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Wednesday, November 30, 2005

This week's feature story: Milemarker

I've been following Milemarker for years, having reviewed both 2001's Anaesthetic (Rating: No) and 2002's Frigid Forms Sell (Rating: Yes), both on Jade Tree. It was the latter album where the band really hit its stride. They'd release the moribund Satanic Versus later in '02, before disappearing from the music scene altogether -- which is discussed in the interview (read it here). It was during those Jade Tree years that Omaha became something of a regular stop on the band's tours through Nebraska, even opening for Desaparecidos' CD release show back in January 2002 (surprisingly, none of their shows were One Percent gigs, until now). Starting over means going from playing rooms the size of Sokol Underground to the more intimate O'Leaver's -- a switch that frontman Dave Laney is happier about, realizing that the band couldn't draw a crowd big enough to fill anything larger. We'll see. There are a lot of Omahans who remember this band and hopefully will show up next Tuesday.

And if you're wondering, no, I didn't go to the Ween show last night. Anyone who did, please be kind enough to grace us all with a brief review on the webboard...

--Got comments? Post 'em here.--


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posted by Tim at 5:23 AM

Tuesday, November 29, 2005

Ween tonight

Well, as hard as I tried, I couldn't get Ween to do an interview. Not this time, said their tour guy/publicist person. In all honesty, I'm not sure what I would have asked them. I'm one of those people that never got into the band, which says more about me then about them. Though I've heard that they deplore jam bands and the whole jam-band aesthetic, Ween and its horde of followers has a lot in common with Phisheads, Deadheads, Widespread Panicheads, etc. Without the help of radio, Ween has managed to garner a sizable following of fans who travel from town to town to hear their heroes, thanks for the most part to their stage shows that draw from a wildly diverse catalogue of music and styles. And because they're funny. So as background for you Weeners and non-Weeners who are braving the arctic cold to attend tonight's sold-out festivities, here's some recent Ween articles to study:

For weird's sake -- Dirt, Boulder, Colorado, Nov. 28 -- A good backgrounder about the band and this tour, written in support of Ween's three-night stand in Boulder that concludes this Saturday. Writer Andy Stonehouse (a more appropriate name for a writer of a Ween article I could never think of) describes the band as "Sophomoric. Ridiculous. Homophobic. Asinine. Puerile." And he's being nice.

Vegoose has flown -- The Rebel Yell, University of Nevada, Nov. 3 -- A review of the Vegoose Festival featuring Ween, Flaming Lips, Arcade Fire and Widespread Panic. A snapshot of the crowd: "All the lead singer had to do was say 'Ween,'and then all the weirdos in the crowd immediately began to howl, conditioned like Pavlov's dogs, which left all the sane people in the vicinity stricken with fear." Look for the same reaction tonight.

Order from Chaos -- Metro Newspapers, Bay area, CA, Nov. 2 -- A piece about Dean Ween side project Moistboyz, who One Percent should try to book when they go on tour this winter.

Ween Radio -- A website that does nothing but stream Ween music. You can request a song and find tour info... from as recent as 2002.

The Official Ween site -- The usual stuff.

Look for a feature on Milemarker here tomorrow, and a column that recaps the past year of columns on Thursday...

--Got comments? Post 'em here.--


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posted by Tim at 5:26 AM

Friday, November 25, 2005

Live Review: Civicminded, Summer Birds in the Cellar; a quiet weekend ahead...

It seems unfair to make any comments about Civicminded's set Wednesday night at O'Leaver's. The sound couldn't have been any worse. Look, everyone knows that O'Leaver's has an inferior PA, but some nights bands sound pretty damn good (bordering on great). Wednesday night wasn't one of them, at least not for Civicminded. I was curious about these guys after hearing their song on the one.one First National Bank comp. I know that they do a lot of gigs in the West Omaha club world. Their stage presence reflected this. Not that there's anything wrong with the frontman saying "How's everybody doin' tonight?" halfway through a song, it's just not what I'm accustomed to at indie shows. Most indie bands slouch onto the stage, plug in and play their entire set without acknowledging that there's anyone else in the room. A common question during an indie band's set "Who are these guys?" No one seems to know, and you usually don't find out until after the set, when you can ask the frontman (and he might even tell you). That wasn't a problem with Civicminded (or the headliner, for that matter). The frontman announced, "We're Civicminded, thanks for coming out," after almost every song. Again, nothing wrong with that, it's just something I'm more used to hearing at The Ranch Bowl or from a cover band.

Civicminded seems to be somewhere between being a radio-alt band and something different, something better. They're teetering on the edge of heading different places than the run-of-the-mill alt-band. A couple of their songs (the one.one track, for instance) wander from the typical radio formula to more interesting territory. It's their rhythm section that seems to be in limbo. Most of the time, the bass and drums were playing atypical heavy-metal backbeat rhythms a la cover bands. This music, especially the guitars and keyboards, demand something more creative than that. Too often the compositions seemed formulaic, as if someone came up with the riffs and everyone else nodded and smiled and thought "Oh, it's one of those songs" and then went into auto pilot. That style -- that straight-on alt rock/bar rock style -- is exactly what 85 percent of a typical bar audience wants to hear. They want the familiar. They want Pearl Jam. That won't cut it with the 15 percenters who are used to hearing more unique (or oddball) stuff that typifies college/indie music. But then again, I have no idea where these guys want to go. Maybe they're targeting the FM alt-radio crowd. And that's fine, too. But if they're interested in doing something more creative (and better), the potential is most definitely there.

It's impossible to comment much further because of the horrible, muddy, cluttered mix. Civicminded is a five-piece that features a frontman (who only sings, he plays no instrument), two guitars (one guy also plays keyboards), bass and drums. Rarely could you make out the second guitar line in the fog of noise. The vocal pick-up was worse than bad -- at moments the guy sounded like he was blowing out the stage-right amp with his voice (He has classic rock frontman tendencies that don't lend themselves to O'Leaver's RadioShack microphones). The proof in the pudding lies in how they would sound on a better PA...

The inferior sound system was no problem for Summer Birds in the Cellar. They spent about 15 minutes dragging a mountain of amps onto the stage and stacking them under, then in front of, the plasma TV. The additional firepower made all the difference. But even then, there were problems. Thing kept getting unplugged to the bass head, and someone would constantly have to lean over and plug stuff back in. Despite the technical glitches, these guys were pretty amazing, with a sound that combines dance rhythms with Cure-style drone guitars and intricate, repeated riffs that pulled songs out with extended, jammy endings that you didn't want to stop. The frontman introduced the last song with "I hope we win the war on terror, because I hate it," or something like that. About halfway through, however, the bass head apparently fell off the stack of amplifiers. Once they lifted it back onto the stack, they declared that the bass head was blown, fiddled around with some wires, and started the song over from the beginning, declaring it was the first encore they ever performed. Great set, great band. I should have bought a copy of their CD that night.

