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Wednesday, October 31, 2007

Alice Cooper: Between High School and Old School (Halloween Special)


Hello! Hooray! Let the show begin
-"Hello Hooray"


On October 14, 2003 I watched the Chicago Cubs blow an eight run lead which made the hope of their first pennant in fifty-eight years vanish before my eyes. I watched it all take place from Harry Carry's bar in downtown Chicago. The main reason I was there watching the game was because I had tickets to a show at the House of Blues up the street the same night. After the loss, I felt like going home but I pushed myself into the House of Blues where I felt deflated, however, rock n' roll was about to reach out to me and pull me out of the depths of my depression just as it had so many times before. However, instead of a new up and comer, a seasoned veteran slayed the stage better than any teenager could ever dream of. For close to two-hours Alice Cooper rocked, shocked and flat out blew away the audience and made me forget about the Cubs loss for a short while. From "Hello Hooray" to "I'm Eighteen" to "Poison" to newer songs like "Between High School and Old School", Cooper was magnanimous in every respect captivating the audience in a way very few performers can. Seven months after that ill-famed night in Chicago sports history; my mentor and friend, Lonn Friend is in town. As I pick him up from the airport, he smiles at me and says "I have something for you". Out of his bag he hands me an old Alice Cooper t-shirt, a mere 2 blocks from the same House of Blues I saw Alice slay just months earlier. However, Lonn tells me it's the same exact shirt Alice wore for the RIP cover shoot to promote his comeback album "Trash". This was more than a simple souvenir but a piece of memorabilia that touched me the same way when Lonn surprised me with a signed Jon Bon Jovi laminate back stage pass a few years earlier. Lonn was the editor of RIP and took a chance by putting Alice on the cover, but he went with his gut instinct and helped give notice and reestablish one of the legendary rockers whose career is now in its fifth decade.

Back in 1989 and pre-"Trash", I had already made myself familiar with the ultimate shock rocker. I owned Cooper's "Greatest Hits" and "School's Out" and had heard enough buzz on the new disc to go out and buy "Trash" on the day it came out July 25, 1989. Ironically on the same day, Alice was sampled on a hip-hop masterpiece, "Paul's Boutique" by the Beastie Boys. "Trash" was a sonic shock-pop-rock masterwork. Everyone who was anyone in the late 80's hard rock explosion volunteered to play on the album (Joe Perry, Richie Sambora, Jon Bon Jovi, Kip Winger, and Steven Tyler) just because they wanted to be in the same space as the legend. Seventeen years later, I still listen to "Trash" on a regular basis, along with his most recent work, and while some may feel it does not match up well against Alice's 70's masterpieces, I would tend to disagree.

Ever since the 1986 release of "Constrictor", critics have been hailing every Cooper release as his "best in a decade". This includes "Raise Your Fist and Yell", "Hey Stoopid", "The Last Temptation", "Brutal Planet", "Dragontown" and most recently, his back to basics albums; "The Eyes of Alice Cooper" and "Dirty Diamonds". It doesn't take a genius to apprehend they all can't be comeback albums, but what they are is unyielding rock n' roll albums and they illustrate that Alice is still as potent as the Stones, Dylan, Aerosmith or even McCartney as he continues to create, push the envelope and not rely solely on past glories. Artist's like Alice Cooper get lost in today's media hoopla since he hasn't had another monster hit since "Trash". As a result, damn fine albums tend to get overlooked. If you want proof of his still vital creative juices one needs to look no further than the song "Novocaine", from "The Eyes of Alice Cooper". I have close to 15,000 songs on my iPod and this one is in the 25 most played as it's as infectious as anything on the radio today. It has a staggering groove that would inspire you to hit the road, roll down the windows and slam the gas pedal and let the wind roll through your hair. This is one of the greatest arms in the air anthems to be written in the last decade, it's a shame few know of it. "The Eyes of Alice Cooper" and "Dirty Diamonds" have an edgier garage sound compared to the more polished sound of his 1986-2000 output. In fact, if you took the best tracks from every Cooper album from "Constrictor" in 1986 all the way through last year's "Dirty Diamonds" you would have a "Hits" packaged that would sit well right beside "The Best Of Alice Cooper: Mascara & Monsters", which aside from one track is a collection of his 70's hits and an essential "Hits" album for everyone's record collection.

It would be one thing to give Alice acclaim for continuing to create innovative and vital music, but it's a whole other thing seeing him live. Each time I saw him he was promoting a "bare bones" stage show, however, the show still packed more of a punch than 90% of the shows on the road today. There were guillotines, blood, balloons, explosions of fake money and even a few horror scenes acted out with a nurse. It was bloody, vociferous, boisterous, gruesome and I loved each and every minute of both shows. Beneath all of the tricks was the ringleader who stood over the stage with grotesque glee. The last time I saw him live it was in 100 degree heat but that didn't stop Alice and his band from delivering in every way imaginable. Two nights earlier I had seen Madonna with a whole stage of dancers, lighting, props and toys. Despite the smaller stage and crowd, Alice's show had a thousand times the energy, animation and authenticity. While the Material Girl was mostly posing for a giant paycheck, Alice was out there leaving a pint of blood on the stage...literally. He doesn't need the money and no matter how much he tours, it's unlikely any of his albums will ever sell in the seven figure range again, but none of that mattered because he was out there giving it his all because he loves it to death. Half of America turns into "American Idol" every week to see a wannabe sing someone else's songs while Alice is out there touring all across the world nearly 40 years after he began. He gives his all every night and his most recent tour has seen him performing an astonishing 27 songs a night. For the record, that is more songs than Kiss, Aerosmith, The Rolling Stones, Bon Jovi, Madonna, or Metallica performs on a nightly basis. In fact the only acts who continually perform that many songs in a single show are Paul McCartney and Pearl Jam.

Every year the Rock N' Roll Hall of fame nominations come out and Alice is implausibly overlooked. Why this is, I am not sure. To some Cooper is just a cartoon and to others he's Satan, but to me, he's one of the most momentous and imperative rockers of the last half-century. While an act like Black Sabbath will never record another album for fear of not living up to their past, Cooper has never lived in the past, but has always had his sight on the future. He continually records album after album and then takes it out on the road to the fans. Alice created the rock theater and is as vital to rock's history in the 1970's as David Bowie, The Ramones, Lou Reed and Black Sabbath. In the last few years, I have noticed that many of the acts elected into the Hall of Fame are no longer creating and evolving. They are living off their legacy which is disappointing because I still get excited at the thought of acts like Dylan, the Stones, McCartney and Springsteen still making innovative music. Regardless of how extraordinary Alice's 1970's albums are, Alice Cooper is an artist who is continually moving forward and making damn good albums every few years. Whether or not Cooper ever makes it into the Rock N' Roll Hall of Fame does not really matter. He's influenced an entire generation of rockers and that is worth its weight in severed heads/ fake blood. "Love It To Death", "Killer", Schools Out", "Billion Dollar Babies" and "Welcome To My Nightmare" (all produced by the brilliant Bob Ezrin who should also have a place in the Hall of Fame, the George Martin of the 70's) are all five star albums and are as essential today as David Bowie's "Ziggy Stardust" and Lou Reed's "Berlin". Add on another twenty-five years of consistent record releases, some of them truly great, along with constant touring, I can not think of another artist at this moment in time who is more deserving of induction to the Rock N' Roll Hall of Fame. Regardless of whether he ever gets elected or not, and regardless of what the hall stands for, I think it would be a nice and well deserving recognition to an artist who has now influenced multiple generations, who is also as vital today as he was thirty-years ago. That in itself is something to make you stand up and yell "Hello, Hooray".

You and me together, young and strong
We're gonna be elected, elected, elected
Respected, selected, call collected
I wanna be elected, elected
-"Elected"

Monday, October 29, 2007

Bon Jovi Newark Setlist Report For Show #3

The third Bon Jovi Prudential show finds five songs making their Newark debut, for a grand total of 37 unique songs so far in the run. Once again, nothing shocking or super rare, making me wonder why anyone would pay three times the normal ticket value to see these shows.

When the Rolling Stones came to Chicago on their 'Licks' tour in 2002 and they did a theater, an arena and a stadium, they performed a whopping 48 different and unique songs over the three nights. Not only that, but they had many world debuts during that stand or performed songs that had only been done less than a handful of times before.

What is Bon Jovi giving these hometown die-hards they have not seen before? If you can tell me, email me and I'll read it and post the comments here on the blog.

