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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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The Who at the Super Bowl, and Other News Who

The WhoFor their first performance in the States since 2008, speculation abounds that the Who will be playing the halftime show at Super Bowl ’10, to take their place among such musical elite as Paul McCartney, Tom Petty, the Rolling Stones, and, uh, Janet Jackson. (Billboard)

Peter Gabriel will be releasing a covers album this coming spring, doing renditions of songs by artists including Bon Iver, Regina Spektor, Elbow, and Lou Reed. Awesome. (CD Insight)

Oh, how we are  starting to really loathe Ticketmaster. Much like what happened with those Springsteen ticket sales some months back (they were accused of holding out tickets for their secondary seller, TicketNow), the giant corporation is being confronted with allegations that a similar situation has arisen with Taylor Swift and Keith Urban tickets. (TicketNews)

The FCC may very well be relaxing media ownership rules come 2010, like by permitting a TV station and newspaper to be under the same ownership or allowing one entity to own multiple TV stations in the same market. This could be good news for struggling media outlets. (Forbes)

Andrew Bird has been quite busy of late. He’s doing a film score, working on an art installation, and doing a track for the Muppets tribute album Muppets Revisited. (Pitchfork)

Read more news after the jump.

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published: November 12, 2009 in column: What Goes On

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Live Show Review: Dawes and Langhorne Slim at the Independent, San Francisco

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Dawes: Photo by Michael HarkinDawes and Langhorne Slim
November 6th at the Independent, San Francisco

I actually first heard Dawes when Crawdaddy! editor Michael Harkin hit the road with them via Daytrotter’s Barnstormer a month or so back and did this great piece on the experience. I was taken by their beautifully crafted songs and Taylor Goldsmith’s voice, rich and full of soul, but also capable of unleashing this antiquated, all-American bellow. Dawes was initially, surprisingly, a post-punk band who called themselves Simon Dawes, but their new record, North Hills, channels the Laurel Canyon sound of the ‘70s—think Neil Young, the Band, and the Byrds… this is totally listenable stuff. Dawes has a big sound that is totally commercially viable, so I can easily see them filling a larger space like the Fillmore in no time at all. On Friday night at the Independent in support of New York City troubadour Langhorne Slim, the California bred quartet played tracks directly from their album (but for one slow, somnambulant song they identified as, simply, a “new one they had never played before”).

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published: November 9, 2009 in column: It Shows

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“Don’t Bring Me Down”

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Graphic by Greer AshmanYou’ve heard the song and may’ve even used the expression the title was based upon, but despite the many recordings of different songs with the same title, there are just three that are fit to undergo examination of the origin of “Don’t Bring Me Down”, a stand-up song that has endured confusion, the passage of time, and a multitude of complaints and criticisms no matter who sings them. Consider them exhibits A, B, and C.

The basic definition of the bring down might seem obvious and unnecessary to outline, but since over-explaining is a bit of a specialty of mine, I’m going to do it anyway. If it’s too much of a bring down for you, you can skip this part. But the general idea is that a negative person or event come to destroy an otherwise perfectly good situation—an instant depressor and a real bad vibe—is a bring down. Born from ’50s jazz and hipster lingo (look, I’m no William Safire, but it’s my best guess), whether it’s a party, an idea, a person’s lifetime hopes and dreams, or even their delusions—to be told, ‘That’s not gonna fly, Jim,” is a definite bring down. Ruining someone’s high or coming down from one? A bring down. Get off my cloud, and don’t be a downer, a bummer, or a drag—these are all other ways of saying, “Don’t Bring Me Down.” As jazz lingo had a way of finding its way into R&B and rock ‘n’ roll, and into the vocabs of the people who listen to the stuff, the bring down found its way into hundreds of songs, some more memorable than others. Dig?

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published: November 4, 2009 in column: Origin of Song

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Barnstormer II: On the Road with Daytrotter

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Photos by Michael Harkin/Graphic by Greer AshmanApart from its sway in presidential elections, I knew very little of Iowa before embarking on Daytrotter’s Barnstormer II tour (aka “Barnstormier”) earlier this month. These dates marked the second incarnation of the live music site’s mini-tour of Wisconsin and Iowa barns, offering compelling new sounds to often passed-over Midwestern communities as well as giving emerging bands the opportunity to play in scenic, unusual spots off the typical rock club circuit.

