Notable Shows in the Greater Cleveland Area

Shows worth checking out this week in and around Cleveland:

The Beachland Ballroom & Tavern

  • Thu, Jan 6| 8:30 PM (7:30 PM door)
    Mountain Heart
    J.P. & The Chatfield Boys
    $12
    Ballroom | All Ages

Grog Shop

  • Sat, Jan 1| 9 PM
    The Big Show
    feat. Smoke Screen
    Izzrael
    100 Proof
    Kick Flip B
    Ebony James
    Mz. Crazy Tee
    Tezo
    Doxx
    Bravo
    The Funny Sound
    $10 adv / $12 dos

Now That’s Class

  • Fri, Dec 31| 9 PM
    4TH ANNUAL NEW YEARS EVE PARTY
    Midnight
    Megachurch
    Burger Boys
    surprise band
    all inclusive $30 includes open bar/bands/mexcican food/shots
  • Sat, Jan 1| 9 PM
    Screaming Smoldering Butt Bitches
    Kill the Hippies
    Sosumi
    $3

Kent Stage

  • Fri, Dec 31| 8 PM
    The Numbers Band
    Rachel Wearsch & the Beatnik Playboys
    $15

No More Words: Rock Instrumentals

Once upon a time, in the relative infancy of rock ‘n’ roll, rock instrumentals were such a popular form that some artists were dedicated entirely to instrumentals and some who, while having a few songs with vocals, built their reputation on instrumentals – artists like the Ventures, the Fireballs, Duane Eddy, The Surfaris and Dick Dale. In time, the popularity of rock instrumentals faded until today when it seems like rock instrumentals are mainly the domain of dinosaurs and noodlers.

Here are a few of my favorite rock instrumentals, ending with what I hope is a glimmer of hope for the future of good rock instrumentals.

Link Wray was a man ahead of his time. A stone cold and cool greaser with a dangerous sound, you can still hear his influence today on some of today’s music. If cool has a soundtrack, Wray’s 1958 hit “Rumble” is definitely a featured number.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1NAq4HyoNe4?fs=1]

Released a year later, it’s difficult to believe that “Sleep Walk” by brother duo Santo & Johnny could even exist in the same universe as “Rumble”. It’s a dreamy piece with some of the most evocative guitar ever recorded.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ogxTQXAgY3Q?fs=1]

In the late ’50s and early ’60s, studios had house bands who played support to a label’s roster of solo and vocal artists. One of these bands, Booker T. and the MGs, had such a distinctive and compelling sound that they went on to become a major contender on their own as well as making huge contributions to the sounds of artists like Otis Redding and Bill Withers. Their most popular song, and still one of my all-time favorites, is 1962’s “Green Onions”.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U-7QSMyz5rg?fs=1]

(Keys man Booker T. Jones is still going strong, releasing Potato Hole last year, which he recorded and subsequently toured with the Drive-By Truckers. Incidentally, the father of Drive-By Truckers’ Patterson Hood, David Hood, was the bass player for the house band at Muscle Shoals Sound around the same time Jones was playing for Stax Records.)

In 1993, the Afghan Whigs ended their benchmark album Gentleman with a string-heavy and slightly ominous instrumental called “Closing Prayer”. I probably don’t have to go into any further detail about my feelings for the Afghan Whigs.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n5f8n42RGJE?fs=1]

Which brings us up to now. The Black Keys are not new to recording instrumentals, having closed out their 2002 debut The Big Come Up with the hip hop rhythm of “240 Years Before Your Time” (and then closing it again some 20 minutes later with a hidden instrumental track that kicks off with a recording of Dan Auerbach’s grandmother) and recording “Junior’s Instrumental” during their Chulahoma sessions. But “Black Mud”, their tasty chaser to “She’s Long Gone” on this year’s Brothers, may be the song to bring the band their first Grammy as it is nominated for Best Rock Instrumental.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-B6OnKRiXr8?fs=1]

Rock ‘n’ Roll Photog: Life by Keith Richards

Today, Jennifer treats us to our first book review after a wild ride with Keith “Have fun deducing how much of what I say is fact and how much is drug-addled hallucination” Richards.


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My first reaction, on turning the final page, was my god, this man is exhausting. And also to be amazed, again, that he’s still alive to co-write his autobiography. Yes, co-write; his assistant in this massive undertaking is James Fox, whom the jacket copy informs me is an old friend of Richards’, author of White Mischief and former journalist for the Sunday Times in London.
What they have produced together is a complex and fascinating portrait of Keith Richards, which reads like you’re sitting at the kitchen table with him while he tells you fabulous tales of sex, drugs (lots and LOTS of drugs) and rock and roll. (He also, unsurprisingly, has a lot of feelings about Mick Jagger.) I could almost see his hands waving and the smoke curling above his head. A good many of the stories cover territory that long-time and/or devoted Rolling Stones fans will already be familiar with; more recent, or more casual fans, on the other hand, may feel a little bit lost in the sea of names and partial descriptions of past events.

