Sunday, December 29, 2013

The Beet Seeking Missile's Top 4 Music movies of 2013

In 2013, I saw four really amazing movies that had music at their core. If you haven't seen them, give 'em a whirl when you get a chance.

1. "20 feet from stardom"-If you've never heard of Merry Clayton or Darlene Love, chances are you're like the rest of us. But once you discover that you've forever sang along to their vocals on many of the famous songs they've been a part of, you'll be fascinated. In this documentary, the lives of several in-demand backup singers are examined in-depth, through interviews and performances.These are women of extraordinary talent who are in high demand as backups, but some have bigger dreams that may or may not ever be fulfilled.

1. (Tie). "Sound City"-Another fascinating music documentary. This one is about the rich history of a studio in Van Nuys that artists gravitated towards for years because it had one of the best custom analog sound boards in the nation. The Neve console is one of the main characters in this great documentary, directed by Dave Grohl of Nirvana/Foo Fighters fame. "It's mathematically crisp and very solid. It's like a tank," says Neil Young. When digital recording dried up business, Grohl intervened and saved the board he loves so much. Prior to this, the story is told in a chronological narrative that  highlights some of the more interesting careers that have intersected with the board in Sound City, including Rick Springfield, Rage Against the Machine and Fleetwood Mac. You'll be amazed at how many albums that you own were recorded on the Neve.

2. (Song for Marion) Unfinished Song-An endearing British story about doting, but grumpy Arthur (Terence Stamp-General Zod from Superman 2), a devoted husband who takes his ailing wife (Vanessa Redgrave) to the local community center every week to sing in a senior choir. The twist is that the young choir director (Gemma Arterton) teaches these folks songs like Salt N Pepa's "Let's talk about sex" and Motorhead's "Ace of Spades." Arthur is reluctant to participate, but when Marion's health takes a turn, he rediscovers his love for music. Stamp's best performance since he played Ralph/Bernadette in  "The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert."

3. Place beyond the pines-This isn't a movie about music per se, but it's the debut soundtrack by Mike Patton (Mr. Bungle, Tomahawk). Patton pens a few moody originals including "The weight of consequences,"  and "Contrapositive. " However, he shines with the array of classics he selects, which include a Burt Bacharach tune and a number by Ennio Morricone, whom he honored on the great Fantomas album Directors Cut. The movie itself is the tale of a circus motorcycle stunt rider (Ryan Gosling in a great bad boy performance) who becomes a bank robber and the cop (Bradley Cooper) with whom his life intertwines. Ray Liotta is disturbing in a supporting role as a bad cop. He plays Hall and Oates "Maneater" on his car stereo to get in the mood for malice.

Monday, December 23, 2013

Whatever you do--Don't play Hall and Oates on the jukebox!

Could an innocuous ballad from an early 70's album incite barroom violence?

On a recent Friday night, a friend and I sought out a holiday pint or two. We went to a local tavern called Hilltop and ordered up a Mermaid's Red, a tasty red by the Coronado. By the time we were ready for a another great San Diego offering called Green Flash, we had had our fill of the contemptible music blaring out of the joint's jukebox.
So, the Beet Seeking Missile took the initiative and attempted to remedy the situation. Not the biggest fan of the current jukebox choices, which ranged from Nu Country to Kid Rock to today's big Rap Hits, I selected a brief, but wide-range of favorites that caught my fancy-the songs ranged from Primus' "My name is Mud" to Talib Kweli's "Hot Thang" to finally, "Abandoned Luncheonette" a rare old gem by Hall and Oates, who are favorites of my drinking buddy Juba.
With these newfangled digital jukeboxes, the upcoming que is displayed and it showed that my choices were plagued to stew behind more of aforementioned tortuous tunes.
I shared my frustration with a guy in a Dodgers hat who was sitting with his girlfriend and then innocently I followed up with the question. "So what do you listen to?"
The Dodger hat guy looked at me and said, "Nu Country and Kid Rock, kind of what like is playing right now.""
"Oh," I replied, when I could see that that he was serious, "I hear the ratio of women to men at a Kid Rock show is similar to that of women to men in Caracas, Venezuela." The guy and his girl got a chuckle out of that and then we proceeded to talk about baseball while I impatiently waited for my tunes to play.
During this interim, a pair of guys hovered near the bar in separate factions. The first guy, who looked a little too happy, was sitting with a couple and their female friend, who firmly insisted, "He's not with me" when I inquired. The other guy gave off an agitated vibe when he ordered from the bar on my other side.
As if by some divine intervention, Kid Rock's "Redneck Paradise" finally ended and on cue came Primus. Naturally, I did a dance/mosh of joy through the patrons, which was followed by a little head-nodding when Kweli played. Juba was surprised by the Hall and Oates choice and started singing the song at the bar, when, all of sudden, the guy who wasn't with the people at the bar and the agitated guy were nose-to-nose in the middle of the place. The guy who wasn't with the people says something in a sinister whisper to the agitated guy and before the Hall and Oates song can get to the second chorus, SMASH the agitated guy cracks a beer glass over the other guy's head. He drops to the ground. The bouncer promptly 86's the agitated guy (a regular) and I help up the guy who got cracked across the skull. No blood, just wounded pride. He too is quicky 86'd by the bouncer.
Just goes to show you that you gotta be careful where you play Hall and Oates on a jukebox.

