An Evening with Feist @ Commodore -- 10/02/17
Somehow it's been nine years since I last saw Feist perform live -- so long that the last time I saw her predates this very blog. So I was happy to fix that while spending An Evening With Feist as she toured her Polaris short-listed album Pleasures (well, the second of two evenings with Feist, really, as she was at the Vogue the previous night).
With no opening act, Feist came on stage with an undeniable and effortless confidence, having the crowd rapt from the first notes of "Pleasure" as she played the entire new album front to back, promising the highs and lows of love & heartbreak.
Backed by Amir Yaghmai on keys and violin, Todd Dahlhoff on bass, and Lucky Paul Taylor on drums, Feist was clearly having fun, while she made jokes & chatting between songs, slipped local references into the lyrics, and even took a moment mid-set to give Broken Social Scene bandmate Kevin Drew a call, speakerphone held up to the mic so we could all hear (and challenged him to make the same call when their places were swapped and she was on the east coast while BSS was playing the Commodore).
Highlights from the first half of the set included one of my favourites from the album, "Any Party", a sweet song with a few ad libbed lines toward the end, and "Century" with the disembodied voice of Jarvis Cocker doing his spoken word portion of the song as the simmering energy bubbled over for an intense ending.
You would think after about an hour, once she wrapped up the album with "Young Up", that would be the end of the main set. But she went right in to a selection of older tracks, starting with the aptly titled "A Commotion", playing nearly another hour of older favourites, like "Sealion Woman" which had the crowd chanting along, and a bit of a revised version of "I Feel It All".
She ended the main set on a bit of a heartbreak, but also with a twinge of humour, saying she had been told this next was used as the first dance at weddings. With a smirk, she made sure we really paid attention to the lyrics, causing a few chuckles through the crowd as everyone listened intently to of one of the best breakup songs of the '00s, "Let It Die".
Once again, I thought that might have been the end, and it would have been satisfying, but she was back out for a well-earned encore, alone with her guitar for an acoustic "Mushaboom" with a giant singalong, and then a reworked, slowed down version of "1234". But the crowd was still clamouring for more, as Feist came right back out for a second encore and fielded a request for "Secret Heart". She joked she may not quite remember all of the words, but any time she hesitated, the crowd was right there to remind her, singing along. Then after two and a half hours, she ended it for real with one last song, "Gatekeeper".
Feist is an amazing performer with an amazing voice, and no doubt this will end up as a favourite show of the year. Now, hopefully it just won't be another nine years...
setlist
Pleasure
I Wish I Didn't Miss You
Get Not High, Get Not Low
Lost Dreams.
Any Party
A Man Is Not A Song
The Wind
Century
Baby Be Simple
I'm Not Running Away
Young Up
A Commotion
My Moon My Man
Sealion Woman
The Bad In Each Other
Caught A Long Wind
Feel it All
Let it Die
(encore)
Mushaboom
1234
(second encore)
Secret Heart
Gatekeeper