Festival Goers Treated to Legendary Lineup at Outside Lands Music Festival; McCartney, NIN, Phoenix, RHCP, Vampire Weekend

Tens of thousands of music lovers descended on foggy Golden Gate Park this past weekend for three days of live music from artists and bands like Paul McCartney, Vampire Weekend, Band of Horses, Nine Inch Nails, Yeah Yeah Yeahs , Red Hot Chili Peppers.

Those giants of music were just some of the headliners at the 6th annual Outside Lands Music Festival in San Francisco last weekend. OSL has quickly become one of the top major music fests in the United States.

As a festival known for its emphasis on representing a diverse range of genres from folk to rock and hip-hop to pop, Outside Lands did not disappoint. On Friday evening, the legendary Paul McCartney, now 71, performed for three hours, playing a string of Beatles’ songs he penned, from “Lady Madonna” and “Get Back” to “Blackbird” and “Ob La Di Ob La Da,” with tens of thousands of festival goers singing along. When great masses of people sing together in unison, it really sounds amazing. McCartney also played many Wings‘ songs, including classic 70’s radio hits like “Band on the Run,” “Listen to What The Man Said,” “Silly Love Songs,” and “Jet.” McCartney and the band also performed a number of songs from the former Beatles solo records as well.

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McCartney performed a wonderful rendition of his classic song, "Yesterday," which many respected music critics consider one of the greatest ballads ever written. Photo by Leopold Ruiz

The stage, which is impressively gigantic considering that it was constructed in days (and has to be taken down in a couple of days as well) contained two gigantic screens, which for McCartney’s set were extended to at least 40 to 50-feet high. The picture quality was stunning, and to see a full shot of McCartney from head to toe on two massive screens was a unique perspective, and raised the bar for festival video displays.

Throughout his three-hour set, photos of McCartney through the years were splashed on the background screen. And if all of that wasn’t enough, the show included a thrilling fireworks display that illuminated brilliantly through the night fog.

Earlier in the day, festival goers crowded around stages to hear a host of artists like Band of Horses, Surfer Blood, The National (all on the main Land’s End stage) with other artists like Wild Belle, Twenty One Pilots, Zedd, Yeasayer and Pretty Lights, all of whom performed on the Twin Peaks stage, which as the venue map shows, was all of the way at the other end of the grounds, some three football fields apart.

The smaller stages like Sutro and the Panhandle featured sets from an array of artists ranging from The Heavy, Rhye and D’Angelo to Houndmouth, The Men, Daughter, Wavves and Chromatics. For fans of all types of music, Outside Lands definitely delivers in that regard.

Listen to IRC’s Spotify playlist for Day One of Outside Lands

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Crowds packed a fog shrouded Golden Gate Park Saturday for Day Two of Outside Lands

Day Two: Young The Giant, Yeah Yeah Yeahs, The Tallest Man on Earth, NIN, Phoenix

On Saturday, Day Two of the festival, crowds flooded in early, with lines, just to get into the festival grounds, backing up for blocks. Day Two started off at noon with Bhi Bhiman and Locura, followed soon after by The Soft White Sixties and Social Studies.

Indie favorites Young The Giant took the main Land’s End stage in the mid-afternoon. The Los Angeles band, who’ve been recording their sophomore album for months, emerged to perform for a huge crowd that latched on to the band after the release of their debut album. Of course they performed a number of their popular radio-friendly songs like “Cough Syrup” and “I Got.”

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Nine Inch Nails rock the Land's End stage on Day Two of Outside Lands. Photo by Leopold Ruiz.

Over-lapping with Young The Giant, for the most part, was The Growlers at the Sutro stage in nearby Lindley Meadow. The long-time indie band from Orange County in southern California started off their set with “Nosebleed Sun” and performed a number of their other fan favorites like “What It Is,” “Someday,” “Wandering Eyes” and “Sea Lion Goth Blues.”

Also over-lapping with those bands was the performance from Youth Lagoon who were performing at the second main stage, Twin Peaks, which is located far away from where Young The Giant and The Growlers were performing.

Alternative rap posse Jurassic 5, Thao & The Get Down Stay Down, Baauer and Bombino finished out the afternoon schedule for Day Two, opening the way for evening performances from Yeah Yeah Yeahs, The Head and the Heart, Kurt Vile and The Violators, The Tallest Man on Earth, Grizzly Bear, The Mother Hips, and the Saturday night closers, Nine Inch Nails and Phoenix.

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Choco Lands played out a familiar theme of art exhibits and expressions in the tree-covered areas of the Outside Lands festival grounds. Photo by Leopold Ruiz

Nine Inch Nails, which turns 25 next year, performed their dark hard rock on the Land’s End stage to a massive audience. The band ripped out some of NIN’s newer songs to start off their set, including tracks like “Copy of A” and “Disappointed,” which will appear on the band’s upcoming eight album release, Hesitation Marks.

Later in the two and a half hour set featuring 19 songs, NIN performed many of their most well-known songs, like “Closer,” “Came Back Haunted,” and “The Hand That Feeds.” For an encore, Trent Reznor, the only original NIN band member, belted out “Hurt” with his fellow band members before a crowd that stretched as far as the eye could see.

