photo: George A. Paul |
Meanwhile, Switchfoot, Andrew McMahon in the Wilderness and
the Pearl Jam leader all stressed the need to forget about negative news and
all our differences for awhile and share a common love of music.
Having been impressed with my first Ohana Festival, I definitely hope to return again next year.
The relaxed vibe and beautiful locale at Doheny State Beach makes
Ohana stand out from other area music festivals. Even Bahamas frontman Afie
Jurvanen raved about his view from the stage. Many concert attendees got into
the spirit by donning Hawaiian leis, shirts or flower crowns (McMahon’s entire
band sported the latter item).
Having the large Main stage and medium sized Tiki stage
located side by side meant people didn’t have to walk far to view each one. Those who arrived early enough could lay out their towels and blankets between
both and not even have to move. Everything seemed to go right according to
schedule, with no major delays. As soon as one act finished, the next stage
started soon after. One minor quibble: Saturday’s sound mix from both stages
was fine; Sunday’s was too bass heavy on the Main stage.
photo: George A. Paul |
A portion of festival proceeds are slated to benefit the San
Onofre Parks Foundation, a local non-profit that works with California State
Parks to develop, preserve and enhance the Golden State’s coastal parks.
Beach conservation was a prime topic at the Storytellers
stage as reps from Surfrider Foundation, National Geographic, Sea Legacy
Collective and others provided tips and food for thought about plastic usage. A
silent auction of music memorabilia benefitted some of these groups.
Award-winning OC surfer Greg Long mentioned the recent bans
of plastic straws, Starbucks’ future lid reformulation and said only 9% of what
we use gets recycled. “If we make small changes in our lives, eventually, we’ll
force the plastic industry to look for better alternatives…it helps to demand
(them).” He described surfing in remote locations around the world where he
still saw plastic remnants around.
photo: George A. Paul |
San Diego surfing legend Rob Machado (pictured far left) talked about how his
namesake foundation initially stemmed from going to his daughter’s grammar
school and noticing that they didn’t have a simple recycling program and none
of the kids drank water from the fountains.
Ohana had water stations sponsored by Machado where you
could fill up your empty reusable container. Nearby, kids could marvel at
Ranger Jim’s Mini Museum, which displayed shark teeth of various sizes. A visual artist periodically did live painting on surfboards.
Early Saturday afternoon, Bahamas’ breezy brand of pop/rock,
included songs from latest album Earthtones on Jack Johnson’s Brushfire label such as “So Free” and “Opening Act (The Shooby Dooby Song).” There was a nice
early John Mayer feel to “No Wrong.” Before “Lost in the Light,” Jurvanen
deadpanned that he and his fellow Canadian musicians onstage were “honored to
represent the soft rock community; it’s a dying art.” They closed with “Lost in
the Light,” a top 10 hit at Adult Album Alternative radio here in 2014.
For this writer, one of the must-see acts at the entire
festival was Johnny Marr. Over the past five years, the former Smiths guitarist
has been on a creative tear, putting out three compelling solo albums. In Dana
Point, the Brit opened with “The Tracers,” an eerie song from current release Call the Comet, where the shimmering guitar effect was unmistakably Marr.
photo: Paul Hebert for Ohana |
The crowd responded loudly during a fierce take on The
Smiths’ “Bigmouth Strikes Again.” They went crazier for “How Soon is
Now,” as Marr twisted the tuning pegs on his Fender Jaguar in tandem with his
backing guitarist on slide to get the classic ‘80s modern rock tune’s famous swirling sound. When it ended, Marr said “that’s a good one” (lest anyone
needed convincing). Both “Bug” and “Easy Money” were extremely catchy. Vedder was among the all-star collaborators with Marr
on Neil Finn’s Seven Worlds Collide projects in the 2000s. Here, he handled
lead vocals for closing Smiths song, “There is a Light That Never Goes Out” and
acquitted himself well. Marr prompted a crowd singalong at the end.
A few months ago, Matador Records released Girly-Sound to
Guyville: The 25th Anniversary box set to commemorate Liz Phair’s
acclaimed debut Exile in Guyville. The remastered collection includes that
title along with all the content from the infamous Girly Sound demo tapes.
photo: Amy Harris for Ohana |
Playing
electric guitar on the Main stage, Phair sounded great, constantly smiled, pogoed a bit and obviously
had some fun. Her winsome Ohana set was highlighted by “Never Said” and hits
like “Supernova,” the melodic gem “Why Can’t I” and grungy “Extraordinary
(where she noticed “all the ladies vibing on it”).
