Live Review: TSITR, others…

Category: Blog — @ 4:19 pm March 20, 2005

Some thoughts on last night’s The Show is the Rainbow CD release party at Sokol Underground, where around 110 showed up:

I missed Shineyville and Milk, thanks to Wake Forest. I caught Caught in the Fall. The guy running the show said they were a hardcore band. I wouldn’t call what they do “hardcore,” but what do I know? I’m not exactly an expert on the genre. The people who were surrounding them on the floor seemed into it, and that’s all that really matters. Jabid was a guy who performed over recorded synth/videogame music/noise paced at about 300 bpm while gameshow footage and “shock” video (operating procedures, disease images, conjoined twins) was shown on a screen behind him. He also performed on the floor.

The Show is the Rainbow a.k.a. Darren Keen, used the screen to show a video during his performance, which took place both on and off the floor. The proceedings began with Darren lambasting the soundguy about the house music — Joy Division’s “Love Will Tear Us Apart.” Said Darren, “I hate The Cure. Turn that shit off!” I still don’t know if he knew… well, whatever.

Mr. Keen performed his entire CD, Radboyz Only!!!, in sequence, Cursive-style. If you haven’t seen TSITR before, it’s Darren singing/rapping over a CDR of his music interspersed with yelling at the crowd and assorted wicked dance moves. He’s an entertainer. In the past, Darren did his shtick from the floor with the lights on, running around the crowd, yelling in their faces — a true entertainment outreach program. And the crowd got into it. Unfortunately, most of that interaction was lost with his new video — a homemade i-movie affair that mixed footage of Darren and his friends with mod graphics, text, etc., all sequenced to the music. Sort of like The Faint’s deal, but on a smaller scale. And just like with The Faint, the crowd tended to keep its eyes on the video and not Darren, resulting in a rather dead audience.

Here’s one example where the video was a deficit instead of an enhancement: In the past, one of Darren’s funnier bits was his intro, where he lip-synched a prerecorded bit and filled-in the blanks, depending on where he was and who he was performing with. “It’s great to be here at (fill in venue name).” It was a hoot. Now he uses a video that shows him in a shower reciting the intro (he still fills in the blanks live). Interesting, but not as funny. On the other hand, some of the video footage was hysterical and effective, such as the shot of a young GW flipping off a television camera before an interview, repeated over and over, and the footage of Keen’s mouth videotaped sideways. Don’t get me wrong, it was a good little film, but it took away from a live performance that’s already dependent on prerecorded audio and sucked the life right out of the audience.

The nine songs from the new CD are pure TSITR — fun homemade beats, electric guitar touches, sound effects, and Darren’s sissy rap mixed with falsetto crooning. Crowd pleaser “Up a Creek without a Saddle” was introduced as a song about how much he hates Bright Eyes. I couldn’t make out the words because of the sound quality of the vocals (and I don’t have a copy of the CD). A lot of it sounded more like a dig at scenesters who frequent indie rock shows. Ironically, one of the best songs off his new album, “Babe Born with Blue Eyes,” is a ballad that sounds like a Bright Eyes song a la Digital Ash. I wasn’t the only one who noticed this. Other highwater marks were “Jailbait Babycake,” a catchy number about pop punk frontmen chasing after 14-year-old girls, and another slower number performed about halfway through the set.

All in all, TSITR’s music can be fun and compelling, but it’s the live show that makes TSITR TSITR. With the video, the lights out and Darren relegated to the front of the room, a lot of that live exuberance was lost. Plus there was no fake blood. When the set ended, Joy Division came back on and Darren again yelled for the sound guy to turn it off. Instead, he turned it up.

We all get a night off to prepare for Men of Porn and Bloodcow at The Brother’s. Oh boy…

–Got comments? Post ’em here.

Lazy-i

Live Review: Low, Kid Dakota; The Show is the Rainbow tonight

Category: Blog — @ 3:25 pm March 19, 2005

Quite a different scene from the last Low show at Sokol Underground. For one thing, there were twice as many people there — around 240 — which is still somewhat disappointing, considering that Low is easily one of the most important bands currently on the road. Hell, they topped the CMJ charts for a month with their new album, and still most people around here never heard of them.