OK, off to my song by song commentary of the song debuts from night #3.

RUNAWAY
Ok, so now they've pulled out a golden oldie. Why not dig deeper and throw the die-hards a bone and play "Get Ready", "Shot Through The Heart (it would make a great 1-2 punch with "Bad Name"), "Tokyo Road" or "Burning For Love"? I actually ache for the days when the band ignored "Runaway".

WE GOT IT GOIN' ON (With Big And Rich)
We knew this was going to happen. The worse song on 'Lost Highway' now gets an even bigger airing.

LIVING IN SIN
Great song from a great album. I'll give them a few points for pulling this one out. This should never have been forgotten about and should get regular airings.

RIGHT SIDE OF WRONG
Seeing this on the set list is the equivalent of Paul McCartney say "I'm going to play a song I only played on one tour" and have him pull out "Freedom" from 2002. Or it would be like Springsteen saying "I'm going to play a song I haven't played in fifteen-years and have him play "57 Channels". Can anyone report back if JBJ did his excruciating, humiliating and downright pitiful acting bit with the video screens? (NOTE: If you didn't see the 'Bounce' tour this last comment will not make sense to you, if you did, you know EXACTLY what I am talking about!). This song should have never made it to the demo stage, let alone have it recorded or played live. How it made it onto the setlist is beyond me.

LAY YOUR HANDS ON ME
Finally, another classic hit makes a debut. This was ignored on the entire last tour (aside from a few 'This Left Feels Right' versions). In fact, it was ignored for the entire first portion of the 'Bounce' tour as well. How does a song as powerful as this one get thrown in the dust bin? I'd dare say this is more essential than "Bad Name".

I'll be back to report back after show #4. Who's ready to take bets that there will be no proper worldwide debuts during this ten-night stand? Email me: thescreendoor at gmail dot com

Saturday, October 27, 2007

Bon Jovi: Prudential Center Opening Recap

Here is a simple but powerful rule - always give people,
more than what they expect to get.
-Nelson Boswell

Call me cynical, but is it me or have the first two set lists by Bon Jovi during the opening of the Prudential Center been profoundly underwhelming. For the record, I have not seen these shows, I can’t afford to with tickets over $300. However, I’m reading the set lists and reports makes me think…”Is this the best they can do?”. Seven years ago, the band started the ‘Crush’ world tour and the top ticket price was $65. Very fair for a show that on average that lasted between 125 and 135-minutes. The band was hungry back then because many people (including myself) were wondering if the band could still fill arenas. They could and they put on some of the most illustrious and determined shows of their career.

Seven-years down the line- it’s almost as if they are sleep walking through these shows. If I was there would I consider it a good time. You bet, but at what cost? Could you imagine if someone told you that the next time you go to a movie that it would cost you $30 for the ticket? Or if you went to your favorite restaurant and instead of a $75 dinner for two with drinks, it would cost you $225? If this was the case, you would expect better service, increased attention and something that would make you feel that extra money is worth it.

I look at the set-list below and am mystified as to why this band felt they could charge upwards of $375 for basically the same show they have been delivering for seven-years. Was there a unique B-stage? No. Have they brought pyrotechnics back to their shows? Is there a catwalk like there was on the New Jersey tour? No. Then why are tickets so damn expensive?


All I know is that this is a band that could be among the great and well respected, but ego trips like the $375 ticket turn people off to the band. Even worse, you can pull up tickets to any show on Ticketmaster. This wasn’t the case when Springsteen sold-out fifteen nights at the Meadowlands in 1999 and ten nights the following summer at Madison Square Garden. Tickets were impossible to come by and for Bon Jovi, tickets are plentiful, the only question is how much below face value will you get them for.

Ticketmaster has tickets for $303, but when these pre-sales occurred back in June, the original price was $337 and there were some packages that were $375. For the sake of arguing, I’ll say tickets were $350 for accounting purposes.

For those who bought the top end tickets it cost them…

$2.59 per minute

$14.58 per song (I’ll count “Shout”)

If you choose to not include “Shout”, then it’s $15.22 per song. This isn’t a band that has not tour in two decades of whose most recent release has sold 8-million copies. What appears below is a very solid set list but not worth $15 a song.

Here are my comments on the twenty-four songs the band performed…

Prudential Center - Newark, NJ - 10/25/07 NIGHT ONE
INTRO
From what I have seen on YouTube, the intro does appear to be rather interesting and creative. I’ll give the band points for creativity.

LOST HIGHWAY
Great song…and one of the best singles they’ve ever released and it is an excellent show opener.

YOU GIVE LOVE A BAD NAME
I would pay $350 to go to a concert where the band DOES NOT perform this song. God, I think I’d pay $350 just to not have them perform it in the first few numbers of the show. This has gotten old. For a band that has numerous hit singles, it may be time to retire this number or at least move it towards the end of the show.

SUMMERTIME
A solid little number from ‘Lost Highway' but is not essential.

BORN TO BY MY BABY
I can understand why this has to be played every night, but why not bring back the harmonica ending?

JUST OLDER
Been there done that…even if this is a classic tune.

WHOLE LOT OF LEAVIN'
One of the best songs on the new album, it does rock live so it rightfully belongs here.

MAKE A MEMORY
A rather great single and one I hope continues to grow and get better in concert.

IT'S MY LIFE
Predictable but essential. This should be an encore song.

WE GOT IT GOIN' ON
If Bon Jovi ever put out a ‘Worst of Bon Jovi’ collection, this would find a perfect home on it.

HAVE A NICE DAY
Killer guitars make this a nice inclusion.

IN THESE ARMS
Great pop song, but why not have David Bryan do his piano version in the encore?

THESE DAYS - RICHIE VOX
This is the one brilliant moment of these shows and set lists. Not even in my wildest dreams did I think they would pull something like this off.

SEAT NEXT TO YOU
Boring ballad from ‘Lost Highway’ that adds nothing to the show.

BLAZE OF GLORY – ACOUSTIC
Violinist Lorenza Ponce looks divinely delicious in her boots and adds a new layer to this stadium anthem, but aside from the colors Lorenza brings, it’s basically a rehash of the version they played in 2005-06 without Jon Bon Jovi in the crowd. It’s time to reclaim this song in its proper rocking key. This is a case of been there done that.

I LOVE THIS TOWN
A fun crowd pleaser that will most likely be great in concert but not resonate in the long term.

SLEEP WHEN I’M DEAD
This song needs to be retired…forever. For a band who has an immense catalog of rockers, why they play this song at every show for fifteen straight years is beyond me. How you can play this and not “Keep the Faith” is beyond me. If they are going to play this in concert, it needs to be earlier in the set and with a medley of classic hits in it.

RAISE YOUR HANDS
This is a definite crowd pleaser than I can’t ever criticize them for performing.

BAD MEDICINE W/ SHOUT
Once again, they’ve been playing this song in this fashion for close to two-decades. Drop “Shout”, throw “Bad Medicine” to the front of the set and revitalize it with the “Good Lovin’” into and possibly add “Honky Tonk Woman” post guitar solo.

WHO SAYS YOU CAN'T GO HOME
This is another essential number but if I were them, I would close the show with this number.

ENCORE:
ANY OTHER DAY
This is the one song from ‘Lost Highway’ that snuck up on me and the version I saw in Milwaukee was just staggering with clashing guitars. This one should be performed every night.

BLOOD ON BLOOD
A tale a friendship I do love and is nice to see included.

LIVIN’ ON A PRAYER
A killer concert number that works anywhere in the set. I think it permanently belongs in the encore.

WANTED DEAD OR ALIVE
Another essential song, but please stop referring to it as your national anthem. This is the type of stuff both your fans and critics cringe when hearing. The song needs no intro, just play it, rock out and show everyone why you are one of the best live bands on the planet. I’ll even pay you $350 to not into the song or refer to it as your national anthem.

Prudential Center #2 - Newark, NJ - 10/26/07
Notes: I won’t be going into in depth detail on every number, but I will focus on songs not performed the night before.


CAPT. CRASH & THE BEAUTY QUEEN FROM MARS
The great rave-up rocker from ‘Crush’ is always welcomed.

WILD IN THE STREETS
Classic ‘Slippery When Wet’ track that is fun and get the crowd revved up. Just don’t play it every night.

KEEP THE FAITH
Finally, the best post ‘New Jersey’ anthem and arguably their greatest live song; it should be performed at every live performance until they die.

