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Music , Video , Bob Dylan , The Tallest Man On Earth , Folk Music , Kristian Mattson , Pop
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Inspiring Funny Hot Scary Outrageous Amazing Weird CrazyMusic: Tallest Man on Earth Strides
Confidently Through New York
TALLEST MAN ON EARTH
TOWN HALLPerformance : *** 1/2 out of ****
Crowd * 1/2 out of ****
When they announced the solo act Kristian Mattson ,
a.k.a. The Tallest Man On Earth, was playing Town Hall,
I was a little nervous. Really? Town Hall? He seemed so under-the-radar to me, I was worried no onewould come. I'd barely seen any interviews with him in the media and every time I mentioned him to
music friends, I seemed to be starting from scratch. I only stumbled on his name in a UK magazine and
after purchasing his last album online on the spur of the moment it became my last-minute favorite
record of 2010. But was anyone else waiting to see him in concert? I would have expected a much smaller
place like Mercury Lounge for his return to New York.
Instead of a half-empty venue filled with old folkies, the NPR/Richard Thompson set (a.k.a. me), Town
Hall was sold out for two nights and filled mostly with young people who had probably discovered TMOEonline just like me, in an organic style that made it seem he was their own personal discovery. A 29-year-old Swede, Mattson sings with an Americana twang, records in English, posts songs online and pairedwith indie labels like Dead Oceans to get the word out. And just like that, he can reach the world. Here he
is trotting the globe and performing in New York the very week that his excellent new album There's NoLeaving Now debuts at #35 on the Billboard album charts. (Sure, these days you can top the charts with
less than 100,000 copies in sales some weeks, but still... pretty great.)
I haven't anticipated seeing a new act in concert this much in years and Mattson did not disappoint. He
prowled out of the wings like a cat and it was immediately clear he had presence to spare. Mattson wouldnot stand at the mike and declaim songs with the faux modest demeanor of a folkie. He is a performerand presumably years of dealing with rowdy crowds in bars has paid off. The stage was filled with fiveguitars standing in a row on one side (electric and acoustic, each tuned in a different manner) and a pianoon the other he assayed once or twice. Mattson soaked up the applause, somehow managing to lookgenuinely touched and as if it were his due at the same time.
He immediately launched into "To Just Grow Away," the opening track of his new album, and we wereMOST POPULAR ON HUFFPOST 1 of 2
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Hoodie
Deaf Boy Asked To Make
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Help Us Write 'The Words'
Quick Read | Comments (27) | 08.20.2012August 29, 2012
Edition: U.S.
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off. Mattson's voice boomed and swooped throughout Town Hall, merging perfectly with his guitar. He
played with aplomb, easily navigating the annoying whoops of audience members who think any quiet
moment is the perfect chance to belt out their approval. There isn't an artist alive who wants people to
bellow and shout while they're performing -- they're onstage for a reason -- but still yahoos think they
must be heard. It was literally one of the most annoying crowds in memory. Kids constantly brandished
cell phones to take pictures because of course if you're not recording an event it hasn't really happened.
Guards roamed the aisles with flashlights, repeatedly getting people to desist. It was a shame they didn't
flash the face of the schmuck five rows behind me who spent the entire show shouting out "Ridiculous!"
at the top of his voice after every musical passage and then mocking the people around him who weretrying to listen by saying, "It's a concert!" Yes, but not a Bon Jovi concert at a football stadium.
I was thoroughly impressed by Mattson's poise throughout. He has the showman's gift for knowing how
to ride the wave of audience emotion, pausing just long enough on a held note before launching intoanother passage or raising his vocals a notch to quiet the chatter. Interestingly, his two forays onto thepiano silenced the crowd almost completely. Why does acoustic guitar equal rowdy banter but a pianorelative silence? At the end of his first piano number, he pointedly said, "Thank you for listening." The
yahoo behind me didn't get the message.
None of those distractions prevented Mattson's performance from being memorable. Song after song
tumbled out of him, including many of the songs on his new album, like upbeat peak "1904" (Mattson
had a playful time with his enunciation on that one) to crowd favorite "King Of Spain," heard here on a
live performance on the UK show hosted by Jools Holland. (I couldn't find a live performance or video ofsongs from his new album but you can hear more of his work on his MySpace page .)
