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John Thomason

John Thomason is the A&E editor for Salt Lake magazine’s sister publication Boca magazine in Boca Raton, Fla. Once a year, like the swallows returning to Capistrano, he joins the Salt Lake magazine music team to cover the Kilby Block Party. Back home writes reviews, previews, interviews, news reports and musings on all things arty and entertainment-y in Palm Beach, Broward and Miami-Dade counties.

Kilby Block Party Day Three Recap

By Kilby Block Party

As I reached the halfway point of Day Three of Kilby 2025, I assumed the line of the day would go to the electronic musician George Clanton, who said about Kilby, “This is the new Coachella; Coachella’s dead.” But ultimately, that honor goes to Hugo Burnham, drummer for Gang of Four, who emerged from behind his kit for the first and only time just as his band finished its explosive set. Using a crutch, Burnham walked to the front of the stage to leave us with two directives, of which few in the crowd would contest: “Be the resistance. Support live music.” And with that mic-drop moment, the best show I’d seen at Kilby so far came to a conclusion.

The appearance was part of a farewell tour for Gang of Four, the post-punk pioneers whose combination of angular rhythms, mutant-disco grooves and leftist politics galvanized a movement in late ‘70s England that still reverberates today—and, it must be said, influenced just about every band that has taken a Kilby stage, directly or indirectly.

Their show was exhilarating for every second, and I hadn’t left a Kilby set so sweaty or energized. Jon King is only the latest of this festival’s riveting, instrument-free frontmen, a theme this year following memorable sets from Future Islands and Perfume Genius. Whether crouching down, hands on his knees, and crab walking (crab hopping?) across the stage or lassoing his microphone cord in reckless bombast, King was an irrepressible force in a pale-pink button-down shirt. At one point, a member of Gang of Four’s crew lugged a heavy microwave oven onto a platform, and King proceeded to crush it into bits with a baseball bat, in time with the music, sending small pieces of shrapnel into the front section—a Gang of Four gambit dating back decades that never ceases to thrill.

Photogarphy by Natalie Simpson | Beehive Photo

Not to be outdone, recent addition Ted Leo’s guitar work, so pivotal to master, left a searing imprint on the audience, which started up a mosh pit just from one of his solos. Bassist Gail Greenwood, on loan from L7 and Belly, laid down notes thicker than motor oil, and shared King’s flair for performance. If this really is Gang of Four’s final tour, I can’t imagine a more marvelous send-off.

Of course, the day had plenty of other highlights as well, starting with Panda Bear, the solo project from the Animal Collective singer-songwriter, whose Day-Glo psychedelia really hit home, adding vibrancy to the overcast afternoon. The songs flowed together without breaks, functioning like an endless groove or a multipart symphony, and manifested as perhaps Kilby’s most cohesive merger of the analog and digital, the human and the synthetic. Panda Bear’s guitar fused with electronic squiggles reminiscent of vintage video games, samples of breaking glass and other quirky sound collages, while the hectic animations shuffling behind the band proved at once distracting and appropriate to Panda Bear’s avant-pop, which felt like surf music for a five-dimensional future.

Black Country New Road. Photo by Natalie Simpson | Beehive Photo

Black Country, New Road (BCNR), which followed Panda Bear on the Kilby Stage, entered their set to a recording of the Band’s “The Weight,” an Americana classic and the first indication that their show would be an outlier among the festival’s most common genres. Indeed, it’s difficult to classify this outfit at all. I can think of no obvious antecedent, at least for this version of BCNR, which shifted some of its gears for their 2025 release Forever Howlong following the departure of their original lead singer, Isaac Wood. This version of BCNR, at least, jettisons typical song structures, and earworms are not their forte. It’s difficult music to dance to, and seems more tailored for cerebral venues—art museums, botanical gardens—than even a big-tent music festival like Kilby.

But the result, once you clued into its wavelength, was enchanting, and patient listeners were rewarded with more instrumental color than anywhere else in the lineup, from banjo and mandolin and bowed bass to accordion, flute, recorder and saxophone—and even whistling. If headliners Weezer are a dog of a band—cuddly, eager to please, easy to love—BCNR are a bunch of cats for whose affection you need to win. By the end, I certainly felt the purr.

I spent a minute or two with Ovlov over on the Desert Stage and was taken with the Connecticut-based band’s infectious enthusiasm for being on the Kilby lineup, which singer Steve Hartlett called “surreal as f***,” adding “we are not professionals. We shouldn’t be here.” Even when Hartlett’s guitar cable malfunctioned, leading to a delay in the set, he was quick on his feet with a rejoinder: “We wanted to drop a song anyway.” Ovlov’s sludgy post-punk hit home with many—slam-dancers moshed to nearly everything, and there were so many crowd surfers that they collided while aloft—but it was the only set I encountered that was certifiably too loud, and having neglected to bring earplugs, I ducked out of it early.

Without further ado, the aforementioned Weezer constitute the biggest “name” on the Kilby lineup this year, and their goofy, high-concept “Voyage to the Blue Planet” tour did not disappoint. The show opened with a faux news report, projected on video, that introduced the plot: The members of Weezer have been called upon to embark on an interstellar voyage to a blue plant dozens of light years away. Another video followed, this one a five-minute countdown accompanied by borrowed sounds of a rocket preparing to launch, which led to yet another video, this one showing the Weezer guys dressed as NASA astronauts and striding toward the spacecraft. One impatient wag behind me, ready for the blessed beginning of live music, joked, “skip intro, skip intro!”

