Live Show Log, May 2017
5 12 17 Crane Wives #24/RACHEL B Red House Concert Series, Tri Cities Museum, Grand After the slight weirdness of Marquette, I might have passed this one up. But A. Already had a ticket to a sold out show, and B. I actually had company, of the female-near-my-own-age variety, for the first time in...fifteen?...years. The second floor museum space was packed to the gills, so awesome to see such a huge enthusiastic crowd for this band that really should have graduated from Douche Bars by now. Rachel B....seems like a very nice person. I don’t know who actually reads this thing these days, so my apologies if you enjoy her music, but for me, born too early for the boy band era, that was excruciating. It was late 90s radio pop. It was Britney Spears. It was entirely synthetic except for her live vocals. Gyrating in front of senior citizens was involved. It was the worst match for the Wives I could think of. My friend and I kept looking at each other, wondering if we were being punked. She picked up a keytar for one song, easily the best one: proof that everything is better when ridiculous instruments are involved. And then the Wives: Sly Kate, Laconic Ben, Happy Dan, and Giant Pole. (We had obstructed seats.) The energy level, feeding off that many people, was off the Richter scale. The two new singles were received as rapturously as the oldest classics. Kate thought my friend hadn’t enjoyed the show, since she sat hands folded stone faced throughout, but I reassured her that’s just how Zeelanders are: never show your hand. She actually loved it and bought all three available CDs. The Garden was an absolute monster. Best moment: At the end of New Colors, they came to an ending, rather than go right into Kick Drum Heart as they so often do live. The crowd, led by Jack Clark, the show’s promoter, was not having that, and the stomping and clapping commenced. The band looked at each other in confused delight, shrugged, and duly launched into Kick Drum Heart. There are real fans of this band, and they know what they want. Sleeping Giants was a roar, biggest crowd response I’ve seen since Founders over a year ago. I wrote a new bio, it got approval, trying not to check the website hourly to see if it’s gone up: http://stolenwallpaper.blogspot.com/... I know my devotion seems excessive--hell, it does to me--but these 55 songs represent the fourth or fifth act of my life, and I would like it to keep going well.
5 13 17 PEACE PARTY: A Concert To Benefit KNOW (Kalamazoo Nonviolent Opponents Of War) featuring Kaitlin Rose and Matt Gross, Thunderbolt and Lightfoot, and The Corn Fed Girls First Congregational Church, Kalamazoo
5 19 17 Carrie McFerrin #4/Matthew Borr #3 Craft Draft 2 Go, Kalamazoo
5 19 17 Vox Vidorra #8 Bell’s, Kalamazoo Kalamazoo is the true music mecca around here: so many venues so close to each other. Except for this new place, Craft Draft 2 Go, way out on the edge of town in a nondescript strip mall, not even very visible from the road. But, it’s nice inside, and they’re aggressively booking in local talent for live music, so yay for that. I had about 45 minutes for Matt and Carrie, in a super laid back atmosphere. Hilariously so: Carrie introduced a song and then wandered off to talk to someone, leaving Matt confusedly vamping. Impressions: great harmony on Trains In The Field, wonderful cover of a Kaitlin Rose tune, and an annoying grinding noise from behind the bar that marred the whole set. Carrie had a small fan at her feet, which was maybe not the best choice to go with her billowing skirt: despite a valiant effort not to, I did occasionally glimpse France. On to Vox Vidorra, at a Kalamazoo Pride event at Bell’s. I was at this same event last year with the Crane Wives, at which the place was packed; tonight it was bizarrely sparse given the extreme excellence of the music played. Even at gay pride events, Bell’s always has drunken morons: this guy kept sitting ON the stage and talking to the band mid song, and staff didn’t intervene. You can see him in my video below. Very heavy on new songs, this album is going to be so insanely good. Molly, henna tattoos up and down her arms, was in strong voice; that Kraftwerky one whose name I can never remember was flippin awesome, and there was one I hadn’t heard before with a strong early Fleetwood Mac vibe, possibly called Check Me Out. I met Sarah Craig, who seemed to be the only other person in the room who knew all the words; we both got slightly drunken hugs from the Schultzes at the end of the night. I would be a better ally if I knew more actual non-basic people, but I do what I can, and coming to this show was not exactly a chore.
