Notable Shows in the Northern California Area

One of the perks of having a music blog is not only promoting bands who have become friends, but also friends who join bands. To that end, my dear friend Gwen Cone’s new band Sweet By and By will be playing their debut gig at the Yolo Throwdown outside of Sacramento, California, on September 25.

To quote their press release, “[f]rom the Bay Area & Sacramento, the Sweet By and By play a beautiful tangle of American roots music. High lonesome harmonies, mandolin, guitar, and bass explore early gospel, jazz and country through merry melodies, murder ballads and sweet spirituals.” Their setlist will include all sorts of wonders from “Long Black Veil” to “St. James Infirmary”.

The Yolo Throwdown, which is taking place at the Heidrick Ag History Center in Woodland, California, from 12 PM to 10 PM will set you back a measly $10 and will also include the Cash Properties, Fortunate Few, Cockfight Kings, a car show, food, dancing and more.

Yolo Throwdown

Notable Shows in the Greater Cleveland Area

Shows worth checking out this week in and around Cleveland:

The Beachland Ballroom & Tavern

  • Fri, Sep 3| 9 PM (8:30 PM door)
    Lords of the Highway
    The Krank Daddies
    Wolf Boy Slim & His Dirty Feets
    $6.00
    Tavern | All Ages
  • Sat, Sep 4| 8:30 PM (8 PM door)
    Paleface
    The Lighthouse & The Whaler
    $8.00
    Tavern | All Ages
  • Tue, Sep 7| 8:30 PM (8 PM door)
    Gorevette
    (Members of Gore Gore Girls and Nikki & The Corevettes)
    Miss Amanda Jones
    $8.00
    Tavern | All Ages
  • Wed, Sep 8| 8 PM (7 PM door)
    Donna The Buffalo
    Hoots & Hellmouth
    $16.00 adv / $18.00 dos
    Ballroom | All Ages
  • Thu, Sep 9| 8 PM (7 PM door)
    Dave Alvin
    & The Guilty Women
    Scar Lovers
    $18.00 adv / $20.00 dos
    Ballroom | All Ages
  • Thu, Sep 9| 9 PM (8 PM door)
    Efterklang
    Buke & Gass
    Leia Alligator’s Music Box
    In Association with The Grog Shop
    $10.00
    Tavern | All Ages

Grog Shop

  • Tue, Sep 7 | 9 PM
    Young Widows
    Helms Alee
    Wreck Havoc!
    $8

Peabody’s

  • Sat, Sep 4 | 7 PM Door
    Kickin’ the Devil’s Ass 2010 – A Benefit for Brother Ed
    Ringworm
    Keelhaul
    Cult of the Psychic Fetus
    Horror 59
    Madison Crawl
    $10 adv/$12 dos

Lock 3

  • Sat, Sep 4 | 5 PM Gate
    3rd Annual Akron Hip Hop Showcase Presented by Keepers Of The Art
    Rakim
    Whodini
    DJ Mick Boogie
    A Minus
    Navy Blue
    Butta Verses
    Slum Village
    $5

Now That’s Class

  • Fri, Sep 3 | 9 PM
    Jesco White
    Mr. California
    Miss Firecracker
    $13 adv/$15 dos
  • Sat, Sep 4 | 9 PM
    Filmstrip
    Cloud Nothings
    Fangs Out
    Safari
    $5
  • Sun, Sep 5 | 9 PM
    Daily Void
    Wizzard Sleeve
    Folded Shirt
    Bad Cop
    Primitives
    $5
  • Tue, Sep 7 | 9 PM
    TV Buddhas
    Odd Alibi
    The Give and Go’s
    FREE

Skip James: Never get down this low no more

It was not Nehemiah Curtis James’, a.k.a. Skip, music that first sparked my fascination with the blues musician from Bentonia, Mississippi. I was skimming through a book I had just brought home from the library, a coffee table companion to the PBS American Roots Music series, when a full-page portrait stopped my hand. The man’s stare was hard, direct, uncompromising. It was a face that revealed no secrets but hinted at stories untold. I was transfixed.

At the time, my familiarity with James was relegated to other people’s interpretations of his songs, namely Chris Thomas King’s recording of “Devil Got My Woman” for the film O Brother, Where Art Though? and the Gutter Twins’ cover of “Hard Time Killing Floor Blues”. That was going to change right quick.

