I promise this will be the last Wilco-related post for a while. I’m sure there must be some other stuff I can blather on about.

Anyway, Ben Hudson — a talented up-and-coming photog and all around good dude — took some pretty nifty shots at the show and I thought y’all might like to see  ’em.

Here you go:

AT THE REQUEST OF STATE OF MIND MAGAZINE, THESE PHOTOS HAVE BEEN TAKEN DOWN. YOU CAN STILL SEE THEM HERE.

                                     
Tune in later for a rant on steroids!

Dan Bolles is a culture coeditor at Seven Days. He joined the paper in 2007 as its music editor, covering Vermont's robust music, comedy and nightlife scenes for a decade before deciding he was too old to be going to the Monkey House on weeknights to...

3 replies on “Oooh! Pretty Pictures!”

  1. I am NOT from Vermont, but I have a question for native Vermonters. Why is it that Vermonter women (not transplants) insist on wearing beards and leg hair? It isn’t attractive and the men here aren’t happy. Men don’t like having to worry if the women they are dating could kick their asses. I guess it’s good to take a Vermonter woman hiking with you in case you break your leg. At least then you will have someone to carry you back to the Subaru. SHAVE YOUR BEARDS and CUT OFF YOUR DREADLOCKS. Tweezers are cheap. Buy some! Good Lord!

  2. How do you know that bearded Vermont women aren’t transplants?Vermont has a proud tradition of bearded women dating back to 1847 when Bertha Mae LaCroix became the world’s first Bearded Lady carney in Traveling Jack’s Carnival Caravan.Since that time, follicle-enhanced females the world over have sought out the Green Mountains in an effort to follow in her large, hairy footsteps. It’s kind of like how half the student body of UVM enrolled simply because Trey Anastasio once threw up off a Living & Learning balcony.There are hundreds, if not thousands of bearded transplants in VT. Do your homework — you obviously have time.

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