After a set by The Mariannes, which I missed due to the NCAAs, Kid Dakota took the stage as a two-piece — just frontman Darren Jackson dressed to the nines in a black suit on electric guitar and vocals, and an intense Christopher McGuire on drums who I’m told performs with John Vanderslice. The music was droning rock, a good fit as an opener for Low. Jackson’s voice is a facsimile of Thom Yorke’s without the high-end, agreeable if somewhat limited melodywise. As the set progressed, Zak from Low joined in, along with Alan Sparhawk. I liked it, though the songs didn’t sound like the stuff I’ve heard from the new Kid Dakota CD on the Chairckickers website. McGuire ended up being a real show-stealer. He was bundle of quirky mannerisms, changing his cymbals after every song and punctuating the set by raising his drumstick over his head then punching it through the snarehead, leaving it sticking straight out as he walked off.

Then came Low. Sparhawk was in a chatty mood, maybe he was nervous, though I doubt it. At one point he said, “I’m talking more than I’m singing tonight.” The set began with “Monkey,” off the new album, and from where I stood — off of stage right, just behind the stack — it sounded good. But Sparhawk was so disappointed that he wanted to play the song over. Apparently Mimi’s bass drum hadn’t properly mic-ed and couldn’t be heard in the audience. After the soundguy hooked it up, Sparhawk was ready hit it again, but Zak talked him out of it. They would up playing it again during the encore.

I expected the performance to be an all-out rock bonanza, seeing as The Great Destroyer has very few lows (so to speak), but was pleasantly surprised by the mix of slow/quiet older songs with new uptempo rockers. The crowd, bustling with local music notables, was adoring — one girl was draped over a monitor swooning the entire set, while another feverishly scribbled in a notebook — I found out later that she was actually drawing sketches of the band (which actually looked pretty cool). One guy standing by the stage had his head bowed throughout the slower songs, reverentially. And yes, there were a few chatterboxes jawing about amps and guitars off to the side, but hardly a distraction.

Maybe because this was the first show after a few weeks off, but there were a number of noticeable technical glitches, specifically with Sparhawk’s guitar rig. Pedals were missed at the worst moments (such as the explosion at the end of “When I Go Deaf”), and there were occasional dropouts. I could barely hear Mimi’s cymbals all night. Despite that, it was another very special Low show, highlighted a brief acoustic set toward the middle, where Zak put down the bass and pulled out an acoustic guitar. It ended with Sparhawk dedicating “Death of a Salesman” to his dad, who was in the audience. The hubby-and-wife team of Parker and Sparhawk continue to amaze me with their pitch-perfect, brokenhearted harmonies — the element that, for me, makes Low one of the most poignant and affecting band going these days. If you missed it, you missed a lot.

Tonight, of course, is The Show is the Rainbow CD release show at Sokol Underground with Jabid, Caught in the Fall, Milk and Shineyville. Five bands, though Darren Keen — the show behind The Show — tells me that Jabid only plays 11 minutes and Milk is a DVD puppet show. Watch out for flying blood.

–Got comments? Post ’em here.

Lazy-i

LOW tonight at Sokol Underground with The Mariannes, Kid Dakota

Category: Blog — @ 3:04 pm March 18, 2005

Tonight’s Low gig at Sokol Underground should be something special. It’s the band’s opening show on this tour. “We’ve got some family coming down from South Dakota,” Mimi said during our interview last week. I asked her what we could expect. Will it be the same sort of performance as the last time they came through? “For the most part,” she said. “We’re gonna be playing the new songs, which will add a new element to it. It’s just us three. At one point we go acoustic. Zak pulls out an acoustic guitar. It’s a break in the middle of the set.”

Low is one of those bands that historically hasn’t drawn well in Omaha — only 130 in Feb 2003 (here’s the review w/pics). I can’t understand why. Maybe it’s the lack of radio support or that fact that the band had a reputation for playing dark, hushed sets. Tonight’s Low show will be anything but a downer, and for those who choose to miss this, it’s their loss.

