Bits: Shel Silverstein songs, Alan Moore opera, No Depression fest, save 924 Gilman, produce a Juniper Tar doc, RSD is crafty

  • Did you know that besides the poems that were so dear to many of us in our youth, Shel Silverstein was also responsible for songs like “A Boy Named Sue” and “The Cover of the Rolling Stone”? A cadre of folky and country artists have contributed to an album of Silverstein’s songs, called Twistable, Turnable Man: A Musical Tribute to the Songs of Shel Silverstein, that will be released on June 8. Pitchfork has a couple of songs from contributors My Morning Jacket and Andrew Bird for you to listen to.
  • A favorite of NTSIB, writer Alan Moore is working with Damon Albarn and Gorillaz to produce an opera about magician/mathematician John Dee (if you are familiar with Moore, you know this is completely unsurprising), and Pitchfork has some info on that, too.
  • Another favorite of NTSIB is the venerable magazine-now-community-website No Depression, and they have announced the line-up for their always impressive festival. This year’s festival will include Swell Season, Lucinda Williams, Cave Singers, Punch Brothers, Alejandro Escovedo, Chuck Prophet and Sera Cahoone.
  • Respected punk venue 924 Gilman is in danger of closing down due to a ridiculous rent increase. Here’s what you can do to help keep it going.
  • High Frequency Media is planning a Juniper Tar tour documentary, and you can become a producer.
  • There’s a nice write-up of the Record Store Day activities in Cleveland’s Collinwood neighborhood from a crafter’s perspective at the Jo-Ann Fabrics blog.

Yours Truly shares this video from SXSW of Nathaniel Rateliff playing “Boil & Fight”, but we’re particularly enamored of his rendition of Roger Miller’s “Oo-De-Lally” at the beginning.
http://vimeo.com/moogaloop.swf?clip_id=11039579&server=vimeo.com&show_title=0&show_byline=1&show_portrait=0&color=b32bed&fullscreen=1

Nathaniel Rateliff “Boil & Fight” from Yours Truly on Vimeo.

The Helper T-Cells: I Live in an Unstable

You know it, I know it: Mondays are shit. We can’t even abolish them because then Tuesday would just become the new Monday. But you know what we can do? We can listen to the Helper T-Cells.

Who are the Helper T-Cells? Got me. All I know is I ended up with their EP More Odd-Toe Ungulates & Nose Rubbin’ Shrubs in my Record Store Day goodie bag from Music Saves and find it delightful. I’m not even certain this band is still together as their MySpace page has not been updated since August of last year, though I did discover that key band member Ray Scott is also a member of the very fine traditional string band One Dollar Hat (who, like the Helper T-Cells, have an extremely limited web presence).

Anyway, here, have some sunshine. Good for adults, good for children, and especially good for adult children.

http://vimeo.com/moogaloop.swf?clip_id=3218158&server=vimeo.com&show_title=1&show_byline=1&show_portrait=0&color=f09c00&fullscreen=1

The Helper T-Cells Music Video “Sprout Springer” from zak long on Vimeo.

The Helper T-Cells MySpace

Bits: Mike Watt photo exhibit & I Need That Record free viewing extended

  • Mike Watt’s photo exhibit, Eye-gifts from Pedro, at the Track 16 Gallery has been extended to May 16th and the Watt from Pedro Show will be a live remote broadcast from the gallery on the 16th.
  • I Need That Record! will be featured on Pitchfork for another week. It’s a must-watch documentary for anyone who cares at all about music.

Notable shows in the greater Cleveland area & NTSIB finally gets on the Local Natives tip

Shows worth checking out this week in and around Cleveland:

The Beachland Ballroom & Tavern

  • Sun, Apr 25| 8:30 PM (8 PM door)
    Alcest
    Broccoli Samurai
    Trans Atlas
    Velnias
    $10.00 adv
    $12.00 dos
    Ballroom | All Ages
  • Sun, Apr 25| 9 PM (8 PM door)
    The Styrenes 35th Anniversary Tour
    Filmstrip
    Home & Garden
    $10.00
    Tavern | All Ages
  • Mon, Apr 26| 8:30 PM (8 PM door)
    Horse Feathers
    Cloud Nothings
    Brian Straw
    $8.00 adv
    $10.00 dos
    Tavern | All Ages

Grog Shop

  • Sat, Apr 24| 9 PM
    Aloha
    Pomegrantes
    The Buried Wires
    $8 adv
    $10 dos
  • Sun, Apr 25| 7 PM
    The Fam Base Tour feat.
    Clipse
    XV
    Doxx
    Smokescreen
    Blacease
    DJ K-Nyce
    $20
  • Tues, Apr 27| 8:30 PM
    Apples In Stereo
    Generationals
    Laminated Cat
    $12
  • Fri, Apr 30| 9 PM
    Yeasayer
    Sleigh Bells
    SOLD OUT

