Column 344: Lincoln Calling downsizes and upgrades; a few words about Steve Jobs; Dick Dale tonight…

Category: Blog,Column,Interviews — Tags: , , , — @ 12:38 pm October 6, 2011

Column 344: Does Size Matter? Lincoln Calling Pt. 8

by Tim McMahan, Lazy-i.com

Lincoln Calling logo

We live in a culture where “bigger” is always perceived as being “better.” Some might argue that this concept is The American Way.

Well, Jeremy Buckley, the impresario behind the annual Lincoln Calling Music Festival, isn’t concerned about getting “bigger.” On the surface, one might look at this year’s festival — the 8th Annual, an achievement in and of itself — and say that it’s a step backward. There are no significant national touring acts on the 100-plus-band 16-DJ (so far) roster whose schedule is spread over five nights at 10 venues in downtown Lincoln. Financial support was cut in half for ’11, thanks to a tsunami that not only devastated Japan, but also washed away sponsorship dollars from Toyota. But a glance at the schedule shows (which you can view at lincolncalling.com), this year’s event may be the best ever.

Buckley, as you can imagine, agrees.

“Each year is a different beast,” he said between football games last Sunday afternoon. “Last year the sky was the limit. We had an assload of money from sponsors and a perfect storm of national touring bands that just happened to be coming through at the right time. This year it was doing what we could with what we had, and I think we put together something great.”

Though the festival’s organization falls exclusively on Buckley’s shoulders — and that’s the way he wants it — this year he loosened the reins oh so slightly and got input from folks who asked to be part of the fun. The result is a more varied lineup that spreads the festival’s genres beyond its usual indie-only focus.

“I guess I tried to put an emphasis on making other people do my work,” Buckley said. “Quite a few aspects of this year’s festival came from people asking to help out.”

For example, Buckley received a Facebook message from Corey Birkmann asking why so few punk and metal bands were involved in the program. Buckley’s reply: “I don’t know much about punk or metal, so I don’t know the difference between the good and bad bands.” Birkmann offered to help by booking a show a day at The Spigot that was metal and/or punk-oriented.

“So I said, ‘Roll with it.'” Buckley quipped.

As a result, 12 Lincoln punk and/or metal acts are booked Thursday through Saturday at The Spigot, including Dust Bled Down, Ten Dead and Beaver Damage. “So this year, metal and punk are getting some love,” Buckley said.

KZUM talent Hilary Stohs-Krause, host of radio show “X-Rated Women in Music,” asked Buckley if she could curate a showcase that featured women musicians in an MTV Unplugged-style setting. “I told her to roll with it,” Buckley said. The two-hour Friday afternoon program will take place in the art gallery above Duffy’s. Called The Parrish Project, it will feature student artists from the LPS Arts and Humanities Focus Program under the tutelage of Mezcal Brothers’ Gerardo Meza.

Then there’s music website hearnebraska.org (which Buckley helped develop), that will host a Saturday afternoon program that includes musicians merch booths at The Bourbon Theater. And DJ Spencer Munson a.k.a. $penselove, who pulled together a posse of DJs who will perform at clubs throughout the festival, including the all new Mix Barcade, a venue in the old Bricktop space that will debut as part of Lincoln Calling.

While all that help is “making things a lot less stressful” for Buckley, the festival’s primary attraction continues to be its overall line-up. No, Lincoln Calling didn’t attract any Saddle Creek bands this year, but it did draw the cream of the crop of the non-Creek acts, including Ideal Cleaners, Conduits, Digital Leather, Eli Mardock, Gus & Call, Icky Blossoms, McCarthy Trenching and Pharmacy Spirits, The Show Is the Rainbow, So-So Sailors, UUVVWWZ, Machete Archive, Talking Mountain, Son of 76, The Whipkey Three, Matt Cox, and even some out-of-towners. They include the always amazing The Photo Atlas, poorly named Gauntlet Hair and Nebraska adoptees Cowboy Indian Bear.

Glancing at the line-up, there were a lot of acts that I flat-out didn’t recognize. Buckley even has an answer for that in the form of a massive 47-song digital download available for free from the Lincoln Calling website.

Like like every real festival, all bands are receiving some sort of compensation, whether it’s a guarantee, a cut of the door or an all-access pass to all five days of the event. Helping defray costs were donations from the Downtown Lincoln Association, Guitar Center and Lincoln’s Young Professional Group.

