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November 13th, 2017

11/13/2017

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​Colony Woodstock Begins Holiday Run of Great Music with Terry Reid, Robert Gordon

The Colony has long been a fixture on the Woodstock music scene, but for some reason, never really seemed to occupy the limelight the way many people felt it could, and should. I recently had the opportunity for my first visit to the newly redesigned and refurbished Colony Woodstock, and, IMHO, the venue has finally realized its full potential!
New owner, Neil Howard, has spared no expense in reshaping the place in his own image. The stage has been moved to, IMO, a better spot, the sound and lights are terrific, and, most importantly, the bookings are out of this world, which is the main reason why I’ve been driven to write this blog at this time. Colony Woodstock is about to embark on a truly impressive run of shows that should interest anyone who studies good music, with a major in Rock n Roll!
The run starts this weekend, Friday, November 17, with Terry Reid and The Derelicts! Now, I’m sure there are many people who just thought to themselves, “Who”? So, let me enlighten y’all. Terry Reid was Jimmy Page’s first choice to be lead singer of Led Zeppelin! I’ve probably got your attention now, I’m just guessing. The thing is, Terry said no to Jimmy! He had a solo career that was going pretty well at the time, (Terry was opening for The Stones on their first tour of America with Mick Taylor in 1969), and he wanted to concentrate on that! I wonder if he regrets that decision, but I’m NOT gonna ask him! I’ll just say this. Musicians and other creative types out there, think about whether you’d rather have 50% of something, or 100% of nothing. Plenty of artists have chosen the latter! Nuff said!
Terry Reid, from what I understand, has moved from the hard rock he espoused in his youth, to a more laid back, rootsy Americana style of music, but his early albums, and the live act I saw open for The Stones in ’69, were pretty hard rockin’ affairs, and kind of ahead of their time. So, based on all that, don’t you wanna check him out this Friday at Colony Woodstock? I know I do! Terry Reid and The Derelicts. Friday night. Colony Woodstock.
But save some energy for Saturday night, because Colony has an amazing 1-2 punch lined up for this weekend! Saturday night, Rockabilly raconteur Robert Gordon rumbles into Colony for a night of rockin’, rollin’, and getting’ down! I say “rumbles into Colony” because, besides being a tireless proselytizer for early Rock n Roll and Rockabilly for, like, ever, Robert is a Harley enthusiast who used to ride with the Hell’s Angels in New York! Never an actual member, Robert, never the less, is that hardcore of a biker! But he’s also that hardcore of a rocker, if your concept of Rock n Roll is what the Founding Fathers, Chuck, Elvis, Jerry Lee, Fats Domino, Buddy Holly, Little Richard, and The Everly Brothers, created, back in the day. That’s Robert Gordon’s milieu.
Back in the 70’s and 80’s, I used to see Robert perform several times a month, mostly at the original Lone Star Café on 13th Street, where he and his band were regulars. Now, lemme tell you about Robert Gordon’s bands, because he got some of the best musicians on the planet to play with him, many of whom, have now, sadly, passed into the great beyond. Let’s start with guitar players. Do the names, Link Wray, Chris Spedding, or Danny Gatton mean anything to you? Well, they damn well should, because right there are 3 of the heaviest cats to ever strap on a 6 string! The only thing in Rock n Roll history that’s comparable is The Yardbirds incredible run of the greatest guitarists anywhere, back in the 60’s when they had Eric Clapton, Jeff Beck, and Jimmy Page pass thru the group! Robert’s guitar players from back in the day, are THAT impressive! But in case you don’t believe me, let me run down a few items of interest.
Robert’s first guitar player was the immortal Link Wray! Link burst onto the scene in 1958 with the now classic, “Rumble”, which, in one fell swoop, introduced America, and the world, to distortion and the power chord!!! Link Wray was one of the most influential guitarists who ever lived! Pete Townshend said he never would have picked up a guitar, if not for Link! Bob Dylan has said that “Rumble” is the greatest instrumental ever made, (although I personally prefer the follow up, “Rawhide” which was a staple of every Rock n Roll band I was ever in)! If you don’t know Link, you owe it to yourself to go to his website (www.linkwray.com) and check The Man out. And The Man is capitalized because he was, The Man! Here’s a clip of Robert and Link doing their version of Jack Scott’s, “The Way I Walk” which features one of my favorite guitar solos of all time from Link. Blazin’!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c-Y_UlonJW8
BTW, Link Wray is a 2018 nominee for the RnRHoF, and it’s way overdue! Robert should be inducted too! A cool cat, and a real cool cat herder!!!
When Link went back to his solo career, after 2 albums and countless tours with Robert, he was replaced with the only man who could actually fill Link’s shoes pretty well, the always inventive, Chris Spedding!
Chris is an English guitarist who’s been around forever and has played with literally everyone. One of the most in demand session guys in Britain, and member of several bands, he moved to New York for a few years in the 80’s and joined Robert’s band. Together, they recorded one great album and did some of the most memorable gigs of the Lone Star Café’s entire run on the corner of 13th and Fifth! Chris’ solos were mindbending! Chris is now touring with Bryan Ferry.
Next up in Robert’s band was Danny Gatton. You may have never heard of him, but Danny Gatton was a guitar player’s guitar player! He was actually known as “The World’s Greatest Unknown Guitarist”! Danny was also called “The Telemaster” and guitarist Amos Garrett named Danny “The Humbler”! Nowhere is this more in evidence then in this clip with Danny jamming with Albert Lee and Vince Gill, two guys who know something about guitars, themselves. Check out the smiles and admiration on Albert’s and Vince’s faces during Danny’s solos. Danny’s burying them, and they’re lovin’ every minute of it! Needless to say, every great guitarist in the world, household names that you love and admire, were fans of Danny’s!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c6FIvSy5W5I
I’d be remiss if I didn’t mention that the fiddle player in this clip, Mark O’Connor, is a living legend who started winning national fiddle championships when he was still a little boy, and could also hang with these guys on guitar, and the steel player looks like John Hughey, also a legend, although no longer a living one.
Now, we can turn to Robert’s rhythm sections. The one I remember the most fondly, consisted of Rockin’ Rob Stoner and Howie Wyeth, who took time away from Robert to tour with Bob Dylan and the Rolling Thunder Revue! Other drummers were New York mainstay, the  late great Bobby Chouinard, who moved on to fame and fortune with Billy Squier, and Anton Fig, late of The Late Show with David Letterman and session work with everyone from Mick Jagger to Bob Dylan. Robert’s bass player, when Rockin’ Rob went off to play with Dylan, was Tony Garnier, who, himself, went off to play with Dylan, and has been the only constant in Dylan’s band for a coupla decades, now!
So, those are the kind of musicians Robert Gordon attracted, back in the day, i.e. the cream of the crop, and while we’ve all grown older and none of us are as pretty as we used to be, one thing I think we can still count on, is Robert Gordon bringing a first class band into Colony Woodstock with him, next Saturday night! If you like rocking’, you best come a knockin’! Next Saturday, November 18, Colony Woodstock. Robert Gordon! Local Rockabilly faves Lara Hope and The Ark-Tones open.
And the fun don’t stop there, folks! I just popped over to colonywoodstock.com and I noticed they’ve got another of the world’s greatest unknown guitarists booked for November 24th, Arlen Roth, and my buddy, Chris Bergson and his band, the following night. I’ll be there, and you should too!
Next month, the new Colony’s got Darlene Love, Larry and Teresa Campbell, Rhett Miller, Ian Felice, Willa and Company, Scott Sherrard and the Brickyard Band, and more, but the biggest night of the year, anywhere, as far as I’m concerned, will be December 8th, when the very Reverend, Horton Heat pulls into The Colony, with his buddies, The Blasters, Big Sandy, and Junior Brown!!! I mean, who puts a line up like THAT together? Who has four acts on one bill, any one of whom could headline, and calls it, Horton’s Holiday Hayride? Nobody, that’s who! Oh, except Neil and his fine staff at Colony Woodstock, who’ve given this great and generous Christmas gift to the community! Thank you, Neil. This one’s gonna be a night to remember!
Colony Woodstock’s also a great place to stop for a bite or a drink. There’s usually some cool music goin’ down, even if nobody famous is booked, and it’s a nice place to wind down and cool out at the end of the day, so, head over to colonywoodstock.com early and often, and always be up to date on all the wonderful and groovy happenings at the rockinest club around town, Colony Woodstock! See you there!
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Reservoir Music Notes - A Story About Growing Up in Brooklyn

