Photos courtesy of City of Caterpillar
Of course, 9/11 came along shortly after and gave an existential context to this enormous new music. Suddenly, it made sense to immersive ourselves in these vast, ethereal, majestically somber albums. Each in its own way conjured a kind of ambient apocalypse.In May of 2001, I saw a band called City of Caterpillar. I’d never heard them before. All I knew was they were from Virginia and had members of pg. 99, a band I liked but that had yet to become semi-legendary. Their name, though, instantly intrigued me. I’d seen it printed on a flyer at Double Entendre, an indie record store in my hometown of Denver that specialized in post-hardcore and threw lots of great shows; in the late 90s and early 00s, I saw everyone from Joan of Arc to Milemarker there. The name “City of Caterpillar” evoked an arcane strangeness. That strangeness called to me. After so many years in the scene, where everyone’s heart was pinned to their sleeve and human emotion was treated as the final frontier, it felt good to tap back into the wider, weirder mystery of music. I had no idea what “City of Caterpillar” meant, and I didn’t want to. I just wanted to see what kind of band plays a DIY place like Double Entendre while having a name that sounded like it belonged to a French prog band circa 1973—the kind of band that might sing about mystical beings roaming the wasteland after the collapse of civilization.I wasn’t entirely off the mark. City of Caterpillar took the stage of Double Entendre and turned it into a dystopia.
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