I bought the first two Association albums when I was in junior high
(and subsequently re-bought them on CD), and was impressed that all of the tracks
held up well over the years, not just the hit singles. I had never seen them
live, and almost didn’t get to this year; I had a ticket for their sold-out
Saturday night show at the Rams Head in Annapolis a couple days earlier, but
the roads weren’t in good shape and I decided that chancing what would have
been a 2-hour round trip in ideal weather was more than I wanted to try. (As it
turned out, there did wind up being an accident on my route.) Fortunately I was
able to get a ticket for their show 3 days later at the Birchmere. The rush
hour traffic to Alexandria was lighter than usual, so I got there shortly after
4:00, was the 6th “group” in line, and wound up at table 317 – close
to the center, one of the tables that are parallel to the stage and just in
front of the divider.
The current 6-man lineup includes 2 original members, the son of
another original member, and the brother of a guy who joined the group in 1967.
The first half of the 95-minute show was good but not spectacular – the opening
“Windy” had a little too much percussion for me, and I wasn’t all that fond of
their reworked version of “Walk Away Renée” – but things picked up when they
got to “Six Man Band”, which rocks harder than most of their material. They also
got to my two other favorite obscure singles during the second half of the show,
“No Fair At All” and “Goodbye Columbus” (for the encore). The main set ended
with a bang, starting with Jim Yester’s hilarious “Avocado” (Weird Al’s parody
of “Desperado”), continuing with a 7-song medley of hits from The Big Chill, and concluding with “Cherish”
and “Along Comes Mary”.
Saw them last year. I don't feel their stuff has held up well at all. At least I've gotten to reply when someone mentions windy conditions over the past half century, "Everyone knows it's windy."
ReplyDeleteA couple acts whose stuff doesn't hold up for me: Bread, and Gary Puckett & The Union Gap. I'm ambivalent about America -- great tunes, but more than their share of "huh!" lyrics.
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