There’s really no entity that compares to the genius of Phil Elverum. \u00a0He’s like a mythical creature or enlightened being from another planet. \u00a0He’s been actively making music and art for nearly fifteen years under a variety of monikers, with common threads and motifs connecting each project to the next. \u00a0His soft, cooing voice sounds bashful but the words they convey are anything but; together they form a cohesive aesthetic whether the tunes are performed as a black metal band or as stripped down acoustic melodies. \u00a0I’ve been amazed and inspired by his work for most of my adult life, finally getting to see him play live (in a glorious cathedral no less!) during Northside fest in the summer of 2011.<\/p>\n
I saw him again a few months later at le poisson rouge. \u00a0The opener both times was Nicholas Krgovich, who put out a 7″ on Phil’s record label P.W. Elverum & Sun. \u00a0This is significant because he also accompanied Phil, playing keys and synths and adding backing vocals. \u00a0The set for both shows spanned a lot of Mount Eerie material (and there really is so, so much of it) but from show to show was pretty similar. \u00a0They were both moving in their own way, although far from my dream set, or what I’d imagined a Mount Eerie set might be like after countless repeated listens to their infamous triple LP recorded live in Copenhagen.<\/p>\n
For Saturday night’s show, Brooklyn-based electronic indie pop outfit La Big Vic warmed up the crowd with bouncy set, each beat measured against swirling synths and vocals. \u00a0Their smartly crafted dream pop is sort of like waking up from a dream you just had where you were lying on the beach sunbathing but the sky was all shifting neon colors instead of the standard blue. \u00a0The majority of the crowd paid rapt attention to the attractive trio, with Toshio Masuda casually looping guitars, Emilie Friedllander bowing a violin or cooing into the microphone, and Peter Pearson manning the keys.<\/p>\n