Music

Oh ‘Yeah,’ the band plays on

LCD Soundsystem broke up, Interpol is missing in action and The Strokes have gone to seed. The last gang standing from New Yorkโ€™s fabled underground music scene of the early 2000s is the๊ง‘ Yeah Yeah Yea๐Ÿ’›hs, and Thursday night, its enduring appeal was on display at Barclays Center. Itโ€™s just a shame there werenโ€™t more people there to see it.

The celebratory homecoming looked as if it were about to derail before the band even arrived on stage, due to the fact that the arena was barely hal๐Ÿ’ซf full and eerily quiet. But rather than sulk because not enough people showed up at their party, the trio made a point of filling the silence with opener โ€œSacrilegeโ€ โ€” a standout from the new album โ€œMosquito.โ€ As they performed the first verse from behind a curtain, the veil slowly lifted to reveal singer Karen O dressed in an eye-popping turquoise and๐Ÿ…˜ purple outfit. The spectacular ensemble was topped off with a papal hat that glowed with a menacing shade of green, as if sheโ€™d stashed some Kryptonite inside it. Whatever sheโ€™s paying her stylist, it canโ€™t be enough.

After that fantastic start, the band reverted back to playing some of its ea๊ฆ‘rlier, grimier work. โ€œBlack Tongueโ€ and the discordant rock โ€™nโ€™ roll squall of โ€œArt Starโ€ are still the๐“€ best possible soundtracks to a wild night out in the beer-stained bars of the Lower East Side, but inside the vastness of Barclays, they failed to connect.

But the Yeah Yeah Yeahs have come a lo๐Ÿ’™ng way since then and, slowly, they proved it. The 2009 single โ€œZeroโ€ felt like a watershed moment in their career and hearing its growling synths and pulsating beat bounce across the arena felt similarly important for the show. Karen O agreed, and as a blast of confetti erupted into the crowd, she squealed, โ€œNow itโ€™s a party!โ€

The trio was generous with their favors, too, dishing out a final hour that encompassed their best and most varied work. The serene and delicate double of โ€œSkeletonsโ€ and โ€œSubwayโ€ both saw Karen O tone down her banshee wail to something more genteel and soulful, while โ€œCheated Heartsโ€ allowed guitarist Nick Zinner a chance to show off his meatiest riffs.
The real mu๐Ÿญsical marvel in the group, however, continues to be drummer Brian Chase, who manages to play his kit in a way that somebody with seven arms would struggle to replicate. Throughout the Yeah ๊ฆฌYeah Yeahsโ€™ thrilling sonic chaos, he remains their north star.

Although any band aspiring to the เดœarena circuit needs to employ a degree of professionalism, it simply wouldnโ€™t be a Yeah Yeah Yeahs gig without some craziness. So for her final act, Karen O let loose one more time during โ€œDate With the Night,โ€ sl๐Ÿ’žamming her microphone into the stage repeatedly before collapsing into a sweaty heap. Itโ€™s reassuring to know that you can take the girl out of the Lower East Side, but you canโ€™t the Lower East Side out of the girl.