Meanwhile, at the opposite end of the festival grounds, a younger generation’s band, the popular French electro-pop outfit, Phoenix, performed to an equally large, and enthusiastic, audience, delivering tracks like “Entertainment,” “Lasso,” and “Lisztomania,” to open their one hour and fifteen-minute set. Prior to Phoenix, Brooklyn indie folk rock band Grizzly Bear performed on the Twin Peaks stage while The Head and the Heart played at the Sutro stage and while festival headliners, Yeah Yeah Yeahs, rocked the main stage at Land’s End.

The biggest downfall, in our opinion, of a festival like Outside Lands, where the two main stages (Lands End and Twin Peaks) are some three to four football fields apart, is missing sets from bands that are playing basically at the same time. The distance between the two main stages makes it nearly impossible to see a half set from one band and leave in time to catch most of the second half of the other band’s performance.

This dilemma occurred a number of times during the festival; in fact, sometimes three or four bands and artists were playing at the same time. The issue with overlapping performances occurred a number of times on Day Two including during the block of time from 6:30 to 8:30 pm when Yeah Yeah Yeahs, The Tallest Man on Earth, The Mother Hips, The Head and the Heart and Grizzly Bear – three of our favorite artists at the fest.

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During their 13-song set, the Yeah Yeah Yeahs stirred up a massive, excited crowd of tens of thousands of mostly younger (under 25) festival goers who were packed in from the front of the stage area all the way back to The Dome – the spot (see here on the official festival map) where deejays and mix masters performed all weekend, and which often obscured the sound from the main stage for people furthest from the stage.

Karen O and the YYY’s opened with “Sacrilege,” followed by “Gold Lion” and “Mosquito.” By mid-set, the band knocked out the ominous “Heads Will Roll,” and saved signature songs like “Maps” and “Zero” for the latter half of their performance. A gigantic image of the band’s YYY logo graced the backdrop of the enormous Land’s End stage.

Other artists that played on Day Two included Social Studies, Locura, Milo Greene, James McCartney (Paul McCartney’s son), Cherub, and newer favorites of cafe patrons, Atlas Genius.

* Listen to a Spotify playlist of Day Two artists from Outside Lands 2013.
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The Red Hot Chili Peppers closed Outside Lands with a masterful and energetic performance. Photo by Leopold Ruiz

Day Three Delivered Red Hot Chili Peppers, Camper Van Beethoven, Kaskade, Vampire Weekend

Day Three of Outside Lands kicked off with artist like Ivan Neville’s Dumpstaphunk, The Easy Leaves, The Wild Feathers and Little Green Cars. The legendary 80’s underground band, Camper Van Beethoven, from Santa Cruz, California, graced the Sutro stage. CVB performed many of their cult classics, like “Take The Skinheads Bowling” and the crowd pleasing “Northern California Girls.”

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Kurt Vile and The Violators jammed on the Sutro stage in Lindley Meadow on Sunday to a lively crowd. Photo by Leopold Ruiz

Philadelphia indie folk rockers, Kurt Vile and the Violators, sounded superb during their set; that is, when they overcame technical issues. Vile opened with the standout track “Jesus Fever” from the 2011 album, Smoke Ring For My Halo. However, the on-going sound issues made the song sound flatter than it does on the official recording.

The natural surroundings actually prevented the sound issues from being even more disruptive. That’s mainly because the Sutro stage is located in smaller area, where a grassy meadow (Lindley Meadow) carpets a long and narrow raven that is shaded and shielded by towering clusters of eucalyptus and pine trees.

It was necessary to leave the Kurt Vile set a bit early to get back to the Land’s End stage to catch one of IRC’s favorite indie rock bands of recent years – Foals. The Oxford, England band formed in 2005, and in 2008, released their well-received U.K. debut album. Nonetheless, it was Foals’ 2010 sophomore album, Total Life Forever, that launched the band’s popularity in the States, a wild wave that they have surfed swimmingly all the way to their headline status at Outside Lands.

Foals opened their set with “Prelude,” that was quickly followed by songs like “Miami” and “Olympic Airways.” As the band’s 10-song set progressed, the audience, many who were claiming their spots close to the stage for the later headlining bands like Vampire Weekend and festival closer, Red Hot Chili Peppers.

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The U.K. power indie rock band Foals were one of the main headliners for the closing day of Outside Lands 2013. Photo by Leopold Ruiz.

Following Foals, it was off to the eastern side of the festival grounds to the Panhandle stage to catch some of King Tuff‘s set, after which it was time to return to the west side once again to the Sutro stage to catch Dawes, who have previously performed at OSL. Dawes played songs like their opening track, “From A Window Seat,” as well as “Most People,” “Fire Away,” and “Time Spent in Los Angeles.” We missed all but one song of Daryl Hall & John Oates headlining set, but it did not phase us much; we’re not really fans of their 80’s radio pop music.

