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The Day Van Dyke Parks Went Calypso

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Courtesy of vandykeparks.comWhen 80,000 barrels of oil spilled into the waters of the Santa Barbara Channel in January of 1969, the crude-splattered water, beaches, and birds along the California coast in its aftermath became the symbols of modern eco-disaster. While the ensuing public outcry helped hasten the formalization of the environmental movement as we now know it, for musician Van Dyke Parks, the spill and “the revelation of ecology,” as he calls it, was a very personal, life-altering occasion. “It changed my M.O. and changed my very reason for being,” he says. The Union Oil rig rupture in Santa Barbara made Parks go calypso.

“When I saw the Esso Trinidad Steel band, I saw myself in a Trojan Horse,” he says. “We were going to expose the oil industry. That’s what my agenda was. I felt it was absolutely essential.” From 1970 to 1975, Parks waged awareness of environmental and race matters through the music and culture of the West Indies, though in the end, “You don’t know whether to laugh or cry. That’s what makes Van Gogh go,” he says, “That’s what great art does.” Though Parks is referring directly to Esso Trinidad’s happy/sad steel drum sounds, he could just as easily be talking about his own experience during what we’ll dub the Calypso Years. read more

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published: November 19, 2009 in column: Feature Story

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Them Crooked Vultures: Them Crooked Vultures

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Them Crooked VulturesThem Crooked Vultures
Them Crooked Vultures

(Interscope, 2009)

The debut album from hard rock supergroup Them Crooked Vultures is a fairly mediocre exercise until you take into consideration bassist John Paul Jones. It was probably no easy feat for the other two Vultures, Queens of the Stone Age frontman Josh Homme and Foo Fighter Dave Grohl, to record an album with a Revolutionary War hero who died precisely 217 years ago. That they could rouse any kind of performance from the long-expired sea captain is, in fact, nothing short of a miracle. Them Crooked Vultures deserve not only a Grammy but several major scientific awards for defying the laws of nature in such a bold, successful manner.

I have just been informed that the John Paul Jones in question is actually the bass player from English music legends Led Zeppelin. While that’s still quite a “get” for our pals Homme and Grohl (Zep’s Jones is known for his finicky nature), it saddens me to learn the space-time continuum has not actually been ruptured by Brody Dalle’s husband and the former drummer for Nirvana. Maybe next time, guys.

Regarding the actual music contained on Them Crooked Vultures, ’tis little more than a murky aural stew boasting the vague flavors of its highly pedigreed ingredients. Like Velvet Revolver and Chickenfoot before them, TCV remain so firmly rooted in a rote 1970s classic rock sound (a sound most commonly associated with, oh, I don’t know, Led Zeppelin and the Foo Fighters) that there is no way anyone who remembers Wolfman Jack or Lynda Carter will dislike them. By the same hand, the Vultures do so little to explore new ideas that there is no way anyone who has ever posted to 4chan or watched Glee will be excited by them. We’ve heard Homme and Grohl whip up thrilling music in the past. Is the influence of the mercurial Jones really that strong?

There are some killer riffs to be found here, like the wobbly one that holds up “Dead End Friends”, but the band’s insistence on staying in third gear tempo-wise makes the entire album seem to go on for an eternity. They could have shaved two minutes off nearly every track and still brought in nearly an hour’s worth of music. I guess sometimes when you “lock into a groove,” the “power of the rock” is too immense to stop from “enveloping your soul.” On a related note, there are a few percussion moments on Them Crooked Vultures that suggest someone was merely tapping on a bong with a pencil.

To be fair, the musicians themselves are in top form. Grohl’s drumming is crisp and precise. Homme’s voice alternates as usual between swaggering, dreamy, and paint-huffing creepy. In addition to his bass work, JP Jones throws out some keyboard dalliances that certainly liven up the proceedings. The recording and production, handled by the three men in question, was clearly done in a professional setting; if any screaming children or howling dogs were in attendance, they were expertly excised from the recording. The worst accusation you can level at Them Crooked Vultures concerns the songwriting—it’s boring, uninspired fart rock we’ve endured a trillion times before. You might as well be pouring molasses in my ear.