EVERYBODY’S BROKEN
One of the most blah songs the band has ever committed to tape. I just can’t understand why this made ‘Lost Highway’ and I’m even more mystified as to why it’s being performed live.

BED OF ROSES – ACOUSTIC
The version from ‘This Left Feels Right’. I remember back when the band played the Borgarta in Atlantic City and charged a then astronomical amount of $350 for tickets that they claimed the two Borgarta shows would be the only time these versions would ever be performed. They lied. Since then, the band has used these versions as a crutch to lean on because I’m guessing singing the original versions is a stretch for them. Despite Jon Bon Jovi’s interview with Larry King last summer proclaiming he wouldn’t mess with people’s memories, he continues to do so. Also, if there was any one ballad in the band’s catalog that should be retired, this is it.

SOMEDAY I’LL BE SATURDAY NIGHT
One of the best tracks the band ever committed to tape. Always welcome on any set list.

RADIO SAVED MY LIFE
A perfect rocker full of cliche's but it showcases them doing what they do best.

HALLELUJAH
Jeff Buckley has the definitive version and while I admire Jon Bon Jovi for performing it, it’s by no means a definitive performance. I wish it was, but it isn’t.

Final thoughts:
OK, so 32 different and unique songs over two-nights isn’t a bad way to start a tour, but aside from Sambora taking over lead vocals for “These Days”, there was not one other shocker or surprise. Not worldwide premiers or arrangements that left people gasping. Here is a great live band that is resting on their laurels. At this point in their career with the extreme ticket prices and the fact they are playing in New Jersey, they should throw the crowd a few bones. Why not play material off their first two albums? Heck, why not give them “Edge of a Broken Heart”. The fans deserve it. I’ll continue to report on the shows, but so far, one song aside, I’m rather pleased I didn’t spend any money traveling out East to catch these show. I only hope these shows get better and longer for the fans that paid a lot of money to witness these shows.

Friday, October 26, 2007

The Biz: antiMusic Articles on Fan Clubs

To those of you who have written to me recently about various fan club fiasco's, I have written the two part article below for you.

This piece originally ran last Friday 10/19
"Taxing Fan Loyalty"
The full article can be found here.

This piece is running starting today 10/26/07
"An Idiot's Guide to Running a Fan Club"
This full article can be found here.

As always, all of my "Biz" pieces can be found at this link.

I hope you all enjoy!

Van Halen Chicago 10/16/07 Review Posted

My review of the Van Halen show from the Allstate Arena outside of Chicago is complete. It can be read on antiMusic here or at Unrated Magazine here.

Photo courtesy of Rob Grabowski

Thursday, October 25, 2007

DVD Review: Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers - Runnin' Down A Dream

My good buddy Sam has a rather excellent DVD review blog which can be found here. He has recently delved deep into the new 4-disc set of the Tom Petty documentary, Runnin Down A Dream by the legendary filmmaker Peter Bogdanovich. After reading Sam's review I need to find time this weekend to spend with this extraordinary film. Sam's review can be found here and the new 4 disc DVD set is available exclusively at Best Buy stores.

Tom Petty is one of the few artists who has fought for the rights of fans and he always puts on a solid shows. In fact, the last few times I have seen him live, I walked away revitalized and felt he was performing much better than he was a decade earlier. He's one of the last of a very old model that is dead and gone. They broke the mold when they made him.

BON JOVI LOST HIGHWAY WORLD TOUR 2008 Tour Dates Announced

The Bon Jovi tour dates for the 2008 American tour have been posted, find them here.

NEW YORK, NY -- (October 26, 2007) – “We’re starting in New Jersey and then taking it to the world,” exclaimed Jon Bon Jovi on stage earlier tonight at the grand opening of The Prudential Center in his home state of New Jersey. With that, the band tore into an explosive concert that marked the first of 10 sold-out concerts and the surprise launch of Bon Jovi’s Lost Highway World Tour. Anticipation is running at an all time high as concerts in more than 10 countries have already been confirmed including Canada, the U.S., Japan, New Zealand, England, Ireland, Scotland, Germany, Holland, Austria – and counting. Tickets for U.S. dates will go on sale on beginning Saturday, November 3rd, with additional markets and dates to follow in the coming weeks. Fans should continue to log on to www.bonjovi.com for the most up to date concert and ticket on sale information.

Bon Jovi, who could've played ten nights anywhere in the NY/Metropolitan area, chose to kick off their next World Tour with ten nights at the brand new Prudential Center in Newark, NJ for a total attendance of over 150,000. The band's sustained presence at the new venue was a conscious effort to support the growth of Newark, NJ, which is currently undergoing a major economic revitalization.

"We applaud Bon Jovi's decision to launch their tour from The Prudential Center in Newark to bring worldwide attention to the redevelopment of this American city, and the economic impact this arena will have in the band’s home state," said Randy Phillips, President & CEO of AEG Live, the band's North American tour promoter. "We look forward to the most dynamic Bon Jovi tour yet."

Bon Jovi has set the bar for more than two decades as one of the most successful rock bands in the world. Globally, they have sold more than 120 million albums and performed more than 2,500 concerts in over 50 countries for more than 32 million fans. Their latest album, the Nashville-inspired LOST HIGHWAY was released June 19, 2007, debuted at #1 around the world and includes the hits songs "Lost Highway" and "(You Want To) Make a Memory." The band's 2005 album, HAVE A NICE DAY, featured the Grammy-Award winning song, "Who Says You Can't Go Home," and fueled one of the top-selling tours of 2005.

Bon Jovi’s Lost Highway World Tour Itinerary (as of 25-Oct-07)
DATE CITY VENUE
25-Oct-07 Newark,NJ The Prudential Center
26-Oct-07 Newark,NJ The Prudential Center
28-Oct-07 Newark,NJ The Prudential Center
30-Oct-07 Newark,NJ The Prudential Center
01-Nov-07 Newark,NJ The Prudential Center
03-Nov-07 Newark,NJ The Prudential Center
04-Nov-07 Newark,NJ The Prudential Center
07-Nov-07 Newark,NJ The Prudential Center
09-Nov-07 Newark,NJ The Prudential Center
10-Nov-07 Newark,NJ The Prudential Center
14-Nov-07 Montreal,QC Bell Centre
15–Nov-07 Montreal,QC Bell Centre
17-Nov-07 Ottawa,ON Scotiabank Bank Place
19-Nov-07 London,ON John Labatt Centre
6-Dec-07 Toronto,ON Air Canada Centre
7-Dec-07 Toronto,ON Air Canada Centre
9-Dec-07 Winnipeg,MB MTS Centre
10-Dec-07 Saskatoon,SK Credit Union Centre
12-Dec-07 Edmonton,AB Rexall Place
13-Dec-07 Calgary,AB Pengrowth Saddledome
15-Dec-07 Vancouver,BC GM Place
16-Dec-07 Vancouver,BC GM Place
11-Jan-08 Nagoya,Japan Nagoya Dome
13-Jan-08 Tokyo,Japan Tokyo Dome
14-Jan-08 Tokyo,Japan Tokyo Dome
16-Jan-08 Osaka,Japan Kyocera Dome Osaka
18-Feb-08 Omaha Qwest Center
20-Feb-08 Detroit The Palace of Auburn Hills
23-Feb-08 Chicago United Center
24-Feb-08 Chicago United Center
28-Feb-08 Washington DC Verizon Center
2-Mar-08 Philadelphia Wachovia Center
3-Mar-08 Philadelphia Wachovia Center
5-Mar-08 Pittsburgh Mellon Arena
10-Mar-08 Toronto Air Canada Centre
18-Mar-08 St.Paul Xcel Energy Center
31–Mar–08 Denver Pepsi Center
2-Apr-08 SanJose HP Pavilion
4-Apr-08 Anaheim Honda Center
5-Apr-08 Anaheim Honda Center
8-Apr-08 Phoenix Jobing.com Arena
9-Apr-08 LosAngeles STAPLES Center
14-Apr-08 Dallas American Airlines Center
15-Apr-08 Oklahoma City FORD Center
20-Apr-08 Kansas City Sprint Center
22-Apr-08 Des Moines Wells Fargo Arena
24-Apr-08 Nashville Sommet Center
26-Apr-08 Ft.Lauderdale Bank Atlantic Center
27-Apr-08 Tampa St.Pete Times Forum
30-Apr-08 Atlanta Philips Arena

Proof TV Appearances No Longer Sell Records

In January of 1992, Nirvana appeared on Saturday Night Live and tore the house down. So much so, that their albums sales the following week were more than 500,000. It swept in the modern era of selling records. No longer could you just rely on touring, radio play and MTV. You had to set your sights higher and for a little less than a decade, it worked. Television appearances usually triggered sales in ways no one had seen before. However, it is now apparent that unless you are Oprah, they make a mere blip on the radar.