5/6/2017

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​Many of you used to enjoy my columns from 2011- 2013. They all appeared in the Tri-Valley Townsman newspaper, were picked up at hvmusic.com, and were posted on my websites, www.reservoirmusiccenter.com and www.brooklyncowboys.com. I also used to appear as a regular guest on John Madeo’s radio show, Monday nights on WIOX-FM, 91.3 and streaming online, but I haven’t resumed that activity yet.
This is my first column since the end of 2013. When I stopped, I was burnt out on deadlines and commitments. I’m feeling much better now, thank you, and I’ve decided to write a column once in a while. I’ve also decided to post them directly onto Facebook. They’ll still probably be on the other sites that used to get them, and maybe The Townsman too, but they won’t be appearing on any kind of regular schedule. Instead, they will appear whenever I feel like writing one. And I felt like writing this one. I hope it moves you.
 
Here’s a story about growing up in Brooklyn.
 
When I was a kid, around 14, a few of my friends and I immersed ourselves deeply in the world of record collecting, specifically British record collecting. The British music invasion had hit us hard, and at that time, we all felt that if a band wasn’t British, they sucked! LOL.
This didn’t last that long, as bands like The Byrds and Lovin’ Spoonful began to eat away at our prejudices, and other bands like, The Syndicate of Sound, Music Machine, Count 5, Five Americans, and The Sir Douglas Quintet launched their own invasion into our young, impressionable minds!!!
Personally, I had been digging music since I was 5, and buying records since I was 8, but, as teenagers, we took it to the next level! Along with a few of my music obsessed friends, and a few other kids in Brooklyn who we didn’t know yet, but would meet later, we started ordering British records straight from England! A couple of us got air mail subscriptions to the British music papers like Disc and Music Echo and New Musical Express, so we always knew what was happening in England, before anyone else in America.
Now, the reasons for doing this were many and varied, but mainly, it was about getting music by our favorite bands, that wasn’t released in this country. The English records seemed to have better fidelity, and they came in really cool flimsy laminated covers that we loved, but for me at least, it was all about the music. British records by popular British bands of the day, would routinely have tracks removed from their American albums, throw on a few singles and B sides, and voila! Two albums where you only had one!
In this way, the American record labels got to release more albums and make more money, which most of them didn’t pass on to their artists!!! In Britain, albums had 16 tracks, and singles and B sides usually weren’t included. American albums routinely had 12 tracks, and singles and B sides were always included! You see how it worked? Every 2 albums, you got an extra one! Do the math! It wasn’t until Sgt. Pepper, that The Beatles had the clout to insist that their records be released worldwide in their original versions, and after that, all the other bands got into the act.
So, my friends and I were ordering unreleased tracks by The Beatles, Stones, Jimi, Floyd, Cream, Spencer Davis Group (later Traffic), Kinks, Yardbirds, Soft Machine, Small Faces, and The Move, and even American artists like Dylan had unreleased tracks in oddball countries like Holland. We had them all! When Fresh Cream was released in Germany with an extra track, even beyond the British version, we got it! If the Stones or Pete Townshend gave one of their rejected songs to another artist to cover, we had it! One of my friends even went so far as to order Stones’ albums from around the world if they simply had a different cover!
For me, though, it was always about just the music. If the French version of a Stones album had a track that was 40 seconds longer than the American release, I had it, but I drew the line at different album covers!
After a while, we got hooked up with the DJ’s at WOR-FM, the first free form rock radio station in New York, (later WNEW), and started supplying Murray the K and Scott Muni with records from our collections to play on the air, since British records were totally unavailable commercially in America, and even DJ’s at radio stations didn’t have what we had!!! We also spent a long night playing records on the air with Bob Fass at WBAI, when we unceremoniously showed up there with a box of records. Bob put us right on the air, and we spent the next 5 hours spinning discs and telling stories of our meetings with remarkable musicians, finally exiting at dawn!
And we were all still in junior and senior high school at the time, maybe 14, 15 years old! There wasn’t a DJ in the country who wouldn’t have jumped at the chance to access our record collections, but we were kids! What the hell did we know about marketing?!! Our connection to the radio stations was a kid who was interning there. He went on to run Aaron Spelling’s production company, then became partners with Dick Clark, and then, I think, helmed a major movie studio, before I lost track of him!
But all that is the stuff of other stories. This one is about something else.
Someone else, actually. Here’s the backdrop. Besides ordering all the British bands on British labels, my pals and I liked to cut school and go hang out at this record store in the Village. It wasn’t an ordinary store, tho. It was really one of the first record stores in New York that catered to the collector market. They had all kinds of records that weren’t hits, and that no other store had. They even had records by the doo wop group my brother had in high school and college (now collector’s items)! It was called The House of Oldies, and it was owned by a cat who went by the moniker, Record Richie!!
My boys and I thought Record Richie was like, the coolest guy on earth! He was real easy going, always in a good mood, and didn’t seem to mind a gang of kids hanging out at his store all day, playing his inventory on a makeshift stereo he had installed, and I suppose it didn’t hurt that once in a while, we bought something.
It was much more than that though. Record Richie was like a father figure to us. He was a lot older than us, at the time, but he was probably, maybe, 25? We really dug his vibe, and he seemed to get a kick out of us too. I never saw him get angry, or heard a cross word come from his lips! He had an assistant named Ira, who we promptly named LP Ira. The name stuck.
Other characters were in and out. Bleecker Bob was a regular. He was a record pusher back then. He’d go around to record stores (no chains back then. All mom and pop stores), and try to get them to take a few of the records he was selling. Somehow, Bob’s bio has evolved him into an attorney before he opened his iconic record store, but if that’s true, he must have been in law school when he came into Record Richie’s, because he sure didn’t look like no lawyer!
We got turned on to lots of cool records at House of Oldies that never became hits, like The Magicians, Ivan, The Leaves, Tim Rose, first Blues Project single (still their best), and others that did, like “We Ain’t got Nothin’ Yet” by Blues Magoos and “My Little Red Book” by Love! I used to love to hang with Record Richie all day before heading up to Central Park for a show at Wollman Skating Rink at night. That’s what the Spoonful song, “Summer in the City” was about, and it captured that mood better than any record before or since! But, I digress.
One day, we were in the store, and Record Richie (we always formally called him by his full title of Record Richie, never shortening it to Richie or Rich), seemed a little on edge, not his usual laid back self. After we left the store, my friend told me that RR had confessed to him that he was planning to try the powerful mind bending hallucinogenic drug, LSD-25, for the first time, that night!
Well, time passed, we all grew up, and one day, Record Richie sold the shop. We were heartbroken, but we accepted it. We were still young, and he was moving into his 30’s by then, so we lost touch. I never saw him again, but I’ll never forget him.
The store is still there, albeit moved around the corner to Carmine Street. It’s only had one owner since Record Richie sold it, but Double R will always be remembered by me as a cool dude, a big influence on me and my friends, a major part of our lives for a time, and the owner of the first collector’s record store in New York, House of Oldies!
Years later, after living in California for a few years and then moving back to New York, I decided to replenish some of the more desirable gems from my childhood record collection, all of which I had sold to Bleecker Bob when I was 17 for $100. Lenny Kaye was clerking in the store the night I brought my records in. The collection would be worth, by my estimate, about $1.5M in today’s market. But again, I digress. So, I stopped down to the House of Oldies, at the time, still, one of the few record stores with that kind of inventory. I don’t know why they called it House of Oldies. It had plenty of new inventory. They really should have named it House of Every Record Ever Made!!!
The new owner, Bob Abramson, was there, and it only takes me 5 minutes to establish a rapport with record people, so we were on the same page immediately. (BTW, Bob is still in business at 35 Carmine Street, and when I called him to confirm some points for this article, after 40 years, he answered the phone by saying, “Fred, how’ve you been?” like it was 6 months ago that we last spoke! And the amazing thing is, he really did remember me! Bob has that kind of passion for music, records, people, and customer service! He’s amazing! If you’re in the market for classic vinyl, you should go there!) I picked up a few records like “When You Walk in the Room” by The Searchers, “Double Shot of my Baby’s Love” by The Swingin’ Medallions, and about a dozen more. That night, I went to see Bruce Springsteen for the first time, at The Bottom Line on Mercer Street. The date was August 15, 1975. The Boss covered half of the songs I bought that afternoon!
 