The particulars: The festival kicks off Tuesday, Oct. 11, with the Homegrown Film Festival at The Bourbon Theater at 8 p.m., a listening party at Duffy’s at 10 p.m. and an acoustic open mic night at The Zoo bar at 9 p.m. The real stuff gets rolling Wednesday, Oct. 12, and runs through Saturday, Oct. 15. All access passes for the full festival are $30, one-day passes run $10 to $12, or you can pay the door at each venue, which runs from free to $8.

So no, Lincoln Calling isn’t as big as it was in 2010, “and I’m OK with that,” Buckley said. “I know there are 5,000 people who will go to this and have a good time, and the bands will have better crowds than on any given Friday night.”

That said, Buckley’s already thinking about the 10th Annual Lincoln Calling in 2013, and for that one, size will definitely matter.

* * *

If Steve Jobs is remembered for anything, it will be that he was a great judge of talent and had a terrific eye for design. Even more than that, Jobs inspired greatness in others.

No, Jobs didn’t design the iMac, iPod, iPad, iPhone or any other modern-day Apple product. Jon Ive and his design team did. Jobs didn’t write the code that makes those devices operate – in fact he didn’t know how to code. That was the work of his programmers. And Jobs didn’t come up with the phrase “Think Different” or write the words spoken by Richard Dreyfuss in that amazing commercial. Ken Segall and his team at TBWA\Chiat\Day did that.

Last night when I heard about Jobs’ death, I clicked around on the ‘net and eventually wound up at folklore.org, a website that compiles stories about the making of the first Macintosh by those who were actually involved. Their stories cover everything from the computer’s initial design to programming, construction, marketing, you name it. Through it all, Jobs was an insufferable task master. He put a boot up everyone’s ass that worked at Apple, and if that boot didn’t fit, he fired them. He made insane demands and never accepted “no” for an answer.  He added his two cents to every decision, and expected perfection from everyone.

So no, Jobs didn’t do a lot of what he’s being credited as doing in the endless stream of requiems. Instead he did something that was just as important — he made decisions, he inspired innovation, he recognized good ideas and demanded their implementation. And yes, in the end, he represented all those products and ideas as a bigger-than-life icon as indelible as the Apple logo itself.

Jobs was a perfectionist and had impeccable taste. It seems unlikely that his successor, Tim Cook, has those qualities at the same levels Jobs did  (or if anyone does, for that matter). Cook’s ability to inspire greatness remains in question, along with the future of Apple as an innovator.

* * *

Another aside: Ironically, Jobs will be remembered by some as the guy who helped bring down the music industry as we knew it, when in fact iTunes came along two years after Napster and was designed to help protect the industry in the face of widespread music-file piracy.

* * *

Tonight at The Waiting Room it’s the return of Dick Dale. I interviewed the “King of Surf Guitar” way back in 1998 (which you can read here) and was happy that he was still alive and rocking. Now at age 74, Dale is still alive and still rocking. With Speed! Nebraska band The Mezcal Brothers. $20, 9 p.m.

* * *

Read Tim McMahan’s blog daily at Lazy-i.com — an online music magazine that includes feature interviews, reviews and news. The focus is on the national indie music scene with a special emphasis on the best original bands in the Omaha area. Copyright © 2011 Tim McMahan. All rights reserved.

Lazy-i

Live Review: Wild Flag makes you forget the past; YellowFever…

Category: Blog,Reviews — Tags: — @ 5:32 pm October 5, 2011
Wild Flag at The Waiting Room, Oct. 4, 2011.

buy https://cbtreatment.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/zetia.html online https://cbtreatment.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/zetia.html no prescription pharmacy

Wild Flag at The Waiting Room, Oct. 4, 2011.

by Tim McMahan, Lazy-i.com

Wild Flag may be the first super group whose former-band baggage is actually a disadvantage.

Without a doubt there likely wouldn’t have been the 150 or so people at The Waiting Room last night if not for the band’s famous pedigree. The average audience-member age was late-20s/early-30s, and consisted of people like me who grew up listening to Helium and Sleater-Kinney. But if those folks thought they were going to hear a medley of songs by those bands sandwiched between new material, they were in for a surprise (but not disappointment).

