I’ve mentioned before how a mutual love of music–specifically indie and alternative rock–helped ignite the Team MarTar spark. It was something we bonded over early on, mailing each other mix CDs (How quaint! How cute!) long before we ever shacked up. She was particularly impressed when I included a Foster the People track one time, and I loved that she sent me Kings of Leon music.

It helped that we mostly have the same tastes in music, with a few exceptions. (She finds Arcade Fire cringey and isn’t nearly as enthusiastic over the Goo Goo Dolls as I am, while I don’t share her Linkin Park love.)

Before we met, I could count the number of concerts I’d been to on one hand (and still have a couple of fingers left over), but once we got together, it was game on. We went to so many shows, we long ago lost count of them all. The number is well over 100, ranging from obscure up-and-comers playing to a few dozen people in intimate venues, to rock ‘n roll legends in sold-out arenas. Portland’s thriving music scene meant there was never a lack of entertainment; some weeks we’d go more than once, even if it was a Tuesday night and we had to go to work the next morning.

It actually amazes me how often we did that. Now that we’re older, the idea holds less appeal, especially if the concert starts late. (Note: late is now 9:00 p.m.) Plus, we had no choice but to scale back in Rapid City; it’s a smaller market with no club scene whatsoever, so concerts became special events rather than weekly rituals. At least now we’re living someplace where the live music scene is much more robust.

And on Friday, we took advantage of that, heading to Milwaukee to see Nathaniel Rateliff and the Night Sweats. It was our first Wisconsin concert, and in fact, the first show we had seen since Built to Spill in Fort Collins almost a year and a half earlier. I’d call that inexcusable but for the fact that we were a tiny bit busy uprooting our lives and whatnot.

The show was great! Nate and his backing band play fun, energetic blues rock, with a few ballads tossed in. If you know one song, it’s probably the super-catchy ditty called “S.O.B.”

We decided to get a room, because people kept telling us to. Sheesh! Actually, it just made sense. We chose a hotel within walking distance (if 40 minutes is considered walking distance). A nice place called the Plaza Hotel just a stone’s throw from Lake Michigan.

The concert was at the BMO Harris Pavilion on the Summerfest grounds. As far as amphitheaters go, this one was pretty nice. There were plenty of concessions stands, though holy concert sticker shock: I never thought I’d pay $19.75 for a cocktail. At least it came in a shaker and was decently sized, but still. Even Tara’s cans of beer were $15. But, hey: we were there to have fun, and it had been a long time. Life is all about occasional splurges.

The whole thing was a rollicking good time and reminded me again why concert-going was a favorite pastime. “We need to do this lots more!” I told Tara afterward, that post-show high (and twenty-dollar cocktails) coursing through my veins.

Afterward we were starving, and had a long walk back to the hotel, but Milwaukee (this part, at least) felt safe enough after dark, so we set out in search of a place. Ended up at Ninja Sushi half an hour before they closed, where we enjoyed a delicious meal before crashing in our room for the night.

Saturday morning we wanted to go out for a nice breakfast, so I did a bit of Googling and we ended up at Toast, a cool little spot with an awesome hippie vibe and (befittingly) a rock ‘n roll theme. My crispy chicken waffle with jalapeno butter and spicy honey totally hit the spot, and that Bloody Mary sealed the deal.

On our way out of town, we made two stops. One of them I’ll write about next time, because it deserves its own post. The other was rather macabre.

That’s the empty lot where Jeffrey Dahmer’s apartment once stood. It was demolished in 1992 and while there have been various plans to turn it into a memorial, nothing has come to fruition yet. That’s not my photo, by the way, because that particular area is very depressed, and pulling over to take a pic seemed disrespectful (not to mention potentially unsafe). We wanted to see it just out of morbid curiosity, I guess.

All in all, it was a great weekend getaway, and the perfect reminder of the role music has–and continues to–play in our relationship.

Have you been to many concerts? Do you still like to rock ‘n roll all night? Who’s still on your concert bucket list?


62 responses to “A good case of the night sweats.”

  1. I love live concerts too, but also tend to be less motivated to go to a ‘late’ concert these days. Still worth it when I do

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    1. What’s your all-time favorite concert?

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      1. Pink Floyd – Dark Side of the Moon – 70s and crazy good performance

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      2. I am officially Very Jealous.