Proof of this is Bon Jovi’s Lost Highway which debuted at #1 last June. Yes, it did debut at #1 behind a very aggressive marketing campaign which found the band playing the Today Show, MTV Unplugged, Radio Stations and they even made an appearance on American Idol the month before. Plus, they added fee’s to their sales to each ticket of their Newark stand so they could be included in the week-one sales for the album. When all totaled, the band sold 285,000 copies that opening week. Not bad at all…but my question is that if they had not, how well would it have sold? It probably would not have been number-one, but statistics mean nothing in today’s day and age. In another attempt to fuel album sales the band, led by Jon Bon Jovi, hosted Saturday Night Live and they saw their album move up a whopping nine spots on the chart (from #75 to #66). The Foo Fighters actually saw their album drop five spots (#17 to #22). I’m all for promotion and felt the SNL exercise was a good one. However, in this day and age, artists need to carefully choose what they appear on as it may give them a short-term lift in sales but the long term effects could be hazardous.

The way of the future is to be mysterious and leave your viewer guessing and wondering. Overexposure can be a killer and I hope Bon Jovi pulls back because they’re broken the barrier of overexposure and now when people see them instead of being excited, they let out a collective yawn. The best way to sell records is to aggressively go out on the road, play each show within an inch of your life and price tickets affordably. Acts who do this will reap the long term rewards. In a industry that is changing dramatically, it’s time to forget the “bigger is better” model of the 1990’s and get back to what mattered in the first place…the music.

Bon Jovi Open New Arena In Newark-Night One Still Has Tons of Tickets Available

Bon Jovi is opening a staggering ten-night stand tonight in Newark, NJ and it should be a triumphant event, but it’s not. Instead of doing a victory lap, there are literally thousands of tickets still available for the entire ten-night stand. If you don’t believe me, go here and you will find that you can bring up EIGHT tickets together for any of the ten-nights.

Bon Jovi is the equivalent of my Beatles and I’ll always love them for getting me into music, but they’re ticket prices for these ten nights are deplorable. Words can not express my disappointment in them. This should have been an easy sell-out with each of the tickets priced at $95, $70 and $45. If they had used that three-tier pricing structure, it would have sold-out and there would be demand for these shows.

Instead, you have radio give-aways every hour and from what an inside source has told me, a “large portion” of the seats every night are freebie’s just to get people in the seats. The key for a multi-night stint like this is demand. Garth brooks created it with a $27.50 ticket. You could see every show in Garth’s stand for less than one top-tier Bon Jovi ticket. I went online this afternoon and pulled up eight tickets further back on the floor. Total cost $1,152.00. I’m sorry but that is too rich for my blood for a band that has done three worldwide tours in a six year period. Also, why am I bringing up this many seats mere hours before the show?

Prince recently sold-out 21-nights in London with every ticket priced at $62.42. If only Bon Jovi had done this, then they too would be reaping the rewards of great press. Even better…they would be reaping rewards of exposing their music to people who are most likely to buy music…the fans.

Wednesday, October 24, 2007

Bob Lefsetz on "The Revolution"

Reading Bob Lefsetz is a trip. He may be over the top but he makes sense a lot of the time. He has a archive of material which can be found here. Just the other day he wrote a brilliant piece entitled "The Revolution". It's about the future of the music industry and I highly suggest reading it. Essential reading for everyone. Read it here.

Doug Corkhill on Bruce Springsteen's 'Magic'

I've now had Bruce Springsteen's Magic in my possession for close to two-months and I'm still delving into it daily and finding elements I missed on previous listens. Producer Brendan O'Brien really fine tuned this most recent effort and while I disliked it immensely at first, it's really settling in nicely in my car stereo. Despite this, I'll probably never do a proper review of the album. Largely because there are so many out there and at this point in the game, I'm not really sure what else I can offer.

A good online friend of mine, Doug Corkhill, recently sent out a brief review of the new Bruce Springsteen album,
Magic on October 2, 2007…the day the album was released to stores. Magic is taking a while to grow on me and encompass my inner feelings and thoughts, but Doug’s remarks were so beautiful and highly emotional, I asked him if I could print it here on the blog. No other review shook me or made me think about my life like this one.
Enjoy!
xT


Every now and then all the elements come together for a perfect moment. We live, we work, and we toil away for those moments of bliss. I was fortunate to have one today. This morning I took my car in to have a slow leak in one of the tires fixed. They called just before noon to say it was ready, and I walked to the shop to pick it up. I paid the tab, put down the top and headed for Circuit City.

Today is one of those glorious days here in the mountains; the sky is cloudless and blue, the air has had just a hint of fall in it at night but warms to the mid seventies in the daytime, the humidity is low. The circle of ridges ringing Asheville was sharp and vibrant on the horizon. I plunked down my $9.61, tore open the packaging and inserted Magic into the car's refurbished cd player and held my breath; “Radio Nowhere” began.

Through seven stop lights I sat until I hit the interstate, pushed replay and began the disc again. As the first track wound down for the second time I exited onto the Blue Ridge Parkway and headed north. This time I let the album run its course.

For six songs I climbed, the air cooling as my elevation and exhilaration increased. I passed the overlooks, riding on a road with no traffic, no stoplights, and no worries listening to the
full, rich sound of the new disc. As Girls ended I reversed course, rolling back down the hill as the second "side" played.

Where the Parkway meets the interstate there is a church on a hill. It has been there for years; although the plaque over the door says established in 1857 I know that is an earlier building. This on has been there for at least thirty years that I know of.

See, my friend Jake and I used to go backpacking in the mountains west of Asheville long ago when we were in college. We'd pass this church on the way to the big mountains, and were known to stop there occasionally on the way back, admiring the view from their parking
lot. We'd relieve ourselves, roll and smoke one and then hit the road heading for home, refreshed.

After college Jake and I tried to stay in touch. He was an usher in my wedding in 1980 and we went on a few more backpacking trips together, but eventually time and distance eroded our friendship. A few years ago I decided to look Jake up online. I found him; I found his obituary.

“Devil's Arcade” was playing as I exited the Parkway today, and just as “Terry's Song” began I was about to pass the entrance to the little church. I turned the wheel hard and pulled up the drive into the same lot where Jake and I stopped. I sat in the car where Jake and I used to sit, admiring the view and listening to Bruce's elegy for his friend.

The top was down, the sun was shining, the music played. As Bruce sang I had time to reflect on love and friendship and life and death more deeply than I had in any of my prior listens to “Terry's Song”. It was one of those moments in life where seemingly random events come together in a perfect instant.

Indeed, I thought, when they built you, brother, they broke the mold.

Doug Corkhill (nobody nowhere nohow)

Jesse Malin on Hilly Kristal (CBGB)

Last month the Village Voice ran an article written bu the talented and underrated Jesse Malin. He wrote about his experiences with the late Hilly Kristal, the owner of CBGB's in New York and the man who is partially responsible for revolutionizing one of the most sacred and popular music clubs to ever grace God's green Earth and Jesse gives him his props. I've read this piece a few times and as a result I felt it necessary to make sure everyone knew of it. The full article can be read here.

Tuesday, October 23, 2007

antiMusic: Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band: Fifteen Songs That Evoke ‘Magic'

The good folks over at antiMusic have published my Springsteen review today along with my suggestions of fifteen-songs the Boss will hopefully implement on a semi-regular basis.

The full article can be read here.
Commentary on Bruce's second Chicago show will be forthcoming.

Monday, October 22, 2007

Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band: Chicago 10/21/07 Night #1 of 2

When I first read about Bruce Springsteen debuting the song “American Land” in 2006 and having it later appear on the extended Seeger Sessions set, I felt it was an ego trip. Does he really need to write a song for a credit on the album? Then when I saw he was closing the early portion of the tour with it, I let out a groan in my house. I’m happy to say I was wrong as this lively number was the perfect set closer and had the 20,000 in the United Center on their feet clapping, shaking and moving. It was the evening’s peak moment. Time and time again, even when I lose faith in Springsteen’s abilities to transcend and transform an audience, I’m proven wrong.

