Nez the Conducer

He’s smart. I just keep thinking how smart he is.

Brief but interesting interview with Michael Nesmith at Wired. He says things like “The problem with those kind of companies is that they don’t have any good way to add value anymore.

For years, they’d support the artist in their nascent stages and get the goods to market. Those are old-time, Methuselean economics”

Tip o’ the hat to Nez’s VideoRanch for the link.

No Direction Home Necessary

Greil Marcus didn’t like Martin Scorcese’s “No Direction Home” and he says so in great detail. I did like it; was fascinated, in fact, so I’ll say so, in detail.

First, I have to address two statements made in the opening paragraph of the essay: “It allows, say, the Irish folksinger Liam Clancy, telling stories of Dylan in Greenwich Village, to contradict Dylan telling his own stories about the same thing; the film contradicts itself.”

Bob Dylan - No Direction Home (DVD)No, it allows the people, telling their own stories, to tell the story they remember, as humans will do. And it does so without feeling compelled to annotate their commentary in order to ‘prove’ one version or the other.

Follows immediately “There is nothing definitive here; within the film there is not a single version of a single song that runs from beginning to end.”

Bob Dylan - No Direction Home (CD)As difficult as it is for some to imagine, Dylan is not his music. This is a biography of a man, not a concert film or music video. I may or may not have been aware that each song starts, or ends, where it doesn’t start or end. I certainly didn’t care.

I have been a huge fan of Bob Dylan for some time – but not for all time. When I was a teenager, some of his obvious classics appealed to me, but I couldn’t have understood “Stuck Inside of Mobile with the Memphis Blues Again” any more than the man in the moon. I went through a period of definite disgust with what I considered taradiddle; meaningless songs full of pretentious babbling and disrhythmic performance.

Eventually, I came back around to a realization that this music had affected me, and continued to do so. Learning to play bass, “Maggie’s Farm” and “Like a Rolling Stone” came easily, and allowed me to play and sing at the same time. Being forced to learn the words, I developed a compulsion to understand them – and there’s no sword sharp enough for this Gordian knot.

Bob Dylan - Blonde On BlondeThe opening scene of Part II of “No Direction Home” provided a personal insight into the human being that was Robert Zimmerman which, to me, was all the explanation I needed for the lyrics to gems like those I’ve already mentioned: Dylan, walking down an English street, sees a handful of signs posted outside a shop. They advertise the banal and personal things little handmade signs might, on a wall outside a little shop in a small town. Dylan stops to read the signs, and a funny look comes over his face, perhaps at the bizarre juxtaposition of

Animals

& birds

bought

– or –

sold

on commission

on the left,

We will
collect
clip
bath and
return your dog


KNI 7727


Cigarettes
&
Tobacco

and on the right

Reading the signs over again, a little faster, he repeats them again, even faster, then again, but now, the words are mixed together from the wrong signs; faster now, mixed more; even faster and more confused, but still the same words, just jumbled up in a frenzied salad of familiar words and phrases taken out of context; rent from their moorings, they’re tantalizingly familiar, whilst meaning nothing whatsoever.

The Essential Bob Dylan“I am looking for a place that will collect clip bath and return my dog. Kay enn one seven seven two seven. Cigarettes and tobacco”

“Animals and birds bought or sold on commission.”

“I want a dog that is going to collect and clean my bath, return my cigarette and give tobacco to my animals and give my birds a commission.”

Bob Dylan - Blood on the Tracks“I am looking for somebody to sell my dog, collect my clip, buy my animal and straighten out my bird.”

“I am looking for a place to bathe my bird, buy my dog, collect my clip, sell me cigarettes and commission my bath.”

“I am looking for a place that is going to collect my commission, sell my dog, burn my bird, and sell me to the cigarette.”

“Gonna bird my buy, collect my will, and bathe my commission.”

“I am looking for a place that is going to animal my soul, knit my return, bathe my foot and collect my dog.”

“Commission me to sell my animal to the bird to clip and buy my bath and return me back to the cigarette.”

Bob Dylan - Nashville SkylineAnd he’s laughing. Laughing out loud; rocking with laughter, and he stands in the middle of a little English street, playing with words like a child plays with brightly colored blocks.

And I know, now, what it means when Dylan says “he just smoked my eyelids and punched my cigarette.” It means that Robert Zimmerman, or Bob Dylan, or both, love words and laughter and the rhythm of speech.

And that’s all it has to mean, to me.

Beer Dawgs, Bass, and Blondes

You can read about the Beer Dawgs elsewhere, but after seeing them for the first time recently in downtown Roseville I had a conversation with Bawb Pearce about their lack of a bass player (or perhaps their having two bass players, depending on how you look at it) which you might not read elsewhere.

As always when seeing a band for the first time, I looked for the bass player. Nobody was holding a bass. Nobody. But someone was playing bass; I could hear it. As I watched, I realized that the singer (later identified as the aforementioned Bawb Pearce) was playing a bass line on his guitar.

