By the time Sunday afternoon rolled around, we were still reeling from Lordeâs spectacular performance on Saturday, but we kept chugging along to see Nas + the Roots, The Replacements, Spoon, The 1975, Twenty One Pilots, Lake Street Dive and The War On Drugs. Of the three jam-packed days, Sunday was the one catered most to rock-and-soul aficionados â and not just because it was punk rocker legends The Replacementsâ first show in Boston since 1991. And, thankfully, after Saturdayâs rain delay, we had a sunny, albeit slightly cooler day to enjoy the tunes.Â
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Boston Calling Recap: The National, The Hold Steady & More
While we missed White Denim earlier in the day, we heard that the Austin, Texas rockers were trying out some jammier material during their set. Maybe they knew that they were warming up the stage for the buzzier The War On Drugs? Whatever the case, itâs worth noting their early fest slot considering theyâve regularly performed at major US festivals since 2012. The War On Drugs, who make brooding, layered shoegaze with the best, then cruised through a chill midday set basked in welcome sun, performing hits from their latest well-received and first charting LP âLost In The Dreamâ including âRed Eyesâ and âUnder The Pressure.â Within the festival setting, it was more of a swell background track to spend a few minutes chilling in the Sam Adams-sponsored beer garden, play lawn games or revitalize yourself at the food trucks, but they did draw a moderate crowd to the stage.Â
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More impressive, though, were Lake Street Drive who returned to downtown Boston after a breakout album (their third, âBad Self Portraitsâ), extensive international touring, and several network TV appearances including Letterman. For the four-piece who originally met a decade ago while attending the New England Conservatory and now reside in Brooklyn, it must have been a trip to perform their Sharon Van Etten-esque soul to thousands in their former college town. 29 year old lead singer Rachael Price croons like she couldâve come out of another era, and with her flight attendant-like attire, she may wish that she did as well. Along with strong harmonies from her bandmates and fellow singers (Bridget Kearney, upright bass; Mike Calabrese, drums), highlights included the dinnertime standard-esque âBobby Tanqueray,â âHello? Goodbye!â and a couple of unreleased tracks. When Price told the crowd that theyâve made some bad decisions, especially over their weekend, we were surprised. Their set sure didnât show it, and weâre sure they made many new fans yesterday.
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On the flip side, rap rock duo Twenty One Pilots and UK power pop group The 1975 â the two bands that followed âprobably had more difficulty making new fans at Boston Calling, although their fervent young crowds showed that they donât need them. Twenty One Pilots are the more quirky of the two, combining theatrics (inclusive of head-covering full-body suits, performing some drum parts on an edge-of-stage platform, and smoke blasts) with lead singer Tyler Josephâs Christian singing/rapping and pump-up-the-crowd directives.
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The 1975 come from Manchester in the UK, and their accent alone is enough to make teenage girls swoon. Made for fans of The Neighborhood, Bastille and others who like their alt rock easily digestible, some of their cuts and harmonies border on âboy bandâ pop. They had their teenage fans in one of the biggest frenzies of the weekend, performing songs including âChocolate,â âGirlsâ and âSexâ to ever-blossoming crowds.Â
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Following were festival warriors Spoon, who have perfected indie rock for the masses over the course of their eight album, 21-year career. Britt Daniels led the five-piece through a greatest hits-esque festival set inclusive of âThe Underdog,â âDonât You Evah,â âThe Way We Get By,â âDonât Make Me A Target, âI Turn My Camera Onâ and their single off of their latest LP, the catchy, rambling pop-oriented indie rocker âDo You.â Theyâre quite a solid band, yes, but it did seem as if theyâre on autopilot this late into the festival season. Â
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By the time The Replacements came onstage, many of the teenagers had left. This was most noticeable as the people in the front of the stage were middle aged balding men instead of screaming high schoolers. Most representative of the set, which the band in the latter-end of middle-age powered through while occasionally forgetting a lyric here or there (âIâm getting old,â explained lead singer Paul Westerberg) was an early set comment from the crowd: âI saw you at [now defunct historic Boston rock venue] the Rat, motherf***er!âÂ
Westerberg may not have been on his A game, but for a reunion of a celebrated punk act â and, if you didnât know, the Boston grit-and-cold made the city a punk town decades ago â it didnât matter. The crowd filled in the lines to âValentine,â âTake Me Down To The Hospital,â âAndrogynous,â âLove You Till Friday,â âBastards of Youngâ and a host of others. Westerberg and his band (which now features David Minehan of The Neighborhood on guitar) did their job, even slipping in a cover of The Jackson 5âs âI Want You Back.â One thingâs for sure: if his occasional comments are any sign (including âI smell weed / F**kinâ hippies!â), we think Westerberg would be a good hang.Â
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Nas + The Roots closed out the festival, although what ended up happening to our disappointment was legendary New York rapper Nas opening up for The Roots. Touring on the 20th anniversary of his 1994 classic âIllmatic,â he did perform his impassioned âIf I Ruled The Worldâ from the classic, but only ended up performing a 30 minute set inclusive of hits including âN.Y. State of Mindâ (changing N.Y. to Boston, in a nice gesture) and âOne Mic.â With just a small overlap, The Roots then finished off the night with a somewhat improvised, chill-but-effective set. The âTonight Showâ house band are seasoned musicians and their musicianship showed, even in their covers of Kool & the Gangâs âJungle Boogieâ and Guns âN Roses âSweet Child Of Mine.â Questlove pounding the drums, Tuba Gooding, Jr. making the sousaphone his own, jazz interludes and Black Thoughtâs rapping characterized the set for the crowd still thousands deep.Â
Considering Boston Calling is just two years old, and the fact that the lifespan of a new festival without major concert promotion-backing is typically tenuous (Crash Line, a local concert production company, runs the festival), the festival couldnât expect to be any more successful in its second year. For the crowd of 45,000 over three days, weâre sure that each person left with their favorite act of the weekend. For day three, while we hoped and wished that there was more interaction between Nas + The Roots (and probably didnât need to see Twenty One Pilots), we couldnât have expected much more.