As for the weekend: For me it'll probably start at The Brothers tonight since there's no shows to speak of. There might be a show at O'Leaver's but who knows? They quit updating their calendar again and sending out information on their e-mail list. I do know, however, that they've got a hot show tomorrow -- Bad Luck Charm with The Black Rabbits -- this one will be packed. $5, 9:30 p.m. And that about does it for the weekend. Blame the holiday for the lame schedule.

--Got comments? Post 'em here.--


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posted by Tim at 9:04 AM

Wednesday, November 23, 2005

Column 52: A Thanksgiving Prayer; Summer Birds in the Cellar, Civicminded tonight

This column is self-explanatory. The staff at the paper hated it. I don't blame them.

Column 52 -- Be Thankful for Nothing
Omaha's music scene has no one to thank but itself.

About two weeks ago, the editorial staff at The Reader approached me and the other writers to lend a hand on this issue's cover story based on the question: "What are you thankful for?" I was given a list of local musicians and important figures from the music scene, which I was assigned to call or e-mail asking them what they're thankful for during this holiday season.

My reaction: This has got to be the lamest idea I've ever heard. Look, I'm not going to pick up the phone and call Simon Joyner or Marc Leibowitz or Tim Kasher and waste their time by first, asking what they're thankful for and second, explaining why The Reader thinks their comments are relevant to anyone outside of their immediate family, close friends or whatever deity they worship.

Beyond the basics -- their health, and the health of their friends and family -- what could they possibly say that would be interesting? What curveball could they throw that would be "good reading" to the guy or gal sitting at O'Leaver's or The Blue Line or your local convenient store or any other place where The Reader is stacked? "Dude, I'm thankful for my sweet, sweet Electro-lux Flying V with duo pick-ups and flaming starburst finish." Right on.

Yeah I know, I flew off the handle, as per usual. I'm sure the story, which is tucked somewhere inside these pages, is absolutely riveting. And upon reflection, the local music scene and its participants do have a lot to be thankful for. But once you get past thanking the obvious -- the venues, the labels, the promoters, the recent national attention, and, of course, their natural talent -- there's not much left to be thankful for.

Our music scene was built on hard work. Not luck, not fortune, not the good will of some omnipotent rock god. The bands that have made a name for themselves did it by busting their asses in the studio, in the clubs, on the road. Beyond that, I can only image what they could be thankful for:

A good van
A better mechanic.
Cheap(er) gas.
Free booze at gigs.
A quiet place to throw up after all that free booze.
Getting away with it.
Getting caught by the right people.
The decision to not press charges.
Staying together, because it makes sense.
Breaking up, because it makes sense.
Just getting rid of fly in the ointment.
Thinking through every possible consequence before saying no to a groupie.
Those times when you said yes.
Catching the flu on off nights.
Being able to fake it when it catches you.
Staying away from the wrong drugs.
Surviving those time(s) when you weren't smart enough to avoid them.
Making that one last phone call.
Sending that one last e-mail.
Making and sending one more after that.
Listening to the right people.
Ignoring the wrong ones.
Not giving a shit either way.
Being clever enough to come up with the right riffs,
The right fills,
The right lyrics
At the right times.
And most importantly, doing things the right way when tempted time and time and time again to do it the easy way.

This is getting preachy. And trite. And it's just the kind of thing I wanted to avoid by not participating in that article in the first place. What do the fans and musicians and everyone involved in the Omaha scene have to be thankful for? That there is an Omaha scene at all. And who can they thank? Themselves.


Maybe I should have ended it with "Happy Thanksgiving"? Anyway, in addition to spending my holiday with family, I'll be spending it in the bar, starting tonight at O'Leaver's. The headliner is Summer Birds in the Cellar, a Florida-based four-piece that combines keys and guitar and guy-vocals to create a sound that's more mellow than rock. The stuff I heard online is unremarkable but pretty. More interesting to me is opening band Civicminded, who had a stand-out track on the First National Bank Omaha music compilation. They've been playing the West Omaha circuit for months now, so I fear they could draw a large crowd which would likely drive me right out of the bar. Guess I'll have to get there early and try to grab a seat, as you should, too. $5, 9:30.

--Got comments? Post 'em here.--


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posted by Tim at 5:02 AM

Tuesday, November 22, 2005

Watching them dig a Slowdown hole; Ladyfinger tonight in Papillion

I e-mailed Jason Kulbel the day I noticed the heavy-moving equipment touch down at the Slowdown site, figuring he would regale me with stories of a fireworks-laden ribbon-cutting ceremony, tales of how he and Robb Nansel and Rachel Jacobson -- decked out in business suits and hardhats (with their names printed on them) --grinned as they pushed their gold-painted shovels into the half-frozen November soil while a small crowd of poorly dressed Creek staffers and well-dressed Kutak Rock "friends" clapped with enthusiasm. Maybe Robb made a speech in his usual acerbic style that captured the moment in everyone's hearts, the totality of which was "Thanks for coming" and a half-wave. On hand for the occasion, of course, would be Mayor Mike Fahey with his usual leprechaun grin, strongly shaking the Creek crew's hands, their arms waving like wet noodles. "I just love you goddamned kids! But tell me, why Slowdown? I figured you'd want something more up-tempo, like The Rock House or Shakers or something like that." Robb would quietly reply with, "Well, we thought about those names and all the other ones you e-mailed us, Mr. Mayor, but Slowdown... well... it would take too long to explain..." Fahey's face would remain a frozen grin as he moved on to talk about the real meaning of Election with Alexander Payne...

Instead, Jason replied to my e-mail with: "we wanted to have an official groundbreaking ceremony but nansel lost all of the shovels. no, there was nothing official. a lot of people told us we should have one, but it seemed a bit over the top. we're just happy to finally see something happening down there." (Note the lack of capital letters -- this is a Saddle Creek correspondence trait, reflecting how the writer is way too fatigued to push the Caps key.) I'm sure Fahey was disappointed. I know how much he likes to wear a hardhat. Anyway, they tore out the sidewalk along the west side of the property yesterday, and steamshovels (or whatever they're called) are eagerly digging away at some sort of foundation. It won't be long now.

Noteworthy show tonight: Ladyfinger at The Rock (now there's a cool club name) in Papillion along with The Atlas and emo bands Renee Heartfelt and Leaving Lafayette. $7, 8 p.m. Ladyfinger is probably playing early...

