bassnectar 5 1108 credit_JoannaJiang

The line dragged across the lawn at Civic Center Plaza to Polk and McAllister, a grab-bag mix of candy ravers, skate punks, mild metalheads, and Giants memorabilia — yes, this last one, even a week after the fact.

November 8, city and Bay Area pride were high on the list during Bassnectarโ€™s final NVSB tour showdate at Bill Graham Civic Auditorium. The San Jose native was greeted like a returning hero; many audience members had turned up solely to see Lorin Ashton, leading to an enormous backlog for security and venue staff more than two hours after doors opened. But the Civic Auditorium got everyone in just in time for the headlinerโ€™s two-hour set. Described as โ€œlegendary,โ€ and โ€œfully immersive,โ€ Ashtonโ€™s performance was a sensory overload at one extreme and flat at the otherโ€”the rest of the time, though, it was fully immersive. And above all, it was ballsy.

He opened with Geminiโ€™s reworking of Kelisโ€™ โ€œBrave,โ€ then spun it into TCโ€™s cut of Estelleโ€™s โ€œFreak.โ€ We prayed no one had epilepsy, but his self-designed lightshow was an epic inย itself. Several songs in, Ashton delved into original recorded material, notably โ€œHologram,โ€ โ€œNoise,โ€ and โ€œLost in the Crowd.โ€

Now Bassheads hold your breath: weโ€™d like to make a claim that Ashtonโ€™s old material just doesnโ€™t hold up. However, recorded or live, Noise vs. Beauty, released earlier this year, is a realized pipe dream. Standout moments, all of which were included Saturday night, include designated make-out tape โ€œYou & Me;โ€ the aforementioned โ€œLost in the Crowdโ€ featuring fellow Bay local Zion I; and the turn-up track โ€œNow,โ€ which Ashton used throughout the night as a transit.

It takes a fair bit of gall to live mix with the sort of heavy bass we heard that night, but Bassnectar has it down to a tee. A leader in the electronic dance scene next to the likes of Diplo but without a show on BBC Radio 1, Ashton also features a number of other producers in his mixes. Saturday evening, he borrowed from Gemini, TC, (a Crystal Castles edit from) Sound Remedy, and (โ€œMove for Meโ€ by) MSTRKRFT, among others — those were just the ones we recognized. He covered all the crowd favorites, at least briefly: โ€œUpside Down,โ€ โ€œTake You Down,โ€ โ€œBasshead,โ€ โ€œLoco Ono,โ€ โ€œPennywise Tribute,โ€ โ€œFreestyle,โ€ โ€œTeleport Massive,โ€ and โ€œVava Voom.โ€ We donโ€™t think weโ€™ve seen as many concertgoers headbang at a non-metal show as hard as they did to โ€œPing Pong.โ€

But perhaps most unexpectedly, Bassnectar segued โ€œFlashbackโ€ into โ€œTimestretch,โ€ mixing the hit track with Lykke Liโ€™s โ€œI Follow Riversโ€ seamlessly. This he followed with the euphoria that was โ€œYou & Me,โ€ hands-down the most distinct track on Noise vs. Beauty quite simply due to its subdued bassline. Some of the single’s Stumbeleine-esque jewel tones missed their targets live; the auditorium was too big and its speakers too loud.

โ€œThurstyโ€ translated well over the soundsystem. The new single, a lead for the 22-track NVSB Remix pack, was written with a fan of his. The repetitive windup led to some downright awkward and some absolutely beautiful grinding that night.

As his set drew to a close, he reverted to his roots, pulling heavier guitar samples and mosh-able licks. Ultimately, what we noticed was the thematic unity of the night — while โ€œNowโ€ served most of the transitions, Ashton frequently clipped โ€œLost in the Crowdโ€™ and other key songs within his set, transplanting them elsewhere like a dรฉjร  vu or mental reset. With no record of a classical background, we strongly suspect this consciousness of structure arises from his affinity for metal music (hereโ€™s why).

Bassnectar finished the night with a thank you to both โ€œthe crazy 100 of you kids who have followed us since Rochesterโ€ (the first NVSB show on 10/3) and โ€œthe locals we havenโ€™t seen in years.โ€ He teased “Basshead” (oh the gall), then moved to a more rock-centred couplet, before returning to the highly-demanded single.

In contrast to other โ€œorganized raves,โ€ Bassnectarโ€™s NVSB finale party was a class act. The set design was simple; basic props included pool floaties, balloons, and confetti; and Ashton said his โ€œthank youโ€s. He calmly addressed the crowd, despite jumping around behind his turntable like a wired madman; there were no political comments, and there was no self-promotion or deeply offensive content.

He said, “I know it’s illegal but I can fucking smell that shit. I can see that shit.” But honestly? Saturday eveningโ€™s sounds and visual array alone took us to higher places. It was noisy, and it was beautiful.

Article by Joanna Jiang

One Response

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.