Notable Shows in the Greater Cleveland Area

Shows worth checking out this week in and around Cleveland:

The Beachland Ballroom & Tavern

  • Sat, Nov 6| 8 PM (7 PM door)
    The Infamous Stringdusters and
    Trampled by Turtles
    Fly Palomino Tour
    $15
    Ballroom | All Ages
  • Wed, Nov 10| 8:30 PM (7:30 PM door)
    Greensky Bluegrass
    Heelsplitter
    $10.00 adv / $12.00 dos
    Tavern | All Ages

Grog Shop

  • Fri, Nov 5| 10 PM
    I Love My City, featuring:
    Tezo
    Smoke Screen
    Keyel
    Erika Kayne
    Kickflip B
    $8 adv / $ 12dos
  • Sat, Nov 6| 8 PM
    Electric Six
    The Constellations
    Fawn
    Shit Box Jimmy
    $10 adv / $12 dos
  • Wed, Nov 10| 9 PM
    Black Helicopter
    Primitives
    Rare Birds
    $6

Now That’s Class

  • Fri, Nov 5| 9 PM
    Toxic Holocaust
    Hjertestop
    Bill Bondsmen
    Vindicator
    Pigsticker
    $8 adv / $10 dos
  • Wed, Nov 10| 9 PM
    COATHANGERS
    (Atlanta all girl new wave punk) / AS IF / FOLDED SHIRT (F/S) / SPORTS BRAS
    $8

Happy Dog

  • Fri, Nov 5| 9 PM
    The Lions Rampant
    Prisoners
    Mother Country MadMen

The Palace Theater

  • Sat, Nov 6| 7:30 PM
    The Bar-Kays
    Slave
    Con Funk Shun
    The Dazz Band
    Ohio Players
    Zapp
    $47.50 – $57.50

Nighttown

  • Tues, Nov 9| 7 & 9 PM
    Mose Allison
    $25

Rock ‘n’ Roll Photog: Titus Andronicus/The Felice Brothers

NTSIB loves the Felice Brothers. NTSIB also loves boys in dresses. Now we can enjoy our two great loves together! Hurray for Halloween!


Continuing my ongoing life-theme of music related traveling, last weekend NTSIB friend Joy and I drove up some twisty mountain roads to Poughkeepie to see Titus Andronicus and the Felice Brothers. Trivia: Joy first saw The Felice Brothers when they were playing on the subway platforms in Brooklyn; I only learned about them this past January, and for all of the times I’ve seen them this year, this show was the first one in an actual club. And it was wonderful.

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Titus Andronicus was once again amazing. The crowd was of course much smaller than the one at Webster Hall, and during the first song I thought they might be a little bit lukewarm. Oh, was I ever wrong. As soon as the second song started, they began moshing. And I do mean moshing; there was hair, beer and limbs flying everyehere, Joy almost got knocked over four times, there were dudes in tweed sport coats pummeling the bejsus out of each other in a circle pit during almost all fourteen minutes of Battle of Hampton Roads, and it was fantastic.

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Then the Felice Brothers came out. They had gotten properly into the spirit of the weekend and busted out some costumes. I’ll just let the pictures do the most of the rest of the talking:

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Various members of the Diamond Doves came along to play the horns and the occasional drum, and they also dressed up for the occasion:

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And there was a costum contest in the middle of the show. Here’s Ian Felice with his favorite, the girl who was dressed as a refrigerator:

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And in conclusion, one from the encore. This is the one that Joy leaned over to say “I like that one” after I took it:

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As for the music – I’m completely useless with setlists, and can only tell you that the songs they played included Run, Chicken, Run, White Limosine, River Jordan, Frankie’s Gun, Ballad of Lou the Welterweight, and Take This Bread, and that overall it was much more up-tempo than they have been recently. By which I mean, they didn’t play Damn You, Jim this time, to my everlasting relief. It’s a beautiful song, it’s just I find it unutterably depressing. (Song I really wish they would play live: Cooperstown.) In any case, it was a great night, and a great show.

— Jennifer

Bits: Wu-Tang Clan, The Black Keys, Mumford and Sons, Robert Johnson, Drive-By Truckers

  • The Wu-Tang Clan are touring in December (and possibly beyond), including a New Year’s Eve show in Pittsburgh.