Wild Flag’s sound is wholly rooted in the now. The 4-piece has as much creative energy as any band of young upstarts currently touring a successful debut album. So it’s deceptive to go into a Wild Flag concert with a preconceived notion as to what you’re going to hear based on, say, Helium’s output. They don’t sound like Helium, however there’s no denying Mary Timony’s wonky vocal style, heard on more than half the material. Her quirky, swirling voice has all the swagger of a young Iggy Pop (but in a sparkling dress), countered by Carrie Brownstein’s more direct, straightforward vocals that come off like punk Chrissie Hynde. There’s nothing girly about the music, but when all four sing, it can conjure memories of The Go-Go’s.

Ten minutes in and I doubt anyone was interested in hearing any old S-K or Minders songs anyway. “Glass Tambourine,” a driving, almost tribal rocker played early in the set was a psychedelic, feedback-fueled head trip, with Timony playing her guitar above her head. Live, the 5+ minute song (on record) stretched out over 10, and no one wanted it to stop.

If Brownstein played the roll of sonic bedrock (with impressive high kicks), Timony was the demure rock star. Her simple guitar lines and solos broke though on every song. Musically, their style vacillates between garage, art punk and modern psychedelic. Through it all, there’s always something familiar that holds it together, though it’s never what you expect. For example, it’s impossible to listen to Timony’s guitar line in the middle of “Short Version” and not be reminded of the middle section of Deerhunter’s “Nothing Ever Happened.” Set highlight “Racehorse,” which came toward the end of the evening, went from a jagged riff rocker into blinding groove stretching forward on Rebecca Cole’s glowing keyboards and Janet Weiss’ seismic drums. Huge. Top-five? Probably. The band came out for a two-song encore that included a very loose-grooved version of “Beast of Burden” before calling it a night.

Opener YellowFever was a quirky guitar-and-drum duo that filled out its sound thanks to drummer Adam Jones also playing a synth/keyboard. Each song began with Jones punching out a rhythm along with a bass line on the keyboard (set to repeat) while guitarist vocalist Jennifer Moore proceeded to chop away at the bass strings of her ax. When Moore added her pretty chirp it became pure art rock. Think early punk B-52s meets Micachu. Fun stuff.

* * *

Read Tim McMahan’s blog daily at Lazy-i.com — an online music magazine that includes feature interviews, reviews and news. The focus is on the national indie music scene with a special emphasis on the best original bands in the Omaha area. Copyright © 2011 Tim McMahan. All rights reserved.

online pharmacy doxycycline no prescription with best prices today in the USA

Lazy-i

Sleater-Kinney + Helium + The Minders = Wild Flag, tonight at The Waiting Room…

Category: Blog — Tags: — @ 12:50 pm October 4, 2011

by Tim McMahan, Lazy-i.com

Wild Flag, self titled (Merge, 2011)

Wild Flag, self titled (Merge, 2011)

We’ve all heard of super groups, but how about an all-female supergroup? Actually, does it matter that all the members of Wild Flag are women?

I’d like to be able to say in this enlightened age of acceptance, tolerance and equal rights that it doesn’t, but let’s face it, it does. If it didn’t, we wouldn’t need groups like Omaha Girls Rock to nurture young female talent and keep it from going unheard. Rock ‘n’ roll continues to be perceived by many as a guys’ game, when in fact some of the best talent in rock ‘n’ roll is (and always has been) women.

Wild Flag is an obvious example.

Conisisting of of Carrie Brownstein (vocals, guitar, member of Sleater-Kinney), Mary Timony (vocals, guitar, member of Helium), Rebecca Cole (keyboards, backing vocals, member of The Minders) and Janet Weiss (drums, backing vocals, member of Quasi, Sleater-Kinney, Bright Eyes), Wild Flag released its first full length on Merge this past September, garnering a mighty 8.0 from online indie-bible Pitchfork, which I guess gives it immediate respectability.

But even without Pitchfork

online pharmacy buy antabuse online no prescription pharmacy

‘s nod, Wild Flag is like a heroes’ guild of classic indie rock talent that glows white-hot on the debut album. It’s as much a modern approach to indie as it is a nostalgic nod toward ’90s college rock.

This show should have sold out faster than Smashing Pumpkins, but as of right now, tickets are still available for a mere $14. Opening is YellowFever, who Brownstein described as “haunted house surf music” and whose debut also received a 7.2 from Pitchfork

online pharmacy buy flagyl online no prescription

. Show starts at 9. Go!

