Lee "Scratch" Perry & the Congos @ Le Poisson Rouge

May 30th, 2013

Le Poisson Rouge hosted Red Bull Music Academy's Pass The Gates: NYC in Dub last Thursday night.  It was one of the final events of RBMA's month long invasion of New York that included lectures and performances all over town.  The line stretched down Bleecker Street and around the corner before the doors were even opened for this sell out show.  Surprisingly, I managed to secure a spot against the front of the stage when I got in.  


First up was some sort of tag team techno duo I saw listed as Peaking Lights In A Dub Style vs Future Times.  Basically, it was two dudes playing with knobs and fingering laptops on a stage packed with gear from the bands yet to play.  They weren't half bad, but their set went on forever.  I tried to figure out who the hell they were, but their web presence is a tangled mess, so nothing more to offer here. 



Next up it got real with the legendary Jamaican vocal group The Congos, backed by Sun Araw and M. Geddes Gengras.  Laptops and gadgets were replaced by bongos and microphones.  While the openers played straight for 45 minutes without interacting with the audience, The Congos were touching outstretched hands, smiling, dancing, and showering the place with love from their opening song to their last.  Cedric Myton was out sick, so a female friend filled in for his falsetto.  Would have been nice to see the full original lineup, but they still killed it.  Sun Araw & MGG, the young bucks backing them, were rock solid.  It was a perfectly mixed cocktail of old and new.  




Watching Congo Ashanti Roy beam from ear to ear as he played his drums and sang his heart out was truly a treat.  His deep appreciation of the crowd was obvious and repaid with frequent screams of "love you" from the crowd.  On the other end of the stage, Watty Burnett danced like a much younger man, consistently cutting a rug with limber moves and joy filled bouncing.  Their set was full of heavy hitters from Heart of The Congos, their roots reggae masterpiece produced by Lee "Scratch" Perry at his Black Ark studio in 1977.  Songs like Fisherman, La La Bam Bam, and Ark of the Covenant sounded just as crucial as they did back in the day, a testament to their timeless genius.  Often they'd start a song and let you feel the power of the music, only to stop the band with shouts of "stop track".  The teasing was a brilliantly designed performance element that made you long for each song.  The crowd responded with shouts and pleas for the music to continue.  Then Watty would call out "run track" and the band would get it rolling once again.  When they did the place went nuts. 



The final performance of the night was The Upsetter, Lee "Scratch" Perry.  Looking like an old man with a love for red hair dye, trinkets, jewelry and mirrors, he took the stage along with The Congos to the deep groove of Zion's Blood.  The giant speaker system provided by the RBMA shook the walls and rattled the light rigging.  Backed by the Subatomic Sound System, Adrian Sherwood, a full horn section, an incredible congo player, and special guest Addis Pablo (son of Augustus Pablo) on melodica, he put on one hell of a thumping performance.  You can't really appreciate dub music until you hear it live and at full volume.  The bass makes your feet tingle and body move while the drums rattle your chest.  It's like a full body vibrator.  Musically, this show was mind blowing.  However, Lee's stage presence was just bonkers.  After every song he ran the flame of his lighter over his mic to clean it of any bad spirits.  He repeatedly shared the fire with the crowd for audience members to pass their fingers over it. More than a few times he lost beads from his boots and looked around the stage for them, shoving them in his pocket once they were found.  He never really sung, instead playing the role of MC and spiritual rambler.  I don't think I understood more than a handful of words.  In a room that must have been around 90 degrees, he rocked an outfit fit for a ski slope.  Never in all my years of attending shows have I seen a performance even close to this level of absurdity.  But, like everyone there, I went with it and had a great time.  What he lacks as a performer at this point in his life doesn't overshadow the fact he is one of the most important figures in the history of modern music.  Those of us who saw him on Thursday were there to pay him the respect he's earned. 


It's often said that there's a thin line between genius and madness.  Lee "Scratch" Perry, after 77 years of living, proves a venn diagram is more accurate by being both.  Lee is way out there.  Just Google him and read some interviews.  But under the outer insanity is a truly brilliant mind.  This is the man who helped invent and popularize reggae music, blending elements of rock steady with the spiritual music he heard in church.  This is the man who took a young Bob Marley under his wing, writing and producing for him, shaping him into an icon.  This is the guy who invented dub music using innovative recording techniques and turning the producer into the star, creating a new world of possibilities that lead to the rise of electronic music.  Lee was the first to believe that drum and bass could work on their own, especially if you filtered them in interesting ways.  His dub remixes of previous cuts virtually invented the remix.  Lee Perry also pioneered sampling by being one of the first to incorporate them and feature them prominently.  He invented new sounds by doing things like burying a mic under a coconut tree and then sampling the sound of striking it.  Toasting over beats, which grew into hip hop once it arrived in the Bronx, started in Jamaica.  Whose music was popular for toasting over in Kingston in the early 70s?  Lee "Scratch" Perry.  It goes on and on and on and on.  The musical landscape we live in today would be radically different had the world not been blessed with Lee "Scratch" Perry.  He has earned the right to be as out there as he wants.  Shaking his hand, running my fingers through the flame of his lighter, and sharing a smile with him is something I'll never forget. 

