Sunday, June 29, 2008
HOLY "PEHDTSCHJMBA"
the video below explains the blog title..."PEHDTSCHJMBA"
the final night of the tour...next saturday night, july 5th, tom waits @ the fabulous fox theatre in atlanta. and i will be sitting 19th row center...on the aisle.
and i get to see my mom and dad too. =)
"rain dogs"
"make it rain"
Labels:
atlanta,
the fox theatre,
tom waits
Thursday, June 19, 2008
over the rhine - "ohio: in concert" @ the national city pavilion/cincinnati (05.24.2008)
ok, i'm a little late getting to this one...
i realized that never posted anything about OtR's - “ohio: in concert” show, i started (and stopped) writing it several times, it was too good of an evening not to publically comment on. at first, just afterwards, it was a bit too overwhelming to try to put into words, then I traveled to atlanta the following weekend to spend some time with my family and to catch their show at the variety playhouse. then it just kind of got away from me.
so, here goes...on the day of the show, the inaugural show at the national city pavilion, i arrived around 2:00 for soundcheck, a lot was going on; juicy, mike and nick were doing the final audio and stage set up, mickey was finishing setting up his drum kit. i wandered around and got to spend a little time w/karin and linford and chat some with jake and (OtR's manager) glen. everyone was in a great mood looking forward to what was ahead, all was right with the world. there was still an amazing amount of finishing work going on around the venue. i saw full-grown trees planted in a matter of minutes, two huge video screens placed and hung and seats numbers placed on several hundred seats. not to mention a kid getting stuck on a roller coaster @ coney island and taken off the ride by a ladder truck from the anderson township fire department. interesting afternoon. and oh yeah…there was sound check too.
i walked around and shot during the very loose sound check. karin and linford had brought on a couple of extra players to fill in the sound for the show and to more replicate the sound of the album. kenny hutson (a former bandmate of jake’s from the vigilantes of love) joined in on guitar and pedal steel and nick radina (of the cincinnati band, tropicoso), a familiar face from doing tour management and monitors on several previous OtR tours, on percussion, and they were a perfect fit, a great compliment to the sound. i always enjoy hearing the music flush out and come together during the final minutes before a show and i appreciate the opportunity to be there.
the show kicked off just a few minutes after after the scheduled 8:00 pm time with karin walking out on the stage solo, quietly sitting down at the piano and launching into the opening notes of "B.P.D." seconds later, the rest of the band casually strolled and picked up their instruments and joined in. and we were off.
the show was split into two sets, "disc one” and “disc two” (if you aren’t aware by now, they were playing their acclaimed album “ohio” in full, in sequence) and "B.P.D." was the perfect rousing, wailing starting point to the evening. the other “disc one” highlights for me: “what i remember most,” the always beautiful “anything at all” (dedicated to cincinnati's legendary bluegrass diva and good friend of karin, miss katie laur), followed by the rarely played “professional daydreamer,” the fun and sexy (a "make out song," as karin intro'ed it)“lifelong fling” and the apocalyptic hymm and always moving & powerful “changes come,” which karin dedicated to “all of those we remember on memorial day.”
time to take a break and flip sides…
after an OtR first, a clothing change mid-show by karin…and as the crowd strolled back in to the opening notes of “long lost brother,” we were off and running with side two. next was the touching and beautiful yet pained “she,” the rollicking “white girl rap” of “nobody number one,” followed by “cruel & pretty,” which i love and is always a treat to hear. things then slowed down with a heartfelt explaination by karin of writing the next song 5 years ago as war broke out in iraq and how hard it was to believe that 5 years later, while playing “remind us” again that we are still fighting this war. “a wing and a prayer” indeed. during the closing moments of the song, there was an erie sound of fireworks going off in the distance, almost sounding like gunfire.
now we’re gettin’ political and topical and next was one of my favorites, a wailing version of “how long have you been stoned” was dedicated to “the current administration” to a smattering of boos (the show was in the very "red" state of “ohio” afterall). the song closed with an extended, almost tribal drumbeat provided by mickey and nick. a very nice touch. next was the rarely (if ever) played “when you say love,” the torch song/ballad “fool,” the norwood inspired “hometown boy,” vocally always one of karin’s best and then they closed it out the "official" set with the lovely “bothered” and the out-and-out gospel and hopeful words of “idea #21/it’s not too late” with just karin, linford and jake on stage. a very different from the full choir version on the record, but equally as beautiful and moving. and everyone in the place was smiling and standing as they left the stage.
