Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros – Live at the Hammer Museum

Ryan McGinley, from "Sun and Health"
Los Angeles, July 23, 2009 -
The night began like most others in L.A.; we sat in traffic. My friend Krystof was trying to figure out why his iPhone didn’t sound right playing through my car speakers. I wasn’t paying too much attention – I was busy checking my work e-mail on my phone while driving and attempting to explain a lecture I’d been listening to during my morning commute on the nature of memory by some guy named John Steele (a random Pirate Bay download). Little did I know how prophetic it would turn out to be. From Wikipedia, “While his work is often closely related to the psychology of fragrance, in talks and writings Steele also explores Buddhism, Vedic culture, the great yugas, geomancy and geomantic amnesia, geobiology, time out of balance, shamanism, the effects of geological formations on human consciousness, cross state retention, and the importance of sacred sites and spaces.” That could easily be a review of the new Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros record.
Part of a fashionable non-movement of “Hippiesters”, Edward Sharpe is a collection of ex-hipsters who have seemingly become spiritually enlightened, which only time will prove or disprove. If you’ve ever attended Agape church in Los Angeles – and if you’re plugged in to celebrity culture at all you’ve heard of it – then you’ll know the vibe (by the way, the “church” is very much worth going to at least once – http://www.agapelive.com/). There are lots of people in hippy-like fashionable garb driving home in Mercedes, Bentleys and on custom Harleys.
The band is fronted by Alex Ebert, of Ima Robot, and consists of members of various L.A.-based bands. It also has a former American Apparel chick Jade Castrinos…but I haven’t been able to confirm any American Apparel photos, just that she worked for them and was a fixture of the LA hipster scene of the mid-2000′s. But why all this background for a show review? That’s part of the deal, are they for real or not? Perhaps the suspicion arises because of the fact that Alex Ebert used to wear eyeshadow, or the connection to major Hollywood stars, or the fact that there were about a hundred onlookers behind the stage all wearing extremely expensive clothes and not dancing. Whatever the case the music is fun, a lot of fun, and that’s probably why at the end of the day none of the “why” actually matters. And to see it relatively new, before the flood, was a treat.
I won’t speak about the opening band Eskimo Hunter, it isn’t fair to them. I wasn’t there to see a cross between My Bloody Valentine and whatever else they are supposed to be so after doing my best to get into them I spent the rest of their set checking out the strange mix of people that Edward Sharpe had brought out. There were raver kids, hipsters, hippies, bro’s, adults, film industry people and an unusually large amount of high-school kids, which might have something to do with the Alex Ebert/Ima Robot connection. The place was packed – people were everywhere – but because of our connection with Capt. AKAK we were able to get right up next to the stage.
Once the one-man sound crew began setting up for Edward Sharpe you could see how fucking cool this show was going to be – piano, tambourine, a xylophone, an accordion, a trumpet, synths, 2 guitars, bongos, drums and several vocal mics. After a long time – there was one guy setting up the microphones – the band came on stage, all twelve of them. They began the set with “Janglin’” a quasi sing-along that essentially defines the band – feet stomping rhythm, lyrics about spiritual redemption, and a lot of ass shaking.

Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros are if nothing else a great party band. Everyone in the group is into the music and into the feeling that it elicits in the audience – you can’t help but have fun. Any cynicism or coolness you came to the show with quickly evaporates – if you don’t believe me by the end of the show I was on the stage after someone shouted “Can we get on the stage?” and Alex said “Yes, just don’t break anything.” And I don’t do those things.
But this gets back to the question – are these guys for real? Do they mean what they’re singing about and the vibe that they put off? There is the definite feeling of a spiritual movement, of proselytizing, of doing things differently. They’re like a traveling religious show. Alex Ebert wears all white, is barefoot, and holds hands with people in the crowd while he sings. His first words to the crowd were the cryptic, “I had a paleolithic egg around my heart, I’ve broke it off.” The members of the band look at you in the eye and smile, after the show everyone in the band comes out and hangs out with the audience. Krystof was able to talk with Jade (although he couldn’t bring himself to confess his feelings for her). It’s like everyone was a member of some new-age church and decided to start a band; there’s a distinct lack of guile. At the end of the show we saw the accordion player getting picked up by her Mom.
Ryan McGinley is a New York photographer and the guy who took the photo above, you probably know who he is. When asked about his pictures he said, “My photographs are a celebration of life, fun, and the beautiful. They are a world that doesn’t exist. A fantasy in which freedom is real. There are no rules. They are of the life I wish I was living.” Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros probably fall into that category. They’re a mixture of the real and not real, of a staged experience and the authentic, they evoke possibilities beyond our own inevitable ones. And for that they point to the world we all crave.
Enjoy the pics.

