The Little Ones give the Echo that midway feel
Kevin Bronson on
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“I told the label we’d never played a carnival,” frontman Ed Reyes [above] said before the Little Ones’ homecoming show Friday night at the Echo. Well, that accounted for the balloon sculptor and the cotton candy man, not to mention the passel of extended family dotting the packed room. All that was missing was a Ferris wheel.
The L.A. quintet, playing their home turf for the first time since the much-delayed release of its debut “Morning Tide,” provided the colorful ride. Their set was characteristically energetic and tighter than past outings — “they’re road-tested now,” observed one fan — even if it didn’t seem to have the same guileless quality of their early performances. Of course, that was 2006, before label woes (the band was signed to Astralwerks in the U.S., then dropped shortly before “Morning Ride’s” original release date) hardened the Little Ones’ little hearts.
The Stillwater, Okla., five-piece provided the emotional antithesis to the headliners with a set that, while heavy on the drama and the melancholy, was never cloying.
The emotional juxtaposition of the sets — Texas indie-rockers What Made Milwaukee Famous played in between — wasn’t lost on Tabish, a modest and reserved type. “It seems to work,” he said of the shows the bands have played together, adding with a smile, “I’m just not very good at writing happy songs.”
||| Live: The same three bands play tonight at the Detroit Bar in Costa Mesa.
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