Friday, July 19, 2024
Black Pumas’ Soulful, Communal Celebration
Black Pumas’ set reached its high point early on with “Know You Better,” when frontman Eric Burton leapt off the stage and into the crowd. Dancing, snapping selfies, and hugging fans, Burton transformed the soulful concert into a communal celebration. “Look, I don’t even need security,” he joked. “Someone tickled me, though.”
Jeff Rosenstock Brings His DIY Punk to the Blue Stage
As fame creeps up on Jeff Rosenstock, he refuses to trade in his morals. Between songs from Hellmode about self-doubt and climate change, the DIY punk stalwart thanked festival workers for taking good care of artists in one breath and shamed corporations for privatizing water in another. His fans kept it real too: after helping Rosenstock crowdsurf while playing saxophone, they lifted an older woman in the mosh pit and crowdsurfed her to the front. The set had a massive turnout, making Jeff Rosenstock and his band the latest act to join the storied list of artists getting too big to play the Blue Stage.
Rosali’s Nonchalant Folk-Rock
Dressed in all-black with oversized sunglasses, Rosali performed with the effortless stance of your coolest friend nursing a hangover—while still looking suave, of course. The North Carolina singer-songwriter led her band through the warm Americana, classic rock guitar solos, and lackadaisical folk strums of her new album, Bite Down, giving the music an extra edge with witty retorts and cheeky one-liners. As Rosali and her bandmates spun folk-rock made for back porch beers and lazy afternoons, she sang coolly, “Baby, I don’t give a shit.” Her nonchalance was infectious.
Sudan Archives and Her Magical Violin
In the hands of Sudan Archives, a violin is a bow and arrow, pistol, and katana. On the Blue Stage, she was armed with a quiver of violin bows that she often unsheathed to the sound of a sword slicing the air. Performing tracks from her 2022 album, Natural Brown Prom Queen, she was funny, flirty, and mesmerizing in her thermal imaging bodysuit. “I got a cousin in Chicago/Who got homies from the way,” she sang, pointing to her family standing left stage, “They’ll smack you in your face/A certain type of hello.” Occasionally, she cocked the violin at the audience, plucking ominous chords as she scanned the audience like a Huntress of Artemis. She may as well have superpowers.
Tkay Maidza and Her Amazing Delusions
Striding onto the stage in a black leather mini-dress adorned with silver cutout stars and “FAME” plastered on her bum, Tkay Maidza resembled an intergalactic rock queen. Against the backdrop of a red moon, the Zimbabwean Australian singer-songwriter matched the hype of her crowd, bouncing from her woozy cover of Pixies’ “Where Is My Mind?” to the twerk-inducing “Ring-a-Ling” and the vengeful trap anthem “WUACV.” Before closing her set with “High Beams,” Maidza offered a nugget of wisdom to her fans: “Be delusional that today is gonna be amazing.”
Yaeji Bursts With Joy
When Yaeji last graced the Pitchfork Music Festival stage in 2021, we were fresh out of lockdown. Three years later, the Korean American electronic artist returned, whirling around the stage with an aura of emotional release. “And I’m 30,” she announced to the crowd, giggling as they cheered her on. Yaeji and her backup dancers swirled, swayed, and swung through her set. The crowd, to no one’s surprise, erupted for breakthrough hit “Raingurl,” bopping in freakish synchronization. Yaeji closed her set with a glimpse of her future, performing the unreleased banger “Booboo.” “If you resonate with my music,” she said before sharing the track, “you are a mirror for myself in some ways as I am for you.”
Saturday, July 20, 2024
Carly Rae Jepsen Is for Everybody
From the old-heads who remember when Carly Rae Jepsen’s “Call Me Maybe” dominated the airwaves to the youth who maybe weren’t born when the Canadian debuted with Tug of War in 2008, multiple generations gathered to enjoy Jepsen’s 16-year discography. For everybody, it was a celebration. Jepsen’s set was like a shot of 5-Hour Energy. If it weren’t for the barricades, I’m sure the crowd would’ve taken the chorus to “Run Away With Me” quite literally.
