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Choose Ani

So, who’s your pick? That dude from Cypress Hill or Chuck D.? The Ruler of the Funky Buddha or The Mouth That Roared? I’m talking about who the new lead singer for Rage Against the Machine should be, of course. The highest-profile radical rock band in the land needs a new mouthpiece, and those seem to be the prime names being bandied about. I wish I could say I’m surprised that no woman’s name has come up, though it’d be a much more radical move to let a femme voice (and perspective) harness the phallic power of Tom Morello’s axe than another Boy Acting Serious and Important. Like Public Enemy before them and like many other great agit-rock acts, Rage’s rage seemed as much about macho posturing as inspiring a livable revolution, and incorporating a little girlie action into their Godzilla-like roar might be a refreshing new direction. All of which is a roundabout way of offering my own suggestion for a new lead singer: Ani Difranco!

Why not? Difranco could use the commercial boost after watching her cult diminish over the last few years, and Rage could use someone with the ability to connect their political sloganeering (and the power of their Molotov-cocktail music) to the physical and emotional realities of everyday life. Sounds like a match to me.

For those outside her core demographic — (very) young, smart, left-leaning (white) women — Difranco can be an acquired taste. After dismissing her for years, like so many others have, as a strident feminist folkie (and “folkie” is the bad word here, not “feminist”), Difranco finally won me over in 1998, when I stumbled onto “Fuel,” a cut from her Little Plastic Castles album. Righteous and caustic, funny and quirky, down-to-earth but with an unexpectedly visionary twist, “Fuel” still sounds like the “protest” song of the decade to me. The song begins with Difranco walking by a Manhattan construction site where a slave cemetery has just been found (“May their souls rest easy now that lynching is illegal/and we’ve moved on to the electric chair”), a sight that triggers a personalized, stream-of-consciousness State of the Union address that encompasses everything from bankrupt politics to crass corporate culture to our isolated citizenry — all conveyed in a thrillingly conversational, everygirl voice. Then Difranco snaps back to real time, still standing over the unearthed cemetery, with a desire to dig even deeper: “down beneath the impossible pain of our history/beneath the unknown bones/and the bedrock of the mystery” to a place where “there’s a fire just waiting for fuel.” Morello’s quicksilver guitar could be the sonic match needed to ignite the blaze.

Okay — time to cut the crap. Won’t happen, right? Rage’s sound is too monolithic to make room for someone whose rhythms and desires seem so deeply personal. Besides, married and past 30, Difranco’s radicalism knows too many shades of grey to embrace the reckless abandon of Rage’s revolution.

The political genius of Difranco’s art is her ability to demonstrate, without ever seeming too willful, how an ethical outlook and subsequent emotional responses can inform how you relate to a lover and a friend as much as it informs how you relate to your country. With the new, two-disc, two-hour torrent of images and ideas, Revelling/Reckoning — essentially her marriage album — Difranco makes this connection plainer than ever. What Difranco has done in the process — perhaps unintentionally — is leave her kids’ cult behind and craft a great adult pop album — a hard thing to do in a genre clogged with the dispiriting self-regard of people like Sting and Don Henley.

The two records have distinct personalities: Revelling boasts fuller arrangements, making the most of Difranco’s unique jazz/funk-folk. Reckoning is more intimate and introspective, boasting a more captivating group of songs. Each record lives up to its title. Revelling starts off, on “Ain’t That The Way,” with Maceo Parker background vocals and Difranco scrunching up her voice like the “Left Eye” Lopes of funk-folk. The message: “Love makes me feel so dumb.” Difranco restates this theme of romantic happiness a bit more slyly on “Marrow”: “I’m a good kisser/and you’re a fast learner/and that kind of thing could float us/for a pretty long time.”

But Reckoning is the real keeper, with “Your Next Bold Move” starting with this: “Coming of age during the plague/of Reagan and Bush/watching capitalism gun down democracy/it had this funny effect on me.” It’s a defeat song, chastising the ineffectualness of a “left wing that was broken long ago,” but what makes it remarkable is how effortlessly the song’s emotion segues into the more personal skepticism of the following marriage songs, “Reckoning” and “So What.” And so it is with the whole of the record, as the political defiance of a song like “Subdivision” (“White people are so scared of black people/they bulldoze out to the country/and put up houses on little loop-dee-loop streets/while America gets its heart cut right out of its chest”) mingles easily with the romantic travails of a song like “Sick of Me” (“The first person in your life/to ever really matter/is saying the last thing/that you want to hear”), making it all sound like part of the same struggle.

So while the job might sound tempting, Difranco probably won’t be too concerned if Rage’s invite never arrives. Judging from Revelling/Reckoning, she’s got more serious battles to wage.

You can e-mail Chris Herrington at herrington@memphisflyer.com.


Music Notes

by CHRIS HERRINGTON

The Premier Player Awards, held at The Pyramid Thursday, April 5th, may have been the site of a New Orleans invasion, but Memphis artists still stole the show. This annual awards ceremony, sponsored by the local chapter of the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences, is essentially the local Grammys, and this year famed New Orleans funk band the Meters took home the Governors Award, the Premier Player’s highest honor. Three-fourths of the original Meters lineup (drummer Joseph Modeliste was a no-show) closed the show with a half-hour greatest-hits set.

The Meters minus one were fine. I may have gotten more of a charge from staying home with my Wild Tchoupitoulas record, but The Meters were still much better than younger New Orleans groove bands Galactic and Astral Project on a night when five of 14 performers fell loosely into the “jam-rock” category, encompassing the good (Meters, North Mississippi Allstars), the so-so (FreeWorld, Galactic), and the so, so bad (the tepid noodle-jazz of Astral Project).

The Meters may have walked away with the show’s biggest honor, but the night really belonged to locals the North Mississippi Allstars and fast-rising Cory Branan. The Allstars took home their second straight award for Best Band and also picked up the Outstanding Achievement Award, besting competition like platinum-selling Three 6 Mafia and hot producer Paul Ebersold for the award that band patriarch Jim Dickinson won last year.

Singer-songwriter Branan won the Phillips Newcomer Award and seemed genuinely surprised, explaining, “I don’t even have a record out,” but thanking voters for keeping their ears to the ground. Branan, who received fervent applause whenever his name came up, also gave arguably the night’s best performance with a typically edgy and heartfelt reading of his song “Tame” during a songwriter’s showcase with Nancy Apple and Keith Sykes.

