Delays, delays… Live Review: Tapes ‘n’ Tapes; Simon Joyner, David Mead tonight…

Category: Blog — @ 5:51 pm June 27, 2006

Sorry for the delay in updating the blog but I’ve been busy working on a massive feature story on Speed! Nebraska Records, that I’m told will be the cover story for this week’s issue of The Reader. You’ll, of course, be able to read it online here tomorrow morning. It was originally slated to be a mere show preview for their label showcase Friday at Sokol Underground, then out of the blue, the fine folks at The Reader said…”Uh, we were thinking cover.” And that changed everything.

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BTW, thanks to everyone who commented on the Fun City column. No word on what the World-Herald thought of it. Who am I kidding? I don’t think the World-Herald knows The Reader (and lazy-i, for that matter) exists. And if they did, they certainly wouldn’t acknowledge it. Way too low-brow for them. The words “riff-raff” come to mind (and just what are you doing reading this?). Ah well, it’s not so bad being a media bottom-feeder.

So Tapes ‘n’ Tapes…. Yeah… uh… Look, no question that they’re popular. They outdrew Fiery Furnaces by at least a couple dozen people last Friday night. But for the life of me, I didn’t get what they were going for. They sounded like a watered down version of Wolf Parade to me. Uninteresting. I wasn’t alone in that opinion, judging from the comments I heard (One guy said, “This is what you get when you go see a band that’s been talked up on some bloggers’ website.”). The promoters, on the other hand, loved them, as did the majority of people there. I guess you need to hear their album first, which I haven’t.

Which brings us to tonight’s festivities and the choices that you’ll have to make. Kyle Harvey, whose taste is impeccable and beyond reproach, says you’d be crazy to miss singer/songwriter David Mead at Mick’s (at a show that Kyle is opening… think he’s impartial?). I’ve never heard this guy before so I have no opinion other than to say if Kyle says he’s good, he’s good. But…

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Down the street and ‘cross town, O’Leaver’s is hosting a show that I simply can’t miss: Simon Joyner and the Wind-up Birds featuring Chris Deden, Mike Friedman, Dave Hawkins, Alex McManus and Mike Tulis. I have to assume Joyner will be playing songs from his forthcoming full-length that I’ve been told is a career-changing album for him. Also on the bill is Coolzey and Miracles of God.

Both shows are $5. Mick’s starts at 9. O’Leaver’s, 9:30.

–Got comments? Post ’em here.

Lazy-i

Live Review: The Fiery Furnaces; Tapes and Tapes tonight…

Category: Blog — @ 12:36 pm June 23, 2006

I was expecting The Fiery Furnaces‘ live set to be different from their albums — no keyboards on this tour, remember? — but I wasn’t expecting the metal-rock-Rush-prog-Talking Head-Zappa-Sabbath explosion that I and about 200 of my closest friends got last night at the Sokol. “Bombastic” doesn’t quite cut it. “Mercurial guitar histrionics”? Not exactly. “Anxiety-inducing tension”? Close, but no cigar. I admit to not being a follower of said band, so I can’t really tell you how differently they sounded from their previous incarnations. I have only one of their CDs — their newest one, which Sister Eleanor said they’d be dipping from extensively. From that disc, I only recognized one song — the surrealistic “I’m in No Mood” and only because there’s no mistaking the Russian pastiche melody-line, which when played on guitar instead of keys, was downright Queen-esque. Forget all the pretty stuff on the record, Eleanor has a perfect rock voice that rests somewhere between Chrissie Hynde and Johnny Rotten. Meanwhile, I am now convinced that Brother Matthew is some type of mad genius wunderkind. It’s one thing to write this Dali-esque music, it’s another thing entirely to play guitar with the virtuosity that he commands. Who needs a synthesizer when you can make your ax create similar (or better) sounds? The bottom line: I like them better as a full-out metal band with punk overtones and a prog jones that comes from listening to too much ’70s arena rock (Did I mention Rush?). Yes, their records are interesting, almost quaint. Their live show belongs on a touring festival sandwiched between roaring sets by Cardiacs and The Who.

Yes, oh yes, I caught Kite Pilot, and they were their usual fine selves. I’ve seen them at least a half-dozen times and am aware that Sokol Underground has a way of bringing out the best in them (They should have recorded last night’s live set, in fact, why don’t more bands do that? Image the marketing potential of a record called Live at Sokol Underground…). I have no idea what they’re going to do without Austin Britton playing guitar or, like last night, washboard. They’ll find a way, just as I’m sure Austin has found his way, which is why he’s headed to Cali under the command of a higher calling.