* * *

Read Tim McMahan’s blog daily at Lazy-i.com — an online music magazine that includes feature interviews, reviews and news. The focus is on the national indie music scene with a special emphasis on the best original bands in the Omaha area. Copyright © 2011 Tim McMahan. All rights reserved.

Lazy-i

Smashing sell-out; Matt Cox & BBQ tonight…

Category: Blog — Tags: — @ 12:46 pm October 3, 2011

by Tim McMahan, Lazy-i.com

Did you get your ticket to Smashing Pumpkins Saturday morning? If you didn’t, you’re not alone. According to One Percent Productions, customers snatched up available tickets within a minute after they were made available online (with all sales final within 20 minutes). No surprise there. The $50 GA tickets to the Oct. 11 show at Slowdown are now being offered at TicketExpress for $125 each. How high will they go on eBay?

* * *

Tonight at The Waiting Room, Matt Cox and The Willards are performing as part of the 2nd Annual Booze, Blues and BBQ event, sponsored by Food & Spirits Magazine. Your $15 will get you barbecue from 10 area restaurants, while the money will go toward helping provide scholarships to students at the Institute for the Culinary Arts at Metro Community College. Dining starts at 6, music starts at 7:30.

* * *

Read Tim McMahan’s blog daily at Lazy-i.com — an online music magazine that includes feature interviews, reviews and news. The focus is on the national indie music scene with a special emphasis on the best original bands in the Omaha area. Copyright © 2011 Tim McMahan. All rights reserved.

Lazy-i

Maps & Atlases, Dirty Flourescents, Millions of Boys tonight; Ideal Cleaners, Capgun Coup tomorrow; Ladytron DJ set Sunday…

Category: Blog — @ 5:12 pm September 30, 2011

by Tim McMahan, Lazy-i.com

Lot’s going on this weekend, so let’s get started…

There’s a kinda/sorta interesting gig going on tonight down at Slowdown. Barsuk band Maps & Atlases opens for former Equal Vision (now Atlantic) band Circa Survive along with States. M&A’s 2010 album Perch Patchwork got a respectable 7.4 from Pitchfork. Circa’s latest album, Blue Sky Noise, was produced by David Bottrill, who worked with Peter Gabriel, King Crimson, Tool, and Silverchair. $20, 9 p.m.

Across town at O’Leaver’s, Shawn Cox’s new band, Dirty Flourescents, is playing with Comme Reel (Marc Phillips (Students of Crime, ex-Carmine, ex-Carsinogents) on drums and bass and Chris Esterbrooks (Mal Madrigal, ex-Philharmonics, ex-Carsinogents) on bass and keyboards, along with frontman Mike Saklar (No Blood Orphan, ex-Ravine, ex-Ritual Device) on guitar, vocals, bass and pedals) and The Butchers. $5, 9:30 p.m.

While fun-punk trio Millions of Boys (Sara from Honey & Darling) are playing over at the Barley Street Tavern with Full Bloods and Cymbal Rush. $5, 9 p.m.

Also tonight, Mitch Gettman is hosting a listening party for his new CD at The Sydney from 6 to 8; while Travelling Mercies and Matt Cox are playing at Stir in CB at 9.

It’s a Husker Saturday, and whether you want to believe it or not, that does (did) affect the show calendar, even though the game should be over in plenty of time to get to a rock show. The Slowdown is combining things Saturday with a football party in the early evening followed by a free rock show featuring Capgun Coup, Feral Hands and Video Ranger in the Jr. room, starting whenever the game ends…

Ideal Cleaners, As Far As You Know (Speed! Nebraska, 2011)

Ideal Cleaners, As Far As You Know (Speed! Nebraska, 2011)

In Lincoln, Ideal Cleaners is having its CD release show at The Bourbon with Sputnik Kaputnik and the Cherry Mashers and Her Flyaway Manner. The Cleaners are one of the hardest but least-heralded bands in the Nebraska scene. I have yet to hear the new disc, As Far As You Know, but have a feeling it’s just like the last one — blistering hot. Show starts at 9. No idea on the cover.

The weekend is capped off with a last-minute Ladytron DJ set at House of Loom featuring Reuben Wu & Mira Aroyo. The deal: $5 entry before 11 with RSVP to info@houseofloom.com, otherwise, it’s $10. Wu/Aroyo will follow sets by Brent Crampton and Enfant Coma a.k.a. Jacob Thiele. Things get rolling at 9 p.m.