In my old columns, I used to recommend every single musical event between Cooperstown and Manhattan that I considered worthy. I will not be doing that any longer. It’s just far too exhaustive research. Instead, I will be cherry picking. I’ll throw some cool nights at ya, but I ain’t gonna be the encyclopedia no more! That’s what the internet is for!!! LOL.
Instead, whatever catches my eye that I think is cool, I’ll write it up. In that vein, this Monday night, May 8, at the Music Hall of Williamsburg, in Brooklyn, an awesome young band that I’ve latched onto, called Strand of Oaks will be appearing. These guys were very good before, but my young friend Jason Anderson just joined on lead guitar, and they instantly went from good to great! Jason is a great undiscovered lead guitarist, and Strand of Oaks is now a band to be reckoned with! You will hear of them, and probably soon. If you wanna adopt them before they hit the big time, doors are at 8, Jason opens solo at 9, and Strand of Oaks at 10. Music Hall of Williamsburg. Brooklyn.
There’ll be some other cool stuff comin’ up. Phil Lesh is at The Cap with Jackie Greene, and there’s a Chuck Berry tribute at City Winery, both towards the end of the month, awesome female guitarist Ana Popovic is at Daryl’s House on May 19, and Michael Arnone’s 28th Annual Crawfish Fest, with their always amazing schedule of bands, and always delicious Cajun and Creole food, will take place again on the Sussex County Fairgrounds in Augusta, New Jersey, June 2-4. I attended my first Crawfish Fest 3 years ago, and discovered some really fantastic, then unknown bands, saw Dr. John from around 3 feet away, and ate the best food on the planet!!! This year’s schedule and more info at www.crawfishfest.com. Highly recommended! And it’s not a sprawling festival with a mountainous site, parking far away, and lots of walking. The site is relatively small, and flat, easy to navigate, and the crowds are not overwhelming (yet). A real easy lift, as festivals go, and big bang for your buck. Check it out!
 
 
 
 
 
 
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Reservoir Music Notes - Kickoff to Summer

5/17/2015

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 Reservoir Music Notes returns…for a minute or a month. We’ll see how much there is to say, but the days are warming  and the unofficial kickoff to summer is here now, so I thought it would be a good time to return to civilization with a column about some of the outstanding concert series that are happening this summer. This won’t be, as it might have been in the past, a comprehensive, all inclusive, guide to summer festivals, concert series, and shows. It will just be me, writing about whatever comes to my attention, whatever strikes me as good, or possibly interesting to you, or maybe something I should go out on a limb and recommend! It’s part of a more laid back attitude to life that I’ve adopted since my shoulder surgery and closing of Reservoir Music as a retail store, last year. And part of this will be that columns and blogs will no longer be written weekly. They will be written and posted on the blog pages of my websites, www.reservoirmusiccenter.com and www.brooklyncowboys.com , and probably on the articles page of www.hvmusic.com as well, whenever I feel like there is something noteworthy to tell you about. This could happen daily, or monthly, but I will always post an announcement on Facebook and Twitter when there is a new blog, and if it fits into the Tri-Valley Townsman’s publishing schedule, as this column does, it will appear in the newspaper. So you won’t get the complete guide to summer music in one sitting, but stick with me, and we’ll get everything done over time, and just in time, for all of us to experience some great live music this summer!


 Memorial Day weekend kicks off with the first show of a small, but mighty concert series at Brewery Ommegang in Cooperstown, NY! Dan Smalls, of Dan Smalls Presents, in association with the brewery, has put together a stellar line up for this summer’s events. With only six shows and one event scheduled for the entire summer, they’ve overwhelmed with quality, not quantity! Every single show is a grand slam home run, as is the one non-musical event scheduled at the brewery! As a slugging percentage, this is the most powerful concert series happening this summer! There’s plenty of other good ones, but so far I haven’t seen any where every single show is killer, and hopefully, they’ll be adding more! After that build up, I won’t leave you hanging. The full line up of musical entertainment at Brewery Ommegang this Summer will be The Pixies, The Avett Brothers and John Prine (together), Old Crow Medicine Show, The Decemberists, Primus, and Bonnie Raitt! Short, but oh so sweet! Just like the best Rock n Roll! For the full schedule and more details, please visit www.ommegang.com. You won’t want to miss any of the music at Ommegang this summer!


 I’m very excited about their opening show, the Friday of Memorial Day weekend, when Dan Smalls Presents and Brewery Ommegang will be presenting the hugely influential, indie rock legends, The Pixies!

 The Pixies' musical style has been described as "an unorthodox marriage of surf music and punk rock”, and I suppose that’s as good a description as any! To me, they sound like a punk-rock Rasberries, but I’m philosophically opposed to describing music in words. You have to hear it, if you know what I mean!

In their relatively short first incarnation, (1986-1993), The Pixies produced relatively few albums, whose sales were relatively modest. While they did enjoy some mainstream success, their importance lay in the fact that they influenced a number of bands associated with the alternative rock boom of the 1990s. Of course, since reforming in 2004, they have experienced the kind of success that eluded them the first time around, selling millions of dollars worth of tickets to their performances around the globe! Gary Smith, who produced their Come On Pilgrim album, commented on the band's influence on alternative rock, and their legacy, in 1997:

I've heard it said about The Velvet Underground that while not a lot of people bought their albums, everyone who did started a band. I think this is largely true about the Pixies as well. Charles' secret weapon turned out to be not so secret and, sooner or later, all sorts of bands were exploiting the same strategy of wide dynamics. It became a kind of new pop formula and, within a short while, "Smells Like Teen Spirit" was charging up the charts and even the members of Nirvana said later that it sounded for all the world like a Pixies song.

The Pixies are credited with popularizing the extreme dynamics and stop-start timing that would become widespread in alternative rock. Artists including David Bowie, Radiohead, PJ Harvey, U2, Nirvana, The Strokes, Weezer, Bush and Pavement have cited admiration of or influence by the Pixies. Bono, of U2, has called the Pixies "one of America's greatest bands ever", and Radiohead's Thom Yorke has said that, while at school, "the Pixies had changed my life". Bowie, whose own music had inspired The Pixies while they were at university, has said that the Pixies made "just about the most compelling music of the entire 80s."

One notable citation as an influence was by Kurt Cobain, on influencing Nirvana's "Smells Like Teen Spirit", which he admitted was a conscious attempt to co-opt the Pixies' style. In a January 1994 interview with Rolling Stone, he said, "I was trying to write the ultimate pop song. I was basically trying to rip off the Pixies. I have to admit it. When I heard the Pixies for the first time, I connected with that band so heavily I should have been in that band—or at least in a Pixies cover band. We used their sense of dynamics, being soft and quiet and then loud and hard." Cobain cited Pixies’ album, Surfer Rosa, as one of his main musical influences, and particularly admired the album's natural and powerful drum sounds—a result of Steve Albini's influence on the record. Albini later produced Nirvana's 1993 In Utero at the request of Cobain.

So you see what league we’re playing in with The Pixies? The Major League, buddy, the Major League! May 22, Brewery Ommegang, Cooperstown. Doors 5:00, music at 7:00.

Now it has also come to my attention that almost every park in the city of New York is having a concert series this summer, many of them free, and that series kicks off in Central Park with an amazing show this Monday, May 18, when Tedeschi-Trucks pulls into town for a free show! This is really not to be missed! I’d probably recommend it as a paid show, but for free? No brainer!