Most of the song titles on this record are equally eye-rolling. “Mind Eraser, No Chaser.” “Interlude with Ludes.” “Caligulove.” Who came up with these, the LSD-addled bum who lives in the dumpster behind the Hy-Vee on Route 12? If so, his name is Gene and he needs his diabetes medicine. Please make sure he gets it. We don’t want a repeat of last Christmas.

As far as vanity projects go, Them Crooked Vultures isn’t nearly as painful or offensive as Russell Crowe’s band or any of Jennifer Love Hewitt’s musical releases. Still, for a record boasting such major league talent, TCV is painfully and offensively dull. Sammy Hagar’s wretched cover of “Fight for Your Right” was more inspired and daring than anything here. Perhaps next time the Vultures should try to hire a several centuries dead historical figure to participate in their album. Then they’d at least have an interesting angle (and a potential Ghost Hunters tie-in!).

Listen: Various Tracks [at myspace.com]

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published: November 19, 2009 in column: Reviews

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Radiohead Backlash Coming to a Proverbial Head, “Stupid Lists” Backlash Just Getting Started

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RadioH[via Daily Swarm]

Flavorwire has an article up titled “The Radiohead Backlash: Why Now?” that explores the boomerang effect (my term, not theirs) of Radiohead’s popularity and supposed “critical acclaim” to the current backlash cropping up lately. This question comes after a recent article in Spin that debunks certain rock myths, most of which are ones we already know, from Ozzy not really biting the head off a bat to Pink Floyd not writing The Dark Side of the Moon as a soundtrack to the Wizard of Oz. Way to crack the case on those things which have been shot out of the same bland cannon for years. However, their #1 rock myth debunked is “Radiohead Can Do No Wrong” with the subtitle “Reality: Radiohead Kind of Blow.”

The Spin article certainly has its points, like this one: “After a two-hour set, with the crowd screaming for more, Yorke retook the stage alone, sat at a grand piano, and played a quiet, minimalist nocturne. For five minutes. Before 20,000 people. The song, “Cymbal Rush,” from his 2006 solo album The Eraser — titled in an apparent gearhead reference to some sonic effect or software patch (probably between “Amp Fuzz” and “Element Isolator”) — amplified the sense that this man was so far up his own formalist ass we might as well have not even been there. It’s a valid outlook, but an odd one for someone making populist gestures in his business life and performing on such a giant stage.”

Sure, but this is coming from the magazine that easily knocks Radiohead while at the same time instinctively knowing that putting them on the cover will sell issues… like the time they put them on their November 2000 cover asking if they were “The World’s Greatest Rock Band?” How’s that for revisionist criticism? read more

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published: November 19, 2009 in column: What Goes On

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Robert Plant and Alison Krauss: Raising Sand

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Raising SandRobert Plant and Alison Krauss
Raising Sand

(Rounder, 2007)

In the wider circles of rock ‘n’ roll, the fall of 2007 was preoccupied with an event of global proportions, an event that had the media and marketing machines of the music industry talking about it way more and way longer than necessary: The Led Zeppelin reunion. Remember? Maybe right now, you read that in disbelief, thinking that it barely raised a blip on your own music radar, but really think back and I think you’ll agree with me. Music movers and shakers couldn’t seem to calm their collective excitement about what was going to go down, and it was mostly on the premise that the one-off reunion show set for December 10, 2007 was a mere inkling of what was yet to come, that being a full-scale tour. This, of course, never happened. The reunion show was pretty cool, I guess, if you were connected or rich enough to actually get there. But basically the concert came and went and now, in retrospect, two years later, it seems clear that it didn’t have much lasting significance, or relevance, or well… much of an impact at all.

In the wake of all that frenzy, there was actually news on the Zeppelin front worthy of our time and subsequent allegiance, and that was the release of the Robert Plant/Alison Krauss album, Raising Sand.

This album ended up going platinum and winning Album of the Year at the 2009 Grammy Awards, so it certainly received its critical and commercial due, but for me—and I bet for many who were sick of all the Zeppelin talk and speculation taking over our RSS feeds—I didn’t even listen to it back when it was actually released by Rounder in ’07. Raising Sand hit the market in the midst of the media storm. It was, and is, a collection of music that’s devoid of any hype or expectation, quite unlike that parallel project that brewed just beyond. Two years later, Raising Sand remains refreshingly free and disaffected—a surprise collaboration that was candidly captured and executed. And that innate harmony shines through on the recording.

