POP OUT THE MUSIC PLAYER

Darlingside Embraces Diversity…

…of gigs. I mean, obviously we embrace and endorse most types of diversity (diversity of opinions about when rehearsal begins is one prime example), but our gigging schedule last week and this coming weekend highlights the vast range of venues we play, audiences we play for, and compensation packages we receive. What’s that you say? We’ll do anything to play music, go anywhere, play anytime? Ridiculous accusations.

Opening for Nada Surf and Dawn Landes

We kicked off our Diversity Tour last Wednesday night with our first gig at a bona fide rock club. Pearl Street Nightclub, right in the bustling center of Northampton, is part of the Iron Horse Entertainment Group, and regularly attracts some of the big names in the business. We were particularly excited to be sharing the stage with Nada Surf, a nationally and internationally-recognized act (they’re going to Japan in a couple of weeks!) that had a big hit a few years ago, and Dawn Landes, an indie-rocking singer/songwriter backed by a flannel-clad crew of, well, indie rockers. Our local crowd came out in force for the event, and good times were had by all.

Precinct Bar in Boston

With the first stop of the tour, the “Big Gig at the Real Club,” behind us, we moved on to the second leg: the “Average Awesome Bar for our Not Average Awesome Boston Fans” leg. After a day of brushing up on some new songs and working on some new covers (more on that later), we made the four-hour trip (the first 2 hours were spend sitting in traffic right in Hadley, then in Northampton on 91, then in the parking lot of a convenient McDonald’s for a pit stop) out to Somerville, MA and the Precinct Bar. Even at this early point in our young careers, we’ve played lots of bars similar to The Precinct, but the combination of a full (if small-ish) room and our loyal Boston-area fans made this one particularly special. Or maybe it was the stage with the swooping front edge, so that it felt like we were part of the crowd. Or maybe the free cider at the bar helped. Actually, it was probably that the band debuted the cover “Shout!” of Animal House fame, to an Animal House-like response from the crowd. In any case, while this gig was average on the outside, it was better than that. Also, the drive home was only an hour and forty-five minutes.

Don’s diverse new guitar!

The following night was the “Small-Format Acoustic House Party” gig. These gigs have special significance to me, because as the drummer, I don’t have to do anything. While the rest of the band still has to play their instruments, I get to tap gently on my snare drum with anything and everything that’s not a drum stick. Nevertheless, the rest of the band excels at this diverse type of gig, where they get to prove that they don’t need tube amps and fancy cellos with extra strings to make music. I, however, do need a kick drum to do much of anything useful, so I’m bringing one next time we play the “Acoustic House Party” leg of Diversity Tour mkII. I’m already looking forward to it, because another thing that makes these stops unique is the abundance of delicious food and drink, rare at “less diverse” types of gigs.

We’re now exactly half way through our tour, with some of the most diverse stops still to come: Thursday we have the “Small (But Not as Small) Format Quasi-Acoustic Gig at a Restaurant in Exchange for Dinner” stop, followed by the “Outdoor Tent Party Pretending We’re DJ’s for College Kids” stop, and finally the “Outdoor Music Festival with Several Other Local Bands” stop next Monday, at UMass Amherst. We’ll keep you posted…

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3 Comments

  1. ivana
    Posted April 10, 2010 at 11:23 pm | Permalink

    4/10 • I didn’t think of the word, “diversity” today, when I/we had an unexpected treat at Hungry Ghost’s birthday celebration … but the definition (i.e., using more words than one, which I tend to do) was my roundabout way of describing your band. It was at Hungry Ghost last September when I was first awed, stunned and simply delighted by you—your style, your words, your music. I’ve seen and heard you several times since then, and I’ve been reading your website entries—virtually following you around—and I am still awed by you. The new lovely difference is the familiar and warm feeling you elicit. I loved the intimacy of your acoustic sound today … remembering last year’s (amplified) outdoor event, which makes me come full circle and say, “Celebrate Diversity! Celebrate Darlingside!”

  2. ivana
    Posted April 10, 2010 at 11:38 pm | Permalink

    p.s. Dear Sam~~How could I have forgotten to say how much you were missed?! And you even inspired the theme of my comment. You were invisible but your presence was felt. (Actually, Harris filled in for you at times, tapping on his cello.)

  3. Andy
    Posted April 14, 2010 at 3:56 am | Permalink

    Sam, you should get a cajon for those “Small-Format Acoustic House Parties.” Drumkit in a box, acoustic groove, and none too loud for the “Really Small, Small-Format Acoustic House Parties.”