What I was most impressed by after the sheer songwriting talent, singing and playing was his assuredpresence. Mattson displayed a wry wit and self-awareness that was striking and funny and whollyentertaining. In the middle of one number, he would suddenly fall into a chair placed towards the back ofthe stage almost as if he'd just discovered it for the first time. A photographer taking a picture became amoment of weird discovery as if he was puzzled to realize people were watching him. He'd wipe his facewith a towel and then toss it away with mock disdain. When he used a pick, Mattson invariably tossed itaside in anger at the end of each number in a bit that became more amusing every time. This is an artistwith real presence and one you immediately sense you'll be seeing again in concert five years, ten year,twenty years from now.
And of course at the heart of it are the songs. It's easy and true to tag Mattson with the Dylan-esque tag.
But this isn't the Dylan of worldly affairs, but the romantic, funny Dylan, the one who can savor love butknows it's slipping away even as he's enjoying it. Mattson's wife Amanda Bergman performs under thename Idiot Wind, just to make the Dylan reference complete and she joined him on the final number,"Thrown Right On Me" (from his most recent EP Sometimes The Blues Is Just A Passing Bird ). Their
voices blended beautifully.
His new album There's No Leaving Now is a step forward sonically. Where his first two albums --
Shallow Grave and The Wild Hunt -- featured simply Mattson and his guitar, the new record features
just a tad more instrumentation and the occasional double tracking so Mattson can accompany himself.
Drums, clarinet and the like all make an appearance, but it's a modest one. It's still essentially Mattsonalone with his powerful, growling voice that can soothe and command and plead in equal measure. Andthat's what we found onstage, a man who can fill a hall with his voice and guitar and stop your heart.
I haven't lived with the new album enough yet but it will certainly be on my best of the year list. I tend to
recommend Dylan fans start with The Wild Hunt but you can't go wrong wherever you start. Because I
GOP Approves Abortion Ban
Isaac Balloons Into A
Hurricane, New Orleans
Threatened
Limbaugh's Wild Isaac
Conspiracy
DON'T MISS HUFFPOST BLOGGERS 1 of 5
Bill Moyers
WATCH: Both Parties Give
Invisible Americans the Silent
Treatment
Dean Baker
Poverty: The New Growth Industry
in America
TOP VIDEO PICKS 1 of 8
MOST DISCUSSED RIGHT NOW 1 of 2
HOT ON FACEBOOK 1 of 3Recommend 9k
Recommend 693
Like 7k
First Video of Snooki With Her
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First Look at Snooki's Baby
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Cocaine Reportedly UsedDuring Prince Harry's Naked
Vegas Party
13 Movies That Changed
The Way We View Poverty
Why We Aren't Playing at
the RNC
Madonna's Message For
Americans: 'Don't Get Fat
And Lazy'
WATCH: Raging Grannies
Have Some Words For
Todd Akin
FOLLOW ENTERTAINMENT
Mining the Audio
Motherlode, Volume
178 --...
Guns N' Roses
Slash Once Caught
David...
Samuel L. Jackson:
'Unfair' Hurricane
Isaac Avoid...
Robin Williams As
Dwight D.
Eisenhower In...know after a few listens you'll buy both other albums and then the EPs and then start wondering when
The Tallest Man On Earth will be coming to your town. Don't miss him if you get the chance. If you canhear a performance like this and not want to hear more, why then, we've got nothing to say to each other.
Thanks for reading. Michael Giltz is the cohost of Showbiz Sandbox , a weekly pop culture podcast that
reveals the industry take on entertainment news of the day and features top journalists and opinion
makers as guests. It's available for free on iTunes. Visit Michael Giltz at his website and his daily blog.
Download his podcast of celebrity interviews and his radio show, also called Popsurfing and also
available for free on iTunes. Link to him on Netflix and gain access to thousands of ratings and reviews.
Note : Michael Giltz is provided with free tickets to shows with the understanding that he will be
writing a review. He also received a free copy of the album.
Follow Michael Giltz on Twitter: www.twitter.com/michaelgiltz
Read more from Huffington Post bloggers:
Cliff Chenfeld: The Best Music of 2011
Just in time for the holidays, here is my 9th annual list of music that you may have missed and mightlike. Not as many standout releases for me in 2011 but plenty of good ones.
More in Entertainment...