The current tour finds Springsteen out in support of his most recent effort, Magic and while I have found it difficult to digest, most of the album has come alive on the concert stage. Opening with the determined “Radio Nowhere” the first part of the show flew by in a wink of the eye. “No Surrender” and “Lonesome Day” followed in quick succession and the arms in the air rejoicing was just the beginning. Material off ‘Magic” was well placed in the set including the domestic “Gypsy Biker”, the metaphorical title track (“Magic”) and the evocative “Livin’ In The Future”. My main quibbles with these three particular numbers sounded better on record versus live. The title track however is slowly seeping into my daily mix and is a stunning play on words and being under three-minutes is proving to be one of the best tracks in the Springsteen cannon. Tonight’s performance, with violinist Soozie Tyrell’ shined and while it wasn’t perfect, I bet it becomes a highlight of the tour shortly. Unfortunately “Livin’ In The Future” fell flat. It felt forced and almost as if Bruce was attempting too hard to recreate a former sound. The song before “Livin’” was a thunderous performance of “She’s The One” which was potent and irresistible and one-hundred percent genuine, whereas the next performance felt forced. However, this was a small misstep on an otherwise rather extraordinary evening.

The band ripped through a scalding “Adam Raised A Cain” and commanded the attention of every person during the revitalizing bluesy back beat arrangement to the ‘Nebraska” track, “Reason To Believe”. In what will potentially be the highlight of the entire tour, the band owned this song and the fresh arrangement brought out the best in this hidden classic. I doubt everyone in the arena was familiar with this quarter-century old number, but the band was so in tune with each other and this song one could not witness it and not be affected by the power of the tune. Other classics aired during the show was the nostalgic ode to friendship “Backstreets” followed by the roaring “Cadillac Ranch” which was serendipitous because it was my wife’s first E Street Band show and she’s a Wisconsin girl. Seeing this song tonight makes me wonder why it’s not played every night. Even the infamous rubber chicken, which first made an appearance in Milwaukee in 2002, made a return visit as it was thrown to the stage.

While the oldies still sounded magnificent, a new tour means the focus is on new music. While a few of the arrangements didn’t quite work live, the latter portion of the show found the band finding their groove. “Devil’s Arcade” is a song that will take time to grow on you but works for me for Weinberg’s thunderous drumming and Springsteen’s staggering solo. “Last To Die” was the strongest of the new material was spot on and effortless while “Long Walk Home”, my personal favorite of the new songs was refreshing yet rigorous in its performance. This is a song that will only get better with time.

After the crowd pleasing “Badlands” closed the main set, the band returned to the stage to take some chances. “Girls In Their Summer Clothes” is a song I didn’t feel at first that worked at all. However, the fact that Bruce could step away from the mic and have the crowd sing the song to him gives me hope that the performances of this Brian Wilson influenced tune will continue to improve as the tour evolves. “Thundercrack”, a song best known to die-hards, and which can only be found on the box set ‘Tracks’ practically willed the crowd back to life. It started out messy, but by the time Nils and Bruce were sharing a duet of six strings, the crowd was won over and wowed by the band’s virtuosic skills. At the songs conclusion, the band tore through “Born To Run” which had the arena shaking. I’ve been critical and tough on Springsteen over the last year and despite how cynical I may become, hearing the lyric “I want to know if love is real” backed by one of the greatest bands on the planet is a goose bump moment. It’s these rare moments where you view your life in past, present and future form and feel good to be alive. As the band immediately segued into the releasing and revitalizing “Dancing In The Dark”, Bruce and the band owned this audience. There is such an immense feeling of power when you see an audience of this size shake the walls. Despite anything I’ve written about Bruce, it’s moments like this where I stand back and feel like this man and his band can transcend in ways few other acts have ever been able to. The evening’s final number, “American Land” sums up the creed of Springsteen. He’s made a career of writing about the American land and its psyche. Good, bad and indifferent he stands alone and is still possibly its preeminent storyteller. I for one am glad he is still out there rocking and rolling like there is no tomorrow. It’s rock n’ roll that keeps me young and I believe that as long as Mr. Springsteen and his E Street Band continue to play it like they mean it, then they too will be forever young.

Anthony Kuzminski is a Chicago based writer for Unrated Magazine and the antiMusic Network.

Sunday, October 21, 2007

Five Shows In Seven Days...The Week In Review

Been a crazy week and I'll get full reviews up on my blog shortly, but before the 1-2 Bruce punch starting Sunday night in Chicago, I saw three shows this week, here are my thoughts:

1) Van Halen
I must admit, I only went because we scored killer seats next to the stage for $80. I was deeply impressed aside from the horrendous sound. They had the worse sound I have heard in 15 years.

That being said, the set list was spot on with renditions that almost were identical to the album versions. "Atomic Punk", "Mean Street" and "Unchained" were my highlights.

I personally thought Roth was excellent and Eddie appeared clean and VERY precise and together. Wolfie did a kick ass job on bass and say what you want about the kid (even I feel Michael Anthony should be there)...but Wolfie brings out the best in his Dad. Eddie's solo was excellent.

Definitely worth seeing but if you don't have tix, get them outside the venue where they were going FAR below face. They have achieved the impossible sorta reunion.

2) The New Pornographers

A pleasant surprise when I got sent to review them. They played 90 mins and were all spot on performances of the albums. The 'Challengers' material sounded great and the 'Twin Cinema" songs sounded great as well (especially "use It"). Neko Case was there and she sounded great, I can’t imagine having to see this band without her.

The band rolled from one tune to the other and the biggest shock was the crowd stood there glass eyed and motionless. It was one of the most disturbing things I have ever witnessed. It took away from the show to see a sold out crowd who appeared to be totally disinterested. Not until the set ending "The Bleeding Heart Show" was there any genuine movement in the crowd and even then it was more like 50-60 people out of 1200.

The band was on fire...but the crowd wasn't. They'll get a good write up for me (already enjoying these songs more now after seeing them live) but I was disappointed by the lack of crowd interest.

3) Fall Out Boy w/ Plain White T's and Gym Class Heroes

Holy crap, I was bowled over. The show is everything a rock show should be...4 bands total and the FOB set were unreal. The show was just under 100-minutes (23 songs) and the most insane crowd I've seen in years. Not even the Justin Timberlake crowd came close.

The floor was GA and EVERY ticket in the arena was $30. My credentials didn't come through and the pulled the tickets off line at 4:30, so I drove to the arena which is 10 mins from my house. I walked in, checked that no tickets were left for me. None were. I asked if the show was sold out and the guy tells me they just released some seats 5 mins before. He shows me where they are and they are PRIME 100 level seats, I say "2 please" and the best part is it was a total of $60...no Ticketmaster fee's.

The crowd was VERY young but right from the first opener, there was electricity in the air. They were dancing, swinging and swaying with all of their energy at 7pm and it lasted until 11:15. All of the openers were surprisingly good and have a penchant for melody with Gym Class Heroes knowing how to work a crowd.

Fall Out Boy was off the wall. They had an incredible opening with the curtain dropping, a vast and enormous stage (drums on a HUGE riser above the stage as they opened with "Sugar". I looked up into the rafters and the last row had people singing, jumping and dancing...just like the people down in front. Now, I know this is FOB's time...but a large part of me thinks it is because of the $30 ticket.

The band was tight and had an incredible stage show with animated videos on the screen, a large amount of fire and pyro and a kick ass set list. They even did a cover of the Killer's "Mr. Brightside" and as good as it was, it was one of the least receptive songs on the night, but it was still insane. There was a Mom behind me and her 9 year old daughter knew EVERY WORD to every song. For me rock has always had a physical element...where you can dance and release your tension. Because tickets are so expensive these days I find too many people at these shows who are going because it's hip and not knowing any of this music. The entire crowd was filled with fans and even if you didn’t like any of these acts I'd dare anyone to not walk away affected by the overwhelming feeling of power by these fans. They knew these songs inside and out and it was euphoric to be there (kind of like a Pearl Jam show...but louder and more physical).

I fully realize I am waxing poetically about Fall Out Boy, but this show was FUN! Isn't rock n' roll supposed to be fun? Somewhere along the line with increasing ticket prices, I think the fun has been taken out for many acts. I was sitting there and realizing that while I still love many of the shows I see, I walk away disappointed in the crowds and I couldn't help but think that I could buy 10 FOB tickets for less than 1 Bon Jovi Newark ticket. Ditto Neil Young...I could be 8 FOB tix for one NY ticket. The Allman Brothers Band delivered big time a few months back, but the small shows I see I find the crowd to be disengaged and many arena shows the fans sit for half the show.