Born in 1902 on a plantation in the Jim Crow South, Skip James’ overall story is not much different from many of the other blues musicians and “songsters” of his time and place. From early on, he wavered between music, bootlegging and the church. In 1931, he auditioned for local record dealer and de facto talent scout H.C. Spier, who sent James to Wisconsin to record for Paramount Records. James recorded 18 sides for Paramount, a label that was in the midst of collapsing. The recordings were not the hits he expected, and James abandoned his career as a blues musician (though he continued to play in church and for recreation).

In 1964, a small group of blues record collectors initiated a blues “revival” when they sought out the musicians who created the 78s they had obsessively collected. The young, white men searched the South and brought back the likes of Son House, Bukka White, Mississippi John Hurt and James and took the musicians – some who would be playing the blues for the first time in years – to Rhode Island to perform at the Newport Folk Festival. While the blues musicians would continue to play Newport for a few more years, the revival was no great success for them and many found the opportunities for paying gigs dwindling rapidly. Barely able to pay his rent, James died of inoperable cancer in 1969, his hospital and funeral expenses covered by royalties from Cream’s cover of James’ “I’m So Glad”.

Inexplicably preoccupied with the arresting photo of Skip James, I sought out his music and found myself stopped in my tracks once again, this time by the first song James ever recorded – and what I feel may be the greatest blues song – “Devil Got My Woman”. “I decided,” James said of his music, “I’d try to play something just as lonesome as I could. To try to take an effect.”* James proves to be a master of taking an effect. I have listened to “Devil Got My Woman” numerous times now, and each time, it leaves me with a hollowed heart and a great, pathetic sigh rising up in my chest. James’ high, bereft vocals hang over his sparsely-picked guitar. James eschewed chords, and his finger-picking allows all the space this song needs to spread out and encompass emptiness.

 

Devil Got My Woman by Skip James

 

While arguably his best, “Devil” is not James’ only song to telegraph unmitigated sorrow. The feeling also permeates songs like “Hard Time Killing Floor Blues” and “Cypress Grove Blues”. Even “I’m So Glad”, a song which would appear upbeat on paper with its title and its bluegrass-speed finger-picking, comes across as a statement of irony. And while even James’ lighter fare is great (check out his piano tunes like “22-20 Blues” and “How Long Buck”) it is this skill to give listeners the blues that, for me, puts Skip James above the rest.


*from I’d Rather Be the Devil: Skip James and the Blues by Stephen Calt.

Rock ‘n’ Roll Photog: Clarksdale

Jennifer’s ready to drop some thoughts on our visit to Clarksdale, Mississippi, the city widely felt to be the home of delta blues music.

To Jennifer’s eternal credit, she passed the visit without outward complaint.


April has already shared her memories from our trip to Clarksdale. Here are some of mine:

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Kitchen window, Ground Zero Blues Club

Readers, I must tell you: this place creeped me out. I’m from New York, and Ground Zero – problematic and inaccurate though the label may be – only means one place. The blues club opened in May 2001, and so technically came first, but still, despite the delicious fried cheesecake (!), it ranks high on my list of disquieting dining experiences.

I was excited to get out of there and go to the Delta Blues Museum. That lasted for about an hour and three cycles of the video playing in the Muddy Waters cabin. (Keith Richards, what did you do your head??) At that point I had seen everything I wanted to see and thoroughly investigated the gift shop (why does Mississippi not believe in keychain souveneirs??) and April still had half the museum to go. I was kind of ready to claw my face off, so I left Cam and April to their own devices and took myself for a walk around town.

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Blues Alley, Clarksdale, MS

Blues Alley starts at the Delta Blues Museum (formerly a railroad depot) and runs more or less the length of the town, and is a useful navigational tool if you don’t have a map. I didn’t have an agenda, either, so I just sort of wandered.

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Mini-park, useful for respite from the unrelenting heat

What I discovered, sadly, is that large swathes of Clarksdale are boarded up and closed. Though in addition to the mini-park, I did find a scattering of restaurants, a rock and roll museum (about to close, so I skipped it), the site of the weekly farmers market, and a folk art outlet (still no keychains!) which had some lovely but impractical-for-roadtripping items. After I had made two circuits of the folk art store, I realized the Delta Blues Museum had probably closed, so I backtracked and caught up with my companions. We then stopped at the former Greyhound station for additional sightseeing guidance:

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Greyhound station, now re-purposed as a tourist information center

April has already told all y’all about our visit to the Riverside Motel, so I’m going to skip over that part and get to the place that I had been most keen to see: Robert Johnson’s Crossroads.