HOT ON TWITTER 1 of 2
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Comments are closed for this entry
View All
ricky_martin
RetweetMake Room for (the New) Daddy
http://t.co/Q6eIDokm via
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feliciaday
RetweetThink on it: Cambridge scientists
say all mammals, birds, many
others including octopi, have
human-like consciousness.
http://t.co/aF6W2ZQh
01:10 PM on 06/27/2012
You guys are little hipsters who cannot stand people who enjoy a show. i wasnt at the show (wish i
was), but whats wrong with people enjoying a show and/or trying to take pictures? Musicians fix my
guitars, perfromers perform for an audience. Get over it, and have fun. There are plenty of artisits
that encourage an audience, how are people suppose to tell the difference??
03:52 PM on 06/28/2012
How did you know I'm short? Anyway, every artist and every style of music and everyvenue has their own way of presenting and appreciating music. Just like every sporting
event: you keep quiet during points at a tennis match (usually, though an "ooh" and "gasp"
are fine at big moments) and you make a continuous wall of sound at American football. In
the same way, you shut the hell up during classical music but are encouraged to offer aburst of applause after a solo in a jazz concert or exclamations of pleasure at a gospelshow. If you're at a Bruce Springsteen concert at madison Square Garden, everyone will
clap and sing along. If you're lucky enough to see Springsteen in a tiny club doing an
acoustic set chances are most everyone will be hushed and quiet during most songs. What
I cannot stand are people with no consideration for anyone around them. When
EVERYONE else is listening in rapt quiet maybe someone could show a little considerationfor everyone around them. The schmuck at the show I saw felt obliged to shout out duringvirtually every quiet moment and he was the only one out of thousands doing so. As forphotos, it's explicitly forbidden and security roams the aisle telling people to stop or kickthem out. I just feel sorry for people who are too impatient to simply watch and enjoy a
performance.
03:54 PM on 06/28/2012
PS How are people supposed to tell the difference? Look around you. When you're almost
alone in acting a certain way at a show, chances are you shouldn't be doing whateveryou're doing. If everyone is clapping and singing along, by gosh join in. If everyone is being
quiet (especially DURING a song), then get clued in. It's not hard to figure out.
08:50 PM on 06/29/2012
I agree with some of your points but come on MG. TTMOE is NOT classical music.
He is indie folk, and maybe if people enjoyed his shows more often, he would havesold more albums. Ryan Adams has the resume to do such things, and he does.
Kristian has a long way to go before he gets in that category. I have been to a
number of acoustic, raw, shows and it's a mixed bag. Half the people lovespeaking out, and the other half hate it. And the other half that hate, mostly justwished they voiced themselves a bit more, they are just to shy to do so.
09:00 PM on 06/29/2012
Furthermore, that classical music venue is filled with 40-100year olds in tuxs.TTMOE shows have 18-35year old fan base wearing shorts and t-shirts. APPEALTO THE FANBASE!!!! You know this!
11:40 AM on 06/24/2012
when I heard "The Wild Hunt" last year it immediately became my favorite album of the year. Noone is doing folk as good as Tallest Man, he has it perfected. I am so excited to see him nextmonth.Permalink | Share it
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Jacob Crim0 Fans
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06:11 AM on 06/22/2012
Never heard of him and now I wish it hadn't.
11:51 AM on 06/23/2012
Glad I saved you the cost of a CD!
03:48 PM on 06/23/2012
Wouldn't have bought this hipster junk anyway, but thanks for the thought, zippy!
There are More Comments on this Thread. Click Here To See them All
03:43 PM on 06/21/2012
I was at this show and couldnt agree more with your summary of the absolute imbeciles in the
audience.
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Featuring fresh takes and real-time analysis from
HuffPost's signature lineup of contributors
Michael Giltz
Freelance writerGET UPDATES FROM MICHAEL GILTZ
Follow
Music , Video , Bob Dylan , The Tallest Man On Earth , Folk Music , Kristian Mattson , Pop
Music , Town Hall , Entertainment NewsReact
Inspiring Funny Hot Scary Outrageous Amazing Weird CrazyMusic: Tallest Man on Earth Strides
Confidently Through New York
TALLEST MAN ON EARTH
TOWN HALLPerformance : *** 1/2 out of ****
Crowd * 1/2 out of ****
When they announced the solo act Kristian Mattson ,
a.k.a. The Tallest Man On Earth, was playing Town Hall,
I was a little nervous. Really? Town Hall? He seemed so under-the-radar to me, I was worried no onewould come. I'd barely seen any interviews with him in the media and every time I mentioned him to
music friends, I seemed to be starting from scratch. I only stumbled on his name in a UK magazine and
after purchasing his last album online on the spur of the moment it became my last-minute favorite
record of 2010. But was anyone else waiting to see him in concert? I would have expected a much smaller
place like Mercury Lounge for his return to New York.