He wasn’t wrong: This was much ado for a rock ‘n’ roll show. Weezer finally emerged, space suits and all, opening with newer material while projected animations progressed the story. Yes, we were expected to follow the narrative as well as the music, as Weezer’s craft soared above clouds, planted a “W” flag on the moon, traversed the planets and exited the Milky Way for the final frontier, en route to what Rivers Cuomo referred to as “an important and dangerous planet,” where only the music from their debut LP, colloquially called The Blue Album, can revive its barren topography.

“Hash Pipe” saw our boys arrive at a neon space station; “Island in the Sun” was, literally, an island in the sun. At one point, an alien called Bokkus, Weezer’s green-skinned nemesis, flew in front of them in a UFO and pelted them with desserts, which damaged the ship and forced it to crash-land on the “Pinkerton Asteroid Belt,” leaving Weezer to salvage components from a desolate wasteland in order to complete their flight. It’s only fitting that material from Weezer’s most angst-ridden album was the soundtrack for their existential crisis.

Weezer. Photo by Natalie Simpson | Beehive Photo

By the time the set list finally arrived at a full-album run-through of Blue—and the band had landed at its destination, with Cuomo now dressed as Captain Kirk—I all but abandoned any concept of following this kitschy nonsense and gave in completely to the music. Our group reward was the unalloyed joy of belting “Buddy Holly,” “Surf Wax America,” “My Name is Jonas” and, of course, the greatest of all modern rock singalongs, “Say It Ain’t So,” in unison with several thousand fellow devotees. The band occasionally made reference to Salt Lake City during their set, name-dropping the famous Red Iguana in the spoken-word intro to “The Sweater Song,” after which the locals in the audience went expectedly bananas. But otherwise, the band didn’t tinker with perfection, playing the songs as they appeared on the landmark album, which recently celebrated its 30th anniversary. And if we needed to go to outer space to get there, so be it.


Read our Day One and Day Two recaps of Kilby!

Read more of our music coverage and find all our Kilby Block Party reviews. And while you’re here, subscribe and get six issues of Salt Lake magazine, your curated guide to the best of life in Utah.

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Kilby Block Party 2025: Day Two Recap

By Uncategorized

In keeping with the tradition of our Day One recap, the line of the night during day two of Kilby Block Party 2025 goes to Michael Alden Hadreas, the singer and chief creative force of Perfume Genius. Gesturing to a black chair on the stage, he said, “It’s a new chair, but I feel like I’ve developed a relationship with it. … It knows my pubic mound.”

He wasn’t kidding. A couple of songs prior, Hadreas, clad in an undersized Guess Jeans T-shirt that exposed his midriff, had straddled the chair, took it for a full-body whirl, and dipped backward, his head nearly touching the stage. It was an acting performance straight out of “Anora,” a work of sensual showmanship that found an edgy purchase amid the largely ethereal instrumentation around him.

Kilby Block Party
Perfume Genius frontman Michael Alden Hadreas. Photo by Natalie Simpson, Beehive Photography.

 Singing in a vulnerable falsetto not unlike Thom Yorke’s, Hadreas’ vocals lay atop twinkly, slow-building compositions for much of the set, with its angelic textures suited for cathedrals and caverns. But just when you think you could define Perfume Genius, the art-pop project adopted a more rocking intensity for the final three songs on the afternoon set on the Kilby Stage—from the viscous bass groove and soaring guitar of “Eye in the Wall” to the ritualistic heaviness of “My Body,” which approached the delirium of latter-day Swans, all while Hadreas’ animalistic crouches and gymnastic contortionism compelled our gaze. Having been only casually familiar with Perfume Genius’ work, I left the set a fan.


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Photography by Natalie Simpson, Beehive Photography.

The same could be said for the first act I caught on Friday, the Lemon Twigs, a retro quartet that falls decidedly outside what might be termed the “Kilby sound”—i.e., shoegazy dream-pop occupying a liminal musical space between electronic and indie rock music. The Lemon Twigs were nothing like this. From their hair—mop-topped, in the case of singer-guitarist Michael D’Addario; curly and long, in drummer Reza Matin’s style—to their preppy clothes, the Lemon Twigs are trend-buckers who look to the past, rooting their sound in the Beatles, Beach Boys, Big Star and the Everly Brothers. Like the latter, the Lemon Twigs are primarily the work of brothers Michael and Brian D’Addario, and their sibling rivalry—at least in comedic form—presented itself on the Kilby Stage more than once. Anchored by classic three-part harmony, their music is, dare I say, wholesome. And in a scene in which irony and detachment are de rigueur, their unguardedness is counterintuitively punk.

This second day at Kilby was probably better attended than the first—no surprise here, given that it falls on a weekend night—and the enormity of people moving through the Fairpark increased the difficulty of seeing every act on my wish list. I quickly (re)learned that to have a reasonable vantage point of any act at Kilby, one must show up 30 minutes in advance of the start time, and thereby forgo the second half of another artist’s set list. It’s a balancing act and a judgment call, and it prompted me to miss a couple of the buzzier bands on the lineup: Momma, who has become one of the hottest bands on the scene in the time since Kilby scheduled them, and who was sadly sequestered on the smallest stage at the festival; and Car Seat Headrest, whose turnout was even more massive.

Photography by Natalie Simpson, Beehive Photography.

But I did catch the entirety of Built to Spill, the best thing to emerge from Idaho since potatoes, and a band as reliably tasty as ice cream. The avuncular guitar god Doug Martsch reminded us once again why he’s the GOAT of modern indie rock, whether on chunky pop nuggets like “Big Dipper” or spacious, extended jams “I Would Hurt a Fly” and “Broken Chairs.” Martsch even gifted us with a deep cut in the form of “Virginia Reel Around the Fountain,” from his Halo Benders side project. Martsch, the only remaining original member of Built to Spill, has been touring as a trio since 2019, playing stripped-down versions of tunes originally composed for up to three guitars. This allowed bassist Melanie Radford to play her instrument as more of a co-lead guitar than a rhythm section. Six years into her tenure, she performed like someone who was still thrilled to be playing in Built to Spill, and her exuberance spread into the audience far and wide.

