Sunday, April 14, 2013

Game of Thrones


So, yeah, Game of Thrones.  Most of the world knows better than to call me between 9 and 10 pm on Sundays, and it's good to know that several musicians are also apparently fans.  Boston's Marissa Nadler recently recorded the lovely acapella version of the theme song above.  The band Chvrches have also tossed off a fairly faithful version of the song. 



However, I'm always hearing Anamanaguchi's version in my mind when the theme song plays.  There are no spoilers, but be warned: if you listen to this version of the theme, it will never sound the same to you again.


It's not the theme song, but these guys accurately calling themselves The Axis of Awesome have pretty much nailed the definitive commentary on the show.


Good point, but I still like the show.

Saturday, April 13, 2013

John Scofield and Mike Stern at Variety Playhouse, April 12, 2013


At last evening's performance by jazz guitarists John Scofield and Mike Stern at Variety Playhouse, I discovered something new about my self-nature. 


What is it about me, I've wondered, that's made my musical mind so predominantly sequential and left it only ever-so-slightly veridical?  To put the question in more common, everyday terms, why do I still continue, after all these years, all these decades, to constantly seek out new music, to still go to clubs to hear new music, despite the fact that I'm the age of the grandfathers of most of the audience at these events?  

Why hasn't my musical taste crystallized at some point in my life like that of most people I know?  Why am I not content to just continue to listen to the music of The Beatles and the Stones, or Bowie and Yes, or the B-52s and The Talking Heads, or The Foo Fighters and Pearl Jam?  Why is it that, unlike almost everyone else I know, I'm still wanting to hear what's new, what's next, what's happening now?  

In my mind, the answer would usually go something like, "I'm still constantly curious, because as a young man, I used to listen to . . ." and then I'd draw a blank.  Who was it that taught me to be so musically adventurous?  Frank Zappa?  I listened to a lot of Zappa at one point in my life, roughly 1972 to 1976, and he certainly opened me to forms of music other than the rock to which I was predominantly listening, but I don't feel like he's had a lasting effect on my taste, just as his brand of maximalist music as fallen out of popular favor.  Robert Fripp and Brian Eno certainly opened my ears and mind to still other forms of music, and for many years I felt like I had been studying at the feet of Professor Eno in particular, but why didn't my taste in music simply settle on their ambient experiments?       


Then, listening to the jazz improvisations and explorations of Scofield and Stern last night, the answer came to me - the name to fill in the blank.  "I'm still constantly curious, because as a young man, I used to listen to jazz."

There was a famously moribund period in rock history when the air waves were choked with disco and ultra-mellow, laid-back, California folk rock (Seals & Croft, the Eagles, Jackson Brown, etc.).  In reaction, punk rock eventually exploded onto the scene, but in that long boring period before the punk explosion, I retreated from rock music altogether and became infatuated with jazz.  

Living at the time on Long Island, it was easy to slip into New York City and hear still-living legends like Charlie Mingus and Rahsaan Roland Kirk at the Village Vangaurd, or Sun Ra and Pharaoh Sanders at The Bottom Line.  I got to see On the Corner-era Miles Davis live, as well as Herbie Hancock and the Headhunters, not to mention jazz-fusion pioneers like John McLaughlin and the Mahavishnu Orchestra, Chick Corea and Return to Forever, and Joe Zawinul and Weather Report with Wayne Shorter.  Roscoe, Lester, Joseph, Malachi, and Famoudou of The Art Ensemble of Chicago became my new John, Paul, George, and Ringo, replacing Crosby, Stills, Nash, and Young in my imagination.


Now, here's the interesting thing about how jazz works:  the music is typically improvisational, loosely based around some standard song or original composition, or just a mere chord progression.  The ear of the listener engages with the mind of the performer, and as the musician surprises us with unexpected twists and turns in the lines being played (or sometimes surprises us by playing the exact lines that we expect), the sequential system in the mind lights up.  

Listening to jazz for years as I did, one exercises one's sequential neurons to the point where the veridical pleasure of a familiar passage of music seems like a pretty weak cup of tea.  After 10 years of sonic exploration with the masters of avant-garde jazz, followed by a return to rock only when punk and new wave were providing something new and different to hear, my mind became so overpoweringly sequential that it could never again settle for the familiar and the expected.  Contentment could no longer be found in the   known; pleasure existed only in going where my ears had never gone before. 


I know very little of this has anything to do with Scofield and Stern's performance last night, except in the most tangential way. Their show last evening was great, masterly and tasteful, and full of improvisation, extrapolations, and sequential surprises and pleasures.  Their set included standards (Moonlight In Vermont) and originals, and they performed two full sets, just like the jazz masters I used to hear in the Big Apple clubs back in the day.  I don't think anyone could have left wanting anything more from these two master jazzmen.

But as I've said, listening to their playing and following the lines they were laying down, I suddenly realized that no rock musician made me the way I am today.  But if you go to a jazz concert, you'll see all kinds of people, men and women, black and white, young and old, all joined together for the common purpose of enjoying the music, of hearing something spontaneously created in the moment.  Those were my formative experiences, and why I don't feel out-of-place or at least too self-conscious going out to hear the latest indie rock band among an audience of 20-year-olds, even if I may resemble Chris Rock's joke about that one guy in the club waaaay to old to be there.    

