Live Review: Bright Eyes…

Category: Blog — @ 5:46 pm October 25, 2007

You know, the great thing about Bright Eyes is that no two shows are alike. Sure, you generally hear the same songs you’ve heard all the other times, but there’s always some slight change, something different that keeps things interesting.

What made last night’s show at The Waiting Room one for the ages (other than the fact that it was 1 Percent Productions’ 10-year anniversary — seems like only yesterday that I watched Marc and Jim walk down that aisle…) was Conor’s overall demeanor and the addition of guitarist David Rawlings. Oberst hasn’t looked this “into” a show in years. Was it the smaller stage? Was it being surrounded by friends and family (his pops was standing just a few feet away)? Was it all the booze? I’ll point to TWR’s overall vibe — it’s got a big-room feel but still seems remarkably intimate. Really, when was the last time (other than last week’s show at The Barley St.) that Oberst has been this close to a crowd? You could tell after the first few songs that he was letting it flow, at one point telling the audience that the play list had been thrown out the window.

Despite the fact that the place was crazy packed, something seemed oddly different right when I walked through the door. What’s that smell? Is that fresh air? Did TWR purchase a multi-million dollar air purification system? No. By order of the band, smoking wasn’t permitted at the show. I heard a few reasons for it, the most logical being that BE’s traveling sound guy suffers from severe asthma. I can see where that wouldn’t be a problem with the rest of the tour, as BE is playing mostly in theaters that don’t allow smoking. Had they allowed smoking last night, Conor would have been down at the morgue this morning identifying his sound guy’s body.

The other possible reason for the smoking ban — the high-dollar sound equipment that BE hauled in for the show. Outside the venue, I heard a couple gearheads going ga-ga over the microphone set up — “You know what those things cost?! That’s the real reason we’re out here smoking!” Well, maybe. There were a lot of microphones on stage, including a couple really fancy mics mounted to the cymbals on the drum set. I’m told the entire performance was recorded, which might have had something to do with it. Towers of equipment were stacked off to the side of stage right — cables and cabinets and lights, it looked like a construction site. One giant board did nothing but control the sound out of the stage monitors. I’m told a generator had to be brought in to run it all. It looked like enough shit to power a show at The Qwest Center. The result was a damn fine-sounding show, on par with a typical show at TWR (translation: It probably would have sounded just as good had they used the house sound).

I showed up at around 10:30. Simon Joyner already was well into his set. In fact, he was almost finished. Still, I was just in time for one of the evening’s highlights. Joyner’s band had left the stage and he was joined by Oberst on keyboards for one song — “Joy Division” off the landmark Joyner album The Cowardly Traveller Pays His Toll — my favorite song from my favorite Joyner album. I was told last night that someone is reissuing Cowardly Traveller on vinyl in the coming months. Seek it out and buy a record player if you don’t already have one. Oberst provided some vocal harmonies, then left the stage as the rest of Joyner’s band came back for a final tune — a roaring version of “Medicine Blues” off Skeleton Blues, my second favorite Joyner album. I felt like I was at a Country Joe and the Fish concert circa Woodstock. The crowd ate it up.

Bright Eyes came on at around 11. Forget the white suit for this tour. Instead, he was dressed in a black front-button long-underwear style shirt, his shoulder-length hair recently lopped off in a part-down-the-middle style reminiscent of Matthew Sweet circa 1994 (but done in black, of course).

I’ve seen Oberst perform maybe 20 times, probably more. Last night’s show was a throwback to the old, more laid-back days when he still played clubs. He was more relaxed and in tune with his band than at any large hall/theater shows he’s done around here over the past few years — he actually looked like he was enjoying himself. The set, which lasted around 90 minutes, was heavier than normal, in part because of the band. Rawlings is a bad-ass guitarist who knows how rip up a solo and loosen the restraints on Oberst’s more demure numbers, unlike Mogis, who instead generally adds delicate, colorful flourishes on guitar or pedal steel that never get in the way. Rawlings is just fine yanking the attention away from Conor, and that dynamic was a breath of fresh air.