I caught most of Slowdive’s set, and would have been tempted to stay longer if I hadn’t attended their full show in my home state of Florida last November. The shoegaze legends, conceived amid the genre’s turn-of-the-‘90s heyday and resurrected in the 2010s, performed a lush set divided between both periods of the band’s evolution. The breathy vocals of Rachel Goswell and Neil Halstead arguably served a secondary function to their bandmates’ cascading maelstroms of sound. The group brought along some of the most potent video projections of any Kilby act, nearly all of them as abstract as the music itself, from pointy shapes bouncing amid the frame like vintage screen savers to spirals traveling toward an infinite void. I particularly enjoyed the tunnel leading toward an elusive pyramid inside a cube, a symbolically laden trip that would have made Stanley Kubrick proud.

Saving the best for last, I departed Slowdive early to stake out a decent position for Rilo Kiley and was rewarded with the best show of Kilby so far. It was the beloved Los Angeles quartet’s seventh performance since reuniting after 17 years of dormancy, but you wouldn’t know it from the tightness of the set. You might know it, however, from the unfettered enthusiasm emanating from the performers—the still-newness of it all, amid a level of fame the group never achieved in its original run. Having last seen Rilo Kiley in a mid-sized club on the tour for what would become their then-final studio album, I was frankly astonished at how bigger the band has grown in absentia. Now they’re playing giant stadiums and amphitheaters, and essentially served as co-headliners of Kilby’s second night; they were the only artist outside of Beach House to play against no competition.

Singer-songwriter Jenny Lewis, captivating as always in a polka-dot dress, black pumps and a well-earned tiara, led the band through material from every era. Lewis, who maintained a successful solo career after Rilo Kiley’s initial breakup, has refashioned the band into one that is ready for arenas. “Moneymaker” proved it can convulse multitudes, while this version of “I Never” was a belty anthem fit for Broadway. During the trifecta of “Silver Lining,” “With Arms Outstretched” and “A Better Son/Daughter,” I teared up during each song, surprised at the emotional wallop these songs pack now, and should have packed back when they were released, when I probably just took Rilo Kiley for granted. Never anymore.

In a rare moment of stage banter in a fast and fluidly moving set, Lewis mentioned her fondness for Kilby Court, referring to the venue as a “destination” and “sanctuary.” The days of this band playing a venue this small are evidently long gone, and I couldn’t be happier for their success.

Beach House ended the night by doing their thing of playing in the shadows of a smoky stage, and it sounded record-perfect. But after the rousing, fist-bumping, arms-outstretched euphoria of Rilo Kiley, the headliners—like the previous night’s top biller—couldn’t help but feel anticlimactic. Plus, my feet were killing me. There are many miles to go before Kilby sleeps, and our coverage continues tomorrow.


Read more of our music coverage and find all our Kilby Block Party reviews. And while you’re here, subscribe and get six issues of Salt Lake magazine, your curated guide to the best of life in Utah.

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Kilby Block Party 2025: Day One Recap

By Music

Yo La Tengo’s Ira Kaplan had the line of the night during the Kilby Block Party 2025 first-ever Thursday event, and it came before night even fell. Noting the presence of turn-of-the’80s staples New Order and Devo at the top of the bill, Kaplan, 68, then quipped, “It’s nice that Kilby is giving a young band like ourselves a shot.”

Yo La Tengo frontman Ira Kaplan. Photo by Natalie Simpson | Beehive Photo

Indeed, the alternative-music tapas of this abbreviated first night did skew older than the festival’s typical demographic, both in the talent and the audience. It was billed as a legacy night, with the four main touring acts dating back at least 20 years. (OK, 19 ½ for Future Islands, but who’s counting?) Festival organizers are considering it an experiment of sorts, and judging by the staggering turnout and rapturous reception these artists received, I’d say it’s a successful tweak to Kilby’s formula.

My evening started with Yo La Tengo, Hoboken’s finest, who opened their set at the Lake Stage with the screeching feedback and blissed-out noise of “Big Day Coming” and ended it with the guitar freak-out of “Ohm,” filling these bookends with partly a greatest-hits set and partly a tour through their many avenues of musical influence—a tall order for a 50-minute show. This included the infectious shuffle of “Autumn Sweater,” the honeyed ballad “Aselestine,” the sunny psychedelia of the Harry Nilsson-esque “Shades of Blue” and the vintage AM-radio soul anthem “Mr. Tough.” “Fallout” segued into an interstellar instrumental interlude, which threaded straight into “Sugarcube,” just one example of a band wasting nary a second of its too-short set.


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Scroll to see the photo gallery by Natalie Simpson | Beehive Photo

The evening leaving little time for catching one’s breath, I had five minutes to trek to the Kilby Stage just as Future Islands entered the chorus of their opener, “King of Sweden.” To be fair to this quartet, I should give equal weight in my praise to the instrumentalists onstage, especially the dreamy shimmer of Gerrit Welmers’ keyboards and Michael Lowry’s flawlessly executed four-on-the-floor dancehall drumming, but let’s be honest: Like most who have caught a Future Islands gig, I could scarcely take my eyes off of vocalist and songwriter Samuel T. Herring.

