Black Keys – Live At The Crystal Ballroom

Stay with me: Dan Auerbach and Patrick Carney don’t absorb you particularly well in this medium – at least in the way their alternately smoldering, alternately bash-it-out attack can, and does, in the live setting. In concert, the two have a tendency to hurtle through songs without much in the way of crowd acknowledgment or surprises – which is fine, considering how their exuberant, balls-out, shaggy, howling performance definitely trumps any part of the workmanlike way they deliver songs without regard for stage craft or changing things up.

But a basic representation of the Black Keys in action isn’t alone going to sell this thing as a definitive Black Keys concert document, and the extras – three music videos, some footage from the Attack and Release sessions in Cleveland – aren’t enough to slake a thirst for even more. There’s no faulting Bangs for assuming the Keys’ mojo was enough to carry the whole thing; with Auerbach and Carney having amassed one of the most formidable catalogs of the past decade’s worth of rock and consistently reinforced their status as a marquee live act, it should have been a slam dunk.

Why not? A deference to Attack and Release material, maybe, with a few perfunctory gems from the older albums? It’s not a style thing. Despite its detractors – afraid of a little game-changing, but fundamentals-preserving production values, are ye? – Attack and Release is to these ears one of the duo’s most accomplished albums. Sure, there’s more of a rush watching Auerbach set fire to Thickfreakness or Stack Shot Billy or Carney punish that kit than much of the new stuff.  But that’s familiarity, not quality. The concert DVD just doesn’t work on an A-level for some bands, but we’d like to thank Carney, Auerbach, Lance and all involved for making a hot B-plus out of it.

Related Content

2 Responses

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recent Posts

New to Glide

Keep up-to-date with Glide

Twitter