Saturday, March 14, 2009

Listening Post: Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers - Long After Dark

He duetted with Stevie Nicks. He's pioneered stoner animation videos. He's run the gamut of styles from pop to country rock to, well, just about everything. And he was a Wilbury. But, how well do we know the guy who wrote Mary Jane's Last Dance, Refugee, American Girl, and countless other classic rock staples? Well, I don't know him nearly at all. Hence the latest Listening Post. Let's dive in.



Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers - Long After Dark - 1982 (Buy It)

You know what you hear a LOT of and get real tired of if you listen to enough Tom Petty? Tambourine. It's all over his stuff. Sometimes it functions a lot like a co-lead vocalist. It's pretty tiring. Just sayin.

The New Wave-y tones on You Got Lucky almost drag it down to latter day J. Geils-land but it's easily rescued by Petty and his craft. Truth is, Peter Wolf could be singing lead on this track and no one would have been the wiser. Less people would have bought it, but.....

The songs are here. None of them really suck. "Finding Out" actually rocks harder than most of the previous record. Instead of being a full meal, Long After Dark is a forgettable lunch. Which is a shame but also, kind of due, right? I mean, four albums that build upon better and better songwriting, touring, fighting with the label, eventually you just gotta be too tired to come up with stuff better than "We Stand a Chance". Okay, maybe that kind of sucks.

You really don't need to hear this record.

Grade D+
A Side: You Got Lucky
BlindSide: A One Story Town, Finding Out.
Downside: We Stand a Chance, Straight into Darkness, The Same Old You (which sounds like bad Aerosmith ripping off bad Stones), A Wasted Life

Listening Post: Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers - Hard Promises

He's duetted with Stevie Nicks. He's pioneered stoner animation videos. He's run the gamut of styles from pop to country rock to, well, just about everything. And he was a Wilbury. But, how well do we know the guy who wrote Mary Jane's Last Dance, Refugee, American Girl, and countless other classic rock staples? Well, I don't know him nearly at all. Hence the latest Listening Post. Let's dive in.



Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers - Hard Promises - 1981 (Buy it)

Here's what I remember about Hard Promises.
At the time the record companies were selling most records for $8.98. They wanted to charge $9.98 for Petty's new one and he wasn't having any of it. He held fast, I think even delaying the release, until the label caved. And now, 28 years later, they can't get more than $10 for a record. In the meantime, Petty and the label kept the fans waiting.
And The Waiting is the hardest part.....
(See what I did there?)

Hard Promises opens with a flourish. As if to say, yeah, the 80s are here and, guess what, we're gonna bring the rock. No compromises and no Damn the Torpedoes part 2.

But there's not much more to say about it than that. It's a great coupling with Damn, but it stands well on its own. By this time, four albums in, Petty and Campbell and crew know what they're doing. Yeah, they're sort of sliding into alt-country more and more, but heartland music is like that. And everyone eventually goes there. Country is more forgiving and easier to sound earnest about (Bon Jovi, Bruce, etc) while at the same time you can really play the hell out of it while you are drunk or, better, stoned. So it's no surprise that these guys all end up on the plains.
That laconic sound definitely padded this album. It's the first to clock in over 40 minutes and that's really just because the sound is more laid back in places than on previous albums. That's the way it is when you are young, I guess, you shoot fast. Gotta get to the point and move on. As you get older you find it's a little more difficult to say what you want to. You're a wee more conscious of your point and want to make sure you've gotten there.
Petty gets you there. Even if, by The Criminal Mind and You Can Still Change Your Mind, the album's closers, he does seem to run out of steam.

Grade A-
A Side: The Waiting, The Nightwatchman, A Thing About You
BlindSide: A Woman in Love, King's Road, Insider
Downside: The Criminal Kind, You can still Change Your Mind

Listening Post: Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers - Damn the Torpedoes

He duetted with Stevie Nicks. He's pioneered stoner animation videos. He's run the gamut of styles from pop to country rock to, well, just about everything. And he was a Wilbury. But, how well do we know the guy who wrote Mary Jane's Last Dance, Refugee, American Girl, and countless other classic rock staples? Well, I don't know him nearly at all. Hence the latest Listening Post. Let's dive in.



Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers - Damn the Torpedoes - 1979 (Buy It)

In 1980 it seemed like every single time I heard "Refugee" it was followed or preceded by Pat Benatar's "Heartbreaker". It was a 1-2 punch that accented my early morning breakfast before school. (And I just got that. Heartbreaker. Followed by the Heartbreakers....funny DJs)
Somehow I never caught Petty fever, or Pat's for that matter. They seemed to get lumped in to a pile of quasi-New Wave and never really felt like that's what they were about. But the rich red on the cover of Damn the Torpedoes, with that cazh slung guitar sort of shouted New Wave from the bins.
It wasn't. And thank goodness, right?

Damn the Torpedoes punches you square in the face right off the bat with "Refugee" and then "Here Comes my Girl". This is a stronger TP&tH. They have eaten their Wheaties. They aren't tremulous at all. They aren't frightened. They are musicians with a lot to prove to a new label and the rest of the world. And when they're done, my guess would have been that you would either be a convert or at the very least have to admire the strength of the songs.

One thing that is becoming more and more clear as these records spin is just how important Mike Campbell, the co-producer and sometimes songwriting guitarist, is to the success of this band. His name pops up as a co-writer on so many of their best tunes: Hurt, Refugee, Here Comes My Girl, to name a few.

Side Note: I think Petty should have sued Bruce for ripping off Century City for his b-side, "Pink Cadillac". It's like a progenitor of the "I was made for loving you" stink.

Damn the Torpedoes is a fine record. One of the best of the era. It deserves all the accolades that have been heaped on it. I'm glad I got to finally hear it. And Louisiana Rain might be my favorite unearthed classic. Well, one of them.

Grade: A
A Side: Refugee, Here Comes My Girl, Don't Do Me Like That
Blindside: Even the Losers, Shadow of a Doubt (Complex Kid), Louisiana Rain.
DownSide: Nothing. This is a quality collection from top to bottom.

Listening Post: Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers - You're Gonna Get It

He duetted with Stevie Nicks. He's pioneered stoner animation videos. He's run the gamut of styles from pop to country rock to, well, just about everything. And he was a Wilbury. But, how well do we know the guy who wrote Mary Jane's Last Dance, Refugee, American Girl, and countless other classic rock staples? Well, I don't know him nearly at all. Hence the latest Listening Post. Let's dive in.



Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers - You're Gonna Get It - 1978 (Buy It)

"You're Gonna Get It" starts off with a sure foot and moves right into the familiar Petty sound on the title track. It's got that "You've Got Lucky Babe" feel to it.
The entire exercise could be called Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers 2 as was the pattern with many acts in the 70s. After all, 30 minutes is not a lot of time, by today's 70+ minute CD standard. So, it could be easy to see some of a band's A stuff spilling over from a strong debut to a tight sophomore entry.
That said, this record takes a long time to get going. I didn't key in until the fourth track, Magnolia, where they album begins to really show some heart. I think, without TP&tH, the Gin Blossoms might have had to find another line of work.
Everything on this record seems to be setting up the TP we will come to know over the last part of the decade.
Ultimately I have to agree with reviewers who say that, in the end, after the record is over, you might forget you even listened to it.
The missteps are few, and innocuous, indeed. A piece of piffle like "No Second Thoughts" wouldn't have made it onto a b-side of a George Harrison single. Before you can realize that you don't want to hear it anymore, it's over, so that's nice and no one really needs to hear "Restless" ever again.

Grade C+
A Side: I Need to Know, Listen to her Heart
BlindSide: When the TIme Comes, Magnolia
DownSide: No Second Thoughts, Restless

Listening Post: Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers - Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers


He duetted with Stevie Nicks. He's pioneered stoner animation videos. He's run the gamut of styles from pop to country rock to, well, just about everything. And he was a Wilbury. But, how well do we know the guy who wrote Mary Jane's Last Dance, Refugee, American Girl, and countless other classic rock staples? Well, I don't know him nearly at all. Hence the latest Listening Post. Let's dive in.




Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers - Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers -1976 (Buy It)

From the opening skiffly, McCartney-esque "Rockin' Around with You" all the way to the closer, American Girl, Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers is the kind of debut that wears its influences on it's sleeve. There's easy Doobie Brothers groove (Breakdown), the aforemetioned Beatles Pop (Rockin'), there's a touch of Springsteen (Hometown Blues, The Wild One;Forever) and more. Is Tom Petty the American Elvis Costello? From this album one might think so.
The album starts off strong and, to be honest, could be the soundtrack for any weekend, parents' basement, lights out makeout session. It's got that Freaks and Geeks timelessness without ever sounding dated.
And American Girl? I gotta be honest. I forgot that song was over 30 years old. I really could have pegged that song as a latter day entry. Shows what I know. Even though it has been in numerous soundtracks, like Fast Times, it still sounds fresh and timeless.
Anything That's Rock and Roll was a minor hit in England. And why not? It's like an Americanized Bay City Rollers or The Sweet.
And I've gotta say, that little backup on American Girl "Make it last all night" has Cheap Trick written all over it.

The record gets a little too Power Poppy for my taste around the middle, and really grinds down to a crawl around Mystery Men & Luna, but at 30 minutes, it really doesn't over stay it's welcome.

Grade A-
A Side: Breakdown, American Girl
BlindSide: Rockin' Around with You,
DownSide: Fooled Again (I Don't Like It) ed.note: I'll say.

Friday, March 13, 2009

DadNabbit. Blogging for a Dad Blog.

I have been asked to write for a Dad Blog, called: DadNabbit. Great name. Great blog.
My first article (and only one so far) was about the phonics alphabet game for Zoe. It can be found here:

but reads like this:



My wife and I went to our first pre-school tour a couple months ago. We live in Los Angeles and had been frightened into action by a friend who was visiting for coffee. The friend was admonishing us for waiting so long to start the waiting list process. After all, Zoe was already eighteen months old. For all intents and purposes, we were “too late to get into any good schools.” The way she said it made it sound as though we had consigned our daughter to a lifetime in the service industry after four years at a community college because the only choice left to us was the J. W. Gacy Clown-Around pre-school.

Before calmer heads had the chance to talk some sense into us we found ourselves in the office of one of the more prestigious pre-schools in the Los Angeles area. The children in this school system graduate to the next level with an average 85% or higher. They don’t mess around here. Only a handful of students per teacher. No holiday is celebrated or hailed so as not to leave anyone out. And the children are not forced into narrow cubbies when they are bad, though a few of them looked like they should be.

What really stood out to me though was when the principal sat us down to give us the low-down. I’ll skip all the details and get to the salient point:

“It used to be,” She said, sternly. “That children came to Pre-K to get ready for Kindergarten, where they would learn the alphabet and their numbers. Nowadays, children come to pre-school already knowing their alphabet and our job is to further enhance their experience to get them ready for a world where they are already ahead of the curve.”

Yipes. When did pre-school get so…advanced? When I was in Nursery school (as we called it) we played Duck, Duck, Goose! Now, the kids are practically pre-algebra! Daunting to say the least. But not impossible to overcome and I’m gonna tell you how we did it. Because it was remarkably simple and our daughter seems to be a genius. Albeit a genius who craps her pants and thinks cheesy poofs are part of the four food groups.


Toss out the flash cards. Forget Sesame Street (Please, god, turn off the TV. It’s a drug. And I’m not getting all preachy here. I have a 1300 square foot house, 2 Tivos, a dual mode DirecTV dvr, a slingbox and a converter to turn virtually anything I want to watch to iPod format. I LOVE TV. But turn off the TV. At least for the first 2 years. Trust me.)

Dump all that stuff because the answer is about twenty bucks away and you won’t have to do a thing. Just sit back, surf the web, make dinner, drink a bottle of wine, whatever, and relax as your child takes the giant step from incomprehensible babbler to genius:

The LeapFrog Fridge Phonics Magnetic Alphabet Set.

