by John Wenzel on September 12, 2007

Rilo Kiley was nicer to look at than hear last night at the Ogden Theatre.
– RILO KILEY —
It makes sense that Rilo Kiley’s Tuesday-night performance at the Ogden Theatre was yawn-inducing. The band’s latest LP, “Under the Blacklight,” is a sleepy, lazy, ’70s-inspired jaunt that tries to be cute and retro-innovative… but falls flat. Of the band’s new songs, “Silver Lining” was lush and warm, and “Close Call” was tolerable. Singer Jenny Lewis’ voice is addictive and lovable, although it’s more intentional than charming when heard live…
The new “Dreamworld” and “Smoke Detector” could be trashed and never missed. The older “With Arms Outstretched” was the night’s undeniable highlight, with Lewis giving an entire chorus to the crowd — thus emulating the recorded version, which is a big Saddle Creek Records singalong.
- Ricardo Baca

Come for the anarchy, stay for the music.
– LOUIS VUITTON NIGHT –
It’s always amusing to watch anarchists come together for organized events, since the meaning of the word implies a lack of structure, or maybe just collegiate angst. Still, the Sept. 6 Louis Vuitton Night variety show at Club 404 delivered an oddly coherent slate of entertainment. Between rowdy, off-key folk songs and slow poetry-comedy readings, the best offerings were the subtler pleasures.
Nintendo Innuendo (a.k.a. Tyler Snell) brought his 8-bit video game samples to the party, green and orange Christmas lights sewn into his collared shirt. Keyboard-driven tunes like “Jonezin’” underscored the overall low-tech, DIY nature of the variety show, especially when Snell handed out a paper Louis Vuitton bag to the person who correctly answered a random Super Mario Bros. trivia question (”What super power does Mario get when he eats an orange flower?”)
- John Wenzel

Go crazy Jesus, go! Photo by 28 Deep.
– DEVENDRA BANHART –
Looking like a mix between the Manson Family and the attendees of the Last Supper, Devendra Banhart’s band looks the part. Their job is to carry out the gospel of their bandleader, Banhart. And Monday’s show at the Ogden was a shining example of why their job is one of the most important outings in music.
Banhart’s music hardly walks a thin line. It straddles multiple subgenres like a game of Twister, and he switches effortlessly from Latin to anti-folk to straight-ahead pop to indie rock to hippie-jam. And it works. Monday’s highlight was a poignant and lovable “At the Hop” and a righteous “Seahorse” that worked itself into a frenzy that sounded like Jim Morrison fronting Crazy Horse (see more photos from the show here).
- Ricardo Baca

It would be easy to make a joke about the singer actually being deaf, but I won’t do it. Oops.
– DEF LEPPARD —
Bands take a risk when they continue playing past their prime, exposing flaws formerly obscured by vigor, good looks or sweet haircuts out of “Labyrinth.” Def Leppard’s set at Coors Amphitheatre on Sunday took that plunge and never quite resurfaced.
Despite the British hard-rock band’s kinship with its over-the-top peers, it wrote some seriously rockin’ songs, owning huge chunks radio in the ’80s with tunes like “Photograph,” “Love Bites” and “Pour Some Sugar on Me.” Each of those showed up in the band’s set Sunday, but they felt both bilious and withered, due alternately to indulgent soloing and singer Joe Elliott’s completely shot voice. The band should have taken a cue from openers Foreigner and replaced the weak members with clones of their glory-day selves.
- John Wenzel

Do you recognize any of these gents? We had a hard time.
– THE SUGARHILL GANG –
The band started as a novelty act, and even now, nearly three decades after forming, it remains a novelty act.
The Sugarhill Gang played the Gothic Sept. 6, and while it was a fun, nostalgic show, it was hardly legitimate. It was difficult to discern if any of the original members — Master Gee and Wonder Mike included — are actually a part of this tour. The MCs’ talents were questionable, and the show was as bare-bones as it gets — even in hip-hop.
“Rappers Delight” was, of course, the big crowd pleaser. “Apache” was also a banger, but it was also a reminder that this group was more valid in the late ’70s.
- Ricardo Baca
