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Saturday, June 15, 2024

Pixies and Modest Mouse at Forest Hills Stadium

Pixies at Forest Hills Stadium
Pixies

Alternative rock has lasted longer than anyone might have predicted when the music first went mainstream in the 1990s. So have two of its leading proponents, Pixies and Modest Mouse. Pixies formed in 1986 in Boston, Massachusetts, and split acrimoniously in 1993, reforming with a new lineup 20 years ago. The same year that Pixies split apart, Modest Mouse formed across the country in Issaquah, Washington, later relocating to Portland, Oregon. With the release of its fourth album, Good News for People Who Love Bad News, Modest Mouse found commercial success in 2004, the same year that Pixies was reforming.

The music of Pixies and Modest Mouse was perhaps too quirky for mainstream audiences, but found a substantial following in the booming alt-rock circuit of the 1990s and early 2000s. Pixies’ peak years started in 1989, thanks to “Monkey Gone to Heaven” and “Here Comes Your Man,” and continued to 1996, with “Letter to Memphis” and “Head On.” Modest Mouse’s peak years were mostly from 2004’s “Float On” to 2007’s “Dashboard,” with brief resurgences in 2014 with “Lampshades on Fire” and 2021 with “We Are Between.” Pixies and Modest Mouse were alt-rock royalty for their respective generations.

Modest Mouse at Forest Hills Stadium
Modest Mouse
Pixies at Forest Hills Stadium
Pixies

On their first-ever tour together, Pixies and Modest Mouse focused on their catalogs rather than on recent releases. Perhaps no longer as angry or as experimental as in their college years, the musicians of both bands did not break much ground on this tour. Rather, they played the safer route, performing what has worked for them over the decades. Avoiding their most recent albums, Modest Mouse played nothing from 2021’s The Golden Casket, and Pixies performed nothing from 2022’s Doggerel. Nevertheless, both bands introduced one new song, Modest Mouse with “Third Side of the Moon” and Pixies with “Vegas Suite.”

A summary of both concert performances would be similar. In recent years, both bands recorded less frequently than in their peak years, and perform more older songs than newer songs live. Their audiences have shown more receptivity to their vintage staples. At Forest Hills Stadium, both bands satisfied their audiences by playing tight, energetic and yet nostalgic repertoires.

Pixies at Forest Hills Stadium
Pixies
Modest Mouse at Forest Hills Stadium
Modest Mouse

Can the houselights go down?” joked vocalist Isaac Brock, dressed in a dark suit and sunglasses as Modest Mouse began its set under the hot sun at 6:30 p.m. Modest Mouse began left of center with a nine-minute "The Stars Are Projectors," with its changing tempos and Brock fiddling with distortion pedals and dials. From there, the music largely marched to a dance beat while Brock continued his eccentric, choppy singing style and distorted guitar leads. At one point, Brock sang into his guitar’s pickups rather than use his microphone. With mumbled lyrics challenging to discern throughout the performance, Modest Mouse’s one unreleased song, “Third Side of the Moon,” was perhaps the most sentimental song of the set. “I wish I had listened to every word you ever said, but you always spoke in whispers, and I’m not good at listening,” Brock sang. The set included a cover of the Cure's "A Forest."

Modest Mouse at Forest Hills Stadium
Modest Mouse
Pixies at Forest Hills Stadium
Pixies

Pixies’ vocalist/guitarist Black Francis (aka Frank Black), along with original lead guitarist Joey Santiago, original drummer David Lovering, and new bassist Emma Richardson, celebrated the 35th anniversary of the band’s groundbreaking album, Doolittle, by playing eight songs from that album. Pixies arrived on stage at 8:10 p.m. with a snarling, crunchy, "U-Mass", "Wave of Mutilation" and a cover of the Jesus and Mary Chain's "Head On." At 59 years of age, Francis’ vocals were still very much intact, as he moved from softer songs like the new “Vegas Suite” to bellowing, moaning, screaming, and wailing on harsher songs, particularly "Gouge Away", "Debaser," and the anthemic "Where Is My Mind?," the night's penultimate song. Francis punctuated songs with his rapid-fire stop-and-start guitar work. Richardson, most recently of Band of Skulls, took the lead vocal on a cover of Peter Ivers and David Lynch’s “In Heaven (Lady in the Radiator Song)” from Lynch's 1977 film Eraserhead. The set closed with a rousing cover of Neil Young’s “Winterlong.”

Pixies at Forest Hills Stadium
Pixies
Modest Mouse at Forest Hills Stadium
Modest Mouse

Cat Power opened the concert at the unreasonable time slot of 5:30 to 6 p.m. Most concert-goers were still in their rush-hour commute from their jobs to the stadium. Sorry we missed Cat Power’s brief performance.

Pixies at Forest Hills Stadium
Pixies
Modest Mouse at Forest Hills Stadium
Modest Mouse

Modest Mouse Setlist

  1. The Stars Are Projectors

  2. Tiny Cities Made of Ashes

  3. Dashboard

  4. Fire It Up

  5. Paper Thin Walls

  6. A Forest (The Cure cover)

  7. This Devil's Workday

  8. King Rat

  9. Third Side of the Moon

  10. The World at Large

  11. Float On

  12. Doin' the Cockroach

  13. Heart Cooks Brain

  14. Shit Luck

Modest Mouse at Forest Hills Stadium
Modest Mouse
Pixies at Forest Hills Stadium
Pixies

Pixies Setlist

  1. U-Mass

  2. Wave of Mutilation

  3. Head On (The Jesus and Mary Chain cover)

  4. Isla de Encanta

  5. Cactus

  6. Planet of Sound

  7. Vegas Suite

  8. Ana

  9. Here Comes Your Man

  10. Motorway to Roswell

  11. Gouge Away

  12. Down to the Well

  13. Caribou

  14. Hey

  15. Mr. Grieves

  16. Subbacultcha

  17. Monkey Gone to Heaven

  18. All Over the World

  19. Velouria

  20. The Happening

  21. Bone Machine

  22. Debaser

  23. In Heaven (Lady in the Radiator Song) (Peter Ivers & David Lynch cover)

  24. Wave of Mutilation (UK Surf)

  25. Where Is My Mind?

  26. Winterlong (Neil Young cover)

Pixies at Forest Hills Stadium
Pixies
Modest Mouse at Forest Hills Stadium
Modest Mouse

***

The Manhattan Beat reports on New York City's live music circuit. All articles are written by Everynight Charley Crespo. All photographs are taken by Everynight Charley Crespo, except when noted otherwise.

For a list of Manhattan venues that are presenting live music regularly, swing the desktop cursor to the right of the The Manhattan Beat home page and click on the pop-up tab "Where to Find Live Music."

For a more complete listing of upcoming performances in the New York City area, visit The Manhattan Beat's June calendar.

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