Pete Townshend once said "Rock won't eliminate your problems, but it will sort of let you dance all over them." and in the last year no one has embodied this and accomplished this better than what I witnessed tonight at the Fall Out Boy show. It may not be cool or hip to like them, but they delivered big time and I can't help but think how much more releasing this show was than the New Pornographers...and the NP make better music, but what's the point when your fans don't get it and don't engage themselves at your shows. I walked away tonight feeling renewed and part of something bigger. I'm not sure what exactly, but I felt like part of a family who danced and sang my problems away. It's been a long time since I felt this way.

One other thing to note, since every ticket was $30, these tickets were impossible to come by. In a week where Bruce and Van Halen are each doing two shows in Chicago...both have fans and brokers who can’t give away their extra tickets, but outside the venue tonight tickets were going for $85 to $125.

They created a need and a want for these tickets...and seeing an impossible ticket like this I haven't seen in a while.

xT
(Dance Dance)

Saturday, October 20, 2007

'The Joshua Tree' Gets a Deluxe 20th Anniversary Treatment

When I first heard about this I thought it was a joke. U2 hasn't exactly been great at updating their back catalog and there were no rumors of this at all so hearing about it was a surprise. But wait...then I saw what is going to be included and I almost had a seizure. Did they talk to fans about this? Bands always seem to miss the mark with these types of releases, but U2 appears to have hit this one out of the park. Not only will The Joshua Tree be remastered, but it includes an extra disc of outtakes, b-sides and rarities.

But wait, there's more. There is a DVD in the deluxe edition with a documentary, a complete concert from Paris on 7/4/87 and two videos; an alternate cut of "With Or Without You" and a video for "Red Hill Mining Town". No this isn't a joke and if you don't remember ever seeing this video, well then you memory serves you correctly. It was filmed but never aired. It was slated to be the album's second single and Neil Jordan directed the clip. However, it became evident during rehearsals for the tour that Bono would not be able to sing the song live. So the video was shelved and has never been seen...until now. This is the holy grail of U2 collectibles and it will be nice to finally have it see the light of day.

The Joshua Tree was a monumental album that is still as surreal and sacrificial as it was 20-years ago and I'm happy to see the band giving the album its proper due. This is scheduled to be released during the first week of December just in time for Christmas. The full DVD details can be found here.

Friday, October 19, 2007

Adam Duritz's Blog (Counting Crows content)

There's no doubt in my mind that the Counting Crows Adam Duritz is a complicated, yet care free, artist. Anyone who takes five years between albums and then delays the new studio disc, missing out on the Christmas rush, has got balls. Selfishly, I'm disappointed because it's been far too long. But we are getting a rather excellent reissue of August and Everything After plus we have Adam's blogs! Check the most recent one out here.

I could repost it, but I really think you should hit the link and be taken away, it's a great, great read!

Thursday, October 18, 2007

Kissology 3 Specs Set!

Over the last 12-months KISS has finally opened their vaults and begun to release many of the pro-shot shows in their possession which fans have collected for years. Volume One was stupendous and Volume Two was equally satisfying (although I wish there had been more material from the non make-up years.

The third volume, mostly focusing on the reunion years is a rather stellar collection, even though most collectors have all of the material. However, the final disc has the 1973 Coventry Show which boggles my mind. This exists? Have I been living under a rock all these years? My only worry is that the quality may be horrendous, but then again, if it is on the actual DVD and not a bonus disc, it gives me hope.
xT

Third 'Kissology' Due In Time For Christmas
Greg Prato, N.Y.
The third release in Kiss' archival "Kissology" DVD series will arrive in time for Christmas. "Volume Three: 1992-2000" is due Dec. 18 via VH1 Classic and will feature four DVDs comprising nearly 10 hours of footage.

The first disc begins with a complete performance recorded at the Palace of Auburn Hills in Detroit from November 1992. It also features the complete August 1995 "MTV Unplugged" set which found the original Kiss lineup of Gene Simmons, Paul Stanley, Ace Frehley and Peter Criss perform together on stage for the first time in nearly 16 years.

The second disc chronicles the original lineup's subsequent successful reunion tours of the late '90s, including the Detroit kickoff of the 1996 outing. Five tracks recorded near the Brooklyn Bridge in New York for the same year's MTV Video Music Awards round out the DVD.

Disc three boasts a performance from the August 1999 film premiere party for "Detroit Rock City" and a June 2000 concert at New Jersey's Continental Airlines Arena. The fourth disc eschews the chronological structure to offer a December 1973 set from New York, when Kiss performed the majority of its self-titled debut two months before its release.

Certain versions of "Kissology" will also include a fifth disc, which features the group's June 1996 performance at L.A. radio station KROQ's Weenie Roast.

In 2005, Stanley explained that the Kissology series was inspired by classic film by another renowned rock artist. "That Scorsese/Dylan piece ['No Direction Home: Bob Dylan'] was eye opening, at least to me, in terms of how you can be immersed in a time capsule, and not only see the music and be part of the crowd, but also get a sense of who Dylan was then," he said. "That set a really high bar, and I think that is more likely our approach at this point."

Tuesday, October 16, 2007

Springsteen and the Arcade Fire: State Trooper

Indie rock geeks are rejoicing around the world…who the heck am I kidding, rock fans are pretty damn giddy at the transcendent and surreal duet Bruce Springsteen shared with the Arcade Fire Sunday night in Ottawa. The Arcade Fire was on stage for the lingering “State Trooper” (one of my ten favorite Springsteen songs), the forceful Arcade Fire number “Keep The Car Running” and finishing off with the arms in the air-house lights on “Born To Run”. There have been numerous comparisons between these two artists (most of which in my mind are far fetched), but it is definitely something to see two exceptional and prevailing acts meld their respective crafts into an etched in your mind once in a lifetime concert experience.

Ironically I’ve been working on an article as of late of songs Springsteen needs to be performing with the E Street Band with some regularity. "State Trooper” is on that list so seeing video of it on the official Springsteen site and also on Spin and Pitchfork is surreal. Here’s to hoping something just as shocking happens in Chicago next week.

"If I had a net and dynamite, I couldn't have caught fish so efficiently..."

I occassionally write about a good friend of mine, Paul, in Springsteen posts. We share a unique love for Bruce and Paul's part time job is to heckle me constantly. Normally, I tend to write rose colored reviews and Paul criticizes me for not being more critical (this was pre-Biz articles). He liked to tease me so much that he nicknamed me Dave Marshmellow. Springsteen fans will get it.

Anyway, Paul's a part time photographer and he has an amazing eye for detail. Just look at the pictures in this post. On his trip to Alaska this past July he took some extraordinary photo's of a female wolf capturing salmon alongside the gigantic bears. With a little bit of luck the Seattle Times ran a story on him a few weeks back. The full article can be found here (and includes the quote that titles this blog entry).

Now if we could only get him to take a picture this good of Springsteen. :-)
xT

Monday, October 15, 2007

Slash and Burn

Former GN'R guitarist Slash will release an autobiography on October 31 simply entitled Slash. This will be an interesting read because while I admire these rockers for writing their tales, do they really remember everything that really happened? From the excerpt which can be read here, Slash did some major tangoing with Mr. Brownstone and the fact he remembers anything is nothing short of a miracle, let alone being alive.


It's the second major release for Slash this year behind Velvet Revolver's Liberated. To my astonishment, the sound and arrangements on Liberated were...liberating as I found the band's debut record to be profoundly underwhelming. I don't care how good they are live or who is in the band, I've been disillusioned with this band since their inception. It kills me to admit it, but Liberated is far superior than it should be. This album should be in the cut out rack, but it's better than I want to give it credit for. I credit producer Brendan O'Brien (Bruce Springsteen, Pearl Jam) for the tight cohesive sound of the band. However, not even O'Brien could do anything about their lead vocalist who continues to milk his fifteen-minutes of fame. Weiland is overrated and the guys in Velvet Revolver would be better off without him and going out as an instrumental group. Wishful thinking on my part.

Either way, check out the revealing except from Slash here courtesy of the Guardian.

antiMusic review of Will Hoge's 'Draw The Curtains'

Just a FYI but the antiMusic Network has published my Will Hoge review on Friday. As mentioned earlier, I think this is the best album to be released in all of 2007 and your life won't be complete without it.

Read my review here or here.
Buy the album here.