Daytrotter’s founder, Sean Moeller, put out a call earlier this year for barns in the Quad Cities region that would potentially make for cool venues, and received several responses worth scouting out, eventually choosing the best spaces in Iowa and Wisconsin. “We wanted to try and expand what the website does,” explains Moeller, namely its presentation of bands “all live, no overdubs,” the context in which Moeller and company claim is “the best way to hear someone.” The first Barnstormer took place from July 25th through 29th this year, featuring bands who had previously recorded sessions for the site at Daytrotter’s Rock Island, Illinois-based studio, and it went well enough that preparations began immediately for a fall installment of the tour. read more

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published: October 23, 2009 in column: Feature Story

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Gin Blossoms: “Hey Jealousy”

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Illustration by Thom GlickThe Gin Blossoms’ “Hey Jealousy” is a bona fide have-a-kick-ass-summer jam. It’s four minutes of late nights, joy rides, and low-speed police chases. The song’s protagonist is a charming wreck. He’s in no shape for driving with no place to go, looking for permission to reminisce and reconcile with an old flame. Threads of regret are sewn throughout, as is a glimmering optimism: “The past is gone but something might be found to take its place,” he declares to her immediately before reiterating the song’s title. He can’t change the past. There is hope in the future. First, he must crash on her futon.

Songs written in first-person rely on the vocalist’s delivery to portray the emotion of the lyrics; they become the “me” and “I” of the song. Whereas Neil Young or Chris Martin would milk the drama from a line like, “If I hadn’t blown the whole thing years ago, I might not be alone,” Gin Blossoms’ frontman Robin Wilson sings it with emotionless nonchalance—in the music video, his hands are appropriately/inappropriately in his jacket pocket at that moment in the tune. If the song’s author, the band’s original guitarist Doug Hopkins had sung the song, it certainly would have felt different.

Hopkins was the most hopeless brand of addict, consistently self-medicating in the face of depression. He penned “Hey Jealousy” and “Found Out About You”, but never was able to appreciate the spoils of his labor. Hopkins drank so often during recording sessions for the Gin Blossoms’ debut that he was unable to stand up in the studio. He was kicked out of the band before the record was released. There is no irony in the album title New Miserable Experience.

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published: October 13, 2009 in column: Lyrical Communique

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Spirit: Twelve Dreams of Dr. Sardonicus

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Spirit: Twelve Dreams of Dr. SardonicusSpirit
Twelve Dreams of Dr. Sardonicus
(Epic, 1970)

When people think of real classic rock albums, the Beatles’ Sgt. Pepper’s and Pink Floyd’s The Dark Side of the Moon are two that immediately spring to mind. For me, LA-based Spirit’s wonderful eclectic psychedelic masterpiece Twelve Dreams of Dr. Sardonicus fits neatly between the two. It’s kind of a distant cousin to those drastically different albums, in that it has the production and arrangement qualities of the aforementioned Beatles album and the daring instrumentals and precision of the Floyd set. Also, it was released right in the middle (three years after the former and three years before the latter). It was the fourth and last album by the original five-piece band (not counting a mediocre ’80s reunion effort). Amazingly, it has never been out of print since its original November 1970 release. It stayed available in its vinyl edition until the advent of CDs in the early ’80s, then was subsequently released as a CD, an expanded CD edition, a Mobile Fidelity Sound Lab audiophile CD edition, and it has been released again as a 180-gram vinyl disc from those bastions of quality at Sundazed, which made for a good excuse for me to revisit one of my favorite albums of all time. It’s even been the subject of a complete and quite exhilarating tribute/reinterpretation album by Seattle-based band 13 Dreams in 2006.

Sardonicus is an enigma, a prime example of quality winning out in the long run. The sales of the album (which went gold in 1976) are simply based on its quality and propelled by word-of-mouth over time, as opposed to any publicity blitz or hype. Most of its accolades seem to come from fellow musicians. On its release, it achieved the poorest chart position of any of their albums, peaking at 63, but has gone on to be the band’s biggest selling album by far and has remained a major cult album.

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published: October 12, 2009 in column: Crate Digger

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What’s a Surrealistic Pillow?

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Origin of SongOn Halloween of 1966, San Francisco’s Jefferson Airplane entered a Los Angeles studio with a new lead singer to begin recording their second album. The collection of songs—a curious blend of acid-dipped folk, harmony, and hard rock that came to define the San Francisco Sound—was completed in enough time for the band to make it home for Thanksgiving dinner. Upon hearing the tracks, their friend and mentor Jerry Garcia suggested that it “sounds like a surrealistic pillow,” and a classic psychedelic album was titled.

So what is a surrealistic pillow anyway? What does it sound like? And why, if you’re not familiar with it, should you care? I’m banking on the idea that any album whose 11 cuts keep comin’ back to me, 43 years after it was made, is worth having a look into and passing on, so for just this month, it’s the Origin of an Album rather than the customary song.