Future Islands. Photo by Natalie Simpson | Beehive Photo

“Force of nature” only begins to describe this guy’s gladiatorial charisma. From jogging in place to balletic twirling, from vogueing like a 1980s fashion model to kicking like a Rockette, Herring was a perpetual motion machine, clearly feeding off the crowd’s adoration and vice versa. More than on his albums, he sang certain notes in a guttural death-metal growl, and was never approached as a novelty: He seemed, at times, to be exorcising his own demons. He belongs in the lineage of other great non-instrumentalist singers such as Henry Rollins and Morrissey, but he exceeds both in ageless exuberance. Herring didn’t simply graduate with honors from Frontman School; he wrote the curriculum.

I expected excellence from DEVO, having seen them a few years ago at a music festival in California, and they did not disappoint. The group is steeped in retro-futuristic fashion signifiers that bled from stage to crowd; the most faithful fans in the DEVO cult had been sporting iconic red energy domes for hours leading up to the set. The band entered initially wearing identical black suits emblazoned with an energy-dome icon that, not coincidentally, resembled a cryptic corporate logo. Videos evoking the VHS era projected behind the band, including an interlude straight of a Carl Sagan documentary, with astronomical data on the enormity of the cosmos and Earth’s infinitesimal place in it, to which Devo is “an insignificant blemish with a lifespan too short to mention,” the voice-over opines. After this bit of self-effacing humor, the group returned in their familiar yellow jumpsuits, which they promptly began to shed.

DEVO performed with the polish of a band that has played the same set—with minor variations for set length—hundreds of times: It was loud, in your face, tightly choreographed and damned infectious, with the musicians adjusting their playing style to fit the song, from Josh Freese’s caveman drumming on “Down Under” to the deliberately apelike synthesizer playing on “Are We Not Men?,” a highlight among highlights.

DEVO. Photo by Natalie Simpson | Beehive Photo

The night culminated with New Order, and while it’s unfathomable to imagine the group as anything but the main headliner, they showed why, for so many artists at so many festivals, DEVO is a tough act to follow. Don’t get me wrong—I love New Order’s music, and there was enough to like in the legendary synthpop act’s career-spanning set, especially in the bells-and-whistles department, such as the elaborate light show that blanketed the audience, and the often-trippy videos that accompanied the songs.

New Order’s Bernard Sumner. Photo by Natalie Simpson | Beehive Photo

But having finally seen New Order live for the first time, I tend to agree with former bassist Peter Hook, who split acrimoniously from the band in 2007, that the version without him underwhelms. Part of it was the low energy coming from the stage. I felt a weariness in leader Bernard Sumner’s singing and presence, and his comparatively toothless vocals on the smattering of Joy Division songs in the set list only underscored how irreplaceable Ian Curtis was. Furthermore, Sumner’s vocals were too low in the mix, and the sound was often muddy and inconsistent, cresting high and then curiously dropping out before retaining its proper volume. Despite an unexpected cameo from guest vocalist Brandon Flowers, of the Killers, on “Bizarre Love Triangle,” the show began to resemble a subpar bootleg recording.

The general vibe in the Fairpark didn’t seem to mind, with spontaneous dance parties popping up everywhere. Crowds can forgive a lot when the music itself is so wonderful; certain substances probably didn’t hurt either. Nor did the absolutely idyllic weather, with a couple of tiny flirtations with rain on an otherwise overcast evening. Many took advantage of the agreeable climate to relax on loungers shaped like Andy Warhol’s famous banana painting from the Velvet Underground’s debut LP; fight gravity on themed pinball machines in the arcade bar alcove in the VIP lounge; and play beer pong with enormous red Solo cups—activities I hope to enjoy over another jam-packed Kilby weekend ahead.


Read more of our music coverage and find all our Kilby Block Party reviews. And while you’re here, subscribe and get six issues of Salt Lake magazine, your curated guide to the best of life in Utah.

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2024 Kilby Block Party: Day Three Review

By Music

“This is very nice,” said James Murphy, frontman of LCD Soundsystem, as he looked out at the massive sea of people in the last hour of the 2024 Kilby Block Party, in what must stand as the understatement of the festival. As a first-time Kilby-goer, it was far better than a “very nice” experience; it’s one that, without getting too sentimental right off the bat, I’ll forever cherish. Kilby is a marvelously well-run operation with the strongest and most unique lineup of any major festival this year. I’ll circle back later on why its formula works so well.

But first, the music, and I saw a lot of it Sunday, starting with Utah’s own Little Moon, whose members were riding the high of winning NPR’s 2023 Tiny Desk Contest. The band’s partially gender-nonconforming psych-folk aesthetic was unlike anything else at Kilby, and unlike most acts in modern music more broadly. Watching their whimsical set was like catching an itinerant minstrel show, or perhaps the live performance of a children’s storybook soundtrack. For comparisons, I’d have to reach back to the Elephant Six sound of the late ‘90s, or perhaps to freak-folk pioneer Vashti Bunyan. If these sound like obscure touchpoints, it speaks to how wonderfully different this group is, down to its choice of instruments, including harp to rain stick.

Nothing could prepare the uninitiated for the next act on my list, New York’s Model/Actriz. In what functioned as performance art as much as rock concert, all eyes were on frontman Cole Haden, who leaned into his band’s name by sporting a bonnet, miniskirt, black nail polish, fishnets and platform shoes, and applying lipstick from a beaded clutch. He treated the stairs leading down into the audience like a catwalk, all while performing vocals that ran the gamut from a Robert Smith quaver to a hardcore scream, and spent upwards of 30 percent of the show amidst the audience, which appropriately went bananas, while guitarist Jack Wetmore played jagged shards of Gang of Four-style guitar, and bassist Aaron Shapiro and drummer Ruben Radlauer laid an intense rhythm section. It was surely the most surreal scene that I saw throughout the weekend, and while I don’t usually go for gimmicky acts, this one really worked.