But the inside scoop on the scandalous behavior is really not the best part. Richards is most interesting when he digresses into a guitar lesson, and explains the secrets to the Stones’ disctinctive sound, or wanders off on an extended tangent about the mechanics of constructing songs.

The book is a big book, dense and sometimes rambling, and by turns hilarious, horrifying and mind-blowing, in a You did what? With whom? kind of way. I was left with a variety of things to chew over, about music and fame and rockstars in general, if not Keith Richards in particular, most notably the isolating nature of fame.

I was also left with the desire to read all the rest of the Stones’ memoirs, to get more views on the story.

Which brings me to: Please Allow Me To Correct a Few Things an review of the book in Slate by Bill Wyman (journalist, NOT rockstar) which is written as Mick Jagger’s response to the book. Just to be clear: Mick Jagger did not write the article. It’s a parody, a literary put-on, but it’s a very sharply observed parody. There’s also a postscript to the piece on Wyman’s blog. I mention it because it’s easy to get caught up in Richards’ story, and get to a point where all of the madness seems perfectly normal.

In summary: A big book, but not a dull one. Rating: \m/\m/ (two sets of metalfingers out of two)

— Jennifer

Bits: Hell and Half of Georgia, the Low Anthem, Conrad Plymouth, the Twilight Singers, Mark Sandman

  • Shows! Hell and Half of Georgia will be playing a free show in Long Beach, California tomorrow, 12.29.10. On the other side of the country on the same day, the Avett Brothers, the Low Anthem and Bombadil will be playing a benefit show in Carrboro, North Carolina – tickets go on sale at 10:00 AM EST today, 12.28.10. (The Avett/Anthem/Bombadil benefit show sold out within the first hour.) Conrad Plymouth will play a New Year’s Eve show with Ian Olvera and the Sleepwalkers and Laarks at Linneman’s in Milkwaukee, Wisconsin.
  • The Twilight Singers have made another track, “On the Corner”, from the upcoming album Dynamite Steps available for free download.
  • And the news I’m personally most excited about right now is the impending release of Cure for Pain: The Mark Sandman Story. The singer/bass player/avant-instrumentalist for Morphine was and is a huge influence on me, and I’m very much looking forward to this documentary, which will be hitting the festival circuit in 2011. Check out the trailer below, and find more video clips at the Gatling Pictures website.

Cure for Pain: The Mark Sandman Story (Trailer) from Gatling Pictures on Vimeo.

Notable Shows in the Greater Cleveland Area

Shows worth checking out this week in and around Cleveland:

The Beachland Ballroom & Tavern

  • Sat, Dec 25| 9 PM (8 PM door)
    Matthew Forcefed
    & The Jesus Freaks
    The Sound People
    Winters Warm
    Keith Jackson
    $8
    Tavern | All Ages
  • Sun, Dec 26| 8 PM (7 PM door)
    8th Annual
    Old Home Night
    Home & Garden (w/Tony Maimone)
    Alejandro Escovedo & Miss Melvis
    Kidney Brothers (w/Anton Fier)
    The Heathers
    $10
    Tavern | All Ages
  • Tue, Dec 28| 8:30 PM (8 PM door)
    A Festivus Miracle!
    Old Boy with Istvan Medgyesi
    Tastycakes
    Beach Stav
    Library Time
    FREE
    Ballroom Floor | All Ages
  • Wed, Dec 29| 9 PM (8 PM door)
    An Evening with
    The Spikedrivers
    $10
    Tavern | All Ages
  • Thu, Dec 30| 9 PM (8 PM door)
    The Schwartz Brothers
    $6
    Ballroom | All Ages
  • Thu, Dec 30| 8:30 PM (8 PM door)
    Beachland Blue Grass Barn Dance
    Misery Jackals
    Front Porch
    Gordon Keller and the Rubes
    Miss Firecracker
    Live square dance
    $5
    Tavern | All Ages

Grog Shop

  • Sat, Dec 25| 8 PM
    HotChaCha
    Megachurch
    CLOVERS
    Born of the Yeti
    $5
  • Sun, Dec 26| 8 PM
    Return of Simple
    Herzog
    The Sibs
    Belmez
    $6
  • Thu, Dec 30| 10 PM
    Prisoners
    Cloud Nothings
    The Very Knees
    $6

Rock ‘n’ Roll Photog: 2010 in Pictures, Part Two

Even though our tastes rarely seem to overlap, these year-end posts illustrate why I’m fortunate to have Jennifer on board. Thanks for a great year, Jennifer.