Yeah Yeah Yeahs – led by singer Karen O. – were wild as
ever. Clad in a shiny and colorful, seemingly tailor-made patchwork outfit with
kneepads, she laughed while singing opening number “Y Control” as Nick Zinner
added clarion call guitar effects. Later, she’d do such risqué moves as putting
the microphone in her mouth and caressing the cord. Fans in front near the
stage barrier got to contribute their own yelps as Karen walked in front and
went all down the line, putting the microphone in their faces. “Heads Will
Roll” (inflatable eyeballs were rolled out into the audience) and the ballad
“Maps” fared the best.
Eddie Vedder’s nifty center stage setup included an old reel-to-reel
machine, a cluster of various electric and acoustic guitars, a chair and more
items. His walk on music was the “Batman” theme sung by children. The solo,
sometimes acoustic, set started with the first of many Pearl Jam tunes. Fans
sang along loudly to “Wishlist.” The singer talked about how being grateful is
a key to life and that he was grateful for Mother Nature before doing a fine take
on Warren Zevon’s “Keep Me in Your Heart.” Another hearty singalong ensued amid
Pearl Jam’s “Elderly Woman Behind the Counter in a Small Town.”
photo: Steve Sherman for Ohana |
Phair guested on “Better Man” and Vedder wondered whether he’d "ever heard a woman sing it." Other times, Vedder would go on humorous tangents about
surfing etiquette and politics.
There were some quiet ukulele songs from the
soundtrack to “Into the Wild.” Then Scott Thurston from Tom Petty & the
Heartbreakers appeared on organ and guitar for songs by his former boss, like a
touching “Wildflowers,” “Room at the Top” and “I Won’t Back Down.” Simply
amazing. Alone again, Vedder took to the organ for a quiet cover of George
Harrison’s “Isn’t it a Pity” as a cameraman zoomed in on a lyric sheet.
Sunday afternoon, Dana Point’s own Andrew McMahon in the
Wilderness drew a large audience. With his parents watching, McMahon turned in a high energy set as always. Starting with “Fire
Escape,” he briefly stepped away from the piano to work the stage and go into
the crowd on a percolating “Island Radio.”
“I wrote this in San Clemente,” the singer said before a soaring,
syncopated piano-led “Dark Blue,” by previous band Jack’s Mannequin. On-again, off-again guitarist
Bobby “Raw” Anderson is now back by McMahon’s side. The singer’s usual
crowd surfing on a yellow inflatable duck was fun to watch.
Reaching all the way back to the Something Corporate days,
the guys played “I Woke Up in a Car” after McMahon proudly recalled growing up on
Doheny Beach and going to high school nearby. “This is my town! It’s a dream
for me to be here. My mind is blown.”
Majestic new single “Ohio,” from the forthcoming new album,
was a highlight. The multi-colored parachute came out for “Synesthesia” as McMahon
went underneath it to sing. Finally, the jubilant “Cecilia and the Satellite,”
penned for his daughter, ended the terrific set on a high note.
Americana was well represented at Ohana. One of the more
underrated bands of the genre is Nashville’s The Wild Feathers, whose latest album Greetings
from the Neon Frontier is among the year’s best. Launching with a rousing “Quittin’
Time,” the guys provided some seamless harmonies on “Wildfire” and impressive vocal
tradeoffs during the Petty-ish “No Man’s Land.” By this point, the crowd was
stomping, clapping and dancing up a storm. So the catchy-as-hell, Motown-styled
bass groove in “Happy Again” fit perfectly. A vigorous take on The Stones’ “Jumpin’
Jack Flash” also went down well. The band capped it all off in fiery fashion
with “The Ceiling.”
Jon Foreman's messianic stage presence and
Switchfoot’s inspiring anthems proved especially life affirming near the beach. Mostly eschewing
hit singles (except for “Meant to Live,” “Dare You to Move”), the San Diego
band with a few surfers among the musicians brought out expert boarder Rob Machado to play
guitar on a couple tunes and pal around.
Beck didn’t really scale down the dazzling production that I caught at Hollywood Bowl two days prior for his Ohana set. This hour-long
version opened with a frantic “Devil’s Haircut.” Surprisingly, “Loser” was
dispatched early and OC got to hear “Black Tambourine.” Elsewhere, “New
Pollution,” “Mixed Bizness,” “Girl,” “E-Pro” and “Where It’s At” were all given
spirited deliveries and greeted with plenty to enthusiasm from the huge crowd stretching all the way back to the grandstand seating.
Having been impressed with my first Ohana Festival, I definitely hope to return again next year.
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