Stones Fest @ Bowery Ballroom

May 23rd, 2013

A slew of stars gathered at the Bowery Ballroom on Thursday night to raise money for the Sweet Relief Musicians Fund, a non-profit charity that helps musicians in need of medical care and financial assistance.  Sponsored by Jameson, every dime of ticket sales from this Best Fest was donated to the charity.  For over 3 hours, a wide array of talented artists took the stage and belted out songs from the Rolling Stones catalog.  My wife and I got there early and snagged spots right up front.  It was an amazing night of great music with one outstanding performance after another.  Check out the pics below to see who showed up.  I also highly recommend checking out the full set of photos HERE





 Jason Isbell

 Cory Chisel

 Norah Jones

 Austin Scaggs

 The Tangiers Blues Band


 Delta Spirit

 Jesse Malin

Nicole Atkins




Jakob Dylan

 Perry Farrell

Boz Scaggs

The Setlist


Angel Olsen @ Glasslands

May 19th, 2013

I am currently in love with two women.  One is my wife, a woman who is much more than I ever dreamed I'd find.  The other is Angel Olsen.  I saw her open for Kurt Vile at the Bowery Ballroom and fell head over heels.  She sung like an angel and had a magnetic stage presence, earning rave reviews from everyone standing near me.  Later that night I met her friend Zia Anger (a film maker who had a hand in Angel's two newest videos) at the merch table.  We got to talking and she informed me Angel was swinging back through town on Sunday night.  "Only a few tickets left," she said.  "Get one tonight if you want one."  I did just that.  I owe you one, Zia.  They were gone by the next morning.   




Angel's second album, Half Way Home, was released by Bathetic in September of last year.  In this interview she says she wanted it to be raw to the point of being somewhat uncomfortable to hear.  I have to admit, I wasn't a fan at first listen.  In fact, I downright hated most of it.  Then, something snapped.  I call it the Joni Mitchell effect.  What at first made me wince and wish for ear plugs now makes my blood pressure drop and eyes water.  This is a stunningly beautiful record.  Each track has what it needs, nothing more, nothing less.  Her song Free is a stripped down mid 60s girl group number The Crystals could have sung.  Border town guitar on The Sky Opened Up is paired with a shaker, simple bass line, and subdued kick drum thump, creating a wide open space for Angel to spread her wings and circle overhead.  You Are Song has hints of early Joni Mitchell.  The Waiting sounds a bit like Patsy Cline sitting in with Dr. Dog.  Her influences are obvious, but they only season her sound, they don't define it.  


In person, her voice is more awe inspiring than her recordings.  The way she paints with it is truly masterful, showing an innate sense of when to rise and fall, roar and whisper, flutter and hold.  For over an hour a sold out Glasslands was completely captivated.  Backed by a drummer, second guitar, and cellist for most of the set, Angel proved she was aptly named.  They picked things up here and there with songs like Sweet Dreams, but the highlights were the intimate numbers.  Some of the last songs she played were just her and her Danelectro.  Those moments were sensational.  When I say she held the audience, I mean she had them with the grip of the iron fist.  There were times I closed my eyes, then had to open them to make sure I wasn't dreaming.  After the show, the people around me all admitted doing the same thing.  Not kidding.  Impressive stuff. 



This blonde bombshell from St. Louis hypnotized a room of Brooklynites, with as many guys as girls I might add, into respectful silence.  Her voice was the swinging pocket watch while her words seduced.  She explores simple themes in new ways through the unique metaphors and imagery of her songwriting.  Here are the lyrics from Acrobat, the first song from Half Way Home.

Acrobat

You are a crazy acrobat
You are the witch, I am your cat
I want to be a bit like you, 
I hope you don’t mind… 
if I do
I love the way your body's made,
I love the way your voice is sex
To be the whisper upon your ear
I want to be the bed you miss
I am alive, I am alive, 
I thought, I thought that I died
Who cares, I'm not a moralist, 
I’m just a lady with some time
I want to be made out of love, 
I want to be made into life.
I love the way you take a walk
And all the things that you see with your eyes,
Oh to be that distant thought,
Some growing meaning in your mind


The icing on the cake is seeing her live and realizing she's actually quite playful and approachable, not an intense "take me serious!" person.  In between songs, she sipped a beer, asking at one point where to find the best burrito in town.  The smiles and easy going banter with the audience took some air out of the balloon and let everyone float back to earth. 