It’s simple.

The machine attaches via magnet to your refrigerator or dishwasher. The 26 corresponding letters are also magnets and each one of them fits into the semi-circle slot on the face of the device. When your child puts one in and presses it as if it were a magic button, lo and behold an obnoxious but catchy voice sings, “B! B says ‘buh’! B says ‘buh’! Every letter makes a sound, B says ‘buh’!” to the tune of The Farmer in the Dell. Pull out the letter, and pop in another.

“V! V says ‘vuh’! V says ‘vuh’! Every letter makes a sound, V says ‘vuh’!”

or

“A! A says ‘ay’! A says ‘ay’! Every letter makes a sound, A says ‘ay’!…and ‘Aa’!”

Press the button on the right and the same juvenile voice sings the alphabet.

The success of just putting the letters in the correct slot (the only slot, but still) helps with motor skills and esteem. The repetition of the letters’ names and sounds coupled with the alphabet and this is a toy to be reckoned with.

Within two weeks of this thing in our house I noticed that Zoe was obsessively putting the letters in and making the device work. So I asked her to pick specific letters.

When I asked her to get the A, she got the A and put it in.

When I asked her to get the B, yeah, she got it.

When I asked her to get the W, or as she calls it, “double-boo”, yeah, she got it.

It was incredible. After all, this was not a preschooler I was dealing with. At this point in her life, my daughter had just turned 19 months. She hadn’t even begun to copy our cursing yet.

Then, while showing my wife just what a success her purchase was I pointed to a letter and, rather than ask her to get it, I inadvertently asked her what it was.

“X.” She said.

I pointed to another.

“Z.”

We applauded. She got excited.

“D!” She exclaimed, pulling the letter D from the dishwasher door. She plugged it into the slot, pushed the button and began to dance, spastically, to “D! D says duh! D says duh! Every letter makes a sound. D says duh!”

Now Zoe is our own little sideshow freak. We love to make her pick the right letters for company. Especially the parents who have not discovered this machine and who are very nervous about getting into the right pre-school.

Oh, we’re not too worried about that anymore.

The Scholarship gets some love.

http://www.familytraveloutings.com/Lulu.html

The magazines should hit the newsstands in a matter of days.

A little pr for a good cause, me thinks.

Dardos

I have been remiss. I am hip deep in something that I really shouldn't talk about, so I won't because I like my work and I like the work I am doing at that work.
That said, this is a shout out to Aaron, who nominated me, along with others, for a blogging award. The Dardos.
I am supposed to accept it and pass it on to 5 others and I just don't have the time.
But, the reason he included mine is because of my "Listening Post" series. And, woe is me, there has been no work done on that front in a while.
But it isn't over.
No, far from it.
I am just getting ready for a new one. Can you believe?
And who will be the lucky recipient of my cloistered ears....?

This dude.


I promise. It's a hard promise (he he) considering my time constraints. But, it's coming.....
Stay tuned.....