 Events in NYC parks are taking place all over the city, including Prospect Park in Brooklyn, and most of them are free! Genres range from Shakespeare and opera to Hip Hop and Rock, so there’s something for everyone! One show that won’t be free takes place at the end of the season, and features Phil Lesh of The Grateful Dead, with Chris Robinson from The Black Crowes, on lead vocals! There are also several local Hudson Valley luminaries on the Summerstage schedule. More information about music in New York City parks this summer can be found at http://www.cityparksfoundation.org/events/, and information about the Prospect Park series can be found at http://www.prospectpark.org/news-events/events/?filter_by=tag&tags=Celebrate%20Brooklyn! I should mention that to use this link, you must include the exclamation point at the end, which Word is not automatically including as part of this link! So click on the link, but don’t forget to add the exclamation point before you search, or you’ll go to the wrong page. Of course, you can always type any of these shows into any search engine, and you’ll find what you’re looking for.

 On a sad note, it pains me to announce that the Bellayre Music Festival, which has taken place every summer for the past 23 years, at Bellayre ski resort in Shandaken, NY, is on hiatus for this year! The series has presented the best of every genre of music during it’s run, and this is a tremendous loss to the Hudson Valley’s musical smorgasbord. Thankfully, organizers have announced that it will return next year.

 Now I could continue, but I want to get this column online in time for y’all to be able to make it to Tedeschi-Trucks on Monday, which is in tomorrow! Unfortunately, those of you reading this in the Tri-Valley Townsman will have already missed this, which is a good reason to check in periodically at www.reservoirmusiccenter.com or www.brooklyncowboys.com. Take a look at the blog page and you’ll be able to see if there are any updates to the newspaper column. Still pick up The Townsman on Thursdays, because I’ll try to be in there as often as I can, but stay in touch on the websites and follow me on Facebook and Twitter, and you’ll never miss a word!

 I will also be resuming my guest spots on John Madeo’s excellent radio show, The Delaware Jamboree, which airs every Monday night from 8-10pm on WIOX-FM, 91.3, out of Roxbury, NY. If you’re out of the area, you can also listen on www.wioxradio.org, or at least you used to be able to. The WIOX site is temporarily down at the moment. Hoping it will return soon, but rest assured that I will investigate and find out the real skinny for you, my loyal readers, as always, and let you know in my next appearance here!

 Thanks for reading. It’s good to be back!

 

 

 

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Reservoir Music Notes - Peter Wolf  Review, Live Music Picks

2/26/2014

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PicturePhoto by Drew Frankel.
     Well, well, well! Look who’s back! And it’s good to be back! There’s been so much we’ve missed, don’t rightly know where to start! That’s a lie!

     Might as well start the first column of the new year by telling y’all where I’ve been. Moving, mostly. I’ve moved Reservoir Music from the log cabin on Route 28 that we’ve occupied for the past two years, into an office in the historic Stockade District of Kingston! The retail store is closed, but we remain in business working by appointment and online. Over the next few months, I will be working feverishly to get all of my inventory listed on our website, www.reservoirmusiccenter.com. You know the site because it’s where you go to read this column online, or, should I say, one of the sites, the others being www.brooklyncowboys.com, www.hvmusic.com, and, of course, www.thetownsman.com.

     I made this move for several reasons, those reasons being time, family, health, and financial. It’s a hand that can’t be beat! Without going into the details, which are personal, I’ll just say that I’m very happy since the store closed. I can still be reached at 845-657-6127 and reservoirmusic@gmail.com. The focus of the business is now buying and selling vintage guitars, doing repairs on all instruments, and rentals of band instruments, PA systems, and stages, so if anybody’s got any vintage gear to sell, get in touch, please. We will also still sell items on consignment, and we look forward to serving the needs of the Hudson valley musical community for another nine years, and beyond!

     What tasered me out of my moving stupor, and back into my life, and this column, was, of course, some very moving, inspirational, and flat out great Rock n Roll, from a member of a very elite club, the “greatest Rock n Roll frontmen in the world” club, former J. Geils Band lead singer, Peter Wolf! WDST Radio Woodstock presented Peter and his top shelf band at The Bearsville Theater last night! Inertia almost kept me home, but I couldn’t shake the feeling that this was a show I had to see, and I was right! Peter and the band were just too good to not write about, so here we are!

     Driving over to the theater, I was a little worried about the nature of the music that Peter might present. You see, the early J. Geils Band was one of the hardest rockin’ blues and rock bands that America’s ever produced! Their first two albums, with songs like “Cruising for Love”, “Floyd’s Hotel”, “Homework”, “First I Look at the Purse”, and “Lookin’ for a Love”, both kick serious ass, and so does their first live album, “Full House”, but as time went on, the band became more Pop, less Rock, until, by the late 1970’s and early 80’s, they went full on Pop with songs like, “Love Stinks”, “Centerfold”, and “Freeze Frame”. This was not my favorite J. Geils period, but these songs were all huge radio hits! From what I’ve heard, this musical direction was the cause of the split in the Geils Band songwriting team, with Peter continuing to favor the Rock and RnB roots that the band came of age with!

     Wolf left the band in 1983. His first solo endeavor, “Lights Out”, written with the great Don Covay (Hitchhike, Chain of Fools), attempted a return to form, but still had a Pop sensibility to it, IMHO! So, I didn’t know what to expect. Would I get the hard drivin’, blues and RnB based, rocker of the early J. Geils Band, or the somewhat more subdued popmeister of the 1980’s? I hadn’t heard much of Wolf after his early solo hits (to be fair, I also stopped listening to the radio around this time) and I didn’t know what to expect.

     As I drove up to the theater with my windows down to let in the unseasonably warm night air, the band had just started their first song, and it sounded pretty darn rockin’! So far, so good. As I stood on the porch talking to my friend, Gary McKeever, I heard the band launch into “Homework”, the Otis Rush tune that was a mainstay of the early J. Geils Band, but, oh no, they were doing it as a Country Blues, almost always a sign that an artist has mellowed out, and is not gonna rock!

      I almost didn’t go in, but I decided to put my preconceptions aside, and let the music speak for itself, and I am so glad I did! The first two songs I heard were new songs that hearkened back to Exile era Stones, and that’s never a bad thing! Rockin’ along in a relaxed groove that wouldn’t quit, Peter and his outstanding band were winning me over. Then they launched into “Cry One More Time”, a song from the second J. Geils Band album, “The Morning After”, that was covered by Gram Parsons and Emmylou Harris on Gram’s first solo record, “GP”. They had me!

     From there, Wolf went on to reveal his newly reinvented self, as a fully matured rocker who encompasses all forms of music, my favorite kind of musician! Next up was a cover of Bill Monroe’s “When my Blue Moon Turns to Gold”! What’s this? Peter Wolf, doing Country and Bluegrass? Yup, but it all rocked! As if to drive home the point, the next song was “Love Stinks” done as a Bluegrass tune. Killer! I suddenly loved this song that had never really done anything for me before!

     Wolf, looking like an elegantly wasted vampire, prowled the stage with a presence
reserved only for the great Rock n Roll frontman, completely relaxed and in control, telling stories about Tennessee Williams and Bill Monroe, showing off the moves and vocal gymnastics that proved, once again, that this man is in the same league as Jagger, Iggy, Springsteen, and the great Soul singers that he draws inspiration from! And the band was right there with him! Every musician was right where they should be. Not a note was played that wasn’t required. The rhythm section couldn’t have been yanked out of the pocket with a crane (to paraphrase John Lennon talking about Ringo). The guitar solos were exquisite! The band played at a level commensurate with their leader. Two guitars, bass, drums, and keys. Classic!

     Now, in case anyone got the idea that Peter Wolf has lost touch with his RnB roots, with all this Country music creepin’ in, he channeled my favorite Soul singer of all time, Joe Tex, towards the end of the show, and then encored with a Gospel tinged RnB song called, “When Women Are Lonely”. Don’t that title tell you everything you need to know! You can almost hear the song from the title alone!