--Got comments? Post 'em here.--


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posted by Tim at 5:30 AM

Monday, November 21, 2005

Injury Time Out

The day after I wrote the Nov. 18 blog entry I woke up and couldn't move my fingers without lightning bolts of pain shooting from my wrist, up my arm to my elbow. Any pressure on my right hand created tiny sparks of agony. It's only now that I can type, and even then it's a bit of a struggle. No, I didn't break my wrist, more like sprained it (It never swelled up). So, as this medical report would indicate, I missed all the weekend shows. Driving was out of the question. Ah well, there will be other weekends. It also means there will be no column this week (the deadline was last Friday). More tomorrow. I promise. And if anyone went to any of the shows this weekend, give us a bit of a review, will you?

--Got comments? Post 'em here.--


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posted by Tim at 5:19 AM

Friday, November 18, 2005

Weekend Update

I write this in a broken and battered state, having fallen flat on my ass on some icy stairs. My back and ass are sore but fine, my hands are two bloody stumps, which is why you're not reading a review of last night's Eagle*Seagull/Benck/Neva show. Anyone who did go, please leave us a brief review on the webboard. My personal agony, however, will likely not deter me from attending the weekend highlights, which start tonight at O'Leaver's where Brimstone Howl, The Terminals and Autodramatics will be performing. Brimstone Howl, if you didn't know, was formerly known as The Zyklon Bees before the Anti-Defamation League stepped in and gave the band some one-on-one sensitivity training. This is the CD release show for Bang! Bang! Bang! Bang! Bang! Bang! Bang! or as I call it Seven Bangs! or Bang! x 7. released on Speed! Nebraska Records. $5, 9:30 p.m..

Meanwhile, downtown at Sokol Underground tonight it's LA noise-rock outfit Mae-shi (5 Rue Christine Records), Lincoln's The Show is the Rainbow and St. Louis' So Many Dynamos (who AMG compares to Dismemberment Plan). $7, 9 p.m.

Saturday night it's The Third Men (ex-The Sons of...) with the jazzy Iowa City combo The Diplomats of Solid Sound at The 49'r. $5, 9:30 p.m.

But perhaps the biggest show night of all this weekend is Sunday. Down at Sokol Underground it's a four-band bill with Broken Spindles, GoGoGo Airheart, The Joggers and Flamboyant Gods, all for just $7 (Starts at 9). Meanwhile, at Mick's, Kite Pilot takes the stage with Unwed Sailor. $4, 8 p.m.

Now if you'll excuse me, I have to go change the dressing on my wounds. Have a good weekend.

--Got comments? Post 'em here.--


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posted by Tim at 5:09 AM

Thursday, November 17, 2005

Feature o' the Week: Eagle*Seagull, playing tonight with Neva Dinova

I am occasionally asked by the very few who read this blog or my stuff in The Reader what's hot these days. My answer for the last few months has been Lincoln's Eagle*Seagull, a band to which I just posted a feature story about (read it here). My first question during our recent interview (which they drove all the way from Lincoln to do -- I was touched!) was the traditional "stupid question": What in hell does your name mean, and why the cock-a-doody asterisk (which is a pain in the arse to type)? The answer to the first half is in the story, the answer to the second was never really given. It had something to do with Google and the Internet. However if you type Eagle*Seagull into Google these days, the top result is a model airplane website, followed by a site selling decorative mobiles. For God's sake, get rid of the asterisk!

What didn't make it into the story? Frontman Eli Mardock's reticence to explain, read and/or publish his lyrics, though he says he takes great pride in them. When I asked him what "Your beauty is a knife I turn on my throat" means, he hum-hawed. "I get self conscious about my lyrics when I see them printed out," he said, avoiding the question. "Poetry is supposed to look good on the page. Song lyrics are about the song. Seeing any of my lyrics makes me cringe." Fair enough. I guess it just means we need to listen to the songs more closely, and that ain't such bad thing.

Tonight Eagle*Seagull opens for Neva Dinova and Sarah Benck & The Robbers at Sokol Underground, which means you must get there at the stroke of 9 p.m. You will not be disappointed. As good as their CD is, their live show is much better and really does deserve comparison to The Arcade Fire, whether the band likes it or it. $7, 9 p.m.

--Got comments? Post 'em here.--


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posted by Tim at 5:26 AM

Wednesday, November 16, 2005

Column 51: Caulfield, Goodbye; Gerald Lee Jr. a.k.a. Lee Meyerpeter at The Niner tonight

Switching things around this week and running the column today and the feature on Eagle*Seagull tomorrow (that show it tomorrow night with Neva Dinova).

I said last week in this blog that I'd heard that Caulfield Records' label chief, Bernie McGinn, had moved to San Francisco, but that there'd been conflicting reports to the truthfulness of that rumor. Bernie put those questions to rest when he e-mailed me with the real poop, and then agreed to do an interview for the column. This piece merely scratches the surface of what Caulfield Records was all about. Believe me, Caulfield was a big deal in the '90s, much in the same way that Saddle Creek is today. In an era before the widespread use of the Internet, Caulfield was the real deal -- a distributed label (via Lumberjack) that got your music heard all over the country. The quality of their releases was consistently first-rate.

Column 51 -- Goodbye, Caulfield
Nebraska's original indie label calls it quits

Before there was Saddle Creek, there was Caulfield Records.

It was 1988 -- a time when the thought of Nebraska ever being the center of anything other than college football, telemarketing or insurance -- let alone the indie rock music world -- was insane. Record labels belonged in New York or L.A. (or maybe Seattle), certainly not Nebraska.

Then along came a 17-year-old Lincoln entrepreneur who conned his loving mother into cosigning a loan to finance the release of a 7-inch EP by his band, Peer Puppet.

"We actually changed our name after the record was pressed," said the entrepreneur in question, Bernie McGinn. "We crossed out 'Peer Puppet' and stamped it with the new name, 'Sideshow,'" McGinn told me the story from his new home in sunny, soothing San Francisco, California, where he moved seven weeks ago to pursue an offer he couldn't refuse from CNET News.com. The move decidedly spelled the end of one of the most influential record labels in our scene's rather young history. Caulfield Records and its roster of bands that included Frontier Trust, Mercy Rule, Christie Front Drive, Giants Chair, Opium Taylor, Mineral, The Sound of Rails, The Lepers and Her Flyaway Manner, were the predecessors to a phenomenon that would emerge a decade later called Saddle Creek Records. McGinn proved that you could run a successful, nationally distributed indie label out of your house and have fun doing it. Making money at it, well, that's another thing altogether...

The label's heyday was in the early '90s. Caulfield grew from a regional label with local acts like Mercy Rule and Frontier Trust, to a national entity with the release of CDs by Denver's Christie Front Drive and Kansas City's Giants Chair, two bands that toured extensively. Things got so busy around the Caulfield offices that there wasn't enough room for McGinn's own band -- Sideshow released their second LP on Flydaddy, a subsidiary of Sub Pop.

