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Gig Info:
Lineup: Luscious Jackson
Performance Date: 10 December 1994

Country: United States
City: Los Angeles, CA
Venue: Universal Amphitheatre

Other Bands/Artists at the Show:

  • Hole
  • Liz Phair
  • Jesus And Mary Chain
  • Veruca Salt
  • Live
  • Meat Puppets
  • Mazzy Star
  • Bad Religion
  • Stone Temple Pilots
  • Sunny Day Real Estate

Notes:

KROQ Almost Acoustic Concert.
 
Setlist:
1. Strongman
2. Here
3. Deep Shag
4. City Song
Reviews:
The Los Angeles Times, Los Angeles, California (Monday, December 12, 1994)
by Robert Hilburn:


You know you're in good hands at a holiday rock concert when the records played between acts range from Christmas tunes by Frank Sinatra and Elvis Presley to the latest music from Pearl Jam and Nine Inch Nails.
Yes, Saturday's first night of KROQ's annual "Almost Acoustic Christmas" benefit weekend at the Universal Amphitheatre was a winner: a frequently glorious, 5½-hour survey of contemporary rock that was more revealing, on balance, than the average Lollapalooza lineup.
The heart of the 11-act affair was a parade of emerging female rock stars, highlighted by polar opposites Courtney Love and Liz Phair.
Where Phair combines a disciplined demeanor and superbly intelligent songwriting, Love surrounds her art with explosive bursts of passion. But they are both at the center of the most liberating array of female artists ever to arrive on the scene at one time - a '90s crop that was well represented Saturday.
New York's Luscious Jackson, four female musicians backed on stage by a male deejay, opened the night's series of 15 to 20-minute sets with winning tales of urban life, blending hip-hop and alternative rock with refreshing independence.
In a far more energized and impressive outing than its recent Hollywood Palladium date, Chicago's Veruca Salt - a co-ed quartet led by singers Nina Gordon and Louise Post operated from a widely appealing musical base that combines the bounce of the Go-Go's and the moodiness of the Velvet Underground. The group's lyrics reflect a strong sense of feminist independence and self-respect.
Mazzy Star, the California band guided by singer Hope Sandoval and guitarist David Roback, trades in a sort of post-Cowboy Junkies, post-Velvet Underground midnight blue melancholia. On Saturday, their music ranged from haunting to a bit remote.
Leaving her band in her Chicago hometown, Phair introduced new material and revisited songs from her acclaimed 1993 debut album, "Exile in Guyville." For all the attention Phair has received for her flashy use of X-rated words in her explorations of love and lust, she is far from a shock-minded novelty. There is in her best work a seductive blend of intelligence and innocence, as reflected in such disarming lines as "Whatever happened to a boyfriend, the kind of guy who makes love because he's in it?"
Next to the soft intimacy of Phair's set, Love and her band Hole came on stage ablaze about four hours later.