From the moment I arrived at The Chapel this past Thursday, a sense of nostalgia held onto me and would not release its grasp until I left the venue that night. Parked directly in front of the box office window, a bus harkening back to the days of Ken Kesey stood with neon red lights lighting the interior and art-covered exterior. As I walked into the prayer-space-turned-concert-house that is the Mission Districtโ€™s The Chapel, brown suede leather jackets and bell-bottom jeans suddenly surrounded me. The scene was completed by the stage backdrop, which is best described as a two-dimensional lava lamp continuously moving and changing shape at the whims of two artists from Mad Alchemy. The night was poised to be one of psychedelia, sixtiesโ€™ inspired garage/punk/surfer rock, and wistfulness.

With opening acts involving belly and aerial silk dancers, expectations were high. But Mystic Braves delivered. Coming on around 11:30pm, they reinvigorated the exhausted crowd as guitarist and vocalist Julian Ducantzeiler quickly began the characteristic garage-rock inspired riffs. With that the crowd responded in frenzy and the moshing began almost instantaneously.
IMG_9181This continued for much of the concert, with members of the audience finding any excuse to push each other around wildly; even during some of the slower songs of the set such as โ€œVicious Cycleโ€ off of their first eponymous album Mystic Braves (2012).The majority of the set was comprised of songs from their prior two albums: Mystic Braves and Desert Island (2014). A number of songs, however, came from the recently released LP Days of Yesteryear (2015). These songs echoed the psych-rock tones that Mystic raves have so steadfastly held on to, and itย obviouslyย continues to work.

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Despite some technical difficulties through the show that seemed to peeve the artists (a misdirected light and an unresponsive bass amplifier), the performanceย enthused and delighted; a glance at the audience revealed smiling faces across the sanctuary.

The whole evening was pervaded by a sense of the surreal and the fantastic. As guitarist of opener Coo Coo Birds Johnny โ€œCatโ€ Shaheri succinctly put it: โ€œThis is not a show, this is a sรฉance.โ€ The theme of the spiritual lingered for the remainder of the performance, and I returned home with the feeling that I had left our earthly plane for a few hours.

 

Article by Jacob Elsanadi, photos by Sofia Duarte

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