Instead of a half-empty venue filled with old folkies, the NPR/Richard Thompson set (a.k.a. me), Town
Hall was sold out for two nights and filled mostly with young people who had probably discovered TMOEonline just like me, in an organic style that made it seem he was their own personal discovery. A 29-year-old Swede, Mattson sings with an Americana twang, records in English, posts songs online and pairedwith indie labels like Dead Oceans to get the word out. And just like that, he can reach the world. Here he
is trotting the globe and performing in New York the very week that his excellent new album There's NoLeaving Now debuts at #35 on the Billboard album charts. (Sure, these days you can top the charts with
less than 100,000 copies in sales some weeks, but still... pretty great.)
I haven't anticipated seeing a new act in concert this much in years and Mattson did not disappoint. He
prowled out of the wings like a cat and it was immediately clear he had presence to spare. Mattson wouldnot stand at the mike and declaim songs with the faux modest demeanor of a folkie. He is a performerand presumably years of dealing with rowdy crowds in bars has paid off. The stage was filled with fiveguitars standing in a row on one side (electric and acoustic, each tuned in a different manner) and a pianoon the other he assayed once or twice. Mattson soaked up the applause, somehow managing to lookgenuinely touched and as if it were his due at the same time.
He immediately launched into "To Just Grow Away," the opening track of his new album, and we wereMOST POPULAR ON HUFFPOST 1 of 2
Chipotle Busted For Cheating
Customers Out Of Pennies
Republican Attendees Thrown
Out After Racist Attack On
CNN Worker
RPatz Agrees To Meet KStew
But Is Selling Their Home
MAP: Hurricane Isaac's Path
Aims For Gulf Coast
PHOTO: The Queen Rolls In A
Range Rover Wearing A
Hoodie
Deaf Boy Asked To Make
Controversial Change (VIDEO)FOLLOW USCelebrity TV Political Hollywood Features Hollywood Buzz Videos
Help Us Write 'The Words'
Quick Read | Comments (27) | 08.20.2012August 29, 2012
Edition: U.S.
FRONT PAGE POLITICS BUSINESS MEDIA CELEBRITY TV COMEDY FOOD STYLE ARTS BOOKS LIVE ALL SECTIONS
Bill Moyers Dean Baker
John Hillcoat Bobby BowdenHOT ON THE BLOG
HuffPost Social Reading
Like 102
Posted: 06/21/2012 2:39 pm
SHARE THIS STORY
Submit this storySPONSOR GENERATED POST
Like 1k
Like 11k
Like 76
Recommend 278
Like 1k
Like 4kThe Avengers Political Hollywood Electronic Dance Music One Direction More Log in Create Account
off. Mattson's voice boomed and swooped throughout Town Hall, merging perfectly with his guitar. He
played with aplomb, easily navigating the annoying whoops of audience members who think any quiet
moment is the perfect chance to belt out their approval. There isn't an artist alive who wants people to
bellow and shout while they're performing -- they're onstage for a reason -- but still yahoos think they
must be heard. It was literally one of the most annoying crowds in memory. Kids constantly brandished
cell phones to take pictures because of course if you're not recording an event it hasn't really happened.
Guards roamed the aisles with flashlights, repeatedly getting people to desist. It was a shame they didn't
flash the face of the schmuck five rows behind me who spent the entire show shouting out "Ridiculous!"
at the top of his voice after every musical passage and then mocking the people around him who weretrying to listen by saying, "It's a concert!" Yes, but not a Bon Jovi concert at a football stadium.
I was thoroughly impressed by Mattson's poise throughout. He has the showman's gift for knowing how
to ride the wave of audience emotion, pausing just long enough on a held note before launching intoanother passage or raising his vocals a notch to quiet the chatter. Interestingly, his two forays onto thepiano silenced the crowd almost completely. Why does acoustic guitar equal rowdy banter but a pianorelative silence? At the end of his first piano number, he pointedly said, "Thank you for listening." The
yahoo behind me didn't get the message.