* * *

Read Tim McMahan’s blog daily at Lazy-i.com — an online music magazine that includes feature interviews, reviews and news. The focus is on the national indie music scene with a special emphasis on the best original bands in the Omaha area. Copyright © 2011 Tim McMahan. All rights reserved.

online pharmacy purchase arimidex online no prescription

Lazy-i

Column 343: The Return of Fizzle Like a Flood; Conduits, Steve Bartolomei tonight…

Category: Blog,Column,Interviews — Tags: , , — @ 12:53 pm September 29, 2011
Doug Kabourek, circa now.

Doug Kabourek, a.k.a Fizzle Like a Flood, circa now.

Column 343: The Return of Fizzle Like a Flood

by Tim McMahan, Lazy-i.com

Doug Kabourek didn’t look much different than when I first saw him slumped like a homeless college student in the back of Sokol Underground during a Her Space Holiday show, circa 1999.

I had just begun going to rock shows alone — a big step for me, but one I knew I’d have to take if I wanted to continue seeing the indie bands I loved. I realized after finding Kabourek rolled up like a bum on the floor that others were in the same boat as myself, though he had an excuse for being alone — he’d just moved to Bellevue from somewhere in Iowa, and didn’t know anybody. I wouldn’t discover until months later, when I interviewed him about Golden Sand and the Grandstand that he was the local musician who went by the odd, awkward name Fizzle Like a Flood.

Now here we were, 12 years later, talking about music over a basket of tortilla chips on the outdoor patio of Agave in Dundee. Pop hits of the ’80s (Huey Lewis & the News, The Outfield, Phil Collins) blared from hidden speakers as Kabourek slowly built a crystal wall of empty margarita glasses on the table. The reason for the reunion was the pending release of Choice Kills Response (Nectar and Venom Records), the first new Fizzle Like a Flood CD since 2005’s Love LP, which kind of/sort of marked the departure of Kabourek as Fizzle.

Now available for download via his former record label, Ernest Jenning (home of O’Death, The Black Hollies and Chris Mills, among others) Love should have been Fizzle’s next step. “It was my most impressive record, and it took the most amount of time to make,” Kabourek said. “It was supposed to come out on Valentines Day 2006. But I was paying for everything; the label was only providing distribution. I couldn’t afford the $7,000 needed to actually release it.”

But more than financials pushed Fizzle Like a Flood into an unplanned hiatus. “I never quit,” Kabourek explained. “It’s just that no one ever reacted to anything I did. I wanted it to ‘just happen,’ and it doesn’t ‘just happen’ in Omaha. You have to really try to make it happen, and even then it doesn’t happen.”

Oh, there were a few write-ups, including an All Music Guide review that called Golden Sand “consistently aurally engaging.” The smattering of press caught the eye of Ernest Jenning, who rereleased that album in ’05 with new artwork by Frank Holmes, who did the art for Beach Boys’ Smile. But for the most part, the winsome, multi-layered one-man head trip — an homage to the demolished Aksarben horse track — went unnoticed. But no more so than its followup, Flash Paper Queen (The 4-Track Demos), with its parenthetical joke title that no one (including Pitchfork) got.

After recording the Love LP Kabourek moved on to other things, including The Dull Cares, a project whose music was modeled after “Earth Angel”-style ’60s pop, and At Land, a power trio featuring longtime friends Travis Sing (Black Squirrels) and James Carrig (Sarah Benck and the Robbers).

“At Land recorded at Baseline, but never released anything,” Kabourek said. “I was drunk at every session. It was going to be sloppy, old-man rock, even though we knew we weren’t old yet.”

While those projects kept him busy (and anonymous), Kabourek kept writing Fizzle Like a Flood music. “I finally got an itch to make this record this past winter,” he said. “Some of the songs go back to 2005.”

Fizzle Like a Flood, Choice Kills Response (Nectar & Venom, 2011)

Fizzle Like a Flood, Choice Kills Response (Nectar & Venom, 2011)

Choice Kills Response is a return to form for Kabourek, and another example of his home-studio recording — and songwriting — prowess. The killer tracks are the ones that depart from his typical heart-on-his-sweater-sleeve approach, like the roaring, hollow-hearted rocker “Cutters.” It is equal parts Pixies and early Weezer, along with an excuse for Kabourek to use the word “masturbation” in his lyrics.