Approximately 15 minutes before the end of Dawes’ set, we headed over to the adjacent Land’s End stage to catch Vampire Weekend‘s headlining performance, and thus having to sacrifice sets from veterans Willie Nelson & Family, indie rock newbies Ms Mr and the powerhouse songwriting duo Matt & Kim. Unfortunately, these are the difficult and regrettable decisions that have to be made at any festival with nearly 100 artists, five stages and 65,000 people.

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Vampire Weekend opened for the Red Hot Chili Peppers on the Land's End stage on the last day of Outside Lands. Photo by Leopold Ruiz.

Vampire Weekend, it goes without saying, was one of the main draws of Day Three, and were essentially opening for Red Hot Chili Peppers, a compliment for any band. VW has improved immensely, in all ways, from when we first saw them at the Rickshaw Stop in San Francisco in 2008, before they exploded into a worldwide ‘indie rock’ pop sensation. The band took the stage to a roaring welcome from the juiced up audience, which was as interesting as it was thrilling, considering that most of those in the audience were long in place to see the closing set from the RHCP.

Perhaps there are more RHCP fans who are also Vampire Weekend fans, and vice-versa? Regardless, VW opened their 17-song, 70-minute, set with the crowd pleasing favorite, “Cousins,” followed by other VW singles like “White Sky” and “Cape Cod Kwassa Kwassa.” The New York band also performed most of their other signature tracks like “A-Punk,” “Horchata,” “Oxford Comma,” and “Walcott,” much of the time with the crowd singing along.

As the last shows of Outside Lands 2013 were drawing near, it struck us just how fast the entire event zoomed right by. But this happens at all festivals – there’s just too much to see and to much to do. It was now down to the last two headliners – the Red Hot Chili Peppers and Kaskade. We decided to split up to cover each separately. While it will be remembered for many great performances, these two top acts, scheduled to close out Outside Lands 2013, were among the most memorable.

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Kaskade brought his groovy beats and synth pop waves to OSL 2013's final hours with a superb set. Photo by Leopold Ruiz

The Red Hot Chili Peppers, who are easily one of the most popular rock bands of the past two decades, took the stage Sunday night to the roar of 40,000-plus festival goers who jammed the west side of Golden Gate Park for the closing set, while the remaining crowd of some 25,000 people, packed it in for the Twin Peaks performance by electro-pop beats artist Kaskade.

RHCP hit the ground running, opening with jam session that got the band and the massive crowd pumped up for the first song, “Can’t Stop,” followed by an electrifying “Dani, California” and “Otherside.” The band was just getting warmed up.

With the exception of what can only be classified as odd banter from iconic RHCP bassist Flea, the band ripped through an amazingly executed set of crowd pleasing songs that included “Under the Bridge,” “Give It Away,” and “Californication,” to name just a few of the 15 songs, including two encores.

Despite Flea’s strange ramblings, the RHCP would not have the power they do without Flea’s legendary bass riffs. And while As their name implies, RHCP were red hot, a stark contrast to the foggy, drizzly, windy and cool weather that surrounded them. Oh, and just a personal note, but the lip hair doesn’t work.

There were many festival goers that were torn by having to choose between the Red Hot Chili Peppers and Kaskade. And as with the RHCPs, Kaskade made certain that his fans would also be treated to a fantastic closing set for Outside Lands 2013, delivering a two-hour set of dance beats mixed masterfully with Kaskade’s unique electro pop grooves.

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In addition to three 10-hour days of live music, OSL 2013 also offered explorations of artistic themes like Wonder World. Photo by Leopold Ruiz

Although the sun failed to break through the thick, gray fog over the three days (which is typical for San Francisco in August), that did not dampen festival goers enthusiasm. In fact, we’ve heard many say it’s preferable to the scorching heat and humidity of most other big summer time festivals.

Each day of the OSL festival, some 65,000 people flowed into the city’s Golden Gate Park, walked long distances between the five stages, browsed the many art exhibits and murals set up in the park and trekking through the forested areas that included temporary wonder lands like Choco Lands, a chocolate-centric area that included just about everything one could imagine made with chocolate.

What a way to end another historic Outside Lands festival. In fact, OSL, together with the Treasure Island Music Festival (which also began in 2008), has brought major outdoor music festivals back to San Francisco, which itself is arguably the birthplace of outdoor music festivals (which then were often free, featured a limited number of bands, were much less organized, and certainly didn’t have corporate backing) as they were an integral part of the Haight-Ashbury ‘hippie’ scene that emerged in the mid to late 1960s.

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A grove of lights illuminate a forested area of Golden Gate Park during Outside Lands. Photo by Leopold Ruiz

Major outdoor music festivals in San Francisco and the surrounding region pretty much ended in 1969 with the tragic events of the Altamount Music Festival, promoted in the weeks leading up to the fest as the “Woodstock of the West.”

Sadly, that didn’t turn out to be the case. IRC will be publishing an extensive look at music festivals in the San Francisco Bay Area and northern California in the next couple of weeks and we will also be covering the upcoming inception of the new First City Music Festival (August 24-25) in Monterey, with a line-up featuring MGMT, Modest Mouse, Passion Pit, Neko Case and many others.

Stay tuned for more coverage of Outside Lands 2013, with additional playlists, photo galleries and video to be added in the coming days.