As had been reported earlier, Mogis isn’t on this part of the current Bright Eyes tour. The rest of the band consisted of permanent BE member Nate Walcott on keyboards (and keytar), Clay Leverett on drums, and a bass player who I recognized but don’t know. Gillian Welch came on stage for a few songs, as did Simon. The first half of the set seemed somewhat scripted. It was the second half that obviously strayed, with Oberst dedicating most every song to someone in the audience. One example was a quick, half-ass take on a song from A Collection of Songs… (was it “Falling Out of Love at This Volume”?) played by request. You’re not going to hear that one played live again. The rest of the set was the usual stuff, the best tunes off Cassadaga, Lifted, and Wide Awake, along with a few new songs that sounded like songs off those three albums.

The highlight was the encore. Joining the band in his trademark sweater and glasses was Mike Mogis, playing along on a Tom Petty cover (“Walls”) and then joining the onslaught of guitar for the evening’s final song, a blistering, angry, violent anti-war rocker that recalled Neil Young at his most metal. Given the choice between Bright Eyes backed with three guitarists and Bright Eyes backed with an orchestra, I’ll take the three guitarists every time.

Want more details? Check out all the other reviews of the show online, including:

* * *

Since this entry already is over a 1,100 words, I’m going to wait ’til tomorrow for the column and top-20 list. You dying to read it now? Go out and pick up a copy of The Reader.

–Got comments? Post ’em here.

Lazy-i

Bright Eyes, Simon tonight; Omaha sound guys…

Category: Blog — @ 12:23 pm October 24, 2007

Those of you fortunate enough to have snagged tickets to tonight’s Bright Eyes concert at The Waiting Room, here’s a sneak preview in the form of a review of Monday night’s show at Milwaukee’s Pabst Theater from shepherd-express.com (full review here). The writer was less than impressed with Simon Joyner: “Numbingly dull singer-songwriter Simon Joyner has a voice like moss and quickly lost the crowd’s attention—which is saying something, since usually Pabst Theater audiences will politely sit through anything. ‘Conor, where are you?’ one woman in the balcony moaned after Joyner finished singing a particularly bland, flat song.” Ouch. On the other hand he was impressed with Capgun Coup after he figured out who they were. “Their name was utterly indecipherable—Captain Goo? Cat Fondue?” Cat Fondue is a frickin’ great name for a band, btw. “It’s not too much of a surprise that Oberst has taken such a liking to them, since they sound a lot like he used to before he tried to reinvent himself as a serious singer-songwriter: spazzy, poppy, catchy, wonderful.” He goes on to describe Capgun as sounding “like a young D.C. punk band doing an entire set of Clean covers.” As reported earlier, Dave Rawlings is playing guitar with Bright Eyes on this tour, replacing Mike Mogis, who I’m told is busy in the studio. Sounds like we’re in for a set list that’s a “career-spanning grab bag, heavy on Oberst’s louder, more charged material.” Opening tonight is Simon Joyner and Flowers Forever. 9 p.m. and yeah, it’s SOLD OUT.

Lazy-i content for the rest of the week is a real jumble. First, I plan on posting a review of tonight’s show online tomorrow. Despite doing a ton of work for The Reader this week, I don’t have much to show for it. This issue is the paper’s annual “music issue” that includes the usual list of the area’s top 20 bands (and the next 15). I wrote profiles of about six of them. This week’s column talks about the list, but is essentially a rehash of last year’s column. I’ll probably throw it online tomorrow, along with the list. The Reader‘s cover story is a focus on Omaha sound guys. The photo was taken on stage at Slowdown last last week. Inside are profiles of at least 10 local sound guys. When I approached Editor Andy Norman with the idea, I originally wanted the profiles to resemble trading cards — each with an action photo of a soundman at work, followed by key stats and comments. I have no idea how the final product will look. I interviewed seven sound engineers for the story: Jason Churchill, Dan Brennan, Jeremiah McIntyre, Brendan Greene-Walsh, Kevin Hiddleston, Jim Bogensberger and Jay Wilcher. Jeremy Buckley also interviewed a few sound guys in Lincoln. Neva Dinova’s Jake Bellows wrote the article’s introduction. I won’t be posting the profiles here, so you’ll have to pick up a copy of The Reader when it hits the stands tomorrow.