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  2. That is one crazy looking bloody mary! I know you’ve told me in the past that people put all sorts of stuff in those drinks. That’s the wildest I’ve seen. Concert sounds great. The drink sticker shock might do me in. Toast is an awesome name for a cool cafe. That part is the highlight for me. Num on unique food!

    BTW, did you see my response to your comment on my post? I thought it was comic gold.

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    1. That doesn’t even rank in the Top 10 wildest Bloody Marys I’ve had! Trust me, things get a lot crazier than that. Unless there’s a slider on there I’m pretty blasé over the whole thing.

      I haven’t yet seen your reply because, good hell, we have been on the go-go-go for weeks now! Time to start catching up though.

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      1. I think there should be a Bloody Mary post in your future.

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  3. Now I’m living vicariously! I miss concerts, the big kind and the tiny, tremendously. I believe I’ve seen the Dead and Phish 100 times combined (for big ones) and, before I hit the road, I was hitting several small festivals each summer. So glad to hear you did it up on your special weekend!

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    1. Ahh, you’re into the jam band scene. Have you listened to any Goose?

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      1. I have! I like him, too.

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  4. That’s definitely a concert I would have enjoyed. For the music as well as the giant shaker cocktails…
    Sadly my husband and I are at opposite ends of the spectrum when it comes to music so it’s rare when we meet in the middle for a concert. Other than local blues fests and live bands that play at clubs we haven’t paid to see a big show in years. That breakfast spot looked fun..
    👍

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    1. What’s a concert your husband would have enjoyed, just out of curiosity?

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      1. He’s more pop, easy listening and old school Motown.

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      2. Sounds like you balance each other out well!

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  5. I’m impressed you are still hitting concerts. I have to stay up tonight for a dinner and show in Hollywood and I’m already whining about how the show doesn’t start until after my bedtime. Trying to figure out how we used to dance until 5 AM.

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    1. Next up: Billy Joel and Stevie Nicks in Minneapolis, Nov. 10. That is obviously a bigger arena show, but I’m looking forward to it! And we’re going to try to slip in a visit to Paisley Park.

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  6. Ok, I can’t let this go, WHY no love for Linkin Park??? We haven’t been to a ton of concerts, but are trying to make up for it. Bucket list for me would be The Killers, Duran Duran, and Third Eye Blind. More unlikely (don’t know if they still perform) would be Howard Jones, Thompson Twins, and Talking Heads (I think David Byrne now does his own obscure stuff, like a weird Broadway show).

    You can drive by Dahmer’s high school home, not far from me, but I’m not coming with! 🤣

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    1. I owned a Linkin Park CD or two back in the day, but for me, that metal/rap hybrid just hasn’t aged well. I actually asked Tara for an example of a band she’s into that I’m not, and it took us both a while to come up with Linkin Park, so obviously I don’t have strong feelings against them. I roll my eyes more when she busts out the 90s country or hip-hop.

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  7. I can’t say I’ve been to a lot of rock concerts, maybe both hands worth? I used to go to the symphony fairly regularly, but it’s been a while for even that.

    Don’t think I’ve had chicken and waffles. Is that a sin? I made biscuits and sausage gravy for breakfast. That’s pretty southern. I never knew bacon in a Bloody Mary was a thing.

    And yes, why can’t they start concerts at 7PM rather than 9PM? Are musicians all vampires, or do they just have day jobs they can sleepwalk through?

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    1. Tara makes excellent biscuits and gravy, and will often order it when we go out to breakfast. I’m more likely to go with chicken and waffles. Something about that savory/sweet combo really gets to me.

      Bacon in a Bloody Mary is definitely a thing. Or a sausage stick, or perhaps even a slider or small chicken. I’ve never had one of those, though there have been seem pretty crazy concoctions in my day.

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  8. That looks like a lot of fun! Great photos too. The big piano and guitar were at the show? Team Mar Tar rocks! ❤️❤️❤️

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    1. I hear they were left over from an old They Might Be Giants concert.