Looking Back: Outside Lands, Day 2 & 3 – Arcade Fire, The Black Keys, Arctic Monkeys, OK Go, Beirut, Muse, The Vaccines

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A non-stop stream of festival goers converge at the crossing between the Polo Fields and Speedway Meadow in Golden Gate Park on Day Two of the Outside Lands Festival 2011. Photo by Jessy Cluster

Now that we’ve have had more than a week to reflect on it, San Francisco‘s very own  Outside Lands Festival 2011 was one of the best since the festival’s beginning in 2008. The impressive line-up of artists and bands, including major headliners like Muse and Arcade Fire, and the fantastic weather for most of the three days, attracted 60,000 festival goers for each day of the fest, selling out all three-day and single day tickets.

During the festival, we Tweeted and Facebooked, in addition to posting a pre-festival schedule of all three days with our top picks, as well as a rushed posting for Day One – “the cold day” – of the festival. That night, in the near-freezing cold, brisk winds and thick fog, tens of thousands of festival goers amassed in the city’s enormous Golden Gate Park, one of the largest and oldest urban parks in the United States.

During the day on Friday, there was no shortage of notable bands, including The Joy Formidable, Foster The People, Phantogram, Clap Your Hands Say Yeah, Toro Y Moi, Big Audio Dynamite, and Best Coast were popular shows. By evening, headliners like MGMTPhish and The Shins made sure that there would be plenty of teenage girls, latte hippies and mid-life crisis urban hipsters packed into the Polo Fields and meadows of Golden Gate Park. Read more about Day One here.

We’re going to jump now to the closing headliners of the last day of the festival – Day Three, and provide an overview the daytime performances on Day Three. Following that, we have a review of Day Two.

Arcade Fire Rock the Park to Close Outside Lands 2011

The highlight of Outside Lands 2011 clearly goes to the nearly 90-minute closing set from the insanely popular Arcade Fire.

The hot Montreal indie rock pop band opened with the appropriately titled track “Ready to Start” in front of a massive sea of people as the full moon shone down on them on an unusually clear August night in San Francisco.

The crowd roared as the Arcade Fire broke into one of their most widely-regarded classics, “Keep The Car Running.” During the performance of the track, you could clearly hear the crowd singing along with the choruses to a song that helped propel AR from a Canadian indie buzz band to a band that now headlines major festivals around the world.

“Keep The Car Running” – Arcade Fire

During their fantastic set, that was enhanced by a light show, two jumbo screens and a terrific sound crew, Arcade Fire belted out tracks like “Rococo,” “Haiti,” “The Suburbs,” “Month of May,” and “Neighborhood.” For the encore, Arcade Fire performed “Wake Up,” and “Sprawl II (Mountains Beyond Mountains).”

“Sprawl II” Arcade Fire

“Wake Up” – Arcade Fire with David Bowie (Live)

Earlier on Day Three: Lord Huron Junip, Grouplove, Beirut, The Decemberists, STS9, Wye Oak

Earlier in the day we caught the last half of the performance by LA-based band Lord Huron on the Panhandle stage. We were first were turned on to the band after hearing their commendable 2010 album, Mighty, so it was enjoyable to hear them play live songs like the title track from the album.

Right after Lord Huron, we turned to the main stage to catch the band Junip – one of our favorite ‘lesser-known’ bands of the past five years.

“Mighty” – Lord Huron

“Rope & Summit” Junip

In back-to-back performances, we then returned watched hundreds of people crammed into the Panhandle stage area dancing and clearly enjoying the joyful tracks from LA band Grouplove.

The crowd was especially moved by the incredibly infectious single, “Colours,” a song that helped make the relatively new band a hit with music critics and fans alike, garnering them regular radio play on influential stations like Seattle‘s KEXP and making them one of IRC’s Breakout Bands of 2011 (look for that series coming up soon).

In 2010, the band toured with The Joy Formidable and were hand-picked to open a number of West Coast dates for Florence and the Machine. Grouplove will release their highly-anticipated debut album, Never Trust A Happy Song, in September.

“Colours” Grouplove from Grouplove EP

While we were digging the set from Grouplove, we had heard that Arcade Fire’s Win Butler performed “The Weight” with the legendary Mavis Staples on the Lands End stage all the way on the other side of the festival grounds. Here’s a video from YouTube of the duet (although it’s a little all over the place, we appreciate being able to see something rather than nothing at all).

Other noteworthy performances that made Day Three such a hit included sets from !!!, Ty Segall, Major Lazer and Wye Oak. Before Wye Oak finished, it was time to hike back to the area around the Lands End stage for the set by The Decemberists, and then over to the Sutro stage for Beirut before returning to the Land’s End stage for the closer by Arcade Fire.

You Make the Sun Fry Ty Segall

“Keep It Going Louder”Major Lazor

“Civilian” Wye Oak

The Decemberists were one of the top headiniers for Day Three of OSL. Photo by Misha Vladimirskiy

By the time one of Portland‘s most famous “indie” bands (even though they signed to Capitol some six year ago), The Decemberists, took the stage, the crowds had swelled considerably.  The popular indie folk rock band kicked-off their set with “July, July!,” followed by “Down By The Water,” from The King Is Dead.