    12/4/10 San Diego, CA, 4th & B

    12/5/10 Los Angeles, CA, Club Nokia

    12/10/10 Dallas, TX, Granada Theater

    12/22/10 Boston, MA, Wilbur Theater

    12/26/10 New Haven, CT, Toad’s Place

    12/28/10 Providence, RI, Lupo’s Heartbreak Hotel

    12/30/10 Philadelphila, PA, Trocadero

    12/31/10 Millvale, PA, Mr. Smalls Theater

  • Re-issuing relatively new albums with additional live material is the new black. The Black Keys will be releasing limited edition numbered vinyl package of Brothers on November 26 as part of a special Black Friday Record Store Day, which will include the original double vinyl and CD of the album, plus a 10″ of a live session recorded in Akron of select Brothers tracks (different from their recent iTunes session) and a poster
  • Mumford and Sons will be re-releasing Sigh No More on November 29 in a limited edition package that will include the original album on CD, a DVD and a bonus disc of songs recorded at a pair of live gigs at Shepherd’s Bush Empire last March.
  • Blues legend Robert Johnson would have been 100 years old next year. In tribute, a tour called Blues at the Crossroads: The Robert Johnson Centennial Concerts will begin in January and will feature legends David “Honeyboy” Edwards and Hubert Sumlin, as well as Cedric Burnside and Lightnin’ Malcolm and Big Head Todd and the Monsters. The group of musicians will also record an album which will be released in conjunction with the tour.
  • Having apparently attended the Robert Pollard School of Never Sitting Still, the Drive-By Truckers are releasing a Black Friday Record Store Day 10″ which will include brand new songs “Used to Be a Cop” and “The Thanksgiving Filter”, with their new album Go-Go Boots being released on February 15. A download of their song “Your Woman is a Living Thing” is available via the band’s Facebook page.

Drive-By Truckers “Used To Be A Cop” from Jason Thrasher on Vimeo.

Rebirth of the Cool: Ohio Covers Ohio, Part One

The Black Keys have a way with a cover song and having long been champions of our shared home state of Ohio, it’s no surprise that they’ve covered a few of their fellow Akron-area musicians.

The James Gang, fronted for a time by Joe Walsh, formed in Cleveland in 1967. Their best-known song was a typically ’70s rock ‘n’ roll nugget called “Funk #49”.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U_qHU_6Ofc0?fs=1]

While keeping the rock essence of the song, the Keys admirably trim the original’s excess making it, for me at least, far more palatable.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3T0GzZuKbhY?fs=1]

While the Cramps formed in Sacramento, California, the dearly departed Lux Interior hailed from Stow, Ohio, just outside of Akron, and Lux and wife Poison Ivy lived in Akron for a couple of years in the early 1970s.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q4BMW31juLc?fs=1]

While a somewhat less natural choice for the Keys than the “Funk #49”, their cover of the Cramps’ “Can’t Find My Mind” reveals an appealing glimpse of punk spirit and Auerbach’s penchant for fuzz guitar serves the song well.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h0XOfMwMX1A?fs=1]

Devo formed in Akron in 1973 before eventually moving to California and never really looking back, but not before leaving the Akron music scene shaken, bewildered and inspired.

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

Even though Patrick Carney has professed Devo to be one of this favorite bands, “Uncontrollable Urge” is an even less natural choice for the Black Keys to cover than the Cramps. There are hardly two bands more opposite in sound and spirit. I’ll let you be the judge of how well they bridged the gap.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ClqeQ8BX05s?fs=1]

Notable Shows in the Greater Cleveland Area + Party of Helicopters

Shows worth checking out this week in and around Cleveland:

The Beachland Ballroom & Tavern

  • Sat, Oct 30| 8:30 PM (7:30 PM door)
    Los Straitjackets
    Big Sandy and his Fly-Rite Boys
    (costumes encouraged)
    $18 adv / $20 dos
    Ballroom | All Ages
  • Mon, Nov 1| 9 PM (8:30 PM door)
    Wet Hair
    Cloud Nothings
    Three Legged Race
    $5
    Ballroom | All Ages
  • Wed, Nov 3| 8:30 PM (8 PM door)
    The Union Line
    Hollis Brown
    Woovs
    $8
    Tavern | All Ages
  • Thu, Nov 4| 7:30 PM (6:30 PM door)
    Los Lobos
    Jorma Kaukonen
    At the Cleveland Masonic Auditorium
    In association with Visible Voice Books
    $35
    | All Ages

Grog Shop

  • Fri, Oct 29| 10 PM
    Mayer Hawthorne & The County
    Gordon Voidwell
    DJ MisterbradleyP
    $17
  • Tue Nov 2| 9 PM
    Filter
    Middle Class Rut
    Nonfiction
    $15