Solid entertainment continued in the form of Choir Boy, another Utah-born band that performs in the synthpop style of the pre-digital 1980s. Singer Adam Klopp has a distinctive, resonant voice perfect for echoing off of arena walls; these guys should definitely be opening for the OMDs and Depeche Modes of the world. “Shatter” was particularly strong, with its saxophone parts and simulated vibraphone adding rich color and texture.

After Choir Boy, I bounced around the grounds a bit, nursing a headache since the morning brought on by too much Kilby, too much sun and not enough water, while enjoying Petey’s crowd-pleasing literate rock and the acoustic folk-rock of Kevin Kaarl, something of a YouTube phenom from Chihuahua, Mexico. I don’t speak enough Spanish to understand the lyrics, but it made for a great acoustic backdrop for a late-afternoon siesta in what little shade was afforded in the blessed VIP section. The music was pleasant and usually rather languorous, until it rocked every now and then.

Thanks to the magic of Advil, I recuperated enough to enjoy Pond’s riveting set at the Desert Stage. Despite releasing some 10 albums, and despite sharing some personnel with Tame Impala, Pond hasn’t really broken out in the U.S. That should change with gigs like this one. Lead singer Nick Albrook is clearly weaned on the classics of stadium-rock theatrics–swinging the mic stand around with glee, clutching the mic cord in his teeth, somersaulting on the ground. Exuding sex appeal–he eventually complied with some audience members’ requests to remove his shirt–he conjured David Bowie, Mick Jagger and Pete Townshend at various times, with some lyrics straight from the glam rocker’s dictionary. (“All that glitters is free.”) The music grooved with the best of them, whether sludgy or bouncy, and was supplemented by the sounds of echoes, sirens and sci-fi effects.

Finally, it was time for Guided by Voices, one of my most anticipated bands of the festival, and one I hadn’t seen live since 2004. Twenty years on, Father Time has yet to catch up with the indefatigable, now 66-year-old Robert Pollard, who still hit all the commanding rock-frontman poses and high kicks for his faithful cult of supporters, of which I am a member in good standing. Announcing they were here to play “rock ‘n’ roll for the kids,” GBV tore through some 21 numbers in an hour. A typical Guided by Voices gig features upwards of 40 tunes, so this show was but a tasty aperitif, with newer compositions like “Jack of Legs” and “Boomerang” landing just as successfully as all-time classic sing-alongs such as “I Am a Scientist” and “A Salty Salute,” Pollard commanding the action like a mad conductor.

As a side note, my GBV gigs of yore usually featured Pollard and some of the band downing an entire cooler of beer during the set, and spraying its contents on the audience. There was none of that here, with the frontman nursing one beer. That’s clearly the right way to go if GBV wants to continue touring and releasing its standard two to three albums a year; I’ll drink to that.

After some much-needed vegan nosh, I spent a rather confused 30 minutes with Ginger Root, a California trio that specializes in, per its own verbiage, “aggressive elevator soul.” Many of the songs had backstories as long as War and Peace, some associated with anime videos and feature films shot by singer-songwriter Cameron Lew that projected behind the band. At other times, a videographer captured the performance for (I think) a live stream, shooting the action in extreme close-ups. Lew kept referring to the festival as the “Kirby convention,” and I couldn’t tell if he was joking. The whole thing felt self-consciously cheezy, self-consciously ‘80s, and very online, and I liked it well enough.

As for the big headliner of the evening, my apologies, reader: I didn’t stay for all of it. Blasphemy, I know, but this was a long weekend, and I slant on the, let’s just say, older side of the Kilby demographic, and I admit to not quite “getting” LCD Soundsystem. That being said, convulsing multitudes is their thing, and they certainly accomplished it, with audiences throughout nearly the entire festival grounds dancing to what amounted to a near-greatest hits set. (Daft Punk was not playing at their house at this show.)

I appreciated the comparably laid-back performance of James Murphy, who dressed more like a stylish doctor than a rock singer. Strobe-lit and disco-balled, his band played with clockwork efficiency in what has become its successful formula: playing songs that you don’t think could possibly become dancier, until they add another instrumental element or two that work the crowd into a veritable frenzy of movement. 
And then it was over, just like that, another Kilby on the books–my first and hopefully not my last. In terms of constructing a great festival, the lineup is always key, and Kilby has cracked the code. The producers’ secret, I feel, is to save money by not going after the bands at the tippy-top of the music festival hierarchy, your Green Days and your Foo Fighters and your Red Hot Chili Peppers, that usually–boringly and predictably–wind up headlining Festivals X, Y and Z. This must free up a lot of cash to book bands one or two tiers lower in name notoriety, but which, in this writer’s opinion, make far better music. I hope Kilby continues to stay defiantly indie and weird. See you next year?

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Photography by Natalie Simpson, @beehivephotovideo


Find our day one and day two reviews of Kilby Block Party here.

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2024 Kilby Block Party: Day Two Review

By Music

“I don’t feel the heat—I’m like a friggin’ lizard who’s been hibernating all winter.” So said Belle & Sebastian frontman Stuart Murdoch between songs at day two of the 2024 Kilby Block Party on Saturday. As for the rest of us? It’s fair to say we felt the blistering temps, marking a big change from the often-overcast opening day, and requiring nearly hourly sunblock applications and multiple trips to the water stations, all for the love of the music.

Speaking of which, Saturday was a more uneven day than its near-universally excellent predecessor, proving that even the great curators and tastemakers at Kilby Court can fumble once or twice or, in one notable example, can choose an important and beloved band that simply didn’t bring the goods. More on that later.