The Decemberists also played a number of their older songs, including “The Calamity Song,” “We Both Go Down Together,” and “The Mariner’s Revenge Song.” Following The Decemberists, we hiked over to the Lindley Meadow to listen to Beirut‘s set on the Sutro stage.

“July July” – The Decemberists

“We Both Go Down Together”The Decemberists

When we arrived in the meadow for the Beirut performance, it was jam packed with festival goers, while it posed a dilemma for the fans of both The Decemberists and Beirut; the only way to see each band, because of their overlapping set times on different stages, was to see The Decemberists first, and then leave early to see Beirut. And so that explained why there were so many people walking back and forth from one area of the festival grounds to another.

We opted to see be a little late for Beirut in order to catch more of The Decemberists on the main stage; admittedly, the bonus of the jumbo screen did help to make it more of an experience because the crowds of tens of thousands of people made it nearly impossible to get close to the stage unless you secured a good spot earlier in the day and just stayed there.

The setting for Beirut’s performance, in a gently sloping meadow encircled by giant eucalyptus trees, and just as day time was transitioning to dusk, was perfect for the band’s eclectic, baroque-style of worldly indie folk music. Beirut definitely attracts a certain type of fan that appreciates the band’s distinct Balkan folk sound fused with western pop music, where Zach Condon‘s trumpet playing and monotone vocals are at the heart of most songs.

The band played “East Harlem,” the first single from the upcoming release of new album, The Rip Tide. Other songs in the set included “A Sunday Smile,”

“East Harlem”Beirut from The Rip Tide (pre-order via iTunes) –  vinyl/CD out August 30th

“La Llorona” – Beirut

A lot of the crowd starting leaving by the middle and towards the end of Beirut’s set; it seemed like an exodus, but we guess that people were going to get their spots for Arcade Fire and Deadmau5.

If you missed it, out coverage of Arcade Fire’s closing set is earlier in this post.

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The Vaccines ripped it up early on Day Two of Outside Lands. Photo by Marcello Ambriz for The Audio Perv

Day Two: The Black Keys, Arctic Monkeys, Sonny & The Sunsets, Ok Go, Starfu*ker, Vetiver

Some time around 2 p.m. on Saturday (Day Two), a mini-miracle happened – the heavy fog dispersed and soon disappeared altogether, revealing deep blue skies and golden, warm sunshine, something that is all too rare during the summer in the western half of San Francisco.

And also by this time, tens of thousands of people were filling the open spaces in the park, and in spots, all of the foot traffic was kicking up enough dust to cover you in it, but most people probably didn’t care as long as it wasn’t foggy and cool like it was on Friday.

The first full performance we watched on Day Two was the 45-minute set from one of the break-through bands of the year – The Vaccines. We love this band’s raw garage rock sound, and their debut album, What Did You Expect from The Vaccines, is spectacular, and easily one of the best albums of 2011, not to mention a strong contender for the Debut Album of the Year award.

The Vaccines kicked off their first major festival appearance with the track “Blow It Up,” followed by “Post Break-Up Sex,” and “Wreckin Ball,” “A Lack of Understanding,” and others like “Wolf Pack” and “If You Wanna.”

“Post Break-Up Sex”The Vaccines

“If You Wanna”The Vaccines

But something was not right from the get-go with their appearance on the Twin Peaks main stage that afternoon. Basically, it was the same problem that occurs at many large music festivals – that is, unless you are in the right place, the sound quality of a performance can be, well, not so good.

That said, the band pumped out a bunch of tracks from their debut.  it was another breakout band of 2011 that we could check off on the list of ‘Bands Seen Live.’

The sound issue is especially the case with the DJ Domes on the Polo Field interfering with the music coming from Land’s End stage some 150-200 yards away. The constant heavy beats pumping out of the domes are loud enough that people furthest from the stage can barely here over the bass emitting from the domes. This clash of sounds is present at almost all festivals.

However, to the organizers credit, on the opposite side of the festival grounds, performances on the smaller Panhandle stage were scheduled in between performances at the much larger Twin Peaks stage one hundred or so yards away, allowing festival goers to see and hear performances at each stage without interference.

In addition to The Vaccines, some of Day Two’s best offerings were Sonny & The Sunsets, Ok Go, Starfu*ker, Vetiver, The Roots, and two of our favorite shows of the entire festival – The Black Keys and the Arctic Monkeys. The latter two bands were secondary headliners, if you will, just below the top headliner status of bands like Muse (a bit too commercial for us) and the remix guru, Girl Talk (a bit too unoriginal for us).

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Alex Turner of the Arctic Monkeys put on a crowd-pleasing set at Outside Lands. Photo by Marcello Ambriz for The Audio Perv

We considered The Black Keys and the Arctic Monkeys our top headliners of Day Two. The UK rockers, Arctic Monkeys, delivered one of the best shows of Day Two, with a energetic and electric set.

