Archive for the Uncategorized Category

Hans Chew’s “Tennessee And Other Stories”

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , on October 9, 2010 by johnbuckley100

Our friends at Uncut sure know how to get a guy curious, what with describing the previously unknown (to us anyway) Hans Chew’s solo album Tennessee and Other Stories as something that could have been palmed off as a great lost album from 1970.  They larded it on a little thick, or so we thought, with comparisons to the Band and Nicky Hopkins.  But here’s the thing: they maybe understated.

Okay, not living in Brooklyn we’ve missed Hans’ shows with the late Jack Rose and with D. Charles Speer and the Helix.  Now that latter group may sound like the house band in Peenemunde, as V2 rockets magically arc and fall on London leaving gravity’s rainbow as a screaming comes across the sky. ‘Stead they’re a potent tea bag steeped in the primo brew of American moonshine, and one of their strengths is the way Chew radiates the 88, like Leon Russell in his heyday.

In fact, if there is a reference point that really nails what you’ll hear on Tennessee, it’s that original Leon Russell album, only instead of Clapton and Ringo sitting in, Chew’s sufficiently multidextrous as to be able to have recorded, from what we can tell, the whole thing mostly by himself.

A few weeks ago, we were stunned to hear Deer Tick’s amazing song “Mange,” which sounded like it had been marinating in a tin container since about the night of the Watergate break-in.  But Chew’s done something possibly more wondrous: he has rendered the sounds of Mad Delaney and the Dominos jamming with circa-Your Saving Grace Steve Miller and Little Feet as recognizable, and as classic, as all those old musicians Dylan tapped into on The Basement Tapes.  Professor Longhair jamming with the Stones as they record Beggars Banquet, breaking only for Nicky Hopkins to trade solos with Ry Cooder — you got it, and you better get it, Tennessee and Other Stories by Hans Chew.

The Air Gets Just A Little Crisper

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , on October 9, 2010 by johnbuckley100

Leica M9, Noctilux 0.95 @f/0.95

We’ll Come Back For Indian Summer

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , on October 9, 2010 by johnbuckley100

Leica M9, Noctilux 0.95 at f/2

In Search of Lost Time

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , on October 7, 2010 by johnbuckley100

Leica M9, Nokton f/1.1

Telegraphing One’s Intentions

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , on October 1, 2010 by johnbuckley100

Leica M7, Fuji Velvia Film, 2006

Darker My Love, Live On KCRW

Posted in Uncategorized with tags on September 25, 2010 by johnbuckley100

Enjoy!

http://www.kcrw.com/music/programs/mb/mb100915darker_my_love/embed-video

A Rose By Any Other Name

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , on September 25, 2010 by johnbuckley100

Leica M9, Noctilux wide open.

Alejandro Escovedo’s Two Shows At The Birchmere

Posted in Uncategorized with tags on September 22, 2010 by johnbuckley100

Alejandro Escovedo and the Sensitive Boys put on two shows at the Birchmere last night.  One of them was superb.

The first show was their six-song opener, bashing their way through the punk rock from the glorious Street Songs Of Love.  Alejandro is that rare artist whose most recent two solo albums are decidedly harder rocking, maybe even progressively harder rocking, than the albums that made his reputation.  For a fellow who has charmed audiences for twenty years by touring alternately with a string trio or quartet and a real rock band that always had at least a cello, often a violin, and sometimes a cello, violin, and a pedal steel, seeing Al appear last night in a two-guitar-bass-drum foursome —  like some throwback to The Heartbreakers (the Johnny Thunders version, not Tom Petty) — took some getting used to.  It was powerful, but ragged.  The softening dimensions of strings and pedal steel were missed.  Other than a great new song, apparently written on the tour, I actually began to fear what the night would bring.

And then the acoustic guitars were brought out, and David Pulkingham was transformed into a street musician in Guadalajara, and it became magical, as it usually does with Alejandro.  I’ve heard “I Was Drunk” played by several of Alejandro’s protean outfits — the all strings flavor and the rocking flavor, with the string quartet sometimes torquing the tension in the song up to the sky — but last night, two acoustic guitars, bass and drums, it may have been best. “Last To Know (Ballad of Buick McKane)” was similarly breathtaking.

