The Preservation Hall Jazz Band: Do You Know What It Means to Miss New Orleans?

I was about 13 years old when I visited New Orleans. I was with my parents, visiting family in Alabama and Louisiana, and I was in the throes of a Harry Connick, Jr., fixation, so it was a well-timed visit. I remember that Connick’s father, then the District Attorney of New Orleans, was on the T.V. news due to allegations of corruption. I remember the cute bellhop at the Marie Antoinette Hotel. I remember a riverboat to Chalmette. I remember walking through Jackson Square in a light rain while a group of young boys played jazz on a street corner. I remember walking a few paces behind my parents because I didn’t want them to see me crying. New Orleans was so true to my daydreams of it that it overwhelmed me.

But the best memory I have of New Orleans was visiting Preservation Hall. Even though it’s just off of Bourbon Street, the Hall seems like its own universe in the midst of the lights, tourists and infamous debauchery that punctuates (or blankets, depending on what time of the year you’re there) Bourbon Street. It’s boards are worn, and it is narrow. The benches inside are hard and uncomfortable. And in the summer, packed in so close with so many other bodies, it only takes a few minutes to become covered in a heavy sheen of sweat. But once the Preservation Hall Jazz Band starts to play, none of that matters. The world becomes music and joy.

Even though I haven’t been back to N’awlins, my memories of and love for the city have endured, and I was greatly relieved when Preservation Hall survived Hurricane Katrina intact. And you can bet I’ll be laying down some cash for Preservation, an album to benefit the Hall, being released on Mardi Gras, February 16th. If it wasn’t enough that the proceeds from the album will keep the Hall going, check out the roster of people who stopped by to help out the effort:

  • Andrew Bird
  • Paolo Nutini
  • Tom Waits
  • Yim Yames
  • Del McCoury
  • Ani DiFranco
  • Pete Seeger & Tao Rodriguez-Seeger
  • Jason Isbell
  • Brandi Carlile
  • Richie Havens
  • Merle Haggard
  • Blind Boys of Alabama
  • Dr. John
  • Amy LaVere
  • Steve Earle
  • Cory Chisel
  • Buddy Miller
  • Angelique Kidjo with Terence Blanchard

Even Louis Armstrong makes an appearance.

If you somehow remain unconvinced as to how great this album will be, check out the preview video.

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

They are even generously streaming the album at the official website: Preservation: A Benefit Album

Friday Fun: On the Day You Were Born

Inspired by a Facebook meme, of all things, I was reminded of the Billboard #1 hit at the time I was born. “Love Train” by the O’Jays. Note the presence of a slo-mo’ing Fred “Rerun” Berry at the 1:08 mark.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r7MiG2fe8lE]

And because I can never hear the O’Jays without wanting to listen to my favorite O’Jays’ song: “Backstabbers”

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yzjziKqVp6k]

What was the Billboard #1 when you were born?

Willy Mason & A.A. Bondy at the Blind Pig in Ann Arbor, MI, 2.2.10

Under a snow cloud that seemed to concentrate solely over Ann Arbor (and seemed to want my car as a sacrifice), in a hole in the wall bar-cum-club, a rabble of music lovers who seemed to span every age range from 18 to 40 and possibly beyond gathered around a small stage to hear what Willy Mason and A.A. Bondy had to offer.

Thinking of Willy Mason, the word that comes to mind is solid. His songwriting is solid, his guitar-playing is solid and his voice is solid. But the previous two times I had seen him play, he seemed to lack an indefinable something. Oomph, chutzpah or some other slightly onomatopoeiaic word. This time, he seems to have found the road to that indefinable something. While Mason is still more than a little quiet in between songs, the songs themselves popped with a vibrancy that had been missing before. “Pickup Truck”, “If It’s the End”, “Where the Humans Eat” and “Hard Hand to Hold” all sparkled and received deserved appreciation from the audience.

There was a sweet moment as Mason waited for some friends to come help him out on stage. He said, “We need some filler.” To which a voice from the audience called out, “Oxygen!” “Oxygen?” Mason replied. “We can do that.” Then a shy smile lit up his face, and it was a moment when you could see in his joy how hard it can be to be The Opening Guy, just waiting for someone to know who you are and like what you do.