Opening the show is Omaha favorites The Mariannes and Kid Dakota, a band that’s on the record label owned by Low, Chairkickers. As you would expect, Kid Dakota’s music has a similar slow, quiet yet powerful sound, like a storm brewing on the horizon. Check out this song from the Chairkickers’ site. See you tonight.

–Got comments? Post ’em here.

Lazy-i

Column 17: A peek inside the Creek, more news; Happy St. Patrick’s Day

Category: Blog — @ 1:27 pm March 17, 2005

As always, the column is explained in the column. As a post script to the Desaparecidos comment, I ran into someone close to that project who insists that it’s still on in spite of what the Creek guys told me. The original plan was for Oberst to add his vocals and other tracks to the already-completed Desa recordings via a mobile recording unit that Mike Mogis has taken with him on the Bright Eyes tour. The Creek guys said, however, that Oberst and Mogis decided against doing the recordings on the road, fearing that the recording would be sub par. That leaves a “best scenario” of Oberst recording the tracks after this first leg of the Bright Eyes tour, if it happens at all. You have to think that Creek would love to put out a new Desa record for sheer sales’ sake — it could be as big as the duo Bright Eyes’ discs.

Column 17 — Creek Runoff

It was so long and detailed that you’re probably still reading last week’s cover story about Saddle Creek Records. Though it clocked in at just over 3,200 words I still had to cut 1,500 of exciting — nay important — information to make it all fit with those strangely inappropriate photos of the Creek staff looking beaten and broken (I wasn’t responsible for the photo concept or the headline used in the printed version, which had nothing to do with the article). So instead of leaving data unwritten to eventually fade from memory, here’s a few items from the Q&A session with Creek yes-men Robb Nansel and Jason Kulbel that didn’t make the cut.

But first, a brief tour of the Creek’s lavish new world headquarters, where the company was forced to move by a combination of success and landlords. Like their old Benson digs, the new offices are unmarked, making them difficult to find among the catacombs of alleyways south of 75th and Cass — a faceless building hidden among faceless buildings. Once inside you still can’t tell you’re standing in the epicenter of the indie rock world. Sure, there’s CD artwork on one wall from the latest releases by The Faint and Bright Eyes and The Good Life, but little else distinguishes the place from any other low-rent, start-up squatter’s flat.
Nothing, that is, except for the sound equipment stacked in a shit pile in the center of the room, stuff that Kulbel said returned on the Bright Eyes bus. Among the goodies, a box containing the broken remains of an electric guitar, it’s neck a jagged piece of well-lacquered wood. Somewhere the E-bay gods drooled.
To the left, the “graphics room” where designer/hero Jadon Ulrich slouched bleary-eyed behind a computer. His walls are barren except for a cartoon-quality fan painting of Bright Eyes’ Conor Oberst looking as if he’s standing on the face of the moon, his hair-swoop covering his face. “That came back on the bus, too,” Jadon says, grinning. “Isn’t it great?”

We stroll through the stock room, where boxes upon boxes of T-shirts, CDs and other “merch” are stacked in racks — a huge improvement over the flotsam found in the dirty basement storeroom of their old offices. Adjacent is another room used for packaging. It’s empty now, but it’s easy to imagine a small squadron of T-shirted hipsters bent over the long table, joylessly stuffing envelopes with oversized hoodies.

Boxed in a windowed corner office in the back stockroom is the label’s new accountant, Mike Brown, also working late (It’s tax season, after all). Again, no artwork on his walls. The same holds true for Nansel’s and Kulbel’s offices. The walls are empty while the floors are crowded with packages, CDs and other junk. Nansel’s office boasts a decent stereo system with a relic from the past called “a turntable.” He brazenly shows off a Metallica box set that an industry goon has mailed him. “Look, it’s numbered,” he points to a little metal label on the case, “but this one, see, it doesn’t have a number!” Cool, are you gonna E-bay it? Nansel scowls. “No, dude, I’m gonna listen to it.”

Alright, alright, enough colorful description. Where’s the newsy stuff I promised?

