Music Midtown 2013 rocks through the rain on Saturday with Red Hot Chili Peppers
Jessica Cortez
BY MELISSA RUGGIERI/AJC Music Scene
(This story was originally posted on Sept. 22, 2013)
It wasnât quite Woodstock, but the persistent rain that drenched Piedmont Park â and most of Atlanta â on Saturday turned the sold-out second day of Music Midtown into a glistening mud pit.
Not that the 50,000-plus who eventually filled the space to see a lineup ranging from the fresh new sounds of Imagine Dragons and hip-hopper Kendrick Lamar to the hard rock contributions from Arctic Monkeys and Queens of the Stone Age to funk-rock stalwarts the Red Hot Chili Peppers cared, even if they didn't get the sunshine of Friday's musical parade that included Journey and Atlanta rapper 2 Chainz.
Throughout Saturday, tens of thousands wearing ponchos and rain boots (some of the lesser icky-minded went barefoot) and toting umbrellas crammed in front of one of three stages staggered around the park. Although fans seemed content to revel in the sounds of the expansive musical lineup, some had to wait to gain access to see the bands, thanks to the gloomy cloud cover.
Most of the afternoon, lines to enter Music Midtown snaked down 10th Street, a problem Peter Conlon, president of Live Nation Atlanta, which produced the event, attributed to sluggish scanners.
The scanners, he said, are powered by satellites, so the wall of clouds prevented them from working. The solution came when he ordered entrance guards to tear tickets the old-fashioned way.
A thoroughly soaked Conlon, his phone tucked into a plastic baggie for safe-keeping, said backstage that the rain was âjust an annoyance. Thereâs nothing dangerous about it. Everyone seems to be in a good mood.â
Indeed, by about 6 p.m., the drizzle tapered off, leaving a cool breeze and ankle-deep puddles of sticky brown sludge for attendees to hop-scotch around.
While music lovers clamored to the park for the third consecutive outing of Music Midtown â it returned in 2011 after an extended hiatus â to hear and see rock stars, at least one guy on the bill remembered what it felt like to be part of the crowd.
Daniel Platzman, drummer for hitmakers Imagine Dragons, is an Atlanta native who attended Paideia High School and remembers coming to see Incubus at Music Midtown with his school buddies.
On Saturday, Platzmanâs family and those old friends were tucked among the thousands gathered to see the band.
âThis is surreal,â Platzman said backstage. âWe woke up in the bus this morning and looked out the window and I was like, âWeâre five minutes from my parentsâ house!ââ
Hereâs a recap of Imagine Dragonsâ memorable set, as well as other performances throughout the day (my partner in crime, Yvonne Zusel, shared the music-listening load with me):
Capital Cities:
The Los Angeles duo of Ryan Merchant and Sebu Simonian are still bopping around the charts with their million-selling single, âSafe and Sound.â Itâs an infectious slice of synth-pop, and the guys proved there is plenty more delightful catchiness in their young catalog.
Sounding a bit like an Americanized Pet Shop Boys, Merchant and Simonian glided through âPatience Gets Us Nowhere Fast,â with its distinct Europop vibe, and showed the crowd how to do the Capital Cities Shuffle prior to the fizzy dance pop of âCenter Stage.â
- M.R.
Weezer:
Weezer gave a nostalgic crowd what they wanted by way of a big helping of old hits from "Weezer (the blue album)â and âWeezer (the green album),â including âSay It Ain't So,â âHash Pipeâ and âMy Name Is Jonas,â the first song from their 1994 debut album.
âGoinâ Surfinâ took on new meaning while fans braved a pretty heavy rain to see lead singer Rivers Cuomo dish out favorites. A large chunk of the crowd, who looked as if they might not even have been born when the Blue Album came out, sang along with every word of the highly sing able âBuddy Holly,â a testament to the bandâs staying power and ability to develop classics.
Cuomo, normally a little awkward in front of a big crowd, drew big laughs for an impromptu song about the golf carts of Peachtree City, where his mother lives (who knew?).
"Maybe someday we'll play there," Cuomo sang. The chances of that happening are about as likely as Cuomo not dressing like a hipster accountant, but we can still dream. The idea of Cuomo riding around Peachtree City in a golf cart humming "El Scorcho" is too delicious not to hope for.
- Y.Z.
The Black Lips:
Hometown boys The Black Lips had to contend with the worst downpour of the day while they delivered their jangly rockers on the Great Southeast Music Hall Stage, but they really didnât seem to mind.
In fact, the band, playing in front of a clever sign of their name written in the style of the Atlanta Braves logo, seemed to relish the challenge.
Known for their onstage antics, the Lips kept the theatrics to a minimum but still delivered a fun, hard-rocking set that included tunes off their most recent album, 2011âs âArabia Mountain.â The crowd bopped along to lead singer Cole Alexanderâs punky snarl on âFamily Treeâ and âDirty Handsâ â when they werenât avoiding getting sucked into the mud pit that Piedmont Park was fast becoming.
- Y.Z.
Arctic Monkeys:
Alex Turner, snazzily dressed in a white dinner jacket, is the kind of frontman who seizes your attention with his combination of sass and sophistication.
Whether blowing through âArabellaâ with the rest of his English mates or combing his slicked-back pompadour prior to the bandâs breakthrough hit from 2005, âI Bet You Look God on the Dance Floor,â Turner was difficult to ignore.