None of those distractions prevented Mattson's performance from being memorable. Song after song
tumbled out of him, including many of the songs on his new album, like upbeat peak "1904" (Mattson
had a playful time with his enunciation on that one) to crowd favorite "King Of Spain," heard here on a
live performance on the UK show hosted by Jools Holland. (I couldn't find a live performance or video ofsongs from his new album but you can hear more of his work on his MySpace page .)
What I was most impressed by after the sheer songwriting talent, singing and playing was his assuredpresence. Mattson displayed a wry wit and self-awareness that was striking and funny and whollyentertaining. In the middle of one number, he would suddenly fall into a chair placed towards the back ofthe stage almost as if he'd just discovered it for the first time. A photographer taking a picture became amoment of weird discovery as if he was puzzled to realize people were watching him. He'd wipe his facewith a towel and then toss it away with mock disdain. When he used a pick, Mattson invariably tossed itaside in anger at the end of each number in a bit that became more amusing every time. This is an artistwith real presence and one you immediately sense you'll be seeing again in concert five years, ten year,twenty years from now.
And of course at the heart of it are the songs. It's easy and true to tag Mattson with the Dylan-esque tag.
But this isn't the Dylan of worldly affairs, but the romantic, funny Dylan, the one who can savor love butknows it's slipping away even as he's enjoying it. Mattson's wife Amanda Bergman performs under thename Idiot Wind, just to make the Dylan reference complete and she joined him on the final number,"Thrown Right On Me" (from his most recent EP Sometimes The Blues Is Just A Passing Bird ). Their
voices blended beautifully.
His new album There's No Leaving Now is a step forward sonically. Where his first two albums --
Shallow Grave and The Wild Hunt -- featured simply Mattson and his guitar, the new record features
just a tad more instrumentation and the occasional double tracking so Mattson can accompany himself.
Drums, clarinet and the like all make an appearance, but it's a modest one. It's still essentially Mattsonalone with his powerful, growling voice that can soothe and command and plead in equal measure. Andthat's what we found onstage, a man who can fill a hall with his voice and guitar and stop your heart.
I haven't lived with the new album enough yet but it will certainly be on my best of the year list. I tend to
recommend Dylan fans start with The Wild Hunt but you can't go wrong wherever you start. Because I
GOP Approves Abortion Ban
Isaac Balloons Into A
Hurricane, New Orleans
Threatened
Limbaugh's Wild Isaac
Conspiracy
DON'T MISS HUFFPOST BLOGGERS 1 of 5
Bill Moyers
WATCH: Both Parties Give
Invisible Americans the Silent
Treatment
Dean Baker
Poverty: The New Growth Industry
in America
TOP VIDEO PICKS 1 of 8
MOST DISCUSSED RIGHT NOW 1 of 2
HOT ON FACEBOOK 1 of 3Recommend 9k
Recommend 693
Like 7k
First Video of Snooki With Her
New Baby Boy
First Look at Snooki's Baby
Boy
Cocaine Reportedly UsedDuring Prince Harry's Naked
Vegas Party
13 Movies That Changed
The Way We View Poverty
Why We Aren't Playing at
the RNC
Madonna's Message For
Americans: 'Don't Get Fat
And Lazy'
WATCH: Raging Grannies
Have Some Words For
Todd Akin
FOLLOW ENTERTAINMENT
Mining the Audio
Motherlode, Volume
178 --...
Guns N' Roses
Slash Once Caught
David...
Samuel L. Jackson:
'Unfair' Hurricane
Isaac Avoid...
Robin Williams As
Dwight D.
Eisenhower In...know after a few listens you'll buy both other albums and then the EPs and then start wondering when
The Tallest Man On Earth will be coming to your town. Don't miss him if you get the chance. If you canhear a performance like this and not want to hear more, why then, we've got nothing to say to each other.
Thanks for reading. Michael Giltz is the cohost of Showbiz Sandbox , a weekly pop culture podcast that
reveals the industry take on entertainment news of the day and features top journalists and opinion
makers as guests. It's available for free on iTunes. Visit Michael Giltz at his website and his daily blog.
Download his podcast of celebrity interviews and his radio show, also called Popsurfing and also
available for free on iTunes. Link to him on Netflix and gain access to thousands of ratings and reviews.
Note : Michael Giltz is provided with free tickets to shows with the understanding that he will be
writing a review. He also received a free copy of the album.
Follow Michael Giltz on Twitter: www.twitter.com/michaelgiltz
Read more from Huffington Post bloggers:
Cliff Chenfeld: The Best Music of 2011
Just in time for the holidays, here is my 9th annual list of music that you may have missed and mightlike. Not as many standout releases for me in 2011 but plenty of good ones.