Now That’s Class

  • Thurs, Apr 29| 9 PM
    Harlem
    Mystery of Two
    The Wooly Bullies

Oberlin College

  • Tues, Apr 27
    KRS-ONE
  • Thurs, Apr 29
    Atlas Sound

Phantasy Nite Club

  • Tues, Apr 27| 7:30 PM (7 PM door)
    Faith and the Muse
    DJ Scary Lady Sarah
    A View So Cruel
    UTO
    Ludwyg
    Queue-up
    $6-$10

It’s been slow in coming, but NTSIB is finally getting into Local Natives, just in time for them to play the Beachland next month. Here’s the performance that helped things start to kick in, filmed at SXSW by Yours Truly.

http://assets.delvenetworks.com/player/loader.swf

Slackday: Planes, Trains and Automobiles

In the very early days of music videos, before they were called music videos, the teen idols of the 1950s and 1960s were made to do some goofy things, presumably in the spirit of making a fun and eye-catching video for all the kids. For instance, what could be more natural than having Martha Reeves and the Vandellas run around the Ford Mustang production line, interrupting the jobs of the line workers who are just trying to earn a buck.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EqxigVGFcis]

While we’re at it, let’s put Dion in an airplane for no discernible reason.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wpRtTBn4VHU]

And Gene Vincent and His Blue Caps… well, they were too damn cool for these shenanigans, but they did participate in the tradition of shoe-horning an entire song performance in the middle of a (often plot-light) movie.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OyNbwdONLqw]

(Okay, I’ll be honest: I just really wanted to include Gene Vincent in today’s post because he was awesome.)

Rebirth of the Cool: Grown So Ugly

Back to the blues we go for this installment of Rebirth of the Cool.

The story of Robert Pete Williams echoes the story of many of the great bluesmen: born in Louisiana in 1914, Williams grew up poor and uneducated. He was discovered in Angola prison, while serving time for killing a man, by a pair of ethnomusicologists who pressured the parole board for a pardon. He played the 1964 Newport Folk Festival alongside the likes of “re-discovered” greats like Skip James, Son House and others, heralding the height of the 1960s blues revival.

“Grown So Ugly” is probably Williams’ best-known song, thanks to the next two acts we’ll talk about. Williams had a percussive style of guitar-playing and his singing style could call up the grit of Howlin’ Wolf one moment and the haunting falsetto of Skip James the next.

http://www.lala.com/external/flash/SingleSongWidget.swf

In 1967, Captain Beefheart brought his Magic Band and his husky yelp to the song and turned it into a jazzy cry.

http://www.lala.com/external/flash/SingleSongWidget.swf

The version recorded by the Black Keys in 2004 is, essentially, a cover of a cover, taking their cues from the Beefheart rendition. The Keys, of course, add a lot of low end to the song, bringing out a darkness that can easily be overlooked in the original and the Beefheart version.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nThv8ZLWCLk]

Bits: R.I.P. Guru, Kings Go Forth debut, Ketch Secor deejays, Arcadia re-issue, Hip Hop Alley mixtape

  • After having survived a heart attack last month, Gang Starr MC Guru has died of cancer at the age of 43.
  • Kings Go Forth release their debut album, The Outsiders Are Back today. Good, classic stuff.
  • From Old Crow Medicine Show: “You can now listen to archives of “The Old Time Hour with Ketch Secor” at the WSM website. Go to the WSM archives, click the arrow in upper right hand corner of the player, scroll right and click ‘Guest Hosts’. Then scroll down to find Ketch’s shows – and stay tuned for next’s month’s show.”
  • Who remembers the Duran Duran one-off side-project Arcadia? NTSIB remembers it fondly and has discovered that the album, So Red the Rose, is being re-issued. You can take a listen at Spinner.
  • Pigeons & Planes and the Music Ninja bring you a pretty sweet mixtape called The Hip Hop Alley, featuring Big Boi, Mos Def and Damian Marley & Nas, among others.
  • I’m just going to say London, Pixies, and drop this here.

If you haven’t already, it’s high time you introduced your face to the Dirtbombs.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-53uojoesME]

Fight for Your Right: I Need That Record

Woohoo, rekkids!

Record Store Day was a great success for all involved, it seems. It certainly was for NTSIB, and the store where we celebrated, Music Saves in Cleveland, broke their record from last year. It really did feel like a Christmas for music geeks, and I was in high spirits all day as I spun my new vinyl.

For the curious, I picked up: the Black Keys “Tighten Up”/”Howlin’ for You” 12″ – which was obtained without bloodshed – the TV on the Radio Dear Science LP, the Joe Strummer and the Mescaleros “Global A Go-Go” LP and the I Need That Record! DVD. I almost didn’t pick up I Need That Record!, but after watching it, I was very glad that I did.