after a short break the encore and surprises kicked in to high gear, with everyone back on stage, a heavy drumbeat and bass line kicked in, then the ironic and tongue-in-cheek words “i went back to ohio” rolled out of karin’s mouth with a half sneer/half smile, the perfect surprise, the perfect song to follow their 2 disc classic tribute to their home state. and they had a blast with it. simply “my city was gone” by cleveland’s “the pretenders” rocked! after the applause died down, there was a request (command?) of “hit it kenny” from karin and we got the tease of the heavy guitar opening riff from “CSN&Y’s” “ohio” (tin soldier’s and nixon’s comin’, we're finally on our own, this summer i hear the drummin', four dead in ohio) before the song transformed into an out and out rockin’ version of gillian welch’s “miss ohio.” "oh-me-oh-my-o, miss ohio" was sure having some fun up there tonight.
and to close out the evening, in this political season, they said goodnight to all with their timely “bi-partisan initiative”…”if a song could be president,” with the “underachiever in chief” line even getting applause…in freakin’ ohio!
it was a fantastic night, hearing many of the songs that had been out of the rotation for a while was like welcoming old friends again and hearing professional daydreamer, when you say love and idea #21 for the first time in concert was wonderful.
the evening ended with smiles, good conversation and hugs at a short after party, then a short stop off for a drink with friend’s @ lebo’s down the street. my only regret of the evening, unfortunately, missing what would have been the undisputed cap on the night…bruce’s soaring karaoke rendition of “sweet caroline.”
soundcheck
the line-up:
karin bergquist - vocals, acoustic guitar, keyboards
linford detweiler - keyboards, acoustic guitar, bass
jake bradley - bass, electric guitar
mickey grimm - drum kit
guests:
kenny hutson - electric guitar, lap steel guitar
nicolas radina - percussion
who'm i kiddin' but me...
words from "who'm i kiddin' but me" by karin bergquist
from "the trumpet child" by over the rhine
photograph (c)2008-bill ivester, taken in new harmony, indiana
Tuesday, June 17, 2008
Sunday, June 15, 2008
over the rhine - "under the beams" @ the rapp granary/new harmony, indiana (06.14.2008)
ok, where to start? it's going to be hard to talk about this without sounding like a gushing fool, seriously.
i headed out to new harmony for over the rhine's show there a little early, wanting to get a feel for the town after discussing it with mickey (grimm, OtR's amazing drummer & resident of new harmony) several times and then recently reading more about it and it's history. while driving over i got a text from karin (bergquist, OtR's amazing vocalist) telling me that everything was fine, but to suggesting to "bring yer waders" and informing me that the national guard was there, since new harmony sits on the banks of the recently severely swollen wabash river... that didn't sound very good. i really didn't know what to expect but i continued to drive and soon began passing army transport trucks (probably 30+ or more) loaded down with sandbags, backhoes and other heavy machinery. ok, now i was a "little concerned." a few more miles down the road i began to see, on both sides of the interstate, what appeared to be lakes, but then i noticed the rooftops of barns and homes and realized that they were really corn and soybean fields, not lakes. ok, now i was a little more concerned, maybe a little bit worried.
i soon reached my exit and a few minutes later, new harmony. only to find one of the most beautiful little towns that i have ever seen in my life. almost surreal in its beauty and charm, it's like a town time forgot. in a good way. then as i turned off of church street towards the granary, i spotted the many national guardsmen, in full camouflage unloading these flatbeads full of sandbags and building virtual walls to protect the historic homes, the "roofless church," the incredible, modern, richard maier designed visitor center from the ravages of nature... high, fast running water. i was within 10 feet of the flow of a river that should have been about a quarter of a mile away. once again, surreal. very surreal.
and yet, none of this dampened the spirit and the people of this amazing place. they went on with life seemingly as they always do. the street antique show was still happening, the local (and very good) country music band was still playing on the street corner, neighbors were still walking and riding their bikes around town, smiling and stopping on the street to say hello, shake hands and welcome all to their home, then offering sightseeing tips to an obvious stranger (me). a woman stopped me as i was coming out of the roofless church, asked where i was visiting from, welcomed me, then put down the kickstand on her bike and said "oh, you've just got to see the garden across the street." she took me by the arm, leaving her bike unattended on the sidewalk and walked me to the garden while explaining much about the town to me. again, very surreal and then you begin to realize, it's so sad that this is such a shocking aberration...this is how we used to be, this how we should be.
a little later, while walking the town before the show and turning the corner towards the granary not long before the doors opened, i crossed paths w/molly and grafton (mickey's wife and son) riding their bikes to the show, waving, laughing and talking all the way (you're probably expecting me to say someting about surreal about now...).