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We had passed it on the way in to town, but, anxious about having enough time in the Blues Museum, we left it for the last stop. As you can see it’s not quite as exciting as the legend would make it sound, though that may be due to the evolution of modern life. It’s hard to imagine a dramatic moonless-night bargain taking place in a busy intersection surrounded by gas stations on streets lined with stripmalls, but the place does have a certain kind of magic just the same.

–Jennifer

Bits: Justin Townes Earle, The Walkmen, James Blackshaw, ATP, Roadside Graves, The Black Angles, Kermit Ruffins, Ray Davies

  • NPR’s got it going on in their First Listen feature, with Justin Townes Earle’s Harlem River Blues and the Walkmen’s Lisbon in the rotation right now. Additionally, although it’s a little older now, is the latest from A.A. Bondy-favorite James Blackshaw.
  • Also at NPR, an All Tomorrow’s Parties preview playlist from NTSIB favorite Jim Jarmusch, which includes T-Model Ford, Raekwon and Ohio’s Greenhornes.
  • Muzzle of Bees brings us some special downloads from a lost session Roadside Graves recorded for Aquarium Drunkard.
  • Spinner offers a free download of the Black Angels’ “Telephone”, which has nothing to do with who you’re thinking of, as well as “I Got a Treme Woman” by Kermit Ruffins.
  • There’s a Ray Davies collaboration album in the works, which will reportedly include Frank Black, Bruce Springsteen and the late Alex Chilton, among others. Pitchfork gathered some reports for you.

Rainy Day Saints/Wye Oak/Lou Barlow + the missingmen at the Grog Shop in Cleveland, OH, 8.27.10

Rainy Day Saints

Kicking off the show around 10:30 p.m. (contrary to the 8 p.m. start time listed on the Grog Shop website. Though I’m getting to the point where I actually like the Grog Shop, their concept of time continues to mystify me) was local opener Rainy Day Saints. Playing straight-ahead, classic Cleveland-style rock with a modern influence, the band suffered from a muddy sound mix in which Marianne Friend’s saxophone and harmony vocals all but disappeared, and it was difficult to tell if any of the songs were good or not. Still, the band seemed to enjoy themselves, so there’s that.

Wye Oak

While the Wye Oak recordings I have heard have been a little mellow for me, the word around the internet was that skeptics should catch the Baltimore duo live before locking in an opinion, and this advice proved on the mark. While you might expect something tiny and twee upon seeing Jenn Wasner in her ballet flats and polka dot blouse, she unleashes an intense sound. With Wasner on vocals and guitar and Andy Stack on drums and keyboards, Wye Oak is equal parts dreamy Americana pop and noise assault. They won over the audience quickly, party through their music and party through Wasner’s charming and friendly personality, and drew vocal praise for “Holy Holy”, a song from their forthcoming album (which Stack works on in the backseat of their tour van “while I talk to myself for 7 hours,” says Wasner).

Sidenote: Red keyboards are so hot right now. Seriously, this is about the fifth one I’ve seen at a show this year.

Lou Barlow + the missingmen

“Lou Barlow!” one of the more, uh, enthusiastic audience members helpfully shouted through the night, just in case we – or Barlow himself – forgot who he was. (The same person would also like you to know that “The Freed Pig” is the best break-up song ever. At least, I assume this is why she stated this no less than four times until Barlow honored her request.) I wasn’t about to forget because, confession time, I was a little geeked out to be seeing someone I’ve been listening to for about a decade, in his various bands and projects, at this little club.

Barlow began the show solo with his acoustic guitar (the case for which sports a handsome Music Saves sticker), chatting with the crowd, telling stories and taking requests (or pretending to). He played sweet-voiced renderings of songs like “Magnet’s Coil”, “Puzzled” and “Rebound” before bringing on missingmen Tom Watson and Raul Morales (on loan from Mr. Mike Watt) for an electric set.

Watson and Morales bring great talent and energy to the stage, and it’s easy to see why Watt has been keeping this friendly, easy-going pair close and why Barlow borrows them. They helped pump up songs like “Home”, “Too Much Freedom” and “Gravitate”. Things really broke out when Barlow put down his Danelectro and strapped on the bass, closing out the electric set by tearing up “Losercore”.

Back for an acoustic encore, Barlow broke out his ukulele (a baritone uke as opposed to the popular soprano uke) for “Beauty of the Ride” and “Soul and Fire” before returning to his acoustic for a few more songs, including the aforementioned “The Freed Pig”, closing out the show with “Brand New Love”.