Monday, February 16, 2009

Amateur Foodie: Blu Jam Cafe for Dinner - West Hollywood


Mama Mexico in NYC.
Rose Angelis in Chicago.
The Frontier in Albuquerque.
The Jordan Pond House in Maine.
Even Pearl's in Sonoma.
These are just a few of the restaurants that litter the canvas of my gastronomical map. The sorts of places that maybe don't get the kind of recognition they deserve.
The kind of places that you tell people they have to try when they are in that town. Because the pineapple tequila at Mama Mexico is wacky greatness. Or the popovers at Jordan Pond House are the lightest and fluffiest in the world. Or the homemade ravioli stuffed with pears in an alfredo/pesto sauce at Rose Angelis is worth flying across the country for when they notify you by email that they are making it that weekend.
There's one that needs to be added to that ever growing list and I've blogged about it before here
But this sidewalk breaky cafe, so well known and reviewed for their early morning cuisine just blew us away.
Again.
Yes, I'm talking about Blu Jam on Melrose.
On Fridays, Chef Kamil Mejur has opened his restaurant for a one night a week, single themed experience. every Friday its something new.
But it's only on Fridays and we haven't been able to get to it, yet. And then we heard about the special Valentine's menu. Saturday night, which was also our anniversary (long story). So we made reservations. And, knowing that the no corkage fee for the night was going to mean downing a hefty bottle of Sonoma Merlot, we cabbed it over.
The trouble with Kamil's menu is that you can rest assured that everything will be good. This renders a choice whore like myself unable to decide on what to get.
So we tried the chef's tasting menu.
And, holy crap.
While we waited we, and everyone, were treated to a creamy and delectable olive tapenade that put to shame the tapenades we get excited about when we are in Wine Country.
Opening with a beautiful circle of Tuna Tartare in dressing and wrapped around avocado we knew we were in for something special.
It's worth noting at this point that Chef Kamil was also the Maitre D' for the night, his bus staff having called in sick. So, while he was running around, seating everyone and making sure we were all happy, he was also in the kitchen preparing upwards of 12 or 13 different entrees as well as the cornucopia for the greedy tasters such as ourselves.
After a while we were treated to a plate of marinated goat cheese in vinegar and cherry tomato, possibly the least attractive dish that also melted in our mouths and vanquished the earlier, much more dynamic, fish.
Then the "tower of vegetables", a perfect circle topped and bottomed with yellow beets. In between a perfect melange of roasted red bell peppers, feta cheese and avocado (a theme, perhaps?). I hate beets. I don't loathe them but I don't eat them. And yet, the way they were prepared the nuttiness of the root was drawn out and playfully danced in concert with the peppers and cheese.
The spoon that was placed on my table was a surprise. Not a soup spoon, I had no idea what to expect when the bowl of braised mussels in a cilantro tomato broth arrived. Beth is not too keen on mussels and I was expecting to down this myself. But one taste from her and she was a convert. This was the spiciest of the dishes of the evening and a great way to say farewell to the appetizers. The spices bounced off the back of my tongue and throat and quickly disappeared cleansing the palette while at the same time preparing me for bolder and richer flavors.
Which followed in the form of a perfectly crusted whitefish on a bed of whipped potatoes and spinach. This immediately took me back to my honeymoon when Beth and I had dinner at the exquisite Oceana and we talked about the Loup de Mer for months afterwards. I dare say this was better.
The steak that followed was almost a denouement on it's thatched bed of pomme frits and vegetable strips. Not that it wasn't perfectly seasoned and melted like butter. It just wasn't AS fantastic and amazing as the whitefish. I understand why it followed and I don't regret it at all. Nor do I think it was a mistake for it to be the capper of the entrees, it's just, well, damn, that fish was perfect.
Tres Laiche cake followed and the wet, almost amaretto-esque bath it created with every carving of our forks turned us into lip licking heathens hell bent on devouring every morsel.
Maybe I could have done without the cheese plate that ended our culinary journey. I don't know. I'm just not a big cheese as dessert fan. And the most pungent of them (by this time I was too drunk to remember the name) was, as the chef said, much much better when mixed with the cranberry chutney. And who doesn't love roasted walnuts with creamy feta? But, like I said, the cake was enough.
Kamil, in his jeans and conductor's cap and sneakers managed a few minutes with each of us and we talked wine. He is also an accomplished sommelier. When I expressed my love for a particular Grenache (Mathis Grenache, the best wine I have ever had) Kamil vanished and reappeared moments later with the remnants of a french Grenache blend from Domaine De la Pertuisane. Le Nain Violet would put up a good fight with the Mathis.
We offered Kamil a glass of our Gloria Ferrer Merlot and he politely declined. I think he felt sorry for us with our domestic grape water as he re-emerged as we were getting our bill with a bottle of Briccotondo as a gift for us. I think we will probably bring it BACK and drink it at our next dinner at Blu Jam,
Our new favorite dinner restaurant in Los Angeles. Sorry, Little Door.