so how do you top off a day like this? you take a town full of these kind people, add a few interested visitors, put them in one place... a beautiful, historical room, "the rapp granary," as linford might say; "a well made thing," to share an evening of beautiful words, music, discussion and friendship led by a group of wonderful, talented and "good" people; karin bergguist, linford detweiler, jake bradley & mickey grimm... "over the rhine." i was lucky enough to spend much of the 30-minute preshow w/mickey's mom, sandy and his sister, kim. what a blast, it's easy to see how mickey "is what he is" after spending some time with sandy, what a kind, sweet and lovely woman.
and it's always a pleasant surprise to walk into a room where OtR is playing and see a grand piano on stage, this time a steinway baby grand was sitting on the front left corner of the stage and linford (OtR's amazing piano player) took full advantage of the beauty it had to offer us. karin was spot on vocally as all have come to expect from her, full of passion, energy, spirituality and beauty. my expectations are always high for her performances and she has never failed to meet (and generally exceed) them. last night was no exception, simply, she rocked the joint. her voice is an amazing "instrument" in it's own right, a true gift of nature. and she has mastered it. jake (yep, OtR's amazing bassist/guitarist) and mickey were as solid as ever and he really seemed to enjoy playing front of his neighbors. it was also great to see molly joining in on several songs, her harmonies w/karin are wonderful.
in short, the show was amazing, a big event for this small town, mostly all locals who seemed to be pleasantly confused by us travelers. the band played two sets, with about a 30 minute break in between to socialize over homemade cookies, brownies and punch, it wasn't "timed" and no one was too rushed. and the treats were delicious.
during the first set linford told a charming story about playing hymns on the family piano for his mother when he was a child and trying to stump her with them (he also noted that he was never able to). he continued the story talking about visiting her recently and taking her to a covered dish church dinner, complete with tater-tot casseroles and fruit and "jello mold" desserts. apparently the entertainment, a local barbershop quartet, was unable to make it and since linford was "a professional musician" and there was a piano in the corner of the room, he became the featured entertainment for the evening. playing old hymns that were called out to him by his mother's friends, he discussed how odd it was that he can't remember songs that he wrote five years ago yet he remembered everything they requested that evening from his early years. a couple of songs into the second set, he mentioned that during the break a woman said "well you talked about the old hymns but you didn't play one." so he launched into a beautiful solo of "let the lower lights be burning" for her, to a quiet, dark, still room. it was stunning. beautiful.
all-in-all, i can't imagine a better day spent. it was beautiful. perfect. and yes...a bit surreal.
the setlist...
first set:
i don't wanna waste
fever
born
desperate
roll
innocent
trumpet child
kiddin' (and mickey really showed off for the hometown crowd)
trouble (w/molly)
break:
homemade brownies and kiss cookies
second set:
motherless child
orphan girl (w/molly)
let the lower light be burning (linford solo)
suitcase
ohio
tom (w/molly)
president (w/molly)
encore
hush now
drunkards prayer
the line-up:
karin bergquist - vocals, guitar, piano, cookie sheet
linford detweiler - piano, guitar, bass, vocals
jake bradley - bass, guitar
mickey grimm - drums and all kinds of shaky things
molly felder - backing vocals
Saturday, June 14, 2008
ellery @ the rudyard kipling/louisville - june (friday the) 13th, 2008
tonight ellery, the husband and wife duo of tasha and justin golden (on piano/vocals and guitar respectively) played an opening set for garrison starr @ the legendary "rudyard kipling" in old louisville. it was a beautiful set in an intimate room with great sound. unfortunately, it was under-attended, but that didn't effect tasha and justin, they played like it was a full house.
i was first exposed to them via over the rhine a few years ago and have seen them 6-8 times since and love what they do more and more each time i see them. tasha has one of the more beautiful, sweet but yet powerful voices that i have heard lately. they are excellent writers, with touching, meaningful and thought prevoking lyrics with beautiful melodies. in other words, they do it all and they do it well. very well.
i got a chance to spend quite a bit of time just chatting about music, people, politics and nothing in particular with them before the show and they are truly generous, nice people, funny and insightful and lovers of music, each other and what they do. as wonderful people as they are artists. which always makes finding and supporting performers like this so much more enjoyable and rewarding.
find out more about them @ http://www.ellerymusic.com
OtR tomorrow night in new harmony. :)
Labels:
ellery,
garrison starr,
justin golden,
review,
tasha golden,
the rudyard kipling
Thursday, June 12, 2008
alejandro escovedo @ headliner's/louisville (06.11.2008)
one of these days i have to play catch up, it's been too long.
but on to "now"...