Sunday, October 14, 2007

Killers Unleash Their Other Side

The Killers will be releasing a B-Sides album on October 31, Sawdust. It's turning up to be a pretty stellar collection of songs for a band who only has two-studio albums. The band is able to pair their melodic hooks with their sizzling harmonies to be one of the few bands to emerge in the last five years who may survive and possibly thrive in the record company system. This new set looks to be more than a standard collection of throwaways.

Sawdust includes "All The Pretty Faces" (which was the b-side of "When You Were Young"); two movie soundtrack tunes, "Shadowplay" (a Joy Division cover from Control, Anton Corbijn's biopic of Ian Curtis) and "Move Away" (from Spiderman 3); as well as a cover of Kenny Rogers & The First Edition's "Ruby, Don't Take Your Love To Town" (written by Mel Tillis)
The collection will also contain songs which weren't completed for Hot Fuss and Sam's Town. The Killers recently went back into the studio to finish the tracks, including "Tranquilize" featuring Rock & Roll Hall of Famer Lou Reed. Halloween can't come quick enough.


Sawdust Tracklisting

1. Tranquilize
2. Shadowplay
3. All The Pretty Faces
4. Leave The Bourbon On The Shelf
5. Sweet Talk
6. Under The Gun
7. Where The White Boys Dance
8. Show You How
9. Move Away
10. Glamorous Indie Rock and Roll
11. Who Let You Go?
12. The Ballad of Michael Valentine
13. Ruby, Don't Take Your Love To Town
14. Daddy's Eyes
15. Sam's Town (Abbey Road Version)
16. Romeo and Juliet
17. Mr. Brightside (Jacques Lu Cont's Thin White Duke Remix)

Westerberg Returns To Action In Minneapolis

On September 23rd, Paul Westerberg returned to action after hurting his hand earlier in the year. The good news is that he appeared to be in good shape and that he is writing songs again, but the bad news is that he has no future plans. This is disappointing because Westerberg needs deadlines and a clear focus, in my opinion, to be at his creative peak. He has the ability to send shivers down your spine with his melodic alternative tunes that influenced a whole generation.

At this point and time, I really wish he would bury the hatchet with the other former Replacements and just hit the road with them again. Who knows, it could be a more dissatisfying show than the Police, but I'd still like to witness it. The Replacements had a rather roller coaster ride of a career which found them breaking up, on stage no less, in Chicago in July 1991. The band did get together to record two new songs for their excellent "Best of" collection released last year, but I have the feeling that a reunion will most likely never happen. Which is a shame, because there's a whole generation of fans, including myself, who never got to witness them live.

Here's to wishful thinking...
The full Billboard article can be found here.
The good news is that Paul Westerberg is writing songs again, but the bad news is there is neither an album nor a tour in the immediate future. The reclusive Minneapolis icon took to the stage last night (Sept. 23) at the city's First Avenue for an installment of "The Craft," a Rock and Roll Hall of Fame chat-and-sing series a la VH1's "Songwriters."

Warren Zanes, currently of the Hall of Fame and formerly of the Del Fuegos, interviewed Westerberg for 90 minutes and the Replacements leader played 10 tunes from his 'Mats ("Skyway," "Can't Hardly Wait") and solo catalogs ("Dyslexic Heart," "World Class Fad").

Zanes asked insider questions about song sequencing on albums and writing bridges for tunes. But he also pulled a few nuggets that Replacements' fans would dig:

-- Producer Jim Dickinson added overdubs, including strings, on "Pleased To Meet Me" that Westerberg didn't discover until he heard the album.

-- Each of the three Replacements was in separate rooms for the recording; Westerberg was in the studio hallway. "I had ZZ Top in the next room," he said. "It never leaked on to the tape but I could hear 'Sharp Dressed Man' in the next room."


-- On those sessions, "They sampled Chris' [Mars] kick drum. That's why it rocks," he said. "Chris could play the hell out of snare and high hat."

-- After John Cale came by to record violin on "Sadly Beautiful" on "All Shook Down," the Replacements had to hide his instruments because Lou Reed, Cale's ex-colleague in Velvet Underground, was coming down to the studio that night.

-- Westerberg took a three-and-a-half year hiatus after his son Johnny was born. "I liked it more than I contemplated," he said. "I found it so fulfilling that I found it hard to strap on an electric guitar."

-- Zanes asked about Westerberg mythology, calling him the J.D. Salinger of rock for going underground. Quipped the artist, "I'm the Catcher in the Slump."

Appearing in front of 500 people on a legendary nightclub stage converted into a talk-show set, Westerberg performed one new song, "Everyone's Stupid," which he explained was about a friend of his now 9-year-old son who was the last to know about his parents' impending divorce. The song was from the kid's point of view.

The singer also offered a 'Mats outtake, "Make the Best of Me, " which he said the band rejected as being too "spiritual" during the "All Shook Down" era.

Zanes had Westerberg pick four favorite songs -- the Beatles' "Hello, Goodbye," the Rolling Stones' "Tumblin' Dice," the Jackson 5's "I Want You Back" and Jimmy Reed's "You Got Me Running" -- and talk about them. One of the night's highlights was when Westerberg, after saying "I wish I could play it," spontaneously played the J5 smash as an instrumental on acoustic guitar.

Zanes didn't ask about Westerberg's fretting hand, which he injured in December while trying trying to clean some candle wax with a screwdriver. In an interview with the Minneapolis Star Tribune in June, the guitarist said, "I'm one-third of the way to being possibly 80 percent all better." In other words, the doctor told him it would take 18 months to recover from the injury -- damaged nerves in the webbed area between the ring and pinkie finger -- and he would regain only 80 percent use of his hand.

Westerberg had to re-teach himself how to play guitar. It didn't seem to be a problem last night though, as he accompanied himself on acoustic and electric guitars, six- and 12-strings in both styles.

After hitting "a dry spell," the less-than-prolific star has been writing again but doesn't know if he's close to completing an album. He has turned down offers from Universal and Sony to start his own label.

After the taping, Zanes told Billboard.com that Westerberg was his "favorite" interview in the series thus far. "I was reared on his stuff," Zanes said. "I was nervous about what Paul I would get. I'm really pleased with how generous he was. Paul sounded like he was at home up there; I wasn't expecting that. Clearly, his maturation process has been a dignified one."

Interviews in "The Craft" series can be heard in their entirety at the Hall of Fame archives or in part via Rockhall.com/thecraft. Already taped are Elvis Costello, Patty Griffin, Jim James (of My Morning Jacket) and Ben Gibbard. Scheduled for interviews are Frank Black Oct. 17 in San Diego and Aimee Mann Oct. 23 in Chicago.

Jon Bream is a music critic for the Minneapolis Star Tribune.

The Best Part of This Week's SNL: Lorenza Ponce

I caught part of the Jon Bon Jovi hosted SNL this week, but I'm not here to talk about him. I'm here to talk about the best part of the show; Lorenza Ponce. Who you may ask? Well she's the hottie in the background behind Richie Sambora when Bon Jovi is performing. She's a fantastic fiddle player and is best known for her work with Sheryl Crow and the Dixie Chicks. She is 1000% hotness and I admire her immensely. She's quite the talent and I hope that the reason Bon Jovi is charging ridiculous ticket prices is because it's all going to go into her pocket. She adds rich dimensions to the music whenever she is on stage and I hope the upcoming Bon Jovi tour gives her more exposure. Check her music and the artists she has worked out with here.

Thursday, October 11, 2007

The Album of the Year: Will Hoge's 'Draw The Curtains'

Truly illustrious albums change your life in ways that are indefinable. They show you the world from a diverse point of view and are cathartic and soothing pieces of art that become vital to your life. Bruce Springsteen’s Tunnel of Love, Bob Dylan’s Blood On The Tracks and Peter Gabriel’s Us are among the bloodiest, truthful and devastating collections of songs ever created. There’s something intensely remarkable about the emotions that come into play when a relationship comes to an end. We’re overcome with this feeling of desperation and feel completely and utterly lost. We try to find the light through escapism but even then it doesn’t always work and we struggle to find our way home. But when you drop the needle on Blood on The Tracks and hear “Tangled Up In Blue” a sense of reprieve comes over you because all of a sudden there’s someone else out there who feels precisely the way you do. When you find albums like these, they become more than just pieces of plastic or digital files but guides that help us save our lives. Will Hoge’s Draw The Curtains is one of these rare albums.