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Felicibago, Lebowski Fest, Louisville, KY, July 2010

Jon Walker

Nick White, Jon Walker and Nick Murray, The Young Veins, Crazy Donkey, Farmingdale, NY, July 2010

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Ryan Ross and Andy Soukal, The Young Veins, Crazy Donkey, Farmingdale, NY, July 2010

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Willie Nelson, Caeser’s, Atlantic City, NJ, August 2010

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Evan Dando, The Lemonheads, The Crazy Donkey, Farmingdale, NY, August 2010

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Matt Shultz, Cage the Elephant, Jones Beach Ampitheater, Jones Beach, NY, September 2010

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Amy Klein, Titus Andronicus, Webster Hall, New York, NY, September 2010

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Pete Wentz, The Black Cards, The Loft, Poughkeepsie, NY, October 2010

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Bebe Rexha, The Black Cards, The Loft, Poughkeepsie, NY, October 2010

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Ian Felice and Christmas, Felice Brothers, The Chance, Poughkeepsie, NY, Halloween 2010

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Mike Ness, Social Distortion, Roseland Ballroom, New York, NY, November 2010

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Glen Hansard, The Frames, Terminal 5, New York, NY, November 2010

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Brandon Flowers (solo tour), Hammerstein Ballroom, New York, NY, December 2010

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Ray Toro, My Chemical Romance, Roseland Ballroom, New York, NY, December 2010

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Frank Iero, My Chemical Romance, Roseland Ballroom, New York, NY, December 2010

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Mikey Way, My Chemical Romance, Roseland Ballroom, New York, NY, December 2010

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Gerard Way, My Chemical Romance, Roseland Ballroom, New York, NY, December 2010

–Jennifer

Rock ‘n’ Roll Photog: 2010 in Pictures, Part One

Some technical difficulties held us up, but here it is, Jennifer’s favorite photos from her 2010 musical adventures/shenanigans.


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Alex Suarez (left) and Ryland Blackinton (right), This Is Ivy League, The Studio at Webster Hall, New York, NY, January 2010

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A.A. Bondy, Union Hall, Brooklyn, NY, February 2010

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Ryan Ross, The Young Veins, The Studio at Webster Hall, New York, NY, March 2010

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Eric Nally, Foxy Shazam, The Studio at Webster Hall, March 2010

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Jon Walker, The Young Veins, The Knitting Factory, Brooklyn, NY, March 2010

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Nick Murray, The Young Veins, The Knitting Factory, Brooklyn, NY, March 2010

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Nick White, The Young Veins, The Knitting Factory, Brooklyn, NY, March 2010

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Jonathan Coulton, The High Line Ballroom, New York, NY, April 2010

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HIM, Irving Plaza, New York, NY, May 2010

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Butch Walker, Webster Hall, New York, NY, May 2010

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Roky Erickson and Okkervil River, Webster Hall, New York, NY, May 2010

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Liz McGrath and Morgan Slade, Miss Derringer, High Line Ballroom, New York, NY, May 2010

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Cadillac Sky, Union Hall, Brooklyn, NY, May 2010

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Dave Rawlings and Gillian Welch, the Dave Rawlings Machine, Bowery Ballroom, New York, NY, June 2010

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The Felice Brothers, Clearwater Festival, Croton-on-Harmon, New York, June 2010

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Z Berg, The Like, Maxwell’s Hoboken, June 2010

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Sean Van Vleet, Empires, The Studio at Webster Hall, New York, NY, June 2010

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Courtney Love, Hole, The Wellmont Theater, Montclair, NJ, June 2010

–Jennifer

Joe Strummer: Love Kills

Today marks the eighth anniversary of Joe Strummer’s death, and the impulse is usually to be solemn and possibly even maudlin in our remembrances and tributes on this day. Yes, Joe was a seriously thoughtful guy and inspired many people to do great things, but he also had a sense of humor and wonder and joy which shouldn’t be forgotten. It bubbled out of him until the day he died.

So, in that spirit, I post the video for one of Joe’s contributions to the Sid & Nancy soundtrack, “Love Kills”. Joe, Dick Rude and someone who looks a lot like Jane Wiedlin as a group of inept federales, Gary Oldman turning into superhero Sid Vicious and (I think) a rockin’ song – what more do you need from a music video?

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PeeZRw52FxE?fs=1]

Bits: Bootsy Collins, Ali Farka Touré and Toumani Diabaté, Captain Beefheart

  • Ohio-born funk master Bootsy Collins has started the Bootsy Collins Foundation to promote music and education for those who might not be able to afford it on their own. “Say It Loud, An Instrument For Every Child.”
  • Nonesuch has made a track, “Sabu Yerkoy”, off of the second (and final) collaboration from Ali Farka Touré and Toumani Diabaté, called simply Ali and Toumani, available for free download.
  • Those wishing to pay their respects to Don Van Vliet, a.k.a. Captain Beefheart, who died December 17, can leave their tributes at The Captain Beefheart Radar Station. And self-titled has a post that includes Beefheart’s Letterman interview along with John Peel’s short documentary (in 6 parts) on Beefheart’s career.