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The Claypool Lennon Delirium in Worcester

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The Claypool Lennon Delirium
Leader Bank Pavilion — Boston, MA

The Claypool Lennon Delirium is the side project of Les Claypool and Sean Lennon, two musicians who shouldn't work together but somehow do. They lean into psychedelic weirdness and instrumental complexity without the prog-rock self-seriousness. The project started around 2014 and treats songs like puzzles—warped rhythms, surprising key changes, and Claypool's unmistakable bass work anchoring Sean Lennon's sometimes detached vocal delivery. Their albums have a distinctly kitchen-sink approach, mixing lo-fi bedroom recording sensibilities with elaborate arrangements. It's not exactly accessible, but there's something genuinely odd and memorable about how they build their songs. They're not trying to be cosmic or profound; they're just following weird instincts.

Their shows are exploratory and hypnotic rather than explosive. The crowd gets quiet and focused, tracking the bass lines and waiting for songs to shift shape. Claypool and Lennon seem more interested in the songs than the audience, which somehow makes people lean in harder.

Known for The Golden Ratio, Amethyst, Easily Impressed, Mr. Completely, Hello Starling

The Claypool Lennon Delirium touched down at The Palladium in Worcester back in August 2019, bringing their kaleidoscopic take on psychedelic rock to a packed room. Les Claypool's unmistakable bass work anchored the evening while the band wound through deep cuts like "Boriska" and the sprawling "Blood and Rockets" suite, proving they're more interested in exploration than hits. They closed out the night with the two-part "Cricket and the Genie," a journey from delirium into oratorio that felt like the only logical endpoint. For a band built on collaboration between Praxis guitarist Bill Laswell and Sean Lennon, the Worcester crowd got exactly what they came for: precise musicianship married to genuine weirdness.

Worcester's music scene has always had room for the unconventional. The city's venue culture supports everything from indie rock to experimental jazz, making it a natural stop for artists who operate outside the mainstream. A band like The Claypool Lennon Delirium—built on intricate arrangements and genre-blending ambition—finds its audience here among listeners who value musicianship and risk-taking over accessibility.

Stay in the Elm Hill neighborhood — it's got actual character with tree-lined streets and the best local dining concentration. Book a table at Elm Tavern for elevated comfort food, then spend an afternoon at the Worcester Art Museum, which has a surprisingly strong collection that rewards a couple hours. If you want something quieter before the show, The Hanover Theatre is worth checking even if you're not catching a play — the building itself is an ornate 1904 gem. The walk from Elm Hill to the venue area is doable and keeps you off the highway entirely.

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