Draw The Curtains is a collection of ten stunningly crafted songs that are as multifaceted as the relationships he sings about. This album stirs your soul and yields a genuine truth so rarely found in today’s music with each song essential to the underlying theme. Instead of writing one or two melodic songs to get on the radio, Hoge has gone down the road less traveled and has shaped an emotionally severe and intuitive masterpiece that is not just timeless but most likely the best album of 2007. This is an album deeply embedded in reactionary tales that permeate into you more and more with every listen. We all need a catalyst to hold onto so we can crawl outside of our skin and look inward and for many, including myself, I look to music to transform me and Draw The Curtains is my new best friend.

Hoge continually embodies the rock and soul godfathers who have come before him but he remains distinctively original as he embodies the best of his influences. His music is an homage of those who have come before him by pledging allegiance to these rock and soul godfathers, notably the Allman Brothers Band for their musical prowess and Otis Redding whom Hoge channels his vocal intensity. These elements are combined with tumultuous, succinct and prosaic lyrics that find their way into gorgeous harmonizing melodies. Will Hoge distills decades' worth of canonical influences in his music and while I often compare him to others, I must make it abundantly clear that he is an artist with his own vision. He has taken courses in the fundamentals of rock n’ roll and knows what it takes to inspire and transform.

Hoge’s iridescent vocal twang rings true and when you listen to his voice he evokes indescribable feelings, most notably on the album’s opening number, “When I Can Afford To Lose”. It’s a peculiar choice to open the album with a ballad, but by doing so, Hoge has laid out all of his emotions on the line. The lyrics are something out of a Cameron Crowe film, the narrator aches with vulnerability and his vocal is poised with agony but there is also haunting desperation. I’m not sure if I have ever such bare poetic agony before. Ballads rarely open albums and succeed (“Round Here” by the Counting Crows comes to mind as one of the transcendent ones) but on “When I Can Afford To Lose” Hoge lets us into his world of pain with scars so deep, you wonder if he’ll ever recover. As I listen to the song, it’s almost uncomfortable to hear it. It’s not as flashy as a roadhouse rocker but it sets the mood for the album. He sings fluently about more than a broken heart but a broken man. Complimenting the sublime vocals and lyrics is a bare production style, yet it has the best overall texture of any of his records to date. His last album, The Man Who Killed Love was the benchmark for production, but he surpasses himself on Draw The Curtains.

“These Were The Days” finds Hoge being nostalgic but with a clear eye on living in the future on the album’s strongest potential for a hit single while “Silver Or Gold” is a minimalist bluesy ballad featuring a killer B-3 Hammond Organ. The bar room boogie backbeat of “Sex, Lies and Money”, similar to the jolting “July Moon”, soars with its hot-blooded and unrepentant drive. In the heart-on-his-sleeve ballad, “I’m Sorry Now”, Will provides a declaration forgiveness which features a lingering and recurring violin in the background of the mix. The upbeat “Midnight Parade” is a buoyant number that evokes John Mellencamp at his best with a dash of slide guitar.

“Dirty Little War” shows a young artist far more mature than anyone would guess. The acoustic number with a sparse yet effective accordion and slide guitar is gut-wrenching but it crawls under your skin like a song from Dylan’s Blood On The Tracks. Hoge has the amazingly ability to put himself in the shoes of someone else yet simultaneously make it feel profoundly personal. It’s a divorce tale performed with an endearing melody, a rare feat to juggle a subject matter this serious and have it sound so tuneful.

The title track, “Draw The Curtains”, gives the affecting and evocative feeling I had when I first heard Dylan’s “Not Dark Yet”. A subdued yet highly affective horn is placed subtlety in the background that creeps up on the listener like a lover’s gentle breath on the back of your neck. When I hear the lyric, “I fall into your arms like rain”, I sit back and just smile at the striking poetics. The song is heartrending without being too maudlin. It paints the perfect picture of faith and hope which is possibly why it became the title of the album. There have been times when we find ourselves drifting throughout life, after being beaten down by it, wanting a second chance, a rebirth and a new day. We’re not sure if the characters in the song make it to the promised land, but we do know they have a keen eye on the hopefulness of a second chance and that is really all that matters.

“Washed By The Water” may be the preeminent song Hoge has ever committed to tape. Written in the aftermath of Katrina, Hoge brings soul and optimism to a tragic situation. Within weeks of the tragedy, a live version of the song appeared on his web page and when it didn’t make The Man Who Killed Love, I was afraid this was one of those songs that would never find its way to a studio album. The Hammond B-3 organ on this song is amalgamated with uplifting production. The sum of the band and their instruments create a sweeping and defiant sensation that almost makes you feel like you were right in the studio when they cut this. If this doesn’t send shivers down your spine, then nothing in life will.

“The Highway’s Home” is a song Hoge has been performing for a few years and having it amalgamated with “Washed By The Water” at the end of the album is ethereal and poignant. When he sings “I’m moving on” it’s the definitive moment on the album. He has a revelation that he holds the keys to his own cage. We all overwrought with grief and heartache but how do we inject ourselves with faith again? That answer lies within us and for Will it’s hitting the road, his true home where he creates music full of heartache and open-road romanticism. Hoge’s lyrics address ghosts of the past and somehow, somewhere he’s looking for a spiritual awakening by coming to terms with these relationships and by the album’s closing track, “The Highway’s Home”, he’s found it.

Will Hoge sings these songs like a lost bluesman. The rockers are full of roadhouse exuberance that are so smoky sweet I felt like I was in a bar where the liquor flows like a river and the smoke wraps itself around you like a cloud. In the last two-years, Hoge has masterfully crafted two perfect albums constructed of ten songs each filled with heartache, hope and romantic giganticism. We all know someone who yearns for the good old days and have lost faith in modern times and technology. Back in 1994 when I would meet a cynic who would tell me “they just don’t make movies the way they used to”, I’d told them to go and see ‘The Shawshank Redemption’ so they could recapture not just their own personal faith but in the film medium as well. The next time someone tells me “they don’t make albums like they used to”, I’m going to tell them to buy Will Hoge’s Draw The Curtains so they can have that same spiritual awakening.
Will Hoge MySpace Page
Buy The Album Here

Radiohead Sell 1.2million Copies Of 'In Rainbows'

According to Gigwise, Radiohead has sold an astonishing 1.2 million copies of their most recent release In Rainbows, in ONE DAY.

Octobr 10, 2007 will be marked as the day the new model for distributing music was born. This isn;t including the special box sets that will ship in December that are around $80, or a physical cd release in 2008 or even a tour in support of the album.

We've seen the future and expect more major artists to jump ship from their record labels in the near future.

(Photo by: Laura Sylvester)

Tuesday, October 09, 2007

This sucks...Counting Crows Push New Album To January

Billboard is reporting that the Counting Crows new album will be pushed back 2 months to January. I'll be frank and say this sucks. I've been waiting for five-years for this album and ow it gets delayed again. Then again, the Crows have released four studio albums since Guns N' Roses last album, so who am I to complain?

Now, personally if delaying the album gives it a better launching pad in the New Year, then I am for it. November and December are insane in terms of exposure and promotion. January may allow this album to have a longer shelf life and get exposure to some who may overlook it in the Christmas rush.

They have an indeliable melodic curiosity in their songs and I for one can't wait to hear the multiple dimensions of this album.

The full Billboard article is below.

Originally expected Nov. 6, Counting Crows' new album, "Saturday Nights & Sunday Mornings," has been pushed back to January. "Between all the touring and the traveling and the mixing and mastering of the new album and putting the together the package ... we just let some little things fall through the cracks," frontman Adam Duritz writes on the band's Web site.

"There are videos and singles and so many things to decide on and finish and it's just not the time in our career to be rushing important decisions," he continues. "Actually, in my opinion, it's never the right time to rush important decisions. We really try to make records that last forever. I don't see the point in putting all the work in to do that and then not having the right cover or picking the wrong single or making the wrong video."

"Saturday Nights" (Geffen) will be the Crows' first studio album since 2002's "Hard Candy." The "Saturday" portion of the disc features more electric material, while the "Sunday" segment is more acoustic-based.

"This album is really starkly divided, not just musically but thematically," Duritz told Billboard in August. "The first half is pretty dark stuff and 'Sunday Mornings' is not a side about redemption either. 'Sunday Mornings' is about sorrow and grief."

He added, "Whether or not everyone else will like it or not, I don't know. It's not a normal Counting Crows record. It may turn some people off."