Monday, February 9, 2009

Jukebox the Ghost: Live at the Museum of Natural History


Simulblogged at www.popdose.com


Last year I had the good fortune to discover a band before almost anyone else. Before they blew up. In the case of Jukebox the Ghost there’s still time. If you listen and love them now you will be in that special crowd of musical geekdom: the “I knew them when” crowd.
For me, unearthing a gem of a band is a bi-polar experience. I want to shout to the rafters about the band, and I do, anywhere I can. And then, after they have been embraced by masses, there is usually a twinge of loss. That they aren’t mine anymore.
When I was a teen this was because the music I loved helped me define myself. And since the band was different, unique, special, then it would follow that I must be as well.
At the same time, though, while experiencing the loss of my secret, self-clarifying touchstone, I am buoyed and elated by their success and thrilled when it happens for them. Mostly because it means there will be more music from the group and better concerts and also because it vindicates my taste and proves that, well, why not say it? I was right.
All of this brings me to Jukebox the Ghost and their live performance at The Museum of Natural History in Los Angeles.
But, first, a little history.

The Washington D.C. trio, Jukebox the Ghost, first came to my attention by way of the blog-o-sphere. I spent much of 2007 reading blogs like The Underrated Blog, My Old Kentucky Blog, Ickmusic, etc, downloading sample singles and letting those tastemakers be the arbiters of my new musical knowledge. It reminded me much of when I was younger and underground ‘zines like the estimable and legendary Trouser Press heralded the coming of U2, months before Boy was released, or touted the new romantic sound of Duran Duran as they began to make noise in England, eons before Rio or Hungry Like the Wolf. The music offered for download was like the plastic flexi-disc cutout from that magazine only instead of one per month, blogs provide hundreds of choices per month.
I can’t recall just what made me decide to listen to “Good Day” and “Hold it In”, the singles offered by JtG on whatever blog they appeared on. By the time I heard them I wasn’t reading the blogs anymore just using the program Peel to sift through the morass of music. It might have been the weird name. At first I thought it was a typo. The Jukebox Ghost sounded more like it. Suitably Indie. But, in retrospect, had it been named that I probably would have been turned off; most likely a band named The Jukebox Ghost is an ethereal, synth laden, semi-goth experience. Jukebox the Ghost brings to mind a jester spectre. Jughead to Caspar’s Archie.
Whatever it was, I was not prepared for what I was hearing. Both singles are rich wordplay confections that excite as much as they beg for replay. The music is as honest as it is simple. Each tune has that nugget of a hook, a moment that brings you back, the handclap you wait for in anticipation, or a chorus that thrills when you listen and thrills you more when you learn the words and sing along.
This is good stuff, I thought. And my family did as well. After we downloaded the album from iTunes, Let Live and Let Ghost, the debut album, made it into heavy rotation at breakfast, in the car, during lazy Sunday music filled mornings.
The rest of the album didn’t disappoint I should say. Ambitious is the precise word I would use while describing it. The two part suite of “My Heart’s the Same” and “Lighting Myself On Fire” are followed by a THREE part suite about the end of the world. The troika of “Fire in the Sky”, “Where Have All the Scientists Gone?” and “A Matter of Time”, where God takes a good look at earth and decides to destroy it, a fable that is actually quite hopeful. And funny. Jukebox the Ghost are nothing if not funny.
But this isn’t a Presidents of the United States of America funny. It’s not cheeky Bowling for Soup funny. Its not a snarky funny. The trio of Ben Thornewill on Piano and vocals, Tommy Siegel on Guitar and vocals and Jesse Kristin on drums bring a goofy, Indie outlook to their songs. Like on the chorus of “Hold it In”, the most infectious single track where Ben sings, “Life is: [clap clap clap] Oh, my God, if I tell him, he’ll tell her and then she will know I like her! Good grief, I don’t think that I can take this heartbreak any longer!” Charlie Brown was never so clear about his fear of the red headed girl as JtG are here.
It would be one thing if the word-smithing was all this band was about. Plenty of other great groups have leaned heavier on their lyrics than their music or musical ability. Somehow, JtG have managed to bridge the over the top theaterics of Queen, with soaring falsettos, classicly trained piano playing and guitar licks that Brian May used to employ back in the 70s and merged it with the intimately youthful exuberance of Ben Folds best work of the 90s. Toss in a dash of Oingo Boingo (believe it) and this band has crafted a sound so new and so familiar at the same time.
