Eddie Kirkland/The Alarm Clocks/The Gories at the Beachland Ballroom, Cleveland, OH, 11.27.10

This past Saturday night at the Beachland (a busy day for the venue on all fronts with four different events taking place) felt more like a package tour out of the 1950s than your regular a-headliner-and-two-openers show. The mirror ball was spinning, and New York DJ Mr. Fine Wine (check out his WFMU Friday night show Soulville) painted the scene with groovin’ chunks of early soul between sets.

Eddie Kirkland

Kirkland’s name might be a little obscure, but his history should make even the most casual music fan pay attention. Aside from his own modest hit “The Hawg” (released on Stax/Volt in 1963 under the name Eddie Kirk), Kirkland played second guitar for John Lee Hooker on a number of recordings throughout the ’50s and toured in Otis Redding’s live band for a while in the early ’60s.

After spending most of his pre-show time sitting behind his amp, waiting for his backing band (second guitar, bass guitar, drums and keys) to arrive, Kirkland suffered a little from a hurried soundcheck (this apparently stemming from the fact that the ballroom was occupied all day by Genghis Con). However, once he got going, he gathered an appreciative crowd from the still-sparse patronage of the ballroom. Kirkland specializes in a mix of electric dance blues and soul – the kind of music the encompassing term “rhythm and blues” was first invented to cover. On some songs, you could practically hear a horn section, and it was hard not to imagine the kind of show Kirkland could put on if he had the full band his music deserves. Building up steam throughout his set, it felt like Kirkland had really just hit his peak when his time was over, and the 87-year-old “Gypsy of the Blues” with the jewel-bedecked guitar exited the stage to the cheers of a now switched-on audience.

The Alarm Clocks

Formed in Parma, Ohio, in 1965, the Alarm Clocks took a long time off when guitarist Bruce Boehm was drafted into the army in 1967. Their music resurfaced in 1983 when their songs “Yeah” and “No Reason to Complain” were included on the first Back from the Grave compilation (a series credited with inspiring Jon Spencer to begin his career in music), and Norton Records released an Alarm Clocks album culled from early recordings in 2000. The band reformed in 2006 and have put out their second album since that time, Wake Up.

While the Alarm Clocks are a fully competent band and bass player/vocalist Mike Pierce has an impressive scream, their straight-ahead ’60s garage rock felt a little too straight-ahead to me, and my interest in the music waned as the set went on (not even to be re-awakened by a cover of Bo Diddley’s “I’m Alright”, though this may have been a cover of a cover given that the Alarm Clocks call it “It’s Alright”, just as Spacemen 3 did when they recorded the song). But it should be taken into account that I have never been the biggest fan of this style of music, and the band received an enthusiastic reception from many in the audience, including the Gories.

The Gories

Dan Kroha was going to have a good time with the Gories’ soundcheck whether the sound man liked it or not. The singer/guitarist/harmonica wailer is about 200 pounds of personality in a 100 pound frame and was a clear indicator that the Gories’ set of serious rockin’ was not going to be serious. As seems to be the case for any of singer/guitarist Mick Collins’ bands (see the Dirtbombs, the Screws, Blacktop, etc., ad naseum), energy was the name of the game.

Don’t know the Gories? Jack White sure does. Take a listen through the Gories’ catalogue, and you’ll easily catch the influence that the band – who formed in 1986, broke up in 1993 and reunited in 2009 – had on the White Stripes, right down to specific riffs.

Kicking off, appropriately, with “Hey Hey, We’re the Gories”, the Detroit three-piece – rounded out by Peg O’Neill on toms – immediately sawed into the skulls of the Beachland crowd (which seemed like it had gone through a complete rotation from the beginning of the night) with their trademark don’t-call-it-garage rock. They threw out songs like “Sister Ann”, “Feral” and “Telepathic” with bombast and love. Kroha looked like he was going to blow a nut as he wailed away on his harmonica during “You Don’t Love Me”, but, unfortunately, those of us positioned in front of Collins were unable to hear most of the fruits of Kroha’s labor (again, a less-hasty soundcheck would have been beneficial).

While the crowd was clearly a few steps behind Kroha, spurring him to comment midway through, “Oh, you liked that one, did you? Finally decided to wake up?”, they’d finally all caught up by the end. When the band returned for an encore, Kroha gave the audience the audience a loving middle finger before the Gories launched into a rowdy call-and-response version of “Thunderbird ESQ” and topped things off with “Nitroglycerine”.

Then, around 1:00 A.M., it was all over too soon. Like the best shows, the Gories leave you with excess energy and a jones for more, and I personally would be happy to see the Gories (and most any of Collins’ other bands) several nights in a row. And if you have even an inkling of interest in catching the Gories, don’t sit on it because Collins’ limited attention span – and the fact that O’Neill was reportedly pretty much done with the tour before it even began – may mean this reunion doesn’t last long.