In all, 21 awards were given, with Steve Potts (drums/percussion), Jim Spake (woodwinds), and Jackie Johnson (female vocalist) joining the Allstars as repeat winners.

The show opened with a “Mardi Gras parade” led by eclectic Best Band nominee FreeWorld and spiked by cameos from Jackie Johnson and last year’s rap winner Lois Lane. Performances from Best Female Vocalist nominees were among the show’s strongest segments. Ruby Wilson delivered a blistering rendition of the Etta James standard “At Last,” with sax man Jim Spake, fresh from winning his eighth woodwinds award in the program’s 16 years, getting a nice showcase. And female vocalist winner Johnson joined nominee Susan Marshall-Powell for a powerful run-through of William Bell’s “You Don’t Miss Your Water” and a gospel number.

Spake’s brief acceptance speech, in which he issued a casual plea for voters to check out a wider range of local music, was one of the few interesting thank-yous of the night. Gaffe of the night award has to go to host Larry Raspberry, who revealed himself to be probably the only person left in Memphis who hasn’t seen The Poor & Hungry when he mistakenly said the film was a documentary while introducing director and Best Band Award presenter Craig Brewer.

The most decorum-free performances of the night came from a couple of Best Band nominees and likely sources: Big Ass Truck, a club band that’s been around so long now they’re probably underrated, were a highlight, dedicating a performance spiked by Steve Selvidge’s animated guitar to late local musician Craig Shindler. And Lucero gave the most out-of-place and, consequently, the most interesting performance of the night with a willfully perverse reading of their slow, loud, and mean live staple “No Roses, No More.” Technical problems dulled the performance’s force, though, and it was hard to tell if the deliberate change of pace won them new fans or drove potential converts away.

This year’s winners were: Harmonica: Blind Mississippi Morris; Woodwinds: Jim Spake; Brass: Scott Thompson; Guitar: Preston Shannon; Strings: Susanna Perry Gilmore; Live DJ/Turntable Artist: Michael “Boogaloo” Boyer; Rappers: Three 6 Mafia; Drums/Percussion: Steve Potts; Bass: Dave Smith; Keyboards: Tony Thomas and Charlie Wood; Female Vocalist: Jackie Johnson; Male Vocalist: Jimmy Davis; Choir: O’Landa Draper’s Associates; Teacher: Jackie Thomas; Engineer: William Brown; Producer: Paul Ebersold; Newcomer/Phillips Award: Cory Branan; Community Service/John Tigrett Award: WEVL FM-90; Outstanding Achievement: North Mississippi Allstars; Songwriter: Kevin Paige; Band: North Mississippi Allstars.

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Music Music Features

CHOOSE ANI

So, who’s your pick? That dude from Cypress Hill or Chuck D.? The Ruler of the Funky Buddha or The Mouth That Roared? I’m talking about who the new lead singer for Rage Against the Machine should be, of course. The highest-profile radical rock band in the land needs a new mouthpiece, and those seem to be the prime names being bandied about. I wish I could say I’m surprised that no woman’s name has come up, though it’d be a much more radical move to let a femme voice (and perspective) harness the phallic power of Tom Morello’s axe than another Boy Acting Serious and Important. Like Public Enemy before them and like many other great agit-rock acts, Rage’s rage seemed as much about macho posturing as inspiring a livable revolution, and incorporating a little girlie action into their Godzilla-like roar might be a refreshing new direction. All of which is a roundabout way of offering my own suggestion for a new lead singer: Ani Difranco!

Why not? Difranco could use the commercial boost after watching her cult diminish over the last few years, and Rage could use someone with the ability to connect their political sloganeering (and the power of their Molotov-cocktail music) to the physical and emotional realities of everyday life. Sounds like a match to me.

For those outside her core demographic — (very) young, smart, left-leaning (white) women — Difranco can be an acquired taste. After dismissing her for years, like so many others have, as a strident feminist folkie (and “folkie” is the bad word here, not “feminist”), Difranco finally won me over in 1998, when I stumbled onto “Fuel,” a cut from her Little Plastic Castles album. Righteous and caustic, funny and quirky, down-to-earth but with an unexpectedly visionary twist, “Fuel” still sounds like the “protest” song of the decade to me. The song begins with Difranco walking by a Manhattan construction site where a slave cemetery has just been found (“May their souls rest easy now that lynching is illegal/and we’ve moved on to the electric chair”), a sight that triggers a personalized, stream-of-consciousness State of the Union address that encompasses everything from bankrupt politics to crass corporate culture to our isolated citizenry — all conveyed in a thrillingly conversational, everygirl voice. Then Difranco snaps back to real time, still standing over the unearthed cemetery, with a desire to dig even deeper: “down beneath the impossible pain of our history/beneath the unknown bones/and the bedrock of the mystery” to a place where “there’s a fire just waiting for fuel.” Morello’s quicksilver guitar could be the sonic match needed to ignite the blaze.

Okay — time to cut the crap. Won’t happen, right? Rage’s sound is too monolithic to make room for someone whose rhythms and desires seem so deeply personal. Besides, married and past 30, Difranco’s radicalism knows too many shades of grey to embrace the reckless abandon of Rage’s revolution.

The political genius of Difranco’s art is her ability to demonstrate, without ever seeming too willful, how an ethical outlook and subsequent emotional responses can inform how you relate to a lover and a friend as much as it informs how you relate to your country. With the new, two-disc, two-hour torrent of images and ideas, Revelling/Reckoning — essentially her marriage album — Difranco makes this connection plainer than ever. What Difranco has done in the process — perhaps unintentionally — is leave her kids’ cult behind and craft a great adult pop album — a hard thing to do in a genre clogged with the dispiriting self-regard of people like Sting and Don Henley.

The two records have distinct personalities: Revelling boasts fuller arrangements, making the most of Difranco’s unique jazz/funk-folk. Reckoning is more intimate and introspective, boasting a more captivating group of songs. Each record lives up to its title. Revelling starts off, on “Ain’t That The Way,” with Maceo Parker background vocals and Difranco scrunching up her voice like the “Left Eye” Lopes of funk-folk. The message: “Love makes me feel so dumb.” Difranco restates this theme of romantic happiness a bit more slyly on “Marrow”: “I’m a good kisser/and you’re a fast learner/and that kind of thing could float us/for a pretty long time.”