Sunday, August 18, 2013

Matisyahu and Who??

Matisyahu underwent a transformation a couple of years ago. After achieving fame early in his career as a bearded Hassidic reggae rapper, and becoming a darling in the Jewish community, the singer caused a stir when he shaved his beard and began performing without a yarlmuke. However, the larger conversion was in his music, when the The Dub Trio became his full-time band. Last year's uplifting Spark Seeker, arguably the best album of 2012, was buoyed by an expansive sound where ancient sounds are blended with electro and  fused with hip-hop and reggae.
The singer's live shows, always funky and inspirational, have evolved into a masterful display of yin and yang between Matisyahu  and the Trio, who constantly tweak arrangements while keeping the melodies intact. The Beet Seeking Missile has seen the group a remarkable five times in the past 13 months and each show has been different. "We're just his backup band," said Dub Trio bassist Stu Brooks, with a sly hint of modesty, when we talked to him in Sacramento before a show last week. But for all the band's anonimity, they are regarded around the music world as a technically masterful threesome, who seem to be able to read each other's minds on stage.
Matisyahu at the Harmony Festival last fall.

Bassist Stu Brooks

 Starting as a headliner at High Sierra in 2012, where the band were mystical and hypnotic to last night's show at the Greek Theater in Berkeley, where at one point, a friend pointed out that they were "rocking out like the Smashing Pumpkins." The band not only varies their set lists, but I can honestly say that in the five outings, they haven't played any song exactly the same twice. That is a tribute to both the singer and the band. It's not going to far out on a limb to say that this is the most versatile band on the road.

Thursday, August 8, 2013

Dirty Heads-Ace of Spades 7/31/13

Duddy B


The Dirty Heads brought hip-hop/reggae/rock madness to Sacramento's Ace of Spades on July 31, 2013. Even though guitarist/vocalist Duddy B.'s mobility was hampered by a seriously injured foot (ATV accident), he and the rest of the group brought their A game to town in a show that featured plenty of tunes from both Any Port in a Storm and Cabin by the Sea. They also previewed a cut or two from their forthcoming acoustic record. Top cuts-"Hipster," "Check the level," "Lay me down."


Dirty J getting lost in the moment.
Add caption



Monday, July 29, 2013

Leather

She said her name was Leather. A few in the small hiking group turned with bemused looks toward the petite African-American lady with the runner's hat and big glasses as she introduced herself. I walked alongside her and asked her about herself. She spoke carefully from behind the glasses that were bigger than her face. In an endearing, nerdy voice, she told me she was working on an M.A. in Social Work and that these hikes were a good respite from the burden of year-round coursework.
As the hike progressed, she told me about her dad's Creole roots and the smells that would come from the kitchen when he cooked. About how she thought she dreamed in Italian, but later found out it was her son practicing opera during late night showers. Then the talk turned to the music that we listen to.
She turned the tables on the Beet Seeking Missile by asking, "Who is your favorite female singer of all time?" I hemmed for a second, hawed for another, before I semi-pandered her with an answer of Aretha and Ella. She stared at me for a second and then I added, "But Bjork has always blown me away." Her eyes lit up at that. She told me how she really liked the ever-evolving diminutive Icelandic singer.
Leather told me how she thought that Chaka Khan's jazz phase was her best, but that Chaka was pressured into going back to playing her popular songs. Somewhere along the line I mentioned James Brown once and then again.
"Wait," she stopped me. "You've now mentioned James Brown twice. That man was a despot." She proceeded to tell me how once when her ex-husband's band was opening for Brown in Oakland, that she had accompanied him while 8 months pregnant. She encountered Brown and his entourage rushing down a stairwell and they shoved her out of the way so hard that she went tumbling. Then, to her utter humiliation, they stopped and laughed at her when she reacted with fury. This was an anecdote that jibed with the biography I had recently finished on Brown. The dude was a little bit crazy, more so in his later years.
So I asked this fifty-something lady of color-"Who is your favorite band?" She turned to me and stated, very matter-of-factly. "Queens of the Stone Age. 
She told me how she had heard that Dave Grohl had played with the band. So she checked them out. She immediately loved the band and the songwriting of Josh Homme. She has gone to see them five times. "Sometimes it's sounds like a big wall of noise and I love it."
By then, the hike was nearing it's end, and I thanked Leather for the musical chat. Amazing what you'll hear when you talk to a stranger about music.....