The friends who came to help were, of course, A.A. Bondy and his bandmates Macey Taylor and Ben Lester, and they helped Mason close his set with a beautifully filled out song – a song to which I don’t recall any of the words and cannot even guess at the title. But trust me, it was good, and Mason was obviously happy to be joined onstage by good friends. He left the stage to the sound of cheers.

Here is what A.A. Bondy is not: a romantic troubadour, a lonesome drifter who just hopped off a freight train, a sepia-toned ghost who has just stepped out of a bygone era. Though he might be a ramblin’ man. And with his long-legged, wide stance, he looks like he could have just gotten off a horse.

Here is what A.A. Bondy is: just a guy. A good guy with a lot of talent, passion, skill and the ability to get up in front of crowds of strangers night after night and do his best.

As a member of an A.A. Bondy audience, here is what you cannot do: expect to hear songs delivered just as you heard them on his records, see one show and think you’ve seen all the artillery he has stashed in his armory, fail to be surprised. It would also be good if you didn’t talk while he was playing. (I have been fortunate enough to have been surrounded by respectful and mostly quiet audiences at the two Bondy shows I have been to.)

While both of A.A. Bondy’s solo albums are beautiful creations (and they both mean a lot to me), if you’ve only heard his albums, you only have part of the picture of who he is as a musician. As an artist, Bondy posesses an admirable confidence in his music. He is not precious about his work and has the ability to stretch out in his songs, to add here, take away there, turn left instead of right.

He opened the set with what well may be his best song to date, “Mightiest of Guns”. The gentle finger-picking of the original recording was accompanied by a beautiful swoon of pedal steel supplied by Ben Lester, adding power to an already moving song. “There’s a Reason” was given a sonicly diverse treatment and crescendoed with passion again and again. Bondy played the most beautiful bit of harmonica I’ve ever heard from him (or anyone, for that matter) on “Black Rain, Black Rain”. “When the Devil’s Loose” was transformed from an almost Radiohead-like exercise in ambience to a hip-shaking honky tonk (during which Bondy shouted out, “Disco ball!” to get the mirrored ball in the center of the room spinning). Electric guitar gave “Rapture (Sweet Rapture)” a certain elegance. Bondy’s cover for the night, Hank Williams’ “I’m So Lonesome I Could Cry” – a song well-suited to Bondy’s smoke and honey voice both in style and content – even received a little improvisational picking. And there was more – “Vice Rag”, “To the Morning”, “Killed Myself When I was Young”, “Oh the Vampyre, “I Can See the Pines Are Dancing”, “A Slow Parade” – each with a certain bang, a certain nuance, that stopped you in your tracks for a moment, leaving you unable to do anything but marvel.

What, for me, was the highlight of the show – in a set where every song was a highlight – was the closing “The Coal Hits the Fire”. Again playing with sonic dynamics, at one point, the band dropped out completely, leaving only Bondy’s voice driving the song through, his eyes closed and his fingers playing in the air as if pulling the notes from somewhere just out of sight. Then the band came back in and took the song to a thrilling cacophony of hard and heavy sound that felt like a sharp punch to the solar plexus before mellowing back into the finger-picked guitar melody. And invigorating note to end a show that played up and down the emotional scale.

The one thing I did miss in this show that had been abundant at the A.A. Bondy show I had seen previously at Musica in Akron, Ohio, was Bondy’s between song banter. Despite the somber presence he can sometimes convey, Bondy is very clever, very bright and very fucking funny. There was a story about the time he had played the Blind Pig two years before. “There weren’t as many of you,” Bondy told the crowd after thanking them and telling them how much he appreciated the turnout, “and you weren’t very nice.” As a matter of fact, another band who was there went backstage and drank all of Bondy’s gang’s beer. “So to recreate that night, most of you need to leave, and then the rest of you be assholes and drink all our beer.”

Side note: A good thing to know if you’re ever going to the Blind Pig: Hit the ATM beforehand. As the posters around the venue and the T-shirt on the bartender will tell you, charmingly accentuated by the infamous shot of Johnny Cash flipping the bird, the Blind Pig is CASH ONLY. They don’t mention this on their website, so it’s a good thing my plastic-dependent self moneyed up beforehand just in case.