But Reckoning is the real keeper, with “Your Next Bold Move” starting with this: “Coming of age during the plague/of Reagan and Bush/watching capitalism gun down democracy/it had this funny effect on me.” It’s a defeat song, chastising the ineffectualness of a “left wing that was broken long ago,” but what makes it remarkable is how effortlessly the song’s emotion segues into the more personal skepticism of the following marriage songs, “Reckoning” and “So What.” And so it is with the whole of the record, as the political defiance of a song like “Subdivision” (“White people are so scared of black people/they bulldoze out to the country/and put up houses on little loop-dee-loop streets/while America gets its heart cut right out of its chest”) mingles easily with the romantic travails of a song like “Sick of Me” (“The first person in your life/to ever really matter/is saying the last thing/that you want to hear”), making it all sound like part of the same struggle.

So while the job might sound tempting, Difranco probably won’t be too concerned if Rage’s invite never arrives. Judging from Revelling/Reckoning, she’s got more serious battles to wage.

Categories
Music Music Features

SEEING CLEARLY NOW

If you wanted to get analytical about it, you could conclude that the rise of angry, adolescent-oriented hard rock over the last half-decade has something to do with the resentment Gen Y kids have for their boomer parents. The higher divorce rates and increase in latch-key childhoods over the last 20 years have changed the tone of teen anger: In the heavy-metal Eighties parents were just accused of spoiling a good time, of taking away your best porno mag, but kids who respond emotionally to Marilyn Manson and Eminem are coming from a deeper source of emptiness. That may be a conclusion that cultural gatekeepers like Bill Bennett and Lynne Cheney share about music they no doubt hate, but it’s also as undeniable as connecting the dots between economic good times, a second baby boom, and consumer-friendly mall-pop.

Crumbling families as a subject for art, much like the life experience itself, is commonplace these days. But good rock-and-roll that deals with it directly is rare, and what makes Everclear’s Art Alexakis so compelling right now is his ability to articulate that particular strain of anguish. As someone who went through it as a kid and has a daughter he’s putting through it right now, Alexakis is able to convey the pain of broken-home childhoods from two angles. He takes the familial dysfunction that young hard-rock bands like Korn and Papa Roach traffic in and makes something of it — with insight and honesty but without whiny solipsism or a loss of good humor.

Alexakis’ journey from late-grunge fluke to the poet laureate of divorced-dad rock has not been a predictable one. Everclear arrived in 1993 with the forgettable grunge of the aptly titled World of Noise then made a commercial dent with the 1995 follow-up Sparkle and Fade. That record, which gave the band its first hit with “Santa Monica,” crystallized their muscular grunge into a more identifiable sound and reflected a more discernible personality at the music’s core. But the band finally started to come into its own with 1997’s So Much for the Afterglow. The title/lead song was a new peak for the band, the Beach Boys harmonies of the intro running into Who/Nirvana power chords and launching an ambitious song that said more about the surprising growth of the band’s music than any critic could. “This is a song about the everyday occurrences that make me feel like letting go,” Alexakis asserted, and so it was. The album also included the hit single “Father of Mine,” a strong commentary on Alexakis’ own single-parent childhood and the first time he hit his great subject head-on.

After a three-year hiatus, Everclear released two albums in 2000, the dubiously connected Songs From an American Movie Vol. One: Learning How to Smile and Songs From an American Movie Vol. Two: Good Time For a Bad Attitude. The conceptual framework of this prestige move is ambiguous; I still haven’t figured out what that title means; and the hard-rockin’ Vol. Two is the band’s worst record since their debut. But Vol. One is a shock.

On Learning How to Smile, Alexakis and company finally find their true voices as a great classic-rock band, referencing Jimmy Page and “Brown-Eyed Girl,” John Prine and “the Otis Redding.” In the most underappreciated pop coup of the year, the band came out of the guitar maelstrom of their previous work with a career album more likely to please fans of Tom Petty and Aerosmith than fans of Nirvana and Sonic Youth. This is their cornball pop move — sampling Public Enemy and “Mr. Big Stuff,” bringing in horns and background vocals and strings — and it’s the one that I adore.

But it’s also Alexakis’ D-I-V-O-R-C-E album, with an overture that contains the following central image: “The only thing that ever made sense in my life/is the sound of my little girl laughing/through the window of a summer night/I sit alone in the backyard/wishing I could be inside.” If you’re wondering why he has to stay outside and only hear her through the window, the rest of the album provides enough context to fill in the gaps — he’s simply there to deliver the child-support check.

Alexakis only comments on his daughter directly at the beginning and end of the album, but she informs all of the relationship songs in the middle of the record, a group of courtship-and-marriage memories that glow with the knowledge of what’s been lost and the damage that’s been wrought. The songs also charm with inspired details of the low-rent dating life that Everclear’s younger and more vague modern-rock competitors can’t touch — such as the plastic welfare-office chair that Alexakis first spies his future bride in and this magic moment from “Here We Go Again”: “There ain’t no place I’d rather be/than watching dirty movies/in that happy room with you/sleeping on a mattress/in the corner/eating Chinese food.”

Everclear isn’t the world’s greatest rock-and-roll band — far from it. But on Friday night at The Pyramid, stuck between the pre-fab modern rock of Lifehouse and the bloated bellowing of Rob Thomas and Matchbox Twenty, they might sound like it.

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Music Music Features

Swell

The
Glands

It’s my heart that’s in the right place but my head that’s in the
clouds,” the Glands’ Ross Shapiro sings on “Swim,” thus summing
up his band’s peculiar charm. The Glands are a rare thing indeed: an Athens
band that doesn’t seem to be influenced by any other Athens band. They don’t
belong to the eclectic Elephant 6 collective, and their tight blend of pop and
rock is miles removed from the loose jangle of early REM or the party-movin’
workouts of the B-52s.

The band’s eponymous sophomore album, released last year on
Atlanta’s Capricorn Records, is a glorious hodgepodge of styles, ranging from
witty, intelligent pop to crunchy, guitar-driven rock to contemplative folk.
It’s a friendly record, one that sounds immediately familiar yet is strikingly
original and resourceful in its execution.

One of the first things you notice on the album is its sense of
spontaneity, a result, perhaps, of the band having no set approach to making
the record. “Sometimes there is no real plan to how something is supposed
to go,” says Shapiro. “So we’ll go into it with the plan to
experiment until something good comes out of it.” Such playfulness is
evident throughout The Glands, from the yawning violin in the coda of
“Swim” to the great tectonic bass shifts that move
“Lovetown” to the seemingly lackadaisical construction of “I
Can See My House from Here.”

