In a sharp contrast from years past, this year's Sasquatch! Music Festival lineup has considerably less folk-inclining music on the main stage, making Lord Huron one of the weekend's folk rock acts that would play directly in front of the Columbia River Gorge. The Michigan-via-Los Angeles quintet stepped up to the plate boldly however, bringing their percussive folk rock to a solid daytime crowd with aplomb. Undoubtedly one of the more sartorially-minded acts of the weekend, frontman Ben Schneider was in top form, leading his well-dressed comrades through a set primarily consisting of tracks from their latest LP, last year's Strange Trails. Just as on the album versions, songs like "Fool For Love" and "Love Like Ghosts" hit their large-audience target without simply cranking the volume, instead using well-placed syncopation and instrumental interplay to create a rich full sound. When the band were crafting the record, perhaps they knew they'd be playing in large venues and built it to play well in outdoor spaces, but with the Gorge as a natural amplifier in both sound and grandeur, Lord Huron sounded nothing short of massive for a golden, pre-sunset hour.
Lord Huron have always resided in a cinematic world. Their debut album Lonesome Dreams transported us into a Spaghetti Western, all sprawling Americana and vast horizons. Last year, the indie folk band’s cinematic sound met real cinema when their song “The Night We Met” was used pivotally and repea…
2011's Hurry Up, We're Dreaming didn't just turn M83 into a triple-A critical darling and unexpected commercial success, it pushed the band to become one of the biggest and outright best acts on the live circuit. Taking their records' widescreen ambitions and bringing them to life with a huge, bord…
A name change and an absence from the Sasquatch! Music Festival app will definitely effect the number of people at a show. But if the crowd at Preoccupations was any reflection of their controversial previous name, their show on the Yeti stage Saturday night was surely a reflection of their promisi…