     The band got two or three encores from the appreciative audience. One of them was “Give it to Me”, the Geils Band hit from back in the day. As I was listening, I thought to myself, “Damn! This is as funky as anything Sly or War ever did”! And it was, proving that great artists can work in any genre of their art, and make it funky! Oops. I meant good. LOL!

     About four years ago, in a particularly bad year for Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Inductees, I wrote a column about ten artists who should be in The Hall, but aren’t. One of them was The J. Geils Band. Most of the rest have made it in, but the Geils Band, despite being amongst the finalists two years running, have still not been inducted!

     Peter’s two most critically acclaimed solo albums are 1998’s Fool’s Parade and 2002’s
Sleepless, which feature guest appearances from Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, and Steve Earle! Sleepless was named one of the 500 best albums of all time by Rolling Stone! The J. Geils Band albums I recommend are the ones mentioned here. And the Peter Wolf show that I recommend you seeing is the next show he does, anywhere near where you are!

     After the show, we hung out with Peter and his band for a while, and he seemed to be one of the most level headed and down to earth rock stars I’ve ever met (and I’ve met a lot of them). A genuinely nice guy, HE insisted on taking a picture with ME! That’s a rare commodity in the music business!

     Before I took my hiatus, I wanted to do one last column in which I profiled two young film makers, Justin Martinez and Kevin Smith, of Upstate Moving Images, who have lent their considerable talents to capturing images of new and up and coming bands, including my new band, Ghosts of Electricity. However, I hit a wall, and just couldn’t do them justice with my move on my mind. I really wanted to write their story for my first column back, but Peter Wolf hijacked me, so next week they will finally get their due. Look for it!

     And I would be remiss if I didn’t mention, that while I was on hiatus, we lost two of the
great ones, Phil Everly and Ray Price! What a legacy those two left behind! They will be
missed.

     Now for this week’s live music picks!
     Wednesday, February 26 – THE SECURITY PROJECT is a band consisting of former
members of King Crimson, Peter Gabriel’s band, and Lou Reed’s band, who’ve come together to play Peter Gabriel’s music, but more importantly, this is JERRY MAROTTA’S FIFTH ANNUAL 54th BIRTHDAY PARTY! Always a good scene and a fun time. Bearsville Theater.
     Thursday, February 27 – ‘MOJO’ MYLES MANCUSO, the steadily improving guitar wunderkind, at The Falcon in Marlborough.
     Friday, February 28 – Primus was a band that mixed humor with great songwriting and extreme musicianship. LES CLAYPOOL is their excellent and innovative leader and bass player. Claypool is certainly one of the best around on his instrument!  His DUO DE TWANG, obviously a two piece unit (bass and guitar), displays the virtuosity that has become Claypool’s, and Primus’ trademark. Personally, I think the band would be a little tighter and fuller sounding, if they became the Trio De Twang, and added a drummer, but they will astound you, amuse you, make you laugh, and you’ll leave the show knowing you’ve seen one, and maybe, two, of the Masters of their instrument! The show is already sold out, but they’ll probably be selling some tickets at the door. Bearsville Theater.
Also tonight, THE LARRY CAMPBELL AND TERESA WILLIAMS QUARTET at The Falcon. The band includes Byron Isaac and Justin Guip on bass and drums respectively. I don’t believe I’ve seen this particular configuration of Levon Helm Band members booked anywhere locally, so this is exciting! I could watch and listen to Larry all night! Teresa has an awesome voice, and the rhythm section ain’t no slouches! I think the music at The Falcon starts early, so you just might be able to see this show and still make it to Bearsville in time for Duo De Twang! Check showtimes with the venues.
      Saturday, March 1 – Hooray! February’s over! Spring is only 3 weeks away! Tonight, BOB WEIR AND RATDOG stop by The Capitol Theatre in Port Chester for the first of two nights, concluding tomorrow. Up in Woodstock, the fantastic hard rock/prog rock band, 3, returns to The Bearsville Theater. 3 display a tightness and cohesiveness that belies their tender years. They’re freakin’ great! Joey Eppard and Billy Riker wail away on their guitars, while drummer, Chris Gartmann, channels John Bonham, and Daniel Grimsland goes head to head with his bandmates, while still holding down the bottom and looking like the star that he is! I have a feeling this will be a great show!
     Sunday, March 2 – At Bearsville Theater, the dynamic, amazing, and always entertaining BROTHER JOCEPHUS AND THE LOVE REVOLUTION return for an afternoon show that’s being called the FIRST ANNUAL WOODSTOCK MARDI GRAS PARTY. Miss this one at your peril!
Club Helsinki in Hudson is a beautiful venue that is well worth taking the drive for, especially when THE NORTH MISSISSIPPI ALL STARS are playing! They rocked Bearsville last year, and now they return to the HV for a show at Helsinki.
     Monday, March 3 – At The Falcon, the very talented SIMI STONE AND HER BAND start a March residency, which, I assume, will be every Monday. You owe it to yourself to catch at least one of these, and I suggest you go to an early one, because you’ll probably want to go back! This lady is going places!
In the city, we finally have a show! I guess it’s the mid-Winter lull in the concert biz, but the city is dead this week! Except, of course, for tonight, when New Paltz resident and fearless leader of Americana darlings, Old 97’s, RHETT MILLER, returns to City Winery for one night!
     Tuesday, March 4 - You know, there weren’t a lot of shows this week, but what there was made up for quantity with quality! Any of this week’s shows could be a Pick of the Week in a normal week, so LOS LOBOS emerging as the only PotW, tells you how special I think this show will be! You just don’t see these guys playing as intimate a venue as Bearsville Theater very often. If you only go out one night this week, this, is that night! This is also a special Mardi Gras show!
     Thursday, March 6 – We end the week with POPA CHUBBY at The Falcon, playing the music of Jimi Hendrix, in something he’s dubbed, “Electric Chubbyland”! Sounds good to me!
     
     Have a great week, and I’ll see you here next week. Good night and good luck!

     


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Reservoir Music Notes - Live Music Picks

11/6/2013

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     It’s hard to believe that we still have almost 7 weeks before the actual start of Winter! I suspected this would be an early, cold Winter when I saw my first red and gold leaves in the middle of July! Prior to the last really bad Winter, about 3 years ago, I saw my first red leaf on July 26. This year it was about two weeks earlier than that! Could be a clue, so get ready for a long, cold, snowy Winter, and for everyone who doesn’t ski, snowboard, or indulge in other Winter sports and activities, sorry to be the bearer of bad news. Of course, the good news is it will probably be over by April! Ha ha!

     Since there’s nothing earth shattering that happened in the music world since Lou Reed died, and since my deadline is looming, and since I do have a life with it’s attendant demands, this week’s column is gonna get right down to live music picks. Here we go.

     Wednesday, November 6 – PHIL LESH AND FRIENDS continue their five night run at Best Buy Theater in Times Square, finishing up on Sunday.

     Thursday, November 7 – Saturday night I was at a party and SPIV UK were playing. I had heard a lot about these guys and was interested in seeing them play. Well, they were pretty damn good, so I’m recommending their Artist in Residence series at Bearsville Theater, every Thursday this month, except, of course, for Thanksgiving, which falls on the 28th this year. So that would leave November 7, 14, and 21 for you to check out Spiv UK, who by the way, are a local band! If you’re in the city tonight, THE B-52’S are at Brooklyn Bowl, and if you feel like taking a drive, the great MARTY STUART is at Infinity Hall in Norfolk, Connecticut. BTW, Marty’s guitarist, Kenny Vaughn, is the best guitar player in Nashville, which is to say, one of the best anywhere!

     Friday, November 8 – The superlative OS MUTANTES stop by Le Poisson Rouge in Manhattan to blow a few minds, just like they did at Bearsville Theater a few months ago. The great roots rock band, LUCERO, are at Terminal 5, HUGH POOL is at Rodeo Bar, and this week’s Pick of the Week, which I was gonna keep to myself, but no one’s getting in anyway, so I might as well let the cat out of the bag, is RONNIE WOOD and MICK TAYLOR at The Cutting Room tonight and tomorrow, with an unrelated and separate early show by Jefferson Airplane founder, MARTY BALIN, tonight only. Both Mick and Ronnie shows are completely sold out!