–Got comments? Post ’em here.

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Live Review: Domestica, The Monroes, Ideal Cleaners…

Category: Blog — @ 5:44 pm October 22, 2007

My only show this weekend was the Speed! Nebraska showcase at O’Leaver’s Saturday night. And as you might imagine, the house was utterly packed.

In many ways, it was a throwback to a better, simpler time, circa 1990-something, when Mercy Rule and Frontier Trust were among the top punk bands in the Omaha/Lincoln area. Now some 15 years later, here was the same primary talent at it again, doing their thing better than ever. I wonder if they knew they’d still be jumping on stages after all these years…

As you may or may not know (and surprisingly, a few people I talked to before the show, didn’t) Domestica is two-thirds of Mercy Rule — vocalist/bassist Heidi Ore and guitarist/vocalist Jon Taylor — but instead of Ron Albertson, Boz Hicks is behind the drum set bringing a completely different style of drumming to their sound. Beyond that difference, it’s pretty much business as usual. Domestica, as Mercy Rule before it, excels in punk-rock anthems — loud, soft, loud, as Taylor put it, the only way to go. Listening to the band’s new five-song EP, I’m reminded of Mercy Rule circa Providence. Heidi’s voice has the same sweet coo, Taylor’s guitar has the same guttural growl. The CD is a must-have for any Mercy Rule fan, astutely recorded by engineer Ian Aeillo at ARC Studios in Omaha (the Mogis compound).

Strangely, Domestica’s mix Saturday night was muddy and somewhat restrained — you can always use more Taylor guitar. On the other hand, The Monroes’ set was dead-perfect all around, probably the best set I’ve heard from these guys (and I’ve seen them at least a dozen times). Yeah, O’Leaver’s has a tiny PA, but the room is perfectly suited for certain bands, and The Monroes is definitely one of them. I’m listening to their new “Drillin’ Daylight” 7-inch as I type this, recorded by Brooks Hitt at his Hittsville! U.S.A. studio in Havelock — it’s the best-sounding record they’ve ever released. Great sleeve and pressed on sexy ruby-colored vinyl. What more do you want? And in case you didn’t know it, Lincoln Dickison is one of the best guitarists in Omaha. Beyond the music, the other highlight was the ongoing trivia contest, where fans were given Richard Petty Pez dispensers as prizes to questions like “How fast was I going when I got a ticket?” Answer: 47, a rather wimpy speed for a Plymouth. You can do better than that, Gary.

Ideal Cleaners played last to a crowd that only got bigger as the night rolled on. I was pinned against the wall by the door throughout the set, no way to move to the railing. Of the three bands, IC is the most straight-forward, and the most brutal. Their new full-length, Muchacho, is an orgy of pounding punk rock that never loses sight of the melodies. A few songs (like the title track, for instance) remind me of Criteria, while other tracks (like “You’ve Got the Prettiest Fingers”) sport a dirtier, grittier groove. I would compare them to Ladyfinger, except that their music is a bit more accessible and less acidic. Nice stuff. Nice night.

–Got comments? Post ’em here.

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Electric Jellyfish tragedy; Live Review: The Family Radio; Scout Niblett tonight, Speed! Nebraska tomorrow…

Category: Blog — @ 5:54 pm October 19, 2007

Musician/soundman/Lazy-I intern Brendan Greene-Walsh passed along some rather grim news last night about Melbourne Australia band Electric Jellyfish, who played at O’Leaver’s last week. The gig was part of a cross-country tour that included Chicago, Detroit and then Brooklyn this weekend. They never made it.

Brendan got a call yesterday while driving around town from a reporter from the Cleveland Plain Dealer, asking about Electric Jellyfish. What the reporter told him caused Brendan to pull over to the side of the road. The band was in a fatal accident on the Ohio Turnpike yesterday morning; their 2001 Chevy Tahoe flipped, skidded and smashed into a concrete barrier after trying to avoid a deer in the road. Electric Jellyfish guitarist Hayden Rodney Sweeney, 23, and his wife, Bridget O’Brien, 26, died at the scene. Three other band members were taken to the hospital, but were not seriously injured, according to the Plain-Dealer article, here. Sad, scary stuff.