Raising Sand is essentially a covers album. Producer T-Bone Burnett threaded the record together and gave it a stripped-down shell. Devoid of excessive studio polish or wizardry, Burnett injected warmth throughout by allowing the collection of songs to feed organically on its modest instrumentation and gorgeous vocal harmonies. Each song demands attention, as they revisit and celebrate the original author who penned it. The legend and lore of Led Zeppelin vocalist Robert Plant is undermined by his folky versatility here, and it’s a testament to the truly angelic vocals of bluegrass nymph Alison Krauss. Who ever thought Plant’s signature spiky yowl could soften like this? Krauss could probably coax the devil out of hell with her rich, honeyed voice, and her perfect pitch effectively coerced Plant into melting right along with her.

The swaggering blues of the first track, “Rich Woman”, first recorded in 1955 by Li’l Millet and his Creoles, is a chilly opening to a record that steadily softens as its moves along. The following song is my favorite. “Killing the Blues” (written by Roly Salley) explores some of the duo’s most beautiful vocal harmonies. With softly thumping guitar chords and intermittent pedal steel, this song beckons sleepy afternoons under a weeping willow tree tossing cares to the wind, or a deserted, lonesome walk in a pattering rain shower headed nowhere in particular. They craft a mood for sure, but leave the song open enough for the listener to take it wherever he and she chooses.

Sam Phillips’ “Sister Rosetta Goes Before Us” is next, a sweet, haunting ode by Krauss accompanied by sparse instrumentation and a lackadaisical waltzing tempo. “Polly Come Home”, written by Gene Clark, is stiff and slow, but Plant sounds as gentle as we’ve ever heard him, his near-whispering vocals greeted by Krauss’ heavenly timbre, serving to lift the song to a place of loss and confusion as they incisively sing together, “I searched for you there, and now look for you from within / Polly come home again.”

“Gone Gone Gone (Done Moved On)”, an uptempo, countrified rocker by the Everly Brothers, swoops in to rescue the album from sinking too heavily into dreamy doldrums, and then “Through the Morning, Through the Night” (again by Gene Clark) takes the reins, steering us back to broken-hearted introspection. For a song that is already sad as hell, Plant and Krauss take it to a whole other level as they sing in harmony, “But to know that another man’s holding you tight / Hurts me little darling / Through the morning, through the night.”

“Please Read the Letter” was originally recorded by Plant and Jimmy Page for their ’98 album, Walking into Clarksdale, but this duo has, of course, turned it into yet another lonesome love song, albeit this one is a bit more hopeful and circuitous. Tom Waits and his wife/collaborator Kathleen Brennan wrote “Trampled Rose” (for 2004’s Real Gone album) and the distance between Waits and Krauss is not as far as you may think. Waits sings with rust on his lips and a bite in his growl, while Krauss’ delivery is entirely silky soft, but both of them capture the folky breadth of the song and carry with it their own desolation and desperation.

With “Fortune Teller” by Allen Toussaint (who wrote it under the pseudonym Naomi Neville back in 1962) comes Plant’s turn to take over vocal duties, his famous voice metered; he keeps his range within the limitations of the song. Krauss and Plant take on “Stick with Me Baby” (written by Mel Tillis) together, their harmonies hushed and humble, before Plant takes respectful liberties around Townes Van Zandt’s gritty “Nothin’” as saturated strings and a dark, fuzzy guitar unfurl and wind around his singing. “Let Your Loss Be Your Lesson” (by Little Milton) is an Allman Brothers-like country-rocker with a danceable, jangly rhythm, coming up for air just before the album closes out with the Doc Watson tune, “Your Long Journey.” With autoharp leading the way, this triumphant hymn is exactly the right way to end Raising Sand, tenderly accepting the departure at hand as Plant and Krauss together sing, “My heart breaks as you take your long journey.”

Word on the street is that Krauss and Plant are set to do another album together. This time, I’ll be welcoming it, even in the midst of any other media mayhem that might be happening on the outside.