A.A. Bondy: Tide Will Bring and Tide Will Take

I should re-title this blog “Just Go to Daytrotter”.

I want to give the A.A. Bondy Ann Arbor show review the attention it deserves, which means not writing it up on this day when I’m functioning on a scant few hours of sleep. For now, know that it was an amazing show, and A.A. Bondy is a good, good man.

Fortuitously, Daytrotter posted a new session with Bondy today, so they’re going to help me tide you over.

A.A. Bondy – Daytrotter encore session

Please forgive me.

What I should be doing is writing some brilliant, pontificating post full of content and revelation to make up for the shorter, paler posts I’ve been making. Instead, the fact that I’m journeying up to Ann Arbor tonight to see A.A. Bondy play at the Blind Pig has eaten my brain.

So instead, I’m going to cop out by pointing you to a Daytrotter session by the man opening for Bondy, Mr. Willy Mason. I have never intentionally gone to a show to see Mason (nothing against him – he’s a fine songwriter with a strong voice), and yet this will be the third time I’ve seen him play.

Show review forthcoming.

Dawes: Truth Back Under the Knife

On paper, there’s no reason I should like Dawes. They have A) a strong vein of Southern rock/Laurel Canyon sound running through their songs and B) a very earnest songwriter. But music doesn’t take place on paper, and Dawes’ music just works. A key element to the succes of Dawes’ sound is Taylor Goldsmith’s strong, open voice that bursts with heart. And while serving the lyrics, the music itself does not sacrifice melody or rhythm to do so.

I’m hoping to see Dawes when they come to Cleveland in support of Cory Chisel & the Wandering Sons on February, 18. They’ll be playing the Tavern inside the Beacland Ballroom.

Dawes – When My Time Comes (Daytrotter session)

Dawes – Love Is All I Am (Daytrotter session)

Dawes on MySpace

Simone Felice: Long May You Run

Simone Felice is a wonder. In 33 years, he seems to have experienced enough highs and lows to fill a few lifetimes, and he still manages to radiate the kind of sunny, loving air one would expect only from someone who has remained innocent of the depth and variety of pain the world has to offer. He came to prominence on the music scene as the drummer and rabble-rouser of the Felice Brothers (“prominence” being a term used loosely here as there are some still ignorant of the glory of the Brothers), given to off-kilter rhythms, whiskey-fueled antics and declarations such as “All ya’ll didn’t think there was any more churches left in New York City, did ya? This is the Felice Brothers Scumbag Church where you can fuck your cousin in the bathroom.” But even in the midst of the backwoods anarchy of the Brothers, the softer light in Simone still came shining through when he’d take the helm on songs like “Your Belly in My Arms” and “Mercy”.

When tragedy struck, not for the first time in Felice’s life, in the form of the still-birth of his daughter in the winter of 2008, instead of becoming hardened by the experience, Felice seemed only more determined to spread love. He bid bon voyage to the Brothers as they continued to tour, write and record and began to work on his own project, the Duke and the King, with longtime friend Robert “Chicken” Burke. What came out of holing up in a cabin with “Bobbie Bird” was an album, Nothing Gold Can Stay, that, true to its title, delivered musical poetry celebrating the beauty of the world – however painfully fleeting – and garnered Felice and Burke copious and effusive praise. Taking the show on the road, Felice and Burke continued to evolve their songs into ever more joyful noise.

Seemingly incapable of sitting still, Felice has now begun performing solo, has finished his fourth book and has just launched a website to keep the world apprised of his further creative endeavors. (One of the happy surprises of the new site is the affordable availability of The Big Empty, the eponomously-titled album of the band Felice started with younger brother Ian in the autumn of 2001, shortly after 9/11 and a few years before the formation of the Felice Brothers.)

