Savannah Stopover 2013 Friday Recap

QRO returned to Savannah Stopover for a full Friday....
Savanah Stopover 2013 Friday Recap

Savanah Stopover 2013 Friday Recap

What makes Savannah Stopover different?  For one thing, bands are given a place to stay with community volunteers during the festival, so hotels aren’t an issue.  The small city has easy access to main highways in and out of town and the Atlantic Beach is a short drive away.  Also, Dollhouse Studios holds recording sessions for Savannah Stopover bands during the day.  The studio main room is roomy enough for bands to be comfortable with a smaller room behind it for drummers that can be kept open or shut.  The recorded work is released as a compilation album representing the festival.  The sessions are loose, open to VIPs and press inside the sound booth during recording.  Artists and guests are provided with wine, beer, water, fruit and light snacks.

And QRO covered the festival, March 8-9th, in Savannah, Georgia:

 

The first full day of Savannah Stopover was held on the same day as a city running match, the ‘greening’ of the fountains for the next week’s huge St. Patrick’s Day festivities, making the small city full of people and excitement, including a small parade of green costumed revelers.

 

 

Sam Sniper @ B&D Burgers, 4:00 PM

Sam Sniper

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This Athens band chose their name ‘Sam Sniper’ because of its catchiness and consisted of two old friends who had played together for over ten years, Andrew Klein and Chris Barnett, who quit fighting over which type of music to make and decided to make all the genres of their interest – rock, blues, country, honky-tonk, and pop.  Their set started with an alt-rock song about Atlanta with Barnett, a tenor, on vocals and electric guitar and Klein, a baritone on vocals and acoustic guitar.  Barnett played lead guitar with varied styles from standard rock to hard rock riffs to funky leads.  Klein later switched to a decorated electric and switched back and forth with Barnett on lead and backing vocals.  Completing the harmonies was the drummer, Bill Bacon, on most as well as the bass player, Nick Mallis, on a few.  Their best song was their closer, “The Best of Me”, from their 2011 CD release.  They are recording for a new release in August or September 2013.

Sam Sniper

 

Filligar @ B&D Burgers, 5:00 PM

Filligar

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Filligar, a three-brother and childhood friend band from Chicago, created soulful boogie-woogie and heavy rock music on guitar, bass, drums and keyboards, respectively.  The singer-guitarist and bass player alternated tempos while the keyboards were typically fast and the drums pronounced.  Harmonies included the lead singer, keyboardist and sometimes bassist.  Styles became varied throughout the set.  One song had Native American rhythms while another started with stair stepped harmonies and became a quirky song with distorted organ and strong lead vocals.  The band did one cover song, Tom Petty’s “Swingin’”.

Filligar

 

Christopher Paul Stelling @ Sparetime, 6:00 PM

Christopher Paul Stelling

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Christopher Paul Stelling began by charming the audience with a story about listening to the audiobook of Old Man and The Sea on the way from Richmond, Virginia that morning and being so tired that he did not know which character he was, and passing the exit for Savannah, then turning around before arriving.  Luckily, he arrived in plenty of time to perform his singer-songwriter act with a lot of passion and expression, with vocal rhythms sometimes similar to Dave Matthews’ singing.  Stelling had complete control of the volume, fierceness and resonance in his voice and his acoustic classical six-string guitar, that showed loving wear, which was amplified further by playing in corner of venue.  Most of his songs were mid-tempo but some were slow enough for sing-alongs, and one was bluesy and fast.  He hand-picked and simultaneously thumped the guitar strings and body for maximum effect while many times keeping his face close to absorb the sounds and sing along with them.  All the while, he joked and conversed with the crowd between songs.

Christopher Paul Stelling

 

Royal Canoe @ Forsyth Park, 7:00 PM

Royal Canoe

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The offbeat six-piece band Royal Canoe from Winnipeg, Canada who opened the show for of Montreal started out pop, then worked their way into synth pop, then drum and bass by the end of their set.  The singer, who also played guitar or keyboards, used double distortion mic on about half the set.  There was a full-time keyboardist who was kind of the cheerleader of the band when not playing, a bass player who also played keys, a guitar player, and a percussion section consisting of a drummer and percussionist who played in precision together.  There were no audience sing-alongs because the band’s diverse melodies didn’t repeat enough to be memorized.  Royal Canoe’s harmonies and odd rhythms proved to make them a good match with of Montreal’s style and sound.

Royal Canoe

 

PUJOL @ Third Man Records Truck, 7:45 PM

PUJOL

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While the audience was milling around or just waiting on of Montreal, with no introduction, DIY garage rock/punk act PUJOL played a short but lively super low-fi 3-song set in front of Third Man Records Truck.  Daniel Pujol, the band’s leader, told the audience, between songs, PUJOL’s name, that of Montreal would play right after their set, and that they would play “a taco place” later.  Their drummer didn’t bother with a drum kit, playing snare on his knee, and it’s highly possible that the guitars and bass shared an amp, as did the singers.  The audience seemed quite receptive of their set.

Third Man Records Truck

 

of Montreal @ Forsyth Park, 8:00 PM

of Montreal

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Since Royal Canoe had a simple, rock setup, it was difficult to tell if Athens’ artsy glam band of Montreal would go for a rock set without theatrics, or a full-on theatrical set.  What they delivered was something in-between, alternating between songs with just the wildly dressed band playing under beautifully weird projections and songs which brought out the theatrical group that performs with them while Kevin Barnes, lead singer for of Montreal, interacted with them while other members of the band played behind them.  The band seemed to really do well on the large stage, making Savannah’s first show one worth waiting for, in a beautiful setting with perfect sound.  Many hit songs were played: “Suffer For Fashion”, “Heimdalsgate Like a Promethean Curse”, “Bunny Ain’t No Kind of Rider”, as well as others, “L’Age d’Or”, “Forecast Fascist Future”, and “Plastis Wafer”, where Barnes rode out onstage atop a group of people from the theatrical group who formed kind of a caterpillar.  A couple of songs couldn’t be identified, perhaps new ones.

of Montreal

 

PUJOL @ Taco Abajo, 11:30 PM

PUJOL

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Taco Abajo’s stage had a wooden pillar built in, leaving lead singer and rhythm guitarist Daniel Pujol of PUJOL in the dark except when he bobbed his head in and out of the shadows.  However, he made up for his lack of physical presence.  Pujol sang through a sore throat, creating hoarseness within the vocals that gave the high-energy garage band a major gritty edge to their act.  Pujol joked and introduced songs and friends between songs, keeping the feel of the set loose while they played the majority of their full-length United States of Being.  The set of songs included “Butterfly Knife”, “Psychic Pain”, “Reverse Vampire”, “Dark Knight in Shining Armor”, and the song that made Pujol shake his head full of black hair most… “Black Rabbit”: a potential southern punk classic with a serious hard driving beat.  “DIY2K”, a lyrical stream of consciousness song about today’s world, became more of a jam than the recorded version, and there was a new song called “Problem”.  The rest of the PUJOL band included Brett Rosenberg on lead guitar and backup vocals, Doni Shroader on drums, sometimes playing one-handed with the other stick in his mouth, and Clayton Parker on bass, who tapped his foot and bounced through the entire set.  The audience finally danced in front of stage during the last half of the set after one guy started on his own.  On the last note of the last song, Pujol took the mic in his mouth and held it until he threw it, by mouth, to the ground.

 

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