More in Entertainment...
HOT ON TWITTER 1 of 2
HUFFPOST'S BIG NEWS PAGES
Celebrity
babies
Heroes
iPhone
Environment
News and
Trends
Rob Shuter
James Holmes
The
Kardashians
Mitt Romney
MORE BIG NEWS PAGES »
Recency | Popularity
jjc7550Like 75k GET ALERTS
Comments 12 Pending Comments 0 View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
ricky_martin
RetweetMake Room for (the New) Daddy
http://t.co/Q6eIDokm via
@huffingtonpost
feliciaday
RetweetThink on it: Cambridge scientists
say all mammals, birds, many
others including octopi, have
human-like consciousness.
http://t.co/aF6W2ZQh
01:10 PM on 06/27/2012
You guys are little hipsters who cannot stand people who enjoy a show. i wasnt at the show (wish i
was), but whats wrong with people enjoying a show and/or trying to take pictures? Musicians fix my
guitars, perfromers perform for an audience. Get over it, and have fun. There are plenty of artisits
that encourage an audience, how are people suppose to tell the difference??
03:52 PM on 06/28/2012
How did you know I'm short? Anyway, every artist and every style of music and everyvenue has their own way of presenting and appreciating music. Just like every sporting
event: you keep quiet during points at a tennis match (usually, though an "ooh" and "gasp"
are fine at big moments) and you make a continuous wall of sound at American football. In
the same way, you shut the hell up during classical music but are encouraged to offer aburst of applause after a solo in a jazz concert or exclamations of pleasure at a gospelshow. If you're at a Bruce Springsteen concert at madison Square Garden, everyone will
clap and sing along. If you're lucky enough to see Springsteen in a tiny club doing an
acoustic set chances are most everyone will be hushed and quiet during most songs. What
I cannot stand are people with no consideration for anyone around them. When
EVERYONE else is listening in rapt quiet maybe someone could show a little considerationfor everyone around them. The schmuck at the show I saw felt obliged to shout out duringvirtually every quiet moment and he was the only one out of thousands doing so. As forphotos, it's explicitly forbidden and security roams the aisle telling people to stop or kickthem out. I just feel sorry for people who are too impatient to simply watch and enjoy a
performance.
03:54 PM on 06/28/2012
PS How are people supposed to tell the difference? Look around you. When you're almost
alone in acting a certain way at a show, chances are you shouldn't be doing whateveryou're doing. If everyone is clapping and singing along, by gosh join in. If everyone is being
quiet (especially DURING a song), then get clued in. It's not hard to figure out.
08:50 PM on 06/29/2012
I agree with some of your points but come on MG. TTMOE is NOT classical music.
He is indie folk, and maybe if people enjoyed his shows more often, he would havesold more albums. Ryan Adams has the resume to do such things, and he does.
Kristian has a long way to go before he gets in that category. I have been to a
number of acoustic, raw, shows and it's a mixed bag. Half the people lovespeaking out, and the other half hate it. And the other half that hate, mostly justwished they voiced themselves a bit more, they are just to shy to do so.
09:00 PM on 06/29/2012
Furthermore, that classical music venue is filled with 40-100year olds in tuxs.TTMOE shows have 18-35year old fan base wearing shorts and t-shirts. APPEALTO THE FANBASE!!!! You know this!
11:40 AM on 06/24/2012
when I heard "The Wild Hunt" last year it immediately became my favorite album of the year. Noone is doing folk as good as Tallest Man, he has it perfected. I am so excited to see him nextmonth.Permalink | Share it
HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Michael Giltz
freelance writer
Permalink | Share it
HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Michael Giltz
freelance writer
Permalink | Share it
jjc7550
Permalink | Share it
jjc7550
Permalink | Share it
Jacob Crim0 Fans
127 Fans
127 Fans
0 Fans
0 Fans
2 Fans
06:11 AM on 06/22/2012
Never heard of him and now I wish it hadn't.
11:51 AM on 06/23/2012
Glad I saved you the cost of a CD!
03:48 PM on 06/23/2012
Wouldn't have bought this hipster junk anyway, but thanks for the thought, zippy!
There are More Comments on this Thread. Click Here To See them All
03:43 PM on 06/21/2012
I was at this show and couldnt agree more with your summary of the absolute imbeciles in the
audience.
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