My day started with the tail end of New Zealand’s Fazerdaze, in a rare appearance as part of their first American tour in six years, and I wish I’d made it for the entire set; they produce shimmery shoegaze at its best. I made it through all of Water From Your Eyes’ afternoon set, an accomplishment not without its struggles. The Brooklyn band opened with a taped noise assault, as if to weed out the faint of constitution before the first proper song. This was, indeed, a harbinger of most of the group’s bludgeoning set, complete with distorted and mostly incomprehensible vocals, which I’ve noticed is a trend these days, because vocal clarity is for squares, I guess? At its best the band conjures Sonic Youth at its most experimental, and can lull its listeners into a kind of hypnosis through sheer repetition. But a little goes a long away.

Next up on my docket was Wisconsin’s Slow Pulp, of whom I was only passingly familiar, and I left the set a fan. Their sound is rooted in scrappy ‘90s indie rock like Velocity Girl, Superdrag and early Built to Spill, all hallowed touchstones, played with two, and sometimes three guitars and led by a singer, in Emily Massey, who can really wail. This was their first festival show of presumably many to come.

Then came a couple of bewildering late afternoon and evening sets, the only extended stretch of Kilby where it seemed like things were going south. I had little patience for Yellow Days, which came across, in the admittedly scant time I gave it, as a swollen and affected ‘70s psych-rock throwback complete, with annoyingly reverbed vocals and an onstage dancer dressed as a TWA flight attendant with a cigarette. Charitably, perhaps I just didn’t get it.

As for Dinosaur Jr., the legendary indie-rock progenitors, hopes were high but quickly dashed through sloppy execution—even by Dinosaur Jr.’s shambolic standards—and audio problems resulting in weird fluctuations in volume, and the occasional disappearance of J. Mascis’ vocals. The shells of great songs were there, and Lou Barlow ferociously attacked his bass as if it owed him money, but this was a mess. In summary, I overheard a fan in a Dinosaur Jr. shirt offer this assessment: “They sound like shit.” He wasn’t wrong.

Any disappointments from the sagging middle of day two were forgotten by the time Belle & Sebastian delivered a jubilant set spanning most of the albums in their storied career of nearly 30 years. Bangers like “Nobody’s Empire” and “So in the Moment” sounded like they beamed in from some dancehall in Ibiza, while early staples like “Get Me Away From Here, I’m Dying” and “Expectations” let Stuart Murdoch’s witty writing take center stage atop more minimalist arrangements.

This was my fourth time seeing Belle & Sebastian, and so I’ve gotten to witness Murdoch’s evolution into the consummate entertainer he presented at Kilby, whether he was dancing on his piano or singing “Piazza, New York Catcher” from the audience, in the stretch of space between the GA and VIP areas. Belle & Sebastian may be a nonet, with much interesting instrumental color, from trumpet to recorder to cello to harmonica, but in some ways it’s the Stuart Murdoch show. Sporting a fedora, he resembled Leonard Cohen and brought a similar patrician panache to the proceedings, especially when calling fans onto the stage to dance through “The Boy With the Arab Strap” and “I Didn’t See it Coming” and then interacting with them onstage, almost like an old-fashioned lounge act. Belle & Sebastian is the best of a legacy band, one that honors its past while moving forward in new directions.

After catching a few songs from Santigold, who looked and sounded excellent (despite some self-consciousness on her part due to the acoustic dynamics of the Lake Stage) in a theatrical show complete with costumed, choreographed dancers, it was on to the dual headliners: Two of singer-songwriter Ben Gibbard’s enduring projects, Death Cab for Cutie and the Postal Service.

For more than a year, Gibbard and his bands have been playing their seminal 2003 releases Transatlanticism and Give Up in full, in honor of their 20th anniversaries. Both releases have enjoyed a sprawling shelf life and garnered new generations of fans; I overheard one fan saying that they were the soundtrack of her middle school years, which aged me pretty quickly; for me, they came out when I was in college, and the CDs earned endless airplay in my (aging me again) Discman.

By this point, these concerts are note-perfect and down to a science, from the band’s flawless execution to Gibbard’s classic frontman charisma to the lighting array, often bathing the singer in cones of orange, the color mirroring the album’s iconic artwork. The LP’s spacious and slow-building title track was a highlight, with countless fans waving their smartphone flashlights in the air, as was “Passenger Seat,” as a drone flew overhead to capture the scene, perfectly timed to Gibbard’s lyrics about looking upwards at shooting stars or satellites. It was great to see how those synth spasms in “They Looked Like Giants” are created live, while drummer Jason McGerr was the band’s secret weapon, his beats providing a metronomic foundation for the group’s layered excursions.

As for the Postal Service, I’m sorry, reader, but I didn’t take any notes during the set, because how could I interrupt nirvana? From memory, the group, complete with the joyous presence of Jenny Lewis on guitar, vocals, and percussion, performed in all white, with similarly streamlined monotone lighting, again capturing the album’s visual aesthetic. As fine a performance as Death Cab For Cutie gave, Gibbard certainly ordered the tour correctly: The Postal Service was mesmerizing from the first second to last. I associate the LP as a work primarily of synthpop, but it was exciting to watch the variety of live music that flowed seamlessly in and out of Jimmy Tamborello’s electronic arrangements. I teared up easily during the duet “Nothing Better,” and like everybody else, I went bonkers went Gibbard sidled over to the drum kit to hammer away at a couple of tracks.

The Postal Service encored with a beautiful “remix” of “Such Great Heights,” performed in the stripped-down Iron & Wine style, with only Gibbard and Lewis onstage, then sent us home with an electrifying cover of Depeche Mode’s “Enjoy the Silence.” Judging by the rapturous reception for the song, perhaps Kilby could consider some new-wave bands in the future?

