Midway through their Wednesday headlining set, Titus Andronicus frontman and lead singer Patrick Stickles stopped playing his guitar, to address the rowdy crowd assembled in front of him. “We’d like to thank you,” he began, “For choosing us for your New Jersey rock experience tonight.” A simple gesture for sure, but one that came across as incredibly gracious, given the context of the night. While dozens were packing into the Horseshoe to see the band named after a William Shakespeare tragedy perform, across town, fellow New Jersey punk band The Gaslight Anthem were also playing at Sound Academy. The latter have grown into something of a household name, thanks to their songs being played on rock radio stations, and having played large festivals such as Vans Warped Tour and Lollapalooza. Meanwhile Titus Andronicus – who are rounded out by bassist Ian Graetzer, Amy Klein on guitar and violin, David Robbins on guitar and a American flag-draped keyboard, and Eric Harm on the drums and back-up vocals – have managed to fly under the radar, unless you are a big fan of bands such as Neutral Milk Hotel, The Pogues, or even The Hold Steady, or are the type of person that reads Pitchfork reviews just for the numerical rating (their debut album, The Airing of Grievances, received a respectable 8.5 out of 10)
Even though both bands call the Garden State home, that’s really where the comparisons end. Titus Andronicus don’t write your typical verse-chorus-verse punk songs that are contained between two and four minutes, they write sprawling epic narratives about that last to upwards of fifteen minutes, often building to powerful finishes. They also aren’t a band that are afraid of ambition. Take for example the band’s most recent album, The Monitor, which is loosely based on the American Civil War. The song “A More Perfect Union”, which they opened with, even goes as far as to sample a recording of an address by Abe Lincoln. Stickles’ howling voice, which at any given time sounds like a cross between Conor Oberst, The Hold Steady’s Craig Finn, and (yes, it must be said) Bruce Springsteen, is the perfect vehicle for the band’s rallying cries against conformity, suburban malaise, and fears of the future. Another highlight was “No Future Part Three: Escape from No Future”, which somehow manages to take the line “You will always be a loser”, and turn it into a cathartic sing-a-long.
The show wasn’t all seriousness though – the band also broke out a rousing cover of Weezer’s “The Sweater Song” that had the entire audience chiming in. When they finished, a cheering crowd brought them back out for one more song, something that Sickles commented, “We don’t do very often.” Underrated, but never unappreciated. That’s the Titus Andronicus way.
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