Monthly Archives: June 2009

Vieux Farka Touré carries on the family tradition at Highline Ballroom

Vieux Farka Touré

Vieux Farka Touré

African singer Vieux Farka Touré put out his first album in 2006, the year his father, legendary world-blues singer and guitarist Ali Farka Touré died.

Since then, Vieux has been carrying on the family tradition, mixing the sounds of his native Mali with other influences from around the world. He’s stopping in NYC for a show this weekend, and it promises to be good one.

In a great new Q&A with The Ithaca Journal, Vieux talks about his influences and carrying on his father’s work:

I come from that tradition [of Malian music], I must be respectful of it, and I love it, too. But then, I’m 28 years old and I listen to music from everywhere like a lot of young people: bangra, reggaeton, hip hop, blues, rock and roll. Now this always surprises people, but I really like Phil Collins!

So obviously all that shows up in my music …that said, I will always have one foot firmly planted in Mali’s traditional music, and one foot in all kinds of new music. Our musical traditions are so rich and so vast, and I think all Malian musicians know that we have a responsibility to share this wealth with the rest of the world.

Click here for the full interview.

Vieux Farka Touré performs at 7 p.m. Saturday at the Highline Ballroom, 431 West 16th Street, Manhattan. Click here for more information and tickets. $17 in advance, $20 day of show.

Night 1: Vic Chesnutt and Jonathan Richman at the Bowery Ballroom

Jonathan Richman, off-kilter as usual, at the Bowery Ballroom, NYC, on June 16. (Photos copyright 2009, Steven P. Marsh)

Jonathan Richman, off-kilter as usual, at the Bowery Ballroom, NYC, on June 16. (Photos copyright 2009, Steven P. Marsh)

They say a picture is worth a thousand words. Jonathan Richman‘s set at NYC’s Bowery Ballroom last night was so wonderful it left me virtually speechless. And Athens, Ga., legend Vic Chesnutt‘s opening set was revelatory, as well.

Vic C gets ready

Vic Chesnutt preparing before his set.

Newsflash: Vic told the crowd last night that Jonathan had recently flown him to San Francisco, where Vic recorded his new album, with Jonathan and his drummer, Tommy Larkins, backing him up. “It went pretty well,” the paraplegic singer-songwriter said with a grin.

I’ll be back for tonight’s show, expecting something equally entertaining. You should be there too.

Check out more photos after the jump. Continue reading

The art of The Feelies on display next week

The Feelies, from left, Stanley Demeski, Glenn Mercer, Bill Million and Brenda Sauter, at the Wellmont Theater, Montclair, N.J., on New Year's Eve 2008. (Copyright Steven P. Marsh)

The Feelies, from left, Stanley Demeski, Glenn Mercer, Bill Million and Brenda Sauter, at the Wellmont Theater, Montclair, N.J., on New Year's Eve 2008. (Copyright Steven P. Marsh)

The Feelies are used to playing in clubs and concert halls. But next week, the band’s modern musical art will be on display in an unusual setting: The Whitney Museum of American Art.

The band —  comprising guitarists Glenn Mercer and Bill Million, along with Brenda Sauter on bass, Stanley Demeski on drums and Dave Weckerman on percussion — is giving a rare acoustic performance at the Whitney a week from Friday in the museum’s lower-level store and cafe area.

The space, which regularly hosts rock and classical ensembles, is tight and seating is limited. But this should still be a good warm-up (or more likely, a dress rehearsal) for their Fourth of July weekend shows at Maxwell’s in Hoboken.

The Feelies' percussionist Dave Weckerman hard at work.

The Feelies' percussionist Dave Weckerman hard at work. (Copyright Steven P. Marsh)

The Feelies perform at 7 p.m. Friday, June 26. At the Whitey Museum of American Art, 945 Madison Ave., Manhattan. Free with museum admission, tickets are available on day of show only, starting at 1 p.m. For more information, click here.

The Feelies also perform July 2-4 at Maxwell’s, 1039 Washington St., Hoboken. July 3 is sold out, but tickets remain for the other two shows. $25. Click here to buy.

Strange Freaks: Don’t miss Colman Domingo in The Wiz!

