No better
way to experience Mark Kozelek than in SF
Mark E.
Ortega
March 3, 2014
Saturday
night, I ventured out to Great American
Music Hall in San
Francisco to see Mark Kozelek play a show ten blocks
from where the former Red House Painters singer lives, according to some of his between song banter that evening.
I had
interviewed Kozelek back in 2011 for Queensberry-Rules.com, not so much about music, but about boxing.
Kozelek’s spin off from Red House Painters is named Sun Kil Moon, named for the
South Korean boxer. On Sun Kil Moon’s first album Ghosts of a Great Highway exists a song “Salvador Sanchez”, named
for the legendary Mexican fighter who died tragically at 23 years of age.
Since that
interview, we’ve traded several e-mails about the fights. When I saw Kozelek
was playing in the Bay Area a day after a boxing match took place in Redwood
City , it made it easy to justify a trip from Las
Vegas back to my former NorCal stomping grounds.
Here’s a
timeline of what was a very enjoyable evening in the city.
Kozelek had
a part in the classic Cameron Crowe film Almost
Famous as the bassist for Stillwater ,
the band that Patrick Fugit follows around and becomes pals with while on the
road. In a way, it was my own brief Almost
Famous moment, as I’ve begun to write about music in the recent months and
Kozelek is the first musician I’ve come to know on a somewhat regular person
level.
Speaking of Almost Famous,
one of the fights I had brought was Lennox Lewis crushing Andrew Golota in one
round. I mentioned that the Arturo Gatti-Gabriel Ruelas fight was on that disc.
As it turned out, Rafael Ruelas came by the set for the film, as many of the
scenes were shot at the Olympic Auditorium, across the parking lot from the gym
that Rafael and his brother Gabriel trained at. Mark met both of the brothers
at a boxing convention in LA the same year.
Kozelek (far right) with Gabriel and Rafael Ruelas. Photo courtesy of Mark Kozelek |
Kozelek’s
funniest line in the film was filmed at that location, he said. “I’m just
hungry man,” he quips back in the film at his ficticous band mate. “Let’s just
go out and find some barbeque or something.”
After a few
more minutes of enjoyable bullshitting I headed back up to the main area and
anxiously awaited the beginning of the show.
“Yeah,
except when it is something that you don’t like,” Roc responded.
“Still, if
you don’t like what you’re hearing, you only have to hear it that one time,
usually,” I said. “At other bars, you have to hear the same Miley Cyrus or
Beyonce song 400 times, sometimes 20 times just in a day.”
He admitted
I had a point.
Kozelek has
a song on his new album Benji called
“Ben’s My Friend”. The song is about a number of things, one being attending a
Postal Service concert and feeling really out of place and slightly competitive
with his good friend Gibbard, who the Postal Service was a side project for. [Gibbard interviewed Kozelek for A.V. Club in 2008].
The
downloading of the albums remark got the guy to respond negatively, saying he
likes to support the artists by actually paying for their music. It was fun to
see the guy try and tiptoe the line of being really offended but not enough to
fuck up his chances to get laid later on in the evening.
The girl
said she put two and two together who he was after she did a little Google
research. That comment made me laugh to myself because in one of our e-mail
exchanges, Kozelek told me he doesn’t use Google at all, so I wonder what he
would think of using it as a tool to familiarize themselves with his work.
I see a
banner hanging from the upper level above the stage, indicating that this show
was part of the long-running Noise Pop Music Festival. I had no idea.
Photo from Instagram user @saintrik. |
???: The only times you realize it
sucks not having a watch is when you’re told to turn off your cell phones.
Kozelek takes the stage and my phone turns off. I try and take notes as best as
I can using a pen and scrap of paper the rest of the way. Here’s where my
actual review of the show begins.
--
I imagine
there is no better place to see Kozelek touring in support of his recently
released Sun Kil Moon album Benji than
in San Francisco . Kozelek makes
infinite references to the area, street names and establishments, as well as
the northern California area (I
think you hear San Rafael and
Sasalito mentioned in songs he played on this night), so it was a real joy to
experience the show in that area.
Kozelek and
his band mates take the stage and play Benji
title track “Carissa”. The content of Benji,
which I reviewed over at GrimyGoods.com a few weeks ago, is moving and stirring
stuff. Kozelek began with the first four tracks from the album.
In between
“I Can’t Live Without My Mother’s Love” (about dreading the day his mom will
pass) and “Truck Driver” (about the tragic way in which an uncle of his
passed), Kozelek broke up the tension very well with his banter.