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      1. Oh, I love They Might Be Giants. Now I love the pic even more! ❤

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  9. Been to tons of concerts over the years. A few notables that we paid for:

    Grateful Dead
    Bruce Hornsby
    Indigo Girls
    Muddy Waters
    Neil Young
    Steely Dan
    Bob Seger
    Jackson Browne
    Starcastle
    Queen
    Alabama
    Dixie Chicks
    Pure Prairie League
    Steve Forbert
    John Eddie
    The Dave Matthews Band
    Sarah MacLachlan
    Melissa Etheridge
    10,000 Maniacs
    Natasha Beddingfield
    Boston
    Little Feat
    Little River Band
    Firefall
    Fleetwood Mac
    Stevie Nicks
    Muddy Waters
    Eric Clapton
    Jefferson Starship
    Orleans
    Atlanta Rhythm Section
    Dolly Parton
    Kenny Rogers
    Gordon Lightfoot
    Journey
    Santana
    Sophie B. Hawkins

    Plus, in college, I worked in a snack hut at the Garden State Arts Center ~ listening to rock concerts for free. After intermission, we inventoried our sales, closed the snack huts, and sat on the lawn to listen to the main acts, which included Stephen Stills, Dave Mason, ELO, Chicago, the Moody Blues, Seals & Croft, Loggins & Messina, the Eagles, Hall & Oates, etc.. If we didn’t get scheduled to work on the night of a good concert, we got into the venue for free by telling the ushers (our friendly co-workers) that we were picking up our checks. The fact that we had 2-3 friends with us never seemed to faze them.

    I hope when I’m really old and gray (like Jagger), I’ll still say: Music rocks! 😀

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    1. That’s a very impressive list! Steve Forbert feels like the outlier, ha (though I do like “Romeo’s Tune”).

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      1. One of my roommates in college was a DJ for the college radio station ~ she played Steve Forbert on a (somewhat irregular) rotation.

        Have fun at your upcoming Billy Joel / Stevie Nicks concerts!

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  10. I don’t go to concerts much (and not at all recently) but I do enjoy dancing to early rock ‘n roll and R&B, so I’m always open to live music… as long as I can still be home by 9 and in bed by 10. I enjoyed the YouTube video. I had never heard of them before, but I like their music. That food made my arteries shut down a bit just by looking at it. I hope you ate salads the rest of the day 🙂

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    1. I had a chicken salad sandwich for supper. That kind of counts!

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  11. What fun! Thanks for taking us along. 😉😎😉

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    1. You’re welcome! (You could have chipped in for gas, though…)

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  12. Last concert was a very aged Doobie Brothers with a very gray Michael McDonald. I say keep rockin as long as you can Mark, even if they take you in and out on a stretcher!

    Talked with Alison today- they loved Sylvan Lake and Custer State Park in general. She said the leaves were turning and the overall ambience was perfect. Rapid City was a hit, Jennifer says hi back at you, they ate at Paddy O’Neils (LOVED the pretzels, Chris had the Reuben, Alison had Irish poutine) but they didn’t get homemade pop tarts- the cafe was closed so they went nearby to Perky something or other…She says thanks for all the info 🙂

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    1. We saw an aged Doobie Brothers in WA maybe 8 years ago. No Michael McDonald, though (I always liked the lineup without him best anyway).

      I’m so glad they took my suggestions to heart and had a great time! I wonder if “Perky” something was actually Pure Bean, another good coffee shop down the street from Harriet & Oak.

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      1. YES! That sounds more correct, although by the time she got to that on her list of things and places stuff was starting to jumble up for both her and me 😉 She did mention “close by” to H & O as she rattled things off.

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  13. I’ve seen many concerts/artists. My favorites include: Pink Floyd, Eric Clapton, The Who, Leo Kottke, Santana, Little Feat (best live band ever), CSNY (and individual solo gigs too), Los Lobos, Solas, Dire Straits, Andres Segovia, Dolly Parton, Jimmy Buffett, John Hiatt, Steve Goodman, Nancy Griffith, Joni Mitchell, and J.J. Cale. There are many more. As a performer, I’ve also opened for several stars. I know concerts from both sides very well.

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    1. That’s awesome! We saw CSN but no Y. I’d have loved to have seen Pink Floyd and Dire Straits.

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  14. My first concert was near Milwaukee. I went to The Steve Miller Band at Alpine Valley. Other than that, hmmm . . . Eric Clapton and Sarah McLachlan (opened by Paula Cole). I think that’s it. I’ve been to orchestra concerts, too. Clearly music isn’t center stage in my life (get it?) like it is in yours, though I was just doing the whole litterbox clean on Saturday and it was made so much more pleasant by listening to some tunes, so it does factor in. The husband is more musically minded of the two of us.
    Very nice hotel room, by the way. When I looked at it I thought, “Hey, Mark’s doing a travel post! Yay!”