De La Soul Celebrate Friendship and Brotherhood
“We’re celebrating 40 years of friendship and brotherhood!” DJ Maseo yelled from his stand, setting the vibe for a trip down memory lane. “We’re also celebrating Trugoy the Dove!” De La Soul followed through with a wave of nostalgia, performing classics like “Potholes in My Lawn,” “Me Myself and I,” and “A Roller Skating Jam Named ‘Saturdays’.” A surprise appearance by Talib Kweli for “Stakes Is High” added to the sentimentality, but the hypest moment was when Pharoahe Monch joined for “Simon Says,” shaking the ground with the party people’s jumping. “A lot will come up here, collect that check, and give you a half-assed show,” Posdnuous told the crowd. “But not De La Soul!”
Feeble Little Horse Make the Most of Their Time
Pittsburgh noise-pop group Feeble Little Horse crammed 16 songs into their set, including Girl With Fish highlights “Steamroller” and “Tin Man,” heady older numbers “Chores” and “Hold,” and a brand new song. They countered their scuzzy tone with absolute charm, quipping about opening for fellow Red Stage performer Carly Rae Jepsen and more fun stage banter. “Here’s a song that Pitchfork gave a 7,” laughed guitarist Sebastian Kinsler. “Why are we here? Why do they want us?” As fans swayed in the crowd, taking in the fuzzed-out set and camaraderie, the answer was obvious.
Jamie xx Excites the Crowd
Under a full moon, Jamie xx transformed the stage into a sensory wonderland, blending distorted live footage of the dancing crowd along with a hypnotic light show. A masterclass in atmosphere and pacing, the English DJ opened with the summery “Baddy on the Floor” and mixed his way through tracks like Henry Rodrick’s “Don’t Believe” and Lemon D’s “This Is LA.” He paid tribute to Chicago too, with DJ Rashad and DJ Spinn’s “Brighter Dayz,” making the crowd bop their heads so hard it looked like they were ready to pop off. Closing with his latest collab with Robyn, “Life,” Jamie xx kept the crowd exhilarated.
Jessie Ware Indulges in Guiltless Hedonism
Saturday evening, Jessie Ware brought the Pearl Club to Chicago. “In our club, we demand that you free yourself,” she proclaimed while twirling around in her mirrorball jumpsuit. Flanked by her “Pearlettes”—a cadre of two unbelievably flexible dancers, two dynamic background singers, a guitarist, and a drummer—the self-proclaimed musical theater nerd invited the crowd to indulge in some guilt-free hedonism. No disco revival is complete without a cover of the goddess of disco herself, Cher. Ware’s rendition of “Believe” came complete with the Brit singing face-to-face with gyrating fans who fully took her command of “Pleasure is a right!” to heart.
Kara Jackson Embodies the Future of Folk Music
“I wrote this song at 17, which was around the age I dreamt about playing at Pitchfork, so this is very weird,” Kara Jackson confessed to the audience before performing “Ray”—a track from her 2019 EP A Song for Every Chamber of the Heart. Usually, Jackson rides solo with her acoustic guitar, but on Saturday, she was joined by a four-piece band. Still, her performance of “Dickhead Blues”—the proclamation of self-worth on 2023’s Why Does the Earth Give Us People to Love?—is the first time I’ve seen a crowd twerk to the sound of acoustic guitar plucks. That and her medley of “No Fun/Party” and SZA’s “Love Galore” solidified her place as the future of folk.
Unwound Were Confident, Determined, and Beautiful
Last year’s deeply moving Unwound reunion shows were a lesson in emotive tenacity, and the post-hardcore band sounded even more confident, centered, and determined while closing out the Blue Stage on Saturday. With a Repetition-heavy setlist, guitarist Justin Trosper and drummer Sara Lund pummeled through a raw set that channeled the frenzied focus of the late Vern Rumsey, as honored by stand-in bassist Jared Warren. After a soul-purifying rendition of “For Your Entertainment,” each member took turns tossing flowers from the stage until the whole crowd smelled like roses. As one kid yelled in the empty field afterward, arms out wide and head tilted to the sky, white carnations in hand, “Unwound is the best fucking band.”