Identifier | 2986842 |
Created At | Tue May 23 2023 23:54:00 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time) |
Media Type | CD-R |
Media Count | 2 |
Show Rating | A |
Sound Rating | B+ |
Note | It's TAO and it sounds somewhat distant. But for all the new songs they unveiled in this set. I'll forego how bad it sounds |
Source Info | Scheops mics>Grace preamp>minidisc>CDR |
Traded From | Sarah Paul |
Trades Allowed |
Performance
Nickel Creek 2003-05-13 Jannus Landing, St. Petersburg, FL | |
---|---|
Set 1 | Jacksmith (Crooked Jack)
Smoothie Song Beauty and the Mess The Fox This Side Ferdinand the Bull > "technical difficulties" Green and Grey Reasons Why Not In Nottingham (Sean and Sara only, while Chris gets his "mousetrap" fixed) Sweet Afton Cuckoo's Nest |
Set 2 | Trouble *
Locking Doors In The House of Tom Bombadil Sabra Girl Elliot Speak Big Sam Thompson [ volume level adjustment mid-song ] Should've Known Better Eveline Little Room ** Itzinay House Carpenter You Don't Have To Move That Mountain *** The Lighthouse's Tale > Yellow **** > The Lighthouse's Tale (+ encore break) E: Ode To A Butterfly > tease > Lithium ***** > Ode > Taxman ****** * Jon Brion ** White Stripes *** Keith Whitley **** Coldplay ***** Nirvana ****** The Beatles |
Set 3 | |
Comment | Band:
Chris Thile ? mandolin Sean Watkins ? guitar Sara Watkins ? fiddle Mark Schatz ? bass Notes: Chris' mandolin rig had trouble, and halfway through the set had to "give up"... finally the band decided to play all around one mic. In Sara's own words (www.nickelcreek.com/journal.htm) - Our show in St. Petersburg on Tuesday was very different from any other - and extremely enjoyable. Things were grooving really, really well when, about 5 or 6 songs into the set, Chris's mandolin pickup, for a reason unbeknownst to us at the time, began acting up. Its bad behavior progressed to the point where we decided to take an unplanned intermission so that Danny, our extremely competent soundman, could examine things on stage. After about 15 minutes, the problem was uncovered but was not immediately fixable, so, rather than make ill attempts and sacrificing everyone's tone and volume, we decided to strip all the other instruments and vocals down to the same level and use just two mics: one for the bass, and one for the three of us to share. We completed the rest of the set with that set up, maneuvering around one mic, trying to make the balance just right...haha, what a great moment. The Del McCoury Band (one of the great traditional bluegrass bands) always performs that way - they know how to pull it off *right*. |