Barlow is a skilled entertainer, aware how to keep a good balance with his audience. During solo acoustic sets, he chats more – telling stories about everything from annoying his sisters with an 8-track player to finding a bag of weed in a hotel room left by the previous occupants, the Black Crowes – and comes across as amiable, funny and candid. “Did I ever tell you my Cleveland story?” he asks the audience at one point, creating the feeling of being friends who have hung out together before. But when Watson and Morales join him onstage, the between-song conversation was turned down as the music amped up.


I don’t normally add links to my show reviews, but I have to share Lou Barlow’s great website and kingofthecastle7’s YouTube channel for videos of the show.

Notable Shows in the Greater Cleveland Area

Shows worth checking out this week in and around Cleveland:

The Beachland Ballroom & Tavern

  • Fri, Aug 27| 8:30 PM (8 PM door)
    DEVOtional 2010
    11:30 – International Espionage
    10:45 – The Mutant Mountain Boys
    10:00 -Poopy Necroponde’s Cream-Based Soups (featuring Al Mothersbaugh)
    9:15 – Malcolm Tent
    8:30 -Miniature Colossal Men
    $8.00
    Tavern | All Ages
  • Sat, Aug 28| 12 PM (12 PM door)
    DEVOtional 2010
    10:00 – Spudboys
    8:45 – FartBarf
    7:45 – Mark Mothersbaugh video chat
    6:45 – Nervous Energy
    5:15 – Jerry Casale Q & A
    4:30 – DEVO Makes Something for Everybody reality series
    3:45 – Jenny Lens slideshow
    2:45 – Great Balancing Act
    2:00 – Ken the Magic Corner God
    $20 ($10 after 7 PM)
    Ballroom | All Ages
  • Mon, Aug 30| 7:30 PM (7 PM door)
    Keep on the Sunny Side for Cuzin’ Dave Newman
    Bands performing:
    Hillbilly Idol
    Hey Mavis
    Jane Dough
    Waxwings String Band
    Rob Bliss Trio
    Take This Hammer
    Matt Harmon
    Colette
    Doug Wood
    Quinn Sands
    John McGrail
    New Soft Shoe
    (Donations will be accepted at the door for admission)
    Ballroom | All Ages
  • Wed, Sep 1| 9 PM (8 PM door)
    Shellac
    Helen Money
    $15.00
    Ballroom | All Ages
  • Wed, Sep 1| 9 PM (8:30 PM door)
    Mammox
    Matthew Forcefed
    Muamin Collective
    Presque VU
    $5.00
    Tavern | All Ages
  • Thu, Sep 2| 8 PM (7 PM door)
    The Breeders
    Times New Viking
    Hot Cha Cha
    $16.00 adv / $18.00 dos
    Ballroom | All Ages

Grog Shop

  • Fri, Aug 27 | 8 PM
    Lou Barlow & The Missingmen
    Wye Oak
    Rainy Day Saints
    $10 adv
    $12 dos
  • Mon, Aug 30 |
    Benefit for Karen Novak
    Unsane
    Craw
    Nonfiction
    & More
    $10 minimum suggested donation

Now That’s Class

  • Sat, Aug 28 | 4 PM
    Strength in Numbers Fest:
    Nation of Thieves
    The Casting Out
    Bike Tough
    Failure to Fall
    Voice of Anger
    Ceasefire
    Deatheater
    The Kids United
    Heads Held High
    Ages
    Exseteras
    Wreak Havoc
    TV Crimes
    Life-Stereo
    Skynet
    Rotten Reason
    Expendable Youth
    $5

Musica

  • Mon, Aug 30 | 8 PM
    Built to Spill
    $20
  • Thurs, Sept 2 | 9 PM
    Cap C & Random X
    Rime Royal
    Train Smoke
    Blu-Sky Jones
    DJ Dulo
    $5

Very happy birthday wishes today to my oldest and best friend, Duane, who first planted the seed for NTSIB in my brain. In honor of his birthday (and because the timing happened to be really good), I’ll be seeing Lou Barlow play tonight. Since Duane got me into Dinosaur Jr., it seems fitting.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5wlzr6HCtKo?fs=1]

“I love deadlines. I like the whooshing sound they make as they fly by.” -Douglas Adams

I goofed.

I am in the midst of writing a feature post that I’ve been planning since I started this blog. It’s, uh, taking a little longer than I thought it would, so I am left content-less today.

In lieu of a post, I encourage everyone to watch It’s Everything, and Then It’s Gone (link to the video at the bottom of the page), a documentary on the almost-the-next-big-thing music scene in Akron, Ohio, in the 1970s – a scene which spawned Tin Huey, the Rubber City Rebels and, of course, Devo, among others.

