Monday, July 25, 2005

Concert Round-Up

Jen was feeling under the weather this weekend, leaving me to catch the Gizmos and Dale Lawrence alone, which at least saved her from any possible crushing disappointment after I relentlessly hyped the concerts for the past two months as "the coolest shows in years!"

Not that she was likely to be disappointed, partly because by now she knows I tend to exaggerate, and partly because they really were the coolest shows in years! (Okay, maybe not the coolest shows, but they were pretty darned good.)

The Dot Dash show on Friday was an eclectic bunch. The opening acts ranged from the "actually not bad" Miss Alex White to the "actually not very good at all" punk stylings of Human Eye, whose show-stopping bit where they set a vacuum cleaner on fire and smashed it to bits was the only memorable thing about their act. After a couple hours of wailing and atonal noise, the Gizmos finally hit the stage around 11:30 and proceeded to blow the other acts away by actually appearing to enjoy themselves.

It reminded me of nothing so much as Xanadu, the 1980 Olivia-Newton John musical. If you've ever had the misfortune of seeing it, you'll know that it's almost embarassing to watch...except when Gene Kelly is on screen, because he's the only one that looks like he's having any fun. You see Olivia Newton-John in pink roller skates at the beginning and you immediately think, "How embarassing the Eighties were!" but later on, Gene Kelly is circling the roller rink in his skates and you think, "Wow! That looks like fun!" He took the material and he sold it to the audience in a way that the other performers couldn't.

And that's exactly what was going through my mind when the Gizmos came on stage. They were the Gene Kelly of the show, showing those whippersnappers up something fierce. They had a good time, the audience had a good time, and they didn't even have to set fire to anything.

The Dale Lawrence show at the Rodeo Bar on Sunday night was a much more low-key affair. He performed with former Vulgar Boatmen percussionist Jonathan Isley, both playing together for the first time in over a decade. I chatted with Dale a bit before the show and Jonathan immediately introduced himself. "I understand you're the token Vulgar Boatmen fan," he said, offering his hand. He then surprised me by knowing my full name already.

"That's impressive," I said.

"Well, when the number of people performing in the band outnumber the fans in the audience 2-1, it's not as hard to keep track of names."

Did I mention that it was a low-key show?

But it was a fine show nonetheless. (The woman sitting next to me even exclaimed, "Wow! These guys are actually really good!" unprompted after the first few songs). The headliners, Tim Carroll and Elizabeth Cook were excellent too; I mean, you gotta love a country duo that ends their set with a Velvet Underground cover.

And so, the weekend ended as it began - with a great concert. If you missed the shows and are curious as to what you missed, WFMU has an archive of The Cherry Blossom Clinic radio program featuring both the Gizmos and Miss Alex White available via RealAudio here. (The Gizmos show up around the 1 hour 30 minute mark; be sure to listen for the bit where Dale flubs the opening of "The Midwest Can Be Allright" and almost breaks up.)

The only problem with all these concerts last weekend was that it left very little time for sleep, which I should probably go do now. Pleasant dreams, everyone...

Friday, July 22, 2005

Mp3 Alert!

Great new song from the newly-reformed dB's: "World to Cry". And they just announced that they're coming to my neck of the woods in September! (Well, Hoboken, which is close enough). Happy day...

Thursday, July 21, 2005

Rockin' for Tacos

Just a friendly reminder that the Gizmos are going to be playing tomorrow evening at Southpaw in Park Slope as part of the Dot Dash festival. Tickets are still available, so snatch some up while they last...

But potentially more exciting than that, the Gizmos' lead singer/songwriter, the inimitable Dale Lawrence (profiled by Mike Whybark in a four-part series here), is also going to be doing a rare, last-minute NYC solo acoustic show opening for Elizabeth Cook on Sunday evening at the Rodeo Bar. Dale is about as fine a songwriter as you could run across, and a very nice guy to boot. The show is free, so come on down and yell out requests for "Mary Jane!"