So let’s take a moment to do a quick summary of very recent escapees: Nick White, Denver Dalley, Nik Fackler and now Austin Britton. Fun City is becoming less and less fun every day.

* * *

A crazy indie smorgasbord of a weekend began last night and continues on and on and on. Tonight it’s maybe the hottest band in the world (at least for the right-now) Tapes ‘n’ Tapes at Sokol Underground with Figurines and Cold War Kids. Tapes ‘n’ Tapes are so crazy hot that I’ve never heard a single song by them and you probably haven’t, either, yet they’re still almost instantly recognized as the “It” band of the moment. If last night’s turnout was disappointing (and it was) tonight’s will be on the other end of the spectrum. I’m just saying. Every time I predict a sellout I’m wrong, so I’m not predicting one tonight. $10, 9 p.m.

Saturday night, the homecoming of Little Brazil at Sokol Underground, a make-up show for the gig they missed earlier this year with The Cops, a gig that I’m told they still feel guilty about missing. Methinks they’ll channel that guilt into some kind of weird mega-performance where they’ll attempt to change our personal definition of the word ROCK. Helping them out will be Prospect Avenue and Statistics (no idea who’s backing Denver for tonight’s gig). 9 p.m. $7.

Everything shifts to O’Leaver’s Sunday night for Eagle*Seagull, Connor and Andrew Morgan. If you’ve never caught E*S before, there will be no better time. Strangely, I’ve watched them perform at O’Leaver’s, Sokol and an art gallery and their O’Leaver’s show was hands down the best, even though they barely have room to move on the bar’s “stage.” $5, 9:30 p.m.

Watch for updates/reviews all weekend…

–Got comments? Post ’em here.

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Lazy-i

Column 82: Conor in the park, and welcome to Fun City; The Fiery Furnaces tonight…

Category: Blog — @ 12:05 pm June 22, 2006

The final word on the Bright Eyes show now that we’re all toweled off; and, of course, some thoughts on the Omaha World-Herald‘s new designation for Omaha…

Column 82 — Living in Fun City
It’s all about furniture and cheesecake.
So I was in the park Saturday night to watch Bright Eyes. Were you?

A lot of you were, maybe 10,000, maybe 8,000, maybe 5,000. Depends who you ask. No one really knows for sure. There were a lot of people there. And all of them were wet. Just like me.

A few brief observation about the “event.” As expected, it wasn’t nearly the size of gathering that 311 was two years ago. Why would it be? Bright Eyes is under the radar, folks. Conor Oberst writes intelligent music that demands an investment from its listeners. It’s not head-bobbing groove candy that asks nothing from the brain pan other than the ability to recognize primordial rhythms. Nothing wrong with dance music. It is, as we all know, the mode o’ day of the status quo. Bright Eyes, on the other hand, whose music is at times beautiful and always lyrically interesting, ain’t exactly the bread-and-butter of Clear Channel-infected commercial radio, keeping it safely under the radar. Which makes Saturday’s opening acts Neva Dinova and Gruff Rhys downright underground.

So while you could argue that most of the people in the park on Saturday afternoon were there only to enjoy a free “event” with their families, and that the entertainment could just as well have been three guys and bagpipe, you’d be wrong. The rain proved it. No casual park-goers would have stood their ground from the nexus of that monsoon. It wasn’t just raining. It was gushing. Forget about cats and dogs, this was biblical. And throughout the maelstrom, thousands refused to leave, both young and old (though mostly young). Talk about your acid test in the park. Conor Oberst found out who his true fan base was in his hometown. They were standing right in front of him, shivering wet, wanting to hear more.

Which brings us to the Omaha World-Herald and its bizarre declaration of the city’s victory over the boredom. Glancing at the cover of the Sunday paper, there on top of the page was a “news story” headlined “Young Omahans hail new Fun City.” Yes, folks, in case you were wondering, we now live in Fun City. Evidence of this is the Qwest Center and its endless stream of vintage-rock concerts whose tickets cost more than a typical “young Omahan” brings home in a week at his minimum-wage job. “Fun” also means lots of shopping opportunities, too. As the story boasted, by god, Omaha now has high-end retailers like Williams-Sonoma and Pottery Barn. And, as everyone knows, once you get a Cheesecake Factory, you’ve made it. Finally, there was that Bright Eyes concert and the “thousands of mostly young people who packed the grassy bowl of Memorial Park” who “seemed to be finding life here pretty good.” (Incidentally, I guess Fun City doesn’t have many black citizens. I only saw three in the crowd, and one was performing on stage. Maybe all the black people were busy picking out cookware at Williams-Sonoma).