5 27 17 Olivia Mainville #9 (with Brandon James) Tripelroot, Zeeland
5 27 17 Libby DeCamp #2 (with Adam Schreiber) HopCat, Kalamazoo
5 27 17 Megan Dooley #8 Old Dog Tavern, Kalamazoo
5 27 17 BIG DUDEE ROO Bell’s, Kalamazoo In which I GO TOO FAR. Four shows in one day, not even a festival involved. It all started with Olivia and Brandon in Zeeland, an inherently hilarious concept. Brandon was wearing a shirt with diaphanous sleeves; this is not the kind of place where anyone would even admit knowing the meaning of “diaphanous.” Despite the Dooley-hosing, Tripelroot is a nice enough place, with the music mostly being ignored, so they could basically just amuse themselves, or me. Danger Death Ray, On A Grave: need recordings for my earhole. Brandon busted out an unrecorded Halloween tune, to amuse Olivia. I met Olivia’s dad, who is one year YOUNGER than me. Kill me. Left after the second set to get a dog walk in, then it was off to Kazoo for a triple play, including the first Dooley show in almost three months. Libby DeCamp on the back deck at HopCat, with Adam on drums: just like Tripelroot, big disconnect between the effortlessly cool black clad hip kids and the gomers in cargo shorts perched atop metal stools, myself included. Languid ballads by ethereal redheads are maybe not the natural tuneage for this swill-soaked environment. But it sounded great: The Blues was a nice song she wrote at age 15, Vernal Sway was wonderful as always, Orchard was a baroque number coming out on 7” soon, and a Waitsish number about killing the conductor went over well. And she tells jokes! “This one’s a dance number about factory farming.” “Any General George Armstrong Custer fans out there?” These four need to put together a Randy Newman tribute night. Next door, and my return to Dooley-watching. The Plainwell weirdness was on my side only it seems, she was glad to see me, friendly, fresh outlook after London misadventures and other life events. No big changes in the setlist to match her dramatic haircut. The crowd got Part Of Your World without quite deserving it. One super cool addition, a twenties tune called Sugar Blues. And then, show four, the new experience of the night: Big Dudee Roo, another case of strange name for a great band. Led by Max Lockwood, who I’ve seen several times backing up May Erlewine and Seth Bernard, with Nate Wagner also writing and singing. (Like the Goo Goo Dolls: hey, let Robbie sing one!) Just like last week, the crowd at Bell’s was uncharacteristically sparse, but I missed both opening acts and it was the holiday weekend. MUCH louder live than on record, trading a little nuance for power, but hey, power has its place, and I have the records on Bandcamp (what if Tom Petty fronted My Morning Jacket?). Newish drummer kept up a hell of a great noise. New song, The Game Is Rigged, excellent and propulsive; new Nate song, Hunker Down, reminded me of Bottle Rockets with its light twang and its wryness. Then to underline Max’s Pettyishness, they actually finished with You Wreck Me, with a little Blitzkrieg Bop mixed in. Sounded like a mission statement.
5 28 17 HANNAH ROSE & THE GRAVESTONES/Big Dudee Roo #2/JESSE RAY
& THE CAROLINA CATFISH HopCat (outdoors), Grand Rapids A Sunday
afternoon show, to commemorate both the end of HopCat’s 5K race and the
release of Local Spins’ 5 year anniversary CD, a collection of live
tracks by 12 local bands, including Olivia and the Crane Wives. I stood
under a tree in the semi-shade and observed the hip, the fit, the fat,
and the nearly famous intermingle in a roped off parking lot. Jesse Ray
is a high energy rockabilly player, who I’m told used to do Jonas
Brothers covers.....fun, but kinda samey. Duo: the “Catfish” is just
one guy on drums, but he is very good and they are very loud and fun and
they could have been in GR fifteen years ago. Second day in a row for
Big Dudee Roo, I actually think they sounded better in the open air.
Michigan is a pander, and also a great song. Hannah Rose has apparently
put her guitar aside again, and assembled a new seven piecee blues/soul
revue that sounded fantastic, a leap above the band I almost saw at
Billy’s a few months ago. Bluesy swing, not a million miles away from
what Roberta Bradley and Gypsy used to do: maybe more low end and less
Latin flavor. Horns make everything better. Highlights: James Brown’s
I Feel Good and smokin’ original Hot Damn. Sinkevics liked my Crane
Wives shirt.
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