And if you can't make either show, the Gizmos will be appearing on The Cherry Blossom Clinic with Terre T on WFMU Saturday afternoon from 3:00pm-6:00pm. Streaming versions of WFMU can be found here.

Tuesday, July 19, 2005

Back in Town

Ugh...arrived at KCI last night to find that, due to a back-up in the air traffic, my flight back to New York had been delayed by two and a half hours, so my original, reasonable arrival time of 10:00pm suddenly became 12:30am. And, of course, with so many delayed flights coming in, the line to the taxis once I arrived was literally snaking around the Terminal. So, it was almost 1:30 in the morning by the time I got back home.

Now I'm back at work still feeling exhausted. At this point, I'm thinking that if I can make it through the day without collapsing, I'll consider today a success.

As for the trip? Well, um....I had a nice time visiting my friends and family.

Thursday, July 14, 2005

And away I go...

I'm off on a wild excursion back to the Midland Empire - a madcap tour of St. Joseph, Kansas City and Harrisonville to visit the ol' homestead. Hope to return next week with posts of thrilling adventures and new insights into the human experience; but I'll probably end up with the standard post about how "I had a nice time visiting my friends and family." We shall see!

For now, off I go...to adventure!

Tuesday, July 12, 2005

The HitchHiker's Guide to the Galaxy

I loved the original radio series of Douglas Adams' "The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy", which I taped off NPR back in the mid-Eighties and listened to almost constantly during junior high (in between tapes of "Dr. Demento" shows and Bach fugues. Yeah, pretty much the quintessential junior high experience...) So, when the BBC announced that they were doing a radio adaptation of the final three "Hitchhiker" books, reuniting all the surviving original radio series actors, I was almost literally atwitter with excitement! Sure, the big-budget movie has their Alan Rickmans and their Sam Rockwells, but the radio series has Simon Jones, Mark Wing-Davey and Stephen Moore! My inner junior high geek hadn't been this excited since they announced the Lord of the Rings movies.

The CDs arrived last week from Amazon.co.uk, and I've been slowly making my way through them an episode a day. And, alas, it is with a heavy heart that I must report that I'm a bit disappointed. Nostalgia only goes so far, and in this case it got me about as far as episode three of "So Long and Thanks for All the Fish" when it all started to come back to me: "Yeah, the last couple 'Hitchhiker' books weren't all that good, were they?"

No, they weren't. Looking back on the series in retrospect, the first two books were just so perfect on their own, intelligent and endlessly inventive, ending on just the right note, that they were essentially impossible to follow. Where do you go from the perfect ending? No place that isn't a disappointment, and each subsequent book was a bit more disappointing than the last. (I mean, by the final book, Douglas Adams was making tired jokes about Elvis being alive in outer space; jokes I heard Ray Stevens make on Dr. Demento almost a decade previous.)

The last three books would have worked so much better if they weren't part of the series at all; the same plots but with a different set of characters. (After all, "Life the Universe and Everything" started its life as the movie treatment "Doctor Who and the Krikkitmen"). Don't know how much of a difference it would have made, but I'm sure it would have eased the frustration that greeted us die-hard fans when presented with each new installment.

Still, all my complaints aside, I am enjoying the CDs more than I enjoyed the movie...

Thursday, July 07, 2005

Back Online...and full of beans!

The technician did that voodoo that he does so well, and now my megabyte modem is back in the land of the living. Regular posting to resume shortly.

Tuesday, July 05, 2005

Technical Difficulties

My Internet Connection has been down for the past week, so posts have been light. But TimeWarner is supposed to send out a technician to fix it tomorrow morning. So with any luck, I'll get back to posting regularly as early as tomorrow evening...

Until then, you may amuse yourself with the Salon Summer Playlist winners (yeah, it's official. I lost!) or Saturday's Agnes comic, which made me a trifle homesick for Missouri.

Back soon, I hope!