Notable Shows in the Greater Cleveland Area

Shows worth checking out this week in and around Cleveland:

The Beachland Ballroom & Tavern

  • Fri, Mar 25| 8:30 PM (7:30 PM door)
    Warpaint
    PVT
    Family Band
    $15
    Ballroom | All Ages
  • Sat, Mar 26| 9 PM (8 PM door)
    We Are Hex
    Xray Eyeballs
    Wooly Bullies
    $8
    Tavern | All Ages
  • Mon, Mar 28| 7 PM (6:30 PM door)
    Martin Memorial
    For Barking Spider’s Martin Juredine

    Ballroom:
    Readings from Suzanne DeGaetano, Ann Trupo, & Jenna Juredine
    George Foley
    Kevin Richards
    Bill Lestock
    Vicki Chew
    Hillbilly Idol
    Mo’ Mojo
    Carlos Jones

    Tavern:
    Charlie Mosbrook
    Poet Ray McNiece
    Martini Five-O
    Colette
    Natural Facts (Guest poet Ben Guylas)
    Michael McDonald & David Krauss
    Tom Shaper (guest storyteller Tom Croley)
    Jim Volk

    $5
    Ballroom & Tavern | All Ages

  • Tue, Mar 29| 8 PM (7 PM door)
    7 Walkers
    Featuring:
    Bill Kreutzmann (of Grateful Dead), George Porter Jr. (of The Meters), Papa Mali and Matt Hubbard
    $25 adv / $28 dos
    Ballroom | All Ages
  • Tue, Mar 29| 8:30 PM (8 PM door)
    Lucky Tubb & The Modern Day Troubadours
    Jim Mckeivier
    Clint Holley DJs
    $8
    Tavern | All Ages
  • Thu, Mar 31| 8:30 PM (8 PM door)
    S. Carey
    Lighthouse & The Whaler
    $8 adv / $10 dos
    Tavern | All Ages
  • Fri, Apr 1| 8:30 PM (7:30 PM door)
    The Greenhornes
    Hacienda
    Exploding Lies
    $12 adv / $14 dos
    Ballroom | All Ages

Grog Shop

  • Fri, Mar 25| 6:30 PM
    Henry Rollins
    (at Gartner Auditorium, Cleveland Museum of Art)
    SOLD OUT
  • Fri, Mar 25| 8 PM
    British Sea Power
    A Classic Education
    Herzog
    $14
  • Sun, Mar 27| 8 PM
    Smoke Screen
    BenniB
    Urbindex
    BEDROC
    Moola Gang
    $5
  • Wed, Mar 30| 8 PM
    J Mascis
    Kurt Vile & the Violators
    $15 adv / $17 dos
  • Thu, Mar 31| 7:30 PM
    OFF!
    Trash Talk
    Cider
    $13 adv / $15 dos
  • Fri, Apr 1| 8 PM
    Omar Rodriguez Lopez Group
    Zechs Marquise
    $20 adv / $23 dos

Musica

  • Sat, Mar 26| 7:30 PM
    The English Beat
    Human Nature
    Dale Earnhardt Jr. Jr.
    $20

Quicken Arena

  • Sat, Mar 26| 7 PM
    Moondog Coronation Ball
    The Grass Roots
    The Rascals
    The Spinners
    The Animals
    America
    $35 / $50 / $65

House of Blues

  • Fri, Mar 25| 9 PM (8 PM doors)
    Willie Nelson
    Drake White
    $55 / $125 balcony
  • Wed, Mar 30| 8 PM (7 PM doors)
    Queens of the Stone Age
    The Dough Rollers
    $30 adv / $35 dos

Pirates Cove at Peabody’s

  • Fri, Apr 1| 7 PM
    Gene Loves Jezebel
    $10 adv / $13 dos

A Conversation with James Leg

 

John Wesley Myers, a.k.a. James Leg, gives off a vibe that reaches across a crowded bar. Stepping into the Happy Dog, a popular neighborhood bar on Cleveland’s west side, packed wall-to-wall with the usual cast of St. Patrick’s Day goofy, green-clad revellers, it took less than a second to spot Myers at the bar. It wasn’t that he was better-looking or more nicely dressed than most anyone else in the place – though there might have been that, too – it is more a natural air that says, “You should pay attention to this guy.”

And you should. From his band the Black Diamond Heavies to his work with the Immortal Lee County Killers and contributions to albums by Scott H. Biram and Left Lane Cruiser on up to his new solo album, Solitary Pleasure, Myers is partially responsible for doling out some of the dirtiest, howlingest, most searing punk-ass blues ever produced. And he’s got more just waiting to pour out.

After a full-on drunk young man screeched excitedly in Myers face (to which Myers, never less than cool, turned to me and simply said, “St. Patrick’s Day”), we made ourselves comfortable on a couch outside a downstairs bathroom (thanks to Andy Jody for finding us a relatively quiet spot) and talked about lost loves, tent revivals, dual personalities and music, music, music.

 


What prompted the solo album?

Well, the Black Diamond Heavies, we’ve been hitting it, like, 260 days a year for 6 years now, and we were tired. We needed to be around other people for a minute, you know? And we’re not done. We’ve got another record in mind, if not in the works yet. And Van [Campbell], the drummer, was recently married, and so he kinda needed to stay closer to home. And I have nothing, so I just wanted to stay on the road. But in order to do that, I didn’t want to just go out and sell Black Diamond Heavies stuff without Van there. And I had all these songs, also, that… the Black Diamond Heavies, we had messed around with some of these songs, and they just weren’t really Black Diamond Heavies songs. Black Diamond Heavies have a sound that’s kinda sacred to me, like this real raw, driving, lo-fi thing, which is great, but I didn’t want to fuck with that sound too much. Some of this newer stuff, it’s a different thing. And so the solo record gave me an opportunity to kinda… And I’ve got another solo record, too. I’d like to some… I’d like to do some [whispers] country. I don’t know…

[gasp, laughter]

You know? I’m from Texas, I grew up on that shit. But in the same style, you know, and that’s something the Black Diamond Heavies really couldn’t, or shouldn’t do.