Now That’s Class

  • Sun Oct 31| 9 PM
    The Dreadnoughts
    Achachay
    Bomb Back Hellcat
    $5 donation
  • Thu Nov 4| 9 PM
    Masaki Batoh
    Moonrises
    Orange Luna Temple
    Kohoutek
    Fillmore Jive
    Zacharius Hay
    $5

Happy Dog

  • Sat, Oct 30| 9 PM
    Filmstrip
    Clovers
    Prisoners

Peabodys

  • Sun, Oct 31| 7 PM door
    Suicidal Tendencies
    Ringworm
    Death Before Dishonor
    Crossface
    $20 adv / $25 dos

Early warning: Party of Helicopters have reunited (again) and will be playing Musica on November 20th. Out of Kent, Ohio, PoH is part of the family tree that also includes Houseguest, Teeth of the Hydra, Beaten Awake, the Six Parts Seven, Drummer and the Black Keys. Additionally, guitarist Jamie Stillman is the founder of Earthquaker Devices.

All this to say, if you don’t know them, they’re good. You should go see them.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=svZMJ0filL8?fs=1]

Rock ‘n’ Roll Photog: Black Cards

Jennifer re-employs her uncanny ability to get killer shots of Pete Wentz as he broadens the current trend of bands with “Black” in their names. While my taste frequently diverges from Jennifer’s, and NTSIB would not have any Wentz-related content without her, I’m truly proud to be able to feature her great shots here.


Black Cards

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Pete Wentz amid a forest of hands and cameras

Apparently I have some mysterious talent for taking reasonably good but yet oddly blown-out pictures of Pete Wentz. I took this a week and a half ago in a teeny-tiny club in Poughkeepsie. The occasion was the last night of a three-show mini-tour by Black Cards, which is his new band. Blown out or not I’m fond of it, though, because, well, look at his little grinny face. He was having fun, y’all, and I was glad I could be there to see it. (Also, that forest of hands and cameras? They were there ALL NIGHT. I was three rows back from the stage and that was essentially my view!)

As for the music: it was great. Their sound incorporates elements of reggae and dance-pop and is wholly different from Fall Out Boy, but is still definitely rock and roll. They don’t have a record out yet, but based on what I heard, I’ll be picking it up when it does appear. Meanwhile, you’ll find links to listen to and/or download the two singles they have on the internet here. Note: the singles are representative of their dance-pop side. They’re much heavier live, and the drums and guitars have a larger, more solid presence. I won’t make April’s head explode (today) by using any “sounds like” comparisons, but I will say: imagine what No Doubt might be like if they had Chicago grit and New York City glamour going for them.

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Bebe Rexha, Nate Patterson, Pete Wentz


You might now be wondering whatever possessed me to take a two hour train ride to Poughkeepsie to attend a show in a teeny-tiny bar by a band with no record out and only two singles on the internet. The answer is: April has Greg (fucking) Dulli, I have Pete Wentz. Also, while I’m not going to get into the tedious gory details, suffice it to say, the tour and the music were and are the physical fruits of Wentz’s recovery from a rough year. And it was really, really good to see him happy on stage again.

Meanwhile, here is another one of my favorite pictures from the evening:

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Bebe Rexha


This is Bebe Rexha (of Staten Island!), lead singer for the band. Her voice is delicious, and her stage presence is killer. I believe I used the phrase “hot reggae swagger” to describe it to people.

I’ll conclude now with an atmospheric shot of the alley next to the club, in honor of Halloween. And because everyone needs some spooky lights and shadowy dragons in their Wednesday, right?

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— Jennifer

Love, Blood and Rhetoric

In lieu of a constructive contribution to the blogosphere today, and in tribute to my fraught relationship with my lady parts, I’m sharing a list of menstrual music. Songs to bleed to. With a little help from our friends.

“Happy and Bleeding” – PJ Harvey
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ev6rS2O19ik?fs=1]
suggested by takethisbread

“Positive Bleeding” – Urge Overkill
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ww-f4glTOdw?fs=1]
suggested by April

Peaches
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dXiFuU7X_Fo?fs=1]
suggested by amanjo

“Grown So Ugly” – The Black Keys
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tkp_EU_yqz0?fs=1]
suggested by Bluerooster

“Comfortably Numb” – Pink Floyd
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tkJNyQfAprY?fs=1]
suggested by Jennifer

And, really, no menstrual music list would be complete without the Cramps…
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8fyr0zbaFyE?fs=1]

Honorable (for a given value of “honor”) mentions: “Let it Bleed” by the Rolling Stones (suggested by takethisbread), “Blood” by My Chemical Romance (suggested by Jennifer)

Feel free to share other suggestions in comments. Misery loves company.

