Show Review + Photos + Setlist: Edward Sharpe & The Magnetic Zeros at the Pageant, Monday, June 14
| photos by Keegan Hamilton |
| Alexander "Edward Sharpe" Ebert and Jade Castrinos: at home together. |
The first one is about his therapist father, who told him as a five-year-old that someday he would die. "After that," he says with a morose chuckle, "my life was pretty fucked up for about the next 20 years."
Jade, his girlfriend and co-leader of the band, resembles a brunette version of Amanda Plummer's Honey Bunny character from Pulp Fiction. She's wearing a white t-shirt with the with the words "Love is all I am," handwritten in magic marker on the front.
"Alexander," she says gently into the microphone. "Remember Mexico. All life is eternal."
And just like that he snaps out of his funk.
The drummer launches into a timpani roll and the guitarist strikes the opening chords to "Up From Below," Ebert's cathartic ballad that compares his recovery from addiction to reincarnation. "I've already suffered," he sings on the chorus, "I want you to know God/ I'm ridin' on Hell's hot flames comin up from below."
| Ed Sharpe's ecclectic symphony makes pretty noises. |
Most of their songs follow the same winning formula and this one is no different. It builds and builds and builds, gets quiet at the bridge and then swells back up like a huge breaker of a wave that crests in crescendo and fades out with multi-part vocal harmonies
All this would seem awfully heavy and spiritual -- like everyone should be offered a cup of spiked ceremonial Kool-Aid just before the encore -- if Ebert and company weren't having so much damn fun while they were doing it.
| Alex Ebert dances like Rain Man crossed with Michael Jackson. |
With apologies to fiddle-playing St. Louis native Nathaniel Markman, the band member that stood out the most was Stewart Cole, a jack-of-all-trades who played everything from the ukelele to a handheld keyboard/sythesizer hooked up to a MacBook. He absolutely killed the trumpet solo on "Home," and added a twist with a battered-looking baritone horn that he later said he "just bought down the road today for $15."
On "Om Nashi Me" the members of the opening act Dawes came out (for a grand total of fifteen people on stage) to play all manner of shakers, rattles and tambourines. Ebert led the chanting chorus "Om nashi me, I will love you forever" until it was just a repeated incantation of "ommmm" with no backing music. Then the everyone in the band clapped frantically and the song came surging back with a trumpet solo and a booming wall of sound. Ebert rolled around on the stage in ecstasy and during the fade out he just slumped on his knees, his head bobbing gently.
| Ebert asked the crowd to sit with him while he sang "Brother" |
Ebert sang the song softly, amid almost total silence from the audience pressed up against him. It was beautiful and somber and no pitchers of Kool-Aid were passed around, though by then everyone probably would have taken a swig if it was offered to them.
Setlist
1. Up From Below
2. Janglin'
3. Carries On
4, Black Water
5. ?
6. Happy Birthday
7. 40 Day Dream
8. Come in Please
9. Desert Song
10. Home
11. Simplest Love
12. Om Nashi Me
13. ? (New song)
14. Brother





