Like I said at the beginning of this review, I'm currently in love with two women.  One is my dream of a wife.  The other is Angel Olsen, who sings in my ear at night and sweetens my dreams.

For more pictures of Angel and her band, as well as her
opener, guitarist Steve Gunn, click HERE.

Click HERE for a great article on Angel from American Songwriter

Upcoming Dates
June 19th - Pitchfork Music Festival - Chicago
August 16th - Lincoln Hall - Chicago
August 21st - The Bishop - Bloomington, IN 
August 22nd - Zanzabar - Louisville, KY 
w/ William Tyler
August 23rd - The Stone Fox - Nashville, TN
August 24th - MOTR Pub - Cincinnati, OH
w/ William Tyler
August 29th - Bush Hall - London, UK
Aug 30 - End of the Road Festival - North Dorset, England
September 5th - Hopscotch Music Festival - Raleigh, NC


Liars @ The Metropolitan Museum of Art

May 18th, 2013

The Temple of Dendur is an ancient Egyptian temple constructed of sandstone and full of stunning reliefs on permanent display in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, a place where artifacts are preserved to act as a window to the past.  Liars are a band from Brooklyn constructed of three members who thrive on impermanence, consistently moving toward new horizons and uncharted territory.  On Saturday evening, the two were both on display for a sold out audience to study and admire.
 

The show was presented in conjunction with the Met's current "Punk: Chaos to Couture" exhibition, which examines punk's influence on fashion.  Not in the mood to celebrate nausea inducing cultural co-opting, I skipped the bollocks when I arrived early and strolled through the current photography exhibits instead.  Not only did I feel like feeding my eyes stimulating images, but it was a perfect fit being that the Liars' Agnus Andrew and Julian Gross joined forces after becoming friends in the photography program at CalArts in Los Angeles.  I've always hated wandering museums with weekend crowds clotting the galleries.  This time I enjoyed it.  Experiencing the art on display with others felt comfortable.  Maybe it's all the live shows I've been seeing.  It's cool to feel something from a work, then become a voyeur and watch the reactions of others.  Two of the exhibits I saw are finishing up before the end of the month and both are worth seeing.  Street is a collaboration between James Nares and Thurston Moore that's nothing short of mesmerizing.  After Photoshop had some killer stuff as well.  What is this? A museum journal?  Let's get to the Liars.  


There was a time that listening to Liars kind of spooked me out.  Their music has changed over the years, but there has always been a darkness to it.  The chords and notes they build with often clash in eerie ways.  Their videos dabble in the disturbing.  When they record they retreat, isolating themselves in deep woods or abandoned office buildings in the dead part of town.  They don't do bright and cheerful.  As I've aged, however, I don't always need the lights on.  Comfort can sometimes be found in the dark.  Thanks to their last album, WIXIW, I am officially a Liars fan.  It's mix of ambient textures, synths, and masterful drum programming takes you for a long and beautiful ride.  This was exactly what they brought to The Met.  The hour long set had a handful of tracks from WIXIW and a ton of new songs.  I spotted David Fricke in the crowd and he also reviewed this show.  He can write circles around me, so go HERE for his insight into their new stuff.



While Liars gave a great show, the pasty crowd of mainly stiff 30 somethings was pretty lame.  Lots of gazing and analyzing through dark framed glasses.  Guess you can't expect mayhem at the MetThat would be actual punk.  Solid show.  Unique setting.  Glad I went.  Thanks for getting tickets, E.  

To see all the pics I snapped of this show, go HERE

Upcoming Dates
Thu May 23 – la Cartonnerie, Reims, FRTickets

Fri May 24 – Bad Bon Kilbi Festival, Dudingen, CH Tickets

Sat May 25 – Primavera Sound, Barcelona, ES Tickets

Mon May 27 – Circolo Artisti, Rome, IT Tickets

Tues May 28 – Interzona, Verona, IT Tickets

Wed May 29 – Musica 90 Molodiciotto, Torino, IT Tickets

Thu May 30 – Cabaret Aleatoire, Marseille, FR Tickets

Thu Jun 1 – Optimus Primavera, Porto, PT Tickets

Wed Jun 5 – Stereolux, Nantes, FR Tickets

Thu June 6 – Trabendo, Paris, FR Tickets

Sat Jun 8 – The Haunt, Brighton, UK Tickets
Sun Jun 9 – Parklife Festival, Manchester, UK Tickets

Thu Jun 13 – Sonar Festival, Barcelona, ES Tickets

Sat June 15 – Barby, Tel Aviv, IL Tickets