Listen:Killing the Blues” [at youtube.com]

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published: November 18, 2009 in column: Ex Post Facto

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Live Show Review: Monsters of Folk at Stubb’s, Austin

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Monsters of Folk: Photo by Lindsey BestMonsters of Folk
November 13th at Stubb’s BBQ, Austin

I’ll spare you the comparisons to Crosby, Stills, Nash, and Young, or the Traveling Wilburys. I’m sure if you’ve heard of Monsters of Folk by now, you understand that this band, like the aforementioned (sorry, I guess I couldn’t avoid it), is made up of four already-successful, talented musicians, coming together to form, in popular vernacular, a “supergroup.”

It’s easy to see how this kind of thing could be a bad idea. Just because a few musicians are good at what they do, and maybe even share similar genres, doesn’t mean they’ll gel together into a cohesive whole. But when it comes to Monsters of Folk, as with CSNY and the Wilburys (sorry again), one thing is clear: This collaboration has some chemistry. I hate to rely on a cliché that’s been used in pretty much every MOF review thus far, but it’s the most concise way to say it: The coming-together of these musicians creates a whole that’s greater than the sum of its parts.

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published: November 17, 2009 in column: It Shows

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Video of the Day: Mississippi Fred McDowell

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Mississippi Fred McDowell was a master of the North Mississippi blues, a distinctive style you can also hear in the music of R.L. Burnside and Junior Kimbrough. As can be seen in the above performance of “Goin’ Down to the River”, his bottleneck guitar playing and raw voice are a spellbinding combination.

Check out more McDowell videos and info on a terrific new McDowell LP reissue after the jump…

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published: November 17, 2009 in column: What Goes On

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Best Album of the Decade? NME Says the Strokes Is It

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IsThisIt[via Rolling Stone] Well, someone’s on the ball, eh? Sorta like Macy’s and Starbucks, with their preemptive barrage of all things holiday that just sorta make the rest of us feel bad for not even being prepared to serve Thanksgiving dinner let alone know if we’re going to have enough money to buy presents for the upcoming holidays, British music news source NME comes in with a list of the decade’s 100 best albums. I guess maybe it’s because they don’t have Thanksgiving that they’re weighing in so early? Oh wait, Paste Magazine has their Top 50 of the decade already up, too. So do a bunch of other people… I guess we’re just slackers over here at Crawdaddy!.

Anyway, NME chose the Strokes’ 2001 debut Is This It. In my mind, this isn’t so far off the mark. I think it’s much more on the mark than Paste’s number one, which was Sufjan Steven’s Illinois. It was around this time, at the beginning of the decade, where rock ‘n’ roll claimed some airwaves back from all the pop shmaltz (which we can attribute to the Strokes, along with the White Stripes, who were technically on the scene a few years before the Strokes were) that previously held the radio captive for more years than I myself was convinced that bubblegum crap would. According to Rolling Stone, they gave the record a 10/10 at the time of its release. The White Stripes don’t show up on their Top 10 at all. In fact, White Blood Cells and Elephant show up at 19 and 18 respectively. Elephant before White Blood Cells. Really? Perhaps that is a debate for another day. Or not. The NME list is riddled with head-scratchin’ picks. read more

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published: November 17, 2009 in column: What Goes On

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The Mary Onettes: Islands

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The Mary OnettesThe Mary Onettes
Islands
(Labrador, 2009)

With synth-pop still pulsing in clubs and Jesus and Mary Chain clones continuing to draw, um, buzz to their linty bubblegum, it’s only a matter of time before the ’80s revival has officially gone on longer than the ’80s themselves. Even the Mary Onettes—a Swedish four-piece drawing on radio-ready, mega-produced pop songs—are still relatively early in their life cycle, releasing their sophomore album here in the decade’s dying months. Their self-titled debut album, from 2007, boasted at least one crypto-cover of “I Melt with You” (“Lost”), and like their countrymen in the Shout Out Louds, that kind of head-cold-afflicted Scandinavian English inflection makes the Cure comparisons even more inevitable. (Bonuses: A bit of eyeliner goth, the “Be My Baby” drum intro, and some, god help me but the word does apply, angular New Order keyboard lines. It’s a fun record, and you should totally check it out.)

