After their slim silhouettes’ swaggered on stage, the bass dropped and a heavy Police-like dance hall rhythm filled the room. Note by note the air became saturated with ethereal, symphonic textures, soaring vocals, and tinges of teenage awe. The vastness was quickly swept away and replaced by an almost comedic vaudevillian stomp. For a time, synthesized horns and a ragtime shuffle grooved beneath blues guitar licks and Huffman’s incomprehensible mumble sing. This shift between reggae and circus sideshow persisted with the occasional injection of Beatles Abbey-Road-era-psychedelica and straight ahead garage rock. Despite the wide range of genres attempted, there was no point in the show where the band sounded at odds with itself. You could tell that the songs were much less tunes and more compositions, carefully plotted and ably executed.
However, the disco ball spinning above the floor of the Echo gave the performance some much needed movement. The only members of the group who appeared to be enjoying themselves were guitarist Thomas Hunter and his Monopoly Guy mustache. Though Huffman’s stationary stance was both intriguing and powerful, he barely opened his eyes and rarely addressed the audience. I couldn’t determine if they were plagued by the perils of hipster pretention, or if the fact that it was the last date on their tour had made them sleepy, but either way they could have bumped up the energy.
I left the Echo glad I had stopped in and though I didn’t have a single lyric or motif of Kay Kay’s stuck in my head, I was filled with a sense of wonder. Their unique blend of orchestral pop had inspired possibility and their worker fatigue reminded me of my own finitude. And although Huffman’s onstage claim that, “Our new record will change your life,” was a bit generous, the album and the band are definitely worth checking out.