Full disclosure: Simone Felice has become a sort of idol of mine. The dichotomy he personifies between dirtbag mountain boy and warm poet delights me, and the poetic prose of his books affects me in a way that writing hasn’t done since I was a susceptible teenager. But the clincher to his idolhood came when I messaged him via his MySpace page to ask if he could help direct me somewhere I could acquire a copy of his limited-edition novel Hail Mary Full of Holes and received a reply that not only affirmed that he could send me a copy from his own barn, but was also one of the kindest, warmest missives I’ve received from just about anyone, let alone an artist I had admired from afar.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1MFM1wrocyM]

This beautiful video was shot at the Olana State Historic Site near Felice’s home in upstate New York. The postmark on the envelope that carried my copy of Mary to me tells me that it was mailed the day this was filmed.

Simone Felice’s official site

The Duke and the King official site

The Felice Brothers official site

Take This Bread: A Felice Brothers blog

Incidentally, it was my enthusiasm for the Felice Brothers that led me to the music of their former-brother-in-law-and-still-brother-in-other-ways, A.A. Bondy (and it was a little write-up in the excellent and sadly now-defunct No Depression magazine that led me to the Brothers), who shares with Simone and the Brothers not just a talent for stripped-down, honest music, but also the trait of being just a damn nice person.

Andrew Bird: Andrew Bird’s Bowl of Fire

I’ll admit it: I like Andrew Bird himself and find his creativity and talent inspiring, but I’ve had a hard time getting into Andrew Bird’s music. When I tried to just listen to him, I found myself liking “Imitosis”, “Heretics”… and that was about it. When I actually watched him play, by way of videos of live performances, I fell in love with a few more songs, like “Anonanimal” and the marvellously ungainly-titled “A Nervous Tic Motion of the Head to the Left”. While all the songs weren’t clicking with me, the ones that did click, clicked hard.

I previewed samples from a few of his albums and just wasn’t finding a whole album I felt like dropping a dime on… until I hit those first two Bowl of Fire albums – Thrills and Oh! The Grandeur – then it was Hot, damn! (On the third and final Bowl of Fire album, The Swimming Hour, switched gears, delving into a variety of pop styles. Bird refers to it as his “jukebox album”. ) If, like me just a week or so ago, you have no clue about the history of Mr. Bird before his ever-growing success as a solo artist, he spent some time contributing his beautiful bow-work to classic Squirrel Nut Zippers’ albums like Hot and Perennial Favorites. That hot jazz vibe must have sat very comfortably with Bird as he went on to form Andrew Bird’s Bowl of Fire – which was basically Kevin O’Donnell’s Quality Six led by Bird – and the first two albums under that moniker feature all the best elements of what the Zippers were laying down (along with a little help from Zippers Katherine Whalen and Jimbo Mathus), not the least of which was Bird’s evocative fiddle-playing.

The tune “Candy Shop” is a foot-stomper of the highest order. Bird’s trademark wordplay is already on display in tracks like “Minor Stab” about a man who can’t get along with his one-man band. And if a beautifully bowed piece like “Wait” doesn’t make you want to grab a lemonade and sit on the porch swing with your best gal or fella, then I’m not sure I even want to know you.

Andrew Bird’s Bowl of Fire – Candy Shop

A.A. Bondy: My Funny Valentine

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9AuLEfFQG6Q]

Two of the great joys of seeing A.A. Bondy play are hearing new arrangements and variations of his songs and seeing what great covers he’ll pull out. To that end, here are two slightly different versions of his heartbreaking cover of the Rogers and Hart classic “My Funny Valentine” (a song which, interestingly, he’s been pulling out for encores since the Verbena days).

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v-KBMs0XPvI]

Hearing him sing this song mere feet away from me at his show last month in Akron was the first time I’ve been left speechless during a show. It seemed I wasn’t the only one having that reaction as it took a few moments for the applause to start once the song was finished. From the back of the room, someone called out, “Well done.”

I’ll be heading up to the Blind Pig in Ann Arbor, Michigan, to see him play on December 2nd. I’m excited to see what he has in store for us this time.

Nicholas Megalis: 216 Reasons to Live

Two words come to mind when thinking how to describe Cleveland/NYC artist Nicholas Megalis: sassy and sexy. Some of his songs carry a mad carinval air, some are enveloped in warm industrial fuzz, but most of them will make you rotate your hips in an unseemly manner.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LE0Q03vV38Q]

I discovered Megalis, or rather, he discovered me when he began following my personal account on Twitter a while back, perfectly illustrating how the internet has changed the whole game for music.