I noticed you seem to be branching out on this album. There’s a lot more gospel and the piano…

The piano, that’s something specifically like… the Heavies, we’ve used the piano as an accent but not as a main instrument. It just doesn’t work. And, hell, I learned on the piano. I play a Fender Rhodes, but I’m a piano player, and so this was nice. There’s more piano on this record than Rhodes, I think – I think that’s right – which was really cool.

So, you read the post I did. I felt like the album seemed like a man realizing his faults and getting ready to take steps to redemption – how accurate was that?

I think the first part’s probably right on, a man realizing his faults. Steps toward redemption… You know, one day at a time? [laughter] It’s been a rough year, a lot of shit’s happened this year. What do they say… it’s been a long time since I was at those meetings… recognizing is the first step or something like that?

So, just curious, “No License (Song for the Caged Bird)”: Is that somebody?

Yeah, that’s somebody. That was the first girl I fell in love with. I was 19, she was 16, so it was a little… eh. You know. But she was sneaking into the bars because she looked older. Actually, since she’s straightened away, she goes to church every day, she’s got a family. I wrote that song years ago, many years ago, and never recorded it, never did anything with it. When I was doing this solo record, I was going through some words that I’d written or whatever, and I found that song, and it was finished, and I just touched it up a little bit. And she hasn’t heard it. And I don’t know if I should play it for her. That was a long time ago, and I don’t want to…

Things are much different now.

Yeah, exactly. But, you know, at the time, she had some problems, she went to jail for it, and you know… [laughter] As you do.

[laughter] It’s a great song, so much fun.

Thank you. Because the situation at the time was such a circus, it was such a circus, and at the time, it was funny, I had been clean and sober for, like, 5 years. So we were young lovers, and then we didn’t see each other for a few years, and then our paths crossed again. And she was in a lot of trouble, and I was in the middle of being totally straight. And I was trying to kind of save her, you know? And it was such a circus, hence the beginning – wah wah waaah – and the end with the Three Stooges. It was fun to be able to – again, that something that the Heavies really couldn’t do. The Heavies are very serious. It was fun to be able to fuck around a little bit.

“Whatever It Takes”, the singing on that – was that just something that you… because it’s so different from your usually singing style.

That was 5 o’clock in the morning, was recording… And I don’t sing like that. I wish I could. I can’t live, I rarely can in the studio, but I’d been trying to nail that song. We had already laid down the music, and I was going to overdub the vocals. And all night, it was taking hours, and I was trying to get it, trying to get it, and it wasn’t working, to the point where I had blown my voice out. And I was, like, ‘Wait a minute, let’s try something, let’s move the mic up really, really close.” At that point, my voice was blown out, and I could sing. I don’t know if that makes sense, but…

Yeah.

Normally, I can’t sing. I have to… just the energy of the music or whatever it is, like it has to be ferocious. But, at that point, I didn’t have any more ferociousness, and so we just moved the mic really close… And it felt, too, like that’s the way that song was supposed to be sung because that’s a different girl. And that one fucked me up pretty good. So, I don’t know… it’s honest, which is all I want from music, and I hope that people would hear that and feel that.

Once I got passed the jarring effect of the nice, sweet voice after all the rough voice, it is. It feels very honest.

It’s the most vulnerable I think I’ve ever been. Which, you know, I was a little insecure after listening to it, but it’s honest. That’s all you can hope for, I think.

Your father was a Baptist preacher, strict household – I love the story about the moment you had when you know you wanted to be a rock musician. [Leg saw a Christian propaganda presentation denouncing the Satanic influences in rock music.]

At the tent revival, yeah. That was amazing. And my poor father… there’s a couple of reasons I go by James Leg, but that’s one of the reasons. My dad’s still a preacher. And I was ordained. I’ve stood in the pulpit on Sunday morning and preached. But my dad’s still, that’s his thing, and maybe it’s a little embarrassing for him. But it’s funny because that moment didn’t turn out the way he wanted it to at all. [laughter] I had never heard – he had a Platters greatest hits record, he had a Charles Brown 45, “Please Come Home for Christmas”, and he had a Waylon Jennings record… it’s just Waylon Jennings, I don’t think it’s a greatest hits, but Willie’s all over it, and it’s, like, “Luckenbach, Texas,” “Good Hearted Woman” and stuff like that. Those were the only three secular records in the house. And he had caught me listening to that when I was about 14. I’d been staying home alone, and he figured out I’d been listening to them. He took those out in the backyard, onto a tree stump, and set them on fire to release the demons that were coming into his house to get his children.

Now, after that, that had been the only secular – the fucking Platters, a Charles Brown Christmas song and Waylon Jennings – that had been the only secular music I’d heard. Well, then this tent revival came along, and… whoa. You know? And they were just playing little clips… they were showing pictures of album covers and playing little clips of songs and… I don’t know, it turned me on. The Stones, Prince, Van Halen, Ozzy Osbourne, Alice Cooper, AC/DC.

It’s like a Who’s Who.

Yeah. The Beatles even! Everything! Like, everything. After that, then there’s the whole thing of people running around in circles, screaming gibberish and the whole thing.

I went to a Christian college for a year…

Really? Which one?

Kentucky Christian College in Grayson.

Okay, yeah, I’m kind of familiar.

I did the born-again thing for a little while.

Yeah. I tried it out. There’s good money in it.

[laughter] But I remember they showed us one of those things and how people who wear lots of black and silver jewelry [calling attention to my black clothes and silver jewelry] were Satanists and how there were all these hidden messages in “Hotel California” and all that stuff.

Yeah, the whole thing.

Just the most insane stuff.

In that tent revival, they played “Another One Bites the Dust” by Queen, backwards, and supposedly it says, “Marijuana, marijuana, decide to smoke marijuana.” Which, I checked it out after that!