Colman Domingo (Photo copyright 2008 by Steven P. Marsh)

Colman Domingo (Copyright 2008 by Steven P. Marsh)

Okay, my monthlong grand jury stint is killing me. It’s making me lose track of things. I am so off balance that I discovered only today that it was announced 11 days ago that one of my favorite actors in the world, the great Colman Domingo, will be taking over from Orlando Jones in the title role of The Wiz for the last six performances (June 29-July 5) of the Encores! Summer Stars revival at New York City Center.

Better late than never, eh? For a full report from Broadwayworld.com on what the former Passing Strange star is up to in Encores!, click here.

Tickets, priced from $25-$110, are available here. Continue reading

Saying goodbye to saxophone legend Sam Butera

Sam Butera

Sam Butera

Jerry DeMarco

Jerry DeMarco

Blogger Jerry DeMarco, a friend and former colleague of mine, usually writes about crime and criminals in Northern New Jersey. But he took some time out from that yesterday to write about another love of his — music — when he noted the passing of saxophone great Sam Butera. Here’s a taste of Jerry’s tribute:

They buried Sam Butera in Las Vegas yesterday, giving Gabriel the one saxophonist who could make a heavenly band swing like the devil. Darkly handsome, Uncle Sam died earlier this month — a footnote for many in the musical world but a noted loss for anyone who knew where rock and roll really began.

Butera, 81, tenor played sax behind Louis Prima, a combination rivaled in our generation only by The Boss and the Big Man. He helped make Big Bad Voodoo Daddy, Royal Crown Revue, and the latest incarnation of Brian Setzer possible.

If you don’t believe me, go to YouTube or dig up few Prima classics: “Buona Sera,” “Jump, Jive An’ Wail,” or “5 Months, Two Weeks, Two Days.” Listen, in particular, especially to “Oh, Marie,” where Prima scats in English and Italian — and Butera matches him note-for-note.

For the full text, please visit Jerry’s web page by clicking here.

What I did on my summer vacation — Friedlander style

Erik Friedlander at The Stone in New York City on June 14, 2009

Erik Friedlander at The Stone in New York City on June 14, 2009

Erik Friedlander probably didn’t realize that his childhood was so different than most kids his age. Spending 2 1/2 months every summer traveling around the United States in a camper atop a 1966 Chevrolet pickup truck was the norm. After all, it was his dad’s job, and dad liked to take the family on the road while he worked.

Lee Friedlander

Lee Friedlander

But Erik’s dad isn’t like most dads. He’s photographer Lee Friedlander, and every summer, like clockwork, he took his children, Erik and Anna, and wife Maria on the road while he shot photos on assignment, worked at teaching gigs and made his own images on the road.

Erik’s parents told him the experiences were “enriching,” he explained last night to an audience at The Stone, John Zorn‘s music venue in NYC’s Lower East Side. While Erik didn’t get that while he was a kid, he said he finally understands and connects with the idea. It proved so enriching that it has become the theme of Block Ice and Propane, the new solo show Erik is developing in conjunction with experimental filmmaker Bill Morrison.

Erik and Bill was road-testing the show at The Stone last night. It grew out of Erik’s 2007 show at Joe’s Pub, where he played the music of his then-new album, Block Ice and Propane, while projecting a few of the images that illustrated things that inspired the pieces. But this new version has been expanded with additional tunes and more extensive use of family photos (many taken by Erik’s father, and some by his mother) and new films by Bill, who specializes in working with musicians.

Erik Friedlander

Erik Friedlander plucks the cello with one of his father's photos projected in the background.

In this show, which Bill directs, Erik plays each tune with great intensity, changing the tuning of his early 20th Century instrument against its creaking protestations.

Here’s Erik’s description of his show:

I will be performing a new show this coming Summer and Fall starting August 1 at The Hopkins Center for Arts in Dartmouth. The new show, which will be directed by film-maker Bill Morrison, is an expansion of the Block Ice & Propane concert I experimented with first at Joe’s Pub in New York. At that performance I projected a few images from the family trips that inspired the music.

Bill and I will be workshopping ideas here in New York and then up at Dartmouth. Some of these ideas include using more projected images, a set, as well as the premiere of new pieces to go with the new program. The Block Ice show will be presented at The Hop in Dartmouth, PICA TBA festival in Portland, Ore., The Walker Arts Center in Minneapolis and the Wexner Art Center in Ohio.

There were bumps and missed cues in last night’s run-through, and Erik cautioned the capacity crowd in the airless former that they were witnessing a work in progress. But on the whole, the show was mesmerizing. While it’s only a start, the idea holds great promise.

