24 hours after Iron & Wine thoroughly disappointed me, I sought out musical redemption at the Varsity last night. Simply put, Architecture in Helsinki provided just that. The Aussie sextet delivered 90 high-powered minutes, mixing in a large part of their new Moment Bends LP (which sounds much better live than recorded) with a slew of older favorites.
The band took the stage one by one, dressed in various spectrums of white and teal, and kicked off their set with the smushy and sunny "Desert Island," which urged the 1/3 full Varsity crowd to stop standing still. While it did its trick, it was the spastic rendition of "Hold Music" that followed which really kicked the show into high gear. As I watched virtually everyone around me dancing their socks off (often times invading my personal bubble), I tried thinking about the last time I had seen such a high percentage of an audience dancing at a show...I've concluded that such a time did not exist. The crowd last night, young and full of energy (and, um, seemingly ecstacy), did not stop bouncing once throughout AiH's perfectly structured set. And the band, feeding off their fans, mirrored those actions.
"That Beep," the best track off the new album was especially entertaining as 4 off the 6 members participated in a hilariously straight-faced choreographed dance that will undoubtedly earn none of them tryouts on Janet Jackson's next tour. After slowing things down for a bit, but not enough to make the crowd keep both feet on the ground at once, AiH hit us with "Escapee" and crowd-favorite "Wishbone," both which transported me out of the Varsity and rather made me feel like I was at a house party in some/any John Hughes movie. A couple more new tracks followed, including the gorgeous "W.O.W." and a funked-up version of "Everything's Blue." Both tracks lured the crowd into a false sense of security as AiH ended the main set with the welcomely raucous "Do the Whirlwind" and the tribal beat-tinged "Heart it Races" to a chorus of duly deserved cheers.
A 3-song encore saw the band give us the Antony-inspired "B4 3D" before offering up a splendid, spot-on version of Londonbeat's classic "I've Been Thinking About You." They closed the night with Moment Bends' first single, the upbeat and in your face "Contact High," which gave the crowded front one last chance to shake out any remaining energy they still had left.
Hooray for Earth, the hotly hyped New York quartet opened to a less than accepting audience, but ending up winning over a ton of new fans with their swirling mix of guitar and synth. There's definite promise here, and they should take close notes to AiH's musicianship if they hope to one day headline a room like the Varsity.
Architecture in Helsinki said "see you in the Fall," and if their self-imposed prophecy is in fact true and they return to Minneapolis that quickly, I hope it's to the same loving response, just a little larger in size.
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