[laughter]

I don’t even know, I’ve never played it backwards, I don’t know if it actually says that, but they did it that night. It even had a tune in it, it was kind of cool.

It’s cool, though, because the same – and, man, I have been in those tent revivals, and even in other churches, and felt it. You can feel it -you know, if you’ve been, you can feel some shit.

Yeah.

And it’s the same thing as a good rock show. It’s the same thing.

Yeah, absolutely. So, when you were first able to listen to secular music without inhibition, was it a free-for-all? Did you have to get your hands on everything?

It was a free-for-all, and I had to listen to a bunch of bullshit and go through it and then figure out it was bullshit and then get to something that… you know what I mean? Because I was really naïve. I had to listen to a bunch of bullshit before I found what was fucking right on.

How old were you when you got to do that?

I was 16, 17? Some of the bullshit, I know that’s what you want to know.

[laughter]

I’ve got to figure out what I want to tell you on that. [laughter] You know, Def Leppard. They were huge at the time.

Fortunately, right out of the bat, I hooked up with some buddies who were heavy metal heads. And they were all into Black Sabbath and shit like that. RATT and stuff like this that I could listen to and find qualities in that I’m still into, but through that, found the Stones. Through the Stones, found Muddy Waters, John Lee Hooker, Lightnin’ Hopkins, Otis Spann, Hound Dog Taylor, shit that connected more with where I was already coming from. I had to take a little detour and check out a bunch of heavy metal first.

I found punk only later, after the blues and everything. Punk’s the same attitude as blues, really, it’s just a different voice.

All along the way, there’ve been people that I’ve encountered that have been, like, “You need to hear this.” Guideposts.

I think that’s how we all do it.

I think so, too.

So, you have a very… right now you look very nice, and you’re a very nice person, but you have this intimidating look about you, and you write these badass songs. Do you find that people have a skewed perception of you from your music?

Yeah. As they should. Maybe it’s a Gemini thing, maybe it’s a… drug addict thing, maybe it’s a… I don’t know what it is, but there is another person that I try to keep sequestered. And I try to vent that on stage, and that keeps me from getting into trouble off stage. But that shit’s real.

Are people a little hesitant when they meet you?

Sometimes, yeah. Which, I don’t want that. I don’t want people to be afraid.

And you are very approachable.

Thank you. I would hope so.

There’s some shit that people don’t know, and that I wouldn’t tell people, that happens often. I don’t know how to explain it, but it’s definitely two people.

You grew up in Texas. Now you’re – are you still in Chattanooga?

No, I’m kind of in the van right now. I was born in Texas – I spent, like, 6 years there – moved to Chattanooga, grew up in Chattanooga mostly. I got kicked out of my house when I was 17, went back to Texas, stayed with my grandfather, who was dying. Was there for a year or so. After that, I just moved around.

Chattanooga’s kind of always been homebase even though I have no family there now. Southeast Tennessee, southeast Texas, that’s kind of my bases. I checked out Kansas City for a year or two. I was in Paris for a while – “Whatever It Takes”, that song, that girl’s in Paris. Where else? St. Louis for a minute. Cincinnati since July. I’ve been around. I live in my van.

I had a cabin in Wildwood, Georgia, which is basically Chattanooga, Tennessee. I had a cabin there for years, and I moved out of there almost two years ago, and I’ve just been in the van since then.

Do the different places have different effects on your music?

Yeah, I think so. I mean, it’s all experience, but the different cities… Kansas City’s the home of jazz. Kansas City, Charlie Parker’s from there, right? I think so. [Ed. note – Confirmed: Parker was born in Kansas City.] St. Louis, Chuck Berry’s from there. And I would go to these people’s homes.

Port Arthur, Texas, where I’m from, ain’t got shit. They’ve got Johnny Winter and Janis Joplin. That’s what they’ve got.

Black Diamond Heavies, the Immortal Lee County Killers, you’ve done some work with Left Lane Cruiser, Scott H. Biram – are there any other collaborations we should know about?

Most recently, Left Lane Cruiser, their brand new record, I did five tracks with them. I did three songs with Scott on his last record – I think he’s got a new one coming up. There’s a really good pop-punk band called the Future Virgins. They’ve got a record that’s just about to drop, and I did four songs with them.

And… Cut in the Hill Gang. Do you know that band? They’re from Cincinnati. It’s Johnny Walker from the Soledad Brothers, Reuben Glaser, who was the frontman of Pearlene, Lance Kaufman, who’s the frontman of this rockabilly band called StarDevils, and then myself. So it was four frontmen, and… when the Soledad Brothers split up, Brian Olive did his own thing, and Johnnie Walker started Cut in the Hill Gang. He’s a doctor of medicine now, so it’s kind of a hobby for him. But anyway, we got four frontmen together, we made a record, it’s on Glitterhouse Records. Specifically, Stag-O-Lee Records, which is to Glitterhouse as Alive is to Bomp. Glitterhouse is the biggest label in, I think maybe Europe, but definitely Germany.

So, we made a record called Mean Black Cat in August, and it’s a fucking amazing record. Check it out, Mean Black Cat, Cut in the Hill Gang. And it’s a shame because it’s only in Europe, and nobody in America is going to fucking hear it. Because they don’t have distribution over here, and it’s available online, but nobody’s going to hear it.

An Ohio-based band, I need to hear that!

I know. It’s a Cincinnati-based band. And there’s been some talk, like, Jack at Third Man was interested in it, and there’s been some talk about maybe licensing it over here. But nobody in that band – everybody’s go their own thing going on, so nobody’s really motivated, and it’s a shame because it’s a great record. Glitterhouse commissioned us to do this covers record, basically. They wanted blues-punk covers in our version. So there’s a Hound Dog Taylor song into an MC5 song, there’s a John Lee Hooker song. It’s all raw as hell. It’s a good record.

You kind of already answered this, but plans for the future?