Who knows why the Omaha World-Herald choose to place this editorial masquerading as a news story on its front page, essentially declaring “Mission Accomplished” like Bush on the deck of a battleship. Nothing much has changed in Omaha over the past decade, unless you view urban sprawl as an accomplishment. Conor Oberst sure doesn’t. With his now sadly-defunct punk band, Desaparecidos, he wrote an entire album railing against it and the consumer-driven paradise defined by the Omaha World-Herald and the Chamber of Commerce. A year later, he moved to New York City. Oberst and most of the people who withstood God’s wrath Saturday consider that kind of “fun” to represent everything that’s wrong with America.

Because when you take away the shopping opportunities and the overpriced concerts at the Qwest Center there ain’t much “fun” stuff left to do, especially if you’re a youth in this faceless city. Sure, there’s the One Percent indie rock shows that draw maybe a thousand kids every weekend to the city’s one all-ages venue. There’s the College World Series (that strangely, the article forgot to mention). But what else? Why would any youth want to live and die in Omaha? The answer overwhelmingly is the same as it was before the consultants declared war on boredom: Omaha is “a great place to raise a family.” Fine, but what’s that got to do with Fun City?

It reminds me of a chat I had with a friend of mine in his 20s who recently moved into one of those high-style condos downtown. I asked him what he thought of his “hip” new place, and he looked at me disappointedly and said, “It’s designed by someone in their 40s who thinks they know how someone in their 20s wants to live.”

Which perfectly sums up what’s wrong with Fun City. The city fathers have forgotten who or what “youth” really is. It sure ain’t some guy in his 40s pulling down $80k a year. It’s that guy’s son and daughter, who this weekend will be driving around Dodge Street looking for something to do. And not finding it. Unless, of course the World-Herald is right and today’s youth thinks “fun” means aimlessly spending money on furniture and cheesecake. If so, God help us all.

Tonight, The Fiery Furnaces with Kite Pilot down at Sokol Underground for what is sure to be a sell-out, right?. Among the promotion for this show is the Omaha World Herald “Fun City” article referenced above in which Filmstreams organizer Rachel Jacobson was quoted as saying, “There’s 30,000 people who go to U2, but there’s also 1,000 people excited about seeing the Fiery Furnaces at Sokol Underground.” Hmm… maybe One Percent should have moved this show upstairs…

–Got comments? Post ’em here.

Lazy-i

The Fiery Furnaces’ sibling rivalry; VCR, Life After Laserdisque tonight…

Category: Blog — @ 12:30 pm June 21, 2006

This week’s feature interview with The Fiery Furnaces is now online (read it here). Female furnace Eleanor Friedberger talks about how the band creates its quirky music, the advantages of a sibling relationship, Sebadoh and softball. Among the stuff that didn’t make it into the story is an explanation why their new CD, Bitter Tea, was released on Fat Possum instead of Rough Trade. “It’s complicated,” Eleanor said. “Rough Trade in the U.S. is released on Sanctuary Records, and they stopped putting out records in US We needed a release date and they couldn’t give it to us, so we licensed the recording to Fat Possum in the US and it came out on Rough Trade in Europe.” What’s in store for their Omaha set? “We’re going to play a lot of songs from Bitter Tea. In the past we did it medley style — 50 minutes without stopping. Now we’re back to a more traditional style and will play whole songs.” And what’s up next for the band? “We’re going to record another record in the winter, this time with live humans. We’re going to have to recruit some people. But for now, we’re going to be on tour most of the rest of the summer.” I mention in the story that they’re the darlings of the NPR set, and as a matter of fact they just did a new interview on Fresh Air with Terry Gross that aired Tuesday. You can listen to it here. It should be great show, especially when you add the fact that it’ll be opening act Kite Pilot‘s last show with guitarist/vocalist Austin Britton.