Word came through the band’s MySpace site that they would be (finally!) playing in Los Angeles. At, of all places, the Museum of Natural History as one of the featured bands during the First Friday event that the museum holds. It’s a hipster affair where the museum is turned into a culture-fest/nightclub. Amidst a guided tour of the Paleontology exhibit and the author led discussion, Evolution: What the Fossils Say and Why it Matters” with Dr. Don Prothero, on the first floor the main attraction is the concert series.
In the great mammal hall, where stuffed bison and other ominous red-blooded beasts we have conquered reside, a stage is set for a festival seated, general admission audience. The show is projected on the wall in the anteroom outside the hall near the lobby and wine drinking Indie poppers sway and chatter the night away.
For those of us who found our way into the main room we were treated to a claustrophobic, over heated, fan-less room, fronted by a stage no where near high enough for a piano led band to be seen.
Jukebox the Ghost was, to my chagrin, not the main attraction. I should have known better, considering the bill, but I am not a fan of The Bird and the Bee. Although, I am glad that such a darling of the Indie community would be the reason so many got to see the better of the two bands. (It’s not quite fair for me to say; we didn’t stay for Bird)
There was a palpable mix of interest and apathy in the room. As the band was introduced it was obvious that there were some in the audience that were “in the know”. And the curious around us were very forgiving, withholding judgment until they gave the band a chance. One thing I do appreciate about the modern fan is the abject willingness to accept the “new.” It seems that bands are given the chance to succeed ofrfail on their own merit and that judgment is reserved; As though these music lovers are so passionate and hungry that they seek out rather than dismiss.
Of course, the back of the room was a din of conversation. So, the battle was on; the band up on their dais, out to conquer the uninitiated and the hipsters who were just in the room to save their place for the band they really were there to see.
Jukebox the Ghost opened their set with “Under My Skin”, one of the more accessible songs from the first half of the album, the more poppy, radio-ready side.
It was about this time that the guys in front of us who were gently swaying to the song which is about as unswayable a tune as I would imagine, turned to ask us, “Who are these guys?” We smiled and told them and went back to singing along.
Then Ben and the boys did something I would never imagine doing when I was in a band. They launched into not one, but two songs from their new, as yet unrecorded new album. “Empire” and “Ghosts” were remarkable choices considering they are wholly unfamiliar. Poppy, yes. And well within the idiom of the band, but why, when their cover of “A Beautiful Life” from the Guilt By Association compilation from last year would be more easily endearing, did they make their second AND third salvo total unknowns? Even the newish track, “Mistletoe”, that has been making the rounds among fans for the past few months, would have seemed a safer choice.
But this is, as I have already implied, an audacious trio.
No sooner did they right their ship with the familiar “Victoria”, a track that has been getting a modicum of radio play way at the left of the dial, then they launched into BOTH of the epic album suites. Back to back.
And they sounded amazing. Considering the challenging acoustics of the room, Thornewill’s falsettos were spot on. The harmonies were devastatingly glorious intervals amidst a palette of almost operatic pop epics.
By the time they started to bring it home with those well blogged tunes, “Hold it In” and “Good Day”, their job was complete. The audience had caught on and were catching on to the choruses. The clatter of conversation in the back had reduced itself to a low drone. And the previously curious and ignorant were raising their hands in time and tempo and cheering as though they had just discovered their new favorite band.
As we made our way out of the hall, past the outstretched queue of fans waiting to be let in for The Bird and the Bee we spent a few minutes chatting with Ben and Tommy. Unassuming and without pretension as they were I left wondering if they knew just how affecting their performance was.
They are coming back to Los Angeles in May. We are already marking our calendar.