Then over the course of '95, Giants Chair, Christie Front Drive and Lincoln band Opium Taylor all broke up, just after Caulfield released those bands' follow-up LPs. "Opium Taylor's last show was their CD release show," McGinn said. "For all intents and purposes, not having bands on the road was the beginning of the end."

But McGinn soldiered on. In 1999, the label released the debut by Traluma, a project fronted by former Gauge guitarist Kevin. J. Frank. It was the first time McGinn had to work with a band's independent publicist. It would prove to be a souring experience.

"I struggled with it for quite a while -- do I want to make this my job or is this a passion or hobby?" McGinn said. "I did try, on a number of levels, to make it a record label by putting out music by (bands) Kolya and m.i.j., and working with people who weren't part of my close circle of friends. Afterward, I decided that this isn't fun and it isn't the reason I started the label."

Add to that the fact that by 2000 McGinn's last band, Luck of Aleia, had folded, and he no longer was performing on stage. "That meant I wasn't meeting new bands," he said. "It just didn't make sense anymore."

Caulfield's last gasps were releases by his brother Brendan's band, Her Flyaway Manner, as well as The Lepers and The Sound of Rails. In May 2003, Caulfield released Fractions and Exaggerations, a compilation of material from '90s noise-rock band Germbox. Catalog number 41 would prove to be the label's final release.

"There was no official tent folding," McGinn said of Caulfield's demise. "It was an organic process of not putting out any records, in the same way that putting out records in the first place wasn't an effort to start a record label."

These days, McGinn and his wife, Tammy Childers, are busy enough just keeping up with their 3-year-old daughter, Stella. He says he's still going to keep material in print that people want (You can find it at Caulfieldrecords.com), as well as make the catalog available on digital services such as i-Tunes, Rhapsody and Napster.

"It's been an honor working with bands that I have been huge fans of, and being trusted to help get their music out there," McGinn said. "That's been the best part of it."

Tonight, Bad Luck Charm's Lee Meyerpeter is doing an acoustic set as "Gerald Lee Jr." at The 49'r. Lee says his songs are written in the vein of Waylon Jennings, Uncle Tupelo and Iggy Pop. Also playing is Lash La Rue from The Mercurys. Hey, is there a better place to be on a cold, cold night than The Niner? $2, 10 p.m.

--Got comments? Post 'em here.--


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posted by Tim at 5:13 AM

Tuesday, November 15, 2005

Live Review: Mal Madrigal; Slowdown breaks ground; Rachel's tonight

Where was I yesterday? Writing a feature on Eagle*Seagull and a column on Caulfield Records, that's where. Watch for them tomorrow and Thursday.

I never got a chance to talk about Saturday Night's Mal Madrigal show at O'Leaver's. It was a packed house. I stood by the door most of the night, which sucked. Nothing like being in somebody's way all night, but what could you do? I don't know what the deal was, but the place was filled... with women -- unheard of at O'Leaver's. I halfway expected some guy to walk in wearing a cop's uniform and tell one of the women that "she's under arrest" before throwing his hat across the room and unbuttoning his shirt to the throbbing beat of The Petshop Boys. Even the owner was perplexed by the number of women who came out to see Mal Madrigal. I guess it's that sexy heartthrob Steve Bartolomei, this season's Keith Partridge.

First up was Denton, Texas' Shiny Around the Edges, a minimalist noise-rock trio with heavy Sonic Youth influence. Their music was tribal and rhythmic, featuring chant male and female vocals. Some songs were feedback dirges while others were gritty rockers (They opened with a gruelingly slow Neil Young cover). Quite a contrast to what was about to hit the stage. It's been about a year since I last saw Mal Madrigal, and their sound hasn't changed much. The band's rural folk is centered around Bartolomei's warm, almost-soothing vocals. Some songs were downright pretty; all were laid-back -- at least all the songs I heard. After about five songs-worth of people constantly walking back and forth in front of me, I gave up and went home. Mal Madrigal may well have outgrown O'Leaver's Saturday night. It will be awhile until we get a chance to see them again as Bartolomei is headed to Europe for a month to play in Mayday. I ran into drummer Corey Broman (Statistics, Son, Ambulance, Little Brazil) at the show -- he'll be on the same tour, playing for both Mayday and Orenda Fink, who are sharing the bill.

A brief mention that Saddle Creek Records' Slowdown project apparently broke ground over the weekend. I saw tractors and other heavy equipment busy at work yesterday from my office window. I was beginning to wonder if they were going to get the hole dug before the ground froze.

Tonight, The Rachel's take the stage at Sokol Underground with Invert and The Mariannes. The Rachel's play incredibly droll, drawn-out found-sound instrumentals on their last CD Systems/Layers. It's a tough listen and could be challenging to pull off on stage. $10, 9 p.m.

--Got comments? Post 'em here.--


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posted by Tim at 5:21 AM

Saturday, November 12, 2005

Live Review: Bright Eyes, Spoon; Mal Madrigal, Dereck Higgins tonight

One advantage to being a music writer other than getting free CDs in the mail all the time is getting on "the list." Most newspapers (The World Herald for instance) don't allow reporters to be "on the list." Reporters aren't even allowed to keep the CDs they've reviewed for fear that it might give an impression of impropriety. That's not a problem at alt weeklies (or online 'zines, for that matter), where receiving free stuff is one of the chief motivations for writing in the first place. Impropriety be damned.

That said, I was on "the list" plus one last night for the Bright Eyes show at The Orpheum. After eating a fine Mexican dinner at Trini's I considered bypassing the whole event. It was already 9:30, and I've seen Bright Eyes more times than I care to admit. But since we were walking in the general direction of The Orpheum, we figured we might as well take a peek.

The Orpheum is an amazing venue, absolutely gorgeous, like walking into a New York Opera House (or what I imagine one to be like). If you've never been there, you need to go at least once before the City decides to bulldoze the place to make room for a parking garage (now that we have their cold, sterile Holland Center). Our seats were in The Loge in the front box on stage-right -- actually the two front seats of the front box -- so close you could watch the rock stars stumbling around backstage.

Spoon already had begun their set and I quickly realized the drawback to our location. Sure, you were close enough to piss onto the stage, but you'd have to heave it over the stack of sub-amps stacked on either side. At first I didn't think I'd need earplugs -- not here, not in this home of perfect acoustics. But after a couple minutes, I put mine in, and after a few songs, it was like I wasn't wearing earplugs at all. The bass so dominated the sound that you could hear or feel little else. This must be what it's like inside one of those rattling Escalades that you can feel approaching your car about eight blocks away. The sound was worse than bad, it was horrible, (at least from our seats).

Spoon walked through its set with mechanical gusto. Britt Daniel played the role of the frontman with as much panache as he could muster, looking like a thin version of Gary Busey circa The Buddy Holly Story. His one rock star trick was dropping to his knees to face a small amp, his back to the audience as if trying to leech feedback from his guitar. While I like Spoon's records, last night, it all sounded the same except for the few numbers where the band played drawn-out, droning endings. It was a boring set that seemed to go on forever, but maybe that's because I was being shaken to jelly by those sub-amps.