Following its release in February, four months before Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band and a month before the Grateful Dead’s debut, throughout the Spring and Summer of Love, Surrealistic Pillow contributed toward turning the Airplane into Life magazine-styled pop stars. The Marty Balin-founded group and the steel voice of Grace Slick clicked with a growing international audience of West Coast hippie watchers and rock lovers ready to take a walk on the Technicolor side. As a child, I adopted them as my new family; like bigger siblings and fellow travelers (though at least two of them were older than my own dad and mom), I could’ve been their littlest flower child mascot. As the years passed, I grew increasingly fascinated by the story of the five young men and the young woman who put my hometown on the musical map, though despite attempting to divine through listening, reading everything I could get my hands on, speaking informally to its former members and crossing paths with their friends and at least two of their children, I’m only slightly closer to solving the mysteries of Surrealistic Pillow or “the Pink Album,” and its allure for me. Had the record been tinted blue, as Balin had intended it, as an old-world girl, I may not have even gravitated to it in the record racks at all. Decades later, its songs are still alive and green for me, though rarely do I listen to the album in parts; rather, it is as a comfortable whole that I find the greatest satisfaction in the Pillow. Perhaps it is fate that has bound me to the songs. Among the things my love and I share, beyond a mutual attraction, is a mutual affection for the Airplane: They were his first concert and Surrealistic Pillow was my first album. We also share his paperback copy of The Jefferson Airplane and the San Francisco Sound by one of rock journalism’s fathers, Ralph J. Gleason, from which I’ve gleaned many fine details on the band contained herein.

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published: October 8, 2009 in column: Origin of Song

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Jack Logan: Bulk

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Jack Logan: BulkJack Logan
Bulk
(Medium Cool / Twin/Tone, 1994)

Bulk is one of those golden records of lore, the kind that languish in relative obscurity despite the fact that once someone happens upon it they fall instantly for its endearing surplus of cheerless mystery and loner laments. Yep, this record is one huge downer, but if being down is your thing, Bulk is almost unsurpassed in its pursuit of all things bleak. Upon its release, the record was met with a lot of critical acclaim but it didn’t get much further than that. Currently out of print, let’s consider this Ex Post Facto my plea for re-releasing the record so it can be celebrated by all once more.

Bulk is a two-CD project by Jack Logan who, in 1993, sent Peter Jesperson (responsible for the early career of the Replacements) a prolific 600 home-recorded songs that he’d documented since 1979 with a rotating cast of musician friends he hung around with in a town just outside of Athens, Georgia after he was done with his day job as an auto mechanic. Jesperson quickly signed Logan to his label, and thereafter, they whittled down 600 songs to the 42 that appear on Bulk—a masterful lo-fi excursion through droning Southern gothic ballads and blotter-enhanced meditations. The narratives of the small town drifters and losers found on this record permeate the atmosphere like the stench of whiskey, stale smoke, and decaying patrons of a dive bar adorned with a jukebox playing an array of proto-punk, listless country-blues, and ’60s-inspired white-boy rockers. Logan treats his down-and-out cast with the humility of a fiction writer like Raymond Carver, and we, in turn, feel all the empathy in the world for these crusty characters.

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published: October 1, 2009 in column: Ex Post Facto

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MV & EE at Cafe Du Nord, San Francisco

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MV & EE: Photo by Michael HarkinMV & EE, Expo ’70, Bronze, Inner Beauty
September 28th at Café Du Nord, San Francisco

This past Monday night at Café Du Nord, curated by FolkYeah, showcased worthy fringe psychedelia both local and touring. While lightly attended, it was a well-constructed bill that hit the spot for Krautrocker, drone, and hippie attendees alike. After a searing set of solo guitar by Berkeley-based guitarist Matt Baldwin (who was performing as Inner Beauty), the SF-based Bronze was up next, in which band member Joe Oberjat turned knobs on a hand-held sampler that looked like a heavily modified guitar pedal, letting fly the range of dark synth sounds that drummer Brian D. Hock nailed down with his incredible drumming. Expo ’70, the main recording project of guitarist Justin Wright from Kansas City, followed in a duo configuration with a short set of tunes, striking an otherworldly balance between droning doom metal guitars and the dreamy guitar leads of Neu!’s Michael Rother.

MV & EE, the Vermont-based duo who have variously recorded with other musicians as MV & EE and the Golden Road, MV & EE Medicine Show, and several other names, are Matt Valentine and Erika Elder, who headlined as a duo at this show. Right around midnight, they got their microphones all properly hooked up, and kicked off their set with “The Hungry Stones”, a Neil Young-reminiscent and contemplative psych-folk tune from their most recent full-length, Drone Trailer. The audience got comfortable, most people sitting on Du Nord’s floor and everyone present attentive to the mellow jams at hand—Elder’s pedal steel and backing vocals play a very natural counterpart to Valentine’s high whine, harmonica, and guitar playing, adding up to an oft meandering but all-in-all hypnotic effect. Valentine mentioned that they were trying to come up with a name for a Bruce Springsteen-covering-Suicide band, like “Frankie Nebraska”—one audience member humbly suggested “Born in the Rocket USA”, which they seemed to enjoy despite Valentine’s joke that it sounded like something off the “jam band circuit.”

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published: September 30, 2009 in column: It Shows

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