I Need That Record! is a documentary by Brendan Toller on, as the subtitle states, “the death (and possible survival) of the indpendent record store”. If you are a music geek, you know that record stores do still exist. If you’ve been reading NTSIB, you know they still exist. But some people don’t even realize there are still actual, physical stores out there that do indeed sell vinyl, as well as CDs, etc. Even some of the people interviewed for this doc, like legendary noise-composer Glenn Branca, were unsure of the continued existence of record stores, illustrating the very problem this doc investigates.

For many people who follow music – or even for those who follow the plight of independent businesses in general – much of the ground covered in Record will not be news, but there will still be pieces of information that will surprise the viewer. And the treatment of the subject is fairly even-handed, spreading the responsibility among major labels, big box stores, internet downloads and consumers. But the big draw of this doc is the passion of the people involved with independent record stores, from the music makers to the shop owners to, most importantly, the music buyers. The stand-out moment of Record is when a loyal customer of Trash American Style, who gives his name as “John the Bomb”, goes on an impassioned rant about what music and the record store mean to him.

I was choked up by it, anyway.

If you’re less of an emotional twit than I am, you might be lured by the appearance of a number of serious names, such as Branca, Ian Mackaye, Thurston Moore, Legs McNeil, the legendary Noam Chomsky, the fascinating Lenny Kaye or the great Mike Watt. For readers in Cleveland, there is a special thrill in seeing Melanie and Kevin from Music Saves show up.

I am very happy to have this great work in my hand in tangible form (because I’m one of those tactile junkies who loves vinyl as much for the ability to hold the cover in my hands and pore over the liner notes as I listen to the record as much as for the sound quality), but for those solely interested in the content, Pitchfork is streaming the entire documentary in their One Week Only spotlight. So there’s no reason not to watch this genuinely moving and, I’ll just say it, important documentary.

Please watch it.

I’ll be your best friend forever.

Pitchfork One Week Only: I Need That Record!

I Need That Record! Official Site

Notable shows in the greater Cleveland area & Josh Homme talks RSD

Shows worth checking out this week in and around Cleveland:

The Beachland Ballroom & Tavern

  • Sat, Apr 17| 9 PM (8 PM door)
    Dosh
    White Hinterland
    The Sleeps
    $10.00
    Tavern | All Ages
  • Sun, Apr 18| 8:30 PM (8 PM door)
    Radio Moscow
    Naam
    The Suede Brothers
    $10.00
    Tavern | All Ages
  • Fri, Apr 23| 9 PM (8 PM door)
    Detroit Cobras
    Living Stereo
    The Guile
    $12.00 adv
    $14.00 dos
    Ballroom | All Ages

Grog Shop

  • Sat, Apr 17| 9 PM
    At the B-Side Liquor Lounge: Questlove (DJ Set)
    Hosted by Babylon
    DJ K-Nyce
    $15
  • Sat, Apr 17| 9 PM
    Th’ Ledgendary Shackshakers
    Elliot Brood
    Heelsplitter
    $12
  • Sun, Apr 18| 9 PM
    Red Sparowes
    Caspian
    Fang Island
    $10
  • Thurs, Apr 22| 9 PM
    A Night with the Davenport Collective feat.
    Afternoon Naps
    Shiny Penny
    Megachurch
    Dreadful Yawns
    rubella
    Remember
    $5

Musica

  • Sat, Apr 17| 9 PM
    Monotonix
    This Moment in Black History
    As If
    IIWII
    $12
  • Mon, Apr 19| 8 PM
    Maps & Atlases
    Drink Up Buttercup
    Wild Boy of Aveyron
    Owlbear
    $9 adv

The Winchester Tavern & Music Hall

  • Sat, Apr 17|
    The Church
    $35 (includes CD)

The Kent Stage

  • Sat, Apr 17| 8:30 PM
    Simeon Soul Charger
    Nicholas Megalis
    Eclyptic
    $5

Phantasy Nite Club

  • Sat, Apr 17| 8 PM
    Ray Cash
    Reloaded f. Zel
    Cali Miles
    Skent Dukes
    ROB
    DJ Jack da Rippa
    $13, ages 18-20
    $10, ages 21 & over

Allen Theater

  • Sat, Apr 17| 8 PM
    The Roots
    $25-$45

House of Blues

  • Thurs, Apr 22| 8 PM (7 PM door)
    Echo and the Bunnymen
    $24.50 adv
    $27.00 dos
    $35.00 balcony

Here’s Record Store Day ambassador Joshua Homme with some words of wisdom.
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QniH-KV5PMs]

Record Store Day! The best Christmas ever!

Just a reminder, tomorrow is Record Store Day (actually, it’s already Record Store Day in some parts of the world… oops, sorry if you missed it), and your local independent record store will have all kinds of fantastic limited-edition vinyl, as well as nifty CDs and DVDs.

For the big details, check out the official Record Store Day website, and for finer details for Clevelanders, make sure to check out Music Saves… but keep your mitts off my copy of the Black Keys 12″.

Record Store Day Site
Music Saves Site