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Events > Reviews > Elliott Smith Elliott Smith20 February 2000: The Black Cat Washington DC By Peter SolderitschExposition: Prelude: Feature Presentation: Appearing perhaps paradoxically more comfortable and outgoing alone behind his guitar, Elliott solicits requests (that for the most part he doesn’t heed) from the crowd (“old stuff or new stuff?”) after the first five songs, the only selections of the night that seemed to have been consciously chosen in advance. In fact, he’s loose throughout most of the night, chiding the crowd for being to quiet (“I guess I’ll just have to work through it”), and making the occasional quip in between songs - After finishing “Needle In The Hay”, the dark examination of heroin addiction that inaugurates his eponymous first Kill Rock Stars record, he offers up Either/Or‘s decidedly brighter “Say Yes”, noting “this one’s happier, it cancels out that last one”. You bet it does. Indeed, the rollercoaster of moods effect seems to be a favorite theme of Smith’s, and tonight’s show is no exception. The dark introspection of the set opener “Son of Sam” (also the first track on “Figure 8”) morphs into the blissful optimism of “Say Yes”, to the bitter character indictment of “Easy Way Out” (a standout Figure 8 track I haven’t been able to get out of my head since the first time I heard him play it last spring), all bound together with an almost effortless sense of continuity. My sole vexation for the night, aside from the fact that only “Independence Day” is showcased from 1998’s wonderful XO, is that the set doesn’t go on nearly long enough. To carry the “mood-coaster” motif from “macro” song-chunking to “micro” lyric examination: on XO‘s “Bled White”, Elliott Smith sings: “happy and sad come in quick succession”. Unfortunately, at the close of a scant hour’s worth of singer-songwritery nirvana, I wish both happy AND sad had stuck around a little longer.
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