Friday, April 12, 2013

Thought Associations


So, the video above turned up in my email today, which reminded me of the video below.


 Which, in turn, reminded me of this:

Broken Social Scene at Bumbershoot, 2011
Which, naturally, reminded me of this:


Wednesday, April 10, 2013

On An On & Savoir Adore at Drunken Unicorn, Atlanta


Don't mistake the brevity of this post with a lack of appreciation of last night's show, but I've been super busy and just don't have time to say too much more.

Minneapolis' On An On played The Drunken Unicorn last night, with Brooklyn's Savoir Adore opening.  Both bands were great, but both featured moody stage lighting and fog machines and were nearly impossible to photograph.  Here's what I caught.

SAVOIR ADORE









ON AN ON









Monday, April 8, 2013

Blind Pilot at Centennial Olympic Park, Atlanta


It seems fitting on so many levels that the Final Four championship, aka March Madness, is being held in April. Southern March weather didn't really arrive until this month, and my March Madness series of concerts didn't really turn out exactly as I had anticipated, although it looks now as if the real madness is going to occur in April.

But I'm getting ahead of myself.  Yesterday, as part of it's Final Four celebration, the NCAA promoted a series of concerts, really a mini-festival, in downtown Atlanta's Centennial Park.  They kept this one quiet, and I didn't even hear about it until I learned at about 7:17 pm on Friday that My Morning Jacket were playing the park starting at 7:00.  I didn't make that one, but while I was at the Caveman show on Saturday night, I was told that Sunday's lineup was going to open with Portland's Blind Pilot


I love this band and wanted very much to be a part of the audience, not so much for my own enjoyment but to show some support and appreciation for the band.  I was worried that their often quiet brand of laid-back folk-rock wouldn't be well received by the audience, most of whom were probably there just for Sting and Dave Matthews later in the day, or at least for Grace Potter and the Nocturnals who were on right after Blind Pilot.  But Blind Pilot are the kind of band with whom, after you've seen them in the right setting, you form a deep emotional bond with, and I wanted to get close to the front and send out some appreciative vibes as they played.

Turns out that getting to the front of the stage was tougher than I had anticipated.  By the time I got to the park, 30 minutes before show time, there was already a line stretching around the block.  It was a free show, but access to the park was tightly controlled for security reasons (all bags were inspected as the audience came through the gates).  By the time I made it through the checkpoint, there were already about 15 rows of people standing in front of the stage, not to mention acres of people stretched out on blankets.  However, I was able to work my way up to about the seventh or eighth row without too much difficulty or being too aggressive.  

On stage, a d.j was working the crowd, and won me over when he threw Duck Sauce's Barbara Streisand into the mix.


Blind Pilot took the stage as scheduled right at 2:30 and almost immediately won over the audience.  We last saw Blind Pilot at The Earl, where someone was blowing soap bubbles toward the band from stage left, but the really memorable performance was their record-release party for We Are The Tide at Portland's Crystal Ballroom during MFNW 2011 (on the 10th anniversary of 9/11 at that!).  I've even got a podcast recording of a show of theirs earlier that day (thanks, KEXP!), a show I missed to go see The Joy Formidable at The Wonder Balllroom, and, yes, I'm listening to that MP3 right now even as I write this.






The weather was perfect, a sunny spring day with comfortable temperatures and low humidity.  The crowd was reasonably attentive, except for a bunch of bros trying to jockey for a stage-front spot so they could see up Grace Potter's skirt during the next set and some frat boys behind me who were there simply to par-ty.  But Blind Pilot was putting out such a warm, friendly vibe that none of this bothered me.


Whenever the Jumbotron projected the audience onto the screen behind the band, the crowd cheered jubilantly, confusing the band until they realized the reason for the sudden and unexpected bursts of enthusiasm.  At other times,. the band seemed dwarfed by giant projections of their own performance.




Blind Pilot ended their set with their traditional closer, a triumphant rendition of We Are The Tide, the title song from their album.  


Overall, it may not have been one of those perfect performances that would form one of those aforementioned deep emotional bonds for someone in the audience hearing them for the first time, but it was as fine and wonderful as one could hope for a show whose real purpose was merely to entertain basketball fans between games.

So, yeah, now this was the real March Madness, and the madness will continue through this week.  Tonight (Monday), Chad Valley is playing at The Earl, and tomorrow night, Savoir Adore and On An On are playing at The Drunken Unicorn.  Wednesday night, Scotland's Frightened Rabbit play at the god-forsaken Masquerade, and Thursday night, New Orleans' Hurray For the Riff Raff are at The 529.  The weekend will bring jazz-rock guitarist John Scofield to Variety Playhouse, and Saturday there's the third annual Buddhapalooza up at the Barking Legs Theater in Chattanooga.

After Blind Pilot's performance on Sunday, I headed back home.  I've already seen Grace Potter live, so I've checked that one off my bucket list already, and I wasn't going to hang around for Sting because it's not 1983 or for the Dave Matthews band because it's not 1993, either.

But, yeah, Blind Pilot on a really big stage in downtown Atlanta.  For free.  Now that was way cool.