— Kulbel and Nansel said Creek releases for ’05 include a Cursive B-sides collection, solo albums by both members of Azure Ray — Maria Taylor (called 11:11, slated for May 24) and Orenda Fink (out some time later this year, after her wedding to The Faint’s Todd Baechle), and a new Mayday record. No mention of a new Desaparecidos album. When pressed, the duo just nodded their head, saying it seemed unlikely that Oberst would be able to record his tracks while on the road as originally planned.

— Lincoln’s Presto! Studios is moving to Omaha as their old Lincoln studios has a date with a wrecking ball. Mike Mogis recently purchased a large house at around 67th and Dodge that likely will be used as a studio.

— The Faint’s last album, Wet From Birth, has sold around 65,000 copies. Was it a disappointment considering the high hopes? Not at all, said Kulbel, though Nansel said he expected more. They predict another sales spike when The Faint hits the road with Bright Eyes for the Digital Ash in a Digital Urn tour later this spring.

— The much rumored Bright Eyes documentary, which began filming a couple years ago, is dead, Kulbel said. Another documentary, however, is on the horizon.

Before I forget — Happy St. Patrick’s day to y’all. I’ll hopefully be spending the evening at The Dubliner, getting lost in a frothy cup of Guiness while studying my brackets.

–Got comments? Post ’em here.

Lazy-i

Low takes the kids on the road; Mimi talks majors

Category: Blog — @ 1:19 pm March 16, 2005

Just placed online, an interview with Low’s Mimi Parker (read it here). The story’s focus is on how and why the band brings their kids with them on tour, their new album and why they’ve gotten louder over the years. I can unequivocally tell you that the new Low album, The Great Destroyer, is my favorite of their entire catalog — it just plain rocks.

Among the stuff that didn’t make it into the interview, I asked Mimi if the momentum created from the last two rather successful albums was what drew them away from Kranky to Sub Pop. “Maybe a little bit,” Parker said. “We love Kranky. We were sad to go, but at same time, Kranky does things a certain way and we respect them for it, but we kind of just decided we needed to bump it up a bit and see what Sub Pop could do. Sub Pop has been working some great bands and had big successes.”

But surely Low has had interest from the majors, right?

“Not really seriously,” Parker said. “We had lunch with someone once. At the same time, we did kind of decide that it would be a crazy route to take. You’re such a small fish in a big pond. Majors are so unstable now. People are coming and going so fast. You sign with someone and have an A&R person who loves you, and then they’re gone and you’re stranded there.”

Ah, that same old story. Imagine if Low were on a label. I, too, can’t see how it would work. I asked Mimi how she would react the first time the label guy called after hearing the new record saying “Where’s the single?” She laughed. “I’d tell him that they’re all singles.”

Mark it down, Low plays at Sokol Underground Friday night with The Mariannes and Kid Dakota.

Post ’em here.>

Lazy-i

Live review: Todd Grant, Dolorean; Son, Ambulance, Mal Madrigal tonight

Category: Blog — @ 1:25 pm March 15, 2005

So I never got around to putting my thoughts down on the Todd Grant concert yesterday afternoon because I was too busy writing a feature on Low that’ll go online tomorrow morning, as well as putting together Column 17 for Thursday. Thus is life. I was also too bushed to go to Head of Femur last night (a review or impressions would be appreciated on the webboard).

That said, Sunday night’s Todd Grant show was a real treat. Grant’s band, featuring a scorching Mike Brannan on lead guitar (Who knew he was such a cocky axman? It’s been a long time since Guerilla Theater.) and hammerin’ Dan Crowell on drums was remarkable (Oh yeah, and that Tim Kasher kid who stood off to the side on bass was good, too. Something tells me he could go places). Grant looked comfortable and assured in the frontman position, and sounded like he never left the stage for all those years. A guy next to me called his music “run-of-the-mill roots rock” and maybe he was right, but for whatever reason this critic, who usually yawns at this sort of thing, loved it. It was Grant’s whole-hearted love of performing these songs that made the set endearing — you could tell that each one meant something to him, was written without thinking of style or genre or trying to make a hit. Grant writes and plays music because, well, that’s what he does. It’s been the bane and boom of his life. Vocally, he reminds me of a cross between Warren Zevon, Lou Reed and the long forgotten Gram Parker (Who owns a copy of Squeezing out Sparks? Anybody? Come on, people!). The songs ranged between quieter folky stuff with a kick to full-blown barroom rockers. The highlight was the closing number (an old Compost song, Grant told me afterward) that just blew the place up. You’ll get a chance to see Grant and his band again April 2 at O’Leaver’s.