ErikFriedlanderandscreen

Erik Friedlander picks up the bow.

It’s radio without broadcasting!

Norah Jones and the cast of Radio Happy Hour.

Norah Jones and the cast of Radio Happy Hour. (Photos by SPM. All rights reserved.)

Radio Happy Hour kicked off with a full house at Le Poisson Rouge in Greenwich Village yesterday afternoon.

Yes, a good-sized crowd filled the dark Bleecker Street basement club for a 2 p.m. Saturday show that featured singer-songwriter cum actress Norah Jones as guest on a modern take on an old-fashioned radio show. It was just like radio in that it had a cast, sound effects, micophones and a live audience. But there was no radio broadcast. The show was recorded as a podcast.

Norah Jones and host Sam Osterhout,

Norah Jones and host Sam Osterhout,

Norah gamely participated in the first of a series of three planned Radio Happy Hour show this summer. answering questions from host Sam Osterhout, playing a couple of songs on an acoustic guitar, listening to Sam do a slightly absurd trivia quiz to a member of the audience and joining the cast for an amusingly silly radio drama called Terror in Teaneck.

Here’s a video of one of Norah’s songs:

It turned out to be a perfectly pleasant way to spend an hour or with LPR’s brunch menu and some drinks.

There are two more shows scheduled: Michael Showalter joins the show at 2 p.m. on July 11 and Andrew W.K. will be there at 2 p.m. on Aug. 8. At Le Poisson Rouge, 158 Bleecker Street, NYC. Ticket are available here. $5.

Satan and Adam tour is off — for now

Satan and Adam, aka Sterling “Mr. Satan” Magee, center, and Adam Gussow, right, at Preservation Pub in Knoxville, Tenn.

Satan and Adam, aka Sterling “Mr. Satan” Magee, center, and Adam Gussow, right, at Preservation Pub in Knoxville, Tenn.

I’ve been anticipating the return of hometown heroes Satan and Adam — the blues duo comprising an authentic Southern bluesman, Sterling Magee, and Adam Gussow, a younger native of Rockland County, NY.

The duo, who got together in 1986, share a gritty and spirited vision of the blues. They made their name busking on the streets, with Mister Satan on guitar and kickboard percussion and Adam on blues harmonica. In their heyday, they found time for touring and made three studio albums together. (A fourth album, Word on the Street, is a compilation of the duo’s early street recordings that was released last year.) They got their 15 minutes of fame when the members of U2 encountered them during the making of their movie Rattle and Hum, and included a few seconds of Satan and Adam in the film.

They had seven dates lined up for this month — the first of them today at Kiawah Island, S.C., with plans to perform at World Cafe Live in Philadelphia on Wednesday, B.B. King’s in NYC on Thursday, and The Turning Point in Piermont, N.Y., near where Adam grew up, on Friday.

Satan and Adam

Satan and Adam

Mister Satan, as Magee is known, who had a nervous breakdown that robbed him of his ability to play guitar a decade ago, has been living in a Medicare-funded retirement home in Boca Ciega, Fla. He’s been on the mend, has slowly regained his guitar-playing ability, and even performed a few shows last year.  The playing seemed to help Mister Satan’s overall well-being, so Adam worked hard to set up this short tour, because he was eager to get back on the road with his partner for a real tour.

It looked like things were all set, until they encountered a last-minute bureaucratic snafu at Mister Satan’s retirement home that dashed their hopes — for now.

I got word of the tour cancellation just as I was preparing to write up the great interview I had with Adam a few weeks ago. While they won’t be on the road this month, Adam says he hopes to reschedule for mid-August. I’ll post the interview in the weeks before the rescheduled dates.

Click through to the jump to read Adam’s explanation of exactly what went wrong, posted to his web site on Friday: Continue reading

The New Royality — using music and film to bring an old theater back to life

Composer Todd Reynolds

Composer Todd Reynolds

Philadephia's Royal Theatre.

Philadephia's Royal Theatre.

There’s an old movie house on South Street n Philadelphia that, while still in a state of elegant decay, comes back to life tonight and tomorrow night with a world premiere multimedia performance featuring a tune by violinist-composer Todd Reynolds, filmmaker Bill Morrison and projection designer Laurie Olinder.

Their work will fill the Royal Theater, entertaining audiences in temporary seating in what is an empty shell of a building.