But unlike the first record, there is a crucial difference between Islands and the awesomely ’80s one-hitters whose moves it bites: The choruses. As far as atmosphere goes, Islands has teen-movie drama to spare—but there are precious few of the kinds of hooks that’ll send you leaping over the driver’s shoulder from the back seat to grab the volume knob (after which the driver will join you in singing along too, momentarily forgetting the fact that you almost sent the car off the road). read more

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published: November 16, 2009 in column: Reviews

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Talkin’ Townes-from-Texas Blues

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Well, at the memorial service for old Mr. Van,
The vagrants, they sat, and the gods made to stand.
And the preacher did whisper in the lone usher’s ear,
“Gypsies up front, please. All press in the rear.”
And his mother, the mountain, she knelt down in prayer.
While his father, the sky, he cursed at the air.
And the preacher asked mercy for all Van had done wrong,
Sayin’, “He done it, my friends, for the sake of the song.”

Well, the press sought out quotes from all the right people,
And the church bells, they sang like birds from the steeple.
As Van’s best friend stood with his face all aglow,
Sayin’, “We should-a booked this gig more than 30 years ago.”
And the wind came a-howlin’ off that lone river line,
As the preacher took a belt of his sacrificial wine.
And he told all the mourners, “Take heed now. Be strong.
For here lies a man who would die for his song.”

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published: November 16, 2009 in column: Open Mic

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Opening Act Boos

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Illustration by Tanith ConnollyMy nearest civic auditorium belonged to another town. I was lucky enough to play to a packed house there before I turned 13. Unfortunately, I played bad trombone, or as my mom liked to call it, second trombone (there were only two of us). Hosting bad music events is the duty and function of every town’s civic auditorium. Fortunately, rock concerts regularly come through to smudge the place with smoke, Fresnels, and big loud music. So the civic auditorium I stunk up with some spitty tromboning (amongst an otherwise fine ensemble) was also the place where I saw my first real rock concert. I was a child and the band was Rush—this is as close as I will ever get to explaining why I act like a kid whenever I hear a Rush song.

Like many concertgoers, the first thing I did when I entered the venue was check out the gear on stage. As a guitar player, I can say with great authority that on stage, the drums remain the most intriguing instrument to look at. Of course, it is rare that guitars are even visible before the show, and, well, you see one Marshall stack, you’ve pretty much seen them all. Of all the drum kits on all the concert stages over the history of rock music, Rush drummer Neil Peart’s kits are perhaps consistently the most intriguing (even the pink one). To be fair, Stewart Copeland, Billy Cobham, the late Keith Moon, and Danny Carey (Tool), are close seconds.

So thanks to festival seating and my mom dropping me off three hours before the concert started, I was able to run right to the front of the stage to see Mr. Peart’s drums. The only problem was someone else’s drums were in the way.

There, shoved up against Peart’s riser, was another double bass kit blocking my view. Thankfully, I could still make out the tops of the orchestral bells standing tall on my horizon like neatly ordered silver prog Alps. This confirmed that I was at the right civic auditorium on the right night (I guess the plethora of Rush t-shirts and mullets would have been my second and third clues). The drums in the way belonged to one Andy Parker, drummer for the influential British metal band UFO. So while Rush was my very first rock concert, UFO was the first band I saw at my first rock concert. As openers go, we were lucky that night, let me tell you. In fact, UFO was on the cusp of headlining themselves had their lead guitarist virtuoso nutlog Michael Schenker not gone rogue on them. Pity, that. It remains the best opener I have ever witnessed.

Being an opening act is like having an incredibly hot date with someone who clearly has an STD.  Okay, maybe not.

Being an opening act is like being the annoying, younger sibling accompanying your incredibly hot date with or without an STD—closer, but not quite.

Being an opening act is like getting a free trip to an amazing travel destination only to realize you can’t leave the airport and the locals want nothing to do with you—nailed it!

Occasionally, openers can blow your mind and in some rare instances steal the thunder from the headliner—though a brief chat between band manager and sound engineer can often put the kybosh on the latter. More often, if an opener is memorable, it is because they were awful or you pitied them.