my god, what an incredible show. hands down the best live performance that i have seen this year. alejandro's band consisting of: alejandro escovedo - guitar & vocals, david pulkingham - guitar, hector munoz -drums (his drummer of 23 years), brian standefer - cello, josh gravelin - bass and carrie rodriguez - violin & backing vocals generates a power that must be heard to be believed. remember the phrase "wall of sound" that was associated w/phil spector in the 60's...well, this is an updated, unabashed, incredible loud and live "wall of sound." all of the basics of hardcore rock and roll, two guitars, bass & drums, supplemented by an amazing cello player and the incomparable "special guest," carrie rodriguez on violin.
tonight was the first night of his tour w/james mcmurtry (who performed a painfully long hour & thirty minute opening set) after opening 3 shows for dave matthews (and as alejandro said, "having the honor of being ignored by 17,000 people per night"). he fully took advantage and enjoyed playing for his audience, a crowd there to see him. and carrie, dove in head first and rocked her fine little ass off, she was a great compliment/addition to this group of players.
most of the songs played tonight were from his new record, "real animal" (due out june 24th & recorded in lexington, ky) which he sold (and i bought) early tonight for the first time tonight + a several of his standards thrown in. one of the highlights was the title song "real animal" which he wrote about iggy pop and who he damn near channeled during the performance of the song. an amazing perfomance. he opened with "put you down" to set the pace and closed out the show with a rocking cover of the stones "beast of burden," during the "pretty, pretty, pretty girls" chant he invited two girls out of the audience that were dancing in front of the stage to join him on stage for the duration. and he enjoyed having them up there. a lot, it seemed.
what a show. go see this man play live. you will not be disappointed.
ben sollee opened the evening and played a beautiful 30 minute solo set. i was standing next to carrie rodriguez who came out to watch ben play and she replied "WOW!" and hooted, whistled, screamed and applauded loudly after each song ben played. pretty high praise from an amazing talent in her own right.
mcmurtry wasn't "bad," just your basic alt-country power trio, after about the third 6-7 minute song that was virtually indistinguishable from the one before or after it, i was ready to move on, unfortunately james wasn't. it would have been a perfect night if it had just been ben followed by alejandro.
but even he and his "set that wouldn't end" couldn't dim the light that was alejandro tonight...
some pics from ben's opening set.
but on to "now"...
my god, what an incredible show. hands down the best live performance that i have seen this year. alejandro's band consisting of: alejandro escovedo - guitar & vocals, david pulkingham - guitar, hector munoz -drums (his drummer of 23 years), brian standefer - cello, josh gravelin - bass and carrie rodriguez - violin & backing vocals generates a power that must be heard to be believed. remember the phrase "wall of sound" that was associated w/phil spector in the 60's...well, this is an updated, unabashed, incredible loud and live "wall of sound." all of the basics of hardcore rock and roll, two guitars, bass & drums, supplemented by an amazing cello player and the incomparable "special guest," carrie rodriguez on violin.
tonight was the first night of his tour w/james mcmurtry (who performed a painfully long hour & thirty minute opening set) after opening 3 shows for dave matthews (and as alejandro said, "having the honor of being ignored by 17,000 people per night"). he fully took advantage and enjoyed playing for his audience, a crowd there to see him. and carrie, dove in head first and rocked her fine little ass off, she was a great compliment/addition to this group of players.
most of the songs played tonight were from his new record, "real animal" (due out june 24th & recorded in lexington, ky) which he sold (and i bought) early tonight for the first time tonight + a several of his standards thrown in. one of the highlights was the title song "real animal" which he wrote about iggy pop and who he damn near channeled during the performance of the song. an amazing perfomance. he opened with "put you down" to set the pace and closed out the show with a rocking cover of the stones "beast of burden," during the "pretty, pretty, pretty girls" chant he invited two girls out of the audience that were dancing in front of the stage to join him on stage for the duration. and he enjoyed having them up there. a lot, it seemed.
what a show. go see this man play live. you will not be disappointed.
ben sollee opened the evening and played a beautiful 30 minute solo set. i was standing next to carrie rodriguez who came out to watch ben play and she replied "WOW!" and hooted, whistled, screamed and applauded loudly after each song ben played. pretty high praise from an amazing talent in her own right.
mcmurtry wasn't "bad," just your basic alt-country power trio, after about the third 6-7 minute song that was virtually indistinguishable from the one before or after it, i was ready to move on, unfortunately james wasn't. it would have been a perfect night if it had just been ben followed by alejandro.
but even he and his "set that wouldn't end" couldn't dim the light that was alejandro tonight...
some pics from ben's opening set.
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