See you on day three!

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Photography by Natalie Simpson @beehivephotovideo


Read our day one 2024 Kilby Block Party review, and find all our previous coverage of last year’s festival here!

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2024 Kilby Block Party: Day One Review

By Music

“This is the best view from a stage we’ve ever seen,” said Peach Pit singer Neil Smith during his band’s Friday afternoon set from the Lake Stage on day one of the 2024 Kilby Block Party. He was referring to the snow-capped Rockies just beyond the horizon, and for an out-of-towner like me, the majesty of the location rings just as true. I came from Florida to review Kilby, but Smith’s acknowledgment prompted me to actually gaze beyond the stages and festival grounds for the first time all day and recognize that, indeed, I was not in Boca Raton anymore.

Just as mountains are rare to a Floridian like me, so too are these bands, most of whom rarely see the rays of the Sunshine State. Hence my traveling 2,500 miles to see some of the most exciting names in indie rock’s past, present and future.

When I first entered the festival grounds, I was quickly struck by the atmosphere, which had whimsy to spare: colorful fuzzy animal sculptures emerging from the grass for photo ops, table tennis and cornhole set up throughout the grounds to encourage play, a rest area that resembled a geodesic dome. I also appreciated the compactness of the setup, with all four stages visible if you’re positioned in the middle of the layout.

My Kilby journey started with Gustaf, a New York quintet that seems to have teleported directly from its city’s downtown avant-punk scene circa 1981. With jagged guitar and bass lines that could cut through steel, Gustaf makes angular music you can dance to, and derives much of its gonzo intensity from vocalist Lydia Gammill, an androgynous frontwoman with an unorthodox charisma. Dressed in a business suit with a long tie and towering platform shoes, Gammill spoke or, perhaps, barked most of the lyrics, often slapping the side of her head for effect.

Gustaf’s music and approach couldn’t be more different from its immediate follower on the adjacent stage, Joanna Sternberg, who played an acoustic guitar set of their deceptively simple, heartbreakingly honest material. An outsider artist who conjures such brilliant singer-songwriters as Daniel Johnston and Randy Newman, Sternberg may just be the most likable—and un-jaded—person in music today. “So I’m gonna sing now,” they said, before launching into “I’ve Got Me.” They were visibly taken back when many of us starting singing along to every lyric. “This feels like a dream come true,” they said, of this recognition. I myself was so emotionally moved that I teared up by the second song, “People Are Toys To You,” and remained in a sublime place for the rest of the set. For those of us in the sizable crowd that were tuned into Sternberg’s wavelength, this was a concert neither the performer nor the audience will forget.

Yot Club was next on my list, delivering a tight, driving set of indie-rock bangers that improved as it went along, with convincing forays into psychedelic and stoner rock. Peach Pit followed soon thereafter, infusing their performance with rock-star showmanship from telegenic frontman Smith, who galloped across the stage, sometimes on one foot, and waved his glorious ‘90s grunge-rocker hair to and fro.

I don’t have a great deal to report on Alvvays’ set, other than the direct high praise it deserves: Dream pop of the highest order, it came across as perfectly executed as a studio recording—soaring synths and big guitars interacting in honeyed harmony. Courtney Barnett, for whom I left Alvvays a little early to catch, was the day’s biggest surprise. I expected to love the show, but I didn’t expect it to land as hard and viscerally as it did. Barnett absolutely shredded on guitar as part of a muscular trio of first-rate bass and drums, proving she’s as much an ace instrumentalist as she is a distinctive vocalist and a witty and gifted songwriter, the definition of a triple threat in music.

Serving as a palate cleanser between the high-energy sets of Courtney Barnett and Vampire Weekend, Joanna Newsom played her first concert in more than a year, and on paper, and perhaps in practice, her inclusion is an odd fit for Kilby. An obviously visionary but generically undefinable artist, she creates baroque, alien music from a galaxy in which rock ‘n’ roll never happened, playing sprawling story-songs on solo harp and piano. She should be touring century-old cathedrals more than outdoor indie-rock festivals, and the obnoxious chatter from some of my less respectful fellow-attendees did mar the experience a bit. Her music demands undivided attention; watching her fingers gracefully glide over the harp strings, combined with her angelic voice, it’s pretty clear she’s channeling the sounds of heaven. Clad in a frilly red dress and ruby slippers straight out of “The Wizard of Oz,” Newsom commented, rather funnily, on the “freezing” temperatures of this comfortably breezy evening. While I departed the set early to stake out a decent position for Vampire Weekend, her show was a singular Kilby highlight.

As night fell, Vampire Weekend took the stage to an absolutely massive audience and performed a jubilant 90-minute set culled pretty equally from their five studio albums. I’m a big proponent of their latest LP Only God Was Above Us, and was delighted to discover that the group’s increasingly expansive instrumental vocabulary, so apparent on that album, has also enhanced their earlier material in a live setting, with saxophone, fiddle and two drummers playing prominent roles throughout the set. I was enraptured with the slower, druggier version of “Sunflower,” complete with fiddle and sax solos. Their cover of SBTRKT’s “New Dorp, New York,” which included dueling saxes, settled into an experimental, elliptical groove that conjured Headhunters-era Herbie Hancock: If jazz-funk fusion is in this band’s future, I’m all for it!

Toward the end of the set, the band honored a fan’s request to play the opening bars of “Connect” on piano, and he did a great job; kudos to Ezra Koenig for indulging the young lad. I wasn’t crazy about the group’s other invited guest, Heather Gay of “The Real Housewives of Salt Lake City,” who played some cornhole onstage to try and win Vampire Weekend merch. Nothing against Gay, but this felt like a frivolous time suck during such a time-limited set.

