Edgefest 5: The good, the bad and the muddy
Jon Bream / Star Tribune
 
SOMERSET, WIS. -- Nearly 22 hours of music from 28
bands over two days. A day of ideal weather, then
morning rain and plenty of mud. Not enough sleep, too
much beer. More than 31,000 people, sending at least
$45,000 to a dozen Minnesota charities. And just how
was Edgefest 5?
 
Here's a look back at the good, the bad and the muddy
of the two-day rock festival, which ended Sunday.
The sign that read "No body surfing/No slam dancing" didn't stop anyone in
front of the stage at Edgefest.
Expect the unexpected: Pop singer Alana Davis, a
veteran of Lilith Fair who is scheduled for the
H.O.R.D.E. fest this summer, and sideman Drew Zing
injected some jazzy guitar work into Edgefest early
Sunday -- a welcome relief after 11 hours of
testosterone rock Saturday. Sister Hazel did a
Southern-fried cover of -- go figure -- Fleetwood Mac's
"Gold Dust Woman," and Green Day did an Ozzy Osbourne
song. Oh, every guitar-dominated rock band has probably
done an Ozzy song at one time or another.
 
Festival Behavior 101: On Sunday, both Cornershop, a
stoic British band, and the Mighty Mighty Bosstones, a
frenetic Boston group, counseled the festivalgoers
about their behavior. "If there's no decorum," said
Cornershop singer Tjinder Singh, "there's no show." A
Frisbee had been aimed at one of the seated sitar
players. Later, in midsong, Singh had to dodge a roll
of toilet paper tossed at him. Bosstones singer Dicky
Barrett confronted the revelers after his first song.
"If I get hurt, you get hurt," he said. "So throw all
your toilet paper at once. I need this at home." Well,
at least no one hurled mud at the stage.
(Law-enforcement authorities reported Sunday night that
scores of concertgoers did suffer injuries through the
weekend, but all were minor.)
Ska special: The juxtaposition of the Specials and the
Bosstones gave Edgefest-goers an education in Ska. The
Specials were part of a British ska movement, starting
in 1979, mixing punk with Jamaican reggae. The
Bosstones are part of a late-'90s U.S. ska explosion,
along with such hitmakers as No Doubt and Save Ferris.
The Boss tones were more urgent and frenzied but no
more -- or less -- fun than the Specials.
 
Drummer wanted: Stabbing Westward's drummer, Andy
Kubiszewski, broke his collarbone roller-blading
Thursday night, and the band had to pull out of its
Saturday Edgefest slot. Soul Asylum used drummer
Charlie Quintana, formerly with Bob Dylan and Joan
Osborne, Wednesday on "The Late Show with David
Letterman." On Sunday at Edgefest, the Minneapolis
group used British drummer Ian Moshington, who has been
on board for a half-dozen gigs and appears destined for
the permanent slot.
Not your flavor of the month: Except for Green Day and
Soul Asylum , most of the nationally known Edgefest
bands were pretty much of the flavor-of-the-month
variety. Forget about these one-hit wonders; it was the
veterans who gave the most galvanizing performances.
Like Beck's show at Edgefest 4, Green Day's
over-the-top set Saturday may rank as the most
unforgettable rock performance of the year. And Soul
Asylum , mixing new material with such old radio
favorites as "Black Gold," "Somebody to Shove" and
"Misery," reminded the hometown folks how to put punch
in pop and to rock with spirit and abandon (a cover of
Wyclef Jean's "Gone Till November" and the unreleased
"Candy from a Stranger," a falsetto-funk meets muscular
metal).
 
Try a new flavor: After opening with "Tumble in the
Rough" by the Stone Temple Pilots (his old band), Scott
Weiland adopted a bug-eyed, exaggerated Bowiesque
persona to play some glam-rock with his new group, the
Action Girls, featuring the slashing guitar of Daniel
Lanois, producer extraordinaire. Then Crystal Method, a
duo from Las Vegas, introduced Edgefesters to
pulsating, pulverizing electronica, accompanied by a
spectacular light show -- dance music for a new
generation.
 
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