The Beer Dawgs' Steve Wall and Bawb Pearce, wearing guitars and smilesAs the evening continued, I realized that the lead guitarist, Steve Wall, was playing bass sometimes. How cool.

And finally, I realized that, sometimes, they were trading off mid-song.

I have to say, from a musician’s perspective, it takes real comfort with your playing and your material to switch from rhythm guitar or lead guitar (or, hey, how ’bout synthesized accordion?) to bass, and then back again, in the middle of a tune. Blew me away.

So, this exchanged ensued:

Myself: As a bass player, I’m curious where the concept for your tag-team simulated bass came from. Did it just grow organically from circumstances, an epiphany from heaven, or didja steal it?

Slim Bawb: about 3 years ago our bass player got sick & missed some gigs. For the first gig Steve played all the bass parts with his synth bass patch. I then bought a fender Jazz bass & switched from that to the guitar. that was too confining so I bought a Roland sythn also & we decided on the fretless bass patch because you slide to notes & it has a more organic sound than the regular bass patch.

We do around 100 songs that I’ve written so the thought of teaching all those parts to a new bass player was too much. plus the fact it’s fun playing bass & Mo money! Our bass player got well but then quit for a real job. He’s now playing stand-up bass with my other band “Slim Bawb & Gator Bait“.

That’s my story & I’m sticking to it.

see ya.

Bawb

I’m partial to the tunes on Blonde On The Bayou but you won’t go wrong with their newest release, A Little Luck.

And you really have to see them live, but since they play five or six nights a week in the Sacramento area, that shouldn’t be hard to arrange.

Shining a Light on Dark Corners

We decided to submit an entry to Scott Andrew’s ‘make a video for my new song’ contest and then decided we should post it here. Yes, that last one is nearly fifty megabytes. It’s full resolution, in case we want to burn a CD and watch it all day and all night.

Dark Corners (lo-fi 4.7MB)
Dark Corners (lo-fi 10.6MB)
Dark Corners (hi-fi 46.5MB)

Rush wants to make a ‘making of the video’ video, so we can explain all the strange effects and what she’s doing all the time.

Nothing but the Truth

New! Listen to this entryMy favorite song on KPRI’s compilation CD “Live Tracks” is the twangy, folksy piece “Russelville” by San Diego artist Eve Selis. Having never seen her, and human nature being what it is, as I listened to Selis’ big, hearty voice over and over, I developed a mental image of a big, hearty Bessie Smith type to go along with the voice.

Eve Selis - Nothing but the TruthThe briefest glance at the beautiful, diminutive Selis proves that it ain’t necessarily so.

My Best Beloved and I recently made another trip to San Diego which we carefully scheduled around a performance by the incomparable Jim Earp. Before we finalized our plans, I discovered that Eve and her band would be performing that Friday night so we made arrangements to head south a little earlier in the week to catch her show.

Years back, when I still lived in San Diego, I had heard rumors of legendary live performances by Selis’ band “Kings Road.” Having heard similar praise for her current band’s appearances I wasn’t going to miss the chance to finally see for myself. Eve and company were appearing at Croce’s Top Hat in San Diego’s gaslamp district. The Top Hat is a long, narrow venue with a stage backed up against a 25-foot-tall brick wall, and facing an enclosed dining room with a balcony above. Brick walls being what they are, the band chose to do an all acoustic evening rather than fighting the wall with electrics. When I had a chance to chat with Eve later, she seemed surprised at how emphatic I was that even rockers like “Heart-Shaped Tattoo” translated to acousticism without any loss in punch and appeal.

Eve Selis - Do You Know Me?Eve’s voice on record is powerful and appealing. It’s been likened to lemonade and whiskey and it’s just as delicious as it sounds. In a small, live venue her voice is awe-inspiring, almost, but never quite, overwhelming. Selis (who has shared the stage with the likes of Chris Isaak, Counting Crows, Joan Osborne, Crosby, Stills & Nash, Dwight Yoakam, and Jack Johnson) is an exuberant performer who laughs and smiles and dances with the innocence and lack of affectation of a child.

Her band is certainly worth dancing for. Lead guitarist and vocalist Marc “Twang” Intravaia has been with Eve since her Kings Road days. (Twang’s uncommon last name sparks memories of something to do with San Diego’s legendary HomeGrown albums, but my collection is no longer complete and I can’t find anything to explain the mental connection.) His direct, clean playing is a perfect counterpart to Eve’s singing; no unnecessary filler or flash, just all the right notes and nothing more. Amazing player and excellent singer, both lead and harmony.

Eve Selis - Long Road HomeOn the other side of the stage was former Johnny Cash sideman “Cactus” Jim Soldi. Jim’s playing is both fiery and graceful, and like Twang he takes his turns on the lead vocals. His rendition of Cash’s first single, “Cry, Cry, Cry” was a particular thrill for me.

Behind Soldi was pianist Sharon Whyte, who also played accordion (well, it sounded like an accordion!) Delicate when the tune called for it, Whyte’s playing reminded me of Jelly Roll Morton on the faster tunes: rolling and punchy and fun.