Rock ‘n’ Roll Photog: Postcards from Disparate Voyage

The theme for my concert-going this summer seemed to be “voyages” and in particular water voyages, both to the water, or at least a couple of different beaches, and also on the water, specifically, the East River. As the temperature cools and the fall rainy season drifts in, I bring you some postcards from my last couple of trips:

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Willie Nelson, Circus Maximus Theater, Ceaser’s Atlantic City: The show was a little bit more subdued than I was expecting, perhaps a concession to the venue, the age of the audience (there were people in the front row celebrating their sixty-fifth wedding anniversary), or a reflection of Willie Nelson also getting up there (77 and still touring!), or some combination of those things. But it was still a great show. It was, in many ways, something of a relief to be able to just sit down and listen to someone sing familiar songs, undistracted by festival crowds or complicated stage business. He did, among others, Good Hearted Woman, All the Girls I’ve Loved Before and City of New Orleans, and I left refreshed, as if I had been visiting with old friends.

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Local Natives/We Barbarians/Young Man, The Beach at Governor’s Island: Young Man was kind of dreamy and pleasant to listen to while half-dozing on the sand; We Barbarians woke me up with their more muscular, drum-driven sound, and then Local Natives came on and got everyone dancing. They’re all a little bit more jam-band-y than I normally go for — I found myself thinking I bet this sounds better in southern California, where it’s sunny all the time and they have palm trees that don’t glow in the dark — but on the whole it was a pleasant way to spend a summer evening.

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The Diamond Doves

The Felice Brothers/Diamond Doves, Rocks Off Concert Cruise, East River, NY: You may recognize the Diamond Doves from their alternate incarnation as Elvis Perkins in Dearland’s back-up band. I had never heard them in that context, but doing their own thing they were pretty great. (Especially the guy playing the horn and the keyboard at the same time. Now that is multi-tasking!) And the Felices were, of course, their usual rockin’ selves, though the set was, once again, kind of heavy. Most of my pictures are of the Diamond Doves; the boat was packed and by the time the Felices came on I was too far back and too short to get anything good. I reckon y’all know what they look like by now anyway.

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William Beckett and Michael Guy Chislett, The Academy Is . . . (top); Gene Simmons, KISS (bottom)

KISS/The Academy Is . . ./The Envy, Jones Beach Theater: When this tour was announced earlier this summer, the part of the Internet that keeps up with TAI . . . did a double-take, turned to each other and said WHAT?? and IS THIS A JOKE?? Now that I’ve seen the results, I’m even more curious about who came up with this particular line-up. The Envy, of Toronto, Canada, were vaguely gothy hard-rock; all I can really tell you is they didn’t get lost in the arena, which is easy to do at Jones Beach. Then TAI . . . bounced out and did a solid set, pulling mainly from their somewhat heavier back catalog rather than their newier, poppier work and winding up with a cover of Fox on the Run. I enjoyed them tremendously, but the rest of the KISS audience seemed to be politely and quietly baffled. Then KISS came out amid fire and lights, and I hung around to watch the spectacle until I just couldn’t take one more minute of Gene Simmons’ tongue waggling on the jumbotron. I found they left me pretty cold, all things considered. Odd, perhaps, given my fondness for fire, glitter and ridiculous costumes, but I just couldn’t get into it. Also noted: high volume of attendees that were both a) kindergartners and b) wearing full faces of KISS make-up, which was adorable, but also underscored how the whole thing was more carnival than rock concert.

— Jennifer

Bits: Conrad Plymouth, Infantree, Megafaun, Folgers, Wu-Ta

  • Conrad Plymouth’s beautiful EP is available on 10″ clear vinyl. Get it.
  • Another gorgeous song from Infantree, “Slaughterhouse”, is available for free download.
  • Megafaun and Fight the Big Bull will be joined by guest Justin Vernon and Sharon Van Etten for a series of shows, taking place September 17-19, that will cover songs from Alan Lomax’s Sounds of the South collection. The shows will be recorded for a future live album release.
  • If your life has heretofore been incomplete due to a lack of Johnny Cash singing to you about coffee from your phone, be ready to experience nirvana. Folgers has posted a series of free ringtones of their jingle performed by Cash, Aaron Neville and Michael McDonald, among others. I can’t make it all the way through the Michael McDonald one for fear of suffocating from laughter.
  • The Wu-Tang Clan are in the middle of the Rock the Bells tour, during which they are performing 36 Chambers in its entirety. Check out the Clan turning out “M.E.T.H.O.D. Man”.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XOLR6U3Cpn8?fs=1]