I’m
paraphrasing what he said, but Kozelek basically said he could care less about
Noise Pop but was very happy he could go ten blocks from his home and make an
easy ten grand playing the show, which had people laughing.
The song “I
Love My Dad” had people who were listening close to the lyrics chuckling a bit.
The everyday stuff that finds its way into Kozelek’s songs about deep and
sometimes dark things also helps provide some levity.
It was after
this song that Kozelek made pretty funny comments about the people who had
showed up to see him. He mentioned how in the front row, all he saw was a bunch
of dudes.
I had read
in a recent review of a Kozelek show that he is sometimes beleaguered by who
the typical Mark Kozelek fan turns out to be. As I looked around, I could
venture a solid estimation that two-thirds of the males (which represented
probably 90% of the audience) had at least one of the following: flannel shirt,
thick rimmed glasses, or a receding hairline.
I’m not sure
if it was during this part of his banter, but at some point Kozelek noticed
some guy in the crowd who was wearing headphones.
I’m
paraphrasing, but Kozelek said something along the lines of the guy with the
headphones was fucking him up and to please take them off, that he looked
fucking stupid. It was said in a joking type way and was another funny light
moment to provide a balance to the depth of what was taking place lyrically.
Kozelek made
a reference to the show that took place the evening before at GAMH, headlined
by Bob Mould. Kozelek must have been in attendance because he mentioned how it
looked like an old folks home at his show and he was glad to have a lively crowd
in front of him that night.
Kozelek
plays a couple more from Benji, and
prior to one, says “This is an uplifting song about a special needs girl I knew
when I was a kid who ended up getting taken advantage of. Later, I’ll play
another uplifting song about serial killer Richard Ramirez, who died last
year.” To the Richard Ramirez remark, some reacted as though he was kidding.
Then Kozelek did play “Richard Ramirez Died Today of Natural Causes”, a song he
said was inspired by a text message he received from his girlfriend. They now
knew he was not kidding.
That Kozelek
explains briefly in between where some of the songs came from and what kind of
headspace he was in while writing it is the kind of bonus nugget of info you’d
be hard pressed to find elsewhere.
“This is a
song about a Mexican contractor who fucked up my house,” said Kozelek before
playing “Gustavo”, one of the highlights of the night.
Kozelek’s
intricate finger picking Spanish guitar that has typified his work for much of
the last decade has seen him compared to other musicians like Jose Gonzalez and
Bon Iver in recent years, though those guys were still getting shoved around on
the playground by other kids when Kozelek achieved his first big success in the
1990s. Kozelek zeroed in on one guy in particular during the show that he kept
calling Jose Gonzalez, which I got a kick out of.
It was a joy
to see Kozelek rely on his killer guitar skills and unstated vocal prowess
throughout his set.
Some of the
highest high points in my opinion were “You Missed My Heart” and “Caroline”
(both of which can be found on Perils
from the Sea, a 2013 collaboration with Jimmy Lavalle).
The boxing
references were aplenty during the set. In “Caroline”, Kozelek references Manny
Pacquiao having an easy night against Ricky Hatton. Songs “Livingstone Bramble”
and “Tavoris Cloud” are named after pugilists and make passing references to
fights and fighters. Kozelek is the only musician out there referencing
unbeaten young welterweight Keith Thurman and ageless wonder Bernard Hopkins in
his lyrics.
“Tavoris
Cloud” was the first encore song and it was preceded by Kozelek saying it had
to do with a drummer friend of his, Tim Mooney, passing away. It was one of two
songs Kozelek played alone on the stage, before being joined on stage for the
final song.
I think
Kozelek is a must see live show if you even remotely like his sound. Some of
the songs he played off Perils From The
Sea sounded even better live than on the studio album, in my opinion. It
was just natural for Kozelek to pump up the chorus on “By the Time That I
Awoke” a bit from how it sounds on the album. Every song is so personally
crafted that experiencing it in its live form just brings an extra element to
the table.
10:45 I grabbed a California burrito from around the corner before catching the BART train back to the East Bay. It was a memorable night in the city.
Setlist:
Carissa
I Can’t Live
Without My Mother’s Love
Truck Driver
Dogs
I Watched
the Film The Song Remains The Same
Micheline
Richard
Ramirez Died Today of Natural Causes
Hey You
Bastards I’m Still Here
You Missed
My Heart
Caroline
Gustavo
Livingstone
Bramble
The Bird Has
a Broken Wing
The Moderately
Talented Yet Attractive Young Woman
By the Time
That I Awoke
Ceiling
Gazing
ENCORE
Tavoris
Cloud
Black Kite
Elaine
Among the
Leaves
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