Bass player Rick Nash plays bass the way I like to play it – and the way I like to hear it played. Many bass players are just frustrated guitarists who can’t find work so they’re constantly working their chops to show how good they are. That’s not what bass is about. The bass notes are the foundation and anchor for the other musicians, not an excuse for pyrotechnics. Rick was always where he should be, right when he was supposed to be.

Drummer Bob Sale has also been with Eve since her Kings Road days. Besides for a snappy style at just the right volume for that size venue, his voice was a real treat the one time we got to hear him sing.

Eve Selis - Out on a WireSelis and her band play regularly all over San Diego so you never have to wait long for an opportunity to see one of the best live acts I have ever experienced. Her web site always has an up-to-date schedule, streaming audio and video, and extensive biographical and musical information. You can also download tunes from the band’s first three albums at Amazon.com, and more from EveSelis.com.

And if I can get this thing started, I’ll be writing a thorough review of Eve’s newest album “Nothing But The Truth” which we picked up at her show.

Walkingbirds Huge West Coast Tour, Part II

More photos of Scott Andrew, this time at the Fox and Goose, a marvelous pub here in Sacramento (when you order a porter, you don’t have to specify a warm glass . . . )

Scott is a dynamic performer who’s comfortable with his role as the (ostensible) center of attention. The full arrangements on his CDs and downloadable MP3s translate well to the informality of a single acoustic guitar and voice. It also helps to have a genuinely witty performer who really likes people and enjoys what he’s doing.

It was pure joy to be able to catch both of Scott’s shows here in Sacramento (and to finally meet him in person.) The family and I are looking forward to The Triumphant Return of Walkingbirds and the possibility of putting together a backing band to perform with Scott.

Thanks for two delightful evenings, Scott. I’d be proud to share the stage with you any time.

Middle Name Torx?

With a voice like a shy child too enthused not to tell his story, Phillip Flathead fills his music with lyrics to match: pleas for a bit of sense in life, and, despite the occasional lonely feeling that ‘the world is so big’, a general belief that, as “Downstream” says, ‘everything is beautiful.’

Phillip FlatheadFlathead’s performance at the Fox and Goose Monday evening was paradoxically joyous. Rarely looking at the audience, occasionally slurring the lyrics into word pictures rather than clearly defined sentences, it could have been a study in angst. Instead, it was like the quiet kid on the playground telling a really funny story, made even funnier by his reserved delivery. At the end of “Love & Medicine” my Best Beloved and I were laughing out loud at the comparisons between the commercial on TV and what’s actually important in life. It’s not easy to skewer something as obvious as commercialism and come off sounding fresh and innocent instead of jaded and pompous.

Phillip FlatheadWith just that wonderful quirky voice and his impressive Guthrie-style playing, PF hammered out the three songs from his demo CD (and one other, “My Best Friend Zen”) with the kind of passion that makes a live show exhilarating.

The three-track demo CD contains “Downstream“, “Hollow Days“, and “Love & Medicine.”

  • Downstream—”Look up towards the sun . . . everyone’s walking on air; and did you know that everything is beautiful all around us?” Opening with languid banjo (how often do you get to write that?) backed by a simple drum and cymbal, “Downstream” feels like one of those Sunday afternoons when everything is done, and all you have to do is lay in the hammock contemplating the clouds over a glass of something cold, watching everything float downstream.
  • Hollow Days—Beautiful cello flows into feelings of emptiness; wishing, as summer turns to fall, that more had been accomplished; that somehow, we had succeeded instead of whatever it that did happen. Reminds me of R.E.M.’s Michael Stipe.
  • Love & Medicine—Sparkling mandolin takes most of the lead in this perky quirky poke at how commercialism sure does squish the good stuff out of life, doesn’t it? I wonder if the hand-clapping percussion was planned, or if the recording engineer just couldn’t keep from joining in? Woody Guthrie would have been proud of this wryly humourous take on how, with “all this love and medicine, all the light from Edison, we’re still walking ’round with darkness in our souls.”

If you live in the Sacramento area, watch for Phillip Flathead. If you live anywhere, watch for his CD “4-Track Mind” in January. And come back here for my review of the full album, just as quick as I can get my hands on it.

Walkingbirds Huge West Coast Tour

Okay, really, it was just Scott Andrew here in Sacramento, but he turned in a spectacular performance which he’ll be repeating at the Fox and Goose tonight.

It was gratifying to see folks (including the other performers) lining up to buy Scott’s new album, “Where I’ve Been.” Good stuff, and a steal at only $5. His CD is available at his site. (Or, if you’re one of the first two people to email me and tell me why you want it, I’ll send you an autographed copy, free! Don’t worry; if this sentence is still here, I’ve probably still got a copy.) Also nice of Dave Baldwin, the evening’s host, to invite Scott back for an extra song and give him the spotlight tonight at F&G.

In the meantime, I got a few shots just in case we don’t see him again soon.