     Saturday, November 9 – Only game in town tonight is ex-Moody Blues lead singer and Wings band member, DENNY LAINE, presenting an Abbey Road program that will include the album, Abbey Road, in it’s entirety, as well as many other hits recorded at the world famous studio, and Denny’s own hits with The Moody Blues and Wings.

     Sunday, November 10- Wind down the weekend with A BENEFIT CONCERT FOR KWASI LESLIE, a young man battling Leukemia. Featured performers will be ALEXIS P. SUTER, AMY HELM, JOEY EPPARD, CHRIS GARTMANN, RAS T, and more. Please support this worthy cause, and have fun at the same time!

     Monday, November 11 – There’s something called DYLAN FEST NYC at Bowery Ballroom tonight and tomorrow, and ELVIS COSTELLO is also playing at The Capitol Theater in Port Chester tonight and tomorrow.

     Tuesday, November 12 – JOHN FOGERTY at The Beacon Theater tonight and tomorrow, is my second Pick of the Week!

     Wednesday, November 13 – CHRIS CORNELL of Soundgarden at UPAC, Kingston.

     Thursday, November 14 – ELVIS COSTELLO at UPAC.

     There’s your week in music. Enjoy!

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Reservoir Music Notes - Lou Reed, Grateful Dead, Cat Review of Papa Roach and Pop Evil, Live Music Picks

10/31/2013

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Picture
     Well, the big news this week is that Lou Reed passed away yesterday. Although I was not a big fan of his later work, his immortality is assured by his output with The Velvet Underground alone, not to mention the early classic solo work, like Rock and Roll Animal, with it’s awesome live version of “Sweet Jane”, featuring some of the most mind-blowing guitar work ever recorded, played by Dick Wagner!

     Reed worked with many greats of the ceative world – David Bowie, Andy Warhol, Mick Ronson, photographer Bob Rock, and Metallica, (with whom he recorded his final album, 2011’s Lulu), amongst others, and was inducted into The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as a member of The Velvet Underground, in 1996.

     About The Velvet Underground, Brian Eno has said, “The Velvet Underground didn’t sell that many albums, but everyone who bought one went on to form a band”, cementing their reputation as one of Rock and Roll’s most influential bands!

     Reed was famously quoted as saying, “One chord is fine. Two chords are pushing it. Three chords and you’re into jazz”, which is a philosophy that I just have to love! My guitar player, Gene Geary, who also passed away two years ago, and who I wrote about in this column several times, including when he died and again, on the one year anniversary of his death, would also have loved that quote. Interestingly, I had no intention of bringing Gene into this week’s column, but that quote is so something we would have celebrated, that I HAD to mention him, and inadvertently was reminded that the two year anniversary of Gene’s death has also just passed. I miss him as a musician and friend. There’s no one left to rock out with at a million miles an hour anymore! But, I digress.

     Reed’s body of work included 49 albums (slightly more than half of them recorded live), and forays into the worlds of literature, photography, and theater! He was knighted in France and performed for Pope John Paul II in 1986!

     The cause of death was not known at press time, but he did undergo a liver transplant last May. Lou Reed is survived by his wife, performance artist Laurie Anderson, who he married in 2008, after a whirlwind 13 year courtship! Reactions poured in from all the creative worlds that Lou Reed ventured into, but the one that I like is from The Who, who wished Lou “a walk on the peaceful side”. I can live with that! Lou Reed, 1942-2013. RIP!

     In other news, Move Me Brightly: Celebrating Jerry Garcia’s 70th Birthday, hits stores this week. The movie, directed by Justin Kreutzmann, son of Dead drummer, Bill Kreutzmann, features documentary footage of a 5 hour concert that Bob Weir held last August (Jerry was a Leo) at his TRI Studios in California, in honor of what would have been Garcia’s 70th birthday. The show featured members of Tom Petty and The Heartbreakers, Phish, The Hold Steady, and Vampire Weekend. There are also interviews with people who knew Garcia well, including his brother, who famously cut off Jerry’s finger in a childhood accident! Complete track list for the DVD is below.

"Cumberland Blues"/"Going Down the Road Feelin' Bad"/"Mission in the Rain"/"Shakedown Street"/"He's Gone"/"Eyes of the World"/"Terrapin Station"/"Days Between"/"Franklin's Tower"/"U.S. Blues"/Bonus Tracks - "Friend of the Devil"/"Bird Song">"New Speedway Boogie"

     In other Dead news, Delaware brewery, Dogfish Head is set to release American Beauty pale ale this fall. Sounds yummy!

     Regular readers of this column will be familiar with Catharina Christiana, of C3 Photography, who often works with me at shows. Cat, as she is known, wrote a guest review for us, of a show she attended this week. So, without further ado, here it is.

Papa Roach with Pop Evil at Starland Ballroom
Catharina Christiana

It was as if I was making a deal with the devil as I was listening to Pop Evil dominating the stage at Starland Ballroom in Sayreville, New Jersey last Wednesday. Pop Evil put on a performance that’d make you forget you were there for the headliner, Papa  Roach. No qualms of disagreement came from the crowd when lead singer Leigh Kakaty disses Justin Bieber and mentions how we all need to stick together as a community, all the rock/metal heads of America because this is the real music that will thrive and live on. And as if slighting a pop icon wasn’t enough, he stood on the hands of the audience that supported and lifted him as he was screaming and singing his lungs out for such hit songs of theirs as “Deal with the Devil”, “Trenches” and “Sick Sense” from their new album, “Onyx”. Pop Evil got the crowd revved up and ready for one of my all time favorite bands, the legendary Papa Roach. Vocalist Jacoby Shaddix came out already grooving and bopping his head ready to take the stage with a mind-blowing performance like always. He belched great hits like “Leader of the Broken Hearts”, “Where Did the Angels Go?”, and “Still Swingin” off their latest album “The Connection”. With guitarist Jerry Horton wailing on guitar and Jacoby singing, spitting, and spraying the audience with I lost count of how many water bottles, they gave a performance that left your ears ringing and body still shaking to the beats and tunes until the next day. Papa Roach and Pop Evil are bands definitely worth checking out and if you haven’t already heard of their music, now is your time to! Seeing them in concert is always worth the trip, money, and bruises you might face in the mosh pit of people.

Thanks for sending us that review Cat!

     Now for something completely different, my live music picks for this week!

     Wednesday, October 30 – If you’re in the Hudson Valley, the only place to be tonight is BSP Lounge in Kingston, for the final night of THE DUKE MCVINNIE BAND’s October residency. This will be your last chance to catch one of the most unusual and unique bands around, at the best place in town, so, see you there? Course if you’re in the city, you’ve got either rap and cultural icons, CYPRESS HILL, at Best Buy Theater, or YONDER MOUNTAIN STRING BAND with THE FOUNDING FATHERS opening, at Brooklyn Bowl, but my own personal favorite would be BRYAN AND THE HAGGARDS, a jazz group led by a sax player, who do nothing but Merle Haggard songs, who’re playing at The Stone on Avenue C! Not that I’ve heard these guys, or even heard OF them. I just love the concept! They’ve got three CD’s out, so I am going to check them out when I get a chance.

     Thursday, October 31 – Happy Halloween! THE LINDSEY WEBSTER BAND will be performing a tribute to Led Zeppelin at The Bearsville Theater, with guitarists MYLES MANCUSO, VITO PETROCITTO, and MATT FINCK duping Jimmy Page’s gazillion tracked guitar tracks! Further downstate, THE JACK GRACE BAND and HUGH POOL are at Towne Crier in Beacon, and even further downstate, PHIL LESH AND FRIENDS return to The Capitol Theatre in Port Chester for the first of four nights.