Next up was headliner Dolorean. I had planned to take off right after the Grant set to get home and finish the Low story, but was talked into catching the front end of the singer/songwriter’s set. I’ve never heard his records before and have been told that they’re amazing. His stage show, however, was less so. Dolorean, a.k.a. Silverton, Oregon’s Jay Clarke, has a voice and style that resembles Neil Young’s quieter stuff to a fault. I couldn’t shake the comparison. And while I dig Neil Young, and liked a lot of what I heard from Dolorean, I could never get my mind off the resemblance. There has to be more to this guy than that, but I didn’t have time to discover it, heading home after the fourth song.

Tonight: Son, Ambulance, Jason Anderson (Wolf Colonel) and Mal Madrigal at Sokol Underground. Should be another good one — which would make six night’s of good shows in a row. Who needs SXSW, anyway? Show’s at 9, tickets are $7.

–Got comments? Post ’em here.

Lazy-i

Last night and tonight

Category: Blog — @ 2:16 pm March 14, 2005

Yes, I went to the Todd Grant/Dolorean show last night, but you’re going to have to wait until later today for a live review (sometime late this afternoon). Just a reminder, briefly, of tonight’s big show: Head of Femur with The Holy Ghost and The Minus Story at The Brother’s Lounge, 3812 Farnam. Show starts at 10 p.m. and is a measly $5. Will it be the show of the year? Maybe. But it’s not the only show tonight: The Hold Steady is at Sokol Underground with The Oranges Band and Ladyfinger. That one’s $8 and starts at 9. Check back here later for more.

–Got comments? Post ’em here.

Lazy-i

Live Review: The Nein, Little Brazil; Todd Grant Project tonight

Category: Blog — @ 4:00 pm March 13, 2005

O’Leaver’s continues to pick up momentum to the point where there’s always an SRO crowd, at least for the last three or four shows I’ve seen there. Not huge, but big, respectable (though I’m told hardly anyone was there for The Flesh Wednesday night, but that’s another story). The stars were out for The Nein last night. Plenty of local music notables, bands, label people. The Nein is The White Octave without Criteria’s Stephen Pedersen (who was in the audience cheering on his former comrades). With a new CD out on Sonic Unyon, the band carried itself like seasoned indie rock veterans, playing tunes that sounded like typical angular indie rock with a hook. The lead singer/guitarist has a voice that (when you could hear it in the poor mix) was reminiscent of a young, gritty Elvis Costello — a comparison that will seem out of the blue for these guys who would probably prefer to be compared to the usual suspects (Gang of Four, Pixies, etc.). Their music, of course, sounded nothing like Costello’s. Overall, I guess I liked it, though we’ve all heard these songs before in one form or another. I think if they pulled it back they’d be better for it. That said, the CD is a keeper and worth finding.

You could blame the sound for The Nein’s less than magnetic live performance, except for the fact that the band that followed never sounded better. It was the second time I’ve seen Little Brazil v. 2.0 and probably their best live performance. I’ve been hearing some of these songs for what seems like two years now (they still play the tunes that originally appeared on their self-produced demo). Little Brazil doesn’t do anything terribly different than any other indie pop-rock band. They live off their rhythm section, specifically the bass lines that give all the songs an undeniable bounce. The secret ingredient continues to be Landon Hedges’ clear-yet-quirky, almost forlorn voice that has the same strange lonely lilt as everyone’s favorite green muppet – no, not just like it, but with that same sad, honest quality. He’s got the voice of your little brother or the guy who sat alone in study hall reading comic books who wouldn’t hurt a fly. He’s pre-puberty Peter Brady. And maybe it’s because I’ve heard all these songs so many times that the new one, which Hedges said they’ve only played live a couple times, seemed so good – a typical indie song that starts by focusing on Hedges and a spare guitar line, bleeds into a medium-tempo rocker and ends with the usual bombast, Hedges yelling the same line over and over before joining everyone else in the pounding. Little Brazil is first and foremost an indie rock band in the classic manner, but I have to wonder how they’d sound playing a set of straight-up electric ballads. As respectable as their new full-length is amidst the multitude of indie CDs crowding the bins these days, it’s the next record that will push them out of that enormous and faceless pack. It has to.