I think we’re going to work on this record for a bit. We’ve basically got to tour the world. I’ve got another James Leg record in mind, we’ve got another Black Diamond Heavies record in mind. AJ, the drummer I’m working with right now, he actually writes and sings songs, and they’re good, so we’ve talked about maybe trying to do something. His stuff is more Stooges style, and I’ve got some of that, too, so we’ve talked about maybe calling it something else and putting out a collaboration record.

So… I don’t know. World domination. Keep making records.

Last question: Because I get my best recommendations from people whose music I love, what have you been listening to lately? Old, new, whatever.

It’s mostly old. I’m ashamed to say I’m not turned on by much new. I’m good friends with Jim Jones Revue, everybody in that band, I’ve known them for a long time. I’m really into what they’re doing right now, and they’re over here in America, they’re in Austin right now. And, actually, I turned down the opportunity to play with them in L.A. for fucking David Letterman. Their keyboard player just quit, and they called me, but I’m going to be in France. So I couldn’t do it, but I turned them on to a good piano player.

I was revisiting Lee Michaels the last couple days. I don’t know if you know Lee Michaels?

It doesn’t sound familiar.

It’s the original rock duo. Lee Michaels played Hammond organ and had a drummer. Good rockin’ shit from the early ’70s. Kind of been on a Kinks kick again lately. It’s funny, everybody says, “You like the Stones or the Beatles?” when actually the answer is the Kinks.

Thank you very much! That’s what I always say, too.

That’s kind of it. I’ve been going through my records. I’ve got thousands of records, and it’s been a rough winter, so I’ve been trying to figure out what I was going to sell and what I was going to keep, so I’ve been listening to a lot of shit. Leon Russell’s always a standard for me. Beefheart because he just fucking died. He died while we were in the studio making this James Leg record. That was pretty intense. That was a wild night.

I’m trying to think of somebody clever to throw out there, but I just can’t.

[laughter] What did you listen to on the drive on the way here?

I have nothing in the van except AM/FM, so we listened to whatever was on FM. We listened to a little NPR on the way up, and then we found a classic rock station that was hitting some Van Halen pretty heavy, which was nice. I’m not ashamed of that.

You guys covered the-

“Ain’t Talkin’ ‘Bout Love”, yeah.

That was great. I was, like, “Wow, I might like Van Halen again.”

[laughter]

What else did we… Oh! I assume it’s Clear Channel, but you know how they’ve started doing these old country stations, what do they call it? Classic country. I don’t know if you’ve got one here.

I don’t think we do.

They’ve got them everywhere now. They’ve got mainstream country, but then there’ll also be a “This is classic country, if you ain’t old enough to something, you ain’t old enough to whatever,” something like that. But anyway, coming up listening to that, we heard Jerry Lee Lewis doing “Honky Tonk Angels,” and that was pretty special. Jerry Lee Lewis.

Someone was saying recently how they felt bad for keyboard players because keyboard players can’t look cool rockin’ the keys.

[laughter]

I’m, like, Jerry Lee?

Well, there’s a bunch of fucking assholes out there giving a few of us a bad name, but Jerry Lee Lewis, Little Richard, Ray Charles, Jon Lord, Lee Michaels – check him out. Even, Booker T., man. Booker T. had a swagger.

So, I would agree with that to a point. There are some. And I ain’t trying to look cool, but I am trying to look mean. [laughter]

You succeed.

Thank you.


 

Here’s the Cut in the Hill Gang covering Gary U.S. Bonds’ “I Wanna Holler”, with Myers on vocals. I’m listening to my copy of Mean Black Cat right now, and it really is as good as he says it is.

 

 

Casey Neill and the Norway Rats: Goodbye to the Rank and File


The Norway Rats are the all-stars of Pacific NorthWest folk-punk musicians: Casey Neill (vocals, guitar), Little Sue (vocals, acoustic guitar), Chet Lyster (guitar), Ezra Holbrook (drums), Hanz Araki (vocals, flute), Jesse Emerson (bass), and Jenny Conlee (piano, accordion), and Goodbye to the Rank and File, the first Norway Rats record to feature the complete line-up of the band all in the same place at the same time, is the West Coast-centered follow-up to the more New York-oriented Brooklyn Bridge (2007).

True confession: Two of the songs on this record -  Guttered and Stonewall – were already old and familiar friends of mine, met some time ago on a podcast. I was nonetheless pleased to see them formally released into the wild, not least because now I can listen to them on their own whenever I want.  I’m particularly fond of Guttered because it is really satisfying and/or comforting to listen to on cold, wet days, when it feels like you’re watching your life go by from the bottom of a hole. Or, to borrow from the lyrics, if you are wandering in a graveyard in the snow -  in your mind or for real.

As for the rest, I have spent a couple of days listening (and humming random bits of melody to myself odd times) and pondering how to describe them. What I finally came up with was “Hymns (and Lovesongs) for The Vagabond Heart.” All of the songs are strong; my personal favorites (as of right this minute) are  Idyll and When I Came To You. These two songs encapsulate the trials, travails and also sublime joys of wandering, and how the joys can be amplified by having someone to wander with, and the ache of the trials and travails eased by finding a place to to finally stop and be at home. Nightowl and the Skylark, based in part on Joe Strummer’s life, is also achingly beautiful.

But really the most important thing I can tell you about this record is: it is meant to be savored. Clear an hour in your schedule, turn off your phone, pour yourself a drink, find some sunlight to sit in, then sit back and listen to them sing some stories.

Here’s a taste of the treat you are in for:

Casey Neill and the Norway Rats "Guttered" live in Seattle at the High Dive 1/13/11

Also important: they are still out on the road in the West, stopping in Albuquerque, NM tonight before progressing on to Arizona, Colorado and Utah during the rest of the week. They’ll also be playing some Pacific NorthWest shows in May; you can find all of the details at Casey Neill’s official website.