     Friday, November 1 – The great, I mean seriously great, STEVE WYNN AND THE MIRACLE 3, are at Bowery Electric tonight, and this is definitely this week’s Pick of the Week! These guys gave a performance worthy of Jimi at Monterey, when I saw them at Livestock a few years ago. If you are anywhere near Manhattan tonight, and you don’t go to this show, you are an idiot! Up in our beautiful and glorious Hudson Valley, THE SLIDE BROTHERS are at The Falcon in Marlboro, and ABRAHAM AND THE GROOVE, a new rock, soul, and funk band featuring Abraham, who CAN sing and front a band, and tonight, drummer Tony Parker’s brother will be joining the band for a double drumming experience that should establish the groove quite nicely, thank you!

     Saturday, November 2 – Double drumming acts two nights in a row at The Bearsville Theater? Whoda thunk it? But, yes, it’s true! DEAD ON LIVE return to Woodstock for an acoustic set with their two drummers, and they were very good the last time they were here! In the city, STEVE EARLE is at Town Hall.

     Sunday, November 3 – The legendary MERLE HAGGARD rides into UPAC in Kingston, and the somewhat legendary ARLEN ROTH is at The Falcon.

     Monday, November 4 – THE HAG (Merle Haggard) moves over to Tarrytown Music Hall. Wonder if he knows about Bryan and The Haggards?

     Tuesday, November 5 – PHIL LESH AND FRIENDS move into the city for the first night of five at Best Buy Theater.

     That’s it! Remain calm and carry on!

  




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Papa Roach and Pop Evil at Starland Ballroom. Photography by Catharina Christiana, C3 Photography

10/31/2013

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Reservoir Music Notes

10/24/2013

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     Damn! What a couple of weeks of tech problems! Some of you may have noticed that I’ve been absent from the paper for the past two weeks. Well, here’s why.

     As most of you know, this newspaper hits the stands on Thursday every week. My deadline, however, is Friday. I usually push the envelope to the limit by handing in my copy on Monday afternoon, just in time for the printer. Barely! This allows me to cover the weekend’s events for you in a timely fashion.

     So, for the issue dated 10/10/13, I was furiously typing away on Monday morning, October 7. I finished the column and was in the process of proofreading it, when the lights flashed and my internet service went out! Never lost electric, mind you, just internet, which meant that in the final seconds before sending that week’s column, I lost the ability to submit it! I was going to take my computer somewhere where there was still service, but just at that moment, the newspaper lost their service!

     Okay, so that sucked, but I figured The Townsman could put a notice in the paper, and direct everybody to one of the websites where the column is usually posted Tuesday night at Midnight (technically Wednesday morning), but here’s the rub. Tuesday afternoon, the power supply for my computer crapped out, and since the battery is useless, of course, I now could not turn on my computer, meaning I could not get to the one place in the world where that week’s column was! Had I been able to send it anywhere, I could have used that email to retrieve and post the blog.

     But it was not to be! I immediately ordered a new power supply, but it took a week to get here, and during that time, my computer was a paperweight! So, no column last week, ANYWHERE! Thankfully, it’s all been sorted out, and we’re back to our regularly scheduled programming.

      During my computer outage, I managed to catch a bit of Ginger Baker’s last night at The Iridium in Manhattan. Ginger seemed tired and ready to finish up the night and go home, but it was still great to see the grouchy old curmudgeon in such an intimate venue. My thanks to Iridium manager, Grace Blake, for her generous hospitality and good cheer.

     Now for this week’s live music picks.

     Wednesday, October 23 – Although I respect BB KING immensely, I am not a huge fan, but he’s playing AT BB KING’S in Manhattan! Surely this rates as an event worth seeing, and don’t forget folks, BB recently celebrated his 80th birthday, and he may grow tired of touring someday soon. If you are a fan, you’ll probably never get a chance to see him in a more appropriate venue!

     Thursday, October 24 – BLACK CROWES, fresh off a four night run at The Capitol Theatre in Port Chester, now bring their show to Terminal 5 in Manhattan for an additional four nights, starting tonight, and continuing Saturday, Sunday, and Tuesday, October 26, 27, and 29. This is an acoustic show, so the energy level may be down a notch from an electric Crowes show, (which, take it from me, is one of the highest around, especially if Jackie Greene is playing guitar with them), but with a group of this caliber, an acoustic show will probably be better and more rockin’, than most groups best nights, electric or otherwise! Also tonight at Lincoln Center, in the David Rubenstein Atrium, a free concert by a fantastic sacred steel group, THE CAMPBELL BROTHERS! The Campbell Brothers are one of the few groups in this tradition of using the pedal steel guitar for church music, that have taken it to the outside world (the other notable one being, of course, The Slide Brothers, who have been mentored by Robert Randolph, the genre’s biggest star). This would be a must see for me if I was in the city!

Up in the ol’ Hudson Valley, an interesting group calling themselves THE LOST LEADERS is at The Falcon in Marlboro. The band consists of bassist Byron Isaacs (Levon Helm Band), Lee Falco (Connor Kennedy Band, and for my money, easily the best young drummer in the area), and singer and composer, Peter Cole, an Afro/World Music artist who’s a big star in Africa. This should be very interesting!

BSP Lounge in Kingston continue to impress with their bookings. Tonight, a band I’m not that familiar with, KURT VILE AND THE VIOLATORS. I’m just going on faith here, because I trust BSP to only book good music! The fact that KV and The Violators are at Terminal 5 in the city the next night, also shows me that these guys can bring it, so, see you there!

     Friday, October 25 – Slide guitar master, SONNY LANDRETH, at Iridium. This will be amazing! The room is tiny, and Sonny’s huge! He’ll probably blow the hinges off the doors! Or he might just tone it down a bit. Either way, you wanna be there! Over in Brooklyn, feminist punk icon, Kathleen Hanna, of Bikini Kill, brings her new project, THE JULIE RUIN, to The Music Hall of Williamsburg. In Kingston, BSP is having a pre-Halloween costume party with The Mid-Hudson Misfits roller derby team! Should be a hoot!

     Saturday, October 26 – The weekend’s in full swing tonight, with shows all over New York, both up and downstate! In Woodstock, The 2013 WOODSTOCK INVITATIONAL LUTHIERS SHOWCASE will feature the best acoustic instrument makers in the world, as well as continuous music all weekend, special shows at night, workshops, and other events, culminating with a show closing concert with LARRY CAMPBELL, TERESA WILLIAMS, AND FRIENDS at 5PM on Sunday. Visit www.woodstockinvitational.com for more info and a complete schedule. JOE LOUIS WALKER, who’s been busy mentoring Murali Coryell’s career, is at The Falcon in Marlboro, SOUTHSIDE JOHNNY AND THE POOR FOOLS at The Towne Crier in Beacon, and the real Halloween party at BSP in Kingston. Downstate, we’ve got THE FAB FAUX performing the music of George Harrison at The Beacon Theater, and great R n B singer, JAMES HUNTER at BB King’s! He’s the real thing folks!

     Sunday, October 27 – SONNY LANDRETH pulls into The Towne Crier for a night, RYAN MONTBLEAU is at Joe’s Pub in Manhattan, and the WOODSTOCK INVITATIONAL AFTER-PARTY is  at The Colony Café in Woodstock!

     Monday, October 28 – I’m recommending two wildly differing shows tonight, something that brings me great joy! Glam-Punk icons, THE NEW YORK DOLLS will rock Irving Plaza, and ALAN JACKSON, one of the very few current Country acts who doesn’t suck, is at Carnegie Hall. This has to be a highlight of his career, and I’m betting he’ll perform like it!

     Tuesday, October 29 – All the action tonight is down in the city. THE TUBES are at BB King’s and YONDER MOUNTAIN STRING BAND with THE FOUNDING FATHERS opening, are at Brooklyn Bowl. This will be a great Bluegrass show, and BTW, Founding Fathers is made up of former Infamous Stringduster members who didn’t dig Nashville, so it’s gonna be a goodun!

     Wednesday, October 30 – Rap and cultural icons, CYPRESS HILL, are at Best Buy Theater. Hip Hop fan or not, these guys will be a blast! In Kingston, the great DUKE MCVINNIE BAND concludes their October residency at BSP Lounge.