* * *

Very impressive crowd last night at The Waiting Room for The Family Radio/MC Chris show — maybe 150? I can’t tell you who was the primary draw, but there were a ton of faces there I’ve never seen before.

The Family Radio came out at around 10 with frontman Nik Fackler in full-on ghost warrior face paint. The four-piece blazed through a half-hour of proggy, indie rock that highlighted Chris Senseney’s intricate guitar work and Fackler’s sing/scream energy. I liken them to a Soviet version of King Crimson with a smattering of Arcade Fire thrown in for good measure. Since it began a few years ago, the band has constantly evolved, from a laid-back warm-hearted chamber-folk project to an intense, all-out prog-punk theater routine. I don’t know if I was more mesmerized by the music, the band or the video of a Final Fantasy game that was projected on the screen behind them. Somehow, it all just seemed to fit. Fackler said last night’s gig will be the last one for awhile as he’s begun shooting his full-length motion picture, Lovely Still, which will keep him busy through spring.

* * *

The weekend is upon us.

Tonight at The Waiting Room it’s former wig-wearing sensation Scout Niblett with Thunder Power!! and Alessi. $8, 9 p.m.

Over at O’Leaver’s, it’s The Jack and Jim Show, Miracles of God and Brian Poloncic. $5, 9:30 p.m.

Saturday’s big show is the big Speed! Nebraska showcase at O’Leaver’s featuring The Monroes, Domestica, and Ideal Cleaners. All three bands will be celebrating the release of must-have new material. I guarantee this show will exceed O’Leaver’s tiny capacity. Get there early. $5, 9:30 p.m.

Down at Slowdown Jr. it’s Coyote Bones with touring bands Coupleskate and Belfrie. $7, 9 p.m.

Sunday at The Waiting Room it’s Rogue Wave with Port O’Brien, $10/$12, 9 p.m. Meanwhile, over at O’Leaver’s, it’s The Stay Awake with Dim Light and Meneguar. $5, 9:30 p.m.

–Got comments? Post ’em here.

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Bright Eyes at Barley St.; One Percent Pt. II, Pinback tonight…

Category: Blog — @ 5:41 pm October 18, 2007

Sounds like there was an impromptu Bright Eyes performance last night, in of all places, The Barley Street Tavern. Matt Whipkey (of The Matt Whipkey Three) was there. He even IM’d me on my cell phone, but by 11:30 I was busy counting sheep. According to Whipkey, it all went down like this:

Bright Eyes’ drummer Clay Leverett quickly threw together a country band that included Mike Friedman on pedal steel, Josh Dunwoody (Filter Kings) on upright bass, and Dave Rawlings on electric guitar. The band, which had never played or practiced together before, played and sang country classics for about 90 minutes.

After that wrapped up, most people took off, but that’s when Oberst decided to join in on the fun. He played a set of seven or eight new songs, backed by Rawlings, Leverett and Friedman.

“Then he started calling people to the stage,” Whipkey said. “Dan McCarthy, then me, then I called Kyle (Harvey) up, Kyle to Justin Dilemma, etc. And we were all backed by Friedman, Rawlings and Dunwoody. Pretty fucking cool.”

Whipkey said only about 20 people were in the crowd during the BE set. Oberst sat and listened while Whipkey and the others did their thing. Each performer played two songs. Whipkey did a couple new Whipkey Three tunes, “Free” and “Separation.”

Overall, Whipkey said, it was a helluva night. “Great atmosphere. The Barley St. was the perfect place for that.” He added that Rawlings may be playing guitar this week in Bright Eyes as Mogis is finishing a big recording project.

* * *

An addendum to yesterday’s entry/column on One Percent Productions… Marc Leibowitz and Jim Johnson had a lot to say during our interview Sunday night that I didn’t have room for in the story. Among the discussion, would Leibowitz recommend that anyone start up a promotion company today?

“Not in my market. I don’t need any more competition,” he said, joking. “This is not an easy business. There’s a reason why they say bars and restaurants are risky businesses — because it’s true. We learned to make this into a real full-time business. You can have a profitable business doing what is artistically valid. We still bring in bands that we find entertaining. Sure, we joke about shitty bands doing better or selling more records, but that’s more jaded than anything else. There is successful quality stuff out there, like Wilco.”