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And speaking of bands with personnel changes, tonight at O’Leaver’s it’s SideOneDummy Records band VCR with Omaha’s own Life After Laserdisque featuring their new line-up sans lead singer. Who’ll be handling the vocals now? Show up at 9:30 with five bucks and find out.

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–Got comments? Post ’em here.

Lazy-i

Briefly… O’Leaver’s show tonight…

Category: Blog — @ 5:53 pm June 20, 2006

Not much to report today, other than a couple Bonnaroo reviews that fell into my inbox here and here. There’s a show at O’Leaver’s tonight featuring a couple glamrock bands I’ve never heard of. Find out more here. Look for my interview with The Fiery Furnaces online tomorrow, and the last word on Conorfest in the Thursday column.

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Live Review: Bright Eyes’ soaker in Memorial Park…

Category: Blog — @ 7:25 pm June 18, 2006


We made it all the way to “Lover I Don’t Have to Love.” Then we’d had enough. We hadn’t counted on the rain. Judging by the condition of everyone else in the crowd, they hadn’t either. But there’s a funny thing about rain. Once you’re wet, you’re wet. Then you’re just cold.

It started to rain before Bright Eyes started. Someone made an announcement from stage, a warning that there’s a good chance that there would be lightning, and rain. But that the show would go on. Once the rain became steady, we made our way down toward the stage and hid beneath a tree along with a half-dozen other people, including some poor guy with a broken leg who had been stretched out in a lounger, a piece of plastic covering his cast.

The perspective was better from down there. Up on stage in his black longsleeve hoodie thing was Conor saying something like “I’m going to play as long as you want me to or as long as they let me.” And with that, he lit into a new song, or a song I didn’t recognize. Within a few minutes, the rain began to subside and slowly, stop. But I knew better. I could see the storm clouds circling. I knew this was the calm before the storm.

I brought a moleskin with me and wrote down some observations after we arrived at around 6 p.m. right before Neva Dinova started their set. There was, what, maybe 3,000 people there? It just didn’t look like very many. About the size of crowd that you’d see at Shakespeare on the Green on a Saturday night. The weather had been cooperating, it was nice and humid.

From where we were, toward the back of the bowl, no one was really paying attention to Jake and his band of merry men. I had no idea who all those people were — since when is Neva Dinova an 8-piece with a violin? I did recognize, however, Roger Lewis, set up on stage right wearing a red-and-white striped hat. Neva’s hippy blues seemed to fit in with the Midwestern love-in vibe… sort of. This wasn’t a real hippie crowd. Hippies don’t wear Puma gear or Abercrombie shirts.

Next to us was a covey of O! kids — volunteers wearing red O! shirts that had been charged with handing out cheesy O! beach balls, supposedly for a photo shoot. “We’re asking people to not blow them up and throw them around until Bright Eyes gets on stage.” There was talk of some sort of choreographed moment when everyone was supposed to throw their beachball into the air, a moment that would never happen.

“I’m surprised that they allow people to put chairs so close to the stage,” said O! guy. “All those emo kids are going to stampede when Bright Eyes gets up there.” I nodded.

Bellows, from stage: “Do they have funnel cakes here?” He repeated the question and then someone yelled “No!” A joke… but everyone thought he was serious. Jake is funnier when he’s drunk on stage. Neva finished their set with a cover of “Here Comes the Sun,” ironic, considering that the storm clouds were just beginning to loom in the north.

There was about a half-hour break before Gruff Rhys came on. Some random observations:

— Standing about 10 yards in front of us was a kid wearing a homemade T-shirt that said “Conor Oberst is my hero.” Ironic? Maybe not.

— Overhead, a helicopter flew over the crowd in circles — chomp-chomp-chomp.

— Hacky Sack and the geeks that play it are the most annoying people in the world. No matter where they set up their “hacky” circle, they are always in the way, and inevitably, run into someone.

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— We searched for the most “emo” kid in the crowd, and found him only a few feet in front of us — a boy in his late teens, sitting alone wearing a brown polo shirt and blue ball cap. Emo kids aren’t fashionable, they’re lonely.

— Lots of goth kids. More Goth kids than black people. We counted only two black people in the crowd, while there seemed to be an endless parade of Goth kids with their multi-zippered oversized pants, black hair, striped shirts and socks, and Lydia-from-Beetlejuice makeup. One guy looked like a Goth mime.