     Thursday, October 31 – Happy Halloween, and there’s two ways to have fun tonight. Three, if you count the Halloween parade in Manhattan, four if you count the Halloween parade in Woodstock, but we’ll just stick to music! PHIL LESH brings his FAMILY BAND into The Capitol Theatre in Port Chester for the first of four straight nights, concluding Sunday. At The Bearsville Theater, THE LINDSEY WEBSTER BAND celebrates Led Zeppelin with a costume party and performance!

Joining Lindsey will be her usual cohorts on keyboards and drums respectively, Keith Slattery and Dan Hickey, with three special guitarists, Myles Mancuso, Vito Petrocitto, and Matt Finck. I guess they needed three guitarists to duplicate Jimmy Page’s parts. Not surprising, since they’re triple tracked (or more) on the Led Zep records.

     Alright! Hopefully, no more tech glitches. See you next week!

     

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Reservoir Music Notes - Billy Joe Shaver at B Side Ballroom, CBGB Festival, Live Music Picks

10/17/2013

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PictureBilly Joe Shaver at B Side Ballroom
     Well, I was right! I loved the Billy Joe Shaver show at B Side Ballroom in Oneonta, and I love the B Side Ballroom! What a cool venue! The owners, Wayne and Rebecca, are lovely, as is Billy Joe Shaver! I’m gonna tell you a story. I met Billy Joe once in Austin. When he told me he was glad to meet me, I really believed it, because he said it like he really meant it! I was impressed with his vibe, too. He was glowing with something, not sure what. Love, maybe. After the show at B Side, I went over to say hello. Billy Joe immediately greeted me warmly and asked how I’ve been. He remembered me from a 15 minute meeting, once, ten years ago! See what I mean? The man is an amazing character, who’s LIVED! He told stories about his son dying, about shooting a guy at a bar in Texas, about Willie Nelson, music, you name it! Billy Joe Shaver is a wellspring of stories and music! I guess that’s what happens once you’ve been to Georgia on a fast train!

     He brought his band with him, which was a pleasant surprise, and they rocked! Great playing, guys! Former Georgia Satellite Keith Christopher was there, and sat in on guitar, and I spotted some Horseshoe Lounge Playboys in the crowd, as well as my buddy John Madeo, who hosts The Little Delaware Jamboree on WIOX, 91.3 FM on Monday nights, and on whose show I am a frequent guest. Also on the web at www.wioxradio.org.

     So, it was a fun night rockin’ out with Billy Joe, and I hope to return to the B Side frequently. Please support this place if you can. It’s awesome, and we need it to keep on doing what it’s doing for live music in Oneonta!

     This week in the city, the second annual CBGB Music and Film Festival takes over the town from Tuesday through Sunday, with over 500 bands at almost 200 venues all across Manhattan and Brooklyn, and over 200 speakers and films, for a total of over 700 live events, culminating in a free concert in Times Square (see below) with My Morning Jacket, The Wallflowers, Grizzly Bear, and more bands and DJ’s! More info at www.cbgb.com!

     Now for this week’s live music picks!

     Wednesday, October 9 – The immortal GINGER BAKER and his new band, JAZZ CONFUSION, with saxophonist PEEWEE ELLIS, starts a 5 night run at Iridium in Manhattan. It looks like the former Cream drummer has put together a Jazz band, and has threatened to perform classics by Monk, Bird, Miles, and Trane! Well, he really always was a Jazz drummer! Nightly through October 13. Also at Leftfield on Ludlow Street, Hudson Valley resident GENYA RAVAN, formerly of Ten Wheel Drive and Goldie and The Gingerbreads, will be holding court with former Dead Boys guitarist, CHEETAH CHROME, who Genya produced for the debut Dead Boys album. Should be a great reunion! RODRIGUEZ is an artist with an amazing story! The Mexican-American singer/songwriter was signed to a major label and released two albums at the beginning of the 1970’s. Both albums stiffed and he was dropped from the label, after which he dropped out of the music business and lived on the brink of poverty for the next thirty years, doing demolition work and attending Wayne State University, where he earned a BA degree. Unknown to Rodriguez, during this time he became a platinum selling artist in South Africa and also very popular in Australia. In 1998, two South African fans discovered Rodriguez alive and well and living in Detroit. This started a musical comeback the likes of which has never been seen in the music business! In 2012, a documentary was made called “Looking for Sugar Man”, which won numerous awards around the world, including the Academy Award for best documentary! Rodriguez is now enjoying a resurgence of his career and is playing at The Barclay Center in Brooklyn tonight, and Radio City Music Hall tomorrow night! Radio City is sold out, but you can still snag tickets for the Barclay Center. Google him, visit his websites, and check him out on YouTube. Even if you don’t go, it’s an amazing story that will brighten your day!

     Thursday, October 10 – If you can’t get a ticket for the sold out RODRIGUEZ show at Radio City, try STEVE KIMOCK AND BERNIE WORRELL at Brooklyn Bowl. Kimock is a veteran of numerous jam bands and Worrell is a member of the Parlia-Funkadelicment Thang, AKA The Parliament Funkadelic Musical Collective, and a former member of Talking Heads.

     Friday, October 11 – The weekend starts with a bang, or several bangs, to be more precise! PUSS N BOOTS, a little Americana trio put together by Norah Jones, ex- Grace Potter and The Nocturnals bassist, Catherine Popper, and former Ryan Adams and The Cardinals member, Sasha Dobson, (and who my band, The Cheating Hearts, shared a bill with last year at Hill Country Barbecue in Manhattan), will be at Bowery Electric in Manhattan, with three other bands, all of whom will probably be good! (BTW, Norah listened and danced through the entire Cheating Hearts set, and then told us we were “great”)! Also tonight in Manhattan, the reunited Buena Vista Social Club, now known as ORQUESTA BUENA VISTA SOCIAL CLUB, is at Jazz at Lincoln Center for the first of two nights, counter-culture demi-god, JOHN SINCLAIR (Google him) at Cutting Room, and the last surviving master of his style, TONY BENNETT, is at Radio City Music Hall! Up in the Catskills, RICKIE LEE JONES will perform at a breast cancer benefit at The Bearsville Theater in Woodstock, and The O+ FESTIVAL kicks off a 3 day weekend in Kingston. More info at www.opositivefestival.org.

     Saturday, October 12 – We’re all about Manhattan tonight! Woodstock local hero, SIMONE FELICE is down in the city at Rockwood Music Hall, mega influential rock band, THE MEAT PUPPETS are at Brooklyn Bowl, FUZZ, who I never heard of, but have been favorably compared to Blue Cheer, are at Mercury Lounge, and MY MORNING JACKET, THE WALLFLOWERS, GRIZZLY BEAR, and several more bands, are at a place called Times Square!??? Outdoor show? Yup! It’s part of the CBGB Festival. It’s a free, all day show, so, enjoy!

     Sunday, October 13 – RICKIE LEE JONES at Towne Crier in Beacon, DIANA KRALL at UPAC in Kingston, BEARSVILLE SESSIONS 8 will focus on ONE HIT WONDERS at The Bearsville Theater, and in the city, awesome Americana rock band, RECKLESS KELLY, is at Bowery Ballroom, and HAWKWIND, who were sort of the British version of The Grateful Dead, are at Gramercy Theater!

     Tuesday, October 15 – MARK LANEGAN, of the fantastic grunge rock band, Screaming Trees, at Gramercy Theater, and an odd coupling of Rock Royalty, JEFF BECK AND BRIAN WILSON at The Beacon Theater!

     Wednesday, October 16 – GLENN TILLBROOK, late of the band, Squeeze, at Stage 48 on, where else, 48th Street.

     Thursday, October 17 – CBGB’S FILM makes its Hudson Valley premier at Bearsville Theater.

     That’s it for another one! See you next week!


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Sean Lennon and Charlotte Kemp Wuhl with their band, The Ghost of a Sabre Tooth Tiger, onstage at BSP Lounge, Kingston, NY, 9/28/13. All photos by John Gullo.

10/1/2013

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    Fred Perry is the owner of Reservoir Music Center on Route 28 in Shokan, NY. More extensive biographical information is on the "About Us" page of this website

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