Notable Shows in the Greater Cleveland Area

Shows worth checking out this week in and around Cleveland:

The Beachland Ballroom & Tavern

  • Sat, Nov 27| 9 PM (8 PM door)
    The Gories
    The Alarm Clocks
    Eddie Kirkland
    DJ Mr. Fine Wine
    $15
    Ballroom | All Ages
  • Thu, Dec 2| 9 PM (8:30 PM door)
    The Sights (Detroit)
    Founding Fathers
    Very Knees
    DJ Mr. Fishtruck
    $6
    Tavern | All Ages

Grog Shop

  • Fri, Nov 26| 9 PM
    The Cowslingers
    Death by Rodeo
    $10

Now That’s Class

  • Mon, Nov 29| 9 PM
    Zoobombs
    Valley Boys
    Loon
    Swindlella
    $5 donation

Happy Dog

  • Fri, Nov 26| 9 PM
    Conspiracy of Owls
    CLOVERS
    Nights
  • Sat, Nov 27| 9 PM
    Gabe Schray: The Band
    Tadpoles
    HotChaCha
    Manor Lady

The Winchester

  • Sat, Nov 27| 9 PM
    Kelly Richey
    Diana Chittester
    $10 adv / $12 dos

The Poison Tree: My Only Friend

Ah, here it is again, Thanksgiving in the States, another holiday about which people have Complicated Feelings. But let me boil it down to this: It’s a good day for being thankful. I’m thankful for the usual family-and-friends thing, but I’m also very thankful for music and for everyone who reads NTSIB. It’s been a crazy year with the inception of this blog, and so much of it has been crazy good.

As a little token of my appreciation, here’s a sweet little song for you by the Poison Tree, a.k.a. Steve Salett, with a little help from friends, including Dawn Landes.

The Poison Tree – My Only Friend

Bits: Atlas Sound, Justin Townes Earle, The Wu-Tang Clan, Conrad Plymouth, The Black Keys

  • Atlas Sound has released two free albums this week. Download Bedroom Databank Vol. 1 here and Bedroom Databank Vol. 2.
  • Justin Townes Earle has updated his tour schedule, including some European dates and a show at the Kent Stage on February 8 with Jessica Lea Mayfield.
  • The Wu-Tang Clan has announced a full tour.
  • Our friends and internet drinking buddies Conrad Plymouth have announced a series of Wisconsin and Minnesota live dates, including the Muzzle of Bees 6th Anniversary show.
  • It’s been 11 days since I’ve mentioned anything Black Keys-related, but our friends at Rubber City Review have afforded me the opportunity to do it again. They have joined the dark side and finally become a part of the Twitter stream, and to promote this new foray, they have a special contest to win a pair of tickets to the sold-out Black Keys New Year’s Eve show in Chicago.

This isn’t really news, but Gorilla Vs. Bear posted their favorite videos of 2010, and it gives me the opportunity to mention one of my favorite albums of 2010 as their #1 video is Gil Scott-Heron’s “Me and the Devil” from his gorgeous album I’m New Here.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OET8SVAGELA?fs=1]

Rebirth of the Cool: Trick Bag

As I’ve copped to before, sometimes I discover great music through questionable sources. For example, my discovery trail to Earl King’s “Trick Bag” began in 1990 thanks to a cassette tape that featured one of the most ubiquitous songs of that era. But let’s start at the beginning…

Released in 1962, King’s original has a solid, loping, irresistible groove and an engaging story.

 

 

In 1964, Seattle band the Artesians took the song and added layers of noise and bombast with muscular organ and lots of hi-hat. I swear if you put your face close enough to the speaker when you listen to this version, you’ll feel your hair blown back. (Incidentally, if anyone has information on this band, please let me know. I’m having trouble turning up much on them.)

 

 

Now let’s leap to the ’90s. In 1990, Robert Palmer created a cultural phenomenon with his video for “Addicted to Love” – you know the one, with the heavily made-up, dead-eyed ladies in their little, black dresses. Despite the fact that everyone grew sick to death of that song, the album it came from, Riptide, was actually pretty good for its time and was loaded with some fairly non-conventional twists, including Palmer’s slightly disco-ish cover of “Trick Bag”.

 

 

Then in ’91, the guitar returned to save our souls, and in ’92, the Gories brought “Trick Bag” back to its roots, hitting somewhere between the sparse groove of the King original and the freak-out of the Artesians cover.