— In spite of all the hype about the cops, we never noticed them after we got inside the park (the perimeter outside the park, however, looked like a pre-riot staging area). We weren’t searched when we passed a couple cops on the way in, and easily could have snuck in a bottle of wine, though I assume there were “spotters” hidden somewhere (maybe in the trees?) who would have swooped down the instant we raised a bottle.

Next up came Gruff Rhys, barely visible seated on stage with an acoustic guitar, a beat-box/Casio device next to him. He does have a great voice, kind of like the guy from Seals and Crofts. Again, from our vantage point, no one was listening, maybe because the music was being sung in Welsh and was somewhat boring, helped along occasionally by the Casio and Rhys sense of humor.

Meanwhile, all through his set, people kept arriving. By 7:30 the crowd looked to be around 5,000, but there was still plenty of room to find a spot, lay down a blanket and relax.

Let’s get this out of the way. It makes no sense to compare this concert with the 311 concert from two years ago. Bright Eyes will never be as popular as 311. He’ll never sell as many records, he’ll never draw the kind of crowds 311 draws. 311 is a commercial pop band, heard regularly on Clear Channel radio stations, and will do whatever it takes to move units. Bright Eyes is not heard on the radio and will not compromise his art for sales or popularity. He shuns commerciality, even though there were gigantic US Cellular banners hung on either side of that stage.

What was the attendance right before Bright Eyes went on? Probably 10,000. Before the rain, from on top of the hill, there looked like fewer than 10k, and closer to 5k. Nothing like the 311 show two years ago, when you couldn’t get near the bowl if you got there after it started — in fact most of the south hillside had been filled as well (The estimate for that show had been 30,000 and that seems somewhat light).

So about 5 minutes after the rain announcement came from stage, it began to spit. Nothing horrible, sprinkles. Then slow, steady rain. That’s when we folded up the lawn chairs and got up to leave. Huddled under the tree while listening to the first couple Bright Eyes songs, we thought maybe the rain would stop, after all, the sun had come out and was blazing on the crowd right where we had been sitting.

Oberst never sounded better, with a strong, professional band backing him. The crowd, now standing, was into it. Introducing one song, Oberst made a pitch for starting a mass transit system in Omaha, just like they have in NYC, “where he lives now,” he said. Driving around in your car listening to music is fun, he said, but sometimes it’s good to get out of your bubble and talk to someone you don’t know. And it’s good for mother earth, who’s about to cry all over you.

About five minutes later, the sky opened up. And it poured. Our little tree provided little shelter. Mr. Broken Leg was pulled closer beneath the branches, but he was soaked. As was the thousands who were still there listening to their savior. We moved to a bigger tree and leaned against its thick, dry trunk for warmth. But it was obvious the rain wasn’t going to let up.

We made it to “Lover I Don’t Have to Love,” and then gave up. One observation: It’s hard to walk in flip-flops when they’re soaking wet. I looked up at the stage as we left and could see some of the earlier bands and VIPs, along with Conor and his friends, warm and dry under the stage tarp, watching while all the world turned into a puddle of human rain.

Though it was pouring, there was no reason to run. We were already wet, and had five blocks until we’d get home. Two little girls ran by us on the bike path, their hair stuck to their T-shirts. They were followed a moment later by their little sister, yelling, “What are you running from? What are you running from? What are you running from?…

–Got comments? Post ’em here.

Lazy-i

Mark Burgess CANCELED; Joyner/Stevens/Bellows tonight; who in the hell is Ladyfinger (ne)?…

Category: Blog — @ 12:17 pm June 16, 2006

Let’s get this out of the way: Mark Burgess’ show at Mick’s tonight has been canceled. Burgess played in Atlanta Wednesday night, but flew back to Hamburg today due to a family emergency. There’s an outside chance that he’ll pass through Omaha in September when he’s in the country for a band-supported performance in NYC.

The cancellation will now allow me to attend the Graphic Noise Rock Poster show down at Jackson Artworks, featuring Simon Joyner, Ted Stevens and Jake Bellows — all three for only $5. Unfortunately, galleries are lousy places to see performances. Go for the posters, dude, then afterward go see Skull Fight! (a.k.a. The Cuterthans) at O’Leaver’s for another $5.