Tonight, Whipkey, Todd Grant and Dolorean at Sokol Underground, $7, 9 p.m.

–Got comments? Post ’em here.

Lazy-i

Statistics tonight, The Nein tomorrow, Todd Grant Sunday…

Category: Blog — @ 1:26 pm March 11, 2005

You got three days of shows this weekend. All good. No excuses. None. It all starts tonight with OK Go, Statistics and Rescue at Sokol Underground. I have never heard OK Go before. They’re a Chicago trio. They’re compared to The Beta Band, Modest Mouse and The Promise Ring by All Music. Well, two out of three ain’t bad. I’m going tonight just to see Statistics again. The last time they played here, as a trio, they were lean and hungry, without any noodle-y keyboards or other flotsam, just plain ol’ rock. For whatever reason All Music compares Statistics to Bright Eyes, The Faint and Grandaddy, three bands that they sound nothing like in the least (which immediately puts the OK Go comparisons into question).

Tomorrow night it’s The Nein at O’Leaver’s. The Nein, incidentally, is The White Octave without Stephen Pedersen. That said, they sound sort of like The White Octave without Stephen Pederson, but with a few more hooks in their bag of tricks. I’ve been listening to their six-song EP on Sonic Unyon and give it a well-deserved “Yes,” especially for the song “Handout” which has a killer hook of its own. Opening is Doris Henson, of which I know nothing.

Then Sunday is Dolorean, a laid-back folk-rocky, harmonizing Elliott Smith-meets-Crosby-Stills-and-Nash type singer-songwriter. Pleasant enough, but I’m going for the opener, The Todd Grant Project (which I wrote about yesterday, scroll down), featuring Grant, Tim Kasher (The Good Life) on bass, Mike Brannan (owner/operator of The Ranch Bowl and Caffeine Dream) on guitar and Dan Crowell (ex-Digital Sex) on drums. Get there early to see a solo set by singer/songwriter Matt Whipkey (Anonymous American, INXS try-outs).

It doesn’t stop there. There are also good shows coming on Monday and Tuesday, but we’ll get to those later.

–Got comments? Post ’em here.

Lazy-i

Column 16: The Return of Omaha’s Original Strangled Soul

Category: Blog — @ 1:11 pm March 10, 2005

The origin of this week’s column is explained in the lead. Todd Grant, his girlfriend Stephanie and I talked for about two hours at the Dundee Dell Saturday afternoon, discussing topics way beyond his upcoming project with Tim Kasher. Grant’s role in the Omaha music scene during the ’90s Golden Age can’t be understated. Now he’s making a new mark on today’s scene with the musicians who were influenced by him. Kinda poetic, ain’t it?

Grant said a sense of camaraderie is what separates today’s Omaha music scene from the one 10 years ago. “One of the biggest differences is that a spirit of cooperation wasn’t around back then. It was one big pissing contest,” Grant said. “I was always open to working with other people, but the only ones who took me up on it was Tim (Kasher) who was 17 at the time, Pat Buchanan (of Mousetrap) and Greg Cosgrove (Clark County).” Grant remembers playing at Kilgore’s back in the day with a 13-year-old Conor Oberst opening. “I’m proud of all those guys,” he said, referring to the Saddle Creek artists. “Nansel and Tim and the Baechles. Seeing Tim go from The March Hares to Cursive to today, it’s just phenomenal really. They say the Saddle Creek thing is a fluke, but in all the cities I’ve played at, I never heard bands that made you raise an eyebrow like the ones from around here.”