Between bands The Orpheum's lobby swelled with hipsters desperately trying to down as many drinks as possible before the next set (no drinks allowed inside the theater). I ran into a few people I knew, all of whom had seats up close but against the wall, and all complaining about the bass. I don't think these types of theaters were designed to handle this sort of music, certainly not this sort of sound equipment.

It wasn't as bad when Bright Eyes came out, serenaded by a harp. Though the harpist played on half the songs, I never really noticed her other than during the opener, "Sunrise, Sunset." It was ornate and pretty. The rest of the time it was drowned out by, well two drummers (Clark Baechle from The Faint and Jason Boesel from Rilo Kiley), Mike Mogis on electric guitar, a trumpet (I think it was Nate Walcott), and bass. The harpist also played keyboards and vibes, and sang harmonies on one song.

Conor looked relaxed in his too-tight pants and button-down shirt. He spent most of the time between songs complaining to someone off stage about the monitors, pointing at his microphone and then pointing up, occasionally doing impromptu sound checks and saying "I need a little more" while, again, pointing at the mike. It reminded me of a Warren Zevon concert I saw at the Ranch Bowl years ago. Zevon did the same thing -- pointing at his mike and angrily jerking his finger upward to some poor soundguy in the back of the room, before he finally blew up and threw his keyboard to the ground. Conor didn't do anything like that last night. He just ran through his playlist, which included selections from throughout his career. The most amusing part of the show was watching Clark Baechle get up from behind one of the drum sets like a trained bear, walk up to the front of the stage and play clarinet. He's pretty good at it, too.

Conor did the obligatory "thank you Omaha" speech, and acknowledging his family in the crowd. He said the last time he was in The Orpheum was for his graduation, then did a mock reenactment with Mogis playing the role of his principal. He went on to say how much he hated his f---ing school. That was the only controversial moment of the evening. After about five minutes of clapping, Oberst came back out for an encore that started with an angsty rendition of "Lua," where he painfully pulled every note from his guitar. It was the highlight of the night. The band came on after that to play a song I didn't recognize before belting out "Ode to Joy," the usual set closer, and my cue to leave.

Two good shows on tap tonight. At O'Leaver's Mal Madrigal is playing with Shiny Around the Edges. The Madrigal band this time consists of Mike Saklar (guitar), Ryan Fox (bass), Eric Ernst (drums), Dan McCarthy (accordion, keys etc.), and of course, frontman/guitarist Steve Bartolomei. The band just finished recording a live, all-analog set of songs using old vacuum-tube mic pre-amps and two linked tape machines. Shortly after this show, Bartolomei will be headed to Europe to play bass on tour with Mayday. 9:30, $5.

Meanwhile, in the heart of Benson at Mick's, Dereck Higgins and his band will be opening for Goodbye Sunday and Stephanie Pilypaitis. This is the same band that backed Higgins at his Healing Arts gig last July (here's that show review). $5, 9 p.m.

--Got comments? Post 'em here.--


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posted by Tim at 12:18 PM

Friday, November 11, 2005

In anticipation of Bright Eyes, Spoon and others tonight

What are we in for tonight at The Orpheum? Going to a Bright Eyes show used to be like going to Sunset Speedway to see something blow up good. Will Conor be so loaded that he'll barely be able to stand up? When will he throw something at the audience or spit on someone? Will he stumble off the stage halfway through his set? Will he smash his guitar after the encore? Will he accidentally insult half the audience or the entire state of Nebraska? The operative words here, however, are "used to be." Bright Eyes sets these days are rather tame affairs. Maturity has caught up with our boy, and he seems to now understand that most of the crowd is there to hear his music, not see him hoist a jug of wine over his head like a pro.

Others from around the country apparently go to his shows with the same level of gruesome anticipation. Check out this review from The University of Washington-Seattle Daily of a recent show on this tour. The lead: "The question on most fans' minds as they wait for a Bright Eyes show to begin usually has something to do with front man Conor Oberst's level of inebriation." Bravo, Keegan. I suspect Conor will be on his best behavior, this being The Orpheum, Omaha's version of Carnegie Hall, a special, regal place to most people who grew up here (God forbid it should be torn down or turned into condos now that the World Herald got its precious Holland Center). Doing the math, I suspect the show will start at the strike of 8 p.m. with Willy Mason and his guitar, followed by Dave Dondero, then Spoon, with Bright Eyes coming on stage at 10:30. If you're still hungry for music afterward, stumble down to Ted & Wally's for Tomato A Day (helps keep the tornado away) featuring Dude Wyoming, Abigail Fishel, and Doug Wray with Morning at Sea and Nick Hugg -- I have no idea what any of these bands sound like, but you'll be downtown anyway...

Look for a review tomorrow, along with a preview of Saturday night's show here tomorrow.

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posted by Tim at 5:27 AM

Thursday, November 10, 2005

Column 50: Shelter Belt comes home from the road

This column originated while driving home from work. Running down the street was sweat-covered Shelter Belt frontman Jesse Otto on his daily jog. I waved him over and we chatted for a couple seconds (No one likes to be interrupted during a workout) about their touring life and studio work. An interview was scheduled later that week. Shelter Belt has always been one of those bands that flies just beneath the radar. They're not terribly concerned about building a big following in Omaha, preferring instead to take their show on the road, which they've done in spades. Will their hard work pay off when they shop their new CD to labels early next year? It should. Most larger indies insist that the bands they sign do the necessary touring to support a release, as it should be. But because Shelter Belt's sound doesn't fall into any trendy categories, they might get overlooked, which would be a shame but not the end of the world for a band that seems satisfied with their current level of success (with hopes, of course, of making it to the next level). But just imagine what they could do with support from a label and a booking agent... Check out Shelter Belt at their website: beltcave.com.

Column 50 -- Shelter on the Road
Shelter Belt epitomizes the term DIY

I never again want to hear woe-is-me laments from local rock bands complaining about how they'd just love to go on the road but they can't figure out how to book a tour.

Not after talking to Jesse Otto and Anthony Knuppel, two of the 7-member indie folk-rock orchestra called Shelter Belt.

Whilst clicking through the daily gig calendar on SLAMOmaha.com this summer I kept coming across listings for Shelter Belt shows at such obscure and faraway venues as Beaner's Central Coffeehouse in Duluth, The Brown Bean in Fredonia, NY; Soul Infusion Tea House and Bistro in Sylva, N.C., and Reptile Palace in Oshkosh, Wisconsin. Hardly the towns and venues I'm used to seeing on a touring band's typical itinerary.