So the burning question about Saturday is: What to do after the Bright Eyes concert? (Incidentally, now there’s a chance for thunderstorms Saturday afternoon. Uh-oh.). A lot of people will be strolling over to The 49r to see Ladyfinger (ne). No, the (ne) after Ladyfinger isn’t a mistake — that’s the band’s new name, according to the fine folks at Saddle Creek Records. You’ve heard this story before: Seems there’s a band in California that already owns the rights to the name Ladyfinger, so our Ladyfinger (the real Ladyfinger) had to add something to the name or change it entirely. They liked the name so much, they decided to add the (ne, which I guess stands for Nebraska? Hmmm… maybe they could have just added an “s” at the end (Ladyfingers?). Anyway, Ladyfinger (ne) (something tells me that name’s not going to work) and Lincoln’s Ideal Cleaners are playing at The Niner Saturday after Bright Eyes, which will probably finish up at around 10.

I was going to suggest that if the Niner doesn’t trip your trigger, there’s always the goony-summer-goodtime rock of Dressy Bessy at O’Leaver’s — but according to the Dressy Bessy’s myspace page, the show has been canceled “through no fault of our own.” Meanwhile, O’Leaver’s main page still shows it scheduled as does www.dressybessy.com. I suggest you contact O’Leaver’s before making the trip.

Look for some reviews here over the weekend.

–Got comments? Post ’em here.

Lazy-i

Get ready for Saturday: Bright Eyes concert review round-up; The Black Angels tonight…

Category: Blog — @ 12:41 pm June 15, 2006

With the Bright Eyes concert around the corner, I thought I’d share a handful of reviews of his Canadian swing that’s taking place as you read this. The tone of the reviews is rather subdued, though there’s a couple spooge-fests along with a few hurled rocks. Sounds like Oberst and Co. played mostly mid-size venues — 1,000 capacity or smaller. You can read the full reviews by clicking on the headline in front of each capsule.

Concert ReviewsStraight.com Vancouver — Malkin Bowl on Sunday, June 4 — Maybe the best of the bunch. Inspirational quote: “Three vaguely embarrassed-looking security guards would march a teenage girl out of the venue not long after Oberst and his Bright Eyes band began—she presumably had a bomb or something—but it was an otherwise peaceful gathering of mostly young, female mall hippies. Of the men who were there, many were baffled dads, though there was also a healthy complement of clean-living young men, dressed like they wanted to be English schoolboys when they grow up.” Nice.

Band emotes punkGoldstream News Gazette — June 9 — Probably the worst of the group, this one will activate the ol’ gag reflex. Get ready to lean over the toilet: “For me, it struck during ‘Lua,’ the fourth song of the evening that he performed alone under the spotlight with his acoustic guitar. On the brink of tears, I heard a little voice deep within me whisper, ‘I love you too.’” One’s gorge doth rise…

Oberst’s brilliance brightens concertOttawa Sun — Bronson Centre, Ottawa – June 12, 2006 — This one starts off like it’s going to be a bag full o’ razors with this quote: “I can’t tell you how many times Conor Oberst, the sulky singer and songwriter better known as Bright Eyes, was on the verge of storming offstage in a temper tantrum or breaking down into tears at Monday night’s Bronson Centre gig.” Turns out to be a yawner.

‘Saviour of literate rock’ fails to live up to the hypeThe Ottawa Citizen, June 14, 2006. Lynn seemed upset that Oberst’s set was only 80 minutes. “But experience doesn’t always guarantee charisma, and having loads of material doesn’t always mean one is going to play for hours. Oberst gave a decent, 80-minute performance Monday at Bronson Centre but never seemed entirely comfortable in the spotlight. For those who were hoping for superlatives, it was a bit disappointing.” Still, it winds up being fairly even keeled.

London Free Press — Centennial Hall, London, Ont. – June 13, 2006 — Conor talks about loving Labatt’s from stage. “At one point, the Blue seemed to take its own revenge. ‘I’ve got to relieve myself. I’ll be back in 25 seconds,’ Oberst said around the 50-minute mark before actually leaving the stage.

Concert Review: Bright Eyes, June 10, Winnipeg, Canada — Blah. “Conor Oberst’s vocals wouldn’t have won him a spot on American Idol; with his somewhat husky, shaky style, however, he excels at conveying emotions and telling stories.

Bright Eyes surprise — June 11 — Hah. “Oberst’s stage schtick has always trended towards preciousness — his distinctive tremulous bleat, in particular — and he found ample opportunity yesterday to do his willow-in-the-wind bit on the slower numbers.

