Concerts
Thomas Dybdahl live at Lido (Berlin)
Lido is a small cinema-rebuilt-to-concerthall and has a very rustic and nice atmosphere, and so it was perfect for the melancholic tunes from Thomas Dybdahl and his band. The band was around 5-6 people, including the sweet Silje Salomonsen (of Mongoland fame) on backing vocals and harmonica.
We were a bit afraid there wouldn't be that many coming, but as the concert started it was a good croud that had gathered to hear the concert. Thomas gets very into his music as he is playing it and it's intriguing to see him play. The concert was fantatstic and the audience really got into it. On several of the songs the audience was signing along. Here are some highlights from it:
- http://journal.boblycat.org/music/adelaide
- http://journal.boblycat.org/music/solitude
- http://journal.boblycat.org/music/newyork
- http://journal.boblycat.org/music/bodyaches
The concert was too short though. According to Thomas the band hadn't rehearsed more songs, so he did the last number on his own. You can hear that in the intro of "Solitude". Also notice on "Adelaide" where he and Silje Salomonsen starts laughing and the audience has to sing the song for them, so sweet :D (appologies for my sour singing)
Great evening, great concert and I also made some new friends. Hi Hilde, Kim and Pia :D
Now, if you want to buy his music then get it here or on itunes.
- parad's blog
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Hear the drummer go apeshit!
As some of you might know, probably a very small part of the world population I'll admit - but some, I have moved to Berlin. We'll get back to that in some other blog entry, now I want to share with you some samples from a concert I went to last weekend.
I got myself a solid-state MP3/WAV recorder some weeks ago, so I thought this would be an excellent test of the device.
It's an Edirol R-09 btw. It is bascially as small as an Ipod, but a little bit thicker (like 1.5 Ipod I would say) so it goes in your pocket and you can take it anywhere - and people think you're just playing with your cellphone so it's excellent!
Anyways, me and Eike a collegue of mine want over to b-flat at around 9-10 ish and sat down in the bar to wait for the band starting. It was a Hungarian band called Djabe and I'd never heard of them before, and was only praying that they wouldn't be super experimental. You know the kind where they basically disregard all common norms when it comes to rythm, harmonies and yeah, music all together :D Luckily Djabe proved to be an excellent band.

Basically they were a drummer, a bass-player, a guitarist, a fiddler/trumpetist, a percussionist and a guy on the piano. And they all rocked! (or I guess that would be jazzed?) Anyways, they played two sets with a pause in the middle and the audience really responded to them.
I would really like to point out the drummer, this guy could really go apeshit. But in a good way. Here is a short sample of him taken from a much longer solo and here is a much longer with him, the bassist and the percussionst all doing solos.
Also, the band had a great sense of humour, so for example in a really long intro (a six minutes bass intro) the bassist and piano player really fooled around, mixing in other silly songs. I really like the mellow part at around 04:00 minutes btw.
And as a great finale they had the coolest ending I've experienced live. Took all of us by surprise. I don't know the name of the instruments, but I called it "japanese shakers". It's some form of shakers that together produce airy harmonies. I got some real nice samples to use in my own music from this. Here is their ending.
I was really impressed by the concert and also the place. It cost 15€ to get in, but it was all worth it. And they also served Radeberger, so I guess even with a shitty concert I would've been happy :D
- parad's blog
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