Of course, the Monkeysâ guitar-driven alt-rock ably maintained the large crowdâs attention at the main Electric Ballroom stage, particularly âFluorescent Adolescent.â
- M.R.
Imagine Dragons:
Itâs been an amazing year for the Las Vegas-based quartet, starting with the ubiquitous hand-clapper âItâs Timeâ and continuing this summer with the buzzy, plodding rock smash, âRadioactive.â
Based on the thousands packed against the secondary Great Southeast Music Hall Stage, Imagine Dragons was one of the biggest curiosity bands of Saturdayâs lineup.
Singer Dan Reynolds didnât disappoint, as he jogged in place, leapt on platforms at the edge of the stage and passionately unleashed his vocals on instantly appealing songs âAmsterdamâ and âTiptoe,â from their breakthrough âNight Visionsâ album.
Reynolds usually had a drum stick in hand, too, and pounded on the array of percussion set up around the stage, which gave the bandâs songs an interesting texture. Guitarist Wayne Sermon provided tasteful licks on his gold guitar â notably on the chiming âHear Meâ â while bassist Ben McKee and drummer Daniel Platzman (as mentioned earlier, an Atlanta native) anchored âTiptoeâ and helped with the syncopated glee that is the heart of âItâs Time.â
This is a band that seems poised to be playing for giant crowds for years to come.
- M.R.
Tegan and Sara:
Canadian twin sisters Tegan and Sara took to the Roxy Stage right as the rain was letting up, and the crowd was more than happy for the duo to provide the soundtrack for them to dry off. The sisters registered surprise that a lot of fans had made the trek to the set, considering they were playing opposite âIt Bandâ Imagine Dragons.
But while Tegan and Sara â who have been recording since 1999 â might not have a hit album on par with Dragonsâ 2012 release âNight Visions,â their following is loyal and true.
Fans sang along unabashedly to the yearning âBack in Your Headâ and singles âCloserâ and âI Was a Foolâ off this yearâs release âHeartthrob.â Everyone seemed to be in a really good mood, and while the subsiding of the rain probably helped, itâs hard to think that the sistersâ tight harmonies and infectious melodies didnât have something to do with it, too.
- Y.Z.
Yeah Yeah Yeahs:
The crowd waiting for the Yeah Yeah Yeahs was pumped at least an hour before the band took the stage, launching into impromptu singalongs to Biz Markieâs âJust A Friendâ and bouncing giant beach balls to each other. By the time lead singer Karen O appeared, every bit the rock star in her graphic print pantsuit and glittery makeup, everyone was in party mode.
âHeads Will Roll,â off the bandâs third album, 2009âs âItâs Blitz,â solidified the good-time vibe. Even the rare quiet moment, like the love song âMaps,â which O dedicated to several people including âall you lovers,â turned into raucous singalongs.
The band had the good fortune to be playing right after the weather finally turned lovely and during an amazing sunset that turned the sky all sorts of awesome and provided a dramatic backdrop for Oâs several small costume changes and her joyful singing.
- Y.Z.
Kendrick Lamar:
Itâs appropriate that the escalating hip-hop star is going on tour with Kanye West this fall (including a Dec. 1 show at Philips Arena) because the two share an affinity for blurring the boundaries of rap and rock and present a cheeky brazenness in their lyrics.
It was apparent pretty quickly that Lamar was too big of an act for the third Music Midtown stage â the Roxy, a new add this year on Oak Hill that could have benefited from a video screen given the size crowd that stretched back from the stage.
Shrouded in pink and red lights, Lamar asked the amped-up audience, âYou m-f-ers ready to party tonight?â before rolling into the humorously salacious âP & P.â
Backed by a live band, Lamar engaged the crowd with typical contests about which side screamed the loudest and rapid-fire rapping on songs such as âB**** Donât Kill My Vibe.â But it was the languid, head nodder âMoney Treesâ that exemplified how Lamar is already on track to surpass some of his idols.
- M.R.
Red Hot Chili Peppers:
Judging from the tweet patrol, half of the ginormous crowd who made it through the rain to rock with the Chili Peppers thought the bandâs set suffered from terrible sound, while the other half thought it was the cleanest of the weekend.
I can only speak for myself, and from where I stood to the far, far side of the stage, the guys sounded as muscular as they looked.
With the rumble of drums, the band kicked off their set with a groove-oriented jam before singer Anthony Kiedis, clad in black tails and partially ripped shirt and pants, clasped the mic to delve into the herky-jerky funk of âCanât Stop.â
The video screens flanking the main stage displayed the band in artsy black and white and shaded hues â and even in that form, bassist Flea was usually the visual centerpiece.
He plucked out the rubbery bass line of âDani Californiaâ and, along with Kiedis, drummer Chad Smith and guitarist Josh Klinghoffer, bulldozed through âThe Other Sideâ and âLook Around.â
The bandâs deep catalog provided the partially inebriated crowd â depending upon where you stood â to sing along in exaggerated fashion to âSnow (Hey Oh)â and âUnder the Bridge,â which began with Klinghoffer kneeling on the stage to pick out the delicate opening notes.
The heart of the Chili Peppers has always been its fantastic grooves, and the band provided plenty of those, too, from âSheâs Only 18â to their tremendous, cowbell-infused cover of Stevie Wonderâs âHigher Ground.â
With so many fan favorites to present â âCalifornicationâ and âBy the Wayâ made the cut â the Chili Peppers could probably still be on stage now, banging out hits. But the full-blast rock exhibit they unleashed marked another successful Music Midtown capper.