Sounds like the set list will consist mostly of stuff from from Wide Awake, a new song, and no “When President Talks to God.” All in all, a timid outing that will likely set well with the Memorial Park crowd but won’t win him any new fans. So how many will show up? First, reread my take on what will happen, written back in April. The weather report looks pretty good, which will help, as will the fact that no Nebraska team made it into the College World Series. I still say the numbers will be far less than the 311 concert a couple years ago…

Tonight, retro stoner meets psychedelic rock band The Black Angels (check out their myspace page) are at Sokol Underground with Hopewells and Omaha’s own Virgasound. $8, 9 p.m.

–Got comments? Post ’em here.

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Column 81 — The Chameleon speaks; Head Like a Kite, An Iris Pattern tonight…

Category: Blog — @ 12:16 pm June 14, 2006

You’re getting the full, unabridged version of my interview with Chameleons’ frontman Mark Burgess. I wrote a condensed version for my column that will appear in the paper today, but I figured I might as well include it in its entirety at Lazy-i (Questions marked with an asterisk (*) are bonus material found only online here!). The 2003 Burgess show made that year’s “best of” list and I have little doubt that Friday night’s show at Mick’s will make the list at the end of this year. There’s additional info about the show here, and if you want more information about Burgess, check out my 2003 Burgess feature written in support of that Healing Arts show.

Column 81: Catching Up with a Chameleon
Mark Burgess returns to Omaha.

The Chameleons is one of those bands that changed peoples’ lives.

No, they didn’t change my life. I only discovered the influential ’80s band a few years ago when I interviewed Chameleons frontman Mark Burgess for an article written in support of a solo show at the Healing Arts Center. There were a lot of people there that night, many who told me afterward that The Chameleons dreamy, floating music inspired them in some way, sort of how the band clearly inspired acts like The Psychedelic Furs, The Church, The Cure and Lincoln’s own For Against. All of those bands sport the same, hollow, ghost-eyed style of gothic ambient rock.

So when it was announced that Burgess was coming through Omaha again — this time at Mick’s on June 16 — I e-mailed him a few questions to see what he’s been up to since that first show way back in ’03. Here’s the bulk of our little internet-based Q&A (including emoticons!). See you at Mick’s Friday ($12, 9 p.m.).

What do you remember about the last time you performed in Omaha?

Quite a lot actually. The beautiful room, which was more like a kind of New Age temple than a venue, the hushed attention of the audience, which I recall was a bit unnerving ’cause I wasn’t used to that level of respect at acoustic shows 🙂 I remember strolling the streets with Stephen (Sheehan, the show’s promoter) watching all the buskers that were around in glorious sunshine, one guy played the theme from 2001 on partially filled wine glasses. That was something. * And Dereck (Higgins, who accompanied on bass) of course, whom I’d never met before the sound check, how quickly he grasped the arrangements and dynamics and then later he introduced me to his amazing record collection, which included practically every record I ever grew up with. And one guy at the show who shyly made me a present of a guardian angel talisman, which I’ve carried around with me ever since.

* You’re only doing three U.S. shows this time ’round, and once again you’re including Omaha. Why?

Well, one of the reasons is to preview the up and coming live Chameleons DVD and promote that. It won’t be distributed traditionally, rather it’s only available via mail order directly from the band. So the manager thought it would be a good idea to preview it and make a few personal appearances. I was invited to come to Atlanta and to Omaha when Stephen heard about it; and the SF thing is a good opportunity to hang out with one of my closest friends, James Oakes of The Bellows. I’m hoping very much to bring my band out here before the end of the year and play more widely. I’m trying to drum up support for a new recording of fresh material.

* I believe when we last spoke, you were living in Hamburg. Are you still there and, if so, what keeps you there? Is it particularly conducive to the artist’s lifestyle?

Yeah I’m still in Hamburg. I think it’s one of the most beautiful and energetic cities in northern Europe, that’s not to take anything away from other great cities, like Berlin, Paris, Amsterdam, Copenhagen etc. But for me Hamburg has a very special ambiance, it was a love affair that began a very long time ago during the early days of The Chameleons. My wife is from there so it seemed logical to settle there. We spent some months living in Manchester, but it didn’t really suit us. We both love going back to Manchester and have a lot of friends there, and family of course, but Hamburg is a bit more relaxed generally.