Speaking of jaded, have these guys become a little jaded after 10 years of booking shows? “I was I excited to promote this last Built to Spill show as much as the first one,” Leibowitz said. “This (job) is cooler than any computer day job or auto body job, but it’s still work, it’s still demanding and you can still get burned out. Before, we could quit (booking shows) at any time. Now we have a lease and a loan and employees.”

Johnson said he was a little more concerned these days about how well shows draw. “I’m more nervous now because it is a full-time job and I don’t have a paycheck coming in and I need to make money,” he said. “It used to be if you made anything you were happy. It’s definitely a job.”

Over the years, bars like The 49’r and now O’Leaver’s have established a regular clientele. As a result, they’ve dramatically cut down on live shows because they simply don’t need them to draw a crowd. Leibowitz said The Waiting Room probably never would be in that position. “This place couldn’t do that,” he said. “I can’t see the day when this place is packed with 200 people with no show. I don’t see it. It’s a big place. Our business is providing entertainment.”

While they like being in Benson, neither said the location has been an advantage or disadvantage. “I don’t think Benson’s helped any,” Johnson said. “I think we could have done this in any decent location.”

“The coolest club in Chapel Hill was in a strip mall in suburbia,” Leibowitz said. “We could have been anywhere. Benson’s been good to us. As far as not having a parking lot, we’ve had no parking complaints.”

Part of what drove the duo to begin booking shows in the first place was their love for indie music. Has indie seen better days? “When we started doing this we thought indie music was more viable than club owners thought it was,” Leibowitz said. “The Ranch Bowl wasn’t doing it. Ten years later, some of this indie music isn’t as viable. There are still some really successful bands and great music, but it’s sort of a dying genre. Some of the labels have adapted in terms of the music. I don’t know how much The Arcade Fire and Superchunk have in common, but that’s what Merge has done. The success of our company is seeing if we can pick the next genre, the next big thing.”

With all the bands they could have asked to perform at their 10-year anniversary, why Bright Eyes? “Why not?” Leibowitz said. “It’s the most successful artist out of Omaha that we ever worked with us. We did shows with him in every venue in the city, except for here. He came in and said he liked it. It’s an honor to have him playing.

One Percent first booked Bright Eyes in 1997, as an opener for Built to Spill at Sokol Underground. “I remember he played with his back to crowd in the dark,” Leibowitz said. “He brought in one of those three-fold blinds and played behind it.

“Almost all those guys — The Faint, Bright Eyes, Cursive — all are as cool to us now as at their first shows. That’s why they’re a success.”

* * *

Perhaps I should be known as Pinhead, as I erroneously reported yesterday that Pinback was last night. It’s tonight, at Slowdown, with Frightened Rabbit. $15, 9 p.m. Thanks to everyone for pointing out the error.

–Got comments? Post ’em here.

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Column 146 — One Percent Then and Now; Hyannis, TSITR tonight…

Category: Blog — @ 5:52 pm October 17, 2007

When I sat down to consider how to cover One Percent Production’s 10-year anniversary, I initially drew a blank. I’ve already written the penultimate history of the company four years ago (You can read that here). Since then, I’ve written various columns about One Percent (including this one). And earlier this year I wrote a cover-length feature about The Waiting Room (here). What was left to discuss? Well it just so happens that in the last few weeks a few people have compared One Percent, and Marc Leibowitz in particular, to Matt Markel (who I wrote about earlier this year, here). Actually, every band that’s had a run-in with Markel complained about that Ranch Bowl story, saying I treated him with kid gloves. Maybe I did. I certainly brought up his business dealings and let Markel defend himself. But at the end of the day, I’m not sure what Markel ever did wrong other than try to run a successful business. Did he treat some bands like shit? I have no doubt that he did. On the other hand, I’m not sure what those bands expected. Is Leibowitz the new Markel? Is that really such a bad thing?

Column 146: 10 Years Gone
One Percent Productions adjusts to the times.
As One Percent Productions celebrates 10 years of business Oct. 24 with Bright Eyes at The Waiting Room, the company is looking toward the future from a different perspective than when they began.