Notable Shows in the Greater Cleveland Area

Shows worth checking out this week in and around Cleveland:

The Beachland Ballroom & Tavern

  • Fri, Oct 22| 9 PM (8 PM door)
    Papadosio
    Zoogma
    Broccoli Samurai
    $10
    Ballroom | All Ages
  • Wed, Oct 27| 9 PM (9 PM door)
    JC’s Night of Star Making

    Moth Cock with Nate Scheible
    Poly Sumkin (Justin & Julia)
    RA Washington
    Christopher Cannon
    JC DJing minimal techno & eurobass in between sets

    FREE SHOW!!!
    Tavern | All Ages

  • Thu, Oct 28| 8 PM (7:30 PM door)
    Mooncussers
    The Corduroy Mason Band
    Dave Padrutt
    $6
    Tavern | All Ages

Grog Shop

  • Fri, Oct 22| 8:30 PM
    Humble Home (CD Release)
    Andy Cook & The Waterloons
    Authors
    Tom Evanchuck
    Rebekah Jean
    $7 (includes CD)
  • Sun, Oct 24| 8 PM
    Legendary Pink Dots 30th Anniversary Tour
    DJ Neal Darewaves
    DJ Textbeak
    $16 adv / $18 dos
  • Wed, Oct 27| 9 PM
    Me & My Arrow
    Craig Ramsey
    Adam Barry
    $6
  • Thu, Oct 28| 9 PM
    Blood Red Shoes
    Sky Larkin
    Starlazer
    Trans Atlas
    $8

Now That’s Class

  • Sat, Oct 23| 9 PM
    Human Eye
    Beast in the Field
    Little Sister
    Centrifuge
    $5

Musica

  • Sat, Oct 23| 6 PM
    The Photo Atlas
    Asleep
    Maid Myriad
    Polymertization Band
    Come Wind
    $8
  • Mon, Oct 25| 8 PM
    Phantogram
    Josiah Wolf
    The Royaltons
    $11

House of Blues

  • Sun, Oct 24| 8 PM (7 PM Door)
    Social Distortion
    Lucero
    Frank Turner
    $30 / $38

Peabody’s

  • Tue, Oct 26| 7 PM
    The Misfits
    Juicehead
    Werewolves
    $20 adv / $24 dos

Rock ‘n’ Roll Photog: Mark Ronson and the Business INTL

This week, Jennifer reveals the quirky interests of her childhood and sees Q-Tip! (Oh, and this Mark Ronson kid.)


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Mark Ronson and the Business INTL

I have spent a certain amount of time in the last couple of weeks listening to Record Collection and pondering the question of how to descibe the sound of Mark Ronson and the Business INTL. A potpourri made of hip-hop and synth-rock electronica? The soundtrack to someone else’s glamorous life? The kind of thing that would be playing the background of a Wes Anderson movie? All of the above? I finally settled on: a delicate, complicated game of vocal pick-up sticks with hot dance beats, though The Business’ Twitter bio says they’re “Nature’s The Traveling Wilburys”, which might also be a wholly accurate description.

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Stuart Zender (Jamiroquai) and Alex Greenwald (Phantom Planet)


Ronson has certainly managed to pull in an eclectic collection of musicians, representing multiple generations of multiple genres. I was at the Webster Hall show, where in addition to the Business – Rose Dougall, Alex Greenwald, Stuart Zender, MNDR, and MC Spank Rock – hip-hop artists Q-Tip and Pill showed up to jam. At his UK shows, audiences were treated to Boy George (!) and Duran Duran (!!).

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MC Spank Rock

What all of that talent in one place translates to is some great tunes amd a really, really fun show. I’ve already expressed my appreciation for the title track; I’m also especially fond of You Gave Me Nothing and The Night Last Night. It’s important to note here that I am normally not so much into synth-pop; back in the early ’80s, while my sister was wearing out her Rio tape, I had my radio dial tuned to hockey games, Larry King Live and Loveline. But these grooves are kind of irresistible.

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Q-Tip

Also, for those of you who are squinting at your screen right now thinking Mark who?, his previous (concurrent?) incarnations include being a DJ and, perhaps most notoriously, Amy Winehouse’s producer. Though he’s worked with a whole lot of other people as well, in fact he made a handy flow chart for an interview he did with New York Magazine.

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MNDR and Mark Ronson

In conclusion: If you did like synth-pop, or still do, and in particular of you prefer your synths poppy and untroubled by industrial undertones, there is a lot for you to love here, and you should totally check them out.

— Jennifer