Review by Suzanne Goodwin
Photography by Paul Clarke
A shame? Yes, a shame that Seattle's Fastbacks were the next band, or actually that they were on the bill at all. The Fastbacks wandered out and started to play, with no hellos or intros beyond saying they had never played in Vancouver before. Seems to me that they would've taken this opportunity to impress a new crowd, y'know, maybe win themselves some more fans or something. The Fastbacks pretty much deflated the balloon of energy that Chixdiggit had given us. I honestly couldn't tell one of Fastbacks' hoarsly edged pop songs from the other, making for a pretty mundane 45 minutes of "Aren't they finished yet?"
But, aaah, finally: The Presidents of the United
States of America. Another Seattle trio. The Top 40 flavour of
1995, and they're here, for a sold-out gig at the Fabulous
Commodore Ballroom. So did they wow us? Ya! With the Fastbacks
quickly forgotten, the crowd made merry the moment the house lights
went down. The Presidents trooped onto the stage doing a sort
of conga dance and opened up with the high-intensity "Kick
Out the Jam," from their 1995 self-titled release. Amusing,
fun and interactive is The Presidents' style. Main singer, two-string
bass player, shaved-head guy Chris Ballews insisted on total audience
participation throughout the gig. We had to sing, we had to dance,
we even had to have those house lights down 'cause we had to all
light up those Bics -- "Big Fat Rock Show" style --
to create an appropriate atmosphere. Let no one in the audience
not participate, because according to the Presidents, there's
no point if it ain't fun. Crowd participation wasn't even
a minor worry anyway, though, what with the sing-a-longs, the
moshers clambering to shake the Presidents' hands and assorted
offerings -- jackets, toilet paper, God only knows what else --
getting tossed up onstage. Merriment was to be the order of the
evening, and the crowd was hooked.
The Presidents really liked to do covers, often mid-song.
Halfway through the "bug" trilogy ("Bol Weevil,"
"Dune Buggy," and a new one "Bug City"), they
broke into a That-Dude-Who-Used-To-Be-Prince funk-a-thon-medley
-- and at this point the whole show stopped, until the lighting
guy turned the Commodore's mirrorball on. Can't do Prince without
the mirrorball, don'cha know! Man, we got treated to all kinds
of kooky stuff; including -- and maybe I shouldn't admit
to knowing this song -- "Video Killed the Radio Star,"
dusted off from the early 80's and refurbished à la The
Presidents. (Who could forget that? Surely I wasn't the
only one there who still remembered it.) They slid seamlessly
from their own jangly, almost country-pop material, including
every song from their last release, into bits and pieces from
all kinds of "big" radio schlock (The Beatles' " ...baby
you're a rich man...", a little Willie Nelson) and back
again, never skipping even a beat.
How can you take seriously a band that has a two-string bass, a three-string guitar and hams it up for all the world to see? Yeah, well, you just don't have to. Will they be around next year? Maybe. Does it matter? Nope! If the Presidents came to Vancouver only just to show us how to have a good time, then they deserved all the votes they received that night.
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