Bits: Pinetop Perkins, The Dead Milkmen, Arthur, The Twilight Singers, CXCW

  • Blues piano great Pinetop Perkins has passed away at the age of 97. Perkins played with Robert Nighthawk, Earl Hooker, Muddy Waters, was the oldest Grammy winner and toured until the end.
  • The Dead Milkmen have released their first album of new material in 16 years. You can listen to song samples and download The King in Yellow at their website.
  • Arthur is dead, long live Arthur. While music and culture mag Arthur has gone on “indefinite hiatus”, they have begun archiving their back issues online. While it’s a work-in-progress, there’s already a lot to dive into.
  • The Twilight Singers will be hitting up Letterman on April 26.
  • Even though Couch by Couch West is over, one of the advantages it has over SXSW is that you can still experience all the music – and see the hipper-than-humans dog and cat contingent – on the CXCW Tumblr. And you should. Great performances from Conrad Plymouth, Doc Dailey, Tim Lee 3, Two Cow Garage, The Imperial Rooster, Neko Case (that’s right – Neko Case. In bed. You didn’t get that at South By) and so many more talented folks. Can’t wait to do it again next year.

James Leg at the Happy Dog, Cleveland, OH, 3.17.11

James Leg and Andrew Jody look like they belong in two different bands. Leg, long and lean with big boots, big rings and wallet chain, is the very picture of a Southern blues rocker while Jody, skinny in a striped shirt, sporting a mod haircut, looks like he would have fit comfortably in any number of ’70s garage bands. And, technically, they belong to a number of different bands, with Leg being one half of the Black Diamond Heavies as well as having been/being a member of the Immortal Lee County Killers and the Cut in the Hill Gang and Jody’s list of credits including The Long Gones, Oxford Cotton, Pearlene, Barrence Whitfield and The Savages and more. But when they come together, they form a synergistic unit, their energies equally matched.

Kicking off with an amped up cover of Junior Kimbrough’s “Sad Days and Lonely Nights”, Leg hit the keys and growled lustily into his mic while Jody’s attack on the drums was solidly timed as well as impressively creative. In an interview, Leg’s Black Diamond Heavies partner Van Campbell said he believed one could see the effects of the spiritual warfare Leg contended with as the son of a strict Baptist preacher working themselves out when Leg played, and it didn’t take long to see what Campbell meant. From the get-go, Leg’s right foot was stomping the floor while his long, dark hair flew in all directions, obscuring Leg’s face for almost the entire set.

While Leg remained pretty quiet between songs, when he called to the bar for a whiskey mid-set and was asked if Black Velvet was okay, someone in the audience began to sing the Alannah Myles song of the same name. Leg responded with, “Now don’t start that shit.”

Leg sprinkled tracks from his forthcoming album, Solitary Pleasure, throughout the set, following up the Kimbrough cover with the sexy “Do How You Wanna” and later including “Nobody’s Fault”, “No License (Song for the Caged Bird)”, “Drinking Too Much” (a Kill Devil Hills cover), “Georgia”, “Drowning in Fire” (which benefitted from an extended intro as Leg tried to recall the words to a song he hadn’t played since he recorded it), “Have to Get It On” and choosing his Link Wray cover, “Fire and Brimstone”, as an inspired closing number.

In between, Leg and Jody inserted a couple of Black Diamond Heavies songs, a couple of Jerry McCain covers (with one, “A Cutie Named Judy”, sung by Jody), and even when they supposedly brought the energy down for an awesome Jody-led cover of the Velvet Underground’s “Oh! Sweet Nuthin'”, they were still more intense than many other high-energy bands at their high points. It was easy to get caught up in the ferocity, reminding me a couple of times of a conversation I had with Leg before the show about the similarity between religious fervor and the feeling produced by a good rock show. The intensity Leg and Jody were able to put out to what ended up being a relatively small crowd after the St. Patrick’s Day amateur drinkers set left the bar to puke and pass out made me wonder how much more fierce the show might have been had it taken place in a full room with a crowd giving as good as they got.

Here’s a short clip of “Georgia” to show you what I’m talking about.

This shit is not for the faint of heart.

Notable Shows in the Greater Cleveland Area

Shows worth checking out this week in and around Cleveland:

The Beachland Ballroom & Tavern

  • Fri, Mar 18| 8:30 PM (7:30 PM door)
    The Blasters
    The Party Stompers
    $15 adv / $17 dos
    Ballroom | All Ages
  • Fri, Mar 18| 8:30 PM (8 PM door)
    The Spikedrivers
    Hey Mavis
    $10
    Tavern | All Ages
  • Sat, Mar 19| 9 PM (8 PM door)
    Pere Ubu
    (Performing Modern Dance & More)
    Scarcity of Tanks
    $17
    Ballroom | All Ages
  • Sat, Mar 19| 9 PM (8:30 PM door)
    Founding Fathers
    The Ferals
    Exploding Lies
    $6
    Tavern | All Ages
  • Thu, Mar 24| 8:30 PM (7:30 PM door)
    Eli Paperboy Reed
    & The True Loves
    We The People
    DJ Charles McGaw
    $12 adv / $14 dos
    Ballroom | All Ages
  • Fri, Mar 25| 8:30 PM (7:30 PM door)
    Warpaint
    PVT
    Family Band
    $15
    Ballroom | All Ages

Grog Shop

  • Fri, Mar 25| 6:30 PM
    Henry Rollins
    (at Gartner Auditorium, Cleveland Museum of Art)
    $25

Now That’s Class

  • Fri, Mar 18| 9 PM
    Druid Perfume
    Terminal Lovers
    Pleasure Leftists
    $5
  • Tue, Mar 22| 9 PM
    Capsule
    Antilles
    What’s Wrong Withya Missy?
    Big Fat Japan
    $5

Happy Dog

  • Thu, Mar 24| 9 PM
    Columboid
  • Fri, Mar 25| 9 PM
    The Cynics
    Rainy Day Saints
    Meeting of Important People

House of Blue

  • Fri, Mar 25| 9 PM (8 PM doors)
    Willie Nelson
    Drake White

The Ghost of Ronnie Drew

That’s right, I’m going to do an Irish music post for St. Patrick’s Day. Bite me.