The album’s diversity of sound comes not only from the band’s
loose approach to recording but also from its use of multiple studios and
producers. In addition, the Glands are listed as co-producers on each track.
“The different studios,” Shapiro explains, “have different
ambiences. Each producer works in a different way, and since our songs go all
over the place, it’s good to have no set habits. Plus, they’re all kinda part
of the band.” The result is a surprisingly diverse collection that shifts
moods often and easily, constructing hooky pop songs and murky soundscapes
with equal success — and never using the same trick twice.

Despite this eclectic quality, The Glands is a genuinely
cohesive collection. Holding all the disparate elements together, Shapiro’s
voice — utterly devoid of affectation — exudes a laid-back charm. Sonically,
it falls somewhere between Tom Petty’s matter-of-fact Southern drawl and Bob
Dylan’s nasal whine, but it also suggests such newcomers as Mercury Rev’s
Jonathan Donahue and Doug Martsch of Built to Spill. But Shapiro’s voice
displays more resonance and distinctiveness than those comparisons suggest; he
is no better or worse a singer than those above but very different,
simultaneously disaffected and completely relaxed.

Genuinely intriguing and sharply crafted, his lyrics possess a
conversational quality that matches his vocal style. There are flashes of
insight on songs like “Straight Down” and “Favorite
American,” and “Soul Inspiration” bristles with an alarming
ambiguity. However, he conveys more meaning in the sound of his voice than in
the words he sings, so lyrics remain secondary to the album’s overall
sound.

The rest of the band — Doug Stanley, Andy Baker, and Neil Golden
— display a funky versatility, genre-hopping from indie to pop to straight-
ahead rock with a dexterous flair. The opener and would-be single,
“Livin’ Was Easy,” shuffles into a drum-heavy breakdown inspired, it
would seem, by Pavement’s “Summer Babe.” It laments having to leave
behind the simple pleasures of life — “Why did I go?/The livin’ was
easy/I had a room of my own/and the weather was warm.”

“When I Laugh” thumps along with a relentless momentum
and some endlessly catchy backup doo-doo-doo-doo-doos. “Swim,”
heralded by a short string intro, changes gear to upbeat pop, tricked out with
a bubbly piano theme. Taken together, the first three tracks comprise a
perfect opening: endearing, inviting, and unflaggingly upbeat. It’s not until
the fourth song, the beautiful, ponderous “Mayflower,” that the
momentum slows.

Through the course of 13 songs, the Glands also touch on classic
rock with pieces like “Straight Down” and “Work It Out,”
which actually have guitar solos, as well as slower, moodier pieces like the
evocative “Ground,” which centers on a start-stop guitar theme and a
spiraling organ solo.

But the album’s literal and conceptual centerpiece, “I Can
See My House from Here,” is its own creation entirely. A steady-moving
pop song at heart, it piles layer upon layer of percussion, guitar, vocals,
and a variation of the piano line from the Four Seasons’ “Oh What a
Night.” It has the spaced-out vibe of a remix, yet every sound feels
vital and central.

For collectors, the vinyl edition of The Glands contains
five extra tracks, which, on the whole, are fairly minor. Only “Something
in the Air” is truly worth seeking out. Its propulsive tempo and crisp
guitars match the mood of “Straight Down” and “Work It
Out,” while Shapiro’s boyish la-la-las and casual lyrics complement
“Livin’ Was Easy” and “Swim.”

Such a rare band has accomplished an even rarer feat: The Glands
have created a small masterpiece of precise sound and easy intimacy, and
Shapiro’s richly textured voice, paired with the band’s exacting work, reveals
new depth and detail with every listen.

The Glands

With The Go and The Final Solutions

Tuesday, March 20th

Last Place on Earth


Music Notes

by CHRIS HERRINGTON

Rockabilly Revival

To the extent that longtime Memphians Jesse Lee and Jimmy Denson
have been recognized, it’s usually been in relation to Elvis Presley. The
Denson brothers grew up with Elvis in the Lauderdale Courts housing project
and their father ran the Poplar Street Mission, which helped the Presley
family start their lives in Memphis. Jesse Lee Denson, roughly two years
Elvis’ senior, is said to have given Elvis some of his earliest guitar
instruction and mentoring. But thanks to a new import release from London’s
Ace Records — Long Gone Daddies: Original ’50s Rockabilly & Rock ‘n’
Roll from the Modern Label
— listeners can check out how the Denson
brothers fared as artists in their own right.

This collection of obscure first-generation rockabilly sides
crams 32 singles and demos onto one disc, including Lee Denson’s “High
School Hop” and five cuts credited under the moniker “Jesse
James” that were performed by Jesse Lee and co-written with brother
Jimmy. These sides were cut in Los Angeles on the tail end of the rockabilly
wave for a label called Kent. “High School Hop” is a typical genre
exercise that, for all its energy, sounds pretty calculated. But the Jesse
James cuts are a little bit rougher. The surprising “South’s Gonna Rise
Again,” included here in its 1958 singles form and as a previously
unreleased demo, is a nervy, proto-Bocephus, scary-white-boy roots anthem with
group-vocal hallelujahs and lyrics like, “Down south of the Mason-Dixon,
friends/Rebels are a’rockin’ and rollin’ in” and “Save your
Confederate money, my friend.” It may have just been a prideful
rockabilly testament, but in 1958 I bet it sounded pretty sketchy. And then
there’s “Rock Daddy Rock,” which begins with the lustful cry,
“There’s a lot of 13-, 14-, 15-year-old girls .”

The Denson brothers are still in town and are anxious for people
to rediscover their music, which could be a problem. Last I heard, Shangri-La
Records in Midtown was trying to get some of these English-import discs but
wasn’t having much luck. If you’re interested, check with Shangri-La.