A brief history: Marc Leibowitz and Jim Johnson, a.k.a. One Percent (named after a Jane’s Addiction song) booked Ani DiFranco and Indigenous at Sokol Auditorium Oct. 24, 1997. It was a success. Over the next decade, they booked more than a thousand shows at venues around Omaha and Council Bluffs. For the first seven years, Leibowitz said, it was a “break-even type business, a hobby.”

These days, it’s a full-time job. While their primary venue is the one they own — The Waiting Room in Benson — One Percent also continues to book shows all over town, including at Sokol, Slowdown, The Orpheum and the Mid America Center. One Percent is recognized as the only real promoter of indie music in a city known around the world for its indie music.

Their rise to prominence is reminiscent of another Omaha music mogul’s rise — Matt Markel. The impresario behind The Ranch Bowl, Markel was the Godfather of the Omaha music scene throughout the ’90s up to 2002. In addition to The Bowl, Markel booked most of the larger venues in town and controlled his network of national promoters with an iron fist. Eventually, his business policies made him reviled by some local bands that felt they were getting screwed (whether they were or not).

Leibowitz refutes the Markel comparison. He said One Percent has never tried gimmicks like Markel’s infamous pay-to-play scheme for local bands. “Matt ran a tight business, did arena shows and had good relationships with agents,” Leibowitz said. “He ran a smart business. And in a sense, we’re dealing with the same issues he did: How do you open a bar to new bands when you don’t know how well they’ll draw? They all say they’ll draw 100. That’s not possible.”

But dealing with local bands is the least of One Percent’s worries. Attendance at live shows is down, not only in Omaha, but across the country, Leibowitz said.

“It’s interesting where we’re at right now,” he said. “We’re getting too many shows and people can’t afford to go to all of them because the economy sucks.”

Consider the sheer volume that One Percent is booking. Last week, they hosted Wilco, Dr. Dog, White Rabbits, Pomeroy, The Good Life, Adam Franklin, Underoath, The Show Is the Rainbow and Pinback, with Blue October, Scout Niblett, Rogue Wave and Bright Eyes on the horizon. “How can people go to all those shows?” Leibowitz asked.

He said the problem is similar to what happened in Lawrence, Kansas, just a few years ago. That scene got overloaded with shows, drawing down attendance and forcing bands to look toward Omaha for relief.

Another reason for the high volume of shows is technology. “The irony is that downloads are killing the concert industry as well as the record industry,” Leibowitz said. “Band managers and booking agents are insisting that bands go out two or three times a year because they can’t make money off records anymore.” In a normal market, last week’s Wilco show would have sold out, “but there are too many shows going on, and people are still broke.”

That business climate, as well as owning a club, has changed the duo’s booking philosophy. Leibowitz said they started One Percent because bands they wanted to see weren’t being booked in Omaha, specifically at places like The Ranch Bowl. Thirty days after opening The Waiting Room, however, and they began to understand why.

“I remember thinking ‘The fucking Ranch Bowl won’t book Pavement but they’ll book Pomeroy.’ I get it now,” Leibowitz said. “Why take a risk on a flash-in-the-pan indie band that wants money versus a local metal show with no risk that does good bar business? When you can make easy money, why go after the difficult stuff? The Ranch Bowl didn’t book Pavement until the last Pavement tour, because it was too expensive and too risky in this market.”

“The market was a lot different 10 years ago,” Johnson said. “We were successful with indie bands because it was cheap. But when indie became mainstream, it became more expensive.”

The bottom line: “A mediocre touring show loses money,” Leibowitz said. “A mediocre local show doesn’t lose anything. It’s disheartening, but it’s part of the business.”

Another part of the equation is owning — rather than renting — a venue. “We didn’t care how the bar did when we first did shows. It wasn’t about concessions,” Leibowitz said. “At this bar, it is. We have overhead to cover.

“It’s very different from 1997,” he added. “We still bring in bands we like even if we think we’ll lose money. If we pass on someone we really like because of the risk, we won’t be doing this much longer.”

