The Cabooze Minneapolis MN: November 23, 2002

Notable

Short intro into Kabump. Jam at 6:45 with Ryan’s bass line is cool.

2nd Self goes into a big improv jam.

The Crooked One, BB “thanks for coming out, everybody, happy Saturday.”

Jake starts in with some picking jazz notes as they begin The Fussy Dutchman.

Joel says “that’s the Stylophone right there” apparently Jake was playing. “1967, purchased at Radio Shack.”

Wappy Sprayberry is still just an improv jam based around Ryan’s bass line.

Jake plays the recently common guitar riff from JaJunk, telegraphing their intent to play JaJunk next.

A rare A Fifth of Beethoven, only played 32 times mostly in 2000-2004, finishes the set.

Miss Tinkles takes almost 5 minutes to work up and start, as the guys jam on an increasing-energy run up to the beginning of the song.

As usual, and in an uninterrupted run so far, Tinkles morphs into Mulche’s like they are a single song. Back to “bacon” in the first verse.

A solid Divisions comes blasting straight out of Mulche’s Odyssey.

It’s a funny uncommon with some weird synthesizer sounds from Joel throughout and after the song

Then a nice standalone get in the van.

Andy’s Last Beer finishes set 2.

Encore: Family Feud Theme, and Jake challenges the audience to name the game show. A solid Hurt Bird Bath ends the show.

Setlist from allthings.umphreys.com

Set 1:
Intro > Kabump > 2nd Self > The Crooked One, The Fussy Dutchman[1], Syncopated Strangers, Wappy Sprayberry > JaJunk > A Fifth of Beethoven

Set 2:
Miss Tinkle’s Overture > Mulche’s Odyssey, Divisions, The Triple Wide, YYZ[2], Uncommon, Uncle Wally > Get In The Van, Andy’s Last Beer[3]

Encore:
Family Feud theme > Hurt Bird Bath

Footnotes:
[1] with Jake on stylophone
[2] Brendan, Ryan, and Jake left the stage for the drums segment, leaving Mike on drums and Andy on groove box
[3] with Flight of the Bumblebee (Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov) teases

Audio

The Live Music Archive app (iOS) and the Taper’s Section app (Android) is a great way to find and listen to these shows. You can stream, download for offline listening, save favorites, and mark shows as already listened to. The app pulls all data directly from the public repository of live music recordings posted at archive.org.

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