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It seems odd to be writing any kind
of What's New with Yo La Tengo update right now, but then again if the
afternoon edition of Who Wants to Be a Millionaire is back on the air
(and it was, last time I looked) . . . I don't know how to end that sentence.
Are you reading this from anywhere near New York City? We're going to
have a little midnight madness record release party at Other Music. It'll
start around 11 pm on April 7. We'll post the details as soon as it's
all set.
We got back from our brief 4-show tour.
It seemed to go pretty well, although once again P.T. Barnum was proved
correct--You can't please all of the people all of the time. An email
correspondent writes:
"Yo La Tengo started quietly, letting us know
that they had a new album coming out in days, thus they would be playing
a lot of songs we would not know. That in itself acceptable, yet the
tone in voice was one of resignation to being stuck on a stage doing
something apparently unloved. The band plodded through song after song
as if stamping and filing at the unfulfilling desk job in the nondescript
cubicle."
Is that what it seemed like? I can say
that's 100% inaccurate in terms of discerning our state of mind. We must
have been playing pretty badly to give that impression. But there's more:
"Somewhere along the way, the Glands were thanked
for playing the opening slot. A generous yet standard gesture from the
nationally renowned headliners. Athens was then cited as a 'very
important city' for live music. Thank you, Yo La Tengo, for the
respect this city deserves. What followed, though, was reprehensible;
Yo La Tengo let it be known that it was nice to finally see a good band
come out of Athens. I couldn't believe what I had heard. Many of the
people around me at the show were local musicians. Many of the bands
they play in I see and enjoy regularly. They may not (yet or ever) have
national recognition, they may not (yet or ever) have critical acclaim,
they may not (yet or ever) appeal to Yo La Tengo, but to single handedly
dismiss them was the ultimate in disrespect."
Oh my god. You know, it's a rock cliché
to get so burned out from touring that you forget what day it is and what
city you're in. All I can say in my defense is that I was clearly so fried
from touring that I forgot all about R.E.M. and the B-52's and Pylon and
the Method Actors and Love Tractor and Neutral Milk Hotel and Vic Chestnutt
and the Bruces and . . .
"I watched as the crowd slowly thinned. Was this
comment the cause? I believe, I hope, so."
Could be. Or it could be that in our
bored, apathetic way we played for almost two hours, right through last
call.
"I stayed a little longer, hoping that the night
would be saved in some way. It was not. When I finally left after about
twenty minutes of endless indie-rock jamming, I felt that I had wasted
twenty-eight dollars of my hard earned money."
Don't most people who come to see us
know to expect at least twenty minutes of endless indie-rock jamming?
And if it's "about twenty minutes" can it really be termed "endless"?
"Worse, I felt that I had wasted a few hours
of my precious time, time that would have been much better spent lying
on the couch watching network sitcom reruns."
That is precious time.
"What will I do now? I will not buy the new Yo
La Tengo disc. I will not buy older Yo La Tengo discs that I do not
already own. I will not see another Yo La Tengo show. I will buy CDs
and see shows of the great new Athens bands who enjoy what they are
doing and appreciate the people that come out to see them. I will buy
CDs and see shows of touring acts whose rock star posturing consists
of 'Are you ready to rock, Athens, GA?' and 'Thank you, we love you,
good night,' instead of jaded rock 'stars' who could appear to care
less about their audience."
Thank you, we love you, good night.

Finally, in our photo gallery, a few of
the singers on "Nuclear War" were caught on film at last Saturday's
antiwar march in New York City. That's Leila Rosenthal on the left with
her American flag/peace combo; Isaac Hubley's in the foreground, his Bush
Is a Bum sign didn't make the photo; behind him; sneaking her arm into
the shot is Hillary Hubley, you can see some of her Drop Bush, Not Bombs
sign; and on the right, holding his Stop Operation American Empire sign
high is Max Rosenthal.

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