Check out both parts
Concert Wrap : Rooney April 26 Greek Theater
There is always an encore. Or, almost always.
There wasn’t one at a Monday night concert at the Greek Theater on the University of Arkansas campus featuring Rooney, and that should tell you something.
For an night in late April, it was unseasonable cool for any outdoor event that didn’t involve a bonfire, the kind of night that made you wish you had a blanket tucked away in the trunk of your car.Rooney may have brought some California with them in their pop rock tunes, but they did little to heat up the night.They didn’t do anything wrong, of course, or particularly poorly. But they didn’t transcend the evening, either, and by the time the band had played their last promised song, the crowd was running for the exits. I’m not sure if they band was willing to play that encore, but the crowd didn’t give them any chance.In a set that last just more than an hour, the group tore through a set of pop rock numbers that drew from early records and a forthcoming disc, “Eureka,” alike.But the band knew which songs to play when, kicking off the evening with an early hit “Blueside” and closing it with what are arguably their two biggest hits: “Shakin’” and “When Did Your Heart Go Missing.”
By the time the last chord had finished ringing on that song, the crowd was already waving goodbye.It’s hard to place fault. The band was solid, especially guitarist Taylor Locke, who blistered through several tastefully short solos.But the band also never reached critical mass, something that was going to be hard to accomplish considering that only 500 or so braved the cold and the UA’s finals week to see the free show.Instead, they sang their songs, the crowd cheered for the few songs they knew and then tore off for someplace warm.
A note about the openers: Goose, a local band, served as the opening act. They sounded a lot like O.A.R. in having a shimmering acoustic guitar sounds with a loose reggae beat. The band didn’t cover O.A.R., but they did cover a lot of other groups, Michael Jackson, Stevie Wonder and John Mayer among them.
Rooney setlist: 1) Blueside; 2) If It Were Up To Me; 3) Don’t Come Around Again; 4) I Don’t Want To Lose You; 5) Daisy Duke; 6) I Can’t Get Enough; 7) You Got Me Paralyzed;
Are You Afraid?; 9) Losing All Control; 10) Not Sure of the Title; 11) Sorry Sorry; 12) Suckceed; 13) I Should Have Been After You; 14) When Did Your Heart Go Missing?; 15) Shakin’
Credit : NWATunedIn.com
PART 2
An (unexpected) enlightening conversation with Rooney
Writing for a newspaper is rarely a dull endeavor. We interview different subjects each week as our story topics change. There is no shortage of interesting people with strange stories to tell. Entire stories simply fall through. We are trained to expect the unexpected.
Even then, we get surprised sometimes.
Like when I picked up my phone Tuesday afternoon and Robert Schwartzman, the lead singer of Rooney, was on the other end of the line.
He’d read my recent review of his band’s concert on April 26 at the Greek Theater and had a couple of things he wanted to tell me about it.
Musicians calling critics out of the blue can be a prickly affair, to say the least, and no journalist I know wants to field a call from someone like, say, Ryan Adams [caution: lots of super strongly-worded foul language in the link].
Instead, my chat with Schwartzman was a pleasant, informative one, although he wanted to call my attention to a couple things I had said.
I had questioned why there was no encore. Was it because the crowd was leaving? Was it because the band wasn’t enthused with the relatively low turnout or hampered by the cold?
None of the above, Schwartzman tells me. Rooney was contracted for a certain time limit, and his band had squeezed in all the songs they wanted to play in that chunk of time. No encore was planned, and the cold didn’t chill their enthusiasm, he says.
I also talked about the exodus of fans after the show’s final notes. There was a crowd leaving, and I know that because I was among them and followed plenty of folks out.
But, Schwartzman says, there were plenty who stayed around for autographs, and the band spent the time to sign everything handed their way.
I stick behind what I wrote. I think it was an accurate representation of the show, especially in my main point: “The band was solid … but the band also never reached critical mass, something that was going to be hard to accomplish considering that only 500 or so braved the cold and the UA’s finals week to see the free show.”
But naturally, those are one-sided interpretations. Sometimes, I miss things, and it appears there was more going on than I caught at first glance in this case.
It’s extraordinarily rare to get the chance to chat with musicians after a show, and they certainly see things on a different level than those in the stands do.
Schwartzman was worried he wouldn’t get to play because of rain showers that persisted all day. He said the Greek Theater may have been the largest stage (physically speaking) he had ever played on in his life, and he said it challenged his band because of the wide physical gap between the stage and the musicians.
He said he enjoyed his time in Fayetteville, and talked about all the times Rooney will play around here this summer (Tulsa, Columbia, Mo., Little Rock) with the hope of a nicer, warmer, sunnier night, which would be a little more appropriate for their sunny pop rock tunes.
Surprises sure make things interesting. And in this case, it served as a nice reminder that we don’t write in a vacuum.
People are always reading. Sometimes, even those you don’t suspect.
Credit : NWATunedIn.com
THANK YOU to lhiggins3 for informing me about this