Awful: AC/DC Highway to Hell Tour (five months before singer Bon Scott would choke to death on his own vomit). The opener was a prancing new wave band with bad makeup—the singer kind of looked like Johnny Cougar in drag—they did two and a half songs (one and a half too many) and they barely escaped with their lives. They were good dodgers though…

Pity: Peter Gabriel tours the US so infrequently and has such an amazing body of work he should have long ago accepted the mantle of “an evening with” instead of giving his fans a measly 90 minutes of brilliant music and an excellent opener you are guaranteed to have never heard of.  On his shed (amphitheater) tour of a few years ago, he brought with him a beautiful world music band from a struggling country with bad infrastructure. For the band (whose name I sadly do not remember), it was the opportunity of a lifetime. But being the opening act on a summer amphitheater tour means you hit the stage in broad daylight while loud Americans carrying nachos and large plastic cups of beer find their seats. So there I was watching these colorfully dressed musicians play folk instruments from their country while their beautiful and exotic female singer tried to get the small clots of crowd to set down their two beers each and clap in 5/4 (clap, clap, clap, [break] clap-clap). Redemption came when the band returned to the stage to join in the joyful “In Your Eyes” encore.

At the level of Peter Gabriel and AC/DC (there’s a double bill for you…), the job of opening act is a fine one in spite of any harsh reactions or pity claps you get while on stage. Hey, you’re on stage, playing music. Isn’t that 80 percent of the dream? (The rest is legal fees and gear problems.)

Where opening acts really pay a heady price for their visions of paradise (thank you Mr. P.) is at the working musician level where the stages are far smaller, the crews far surlier, and in some instances, the headlining act has kissed fame briefly and gotten drunk from the smooch. These are the kind of gigs where you have to sit the drummer down and tell him to leave 35 percent of his kit in the van if he wants his bandmates to join him onstage. It is also where you have a choice of no sound check or a sound check while the crowd is filing in. This choice is not as easy as it sounds—while a fast sound check in front of a few hundred people is not that bad, the soundman already hates you because you’re there and now you want him to do his job? I have suffered the consequences of choosing poorly in these instances. The punishment is usually a combination of no guitar or bass in the mix, no monitors for the singer, and half of the PA being turned off during your set.

I have seen countless others suffer the same fate. The most recent encounter was just a few weeks ago when I went to see, as a headliner on the club circuit, the first band I saw as an opener—UFO. As I sat in judgment while watching UFO’s opening act, who were truly dreadful on so many levels, I saw them gleefully commit all the offenses that make soundmen, headliners, and house crews hate opening acts. While their set was quite bad from a rock ‘n’ roll point of view, it was quite good as a tutorial on what not to do to survive the opening slot intact.

For example: If you, the lead singer, are going to drink on stage, make sure you know your band’s gear from the headliner’s gear so you do not struggle with the many choices of where to set your beer down.

Headgear is strictly forbidden (Lady Gaga notwithstanding). Don’t blame me, blame Slash and Buckethead.

Contrary to what you’ve learned on VH1’s Behind the Music and those horrible rock ‘n’ roll schools where you meet drug-addled has-beens with tax problems, never pretend you are playing to a full house when everyone in the room knows you are not. In fact, if the audience to band member ratio is 4:1 or less, ask them their names, thank them kindly, and do not yell anything about having a good time.

That loud squeal you hear is from you pointing the mic at the monitors. STOP IT!

Just walk on stage like everybody else, okay? If your singer mentions the words “make an entrance,” hit him really hard (probably not in the face, but I’ll leave that up to you).

Do not act proud when your girlfriend disappears for 15 minutes or more with a member of the headlining band or someone from their crew. But when she returns, go ahead, kiss her fully on the mouth—I dare ya.

It doesn’t matter that your guitarist is Asian, Samurai headbands look totally lame unless you’re being ironic, sardonic, or Rudy Sarzo from Quiet Riot circa 1983.

Unless you are illiterate and prepared to talk about your plight in between songs, never ever say, “Thank you, Crowd!”

Admittedly, I give opening acts a few extra claps and whistles if they do not suck because too often they are in a no-win situation—there in the name of destiny and no control over any of it except in how they respond to the challenge. (Hopefully with grace under pressure, eh?) If they sound like crap, it may not necessarily be their fault. When it is, it’s usually pretty obvious. And if I got the call to open for someone coming through town—I’d take it in a second. Think of the exposure!

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published: November 15, 2009 in column: Riot Gear!

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