set.
‘Singers’ was a song about Matsson’s grandfather, ‘Darkness of the Dream’ uses the same brooding synth sound from Kate Bush’s ‘Running Up the Hill’, and Matsson hasn’t forgotten his own solo roots, letting the band go (which includes Bon Iver/P.O.S. collaborator and falsetto background vocalist Mike Noyce) for a mid-set string of three solo songs.
“Sad songs only…on the ticket, I know”, Mattson mused, as each rustic folk number seemed to be pinned with an undercurrent of sadness, even the more uptempo ones like ‘Timothy’ about his “best friend ever”, who was with Matsson last time here, though was not this time.
‘Sagres’ has a very Dylan/Bon Iver feel, perhaps the result of finishing the new album’s songs in Wisconsin, and is one that local station The Current, has embraced for airplay. Noyce joined Matsson on stage for a pair of duo songs- ‘Little Nowhere Towns’ which had Matsson move to keyboard and featured Noyce’s high harmonies, and the contemplative ‘Where Do My Bluebird Fly’.
The Tallest Man on Earth takes a bow |
The Tallest Man on Earth at First Avenue, Minneapolis (29 August 2015) |
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