I’ve always loved traditional Irish music, and my favorite voice in that genre, by far, is that of Ronnie Drew. If you know this classic performance of “The Irish Rover” by the Pogues and the Dubliners, you know Ronnie Drew. He’s the handsome, white-haired gentleman who takes the first verse. (Please excuse the advertisement at the beginning.)


The Pogues & Dubliners – The Irish Rover by Renaud_lyon

 

 

Drew’s deep gravel was sublime on its own, but as a part of the Dubliners (who were originally known as the Ronnie Drew Ballad Group when they formed in 1962), his voice was a beautiful complement to the tenors of Luke Kelly and Ciarán Bourke, as can be heard in the chorus of “The Rocky Road to Dublin”, one of my all-time favorite songs.

 

 

Another example of how fine Drew’s voice was in harmony can be found in this lovely Gaelic tune, “Óró Sé do Bheatha Bhaile”, which translates to “Oh-ro, You’re Welcome Home”.

 

 

In January of 2008, U2, the Dubliners, Kíla and a who’s who of Irish music (including Shane MacGowan, Liam Ó Maonlaí, Glen Hansard, Sinéad O’Connor, Bob Geldof and more) recorded “The Ballad of Ronnie Drew” with the proceeds from sales of the single going to the Irish Cancer Society. The song ended up being a send off of sorts when Drew died the following August.

I could keep this up all day, inundating you with “Slow and Easy, “McAlpine’s Fusiliers”, “Seven Drunk Nights and so on, but I’ll end here with this clip of “The Auld Triangle” that marked Ciarán Bourke’s last appearance before his death in 1988.

 

Get More Gritty: Again and Again

Ladies and gentlemen, please meet Again and Again, of Seattle, who I learned about from Twitter. After I had poked around their website a little bit and listened to a couple of songs, I was intrigued and wanted to know more. After getting past some technical difficulties, drummer XwesX (Wes Keely) (center) and I had the following email chat:

 

Who was in which band, previously, and how did you get together to form Again and Again? And who does what in Again and Again – did anyone switch roles (or instruments) from previous bands?

OK, well, to start this off, Dutch VI (above left) plays guitar, Geoffrey C Walker (above right) sings, and I play drums. We had a few other members over the years, but at the current moment this is the core group, and we have a few fill in bass players that go out on tour with us from time to time. Geoffrey used to sing in the Victory Records band called On The Last Day based out of Seattle, Dutch VI also plays in a few different hardcore bands that we are not really allowed to talk about, and I was a founder of Walls of Jericho and have also played in bands such as Most Precious Blood, Throwdown, Until The End, Remembering Never and a few others.  I also spent years as a hired gun for several different bands over a span of 5 or 6 years.

There was no role switching as far as instruments go, although we all play other instruments. Dutch plays a mean set of drums from time to time; Geoffrey plays guitar and bass and knows how to rock a Pro Tools rig like no other; and I play guitar as well as bass.

 

On the “hired gun” front, I see from your blog that you were out with the Jonas Brothers. How did that happen and what was that like, because there’s quite a vast gulf, musically, between Throwdown and the Jonas Brothers. Also, tangentially, I have noticed that there are an awful lot of ex-hardcore drummers in pop and/or pop-punk bands. Is that just a coincidence, or a kind of natural progression?

Haha, well, ok, I did some touring with Jonas this past summer, but there was no drumming involved. I was on the tour working for one of the lead sponsors of the tour that works with the Jonas group.  It’s funny, I did a tour just before that one with Jordin Sparks and a lot of people were asking me “are you drumming for her?” because really with the amount of jumping around that I have done in the past something like that is pretty possible.

As far as hardcore drummers in pop music, well that one has been happening on and off for years, people like Andy Hurley playing in Fall Out Boy with Pete [Wentz], and Chad Gilbert playing in New Found Glory after sinning in Shai Hulud.  I think its just one of those things where people just play in HC bands for years and eventually you just want to do something else.

Pete and Andy used to go to WOJ and Earthmover (band 3 members were in before we started WOJ) shows in Chicago and they played in HC bands too. We all used to have fun and play shows together and mosh it up, but eventually some of us just wanted to do other things.  Some people go back to school, some get married, some start pop bands and become millionaires, it happens.

 

Hah! There’s also Alex Johnson of The Cab, though I don’t remember now which HC band they got him from. Though Andy Hurley (and Joe Trohman) have since gone back to heavy music, with The Damned Things.

Yeah, it’s awesome, they are all doing great. Andy and I just recently got back into touch, he’s a rad dude and a solid drummer I hope to see him play again one day here soon!!

 

On the ProTools tangent – have you been producing your own records, or are you working up demos and then working with a producer?

YES, the first record we had some help from a sweet dude named Steve Carter, he’s a great guy and a great engineer and has million dollar ideas.  Steve and Geoffrey pretty much handled the first record [Again and Again, 2008]. I mean, we all had our hands in, it but the majority of the producing was all on them.  The second record, Get More Gritty [2010], was pretty much all Geoffrey. Derek [Casey], the guitar player and song writer at the time, had hands in it as well, but for the most part it was Geoff.  We had some outsiders mix and master the record, which is always a great idea.

 

Is sending a record to someone else to be mixed and mastered a good idea because it’s helpful to have someone listen to it / “edit” it who isn’t so close to it?

Yes, I mean sometimes we are so deep in it that we can’t always hear the songs for what they are or what they aren’t.  It’s nice to have another set of ears on the songs.  For example, our latest release Get More Gritty was mixed my one of my oldest friends, Marc Hudson, who happens to be an amazing engineer and has a great ear. I have been working with him on and off since I was about 15.  He spends most of his time on the road with Taking Back Sunday and Saves The Day, [so] he has such a different outlook on how things should sound, and sometimes that makes all the difference in the world!

 

Why did you pick Seattle as your home base? (Also I’d like to know more about the Barn of Solitude!)

