Pentimento/Young English Split
By James Twigg | Apr. 3, 2012Artist: Pentimento and Young English
Artist: Pentimento and Young English
Music aficionados gathered for the music of famous avant-garde composer John Cage - an icon whose most famous work, "4'33," consists of the audience's rumbling stomachs, rustling programs, and a loud sneeze.
Since the band's conception, Cursive has lacked a set-in-stone identity. Like its music, the outfit is ever evolving.
Fans intimately pressed their bodies against the stage, some forced to lie on it as the crowd pushed from behind. Sweat drenched every person and surface within reach while riskier fans bobbed in the black hole of the mosh pit, gasping for air.
Tom Warne, a senior business major, is flailing as he's pushed back and forth. Ten people are in the center, treating his body like a punching bag. As the sounds get louder, he's no longer able to stand. A blow to the ribs brings him down, and he disappears briefly in the nest of revelers.
As a siren wailed, Go Radio took the darkened stage to cheers, quickly sending the opening lines of "Lucky Street" blasting out of the speakers.
Fans pressed closer to the stage as Last Stand For Lucy made their appearance shortly after midnight, with the crowd coming more alive than it had been for any other set as the quartet lit into its first song.
Album: The Odd Future Tape Vol. 2
Last week, three Buffalo bands traded the blustery rust belt for the dry heat of Austin.
Wiz Khalifa - Taylor Allderdice
Wiz Khalifa - Taylor Allderdice