New Releases

Significant new records scheduled to hit the racks this week:

Bastard Sons of Johnny CashWalk Alone
(Ultimatum Music)

Eric ClaptonReptile (Reprise)

Daft PunkDiscovery (Virgin)

Idlewild100 Broken Windows (Capitol/Odeon)

Los Super SevenCanto (Columbia/Legacy)

SwagCatch-All (Yep Roc)

Categories
Music Music Features

Sound Advice

Chicago-based punk-rock girls who sound more down-and-dirty than the Olympia variety, the Dishes are one of the “100 New Bands You Need to Know” this year according to Alternative Press. While I don’t always trust that rag, I’ll second their emotion this time, as the band’s eponymous 2000 debut is a rough-and-rousing affair. Like so many other bands right now, the Dishes will be hitting town this week en route to Austin for the South By Southwest Festival. Check them out at the Map Room on Monday, March 12th, with like-minded locals Girls on Fire. Also of interest at the Map Room this week are Elephant 6 offshoots the Essex Green. Though I’m a big fan of Elephant 6 standard-bearers Apples in Stereo, I have to admit that I find the Essex Green a little too evocative of 1967 for my taste — their last album, 1999’s Everything is Green, is a magical mystery tour of innocent hippie-drippiness that makes me want to pull out Love’s seminal Forever Changes rather than attend to the newer copy. But fans of that particular ilk of retro might want to take a look-see anyway. The Essex Green will be at the Map Room on Sunday, March 11th, with Snoglobe. — Chris Herrington

Johnny Dowd is a frustrating artist. He rants about his lifetime devotion to rock-and-roll. He calls it his religion. But if that’s the case, he’s a heretic. He’s really a country songwriter — and a skilled one at that. At times, he even seems more like a playwright who lacks the focus to create a piece more than three minutes long. His songs, especially those concerning family matters, go far beyond the easy transgressions of Jim Morrison’s “Father? Yes, son? I want to kill you” and sock you right in the gut like a monologue from Sam Shepard’s Lie of the Mind. It’s heroin-country, ominous and lurking. Imagine Billy Joe Shaver on way too many Quaaludes trying to write a tune for Nick Cave on a synthesizer and you’ll get the idea. So if you are into songs that make you want to slit your wrists, Dowd is playing the Hi-Tone Café with Cory Branan on Wednesday, March 14th. Black Dog recording artists the Bigger Lovers, who sound like a less drug-addled answer to the Flaming Lips, will also be at the Hi-Tone on Sunday, March 11th, with local soundscapers Delorean. Though lacking the surreal imagery that made the Lips’ rep, the Lovers have put the rock back into retro ’60s psychedelia.

Chiseler chick Misty White, the driving force behind Memphis’ most rockin’ Halloween party, Hell on Earth, is throwing a weekly shindig at Earnestine and Hazel’s. Get on down to that former brothel on Sundays and enjoy a variety of fine Memphis musicians. Last, and best of all, the godfather of Memphis punk, Jeffrey Evans, whose bands the Gibson Brothers and ’68 Comeback are so universally influential that people in France have his Cadillac tattooed on their backs, will be playing on the porch at Shangri-La Records at 2 p.m., Sunday, March 11th. Evans is supporting his new Sympathy for the Record Industry release I’ve Lived A Rich Life. The new record is a raw answer to VH-1’s storytellers series, and Evans is one helluva fine entertainer. Don’t even think about missing this one. — Chris Davis

Categories
Music Music Features

What’s Their Name?

Drive-by Truckers

If, in a fit of utter nerdishness, you were to devise a chart ranking bands for their music and their monikers, I’m pretty sure there wouldn’t be many good-band/bad-name gaps as wide as that of the Drive-by Truckers. The name is pure novelty, and it gives uninitiated listeners every right to expect a cross between the Insane Clown Posse and Southern Culture on the Skids. This problem is only exacerbated by the unfortunate title of the band’s first album — Gangstabilly. But the Drive-by Truckers are not the cornpone attitude-mongers their name suggests, nor does their music — in content or sound — have the slightest bit to do with either “gangsta” or “rockabilly.” What the Drive-by Truckers are is one of the best rock-and-roll bands around right now — the missing link between the proud, smart redneck-rock of Lynyrd Skynyrd and the fierce, sloppy-yet-tuneful post-punk roar of the Replacements and the Archers of Loaf.

Five years after forming and 15 years after co-leaders Patterson Hood and Mike Cooley first hooked up with the band Adam’s House Cat, these Athens-by-way-of-Muscle-Shoals road-warriors may be on the verge of breaking out. Last year, The Village Voice dubbed the group the best unknown band in America, and the current issue of Spin lists them as “on the verge” for 2001. The band hits town this week with the thrilling, late-2000 live album Alabama Ass Whuppin’ under their belts and a “rock opera” on the horizon about Southern culture in the Seventies. The forthcoming record is said to be called Betamax Guillotine, a reference to the rumor that one member of Lynyrd Skynyrd was decapitated by a VCR when the band’s plane went down.

Hood and Cooley both lived in Memphis briefly during the early Nineties — which spawned the song “The Night G.G. Allin Came to Town,” about the late shock-rocker’s infamous Antenna club performance — and the band performs here regularly. I missed their last stop in town, last fall at the Hi-Tone, which was reportedly a perverse and poorly attended affair. But a gig the band played a year or so ago at Young Avenue Deli was a ragged-but-right revelation: loud and anthemic but suffused with conversational good humor, it was one of the best sets I’ve ever seen by a band I knew little about.

It may seem odd for an under-the-radar, regional rock band with only two studio albums to its name to release a live record, especially since the Drive-by Truckers are in no way a “jam” band. But the decision to do so — along with being a possible stopgap while trying to complete the “rock opera” opus — reflects the reality of a cult band that improves on the stage. And while the 70-minute Alabama Ass Whuppin’ may be no substitute for the real thing, it’s still a perfectly paced, kick-ass document that captures the raucous, roadhouse feel of the band’s stage show.

The album kicks off with the slow, grueling grind of Hood’s “Why Henry Drinks,” a song inspired by Hank Williams Jr.’s “Family Tradition.” Neil Young guitars lurch out of the gate and into Hood’s mean, meaty twang, spitting venom with lines like, “Those obnoxious drunks downstairs are fighting and cussing/12 years of me and you don’t add up to a goddamn nothing.” The record then segues into the equally down-tempo suicidal tendencies of the Adam’s House Cat dirge “Lookout Mountain.”

The pace picks up with “The Living Bubba,” a moving, mid-tempo tribute to an Atlanta musician and friend who died of AIDS, and then moves swiftly into the sardonic, up-tempo ode to radio preachers “Too Much Sex (Too Little Jesus).” The record then hits overdrive with the breakneck break-up song “Don’t Be in Love Around Me,” with Hood delivering a matter-of-fact message to an ex-lover: “I’m not in the mood to see you looking at each other like you’re looking at each other right now.”

