Shouting Thomas Torment/T-Model Ford & GravelRoad at the Beachland Tavern, Cleveland, OH, 6.4.11

 

Shouting Thomas Torment

 

 

Sometimes you go to a show just hoping the opening act won’t be unbearable. Then sometimes you get something like Shouting Thomas Torment.

While sometimes situated in a group, Shouting Thomas and the Torments, Shouting Thomas was doing it one-man band style at the Beachland Tavern Saturday night. He immediately lived up to his name by shouting, showman style, from the moment he stepped on stage to the moment he stepped off. In between, he thumped the bass drum, drove the hi-hat and took the guitar from fuzzed-out punk blues to rockabilly twang, shook it all together and broke it all down. The set kicked off with “Struggle (Scratch That Itch)”, hit on a number of highlights like “Slave for My Cave”, “All Grown Up Wrong”, “Trouble Doll” and “Swamp Witch”, and closed out with “Shakey Shake #1”. There was also a Bo Diddley beat and a very respectable imitation of a chicken on the guitar.

(Shouting Thomas also made sure to mention a couple of 45s he had for sale: “Slave for My Cave” on a split with Wolfboy Slim and “Black Cat Bone” b/w “Trouble Doll”.)

I went in not knowing a single thing about Shouting Thomas Torment and came out an enthusiastic fan.

 

T-Model Ford & GravelRoad

 

 

One of my regrets from the Great Mississippi Sojourn I took last summer with co-blogger Jennifer and our friend Cam Rogers is that I didn’t spend an evening or two in a juke joint. Well, now I feel a little better because James “T-Model” Ford brought the juke to the Beachland. Aside from being about the right size and aesthetic for a Mississippi juke, the tavern also had about the right heat and humidity Saturday night. But it took T-Model to fill it with the right vibe and sound.

GravelRoad – this night being comprised of just guitarist Stefan Zillioux and drummer Martin Reinsel as bass player Jon “Kirby” Newman was under house arrest for undisclosed reasons – took the lead, playing a couple of their own numbers, showing why they make a great complement to Ford with their low, rough, electric blues-drag sound. Then Ford, who drew a crowd that covered a wide variety of ages and classes, took the stage, strapped on Black Mattie (his trusty Peavey guitar) and got hips to rolling in short order.

Best estimates place Ford’s age at 90, he has a pacemaker and has survived a stroke in recent years, but you’d hardly think it from watching him play. While a couple of his songs this night lasted less than 3 minutes, most of them ran well beyond the usual 5-minute mark, playing on the classic blues tradition of not letting a good groove go once you’ve got a hold of it. And groove is what it’s all about. Just fast enough to get your ass to swaying, but not too fast to keep your partner from holding on tight. This is why they call him the Tail/Tale Dragger. (And this is also probably part of why he calls himself the Ladies Man, because you can bet he was taking in as much of the body-grooving females in the audience as he could.)

While Ford was undeniably the star of the show, the support of GravelRoad should not be underestimated. Zillioux stayed tight in Ford’s wake through tunes like “I Love You, Baby”, “Hip Shakin’ Woman”, “Chickenhead Man” and “Train I Ride”, while Reinsel pummeled a tide of heavy beats that were more than a little responsible for the shaking of hips through the night. Not to mention, Reinsel looked like he was having the time of his life.

 


Video courtesy of Chris Bishop.

 

Now if there had just been some fried pickles and sweet tea…

 

 

For some absolutely beautiful shots of T-Model Ford’s recent show in St. Louis, Missouri, check out our friend Nate Burrell’s Flickr set.

Notable Shows in the Greater Cleveland Area

Shows worth checking out this week in and around Cleveland:

The Beachland Ballroom & Tavern

  • Sat, Jun 4| 8:30 PM (7:30 PM door)
    The Hesitations
    $10
    Ballroom | All Ages
  • Sat, Jun 4| 8:30 PM (7:30 PM door)
    T-Model Ford & Gravel Road
    Shouting Thomas & The Torments
    DJ Kitty B. Shake
    $12
    Tavern | All Ages
  • Sun, Jun 5| 8 PM (7 PM door)
    Southern Culture on the Skids
    Whiskey Daredevils
    $15 adv / $17 dos
    Ballroom | All Ages
  • Mon, Jun 6| 8 PM (7 PM door)
    Zoe Keating
    Nick Diodore
    $18 adv / $20 dos
    Ballroom | All Ages
  • Tue, Jun 7| 9 PM (8 PM door)
    Del The Funky Homosapien
    Bob & The Devil
    Bukue One
    Muamin Collective
    Unseen Handz
    Groovesmith
    $12 adv / $14 dos
    Ballroom | All Ages
  • Tue, Jun 7| 8:30 PM (8 PM door)
    Daryl Hance
    Physical Rockett
    Andrew La Ponza
    $7
    Tavern | All Ages
  • Wed, Jun 8| 8:30 PM (7:30 PM door)
    Dennis Coffey
    (with Will Sessions & vocalist Kendra Morris)
    Stepkids
    We The People
    DJ Charles McGaw
    $18 adv / $20 dos
    Ballroom | All Ages
  • Wed, Jun 8| 8:30 PM (7:30 PM door)
    Nicole Atkins & The Black Sea
    Rebekah Jean
    Nate Jones
    $10
    Tavern | All Ages

Grog Shop

  • Sat, Jun 4| 8 PM
    Red Giant
    Ohio Sky
    $6
  • Sun, Jun 5| 8 PM
    Polymerization
    The Red Buttons
    People Parts
    Big Sur
    $5
  • Tue, Jun 7| 8 PM
    The Dodos
    Gauntlet Hair
    Shoreway
    $10 adv / $12 dos

Now That’s Class

  • Sat, Jun 4| 9 PM
    Keelhaul
    Megachruch
    $5
  • Mon, Jun| 9 PM (4 PM doors)
    10 Cent Beer Night, featuring
    Natural Child
    Rabble Rabble
    Mr. California
    (Bar opens at 4 pm. Kegs tapped then. Show starts at 9 pm When they run out, they run out.)
    $5
  • Thu, Jun 9| 9 PM
    Garbage River
    Yvette
    Folded Shirt
    Skitzobill
    FREE
  • Fri, Jun 10| 9 PM
    Tiger Hatchery
    Moth Cock
    Drake-Scheible-Henry
    Dead Peasant Insurance
    $5

Happy Dog

  • Sat, Jun 4| 9 PM
    The Flying Eyes
    The Suede Brothers
    The Exploding Lies
  • Wed, Jun 8| 9 PM
    The Tillers
    Shivering Timbers
  • Fri, Jun 10| 8 PM
    Weapons of Mass Creation Pre-Fest Mixer Show, featuring
    Humble Home
    Gregory and the Hawk
    Bethesda
    David Dondero

Musica

  • Fri, Jun 10| 10:30 PM
    J Rawls
    A Minus
    Muamin Collective
    TUT
    DJ Jack da Rippa
    $10

T-Model Ford in Cleveland

“It’s Jack Daniels times.”

T-Model Ford, the 90-year-old bluesman from the Mississippi hill country, the Bad Man, the Ladies’ Man, the Tale Dragger, will be putting players half his age to shame at the Beachland Tavern tonight.

He’ll be backed by GravelRoad. Shouting Thomas & The Torments and DJ Kitty B. Shake open.

Doors at 7:30, show at 8:30. $12 gets you in. You can buy me a drink while you’re there.

Your T.V. Favorites

Earlier this spring, I conducted a seasonal survey on Twitter that was a big hit all around. And while this one won’t be as titillating as the first, here’s another fun one, inspired by @Truersound talking about one of his old favorites (and which song I can’t remember now… oops). While I don’t watch television that much anymore – aside from occasional shows on the internets… oh hey, I should have an episode of Archer waiting for me – I grew up with television as my best friend. I was a latchkey kid for most of my childhood and used the T.V. set for company becoming well-versed in all manner of syndicated sitcoms and afternoon talk shows.

While I wouldn’t accuse most shows of having good music for their theme songs, there have been a few that have really stood out down the line. My personal favorite has to be the theme from The Dukes of Hazzard, a show which I was devoted to when I was a kid, sung by none other than Waylon Jennings.

 

 

Submitted by @ATerribleIdea:
“Hard tossup between Electric Company and Sanford and Son. #ismellamashup”

 

 

 

Submitted by @dopeburger:
“because of a local jam band in college that really stretched out on it, Night Court.”

 

 

Submitted by @pdennison:
“Unquestionably, Mike Post’s theme for ‘The Rockford Files’!”

 

 

Submitted by OwenTemple:
“A-Team. it’s like a 4 movement symphony. you will drive your van better after hearing it.”