Column 16 — Grant-ed a Second Chance

If you went to rock shows back in the ’90s you’ve heard of Todd Grant, either as a solo act or as part of Compost, a band he fronted with Matt Rutledge, Mike Fratt and others.
Out of the blue last fall, a buzz began ringing around the city that Grant was back and working with none other than Tim Kasher, frontman of Cursive and The Good Life. Kasher mentioned the Grant project when I interviewed him last August, saying he and drummer Roger Lewis were involved and calling Todd “a good friend and a role model.”
Role model? Some would raise an eyebrow over that one. After all, where had Grant been the last five or six years?
About a week ago, a friend of mine found a used copy of Grant’s 1994 solo CD, Strangled Soul, at Cool Stuff for $4.99. He passed it onto me for research purposes. I spent the next three days enjoying a collection of music that has held up remarkably well over the years. Not your usual singer/songwriter fair, Grant’s songs are like listening to pain spikes or peering into a cellar of dark loneliness. The CD sports song titles like “Valium & Coca-Cola,” “Happy Going Nowhere,” and “The Know,” with its telling line, “Wouldn’t it be better / To be left alone / Where these demons inside you / Can bother no one?” Grant has a showman’s charisma, belting out the lines in a style that recalls Warren Zevon, and more recently, American Music Club’s Mark Eitzel.
I got Grant’s number from a local promoter and set up an interview. The days leading up to it, people came out of the woodwork with odd requests like, “Check out his teeth” or “Ask him about the scar on his back.” Everyone had a weird Grant story. I expected a badly damaged, war-torn lost soul to show up at the Dundee Dell and not the hip-looking guy dressed in black with long black hair and soul patch, his girlfriend, Stephanie Wyscarver, in tow. Over a couple hours, a gallon of Diet Coke and too many cigarettes, Grant, 34, told me how drugs had gotten the better of him most of his adult life, and how he has managed to free himself.
“I had a lung removed when I was 17. The medication led to other drugs, and it all caught up with me in ’99,” he said casually between puffs. “One thing about being an outlaw, you can never turn to the law for help.”
Grant says his turnaround began after getting arrested by the state patrol, who had been watching him for months. He said his three days in jail without drugs “were hell.” He would eventually get probation and re-enter a methadone program that he’d preemptively began prior to the arrest.

And then he just disappeared. “From ’99 until now, I haven’t been out of the house,” he said. “I don’t know why I stayed disconnected for so many years. Methadone was the hard part. For two and a half years I didn’t have a guitar, didn’t write. I was literally a zombie.”
When he finished the methadone program in January 2004, Grant slowly began rediscovering old acquaintances. Among them Wyscarver, who he’s since moved in with. And Kasher, who had a different opinion of Strangled Soul. “Tim thought the songs were great, but that the production was too slick and over the top,” Grant said.
Kasher, who had never produced a band before, took Grant as his first project. “Tim and I got together between his tours. We started practicing in the summertime and it came together quickly.”
Between Cursive and Good Life tours, Grant and Kasher laid down tracks at Mike Brannan’s Artery Studios, with Kasher on bass, Roger Lewis on drums, and Brannan on guitar. Old friends Matt Rutledge and Mike Daeges also are involved, while ’89 Cubs guitarist Dan Brennan manned the board.
Grant says the new music isn’t much different from the stuff on Strangled Soul, “but with Tim’s arrangements, there are things that are undeniably Kasher-esque.” With Kasher now back from tour, Grant hopes to finish the CD in the brief window of time before he leaves again.

In that window, Grant and a band that includes Kasher, Brannan and drummer Dan Crowell will perform on stage as an opener for Dolorean March 13 at Sokol Underground.
Grant said a label has expressed interest in releasing the finished recording, and perhaps a tour will follow. But after that, his future is blurry.

“I feel like there’s still a lot of work to do, but I’m now in a position to do it,” he said. “When I look back at what I’ve done and how I went about it as a beast, it’s ridiculous to think that having cleaned up my act and grown up a bit that I wouldn’t be able to pull it off with a clear head. It’s humbling to know that after all I’ve been through that so many people still care.”

–Got comments? Post ’em here.

Lazy-i