The show ended with Alejandro and his Sensitive Boyos coming back to play “Beast of Burden,” sounding maybe more like Archie Bell and The Drells than the Rolling Stones.  Alejandro announced that next year he’d be back to celebrate his 60th birthday with the full army, the fiddle players and all the rest.  Great.  Because the hard-rocking foursome does not fulfill his potential; the strings add a needed dimension for his songs, and his singing, to work.  I love the fact that Alejandro, at age 59, is playing out a Lou-Mott-Thunders role with a killer four piece band.  I love Street Songs of Love — it may be my favorite Alejandro album of all time.  But I can’t wait to see him with the full blessed orchestra.

The Fleshtones Movie: Pardon Us For Living But The Graveyard Is Full

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , on September 19, 2010 by johnbuckley100

It’s too bad Leni Riefenstahl already used the title Triumph of The Will, which was about some rock festival in Nuremburg or something, because it’s the genuine subtext of Geoffary Barbier’s wonderful movie about the Fleshtones, Pardon Us For Living Because The Graveyard Is Full, available to watch in is entirety for free at the world’s coolest website, SnagFilms.com.

For what emerges from a story about the greatest working rock’n’roll band in the world, who have played in dives and palaces but most importantly, non-stop for nearly 35 years, is their indomitable spirit, their seemingly absurd persistence.  Pardon Us For Living takes the band from its origins in Queens to its outsider status at CBGB when the cool kids were getting record contracts thrust upon them even as they were blown away by the Fleshtones as their opening act, to The Party, as Barbier refers to it — the IRS Records years when Roman Gods came out and the Fleshtones, freed from their bad contract with Marty Thau’s Red Star Records, appeared finally to be on the verge of making it– to the end of that dream in the 1980s, and then the relentless, impressive, world historical campaign, similar in scope to Mao’s Long March but with fewer participants, to the Fleshtones becoming that working band that shows up in your town and, even as you call in chits to get skeptical friends to come see them, changes people’s lives as even the most straitlaced find themselves in a conga line marching out of a bar at 1:00 a.m. while the Fleshtones, still playing music, get into their van and drive off into the night, music still coming out of the amps they’ve left behind, and which they have to come back for.

I first saw the Fleshtones at Maxwells in Hobokon in June of 1979, and I’ve seen them maybe 30 times since.  That seems about right… an average of one time per year over the course of three decades, six presidents, at least three wars, children’s births, the rise and fall of the music industry, etc.  They are still going, and going strong.  I have never seen them put on a bad show, never left a club they’ve played in with anything less than a smile on my face and my head shaking, marveling at the manifest unfairness that (fill in the blank with this year’s darling) are selling out arenas and a band that spreads joy and sheer rock’n’roll genius are playing at (fill in the the blank with the shitty dive they’ve just played in.)

As this is written, The Fleshtones are going into the studio to record their 4,212th album.  Maybe this is the one that will finally do it… that will reveal to the world how dull The Arcade Fire really is, and why it should be the ‘Tones who get the Madison Square Garden homecoming.  Maybe.  It’s this kind of optimism that has kept the band going, though they are eminently realistic and down to earth people: it has to be something more, too.

Pardon Us For Living shows that The Fleshtones keep going because they are filled with joy when they play.  It is their higher calling to get rooms full of people dancing, sweating and laughing.  They are carriers of joy.  They have no self-pity, very little bitterness (except at the idea that history has not fully recorded their place in it), no rancor.  “It takes a big heart/big enough to hold us together,” the Fleshtones once sang, and it’s clear that even as few bands have ever been as exciting live, no band — not one — can compete with the Fleshtones when it comes to heart.

The Fleshtones have now been the subject of a fantastic book — SWEAT: The Story of The Fleshtones, America’s Garage Band, by Joe Bonomo — and a first-rate rockumentary.  Justice will only be served when the Fleshtones are voted into The Rock’n’Roll Hall of Fame. Start your petition now.  Those of you on Facebook, get cracking.  In the meantime, watch this movie, for free, on SnagFilms.  And go see the ‘Tones when they next set up shop in your town and turn it into Hitsburg USA.

The Black Angels And Black Mountain Should Play Here

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , on September 17, 2010 by johnbuckley100

Wilderness Heart indeed… Leica M8, WATE