
Few bands occupied as much space on the CD shelves of millennium-era art students as Chicago's Tortoise and Glascow's Mogwai. Focusing exclusively on instrumentals, Tortoise was among the first indie rock bands to incorporate styles closer to Krautrock, Dub, Minimalism, Electronica and Jazz rather than the standard rock and roll and punk that dominated for years, and to employ instrumentation (two bass guitars, three percussionists switching between drums, vibraphones and marimbas) that departed from the traditional rock set up. For this reason, they are often cited as one of the central pillars of "post-rock" movement. The group's only other Buffalo appearance was in the room above Mr Goodbar in the mid-90s.
Where Tortoise injected dub and jazz influences to the post-rock mix, Glasgow's Mogwai pushed elements associated with traditional rock beyond the limits of conventional expectations. Most often, the group composed instrumental, often lengthy guitar-based pieces typically focused around the elaboration of a single theme. They are known for the use of dynamic contrast, melodic bass guitar riffs, guitar distortion and effects. The group's only other appearance in Buffalo was as part of an outdoor festival associated with a Clarence nightclub a few years back.
Should be a fun spring!
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