As of last Saturday night's gig at Shea Riley's, Shelter Belt has logged 58 shows this year throughout the North Central, Midwestern and Eastern United States. That follows a 70-gig year in 2004, all without the help of a record label or booking agent.

Booking is hard, frustrating work, Otto and Knuppel said over espressos in a packed Blue Line coffee shop Saturday. "You have to be persistent, and it can't bother you to be ignored," Otto said. "When a venue says they've never heard of you and they don't have time to listen to your record, you just have to move on to the next one on the list."

There's a method to the band's touring madness. Knuppel said it involves identifying colleges and universities within driving distance, then researching nearby venues. They bypass large cities and big clubs. "Unless you're a really huge band, forget about it," Knuppel said. "We've had our best luck at smaller cities with bigger schools. We try to avoid 21-and-over clubs for venues that are 18-and-over or all-ages. Coffee houses are the best. We'll sell 15 to 20 CDs at those shows."

But it's not only juggling venues' schedules, Otto and Knuppel also have to juggle the band members' seven day-jobs. Otto, for example, works at UNO and is a history grad student, while Knuppel does accounting for a downtown parking company. "We're lucky everyone has flexible jobs," Knuppel said, adding that the band takes vacations days at the same time to facilitate longer tours. "We've only had to turn down four or five shows because of job schedules."

With the gigs booked, the band piles into both a van and a car and hits the road to venues like The Boheme Bistro in Ames, Iowa -- a favorite because of its generous owner, its roomy stage, and of course, its loving crowd. "The Iowa State Daily and the radio station have been good to us," Otto said. "We've had large crowds there from day one."

Otto and company received the ultimate compliment the first time they played The Main Street Pub in Brookings, South Dakota. They began playing "Sad Thing" from their last album, Rain Home, and members of the crowd already knew the words. "That's the ultimate compliment," Otto said.

He says touring is like being on vacation, but not a paid one, as the band usually struggles to break even or get a few dollars ahead. Still, without a record label, touring is the only effective way that Shelter Belt is going to get their music heard outside of the Omaha area. So far they've sold more than 1,100 copies of Rain Home -- almost all of them sold at gigs.

The band is winding down its tour schedule for the year as they reenter their homemade Belt Cave Studios located in the basement of a Dundee home, to record the follow-up to Rain Home. Fans can expect the finished full-length sometime next spring. And then it's back to the road.

"We want to do more shows than last year," Otto said. "Every year it gets a little easier now that we've done the initial leg work. More people know who we are."

But wouldn't it be a dream come true if the new CD caught the attention of a record label and Shelter Belt got a booking agent? Otto and Knuppel aren't holding their breaths. The band didn't even bother shopping Rain Home to labels. They might send the new one out to a few this time, but if no one bites, that's okay.

"We've always done things DIY and it's worked for us," Otto said. "We would love to make a living traveling and recording and not have to work day jobs. We're told that it's possible.

"We wouldn't be doing it if it wasn't possible," Knuppel said.

--Got comments? Post 'em here.--


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posted by Tim at 5:20 AM

Wednesday, November 09, 2005

This week's feature: Spoon; Tristeza tonight

It's become something of a habit to tell you that the mere 400-word limit that The Reader places on feature stories wasn't enough and that I had to commandeer my column to have enough room to get all the important meaning out of an interview. That wasn't the case with Spoon's Britt Daniel this time around (read it here). Britt clearly wasn't in the mood for an interview. I got a sense that I caught him at a bad time, or that he'd just woken up. I can understand that. I don't know how musicians, especially popular ones, stand being interviewed over and over and over. In the case of Conor Oberst, he simply doesn't do interviews anymore, at least not with small publications (I should point out that I didn't request an interview with Conor this time around. There wasn't anything new to talk about. I gleaned his no-interviews policy from The Omaha World-Herald's precoverage of Friday's show -- Niz was forced to interview Conor's publicist). Daniel could have refused as well, but he was willing to take 10 minutes to at least chat with me.

Interestingly, most of the time was spent with me updating him on the Saddle Creek's Slowdown project, which he was "eager to see while in town." I told him he'd be staring at an overgrown weed field with a railroad track running through it as the project hasn't broken ground yet (and time is ticking away). The other stuff that didn't make it into the story includes how Omaha has sort of slipped off Daniel's radar screen. "A lot of people who made Omaha special have left," he said. But he couldn't really think of anyone else other than Conor, who now lives in New York. "Nansel's still there," Daniel said, referring to Creel label head Robb Nansel, "and some Saddle Creek people are still there. The Faint still are still there, but some of my best friends left." The rest of the interview was somewhat forced. Britt talked about how digital downloads will never replace record stores and how he's never really pursued top-40 status. He also had no idea what kind of venue The Orpheum is, figuring it was just a large hall. Not a stellar interview, but that can't all be.

Anyway... Tonight is Tristeza with Bella Lea at O'Leaver's. Tristeza has gone from being one of the hottest acts in the indie sphere back in 2000 (and here's my 2000 interview with the band) to just another touring indie instrumental act. I remember them talking about breaking up way back then, but they never did (though I think some of the personnel did change). It should be a rather soothing show. $6, 9:30 p.m.

--Got comments? Post 'em here.--


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posted by Tim at 5:27 AM

Tuesday, November 08, 2005

The Lepers in the studio; Brother Ali tonight

Owen Cleasby of The Lepers tells me that he and drummer, Ken Brock, are recording a new album at Steve Micek's home studio. Owen said this one will be more fleshed out instrumentally than the last Lepers CD, The Love from Above, which was released on Caulfield Records. Very unlikely that Caulfield will release this one, Owen said, as the guy behind the label, the legendary Bernie McGinn (ex-Sideshow), has moved to San Francisco. Someone else had told me that McGinn moved to S.F., then I mentioned that news to someone else, who said it wasn't true, then Owen told me the same story at the Okkervil River show. I guess I could try e-mailing McGinn via the Caulfield website, which is still live. Anyway, Owen says their CD should be done in early 2006 and then they'll shop it around to labels.

Tonight, Brother Ali returns to Sokol Underground with Swollen Members and Buck Bowen. Fellow Reader screed Jeremy Schnitker did an interview with Ali last week (read it here), where race again became the center of the discussion. Sounds like he's getting tired of the same questions over and over. I'm lucky I got to interview him waaay back in June 2003 (read that one here), before he caught fire with the critics and was more open about those sorts of questions. That didn't stop him from calling me out on stage about my article, however (you can read about that uncomfortable night in the June 13, 2003, Lazy-i blog entry). $10, 9 p.m.

--Got comments? Post 'em here.--


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posted by Tim at 5:28 AM

Monday, November 07, 2005

Chromatics tonight with... Black Guys (Darren Keen strikes again!)

