Spoon Review: The Line Between Musician and Rockstar

by | Mar 12, 2018 | MUSIC

As fans converged upon The National last week to see Texas rock outfit Spoon, lines began to form around the corner of the block. Instead of Richmond’s pseudo-bohemian regulars, the audience was comprised of veteran fans- an older crowd engrossed with nostalgia. The band hadn’t been back to Richmond in seven years, and with a playful, but an uncoordinated attempt by the openers, expectations were high.

When I think of Spoon, several reservations come to mind. Romantic comedies, happily ever after, Paul Rudd. Would they simply play The Underdog on repeat? It’s fair to say that despite maintaining consistent commercial success, Spoon has struggled, more than most, in establishing their own sound. With a sound resonating with early 2000s contemporary rock, it’s easy to lose the group in the mix. At least that is what I thought of the band before the show.

You think you know a band until you see them live. Last Wednesday, Vocalist/Guitarist Britt Daniel and his crew executed a stellar performance from start to finish. Even after 19 years in a competitive market, Spoon doesn’t show any signs of slowing their ambition. While many bands begin their first steps towards complacency and fall into the reunion circuit, Spoon has continued to carve out its own sound, bouncing from previous endeavors with a live performance that is vicarious and all feel.

Even with a crowd as notoriously stiff as the head knobbing elites of Richmond, every song filled the air and chipped away at the stakes by our feet. While many acts usually try their hand at anecdotes between sets, drummer Jim Eno and bassist Rob Pope stretched each riff, stuffing the spaces between line breaks, yet stopping on a dime with near perfection.

Their performance is parallel to their newest release, Hot Thoughts, Spoon’s ninth album, another stellar mark to the band in full stride despite their 19-year reign over the rock world, this time combining the influences of funky electronics and new wave antics, ditching the guitar for keyboard galore and a tempo that Martha Reeves could appreciate.

Their success a testament to their work ethic, their public image- relatively low-key. While rockstars parade the corners of their bandstand, Spoon is electrified yet channeled, Daniel scans the crowd with reciprocity, each line an exchange for their diligence. And to think, my previous concern writing this piece was how to play up a one-hit wonder. You think you know a band until you see them live.

Music Sponsored By Graduate Richmond

Photos By: John Donegan 

John Donegan

John Donegan




more in music

Photos | TsuShiMaMiRe, Tear Dungeon, Steelboy at Get Tight Lounge

Japanese art-punk trio TsuShiMaMiRe brought their long-running experiment in sound and spectacle to Get Tight Lounge last week. Formed in 1999 in Chiba, Japan, the group has carved out a global cult following with music that darts between jagged punk riffs, bursts of...

Deau Eyes’ Tour De Richmond is a Love Letter to the City

Deau Eyes continues on her Tour de Richmond with headline show tomorrow night at The Camel. Richmond native and indie rock troubadour, Ali Thibodeau, also known as Deau Eyes, has been making the rounds this month with a city-wide musical celebration called Tour de...

SALON DE RÉSISTANCE | The Death of Science in America?

Dispatch number two: The State of Science in 2025 Join us for Salon de Résistance on September 25 at Black Iris for a conversation about science in America. Scientific progress shouldn't be optional. From vaccines and clean energy to space exploration and evolutionary...

Photos | Sierra Ferrell and Nikki Lane Bring Americana to Richmond

Sierra Ferrell took over Brown’s Island earlier this week, transforming Richmond’s riverfront into fantasy. Surrounded by oversized mushrooms, flowers, and a stage dressed like an Appalachian fever dream, Ferrell delivered a set that moved easily from honky-tonk stomp...

Salon de Résistance | A Live Interview Series From RVA Mag

"The absurd is the essential concept and the first truth" - Albert Camus Dispatch NUmber One: Salon de Résistance | presented by RVA Mag, Black Iris, and Le Cachet Dulcet Not long ago, salons were a catalyst for intellectual expression. Spaces where creators,...

Confederate Nostalgia, Black Voices: The Paradox of Polk Miller

Over a century ago, engineers from the Edison Company hauled their bulky recording equipment from New Jersey to Richmond, Virginia. In 1909, they captured one of the first interracial recording sessions in American history: Polk Miller, a white Confederate veteran...