Alabama Ass Whuppin’ peaks with the unforgettable centerpiece “18 Wheels of Love.” Hood is a good singer, but he’s a great talker, and the jaw-dropping monologue that opens this song is an unintentional testament to the enduring character of Southern speech — the accent, the content, and the delivery all inspire regional ardor. Breathtakingly walking the line between life-affirming laughs and easy yuks, Hood begins his story by announcing, “When my mom and dad got divorced my momma locked herself in her room and didn’t come out for six years.” Hood goes on to paint a picture of his exiled mother, with three TV sets (“just like Elvis, the King, used to have”) and two VCRs on top of each “so she could watch all the shows later that she wasn’t watching when she was watching the other shows.”

But the child support runs out and Hood’s momma has to get a job. “Let me tell you folks,” Hood says in a tough but touching moment. “It’s a mean, mean, cruel world out there for a 55-year-old woman that’s never worked a day in her life.” Hood’s mother finds the kind of job that small-town Alabama affords middle-aged, underedu-cated women — log monitor at a trucking company. There she falls for Chester, “the biggest, meanest motherfucker” at the company, and gets married at Dollywood. Hood explains that his momma’s remarriage happened at a time when he was unemployed and broke so “I wrote my momma this song as a wedding present; it’s called ’18 Wheels of Love’ and every goddamn word is true.” Guitars rise from the din as Hood speaks the last, triumphant line and the song ignites. Other than Clarence Carter’s treatise on the birds and the bees in his version of “The Dark End of the Street,” this might be the grandest extended, spoken-word intro in rock-and-roll history.

After that glorious high note, the album downshifts with a hilarious, impromptu childhood remembrance called “The Avon Lady” and Hood’s “Margo and Harold,” a Randy Newman-worthy tale of being hounded by a pair of middle-aged swingers.

The record then climaxes with a medley of sorts. The band breaks into a noisy, guitar-drenched tribute to a Seventies icon on “Steve McQueen” (“Bullitt was the best movie I’d ever seen/Tore up my go-kart tryin’ to imitate that chase scene,” Hood drawls), before unexpectedly morphing into a vicious, perfect cover of Skynyrd’s “Gimme Three Steps.” And just when you think things can’t get any crazier or more inspired, the band has the guts and heart to segue breathlessly from this McQueen/Skynyrd tribute into a ferocious recitation of the Jim Carroll Band’s classic “People Who Died.”

Somewhere out there Ronnie Van Zandt, not to mention the lost friend saluted on “The Living Bubba,” is flashing a big shit-eating grin.

The Drive-by Truckers

With Old No. 8 and Truckadelic, The Hi-Tone Café, Thursday, March 8th

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Music Music Features

Sound Advice

It could be a pretty special night at Newby’s on Thursday, March 1st, when roots reggae legends Culture hit town. Founded by lead singer and chief songwriter Joseph Hill in Kingston during the mid-Seventies, Culture rivals the Wailers and Toots & the Maytals among the most important of all reggae groups. The band’s colossal 1977 debut album, Two Sevens Clash, is roundly considered one of the greatest reggae records ever made — a feverish, rhythmically galvanizing, Rastafarian exploration of mid-Seventies Jamaica. At the time, the album, especially the apocalyptic title song, made such a huge impact that on July 7, 1977 — the day the sevens clashed — Kingston reportedly ground to a halt as people awaited judgment.

My first-hand experience with the band starts and ends with Two Sevens Clash, and if you’re wondering how well the band can conjure the excitement of 1977 today, then your guess is as good as mine. But it sure seems like a good idea to show up and find out.

Another show Thursday night worth getting excited about: If you read our music feature last week on the Memphis Troubadours compilation, then you might remember some favorable ink expended on local singer-songwriters Cory Branan and the Pawtuckets’ Andy Grooms, who were the heroes of that record. Well, now it turns out that the MADJACK Records labelmates are joining forces at the Hi-Tone Café on Thursday for what will no doubt be some first-rate song swapping. — Chris Herrington

When you go see Southern Culture on the Skids at the New Daisy on Friday, March 2nd (and you’d be a fool not to), chances are good you’ll walk away wondering, “Who was that great opening band, and why haven’t I heard of them before?” Well, that band is the Forty-Fives and I’ve slathered nine kinds of praise on their Hammond-driven sound the last two times they came to town. Nobody paid any attention though, and turnout bit. Now (finally) they are touring with a band guaranteed to draw a crowd. They deserve it too. There is not a finer garage band on the planet. Go early. Don’t miss a note.

All good things must end they say, and sadly enough Oxford’s mighty noise machine the Neckbones have skipped on down the primrose path. That’s not news really; they busted up a while back but I’m still not over it. In fact, I haven’t been this broken up about a band’s demise since the Oblivians called it quits. From the Oblivians’ ashes, however, two fantastic bands emerged: the Tearjerkers and (I really can’t believe how good they are) the Reigning Sound. Hopefully the late great Neckbones will likewise double down. Former Neckbones front man Tyler Keith, who gave us nasty-good ’70s-style punk in the form of songs like “Art School Dropout” and “Get My Kicks” as well as the gruff country of “Red Wagon,” is bringing his new band, the Preacher’s Kids, to Shangri-La Records on Friday, March 2nd, at 5:30 p.m. in support of their debut album Romeo Hood. Considering that the Preacher’s Kids is made up of members of Mississippi hellions/Black Dog record execs Blue Mountain, the chances are good that this will be a great rock-and-roll show. Not so coincidentally, Blue Mountain will be doing their thing later that night at the Hi-Tone. — Chris Davis

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Music Music Features

Bringing Back the Bomp

Everybody see Bono at the Grammys? I loved how, receiving what I think was the third award of the night for the typically grandiose if still lovely “Beautiful Day,” he expressed “humility” then immediately proclaimed his group “The World’s Greatest Rock-and-Roll Band.” There are worse choices these days, I guess. But if a lot of Radiohead fans were mulling over that claim carefully, I’m willing to bet that plenty of people — more than you might think — were also yelling back at the television: “Sleater-Kinney!” Though obscure to casual music fans, that post-riot-grrl group has been critics’ choice for years now. But they better watch out, because a blast from their own past — Kathleen Hanna, formerly the screech-and-snarl behind ’90s scene-starters Bikini Kill — is giving them a push for the throne.