“‘Cutters’ was written for At Land, which to me is a ’90s tribute band but with our own songs,” Kabourek said. “(The song) is about the frustration of not having sex for a long time, which is the perfect theme for every ’90s song. Every big hit from 1994 had ‘masturbation’ in the lyrics.” Other tracks, like opener “Balcony” and “Great,” are Fizzle fixtures with crunching guitars and Kabourek’s trademark bells, while the unpronounceable “Ö[Æ]à[=]É” is a modern surf rocker, complete with horror-movie organ. Kabourek skimps on nothing on this recording, but since he now refuses to use backing tracks on stage, we’ll never hear it performed this way live.

Not bad for a guy who at 38 says he’s fallen out of the music scene. “I’ve gotten to the age where this is my music — the ’90s — I love that stuff,” he said. “If someone plays me something new, that’s fine, but I have enough old music to keep me happy.”

He says he hasn’t been to Pitchfork.com since 2006. “I watched the Grammy’s two years ago,” he said. “What was the band with a thousand members and none of them play anything remotely catchy? Arcade Fire? I don’t get it. It’s OK, but I don’t like their stuff. And Radiohead on SNL last night? What I heard sucks.”

In fact, you’re not going to find Kabourek hiding in the back of rock clubs these days. “We like to go sing karaoke,” he said. “It’s more fun than going to a show.”

Except for his show, of course.

Fizzle Like a Flood’s CD release party is Oct. 7 at The Barley Street Tavern with The Whipkey Three, At Land and Underwater Dream Machine. The show starts at 9 p.m. Cover is $5.

* * *

Tonight’s red hot ticket is Conduits at The Waiting Room with Outlaw Con Bandana, Thunder Power and Wayward Little Satan Daughters (Rachel Tomlinson Dick of Honeybee & Hers). The burning question on everyone’s mind is when (or if) Conduits is going to release their debut album, which has been in the can since early this year. One assumes they’re still looking for a label with decent distro. It’s easy to say a label ain’t necessary in this era of electronic distro, but let’s be honest, you’re almost always better off if you can get on a recognized label rather than just putting the CD out yourself, selling copies to your local fans and hoping someone out there (someone with influence) notices. Unless your band is on a known label or is newsworthy or happens to catch the ear of an influential national blogger or celebrity, it will remain unnoticed and unheard, no matter how good it is. It’s a harsh reality that hasn’t changed despite the rise of the Internet era.

Anyway… Show starts at 9, cover is $7.

Also tonight, Steve Bartolomei of Mal Madrigal

online pharmacy buy glucophage no prescription with best prices today in the USA

is playing at The Barley Street Tavern with Mike Saklar and Ben Brodin. $5, 9 p.m. Good times.

And finally, Cloven Path is playing a last-minute show at O’Leaver’s tonight. 9:30, $5.

* * *

Read Tim McMahan’s blog daily at Lazy-i.com — an online music magazine that includes feature interviews, reviews and news. The focus is on the national indie music scene with a special emphasis on the best original bands in the Omaha area. Copyright © 2011 Tim McMahan. All rights reserved.

online pharmacy clomid no prescription with best prices today in the USA

Lazy-i

Smashing Pumpkins at Slowdown Oct. 11; Helmet, Boom Chick, Netherfriends tonight…

Category: Blog — Tags: — @ 12:49 pm September 28, 2011

by Tim McMahan, Lazy-i.com

Billy Corgan

Billy Corgan

The celebration of all things ’90s continues as One Percent Productions announced today that Smashing Pumpkins is slated to play at The Slowdown Oct. 11. The $50 tickets go on sale Saturday at 10 a.m. How quickly will this show sell out? I suspect the answer is very quickly, considering The Slowdown’s capacity is less than 1,000 and the band has sold more than 30 million albums. In fact, I would guess that even if this version of Smashing Pumpkins consisted of Billy Corgan and three strangers (which it does), it could sell out Stir at $35. You have to wonder why 1% didn’t consider doing this one at a larger venue. If they have reasons, they’re not saying, but they do say that this show will not be moved to a larger venue regardless of how fast it sells out, so you better be quick on the trigger.

* * *

Speaking of ’90s rock, Helmet is playing tonight at The Waiting Room with Broken Crown and Meet Your Maker. Helmet’s latest is Seeing Eye Dog, released on Work Song Records in September 2010. $15, 8 p.m.

There’s also a show at O’Leaver’s tonight featuring Brooklyn guitar-and-drum duo Boom Chick (not to be confused with the world famous Lincoln record label Boom Chick), along with Snake Island. $5, 9:30 p.m.