 

The Gories – Trick Bag

Notable Shows in the Greater Cleveland Area + The Gories

Shows worth checking out this week in and around Cleveland:

The Beachland Ballroom & Tavern

  • Fri, Nov 19| 8:30 PM (7:30 PM door)
    Asylum Street Spankers
    Caravan of Thieves
    $18 adv / $20 dos
    Ballroom | All Ages
  • Fri, Nov 19| 9 PM (8 PM door)
    Whiskey Daredevils
    Lords of the Highway
    45 Spider
    $7
    Tavern | All Ages
  • Sun, Nov 21| 8 PM (7 PM door)
    Raquy & the Cavemen
    Durga Dance Company
    $10 adv / $12 dos
    Ballroom | All Ages
  • Sun, Nov 21| 8 PM (7 PM door)
    Reverend Peyton’s Big Damn Band
    Misery Jackals
    $10
    Tavern | All Ages
  • Wed, Nov 24| 8:30 PM (8 PM door)
    The Floorwalkers (cd release)
    The Modern Electric
    Tom Evanchuck
    $8
    Ballroom | All Ages
  • Wed, Nov 24| 9 PM (7 PM door)
    This Way Out 5th Anniversary Show
    Afternoon Naps
    Clovers
    Dreadful Yawns
    (Bands start playing @ 9PM
    Free appetizers 7 PM to 9 PM)
    $5
    Tavern | All Ages

Grog Shop

  • Sat, Nov 20| 9 PM
    No Age
    Lucky Dragons
    Herzog
    $12 adv / $14 dos
  • Sun, Nov 21| 8 PM
    Free Energy
    Hollerado
    The Globes
    $8

Now That’s Class

  • Sat, Nov 20| 1 PM – 7 PM
    Bling Bling Bazaar
    (featuring vendors, DJ’s, food)
    Beardo Bandini
    Jukebox Value
    Muamin Collective
    Vigatron
    FREE
  • Sun, Nov 21| 9 PM
    Destroy Nate Allen
    Beckett & Friends
    Back to Bouvet
    19 Action News (cd release)
    Dan Polo
    $5 donation

Musica

  • Sat, Nov 20| 7 PM
    River City Extension
    The Modern Electric
    Shivering Timbers
    Tinamou
    $8
  • Sat, Nov 20| 10 PM
    Party of Helicopters
    Sun God
    New Body Type
    $5
  • Wed, Nov 24| 10 PM
    Cap C & Random X
    $5

The Kent Stage

  • Fri, Nov 19| 8 PM
    Kent State Folk Festival
    Loudon Wainwright
    Shawn Colvin
    $40 / $65

Happy Dog

  • Fri, Nov 19| 9 PM
    Benefit for Secondhand Mutts
    Misery Jackals
    Scoliosis Jones

The Gories are coming! The Gories are coming! I first encountered the gigantic and gigantically cool Mick Collins when his band the Dirtbombs opened for the Detroit Cobras at the Beachland Ballroom. The Dirtbombs blew that place up and made the Detroit Cobras seem flaccid in comparison. Now Mick Collins is back together with his old friends in the Gories, and they’ll be playing the Beachland on November 27.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JvjIq0j6hjY?fs=1]

Paolo Conte: [Imagine Something in Italian Here]


It’s tough being a fan of singer/songwriter/pianist Paolo Conte if you don’t know much Italian. I first heard Conte’s music while working in a bookstore in northern California thanks to one of my spectacular co-workers playing Conte’s Best of… CD over the PA. I fell in love with the music – which, though I tend to shy away from direct artist comparisons, I have often described to people as “if Tom Waits sang French songs in Italian” – but it’s been difficult keeping up with him since.

You may well have heard Conte, too, as songs like “Come Di” and “Via Con Me” have been used in a couple of American films (like the Cleveland-set Welcome to Collinwood). His bi-lingual music is often upbeat and infectious but also ranges to the utterly beautiful. A lawyer as well as a musician (his family have been solicitors for generations), he is known to accompany himself by producing trumpet sounds with his mouth.

And it just so happens that he released a new album last month called Nelson (in honor of his dog).

Italian journal-makers Moleskine love Conte, too, and have produced a lovely special edition Nelson journal.

You can purchase Nelson on Amazon and iTunes Italy (though apparently not iTunes U.S.). And your guess is as good as mine on where to get the Moleskine journal.

Paolo Conte Official Website

Bits: Sub Pop’s Andy Kotowicz, Einstürzende Neubauten, Tom Waits and the Preservation Hall Jazz Band, The Low Anthem, Raekwon

  • On October 24 of this year, Sub Pop executive Andy Kotowicz was killed in a car accident, leaving behind a wife and young daughter. On December 4, the Showbox will host a benefit concert for the Andy Kotowicz Family Foundation, featuring A-Frames/AFCGT, Fruit Bats, Mudhoney, Michael Yonkers, Pissed Jeans, Shabazz Palaces, Vetiver, and Wolf Eyes.
  • At 2:00 PM EST (if my calculations are correct) today, November 16, Arte will have a live webcast of Einstürzende Neubauten’s 30th anniversary show in Paris.
  • Beginning Friday, November 19, Preservation Hall will have for sale a special 78 of Tom Waits and the Preservation Hall Jazz Band’s recording of “Tootie Ma is a Big Fine Thing”, signed and numbered by Ben Jaffe. (Online sales begin November 20.)
  • The Low Anthem have announced that their new album Smart Flesh will be released on February 22.
  • November 13 would have been the inimitable Ol’ Dirty Bastard’s 42nd birthday. In memory, Raekwon has released the video “Ason Jones”.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rJtGqCyiMOA?fs=1]

