This is the first in a series of daily reports from this year’s Outside Lands from KQED Arts’ newest reporter, Kevin L. Jones. This is the first time Jones has attended the festival.

I should probably preface this by admitting that I’m not a huge fan of outdoor music festivals. I prefer to see bands in more intimate venues that don’t leave me vulnerable to the elements (I’m fair-skinned.) Of course I’ve been to my share of music festivals — in some cases it was my only opportunity to see some of my favorite bands — but nowadays I avoid them completely.
That being said, it makes little sense that I volunteered for this assignment — providing daily recaps of the events — because it means traveling two hours each way to stand in the sun and watch a bunch of bands I’m not too familiar with, only to leave before the headliners take the stage so I can write my article.
But I did, because somebody has to do it.
So, without further ado, here are my notes on the first day of Outside Lands.

Rayland Baxter: I started my Outside Lands experience with the feel good sounds of Rayland Baxter and his group from Nashville. Their tunes were mostly southern-tinged tributes to AM Gold classics, but they could also get pretty heavy, with one track sounding like if the Black Angels tapped into an early Black Sabbath riff. Also notable was Baxter’s anecdote about living in a friends backyard in Israel years ago — “I just ended up there” — in which he concluded by saying the current situation there was “a bunch of stupid shit.”

Aparna Nancherla / Garfunkel & Oates: Though it was already packed, a quick flash of my press badge got me into the Barbary to see the first sets of the day from comedian Aparna Nancherla and the musical comedy duo Garfunkel and Oates (they also closed out the day). It appeared that the crowd needed to warm up to Nancherla and her sardonic takes on real life, but by the time she started reading the messages she’s received via her OK Cupid account, the audience was hers.