What will the next 10 years bring? “I don’t know,” Leibowitz said. “The Waiting Room is still in its infancy. It was going to be a springboard to bigger stuff, like The Ranch Bowl was for Markel. We want to do shows with artists as they grow. Just like Markel had Pearl Jam and Smashing Pumpkins and Faith No More at The Ranch Bowl, we want to book that next band that becomes a huge success, and then hopefully be able to book them at an arena.”

“I guess the goal is to become Markel,” Johnson said, “to have a club and do festivals and shows at arenas and theaters.”

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There’s a lot more to our interview, and I may lay it on you tomorrow, if I have time.

Tonight, two shows worth mentioning: At PS Collective, it’s the Hyannis CD release show with Shiver Shiver and Beaucoup. $2, 8 p.m. At The Waiting Room, it’s The Show Is the Rainbow with Baby Walrus and Talkin’ Mountain. 9 p.m., $7.

–Got comments? Post ’em here.

Lazy-i

Adam Franklin tonight; Springsteen’s Magic…

Category: Blog — @ 5:52 pm October 16, 2007

Very little to report today other than reiterating yesterday’s post about tonight’s show at The Waiting Room — Adam Franklin of Swervedriver. Local heroes Kyle Harvey and Reagan Roeder are opening. Tickets are $10; show starts at 9 p.m. You should go.

And this: I’ve spent the last day or so listening to the new Springsteen album, Magic. I didn’t want to like it. After the schmaltz that was The Rising, I figured “The Boss” had seen his better days. Then I saw that Rolling Stone gave the new album five stars, which is unheard of (I assume part of the rating has to do with politics at Rolling Stone and leveraging their position to get an interview with Springsteen — just the opposite of what new bands have to deal with at the once-important music magazine. The cover of Stone is gold, but it’s only going to happen if your music rates with Joe Levy. Springsteen, on the other hand, could give a shit, and it’s Stone that needs him to give the publication credibility in an era when they’re putting shit like Zac Efron on the cover). While five stars is unwarranted, I like this album more than I care to admit. It has a cohesive quality that I haven’t heard from a new album in a long time. Someone I spoke with compared it to Darkness… It’s not nearly as bleak or introspective. It also isn’t as bubbly and back-slapping as Born in the USA or as cheesy as Born to Run. Yeah, you can hear when he’s trying to sound like his older stuff (He should have let “Livin’ in the Future” be a B-side somewhere), but even moreso I hear a modern-day Dylan influence, a return to simple songwriting. Definitely rates a “Yes.”

Tomorrow’s column: Happy Birthday One Percent…

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Back from South Bend; Swervedriver podcast…

Category: Blog — @ 6:30 pm October 15, 2007

Based on the Omahype review (here) sounds like I missed a very special show by The Good Life — Help Wanted Nights front-to-back in its entirety, that’ll never happen again. Instead, I spent the evening staring at Touchdown Jesus from the endzone of The House That Knute Built, watching as The Fighting Irish got their asses handed to them by BC. No, I’m not a Notre Dame fan, but Teresa is. Sounds like I also missed a good Wilco show, too. Ah well, what can you do?

Tomorrow is Adam Franklin of shoegazer/dreampop band Swervedriver at The Waiting Room and to prep for the show, Dave Leibowitz has put together an episode of his Dark Stuff podcast featuring an interview with Franklin along with plenty of his music. Check it out here, then go to One Percent Productions website and buy a ticket to the show. Leibowitz says Swervedriver is one of the best bands of all time. I own not a single Swervedriver album (though I have my share of My Bloody Valentine and Chapterhouse CDs), so Leibs’ podcast was indeed a good primer to catch up on the band’s sound. Check it out.

–Got comments? Post ’em here.

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On Radiohead, the future of music, The OEA’s and the weekend…

Category: Blog — @ 1:49 pm October 12, 2007

That new Radiohead? — not bad. Actually, pretty good, though like I said before, it’s getting close to ’90s-era U2 territory, not that that’s necessarily a bad thing. So now I’m hearing Nine Inch Nails may be doing the same thing with Trent’s next release. I’ve heard people complain that this devalues music. I’ve heard them say that it’s nothing more than a publicity stunt that will come back and bite the band on the ass when the “real CD” comes out in December. I’ve heard from a lot of people how they didn’t pay a pence for the download because they don’t like Radiohead. I’ve heard people complain that the bit rate was too low.