Young Circles: I’ve Got Shit for Brains, and They’re Out of Stock

You can’t go wrong when you start your album out with feedback, at least in my book. So, Young Circles had me at ‘SCREEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEECH’ with the first song off their forthcoming debut EP Bones (out 1.11.11). But feedback will only get you so far, and Young Circles keep up (and expand on) the interest with some seriously heavy low-end, Britpop-style vocals and decidedly infectious grooves. And for a three-piece, these guys throw a lot at you in one song, sometimes flowing from sweet to jarring in seconds. There are layers of good things here.

“Sharp Teeth” is my favorite track off of Bones, with it’s clap-stomp rhythm and rap-chanting. Check it out, download it, love it.

Young Circles – Sharp Teeth

Young Circles Official Website

Notable Shows in the Greater Cleveland Area

Shows worth checking out this week in and around Cleveland:

The Beachland Ballroom & Tavern

  • Fri, Nov 12| 9 PM (8 PM door)
    Beachland Co-Presents
    @ The House of Blues
    Trombone Shorty & Orleans Avenue
    The Rebirth Brass Band
    $22
    |All Ages
  • Fri, Nov 12| 9 PM (8 PM door)
    The Schwartz Brothers
    $6
    Ballroom | All Ages
  • Sun, Nov 14| 8:30 PM (8 PM door)
    Spindrift
    Stereo Workers Union
    Mother Country Mad Men
    $7
    Tavern | All Ages
  • Mon, Nov 15| 8 PM (7 PM door)
    Josh Ritter & The Royal City Band
    Thieving Irons
    $18 adv / $20 dos
    Ballroom | All Ages
  • Wed, Nov 17| 8 PM (7 PM door)
    Band Aid with Doc Rock
    First Anniversary Ball
    Zach
    The Modern Electric
    JD Eicher & The Goodnights
    Kurt Scobie

    Free show with ticket
    (Pickup your ticket @ the Beachland!)

    Ballroom | All Ages

  • Thu, Nov 18| 8:30 PM (7:30 PM door)
    Members of Morphine & Jeremy Lyons
    Non Fiction
    $15
    Tavern | All Ages

Grog Shop

  • Sun, Nov 14| 9 PM
    Aloe Blacc
    The Grand Scheme
    Maya Jupiter
    MuAmin Collective
    $10 adv / $12 dos
  • Mon, Nov 15| 9 PM
    Fang Island
    Delicate Steve
    Chat Logs
    Simeon Soul Charger
    $10 adv / $12 dos
  • Tue, Nov 16| 9 PM
    Stalley
    Camp Lo
    Moriarty
    Brainsick
    DJ Terry Urban
    $10 adv / $12 dos
  • Thu, Nov 18| 7 PM (6 PM door)
    A Benefit for Chris Jordan’s Family
    Presented by the RedHeaded StepChildren Collective feat.
    Tino
    N 2 Deep
    Army Gang
    & More
    $10 adv / $15 dos

Now That’s Class

  • Fri, Nov 12| 9 PM
    Cheer-Accident
    Filmstrip
    Low Lamps
    Nate Scheible-Bob Drake-Andrew Klimek
    $5
  • Mon, Nov 15| 9 PM
    La Otracina
    Snuff Film
    Own Weather
    Main Street Gospel
    $5

The Kent Stage

  • Fri, Nov 12| 8 PM
    The Flatlanders
    $30 / $40
  • Wed, Nov 17| 8 PM
    Kent State Folk Festival
    Night of Brazilian Music featuring
    Luca Mundaca
    Moises Borger Trio
    Capoeira
    Samba Joia
    $10
  • Thu, Nov 18| 8 PM
    Kent State Folk Festival
    Jessica Lea Mayfield
    Tim Easton
    Frontier Ruckus
    $20

Palace Theatre

  • Sat, Nov 13| 7:30 PM
    Walking to New Orleans: The Music of Fats Domino and Dave Bartholemew
    Featuring
    Lloyd Price
    Dr. John & the Lower 911
    Irma Thomas
    The Rebirth Brass Band
    Robert Parker
    $30-$250

House of Blues

  • Sat, Nov 13| 8 PM (7 PM door)
    Michael Franti & Spearhead
    Bobby Long
    $25 adv / $27 dos / $35 balcony