Hanna’s new band, the riot-grrls-catch-disco-fever Le Tigre, arrived in late 1999 with an uneven but often thrilling eponymous debut that gradually found an audience and landed on Spin‘s list of 2000’s 10 best albums. With its ruminations on indie-film icon John Cassavetes and shout-outs to academic/feminist heroines that less well-educated listeners have likely never heard of, Le Tigre carried an art-school aftertaste that, for some, may have clashed with the political populism inherent in the music’s punked-out pleasure principle.

But with the new From the Desk of Mr. Lady (the band’s record label), they’ve delivered a more direct, more forceful statement, one that finds the band less preaching to the choir than taking a bullhorn into the crowd. At seven songs in 17 minutes, it’s the most fully alive collection of music to hit the racks so far this year.

The first words from Kathleen Hanna’s mouth on Le Tigre were, “Who took the BOMP?!” The line was a reference to an early-Sixties hit, now oldies radio staple, from Brill Building songwriter Barry Mann, “Who Put the Bomp (In the Bomp, Bomp, Bomp).” Mann’s song is a loving tribute to the simple sonic joy of early doo-wop and rock-and-roll. “Bomp,” in Mann’s song, refers not only to the common nonsense syllables deployed in early rock and soul, but to that music’s ineffable magic; “bomp” is an essence so otherworldly that it’s assumed that some outside force had to put it there.

Hanna evokes the line at a time when hip hop and R&B are absolutely bompalicious but when the world of white guitar rock, both the mainstream and underground, is noticeably lacking in bomp. But Hanna doesn’t just bemoan the lack of spirit in modern rock, she puts the bomp back. With an inspired amalgam of pogo-punk, new-wavey disco, and hip-hop-bred beat racket, Hanna and crew have taken to heart the essential message for any would-be rock-and-roll revolutionaries: Fun Matters.

Le Tigre’s music is a rebuke to mainstream rock culture — reactionary, macho, money-mad, solipsistic. But it’s also a seemingly conscious rebuke to the boycentric side of the rock underground — obscurantist, pleasureless, apolitical, solipsistic. Who took the BOMP?!

If Radiohead mope-maven Thom Yorke is the new frontman of a suffocating, art-rock-loving alternative culture, then Le Tigre offers a hearty, rude “I dissent.” On the new record’s “Mediocrity Rules,” the dullard date being skewered could be the male half of Le Tigre’s native indie-rock world: “I can see it in your eyes that nothing scares you like a real idea.” If so much that passes for independent rock these days is a withdrawal into the subcultural closet, then Le Tigre feels triumphant for how broadly their homemade agitpop engages the world. This is music made on the fringes but aimed squarely at the center. In the words of like-minded Sleater-Kinney, this band has come to join the conversation and is here to raise the stakes.

But if the beatwise bump ‘n’ grind of Le Tigre’s music is enough to get them in the door, the messages and emotions it carries make it a Trojan horse. The band sports female vocals alternately flat, bored, and exasperated or shrieking, taunting, and declamatory — an Everygirl voice that is everything assured, professional singing is not supposed to be and is all the more thrilling for it. The band’s lyrics are expressions of basic political outrage and common-language calls to arms, fed-up meditations on feminist backlash and lowered cultural expectations.

From the Desk of Mr. Lady starts off in a funk — “It feels so ’80s/Or early ’90s/To be political/Where are my friends?” — but then blasts through it — “Get off the Internet!/I’ll meet you in the street!” The record’s centerpiece is the Amadou Diallo-inspired “Bang! Bang!,” the most galvanizing “protest” song in recent memory. Instead of artists with issues, the band sounds like outraged citizens (which, as non-rock-star New Yorkers, is exactly what they are) turning the town hall meeting into a radical house party, screaming the truth in the plainest, crudest terms they can come up with: “Murder is murder/Why’re they confused?” and “Wrong fucking time/wrong fucking place/There is no fucking way this is not about race.”

If the rousing harangues of Rage Against the Machine sound like pamphlet polemics, Le Tigre’s politics are more conversational and lived-in — like a pissed-off neighbor grabbing you by the collar on the street and throwing their anger in your face — and anger almost seems too tame. Last year the band paused during an ode to public transportation to offer a deliciously succinct dismissal of their martial-law mayor — “Oh, fuck Giuliani/He’s such a fucking jerk/Shut down all the strip bars/Workfare does not work.” Here they ask for his head.

From the Desk of Mr. Lady is an art-punk answer to the imposing challenge that has been laid down by hip-hop heroes Outkast: It’s political party music that breaks down musical barriers, speaks truth to power, and never forgets to dance this mess around. But Le Tigre’s triumph also hints at further riches below, and one new band that’s risen to the challenge is Sleater-Kinney labelmates the Gossip.

The Gossip aren’t at all engaged with the outside world — the lyrical content of the band’s recent full-length debut, That’s Not What I Heard, never gets beyond first-person accounts of tumultuous young love. But it takes the same musical lesson to heart: Cramming 14 songs into 24 unrelenting minutes, this introductory blast from the Arkansas-by-way-of-Olympia punk band is a wide-open wonder, nothing but bomp. Crashing backbeats shadow-box punk-blues guitar that should make the folks at Fat Possum wet themselves, while lead singer “Beth” wails over the top of the clamor like the bastard child of Janis Joplin and um Kathleen Hanna. (Blues Foundation Alert: Please consider That’s Not What I Heard when putting together the “Best Debut” category at next year’s Handy Awards.)

Maybe it’s their Southernness, but with their blues-drenched guitar, gospelized vocals, and comfortable expressions of sexuality, the Gossip sound more open to “black music” without being calculating about it than any other contemporary punk band that never varies from the guitar-bass-drums format.

“Swing Low” is a lesbian-punk booty call with Beth establishing herself as the most sexualized punk singer on the planet (“Better make it good/Better make it now/Well, baby, shake it honey/Nobody has to know”), while her bandmates back that azz up approvingly (“Make it oh-oh good/Make-it-make-it-make-it now”).

Can an all-girl art-collective-turned-pop-band become the new Rage Against the Machine or Public Enemy? Doubtful. Can three scruffy kids on a tiny record label defiantly called Kill Rock Stars sweep bar-band blooze into the dustbin of history? No way. But if you find yourself scanning rock radio and wondering what happened to the bomp, don’t say I didn’t give you a heads up.

You can e-mail Chris Herrington at herrington@memphisflyer.com.