While over at The Barley Street Tavern, Chicago’s Netherfriends plays with Public Access and Razors. $5, 9 p.m.

* * *

Tomorrow: The Return of Fizzle Like a Flood

* * *

Read Tim McMahan’s blog daily at Lazy-i.com — an online music magazine that includes feature interviews, reviews and news. The focus is on the national indie music scene with a special emphasis on the best original bands in the Omaha area. Copyright © 2011 Tim McMahan. All rights reserved.

Lazy-i

Having another one at Krug Park; Hermit Thrushes tonight…

Category: Blog — Tags: — @ 12:49 pm September 26, 2011

by Tim McMahan, Lazy-i.com

Krug Park logo

Zero music this past weekend. Blame Krug Park, where I had my inaugural visit Saturday night, figuring (correctly) that the place wouldn’t be crowded, what with the Huskers playing (For those of us who don’t follow the Big N, Husker Saturdays provide a whole new realm of dining possibilities previously unattainable on a typical Saturday night — there is no better time to get a table at that restaurant you’ve been dying to try).

For those who haven’t been there, Krug Park, located right across the street from The Waiting Room in Benson, boasts sixty-some beers on tap and tons more in bottles. No, you won’t find a Rolling Rock or Bud Light in the place, instead you’ll find a collection of local, regional and world beers that will make your head spin (literally). It’s a beautifully designed space, with a huge bar, comfortable low booths and tall stools along the front window that look out at the mothership across the street. Lighting is moody and fantastic; the music is tasteful jukebox stuff at a perfect sound level — loud enough to get your feet tapping, but not too loud as you can’t hear the person sitting across from you (However, I don’t know if that’s true when they’ve got a packed house).

My first thought when handed the rather large menu was to try an espresso or coffee beer, but the lovely barmaid who served us said those beers are apparently “out of season” (coffee out of season?). Instead I started with a pint of Rogue Chocolate Stout that was like drinking a slice of German Chocolate cake. Rich and tasty, but 16 oz. is way too much. Lovely barmaid suggested I follow it with a Delirium Nocturnum, which came in a brandy snifter-type glass and was fruity and full bodied and delicious. And potent. My head began to swim before I drained the glass. Now you know why I didn’t make it to any shows Saturday night.

This beer is pricey stuff. The pint was $5.50; the smaller snifter-sized glass was $7+. But what can I say, it tasted better than Rolling Rock (and was much more potent). Definitely good times. My only question was how the Krug beermasters manage to offer that many different on-tap beers without any getting stale. Or maybe they’re turning 60 half-pony kegs a week. Who knows. All I know is my beer was fresh and frothy and good. And that I’ll be back. Check out their website for a full menu and drink specials.

* * *

I still drinking Rolling Rock. And one of the best places to get one is at O’Leaver’s, where tonight Noah Sterba and the Cocktails and Family Picnic perform with Philly experimental combo Hermit Thrushes. $5, 9:30 p.m.

* * *

Read Tim McMahan’s blog daily at Lazy-i.com — an online music magazine that includes feature interviews, reviews and news. The focus is on the national indie music scene with a special emphasis on the best original bands in the Omaha area. Copyright © 2011 Tim McMahan. All rights reserved.

Lazy-i

At Land, Star Anna tonight; the return of It’s True, Honeybee & Hers tomorrow…

Category: Blog — @ 4:52 pm September 23, 2011

by Tim McMahan, Lazy-i.com

It’s another somewhat quiet weekend musicwise with no big indie bands in town but still some great shows worth seeing. Two of those shows, in fact, are at The Barley Street Tavern. The first is At Land, a trio featuring Doug Kabourek of Fizzle Like a Flood fame. You’ll be hearing a lot more about Fizzle as that project’s latest release, Choice Kills Response, is looking at an Oct. 7 CD release. Until then, you’ve got Doug’s heavier project burning up Barley Street tonight with Ryan Kosola and Dirty River Ramblers. $5, 9 p.m.

Also tonight Star Anna & the Laughing Dogs play at O’Leaver’s with Field Club. $5, 9:30 p.m.