What is the current state of The Chameleons? When we last spoke, guitarist Reg Smithies’ son had just been born, putting a damper on any upcoming reunion tours.

Yeah, and they’re now expecting their second child, a girl I believe so that’s pretty much that 😀 We’re all kind of scattered to the four winds and you know with the passing of time we’ve become very different people, different priorities. I think we took it as far as we could really.

Are you more interested in pursuing a career as a solo artist than keeping The Chameleons active?

Yeah, I think so. I mean I try and get involved with different types of people in terms of collaborations and I like re-exploring past musical relationships, I think with Chameleons we’re too anchored in the past really from an audience’s point of view. Having said that, I still enjoy playing a lot of that stuff, especially songs that we didn’t play for one reason or another, like “Looking Inwardly” for example. It is very difficult, though, because Chameleons is what people are mainly interested in, it’s hard to get them to put that aside and be open for other people I play alongside. Some do though, so I still have an audience 🙂

* Tell me about the Ascension DVD. How did you put it together. What were you trying to accomplish with it?

A film maker contacted me prior to the US reunion tour and asked if he could come to the Californian shows and film them. The understanding was that if we had something we were happy with we could come to some kind of arrangement about putting it out. It was too good an opportunity to miss, really, and I think it’s the best footage of the band I’ve ever seen. That was the point really, to document the band at a time, which we all felt it was better than ever.

Do you keep current with what’s going on with today’s music? If so, what’s your take on the current status of American music? To me, it’s been in a rut for the past two or three years!

I think generally it has. One reason is because from the point of view of genre, it’s become very, very fragmented. There hasn’t been one scene that kind of unifies a ground swell of attitude or thought. I don’t keep as current as I used to, I tend to rely on friends or whatever pointing interesting things out to me. Currently I’m still playing the Arcade Fire pretty much non-stop.

I think part of the reason for America’s artistic malaise is its current political climate. What’s your take on US foreign policy and how do you think it’s impacted your life and your music? (I remember you throwing out some interesting jabs at Tony Blair during your ’03 Omaha performance).

Well obviously all our lives have changed with what’s been going on with US foreign policy. I understand that politically America has been forced to react to the forces that have been raging. I’ve lost what little faith I had that power politics will ever change the world for the better. I have contrary opinions to a great many issues that potentially may offend. I find it almost impossible to trust information that I’m given by the major media and think that in many instances, such as 9/11 for example, they fail us by failing to address very important questions. My cynicism toward Blair, though, predates all of that to a large degree. I feel that he got his party elected by betraying every ideal that the party was founded on. It was clever politics, forcing the Tories even further to the right and occupying the middle ground, but it was a betrayal in my view and it made me very sad.

What can we expect from your upcoming Omaha performance?

I honestly don’t know. I never really know how it will go or exactly what I’ll play. Hopefully the people who come will hear something or feel something that will stay with them for a long time. And at the very least it will be an honest performance.

* What’s in the works for Mark Burgess for the rest of ’06 and beyond?

Hard to say. I do hope I can take the band out and develop the new songs I’ve been working on. I have an autobiography coming out in December. Beyond that, I don’t know. I have to think long and hard about whether I should continue as I have been doing or go into something else. I just don’t know.

Tonight at O’Leaver’s, Seattle shoegazer(s) Head Like a Kite headlines a show that also features Omaha’s An Iris Pattern. HLaK’s recent album combines trip-hop (Manchester-esque) with synth-hop (Kraftwerkian) with indie-hop (Sonic Youth-y) and is all over the board, and also pretty good. $5, 9:30 p.m.

–Got comments? Post ’em here.

Lazy-i

Rademacher tonight…

Category: Blog — @ 12:19 pm June 13, 2006

I was informed late last night that Eux Autres was in town at The Goofy Foot with The Family Radio and The Third Men — an a-list show that completely slipped in under the radar. We almost have too much stuff going on these days, and I need data, people, if I’m going to help get you there! I rarely hear about Goofy Foot shows until afterward, which is a shame because it’s a fun (and different) place to see a band. Tonight, Fresno California indie band Rademacher is at O’Leaver’s. They sound sound like Yeah Yeah Yeahs meet, I don’t know, a ’60s garage band on ludes? Listen for yourself. No opener listed on the O’Leaver’s site…

Tomorrow, look for an extended interview with Chameleons frontman Mark Burgess (which is the topic of this week’s column).

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Lazy-i