Me, I think it was a brilliant idea. I think we’ll never know how much money they actually pulled in through their website. I think the CD sales in December will, in fact, be rather limp — I won’t be buying the CD, though I’m inching closer to buying that vinyl box set. I think Radiohead will win over some new fans (all those people who didn’t pay a pence). I think they’ll have one of the more successful tours next year, but it was going to be successful with or without this online event. I’m a little less hopeful about the future of record labels than I was before. And record stores, well, they’re just going to have to figure out a way to adapt in this new world. Maybe David Matysiak is right, maybe the CD is dead and maybe we’ll see a new interest in vinyl — but only purchased as a keepsake or a collectable, never as a dominant audio medium, never again. There’s no question in my mind that technology will evolve in the next few years where downloading CD-sized files will be quick and easy. All this talk about “the CD being the ultimate back-up” will go away as technology will allow for easy online storage of entire music collections (Your iPod died and your hard-drive crashed? Really? Just go to where your files are stored online and upload your whole music collection again, and only in a few hours). And people will still pay for music, somehow…

* * *

The Omaha Entertainment Awards are up and running again for 2007, and I once again have been asked to be a member of “the academy,” in spite of my comments about it last year. Now is the time that you can influence the outcome by voting for your favorite band online. Believe it or not, it makes a difference. If you don’t have an opinion in areas like “best visual artist” or all the acting categories, then just skip ’em and go on to the subjects you know about. Or just fill in the music section. Whatever, it only takes five minutes, go here and vote.

* * *

So what are you doing this weekend?

Maybe going to see Minipop tonight at The Waiting Room, opening for White Rabbits? Well, why not. $8, 9 p.m.

Tomorrow night is The Good Life at Slowdown with Georgie James and Zookeeper. $10, 9 p.m. This is must-see stuff, so see it.

Me, I’ll be out of town most of the weekend, so drop by the webboard and let me know how it went.

–Got comments? Post ’em here.

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Lazy-i

Cover story: The Good Life, Tim Kasher and Help Wanted Nights; Team Love still allows downloading; Wilco tonight…

Category: Blog — @ 5:29 pm October 11, 2007

Just posted, a rather long interview with Tim Kasher of The Good Life, where Tim talks about his screenplay called Help Wanted Nights, the script that the CD of the same name is sort of based on. In fact, most of the story is about the script (if you want to read a review of the album, go here) as well as life in Los Angeles, the movie industry, the Good Life and Cursive. Read the story/interview here.

Will this script ever be produced? After this interview, I’m convinced it will be, eventually. But it could take a long time, maybe even years. By then, Kasher already may have had a different script produced — he wrote three before he wrote Help Wanted Nights, and finished a new one over the summer. Anyway, go read the story, then come back and read the rest of this blog entry… we’ll wait.

Dum-de-dum-de-dum *looks down at his watch*….

Ah, you’re done. Thanks for coming back. In my opinion, Kasher should shoot some exteriors in California and then come back to Omaha and shoot the entire film in O’Leaver’s — that’s the lounge that was in my mind’s eye while reading the script.

Moving on…

You might have noticed that I added a strikethrough in yesterday’s column. It was pointed out to me by a reader and by Team Love executive Matt Maginn that I erred in saying that you can’t download Tilly and the Wall’s Wild Like Children in its entirety at team-love.com anymore. You can, just like you can download some of the other Team Love releases — not all, but most. Well, a few, anyway. I screwed up by going to the site, looking at the releases pages and not finding any links to download the tracks. They’re there, you just have to search for them (and don’t bother going to the “downloads” page). Apologies to Team Love for my screw-up, and thanks to those who pointed it out. Now go to team-love.com and start downloading!

Tonight at The Orpheum Theater — Wilco. Unbelievably, as of noon, the show was still not sold out (according to the One Percent Productions website). Get your tickets now ($29). Andrew Bird opens the show at 8 p.m.

–Got comments? Post ’em here.

Lazy-i