Tomorrow night it’s the heroic return of It’s True

buy https://swetnamcosmetic.com/wp-content/uploads/wpcode/cache/library/topamax.html online https://swetnamcosmetic.com/wp-content/uploads/wpcode/cache/library/topamax.html no prescription pharmacy

to the Barley Street Tavern with Katey Sleeveless, Platte River Rain and Drone City. This will be a capacity crowd, so I suggest you arrive early if you want to get in. $5, 9 p.m.

Also Saturday night Honeybee & Hers is celebrating its album release with a special show at DP Muller Studio, 6066 Maple Street in beautiful Benson. Also on the bill is St. Louis’ Cassie Morgan and the Lonely Pine. The show starts at 9 and is free, though they’ll be taking donations (give it up, cheapskates).

Finally, Simon Joyner and his band is in the lineup for a house show tomorrow night at 3803 So. 25th St. that also features L. Eugene (Lonnie) Methe, Ed Rooney and Californians Whitman and No Babies. Mr. Methe says the show starts at 9 p.m. sharp and to bring cash to spend on the touring bands’ merch (always a good policy).

That’s all I got. Got any better ideas, put them on the webboard. See you at the show…

* * *

Read Tim McMahan’s blog daily at Lazy-i.com — an online music magazine that includes feature interviews, reviews and news. The focus is on the national indie music scene with a special emphasis on the best original bands in the Omaha area. Copyright © 2011 Tim McMahan. All rights reserved.

Lazy-i

Live Review: Gomez; should R.E.M. have ended it in ’97?; Ragged Company, Travelling Mercies tonight…

Category: Blog,Reviews — Tags: , — @ 1:19 pm September 22, 2011
Gomez at The Waiting Room, Sept. 21, 2011.

Gomez at The Waiting Room, Sept. 21, 2011.

by Tim McMahan, Lazy-i.com

Ah the rise and fall and rise and fall of rock bands. I remember when Gomez was on its way up, when they were covering Beatles songs in Phillips lightbulb commercials. There was a sense that Gomez might be the next big thing, maybe the next Oasis? That was in 1998 when their debut, Bring It On, was released on Virgin. The band’s had its ups and downs over the past 13 years. One Omaha highlight: Playing at Memorial Park in 2009 to about 1,000 people.

Last night Gomez played to fewer than 200 people at The Waiting Room, but in its defense, the band sounded better than at that big outdoor shindig. If the British 5-piece has a sweet spot, it’s playing club gigs, where they have a better chance of connecting with the crowd — and they need all the help they can get with a stage presence that consists of standing (or sitting), singing and playing and nothing else. Dynamic they are not, but their music is so well-played — stunningly so — that in the confines of a space the size of The Waiting Room they can get the crowd grooving, at least as much as a band can that plays their rather safe style of indie/folk rock.

The hour-plus set balanced all three vocalists on songs that focused mostly on their new album but ranged back to their ’90s catalog. The older crowd did a grind to the familiar songs — you can’t call them “hits” because Gomez never really had one. In fact, while listening to this very pristine, very professional performance I was stricken at how no one player —  and no one song — stood out. There’s a comfortable, familiar ease to Gomez music – simple love songs with forgettable melodies that are pleasant and upbeat and completely unoffensive. I wonder what they’d sound like if they ever took some chances with their lyrics or arrangements, if they ever took a walk on the wild side…

* * *

R.E.M. yesterday officially announced that they’re hanging it up for good after 31 years. The common rejoinder to the announcement on Facebook has been “I didn’t know they were still around.” They have been, though you wouldn’t know it based on how little traction their recent full lengths garnered in the media. To me the band never recovered when Bill Berry left in ’97, releasing five albums since then — including this year’s Collapse Into Now — that sounded flat and lifeless. Maybe they should have hung it up when Bill left? Who knows. At the end of the day, they had the heart but not the creative inspiration that made all their earlier albums so good. Even if they weren’t making interesting new music, it was nice knowing that they were out there trying. I don’t think you’ve heard the last of Stipe, Buck and Mills (or Berry for that matter). There will be other projects, solo efforts and one day, the inevitable reunion.

* * *

It’s folk rock night at O’Leaver’s tonight when Ragged Company takes the stage with Travelling Mercies and Kindlewood. Get your yee-ha on for a mere $5. Show starts at 9:30.

* * *

Read Tim McMahan’s blog daily at Lazy-i.com — an online music magazine that includes feature interviews, reviews and news. The focus is on the national indie music scene with a special emphasis on the best original bands in the Omaha area. Copyright © 2011 Tim McMahan. All rights reserved.

Lazy-i