Seattle is a great place to live, we have all lived in a ton of other places, I mean between us all, we have lived in Vermont, Michigan, Virginia, Kansas, Germany, South Florida, Orange County and Washington.  Seattle is by far all of our favorite place to live, it has mountains, desert, snow, rain, rain forest, city, hiking, camping, great music scene, jobs, and great food. It’s just the best! Seattle just happened to be the place that we all ended up, before meeting each other. (Other than Dutch and I, we were friends before the band.)

The Barn of Solitude is a great place, free of most distractions, where we wrote and recorded our first 2 records. It has a great sound and we have been fortunate enough to use it whenever we needed to over the past 3 years.  It’s 30 minutes out side of the city, up in the hills of an area called Sammamish, just east of the city.  We also shot a a video there for More Ripley Less Darrow.  It’s just an awesome place to play, write, and hang out.

 

Woah, that’s a lot of moving. And I say that as someone’s who’s moved, I think, nine times since 1998, or something like that.

Yeah, I mean between dudes in the band that have been in other band, moving and traveling just kind of comes with the gig.  Some people are fortunate enough to start a band in their home town and never leave only to tour and record, we just haven’t had that luxury.

 

“Wish I Could Be” and “More Ripley, Less Darrow” are so far my two favorite songs, MR,LD in particular because a) I appreciate a good ode to a self-rescuing princess but also b) it isn’t a simple song. The narrator sounds like he’s really wrestling with the issue. What can you tell me about those songs?

Well all of the songs are written biographically and are situational of course.  There are metaphors all over the place. Geoffrey really puts the work in to tell a good story in a catchy way.  We really try write catchy fun songs but  at the time we also try to keep ourselves entertained while playing them, which in turn makes them a little complicated by nature.  There is a lot of pre-production that goes into our songs, and we try to write more songs that we will need for a record, so we can sort out the best of the material that we have at the time.  We are in the process of starting to write and demo some new tracks, [and] we’re very excited to see what will come out next.

 

Again and Again - More Ripley, Less Darrow OFFICIAL

 

Why did you name the band Again and Again?

That was Geoff’s creation. It was funny, when he and I joined up and we were talking about doing a band together, I asked him “what’s this band going to be called?” and he was just like “Again and Again.”  I don’t think that I have ever been in a band where one guy had already decided the band [name]. It’s always such a pain to have 5 dudes trying to come up with that they think is the best band name, him having the name he liked and being set on it was great, because we totally avoided that situation.

When I asked Geoff why that name, he told me this: “To me Again and Again means a lot. It represents persistence and perseverance, sometimes to a fault. But it’s about never giving up”.

 

Who did the cover art for Get More Gritty and the website? Something about the style seems very familiar and I can’t tell what it is. I am having a moment of Why Do I Recognize That Bear?

If you recognize the bear you are probably just thinking of something else.  There are a lot of people that do the “scratchy” type drawings people like Derek Hess and Jake Bannon but I can assure you it was neither of them, it was in fact my roommate and long time friend Rawb Evans. We had this idea for the new record of a “scratchy” bear and he made it for us.  There are a lot of bears here in Western WA!

 

I see you’ve been on Warped Tour before, do you have any plans to go out on tour again soon? Not necessarily on Warped Tour, just, at all?

YES!! We did a short 4 week tour in OCT/NOV and have been planning on heading back out, sometimes life and holidays get in the way, that and the US getting blasted with snow everywhere but here in Seattle hahahahaha.  We will be out very soon.

 

And now the questions for all three of you. What was your transformative song – the rock and roll lightning strike – and why?

Geoffrey: When I first heard a rough version of Excuse This Honesty everything clicked.  I’m proud of everything we’ve done, but that song just really defines what we are at this point.  It has all the elements of music that we’ve been trying to inject into these songs.  Excitement, beauty, sincerity, and intensity.

Dutch: Excuse This Honesty is the jam, it embodies all the rock but still stays groovy and has tons of emotion in the melodies.

XwesX: I feel is the song that actually hit us in the face and the “transformative song” was a song called TMNT2, that never actually saw the light of day. It’s something that we wrote and recorded and it only made it to preproduction before we came up with 4 or 5 songs that were just way better, but had a familiar feeling to the TMNT2 track.  It really was the song that started defining what A&A sounds like today.

 

What in the world does TMNT2 stand for? Part of my brain wants to parse that as Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 2, and I know that can’t be right.

XwesX: HAHAHA, that’s exactly what it stands for. I can’t tell you why, I can just tell you that that is indeed what it stands for!!

 

Also, let me rephrase that last question a little bit: what song(s) made you fall in love with rock and roll?

Geoffrey: I can think of a few. But narrowing it down is tough. So here are two. It might sound cliche, but Smells Like Teen Spirit made a big impact on me. It was just so HUGE sounding. So aggressive and in your face.  The other is Closer by Nine Inch Nails. It was the first time I’d really heard electronics in modern music that didn’t induce vomit. It was dirty and grimy and shockingly honest. Trent Reznor remains a hero of mine to this day.

Dutch VI: I have a record more than any one song: Pink Floyd, The Wall.

XwesX: There are definitely a few records that strike me as “the ones” that made me wanna rock but I think when all is said and done it was probably the Arise record from Sepultura. My brother used to air drum to this record all the time, and spin these drum sticks that he had to all the awesome drum parts. I don’t think he could have ever played them for real, but it was cool to watch him when I was like 13.

 

What was your first show (that you attended, not that you played)?

Geoffrey: Aerosmith!  They played a ski area near where I grew up (during the summer).  It was on the Get A Grip Tour.  So good.

Dutch: Steve Miller Band, 1998

XwesX: Body Count, 1992

 

What was the first record/tape/etc that you bought? What was the last one?

Geoffrey: First: I wish it was something that gave me mad street cred.  But I’m pretty sure it was New Kids on the Block.  I was only 8 or 9. Haha. Last: The last record I bought was the Tron: Legacy soundtrack by Daft Punk.  It’s so epic.