The band have come a long way since 2006, when they broke out in the states after the release of the album, Whatever People Say I am That’s What I’m Not. The band were really one of the first to benefit from the increasing influence of the Internet on the music scene.

Who knows if they would have been as popular as they were in the mid to late 2000’s without the help of sites like MySpace and dozens of popular music blogs that exposed the band to a wider audience outside of the UK, most particularly in the U.S. and Canada, where they still have a good-size following, although that following abated after the release of Arctic Monkey’s 2009 album, Humbug, which many critics and fans criticized because of the noticeable departure from the blistering rock and silly and sarcastic ballads that made them such a huge hit for at least two or three years (say from 2005 to 2008).

“Fluorescent Adolescent” Arctic Monkeys

“Fake Tales of San Francisco”Arctic Monkeys

But the band are playing live better than they ever had, and their set at Outside Lands was a perfect example of that. In front of tens of thousands of eager fans, Arctic Monkeys performed some of their best new and older tracks, including “Crying Lightning,” “Fluorescent Adolescent,” “I Bet You Look Good on the Dancefloor,” and 13 others during their hour-long performance.

While the Arctic Monkeys were wrapping up there set on the Land’s End stage, music festival regulars, The Roots, were just getting started on the Twin Peaks stage way at the other end of the festival grounds. We wouldn’t have time to get all the way to the other stage to hear even 10 minutes from The Roots and still make it all the way back to the Land’s End stage to hear The Black Keys, so we just stayed put. We were not going to miss them for anything. Afterall, it’s not often that they come to town, so this was our chance to see one of the best garage rock bands of the past decade.

It was a bit surprising to see so many teenagers cramming their way enthusiastically through the crowds to get closer to the stage.  Even more evidence that many of these young folks were true TBK fans was demonstrated by the fact that they sang along with the band’s older tracks (like “Girl is On My Mind”) just as much as they did with their newer songs (“Tighten Up”).

“Tighten Up”The Black Keys

When they came out on stage to the roar of the crowd, the band kicked off with the song, “Thickfreakness,” as well as other great Keys’ tracks like “Busted,” “Howlin’ For You,” and the 15-song set closer, “I Got Mine.”

Dan Auerbach of the Black Keys performs at Outside Lands 2011 in San Francisco's Golden Gate Park on Day Two of the largest music festival in norther California. Photo credit: Jeff Miller for the Orange County Register

The duos’ raw guitar rock sound carried them through a 65-minute set. They belted one romp after another and the fans that gathered by the thousands absolutely loved it.  Clearly, TBK were one of the best performances of the entire festival, and it is also clear that they have a much bigger following among music lovers under the age of 25 than we had previously imagined.

As time goes on, their status as one of the best alt/garage rock duos continues to solidify. It’s great to see there is so much love out there for stripped down, straight up, in-your-face rock, especially at a time when indie and alternative music have become more synth-centric in recent years, we will always seek out pure ole rock and roll – so long live The Black Keys!

“Howlin’ For You”The Black Keys

“I Got Mine”The Black Keys

As the crowds grew thicker and thicker on the Polo Fields, it was evident that they were gathering for the Day Two closer Muse. In typical fashion, Muse eventually came on and played a 105-minute show to the delight of tens of thousands of festival goers (even as we were leaving after the first 20 minutes). All in all, Day Two = the second successful day for Outside Lands 2011.

The one thing was clear about this year’s OSL fest compared to 2010 – it was much better – the weather, the line-up and yes the fact that the organizers put it back to three days after cutting it back to two days in 2010. The organizers calculation was correct – people wanted three days. Afterall, all three days of OSL 2011 were sold out.

Thanks to Hassle Media and the organizers, as well as all of the artists, crews, security and of course to the tens of thousands of festival goers, for making this year such a huge success. It still went by too fast, but you know what they say about time when you’re having fun.

 

San Francisco’s Outside Lands Festival, Day One – The Shins, Phish, MGMT, Foster The People, Toro Y Moi, Best Coast & More

The Shins headlined Day One of Outside Lands 2011

Thick, gray fog enveloped everything for miles around, and steady winds together made it feel like it was in the mid-to-high 40’s for Day One of the Outside Lands Music festival.

We immediately noticed that crowds were larger than last year, when the festival was scaled back from three days to only two days. But for 2011’s opening day, the festival packed in 60,000 fans, the maximum capacity.

Now in its fourth year, OSL kicked-off this past Friday in San Francisco, with an amazingly diverse line-up, and what seemed to have been the largest attendance for a Friday opener since OSL’s debut in 2008 (at which Radiohead was the main headliner). There was something for everyone – rock, electronica, pop, folk, techno and so on.

Just as it hasn’t in previous years, the thickly layered fog and brisk, cold winds (the wind is the real culprit) blowin’ off the Pacific Ocean only blocks away, did not keep the masses of music fans and festival lovers away from celebrating OSL’s 4th annual festival opener this past Friday.

Headliners The Shins and Phish Please the Masses

The Shins, who hit the Twin Peaks stage at 8:40 p.m., and performed about a 70-minute set, was easily our favorite performance of Day One at OSL.  Despite the bone-numbing cold, Shin lovers (yours truly included) braved the elements as night fell on Golden Gate Park. The band opened with the classic indie track, “Caring Is Creepy,”and the huge crowd roared in approval.