 

The Ridges: This Word is Worth a Thousand Pictures

 

As I was listening to the Ridges’ EP last night, a storm kicked up that colored the sky charcoal grey and blew leaves horizontally through the air. It seemed appropriate to the roll and swell of moody strings and beautiful but fraught vocals of the album.

Formed in Athens, Ohio, and consisting of core musicians Victor Rasgaitis (guitar), Talor Smith (cello) and Johnny Barton (percussion, glockenspiel) – with a rotating line-up of additional musicians contributing violin, viola, upright bass, trumpet, percussion, mandolin, cello and accordion – the Ridges took their name from the institution that was formerly the Athens Lunatic Asylum. And the band continues to draw inspiration from the old asylum. Not only was their album recorded in the ornate Victorian building, but the songs are imbued with an aching hauntedness that seems to reflect the ghost stories that surround any once-abandoned institution worth its salt.

That’s not to say that the self-titled EP is a non-stop dirge full of melodramatically gothic declarations of emotion. While none of the lyrical matter could be accused of being upbeat, many of the songs invite foot-stomping and sing-alongs. Listen to and download an example of what I mean with stand-out track “Not a Ghost”.

 

Not a Ghost by The Ridges

 

Now download the full EP at their Bandcamp site and get haunted.

The Ridges @ Bandcamp

The Ridges @ Facebook

Gil Scott-Heron: And now it’s time to gather all the things we need to fly

 

The beautiful Gil Scott-Heron died yesterday.

If I was into making Best Of lists, GSH’s I’m New Here would have been high atop my list for 2010. But, of course, his legacy stretches much further back than that, at least back to 1970 with the release of Small Talk at 125th & Lenox, which contained the iconic “The Revolution Will Not Be Televised”.

If you’re not as familiar with GSH as you’d like to be, you can check out a documentary about him at Self-Titled or read a sketch of his life and career at The Telegraph.

 

Gil Scott-Heron: On Being New Here from Iain & Jane on Vimeo.

 

Notable Shows in the Greater Cleveland Area

Shows worth checking out this week in and around Cleveland:

The Beachland Ballroom & Tavern

  • Fri, May 27| 9 PM (8 PM door)
    Mr. Gnome
    Phantods
    Rare Birds
    $8
    Tavern | All Ages
  • Sat, May 28| 8 PM (7:30 PM door)
    Zeke
    Antiseen
    Joe Buck Yourself
    Goddamn Gallows
    $20
    Ballroom | All Ages
  • Sat, May 28| 9 PM (8 PM door)
    15-60-75 (The Numbers Band)
    $7
    Tavern | All Ages
  • Sun, May 29| 8:30 PM (8 PM door)
    The Bottom Dollars
    Debussi
    $6
    Tavern | All Ages
  • Tue, May 31| 8 PM (7 PM door)
    Taking It To The Bank: Benefit For The Cleveland Food Bank
    The Blue Drivers
    Sweeteven & The Abydos Studio Band
    The Covert Operation

    (Show is a CD release fundraiser for The Cleveland Food Bank’s Harvest For Hunger food drive as is the Taking It To The Bank Album. Each album sold will provide at least 16 meals. Admission includes copy of CD.)

    $15
    Ballroom | All Ages

  • Wed, Jun 1| 9 PM (8 PM door)
    Head for the Hills
    The Hiram Rapids Stumblers
    $12 adv / $14 dos
    Tavern | All Ages

Grog Shop

  • Fri, May 27| 6 PM
    Eisley
    The Narrative
    Christie Dupree
    These Knees
    $10 adv / $12 dos
  • Fri, May 27| 10 PM
    Kings of the Iron Mic
    Mr.44
    The Wrong Guys
    R.Y.A.N.
    Poetry Feen
    G Huff
    B No Good
    twerp
    Controversy
    A-Motions
    $10

Now That’s Class

  • Sun, May 29| 10 PM
    PhatBurner
    Keyo KonFuzion
    Storm
    Jack Burton
    $3

Happy Dog

  • Fri, May 27| 9 PM
    Little Bighorn
    Tinko
    Exploding Lies
  • Sat, May 28| 9 PM
    The Very Knees
    Baby Baby
    Andy D
    ME

The Hi-Fi Concert Club

  • Fri, June 3| 8 PM
    He-Chaw Frunk

Musica

  • Sat, May 28| 10 PM
    Cap C & Random X
    $7

Ben Sollee Subway Session

Having trouble getting into the swing of things this week, but here’s a nice way to ease back into it: Ben Sollee, accompanied by Jordan Ellis, playing a session at the Fulton Avenue subway stop in New York for Subway Sessions. Sollee has such a unique way with the strings, and I love the sounds Ellis is getting out of his percussion.