Dutch: First: Weezer- Blue album, Last: Behemoth- Evangelion

XwesX: First: Guns N Roses “Appetite for Destruction” , Last: Mumford & Sons “Sigh No More”

 

Okay! Thanks so much for talking with me. And with that, I’m going to leave everyone with one more song for the road:

Bits: TV on the Radio, Booker T. Jones, J Mascis, Mark Lanegan, Royal Bangs, Patrick Sweany, CXCW, etc.

  • TV on the Radio’s Gerard Smith was diagnosed with lung cancer at the conclusion of recording for the new TVoTR album Nine Types of Light and will be unable to accompany the band on their current tour. A statement on the band’s website throws a hopeful light on Smith’s recovery, and we are sending good thoughts Smith’s way.
  • Head over to the Rolling Stone website to get a taste of the new Booker T. Jones album as he and the Roots cover Lauryn Hill’s “Everything is Everything”.
  • NYC’s Bowery Ballroom will play host to a show celebrating the 10th anniversary of one of my favorite books, Michael Azerrad’s Our Band Could Be Your Life, on May 22.
  • The 2nd installment of Oxford American’s ABALABIP! concert series celebrating Alabama music and music makers will take place on June 4 in Florence, Alabama, and will feature Dexateens, G-Side and Candi Staton.
  • J Mascis’ new acoustic album, Several Shades of Why, is streaming at Spin.
  • A new Mark Lanegan track, “Burning Jacob’s Ladder”, is free to download on the Rage website.
  • And a new Royal Bangs track, “Fireball”, is free to download at Spin.
  • Patrick Sweany has added more tour dates including some in Austin this week.
  • Speaking of Austin, can’t make it to SXSW this year and envious of your friends who are hitting up Austin? Want to show just how hip you are by not going to SXSW? Then CXCW – Couch by Couchwest – is the event for you. While the so-called mover and shakers are standing in long lines and getting alcohol poisoning, the CXCW crowd will be drinking beer, ordering pizza and moving as little as possible. Join the thrill ride on Twitter and Tumblr. CXCW – Where the beer is cheaper and the only hipster is you.

James Leg: Big Hearts and Bad Attitudes

While some hetero ladies like to pretend they only want an upright, decent, clean-living man who is home every night by dinner time, I tell you what, it’s hard to pass up a long, tall Texan with Waitsian vocal cords and key-pounding fingers… especially when he serves up some of the filthiest, most driving soul/jazz/blues-powered rock ‘n’ roll since T-Model Ford’s debut.

James Leg, a.k.a. John Wesley Myers – who was a part of the last line-up of the Immortal Lee County Killers and comprises one half of the Black Diamond Heavies – is releasing his solo debut, Solitary Pleasure, on April 5th, and it is a delight. Leg expands his usual repertoire into piano bar ditties and gospel while still serving up slipping, sliding, sweaty blues-tinged rock and heavy soul with take-me-as-you-find-me lyrics. He even dips into comedy with “No License (Song for the Caged Bird)”, a song that begins with a sad trombone, ends with a Three Stooges motif, and plays like Fats Waller at the end of a week-long bender in between, in an ode to one hell of a dame.

Among the 10 tracks on Solitary Pleasure are two covers: a thumping, fiery take on Link Wray’s “Fire and Brimstone” that I’m sure Wray would have approved of and a cover of the Kill Devil Hills’ “Drinking Too Much” that takes the Australian band’s aching ballad of self-realization and turns it into a ramshackle tumble that makes the final verse feel even more confessional than in the original.

A little over half-way through the album comes a track, “Whatever It Takes”, that threw me for a loop the first couple of times I listened through the album. The song features vocals that are so sweet and pleading that they are actually jarring after 6 tracks of Leg’s broken-glass gargle. I made a note to myself to check the liner notes and find out who was singing on this almost out-of-place track and was shocked to find it was still Leg, making a heartfelt plea to a lover who wants to throw in the towel. In contrast to his usual singing style, the softer vocals make the nature of this song that much more affecting.

If I had to pick one track that would best encapsulate Solitary Pleasure, it would be “Drowning in Fire”, as it combines elements of rock, blues, jazz, soul and gospel into one hell of a revival complete with a church-worthy backup chorus.

James Leg – Drowning In Fire by Now This Sound Is Brave

The whole collection wraps up with a straight-up, hand-clapping gospel tune called “No Time to Tarry” that Leg throws himself into so whole-heartedly that you can hear him panting and cussing at the end. It’s an oddly uplifting and fitting end to an album that is ultimately the story of a man who has come to realize his faults and seems ready to take the first step to redemption.

James Leg is currently touring in support of Solitary Pleasure and will be making a stop at the Happy Dog in Cleveland this Thursday, 3.17.11, at 9 PM, and I highly recommend you get there.

(And if you live elsewhere, check out these dates [more to be announced]:

March 17- Cleveland, OH- The Happy Dog
March 18- Ft Wayne, IN- The Brass Rail- Left Lane Cruiser record release show
March 24- Chattanooga, TN- JJ’s
March 25- Chattanooga, TN- JJ’s

EUROPE DATES
31March -Lorient, FR at Le Galion
2nd April- Mont Contour [St Brieuc], FR at La Vieille Tour
3rd April- Binic, FR at Le Chaland Qui Passe
5th April- Grenoble, FR at 51 to 48
6th April- Valence, FR Mistral Palace
7th April- Dijon, FR at Deep Inside
8th April- Nantes, FR at Le Remorqueur
9th April- Marmande, FR at Garorock
10th April- Brive, FR at 5th Avenue
11th April- Bordeaux, FR at St Ex
12th April- Limoges, FR at Zic Zinc
13th April- Lille, FR at La Boite à Musique
15th April- Middleburg, NL at Café t’Hof
16th April- Haarlem, NL at Patronnaat
17th April- Utrecht, NL at db’s

April 23- Cincinnati, OH- Northside Tavern [Record Release Show])