“Caring Is Creepy”The Shins

While The Shins’ intimate brand of indie pop does not translate necessarily all that well in a huge outdoor venue like Golden Gate Park, tens of thousands (at least it felt that way) of fans were cheering and singing along with old favorites like “New Slang,” “Phantom Limb,” “Australia” and “Sleeping Lessons.”

“New Slang”The Shins

“Phantom Limb”The Shins

One of the best surprises for the day was The Shins performance of a new and untitled song that frontman James Mercer (also the other half of Broken Bells) said should be on the band’s next album, which Mercer confirmed is currently in production. Watch the video from the Baghdad Cafe; the videos of the song being played at OSL last Friday do not have a good enough sound quality to justify embedding here.

 

 

Sadly, some Shins fans may be disappointed to learn that last week The Shins signed a contract with the major record label, Columbia Records. Whether or not fans will reject the band for ‘crossing over to the darkside,’ as a friend put it, remains to be seen. We shall see if selling out their most loyal fans for money affects the band’s first major label release, expected to be released sometime in 2012.

Another Friday night headliner, the seminal ‘jam-band’ Phish, played two sets spanning an impressive four-hour long performance.

Many of the band’s fans – especially in San Francisco, which lays claim to the hippie birthright – with their tie dye shirts, long hair (even if they’re bald on top) and cannabis smoke-ins – are also fans of the famous San Francisco band Grateful Dead. In fact, since the death of Grateful Dead founding member, Jerry Garcia, in 1995, Phish has just become more popular, and happily took the torch as the ultimate jam-band. For their Phans, the band included favorites like “Wilson,” “Fluffhead” and “Sample in a Jar.”

There is little doubt that the booking of a double-set marathon from Phish was one of the reasons that  Golden Gate Park was packed to capacity, and it was fairly easy to separate which festival goers were there to see Phish, and which were not.

Day One of OSL music fest started at noon with sets from bands most people have likely never heard of before, such as Release The Sunbird and Marky.

But it wasn’t long before the first well-known indie band, The Joy Formidable, took to the Sutro stage in Lindley Meadow for a 45-minute set. It was a great way to start the day, even though it was foggy and cool. A half hour later, at 2:25pm, the upstate New York electro indie band, Phantogram, put on a sweet show that the growing crowd appeared to enjoy immensely. Friends since junior high school, the duo signed to BBE in 2009.

“Austere” The Joy Formidable

Their band name was inspired by the phantogram optical allusion, which is the effect that 3-D glasses provide. In 2010, they released their debut LP, Eyelid Movies, which received thumbs up from fans, bloggers and critics alike.

“When I’m Small” Phantogram

The lesser-known band Lotus began their show at 2:15pm on the Twin Peaks stage during almost the same time slot as Phantogram – making these hard decisions is one of the biggest dilemmas all festival goers face at one time or another. So, we opted for Phantogram, and were not disappointed.

Later, we weaved ourselves through the crowds to the Sutro stage for the Foster The People show. While FTP were on, Toro Y Moi were performing (3:50 to 4:40 pm) on the Twin Peaks stage, which was a bummer to miss, but there was no alternative really.

“Pumped Up Kicks”Foster the People

At 4:40pm, indie-gone-mainstream electro-pop band MGMT hit the Land’s End stage which is all the way at the opposite end of the festival grounds from the Twin Peaks stage.  Unfortunately, festival goers who wanted to see MGMT and Clap Your Hands Say Yeah, had to leave the MGMT show around 5:30 pm to hike all the way back to Twin Peaks to catch CYHSY.

“Electric Feel”MGMT

Clearly, the reason for the thousands of high school and college aged festival goers was likely because of the MGMT show. Based on the roars from the crowd after each track, MGMT pleased their young fans with an assortment of songs they’ve released in their short time as a band.

It was evident as the afternoon wore on that the entire area – which is the length of some four to five football fields – was going to be packed with people for the night shows – most notably, The Shins and Phish, who performed at opposite ends of the OSL festival grounds.

This is where it can get a little tricky. Right about the time 6 p.m. rolls around, there are many choices of bands playing all at the same time on the four main stages – Phish (Land’s End); Big Audio Dynamite (Twin Peaks); Big Boi (Sutro).

Big Boi made fans wait more than one hour before his set was altogether canceled due to “technical problems.” Fans who bought single day tickets just to see Big Boi (as there was few other rappers or hiphop artists on the schedule) should have been given some kind of refund.

After that, Erykah Badu took to the Sutro stage to perform a worldly set, bringing a touch of real diversity to a mainly indie and rock music festival. Badu’s performance was the last show of the night on the Sutro stage, but we couldn’t stay long anyways because we needed enough time to trek across the festival grounds (did we say the area is gigantic?) and weave our way around tens of thousands of people, many who were also on their way to The Shins show (see above).

