Saturday, June 25, 2011 ; Brandon Caulfield Live Review
Live From The Ambassador Auditorium, Pasadena, California, USA
As I arrived at the venue, I have to admit I was unsure as to what to expect, my knowledge of Mr. Caulfield was rather minimal, of course I was aware of him being selected to front the legendary rockers The Bards for a limited period recently, but as a solo artist … well to be frank, I had no idea, I had heard stories that he was a little too intense as a live performer and that his shows had way too much focus on emotion and feeling, I personally believe that a concert should be fun and enjoyable and have the ability to make you smile, but the fact that this guy seemingly wants his audience to leave with tears in their eyes had me feeling very sceptical. However I was pleasantly surprised by his buoyant nature.
The man stepped out onstage with an acoustic guitar, and the place went pretty silent as he made his way over to the microphone stand at the centre of the stage, you could hear a pin drop in the audience and I was pretty certain that we were in for an emotional rollercoaster, that is until a guy from the back of the venue shouted, “How’s It Going, Brandon?.” to which end the singer looked into the direction the voice came from and smiled, he whispered with a tinge of humour, “Come on dude, don’t make me more nervous.” the audience started chuckling in small ripples before Caulfield began to play his guitar, he launched himself into a highly energetic rendition of his own, Patience And Grace which is quickly followed by a slower and more emotional rendition of Until Your Nothing which laments the loss of a close friend.
He paused briefly to introduce the next song, “You know you in for a tough night when you go through your list of songs and find a depressing mix of losing love, feeling pain and losing a child … This is Into The Wild.” He performs the song with an unexpected feeling of humour and joy as he quickly powers through two more songs in quick succession with the love instead of war anthem Busking On The Gaza Strip and slightly uplifting, The Sky Is The Limit. As he finishes the song, he takes a quick drink of water and pauses before introducing the next song.
“Are you guys enjoying yourselves so far?” he pauses as the crowd cheer and as the cheers die down, one solitary voice is heard, “I love you man” Brandon laughs and says, “Thanks man, I like you.” he pauses briefly and then continues, “But only as a friend.” the audience laugh and he introduces the next song. “I wrote this song a couple of days ago so please bare with me, It’s called, Bedouins And Fireflies.” the crowd cheer at the thought of hearing a new song before anybody else and it gets a pretty good reaction, it’s a lot more rock influenced than some of his previous stuff but it’s lyrics are full of bizarre phrasings and words which shouldn’t ordinarily fit into a song.
The next three songs, Footprints Of My Soul, A Whiskey And A Smile and Follow My Ghost, were much more softer and emotional, Caulfield showed exactly why he has a reputation and it’s pretty clear that his talent is just being very quiet and sad. However those songs were a treat as they tugged at our heartstrings, but a whole show full of those kind of songs would be a little too much emotion to deal with but he has managed to mix the sad emotional songs well with more of a joyous and entertaining performance than I would have expected.
His final two songs were quite surprisingly, cover versions. First up Bob Dylan’s song about allowing your love to leave you, Don’t Think Twice, It’s Alright, quickly followed by Ben E. King’s classic love song, Stand By Me. The audience seemed to enjoy it however unexpected it was to hear those songs included in the Setlist. As those songs finish, Caulfield thanks the audience and takes a bow, before leaving the stage, the crowd cheered and hollered until the man returned, he thanked the audience once more. “Thank you, I’m not so used to encore’s. So here we go.”
He played three final songs for us, All of which appeared on his second record, Into The Wild Part II. After the first of the final three song, What Side Are You On? He spoke to the audience, “I hope this hasn’t been too difficult for you guys and I hope you were suitably entertained, thanks for listening. This is called Finding Meaning.” And with that, he powered through the final two songs of the show as Finding Meaning was quickly followed by If I Said I Loved You Would You Hold It Against Me. He took another bow as the crowd cheered and he thanked them once more.
I left the show quite surprised at the mix of music on show tonight, despite most of the lyrics being pretty depressing and sad, Caulfield managed to put an energetic spin on things and kept the relatively small audience entertained throughout the show. I’d be more than happy to see more concerts from this every growing indie rocker. Hopefully he’ll continue to do this for a long time, because it works perfectly.
SETLIST
Patience & Grace
Until Your Nothing
Into The Wild
Busking On The Gaza Strip
The Sky Is The Limit
Bedouins & Fireflies [New Song]
Footprints Of My Soul
A Whiskey And A Smile, Hides My Sorrow For A While
Follow My Ghost
Don’t Think Twice, It’s Alright (Bob Dylan Cover)
Stand By Me (Ben E. King Cover)
ENCORE
What Side Are You On?
Finding Meaning (Running Down A Dream)
If I Said I Loved You Would You Hold It Against Me
OOC: I wrote this pretty quickly so it's probably not so good, also there's one more thing for Brandon which will be posted on Culture Uncut in minutes.
Edited by user 27 June 2011 19:11:55(UTC)
| Reason: Not specified