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Music Music Features

PREMIER PLAYER NOMINATIONS

The local chapter of the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences announced nominations last week for the 16th Annual Premier Player Awards. Awards are voted on by NARAS members and will be presented on April 5th at The Pyramid.

This year’s Premier Player Awards will salute New Orleans and will present the organization’s Governor’s Award to Crescent City legends The Meters. The North Mississippi Allstars and the University of Mississippi Gospel Choir are among those scheduled to join the Meters as performers. A complete list of nominees follows:

Band: Big Ass Truck, FreeWorld, Lucero, North Mississippi Allstars, Kevin Paige Band, Preston Shannon Band.

Female Vocalist: Joyce Cobb, Jackie Johnson, Susan Marshall Powell, Reba Russell, Ruby Wilson.

Male Vocalist: Jimmy Davis, James Govan, Gary Johns, Kevin Paige, Preston

Producer: Paul Ebersold, Jim Gaines, Jeff Powell, Norbert Putnam, Ross Rice.

Engineer: William Brown, Posey Hedges, Dawn Hopkins, Kevin Houston, Jeff Powell.

Award for Outstanding Achievement: Paul Ebersold, Jim Gaines, North Mississippi Allstars, Sounds Unreel Studio, Three 6 Mafia.

Drums/Percussion: Jim Britt, Cody Dickinson, Harry Peel, Steve Potts, David Skypeck.

Bass: Jackie Clark, Tim Goodwin, Sam Shoupe, Dave Smith, John Williams.

Guitar: Tommy Burroughs, Luther Dickinson, Jack Holder, Preston Shannon, Harold Smith, Brian Overstreet.

Keyboards: Al Gamble, Ross Rice, Rick Steff, Tony Thomas, Charlie Wood.

Brass: Tom Clary, Steve Dolan, Mark Franklin, David Spencer, Scott Thompson.

Woodwinds: Art Edmaiston, Tom Link, Lannie McMillan, Jim Spake, Kirk Smothers.

Strings: Roy Brewer, David Cho, Richard Ford, Susanna Perry Gilmore, Eric Lewis.

Harmonica: Billy Gibson, Lyn Jones, Blind Mississippi Morris, Mark Sallings, Robert “Nighthawk” Tooms.

Choir: Kevin Davidson and the Voices, O’Landa Draper’s Associates, Orange Mound Choir, Billy Rivers & Angelic Voices of Faith, Tennessee Mass Choir, University of Mississippi Gospel Choir.

Songwriter: Nancy Apple, Cory Branan, Jimmy Davis, John Kilzer, Kevin Paige, Ross Rice.

Live DJ/Turntable Artist: Michael “Boogaloo” Boyer, DJ Aramis, DJ Slice, Devin Steele.

Rapper: Al Kapone, Gangsta Boo, Lois Lane, Playa Fly, Project Pat, Three 6 Mafia.

Premier Newcomer Award: Cory Branan, Dust for Life, Katrice, Richard Johnston, Kirk Smithart.

Premier Music Teacher Award: Jonah Ellis, Tom Link, Ricky Richardson, David Spencer, Jackie Thomas.

Award for Community Service: George Klein, Memphis & Shelby County Music Commission’s Musicians Health Care Plan, Deanie Parker, Rock N’ Soul Museum, WEVL-FM 90.

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Music Music Features

Sound Advice

John Prine

The Keith Sykes Song-writer Showcase gears up again this week with a bang as the best of the “New Dylans,” John Prine, joins Sykes and guest Roger Cook at the Black Diamond. The show starts at 8 p.m. on Thursday, February 22nd, with a $15 cover.

After having to cancel their last advertised gig at Young Avenue Deli to open for the North Mississippi Allstars in Chicago, Lucero is back at the Hi-Tone Café on Saturday, February 24th, with the Kansas City band Secret Liquor Cure. — Chris Herrington

The Circuit Riders, a group of talented youngsters from Oxford town, claim that their music is a hybrid of Southern rock and Americana, but I just don’t buy it. Their song “Hat Giver” begins like a tom-tom-happy Led Zeppelin (lyrically substituting mermaids on the Mississippi for Zep’s fantastical characters from Tolkien’s Middle Earth) then smoothly morphs into a rootsy mid-Seventies Stones rip-off. The twangy, jangly ballad “Around the Bend” sounds a lot like an unlikely duet between Uncle Tupelo and the Revolver-era Beatles. Their recording of an incredibly dated Faces cover, “Glad and Sorry,” begins with the spoken indictment: “We need everybody to support local music.” The irony is almost painful. But one thing is for certain, the kids can play the fool out of their instruments. They also have a good ear for intricate and eclectic arrangements. Hopefully they will, with time, stop using their influences as crutches and develop a sound all their own. Still, it’s great to watch young bands develop, and they are certainly worth checking out. Do so when they play the Hi-Tone Café Thursday, February 22nd. The Hi Tone also features C&W powerhouse The Derailers on Friday and the utterly amazing acoustic roots mob The Asylum Street Spankers on Sunday. Go Hi-Tone. That’s one heck of a weekend!

The Bluff City Backsliders are a skronky, sloppy, glorious mess of an old-time Memphis jug band. Between Jason Freeman’s throaty (Gus Cannon only wished) vocals, John (Lucero) Stubblefield’s plucky bass, Mike (Fatback Jubilee) Graber’s manic mandolin, Clint (Mash-o-Matic) Wagoner’s sawing fiddle, and Jack (Professor Elixir) Adcock’s awesome scratch board and spit-drenched jug-work this Memphis superband can deliver the soulful, spirited, and often very funny sounds that first made Beale Street famous. Throw in some zippy kazoos, a mean dobro, and effective, minimal drum-work and you have the swampy recipe for a nasty hangover. They are playing 8-11 p.m. every Wednesday at Beale Street’s Blues Hall. Ah, at last — something authentic on the street that Mr. Handy built. — Chris Davis

Props should go to Clutch for longevity, especially since all nine of their releases have borne a different record label imprint. Their latest, Pure Rock Fury, is on Atlantic records, and while, despite the title, some fans may complain that Clutch doesn’t rock as hard as in their early days, the band goes beyond that to contribute to the redefinition of the term “heavy.” This fine album demands a journey back through the Clutch catalog to witness the evolution of a band fusing hard core and hard rock through roots music, jazz, and go-go. Clutch will be at the New Daisy Theatre on Tuesday, February 27th, with Corrosion of Conformity, Spirit Caravan, and Clearlight. — Pat Mitchell