By the time The Shins’ got on stage, all the way on the other end of the festival grounds, Phish were already more than two hours into their jam-a-thon on the Land’s End stage. In some ways, the main stages – Lands End stage, and at the opposite end, the Twin Peaks stage – were practically inaccessible unless you got there very early to take a position close to the stage. As you scan the sea of heads from a hill near the stage, it was only then that the true enormity of the crowds was realized.

There were other bands that we only got to see for a few songs due to conflicts in the schedule, including Big Audio Dynamite, Best Coast, and The Original Meters.

All in all, the opening day of OSL 2011 was a promising kick-off to the city’s biggest summer music event, and what is steadily becoming one of the most well-known and popular music festivals on the west coast.

Stay Tuned for Day Two and Day Three reviews

San Francisco Bay Area Music Festivals, Vol. One – Outside Lands Kicks Off Today with The Shins, MGMT, CYHSY, Phish, Best Coast

Outside-Lands-2011 lineup

Starting today, music lovers in the San Francisco Bay Area have three major music festivals to look forward to in the next couple of months – Outside Lands; Treasure Island and Hardly Strictly Bluegrass festivals.

There are also a bunch of other smaller festivals – we call them “one-off fests,” such as the All Shook Down Festival held on August 6th at the Regency Ballroom in San Francisco, where Crystal Castles were the headlining band.

At the noon hour today, the Outside Lands Festival returns in full force for its fourth annual fest-bash. Thankfully, OSL reverts back to a three-day fest this year, after it was trimmed back to only two days last year. We’re going to try and get an answer as to why it was changed back to three days, since that’s of interest to many festival goers.

The big headliners for Day One of Outside Lands are MGMT, Phish, and of course The Shins, followed by other bands, such as Toro Y Moi, Clap Your Hands and Say Yeah and Big Audio Dynamite.

By the time the sun goes down today, there will be only one show left, The Shins, who will come on the Twin Peaks stage at 8:40 pm and play a 70-minute set. And all the way – say, four or five football fields – at the other end of the festival grounds closest to the ocean, is the enormous Lands End stage, where Phish are scheduled to already be two hours into their marathon three and a half hour set. So, by 8:30 pm everyone will be at either one of those stages.

As the clock strikes 10 p.m., OSL 2011 Day One will come to a close. Weary, and likely cold, festival goers by the tens of thousands of people will funnel out of Golden Gate Park, many of whom will be returning Saturday for another day and night of fabulous music, having good times with friends, and meeting new ones, and OSL’s better-than-most-festival food and drink, and what looks like will be partly cloudy skies with temps in the low 60s by day, and the low to mid 50s by night.

But then again, you never can be quite sure what you’re going to get in San Francisco – afterall, it is a weather phenom of it’s own – a sliver of land (only 12 miles from west to east) surrounded by water on three sides. Sunny blue skies or thick coastal fog – it’s usually one or the other. There are clouds sometimes in the summer, and fog as the perfect but just about never is there rainfall in August in the city by the bay.

If we’re able to get a signal (keep in mind, we have AT&T), we’ll be sending messages from the festival via Twitter, and perhaps via our Facebook page.

Also, don’t forget to check back for our coverage this weekend of the fourth annual Outside Lands Festival in San Francisco‘s magnificent Golden Gate Park. In the meantime, here is a day-by-day listing of which artists and bands we plan to experience at OSL 2011.

Day One – Aug. 12th

The Shins – Phish – Best Coast – Clap Your Hands Say Yeah – Toro Y Moi – Foster The People – Ellie Goulding – MGMT – Phantogram – Tamaryn – The Joy Formidable – Big Boi

“Caring is Creepy” The Shins

“In This Home On Ice”Clap Your Hands Say Yeah

Day Two – Aug. 13th

The Black Keys – Girl Talk – Muse – The Vaccines – Paper Diamond – The Roots – Arctic Monkeys – OK GO – STRFKR – SIA – Vetiver – Sonny & The Sunsets – The Mexican Institute of Sound – Bob Schneider – The Stone Foxes – Ana Tijoux

“Act Nice and Gentle” (The Kinks) – The Black Keys from Rubber Factory

“Norgaard”The Vaccines from What Did You Expect From The Vaccines?

“Triple Double”Girl Talk from All Day

Day Three – Aug. 14th

Arcade Fire – The Decemberists – STSR9 – Beirut – Major Lazer – Wye Oak – Ty Seagall – !!! – Grouplove – Tuneyards – Lord Huron – The Fresh & Onlys – Junip – John Fogerty

“The Suburbs”– Arcade Fire from The Suburbs

“Ghosen”Beirut from The Rip Tide

For the full schedule and line-up goto sfoutsidelands.com

San Francisco is known by many names, but our favorite is the air conditioned city, which for  anyone who’s spent enough time in S.F., knows that it is indeed true, especially in the summer. It is a rare occurrence that temperatures in the summer reach 80.

But it’s the western half of the city that has a climate all it’s own – which, even in the summertime, usually means heavy fog, cool temperatures and chilly winds. In fact, when the fog is really thick, and it’s windy too, it is often warmer in Wisila, Alaska than the west side of San Francisco.

For schedules, maps, tickets, lineup and more, go to San Francisco Outside Lands website