For eight hours on Saturday, I wandered around a field and
listened to music performed by old friends and other musicians I’ve heard so
many times they feel like old friends. On Sunday, I spent about eight hours
wandering social media, searching for confirmation that my experience Saturday
was as notable and unique as it felt.
Two things. One, it was. Many a Tweet and Facebook post and
big city newspaper confirmed that the Eaux Claires Music Festival was a
success, both on a technical, music line-up and fest organization level, and on
a deeper community vibe level. Second, as far as reviewers go, I’m probably not
the guy to trust. I’m biased beyond recognition, and I have little to compare
to. As I kid, I saw Kenny Rogers at a State Fair. And Weird Al Yankovic. Last
year I attended Rock Fest to see Cheap Trick, Live, and Aerosmith. And that is
the full extent of my professional outdoor music experience.
I only attended one day of Eaux Claires, because weekends
when grandma and grandpa take the kids require a broad assortment of
unencumbered activities. Friday, my wife and I read on the porch and went out
to dinner. Midafternoon Saturday, though, we took a hike down a wooded trail
and attended the big shh-bang. Social media and the big city newspapers can fill
in the specifics. The weather was warm and the food lines were long. There were
art installations and multiple stages. I had a walking taco and some cheese
curds. They were delicious.
Sufjan Stevens, photo by Joel Rasmussen |
But there was something deeper at work last weekend. Mike
Perry, author and narrator of the festival, blamed it on the rivers. Justin
Vernon cited friendship, dozens of Twitter users noted the reverential nature
of the crowd all weekend and assumed it was the setting, or the music, or that
everyone was stoned. But there definitely was something. The Indigo Girls were
a unique inclusion in the line-up, but they brought a sense of generational
connection. Sufjan Stevens told the crowd that he doesn’t play festivals
because of his agoraphobia, his fear of large crowds, which is actually another
reason I only attended one day. But when the crowd joined in singing at the end
of “Casimir Pulaski Day,” and I felt the pull of tears at the back of my throat
at the grandeur of the moment, and the song finished and Mr. Stevens said,
“That was amazing,” he felt that something deeper too.
Indigo Girls, photo by Arwen Rasmussen |
We Chippewa Valley folk tend to be very impressed with
ourselves. It is a criticism lobbed at our media and our artists and it is
something I have felt. Our city puts a park on a river, someone comes along and
starts hosting concerts there, and you would think we invented the whole idea
of outdoor music. We train some great bands at our schools, some of those band
members go off to make careers in music, maybe win some Grammys and come back to host
notable music festivals, and everyone starts looking to the water, or the
weather, or, who knows, gravitational vortexes to explain how we could be so
lucky, or so special. A few years ago, when I advised Student Council at
Memorial High School and we produced a talent show, a group of high school guys
covered a Killers’ song, and I stood in the back of the darkened theater and
knew, fundamentally and forever, that the performance was one of the greatest I
would witness.
But, come on. It was a high school cover band.
What my wife looks like at a music festival |
I can’t say if Eaux Claires was different, or why.
Authenticity is nothing that can be measured, heart and passion are elements
that are hard to account for. It is entirely possible that I loved the festival
because just about all of my current and former friends were there, and all day
was like a huge reunion without the judgment and crappy buffet. Maybe I would
have been just as impressed with Pitchfork. Maybe that walking taco was a dinner
so sublime that it will go unrecognized as the pinnacle of the experience. At
the end of his set, Justin Vernon seemed to get choked up, and much of the
crowd with him. Why the hell would he, and I, and we, go through all that work
if we didn’t impress ourselves with the product?
The internet probably doesn’t need more people raving about
Eaux Claires. Thirty-six hours after “Skinny Love,” all the gushing is becoming
cliché. But just in case the festival was something worth gushing about, I need
to join in. I had a really great day.
Great piece, Eric. Really.
ReplyDeleteThank you very much.
DeleteWell said my dear! It was a great day!
ReplyDeleteBeautifully written....spot on.
ReplyDelete