It's shaping up to be a pretty busy week, with significant shows somewhere every night. Tonight it's Chromatics at O'Leaver's with Black Guys? Who are these Black Guys? None other than Darren Keen of The Show is the Rainbow with Jim Schroder (Mr. 1986), Javid Dabestani (Bright Calm Blue, Broken Spindles) and Brendan McGinn (Her Flyaway Manner). No idea what they sound like. Keen describes them as a "rock band." Chromatics record on Troubleman Unlimited, so expect arty noise mixed with electronics. $5, 9:30.

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posted by Tim at 3:36 AM

Sunday, November 06, 2005

Live Review: Cursive; Virgasound, Local H tonight

It's my assessment that the whole Cursive storyline -- opening for The Cure, The Hiatus, The Return -- couldn't have been more ingeniously calculated by our friends at Saddle Creek. Cut the band off whilst it prepares to break through whatever invisible force field the protects the different layers of public acceptance, leave the masses wondering if the band has breathed its last, leave them yearning for more. Then a little more than a year later, seemingly out of nowhere, pluck them from the ashes reborn as a lean, mean four-piece, casting aside the glitter and glow to reveal muscle and bone. The New Cursive is a Jeet Kune-Do version, stressing power in efficiency, building strength through simplicity. Applying this new philosophy to recordings and the road, their fans, who have wept in their dormancy, will have new heroes to celebrate. And all will once again be well in Cursive land.

I mentioned this theory to the label chief last night, how he couldn't have marketed the band any better if he tried, and he just laughed. He didn't laugh, however, when I told him that the next Cursive album will be King Kong-sized, as will the subsequent tour. Cursive is slowly evolving from being just another indie band with principles to folk heroes on par with Fugazi. I mentioned that to Matt Maginn last week, and he quickly denied it. "We try to walk the fine line, we try to make good decisions, but we don't make decisions based on whether it follows a DIY or independent ethic or rule," he said. "We follow our own ethic. I love Fugazi. We don't take ourselves seriously enough to be in their league."

Fair enough. But the hiatus did prove that Cursive isn't in it for the cash (though the cash can't be bad). Whether they want it or not, people are identifying with this band for than its music.

But I digress…

Cursive brought their A-game last night, dipping deep into the catalog for what was an inspired set. I was told by three or four people that it was a night-and-day difference from their Friday night show, when Kasher and the band seemed more stressed and disconnected with the audience. Halfway through the set, Kasher inasmuch admitted it, saying that the band was too anxious Friday night having tried to relearn so many different songs. There was no anxiety in the house last night as the band eagerly rifled through a huge set list that included what I assume was a number of new songs that sounded altogether different than their usual fare. The new music is more muscular, angular and less interested in providing hum-able melodies. The songs don't seem angry as much as intense, and while there's an inherent dissonance to the new stuff, there's also something undeniably, well, funky about it, specifically in the rhythm section. Who knows how much of what I heard will ever make it to the studio. If it does, look out.

The only thing I can whine about was the all-Cindy-Lauper encore -- "Time After Time" would have been enough of an ironic statement. "True Colors," OK, cute. You can stop now. "She Bop," however, pushed the envelope a little too far, and maybe that was the intention. I didn't hear a lot of complaints when they left the stage for the last time. Nobody wanted to hear "Girls Just Wanna Have Fun" Cursive-style.

Tonight it's Local H doing what's been billed as their "all request" tour. I have no idea what that's all about. I do admit to liking their last studio release, Whatever Happened to P.J. Soles? Opening is Virgasound (formerly known as The Philharmonic) and that alone is worth the $12 ticket. Unfortunately I'll be too busy tonight writing a feature on Spoon and a column on Shelter Belt to go. Goddamn deadlines.

--Got comments? Post 'em here.--


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posted by Tim at 9:54 AM

Friday, November 04, 2005

Live Review: Okkervil River, The Minus Story; Cursive Pt. 1 tonight

Sorry for lateness of submission but I have the day off and was busy raking. Yeah, yeah, yeah, you've been pulling your hair out wondering 'When is that lazy bastard going to update his blog?' Especially when you know that I went to Okkervil River last night at Sokol.

The biggest surprise of the evening was the turnout. Last time they came through maybe 60 showed up at O'Leaver's to hear their set. Last night the number was around 200 -- quite a jump. What's the deal? Has their stuff been played as background music on an episode of The OC or something? Maybe people are just starting to catch on that Okkervil River is one of the best folk/rock/indie bands going these days. They certainly proved it last night, despite a number of setbacks.

But first, Lawrence's The Minus Story opened (actually, Fizzle Like a Flood opened, too, but I missed their set. Sorry, Doug.). I've heard they're all the rage down in Lawrence. I was told last night that a certain Omaha record label had looked long and hard at them a year or so ago, but missed out to Jagjaguwar. I can see why they'd be interested. To me, The Minus Story sounded like a slightly more indie version of Now It's Overhead, probably because vocalist Jordan Geiger has the same nasal high-end delivery as Andy LeMaster. Their opening song was a bit of a dud, but they only got better as their set went on. I'm a bit reticent about saying more because I wasn't really in the mood for their style of dreamy/indie/pseudo-psychedelic rock, or maybe I'm just getting tired of the drone. They're probably better than I give them credit for (Hey, Jagjaguwar doesn't sign slouches).

Then came Okkervil River. Frontman Will Robinson Sheff warned everyone before their set that it wouldn't be typical. The band apparently just returned from a few weeks in Europe, where Sheff lost his voice. He got it back, but then drummer Travis Nelsen broke his hand a few days ago (I'm told he had it iced before the set). To make matters worse, Sheff broke a string on the very first song (an acoustic version of "Happy Hearts") and proceeded to tell us while he was restringing how his ex-girlfriend, who he had been pining for, told him last night that she never wanted to talk to him again. "Awww!" cried the girls in the audience. Cute. He also said that Omaha was special to the band, recalling how their March 5, 2002, show at The Junction was the first gig they ever played outside of Austin, and what a crappy gig it was (Though I thought they performed well that night. Guess I'm the only guy in Omaha that misses The Junction).

Regardless, Sheff got it together, played his solo song, and then was joined by five other players, including guys on accordion, mandolin, keyboards, trumpet, the whole ball of wax. The drummer's broken hand supposedly caused them to rewrite their set list and omit a few songs (not the least of which was "Black," which someone kept yelling for, and which Sheff kept saying he couldn't play because of the broken hand). I didn't notice a drop-off in the quality of drumming, I certainly couldn't tell the guy's hand was broken. But maybe the set-list was a little more restrained than usual. There were a few more droning, atmospheric numbers than I remember from last spring, but there were still all my favorites, including "Red," "Black Sheep Boy" "The Latest Toughs," "Okkervil River Song" (the traditional set closer), and "Kansas City" (part of the two-song encore). Good stuff.

