Saturday, June 29, 2013

Parquet Courts, Reigning Sound, and more at Village Voice 4Knots (PHOTOS & REVIEW)

By the time I arrived at South Street Seaport for this year's installment of the Village Voice's 4Knots Festival, my shirt was already showing damp patches and beads of sweat were racing each other down my face. The air was still and lacking the familiar breeze from the East River that the seaport is usually graced with. Still, there was a festival to be had, and while the day may have been hot, the bands were hotter. 

This year's 4Knots was a marked change of style from last years easy-going pop-heavy line up that included The Drums, Hospitality, and Nick Waterhouse. Gritty, dirty guitars and an overall unkempt sound was the highlight of this year's acts. Brooklyn based Parquet Courts who are touring in support of their 2012 release "Light Up Gold", stole the show. They brought their anthems of confusion, lack of direction and good ol Ridgewood, Queens wandering to the stage at the seaport where they delivered a dense, energetic set. The anti-establishment tinged "Master of my Craft" kicked off a small mosh and provided the perfect moment of irony. The satire of business interests praising the dollar played at the Village Voice's huge event, a weekly, whose parent company since last year Voice Media Group recently cleared the paper of its beloved writers to 'rebrand'. The end of Parquet Courts set featured front man Andrew Savage going off on a rant, which kept with the anti-conformist themes. All that could really be mustered over the cacophony of guitars was the last repeated line "sun bathing animal". Despite the apparent insult to all of us sun bathing animals soaking up tunes and rays, Parquet Courts seriously killed it.

Reigning Sound's set was almost ruined for me by a severely intoxicated 50-something year old woman, but was saved by their head-bopping jams and was a good way to cool down from the constant assault of power chords and angst. Bringing their glossed over, dance worthy, heavy jams all the way from Memphis, Reigning Sound had everyone, including the aforementioned drunk lady, grooving heavy. Frontman and well-respected musician Greg Cartwright crooned over melancholy songs of lost and broken love. The drunkard said we were all scared to love. Nonetheless, Reigning Sound really reigned in the day, and set the stage for what I'm assuming was a good Kurt Vile set (left early :P) 

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Saturday, June 22, 2013

This Blog

Ah, I've always promised myself that I would start a blog, if not to become a famous writer then at least to document some of my experiences in this beautiful city of New York (especially the borough of Queens, after which the blog is named). Finally, I have mustered the willpower and fended off rampant procrastination to start this blog. So what exactly will I cover in 'Inquisitive in Queens'? As of now, mostly live music that I go to see, possible reviews of new music releases, and a constant stream about life in the borough of Queens. Queens in itself is undergoing a metamorphosis. The neighborhoods of Astoria, Long Island City, Sunnyside, and even Woodside have seen a 'gentrification' for lack of a better word. Transplants from Brooklyn and Manhattan as well as students from the world over are populating these key neighborhoods in the borough, bringing with them an appreciation for art, and the energy of 20 somethings looking for something to do. I personally live in the Rockaways, an area that in the year prior to Sandy was finally receiving the attention it deserved as an area with a ton of potential as a recreation destination. With the addition of the VW dome, however, Rockaway is starting to rebound, at least culturally, as the dome offers many cultural opportunities to the artistically starved community. So, throughout the summer, as I bask in the experiences of the city, hopefully meet new people, and discover new ideas, I will post to this site my findings. Cheers!