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    1. I guess it does count as a travel post! Next up: Minneapolis on 11/10. We don’t plan on any serial killer-themed stops that trip, but then again, you never know what you’ll stumble upon.

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      1. In Minnesota? Never! Serial killing is so Wisconsin.
        P.S. Hoping for a meet up!!

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      2. We’ll definitely try to arrange a meet-up!

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  15. We don’t go to many concerts, but recently my favorite band from childhood (Simple Plan) came to Denver so we did go to that. Made me think we should go to more concerts, actually. It was a lot of fun!

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    1. That’s the thing: no matter how much of a drag it might feel like in advance (late night, driving, parking, expenses, etc.), I have never once left a concert thinking I should have stayed home.

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  16. We used to go to concerts, my favorite is a tie between jackson browne and queen back in the 70s also billy joel in a little room at bowling Green university. But lately it’s been more classical, since we have the Cleveland orchestra, and random lucky occurrences. I would love to see puddles pity party!

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    1. Jackson Browne is still high on my concert bucket list. And he played in Madison a few months ago, but we had just bought tickets for Billy Joel & Stevie Nicks in Minneapolis in November, so I didn’t really want to shell out a bunch more money. Hopefully he’ll come through town again in the near future.

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  17. I’ve seen very little live music as I’m not a massive fan of the stadium experience. Too many people, too much traffic, too expensive, too far to walk back afterwards when I’m tired and want my bed. And that’s before I got old!

    I do love a small venue, and miss my Sunday lunchtimes at a (relatively) local jazz club. Sadly the club closed and I’ve not found another to replace it.

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    1. I prefer small venues myself, but I’ve gotta say, this amphitheater was the perfect compromise. Big enough to hold enough people, but not so large that you’re stuck in the nosebleed section. And it’s got a roof to protect you from the weather, but is open on three sides.

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  18. The price of that cocktail will haunt you for months. This I know from experience.

    Have you been to many concerts? No
    Do you still like to rock ‘n roll all night? Well, I like rock ‘n roll for some of the night
    Who’s still on your concert bucket list? I’ve never had a bucket list for anything so… no one?

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    1. I’m not so sure about the cocktail, seeing as how we bought another before the evening was out. 🙂

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  19. You guys do the coolest things.
    I love that picture of the two of you.
    We do things out of morbid curiosity as well. We were in Manitowoc a few years ago and took a picture of the Avery Auto Salvage yard after watching Making a Murderer.

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    1. I’d do that too! You don’t hear much about Steven Avery these days. After watching the show, I came away fairly convinced that he’s innocent. Or, at the very least, didn’t act alone.

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  20. I remember in high school, concerts were my life. And they were cheap enough to go to all of them, just off my babysitting money. AND I could afford a program and a t-shirt. Pretty sure parking was free.

    That little hotel is the cutest!

    That bloody mary looks like a meal in itself! Wish I had one right now.

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  21. P.S I love NR and the Night Sweats “S.O.B.”!!!!!!! It’s on my “If I’m ever in a coma, play only this” playlist.

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    1. I have a playlist with the same name, lol. I think you’re the one who gave me the idea!

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  22. That looks like a really fun weekend…aside from your macbre moment. 😳
    We saw Nate (I think he might have had the sweats, or he was minus the sweats, can’t remember because also: ‘spensive drinks) about four years ago at The Grand Ole Opry. I love their music!!

    We have seen sooooo many live concerts. We’ve only slowed down the past few years….covid being one reason. The other being I don’t love being out too late myself. 🙂 That being said, I’m going to see John Mayer later this week!!

    My fave show I’ve ever seen? Would have to be Farm Aid on my 40th birthday in 2007.

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  23. I have been to less than 10 concerts. Kenn is a total-stick-in-the-mud when it comes to concerts; he’ll go, but he’ll quietly broadcast how much he doesn’t want to be there the whole time. The last concert I went to, I took someone else and had a blast!

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    1. Haha! A passive-aggressive concert attendee is no fun. I don’t blame you for finding alternate company!

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  24. I’d love to see Nathaniel Rateliff–he has a great vibe! We also “Feel the Music” and love concerts at all levels!!

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    1. He definitely brought a lot of energy to the stage!

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  25. […] we were staying overnight for the Nathaniel Rateliff concert in Milwaukee in September, our hotel had complimentary bottles of S.Pellegrino sparkling natural […]

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