I wonder if we could find a good place to make sessions like this happen in Cleveland…

Notable Shows in the Greater Cleveland Area

Shows worth checking out this week in and around Cleveland:

The Beachland Ballroom & Tavern

  • Sat, May 21| 7 PM (6:30 PM door)
    Tom Evanchuck
    Ty Kellogg
    $6
    Tavern | All Ages
  • Tue, May 24| 8:30 PM (7:30 PM door)
    Big Sandy & His Fly-Rite Boys
    Dan McCoy & The Standing 8s
    $12
    Tavern | All Ages
  • Fri, May 27| 9 PM (8 PM door)
    Mr. Gnome
    Phantods
    Rare Birds
    $8
    Tavern | All Ages

Grog Shop

  • Sat, May 12| 6 PM
    Terror
    Stick To Your Guns
    Trapped Under Ice
    Close Your Eyes
    Your Demise
    $13
  • Sun, May 22| 8 PM
    Cloud Cult
    The Wilderness of Manitoba
    $12 adv / $14 dos
  • Wed, May 25| 8 PM
    Sloan
    The Modern Electric
    Dearly Beloved
    $10 adv / $12 dos
  • Thu, May 26| 7 PM
    Smoke Screen
    Twenty One Pilots
    Urbindex
    Plastic Hearts
    $8 adv / $10 dos
  • Fri, May 27| 6 PM
    Eisley
    The Narrative
    Christie Dupree
    These Knees
    $10 adv / $12 dos
  • Fri, May 27| 10 PM
    Kings of the Iron Mic
    Mr.44
    The Wrong Guys
    R.Y.A.N.
    Poetry Feen
    G Huff
    B No Good
    twerp
    Controversy
    A-Motions
    $10

Happy Dog

  • Sat, May 21| 9 PM
    Founding Fathers
    Restless Habs
    Swarm of Bats
  • Fri, May 27| 9 PM
    Little Bighorn
    Tinko
    Exploding Lies

The Winchester Music Hall

  • Fri, May 20| 9 PM
    Neil Innes
    $15

Peabody’s

  • Sat, May 21| 6 PM
    Ray Cash
    Da Kennel
    Young Ray, Jr.
    Ampichino
    CJ Platinum
    $10 adv / $14 dos
  • Thu, May 26| 7 PM
    Front Line Assembly
    Dismantle
    Cyanotic
    DJ Acucrack
    Filament 38
    $15 adv / $18 dos

Rocbar

  • Sat, May 21| 9 PM (8 PM door)
    Debussi
    He-Chaw Frunk
    The Woovs
    Tuesday BLVD
    Across The Viaduct
    Stone Relied
    Sinful Faith
    $6-10

Quicken Arena

  • Thu, May 26| 7:30 PM
    Bob Seger & the Silver Bullet Band
    $250, $225, $65, $37

House of Blues

  • Thu, May 26| 9:30 PM (9 PM door)
    Portugal. The Man
    Telekinesis
    Unknown Mortal Orchestra

    SOLD OUT

Phantom Tails: We Turn the Wheels of Alchemy

 

It took me a while to realize why the music of Phantom Tails sounded familiar. It was probably the third or fourth listen to Sounds of the Hunchback Whale when I realized that this music would not have been out of place in the goth clubs of ’90s San Francisco… but more like the ’90s goth scene if I’d had my way with it. This is not music you swoopy dance to while artfully waving your lacy cuffs. It requires a little more funk in your back-end. The band’s synth wizard Sergio Hernandez has called it Deep Space Doom Funk.

 

Real Savage by Phantom Tails

 

While it’s definitely dance music, it’s not without grit, coming down with an industrial thump at times. Songs are written, sampled, layered, sampled again, layered some more, resulting in fuzzed out laser zaps, rounded out with jagged guitar, heavy bass and drum machine beats that go down to bedrock instead of floating off into the atmosphere.

 

Streetsweepers by Phantom Tails

 

You can dance to it and still look like a badass.

Plus, singer/guitarist Orion Treon quoted the Wu-Tang Clan in an interview, and we are all the way down with that.

You can listen to and download the two songs above, then get over to Bandcamp and pick up the whole album. It’s good from top to bottom.

 

Phantom Tails @ Bandcamp

Phantom Tails @ Facebook

PhantomTailsTV