Koenig mentioned that Vampire Weekend first played the tiny Kilby Court in 2007, prior to the release of their self-titled debut. Their riveting headlining set was a testament to both their growth and the evolution of Kilby itself, and was a perfect day-one send-off. See you out there for day two!

Read more Kilby Block Party Coverage:

Photography by Natalie Simpson, @beehivephotovideo


Find all our reviews from last year’s Kilby Block Party here!

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Kilby Block Party Day Three

By Kilby Block Party, Music

The last day of the festival definitely went out with a bang…and when I say bang I mean literal thunder and lightning.

Highlights of the Day

The day truly kicked off with back-to-back sets by Crumb and Tolchock Trio, two talented acts who are sure to gain widespread recognition after their performances today. The Backstreet Lovers took the stage, and their performance drew in just about every single attendee there. The band is local and, of course, had to play their hit song “Kilby Girl,” which had the crowd go wild, myself included. After that, the Pixies performed, creating a massive crowd with their iconic reputation. However, the festivities took an unexpected turn when a thunderstorm struck, prompting a frenzy as half the attendees sought shelter and the other half left. Nevertheless, the festival went on despite the setback. Pavement ultimately took the stage around 10:00 pm and the dedication these fans had was unreal.

My Day at Kilby

Today was undoubtedly my favorite day of the festival. Although it was a little less hectic than yesterday, it was still busier than the first day. However, the atmosphere was much more relaxed, and the people seemed to be having more fun, probably because most of them were feeling a little delirious from the past two days of festivities. Without a doubt, my favorite performance of the day, and perhaps the whole festival, was the Backseat Lovers. I might be a little biased since they’re one of my favorite artists, but their performance was outstanding, and the audience was impeccable. But the highlight of my day was the thunderstorm. I know that may sound crazy, but running to find shelter with thousands of people all screaming the lyrics to the Pixies was an unforgettable experience. Now that the festival is over, I’m exhausted, slightly hysterical, but above all, extremely happy that I attended. 

My first festival, and definitely not my last. Thank you Kilby Block Party for the craziest and best kick off to summer 2023!

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Kilby Block Party 2023 photos by Natalie Simpson, Beehive Photography


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Kilby Block Party Day Two

By Kilby Block Party, Music

Despite the rain causing a few minor setbacks, the Kilby Block Party crew persevered and ensured that the show went on for the second day of the festival on Saturday, May 14, 2023. Shades of Woodstock?

Highlights of the Day

The festival truly kicked off with an electrifying performance by Goth Babe. Their inventive antics, including tossing a blown-up watermelon floaty into the crowd and inviting an audience member to ride it, set the tone for an unforgettable performance. Caroline Polacheck, Gus Dapperton and The Moss were also massive hits, drawing in huge crowds. While Hippocampus delivered their highly anticipated performance, the former fell flat for me, lacking the energy and excitement of other acts. Overall, The Strokes definitely stole the show with their stunning visuals and unparalleled stage presence, cementing their position as the night’s top act.

My Day at Kilby

Day two of the festival proved to be a lot more enjoyable than the previous day, thanks to the larger crowds, more artists that matched by preferences, and an overall better atmosphere. Although earlier in the evening, if you had asked me to name my favorite performer, I would have undoubtedly said Goth Babe. However, it was the lesser-known group, Osees, that truly stole the show for me. Despite being unfamiliar with their music before the event, I decided to give them a chance and it turned out to be the best decision I made all night. In my opinion, their performance was the highlight of the entire event.

Super stoked for Sunday, let’s make the most of our final day and go all out in style!

See our day one coverage here and all of our Kilby Block Party Coverage here.


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Kilby Block Party 2023 photos by Natalie Simpson

Read more of our music coverage and get the latest on the arts and culture scene in and around Utah. And while you’re here, subscribe and get six issues of Salt Lake magazine, your curated guide to the best of life in Utah.

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Kilby Block Party Day One

By Kilby Block Party, Music

The first day at Kilby Block Party proved to be anything but ordinary. Unlike last year’s festival the larger State Fair Park setting gave us all room to move around without getting jostled or crushed. There was plenty of places where people could just sit down, grab a beer and relax. However, it was all about the music, which featured incredible performances that kept the energy high from start to finish.

Highlights of the Day

The festival featured several noteworthy bands, but six in particular left a lasting impression. The first was Sunhills, a local group that kicked off the festival with an electrifying performance that got the crowd moving. Lucius, Noso and Japanese Breakfast were the afternoon’s biggest draw. Dominic Fike’s set was another crowd-pleaser, drawing a massive audience. However, the biggest highlight of the day can be summed up in three words: Yeah Yeah Yeahs. As soon as they stepped up on the stage, it was made clear that this was the performance everyone was looking forward to seeing, featuring incredible vocals and energy that left the crowd awestruck.

My Day at Kilby

Aside from the long wait to get into the festival, my day at Kilby Block Party was anything but long. The abundance of food trucks serving a variety of cuisines, from Thai dishes to classic burgers and fries, was impressive and sure to satisfy any craving you might have. While the beer selection was somewhat limited, the Squatters Juicy IPA definitely did it for me. Of all the performances, Ritt Momney was definitely my favorite. They played to a perfectly sized crowd as the sun began to set, and their connection with the audience was palpable.

For all you day two comers, please bring sunscreen, a water bottle, and trust me don’t stress about the size of your bag, they truly do not care.


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Kilby Block Party 2023 photos by Natalie Simpson


Read more of our music coverage and get the latest on the arts and culture scene in and around Utah. And while you’re here, subscribe and get six issues of Salt Lake magazine, your curated guide to the best of life in Utah.