The Royal was dubbed “America’s Finest Colored Photoplay House” when it opened in 1920, and was the first black-run theater in the City of Brotherly Love. The 1,200-seat Royal presented live acts, including Fats Waller and Bessie Smith, as well as movies.

Todd calls his composition Sounds for a New Royality. Network for New Music, one of Philadelphia’s leading advocates of contemporary composition, will perform Todd’s score live while Bill’s film and Laurie’s projections provide a ghostly presence on the theater’s walls.

Todd’s composition was deeply informed by his visit to the site and his conversations with people who remembered the theater in its heyday.

Says Todd: “As we walked into The Royal last year for the first time,  I felt immediately the vast, resounding emptiness of a building which used to be filled with image, with sound, with people. Yes, there was and is the decay we see around us which holds its own indescribable beauty as well.  There are many tales here as well, history here, even in the punch cards which still litter the office.

“I wrote a cinematic soundtrack, not for a film, but for an environment invoked by the rich media of Bill and Laurie. The music is made for a theater which, though decaying on the inside, is still strong and structurally sound, and which for these two days of this particular year, welcomes a community once again into its arms.

“My research for this piece included interviews with two local residents, Barney and Junior.  They are part of the lifeblood of this area, and spending time with them recalling their own experiences, listening to Junior’s deep voice and Barney’s citations of ‘history, history, history,’ provided a rich context within which I could write some sound.  If you stand just in front of the theater, Junior’s barbershop is just down the street to the right, and Barney lives just across the street to the left, that’s how close they are.  Our conversations were invaluable to me in garnering a feeling for what life might have been like back then and in imagining a new ‘Royality.'”

Todd gave me a preview clip of the piece. And, while it will obviously sound different played in the cavernous space played live, I think the clip offers a good sense of what the audience will be hearing. The driving, rhythmic piece is deeply influenced by his background in minimalism.  But is also clearly informed by his research. While not obvious, there are hints of urban life in the score, and I would swear I hear suggestions of theater organ at times.

Adds Bill: “We are interested in this notion of a ‘ghost theater’, a palace of dreams where time has in a way stood still. … [W]e are opening its doors again, winding up its projectors, and referencing the images that may have once graced its screen. We imagine finding a lost reel in its projection booth, threading it up and letting it spin its tale. The images still haunt us. But the context has changed, and so must the story and its soundtrack.”

Here’s Todd’s introduction to his part of the work, and a video clip, with a bit of his composition playing in the background:

Upon viewing, I realize that this is MUCH too serious. It might have been better with me in a smoking jacket with a pipe instead of my two companion basil plants… The point, however, is clear. Come on down to The Royal Theatre in South Philly for a mulitmedia event which will leave your ears and eyes humming.

Vodpod videos no longer available.

more about “An Invitation to The New Royality on …“, posted with vodpod

Performances are today and tomorrow at 8 p.m. at The Royal, 1524 South Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Tonight’s show is sold out, but seats remain available for tomorrow’s performance. Visit HiddenCity Philadelphia’s web site for tickets. $20.

Holsapple and Stamey: Yes, The dB’s really are recording again!

The dB's in New York City in 2007.

The dB's in New York City in 2007.

Peter Holsapple and Chris Stamey, founders of the legendary Eighties band The dB’s, release their new album, Here and Now, tomorrow.

While it holds out promise, it’s very much NOT a dB’s album. It’s a followup to Mavericks, the album the pair made 18 years ago.

Now Magnetmagazine.com, which Holsapple and Stamey are guest editing for a week, confirms what has been rumored for some time: The pair have really have begun recording again with The dB’s original bassist Gene Holder and drummer Will Rigby.

If there’s an album, a tour will certainly follow, right? Well, let’s not get ahead of ourselves. There’s no guarantee. But the guys do seem to enjoy playing live, so it seems likely.

There’s more evidence on the band’s web site:

The dB’s continue (slowly) working on their long-promised reunion album. Now tentatively slated for release in winter 2009…

This is not the first time that reunion-album news has popped up. And The dB’s have done a few reunion gigs here and there.

But given the direct involvement of Holsapple and Stamey in these reports, it seems pretty likely that we really will be hearing a dB’s album sooner rather than later.

Meanwhile, Holsapple and Stamey are performing on the day of release, tomorrow, at City Winery,  155 Varick Street, NYC. (212) 608-0555 • info@citywinery.com

The show is 9 p.m., and tickets, priced at $20 and $25, are still available. Click here to purchase.

Here’s hoping.