Tonight is the first of two nights of Cursive at Sokol Underground. As you know from reading Wednesday's feature, it's sold out and has been for a long time. Even the tickets on eBay are gone. Opening tonight's show is Back When and The Stay Awake. Tomorrow night it's Criteria and Race for Titles. It will be a madhouse, as all sold-out shows are at Sokol Underground. Bring your earplugs. If you don't have a ticket, you might want to check out pop-rockers The Plus Ones with The Hooligans at O'Leaver's. $5, 9:30 p.m.

--Got comments? Post 'em here.--


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posted by Tim at 9:46 AM

Thursday, November 03, 2005

Okkervil River at Sokol, Eagle*Seagull at O'Leaver's

Two good shows tonight. The marquee act for me will be Okkervil River at Sokol Underground with Lawrence's The Minus Story and Omaha's own Fizzle Like a Flood. Okkervil is touring in support of a just-released addendum CD-EP from their last full length, called Black Sheep Boy Appendix. I assume these are the tracks that didn't make it onto their amazing full length. Three of the seven tracks are keepers, though, the rest are dour or found-sound collages, but those three (titled "No Key, No Plan," "Another Radio Song" and "Last Love Song for Now" are as good as anything they've done before. They travel large. When they played at O'Leaver's last April (review here) there must have been six or seven of them, most were drunk or sounded drunk. Still, it was a good show. Okkervil's label, Jagjaguwar is also releasing the new Minus Story CD. From the couple tracks I've heard online, they sound like a good fit. Who knows what configuration of Fizzle Like a Flood will show up. Last time it was just Doug on drums and vocals and Travis bearing an ax. $7, 9 p.m.

Meanwhile, at O'Leaver's, straight-up indie rockers Sam Champion take the stage: My review of their new one on Razor & Tie is on the Reviews Matrix, but here it is for the lazy reader: "Starts off as country by way of Johnny Cash (without the ornaments) and shifts into grind rockers with the snarly Cash drawl. Meanwhile, track 3, is a stone-cold Pavement rip. So yeah, I guess you could say they're all over the place. In the end, the Wowee Zowee-era Pavement wins out -- which is an easy way of saying this is slacker indie rock. It's not bad, but it's been done before, and better." Rating: No. Consider it melodic Pavement-lite. Most will be on hand to see Eagle*Seagull, which has become something of a breakthrough local act. They're even better live. More on them later. $5, 9:30 p.m.

--Got comments? Post 'em here.--


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posted by Tim at 5:23 AM

Wednesday, November 02, 2005

Feature interview: Cursive

First, an apology for screwing up the location of yesterday's Cracker show -- I said Sokol when it was in Lincoln at Knickerbocker's. I figured it out after I got back to work and wasn't able to fix it until I got home. Hope no one got misdirected by my miscue. Speaking of Lincoln, tonight is the real "final show" for The Street Urchins at Duffy's. Brimstone Howl will also play. $5, 10 p.m., if you're in the Capitol City you won't want to miss it.

This week's feature is an interview with Matt Maginn from Cursive (read it here), where Matt talks about the band coming out of its hiatus, the sold-out $2 Sokol Underground shows, the "fake name" tour, their return to Junior's Motel this winter, their new CD and how they'll keep it together once they return to the road. It will appear in The Reader as my weekly Lazy-i column because I needed more than 400 words (the typical word-count limit) to tell it. Even with twice the real estate I didn't have room in the article for everything Matt and I talked about. Among the stuff that got left out: Has marriage gotten in the way of being in the band? Apparently not. Maginn said he and his wife have been together the entire time he's been in the band. "Obviously I don't like to be away from her, but the situation's the same for other members of the band. If anything, I'll talk myself into going on longer tours, figuring if we're going to go out, we might as well hit all the cities. Clint (Schnase) is married now, too. No one wants to live on the road."

Will the "back-to-basics" approach be heard on the new CD as well? No again. "We may be returning to the oldies in our style and mind, but not in our music. We're going to approach each song differently," he said. Asked about whether it will be a collection of songs or a concept album, Maginn hmmed and hawed and deferred to Kasher. He knew, he just wasn't gonna tell me.

Finally, the $2 shows were originally going to be free, but logistics made it impossible to not charge something. "Originally, since it marks 10 years that the band existed, we wanted to do something for free," he said. "But it was explained to us why that wouldn't work. If it was free, people might take more and more tickets and we'd have no idea if they used them or not. Also, we wanted the shows presold." If you're heartbroken that you can't get a ticket, don't sweat it, Maginn said there will be other Omaha shows. "That's a guarantee, and they'll be sooner rather than later."

--Got comments? Post 'em here.--


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posted by Tim at 5:27 AM

Tuesday, November 01, 2005

Ex Models tonight; Matrix; some interesting headlines

Ex Models at are O'Leaver's tonight with Brilliant Red Lights and Omaha's The Lepers. Should be a very noisy, jarring experience. $5, 9:30 p.m. Cracker is also at Knickerbocker's in Lincoln tonight with Matt Whipkey of Anonymous American opening. $15, 9 p.m.

The Reviews Matrix has been updated with some new reviews. Check it out. More to come.

The San Jose Mercury News has an interesting review of last Saturday's Bridge School Benefit Concert that featured Bright Eyes along with Neil Young and others. Sayeth the writer: "It looked just as awkward during the show closer, 'Teach Your Children,' as Good Charlotte twins Joel and Benji Madden, (Conor) Oberst and (Nora) Jones, craned their necks to read lyric sheets of the song that was an anthem to the Woodstock generation that, sadly, must not have been taught to its children."

And there's an interesting looong piece over at the South Florida Sun-Sentinal about the advent of indie music. The writer points toward the Internet and the coming of age of fans of '80s underground music to decision-maker status as a couple of the reasons. Interesting quote: "If the pattern holds true, what will happen next is a rash of really terrible bands that are pale imitators of Death Cab and Modest Mouse will get signed by the major labels and be marketed to a mainstream audience." That's already happening, trust me. When it comes to imitators, Death Cab could be this generation's Dashboard Confessional, god help us.

--Got comments? Post 'em here.--


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posted by Tim at 10:43 AM

Music Posts
Catching up; Live Review: Gomez; "Omaha's booming music scene" in the LJS; Islands tonight...
Major Outage -- We're back, sort of...
Column 76 -- More than a feeling...
Gomez returns; Live Review: Cordero...
An Iris Pattern tonight w/Koufax
Live Review: Kite Pilot...
This weekend -- Kite Pilot, Eagle*Seagull; Cougars Sunday...
Column 75 -- The confidence of Kite Pilot...
Live Review Pretty Girls Make Graves, Giant Drag...
Pretty Girls Make Graves, Giant Drag tonight...
Music Posts
February 2005
March 2005
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November 2005
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