Pre-Game Warm-up

Eskimo Hunters

Eskimo Hunters

Eskimo Hunters

Capt strikes again.

Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros

Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros

Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros

Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros

Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros

Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros

Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros

Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros

Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros

Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros

Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros

Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros

Hells Yes

The Crowd on Stage

The Crowd on Stage

The Crowd on Stage

The Crowd on Stage

George Pants on Stage!!

George Pants on Stage!!

Mr. Pants with Mr. Sharpe

I wonder what Krystof's heart rate is at right now
Tags: Edward Sharpe, Eskimo Hunters, Hammer Museum

July 26th, 2009 at 5:58 am
wow man i wish i was there i think ill get that record….today!!!!! your writing is immediate and excellent…..goood work pants you need to get paid for this…..
July 26th, 2009 at 11:21 pm
Pichurs?
i am the small gurl yu allowed ta go infront of yu. :3
i guess i would fit into this >>>”and unusually large amount of high-school kids, which might have something to do with the Alex Ebert/Ima Robot connection.” and yu would be correct with the Ima Robot connect!
July 27th, 2009 at 10:04 am
GP: You captured it perfectly….I wondered whether or not it was all for show or was this music something they really all believed in. I am still not sure to be honest but I do know it was a blast. Love the last paragraph seriously…
RE: bruce. I just moved into a new apartment….need an internet connection and then I will have the picture up. Go to a show at least once a week during the summer…it will keep your spirit alive.
July 27th, 2009 at 11:37 am
I saw them a while back at the Regent and had the same experience. I was pretty skeptical about the group—trying to figure out exactly what their angle was–especially knowing their hipster/american apparel/cobrasnake (the girl was a cobrasnake muse) pasts—-but once you are actually at the show and see them live—you can’t deny that they really have something cool going on. Whether or not its real or fake or they’ve been living this way their whole lives or just arrived at this place a couple of months ago—it’s kind of a beautiful thing when you see it on stage and i just wish more bands got people as frenzied and involved and uninhibited as this band does. they are kind of like an indie rock version of the musical HAIR. And I really do like HAIR. haha. Anyways, great review!
July 27th, 2009 at 12:33 pm
I checked ES&tMZ a bit ago and found their Dylanesque-hippie revivalism …uhm, ok. But I’m a tough sell when it comes to Dylanesque hippy hipster revivalism.
It should be noted I’m basing my conclusions on only 1 1/2 songs I listened to off myspazz. Bearing in mind your fine review, perhaps I should give these guys another go.
July 27th, 2009 at 12:47 pm
oR –
Check out their KCRW live video and it’ll get a little clearer (click on “watch”):
http://www.kcrw.com/music/programs/mb/mb090528edward_sharpe_and_th
“Bruce” (not oR) – that’s very cool that we saw you at a show and now you’re posting about it…it’s for real now. As Alex said at the show, “Don’t let it get weird.”
I’m glad you guys dug the review – send it around as much as you can so we can generate some traffic here at TSoS.
Love you all for real for real.
August 11th, 2009 at 1:06 pm
Sorry, replying pritty late. I had left ta Frisco nd had no internets.
!! i am attempting ta keep my spirt alive. :3haa, any showss yu would recommend?
Im planning on going ta FYF Fest. Sounds amazing :3
nd uhmm whn evrr yu gets yur internet i’d luv pichurs !
juss spent da last hour watching the video. thnk yu fer tht.
August 11th, 2009 at 2:32 pm
Octopus Project this Friday at Troubadour. Your message needs a decoder ring seriously. I should have the pictures up by tonight. Stay classy.
August 13th, 2009 at 6:46 pm
I think Bruce. is drunk…but that’s probably a good thing.
Go to the Sunset Junction Street Fair and see Built to Spill.
August 13th, 2009 at 11:01 pm
Pictures are finally up….sorry it took so long.
August 15th, 2009 at 1:22 pm
Thanks for the photos…that was a good show.
December 14th, 2009 at 5:11 pm
Great pics! I just saw them last Friday. They were excellent.