Tuesday, June 4, 2013

Dimebag Darrell saves the day



Long may he shred!!!
  At Monday's end, the Beet Seeking Missile was feeling the effects of a long, hot, eventful weekend where good times with old friends was high on the priority list, while sleep ranked low.
Still, a run seemed like a good idea late on a breezy Monday afternoon in Sacramento. But even with this positive idea as a catalyst, motivation was nowhere to be found. Caffeine had been deeply sourced all day long. Mental fatigue was setting in. How could one get the momentum going?
The only thing to do, was to rummage through the CD pile and seek out  Pantera's Vulgar Display of Power. The Beet Seeking Missile had forgotten how, years ago, cranking up this early 90's metal classic had added instant adrenaline to any workout
As it was on the band's first record Cowboys from Hell,  guitarist Dimebag Darrell's legendary shredding sets the tone on this disc.Straddling the fine line between Eddie Van Halen and Randy Rhoades, mixed with dirty Texas blues, Dimebag ripped up and down the fretboard with a rare combination of ferocity and precision.Fortunately for the Beet Seeking Missile, he was able to see this phenomenal shredder live a few times, being blown away by his onstage passion for the metal. This little Texan, along with his drumming brother Vinnie, set the world of heavy music afire with their blazing music.

So about a minute into the album's opening track "Mouth for War," the adrenaline started double-kicking in just as the the the brothers (Darrell's brother Vinnie played drums in the band)Paul do at the beginning of the song. Simultaneously, the Beet Seeking Missile flipped on the TV, because he knew his beloved A's were just starting in Milwaukee. Just as the song has switched gears to a full gallop near it's end, CRACK!, the A's Coco Crisp leads off the game with a home run. You can't script that folks-you just can't. By about the fifth song "This Love," the Beet Seeker, was working up a good lather in the living room, ready to hit the trail for a great run.


The brothers Paul-Vinnie and Darrell



Postscript-Sadly, a few years back, Darell was gunned down by a lunatic while onstage in an Ohio club as his brother watched in horror from behind his drum kit. However, the legacy of sheer metal madness he left behind still energizes countless others on their daily trek through life. So when you are feeling a little low on energy, do what the Beet Seeking Missile does: turn it up LOUD!!!

Tuesday, May 28, 2013

Photo Essay-Los Lobos at the Sacramento Music Festival



Once in while in this business, one is lucky enough to get up close to watch an all-time favorite. That was the case Sunday night at the Sacramento Music Festival, when the Beet Seeking Missile was able to hang in the photo pit for the entire two-hour plus Los Lobos set. And what a set it was!

 One of America's finest rock bands (and a Beet Seeking Missile favorite!) played a memorable show. Los Lobos are going strong in their fourth decade of touring, recording and blending cultural heritage with psychedelic rock, folk and blues. In a set list that spanned their 40 years together, they played favorites like "Dream in blue,"  "I got loaded," "Volver Volver," "Mas y Mas" and a great cover of the Grateful Dead's "West L.A. Fadeaway."
The greatest part of the show was while looking around at all the dancing, happy, singing people giving their pure , unabashed love to this band, I would look up and catch the band having fun too; joking with each other between songs, inviting a fan onstage to sing and generally being the consumate pros and great multi-instrumentalists that they are known to be all over the world.













Monday, May 27, 2013

Talib Kweli-Spanning the globe to bring you a variety of sounds



  I knew there was something unique about Talib Kweli when I first saw him in the fall of 2004. He was opening for the Beastie Boys at the Bill Graham Civic Auditorium in San Francisco. Baseball season was in full swing and out comes this Brooklyn kid with a t-shirt, jeans.... and an Oakland A's cap. Not only did he get the Beet Seeking Missile's attention with his choice of head gear; his high-order vocabulary and quick-segue delivery were absolutely mind-blowing.
What topped it off during his short set, was his impromptu freestyling. During the great song "Get by," he incorporated an episode from the previous night's A's game into the song. Like the best rappers, who are reporters on the mic, Kweli improvised a short rhyme about the incident: a Texas Rangers pitcher, in a fit of rage and frustration, had thrown a chair into the stands and injured a fan. It was just a brief moment in time, but it was also a quick glimpse into this young man's lightning-quick style.
The next time i saw Kweli, it was two years later at a rock club called the Boardwalk in Orangevale, a Sacramento suburb known for it's fondness for late model Camaro's (and about a mile's walk away from the Beet Seeking Missile's home at the time). 
It was a Tuesday night,  and the turn-out was low- maybe forty people in the house. Yet the rapper performed as if we were 40,000. It was epic fun, as he stormed the place with only a turntable and two back-up singers. He even hosted a white-boy dance-off onstage(I think there was one black kid in attendance.)



 But as I looked around the sparsely attended show, all I could think was: Why don't more music lovers,  regardless of where they're from, know about this guy?

Much has developed since that night. Despite relatively low record sales, Kweli's fan base has grown steadily through word-of-mouth buzz. He is hardly what one would consider a rap star, but he prefers it that way. Kweli has built his following in a steady, hard-working fashion.

 Touring constantly, he circles the globe playing big and small venues everywhere. Kweli has the rare ability to deftly straddled the fine line between thought provoking lyrics and being an entertaining party emcee. He is atonishingly gifted at both.

That larger success has eluded him, is part of that choice.  Jay Z summed it best in his song Moment of Clarity-"If skills sold, truth be told, I'd probably be, lyrically Talib Kweli." Unlike many big box rappers, Kweli has managed to retain his creativity and keep his integrity intact throughout a 15-year career.

His latest, the long-awaited Prisoner of Conscious, may be where his perseverance finally pays off. It's his first release that combines the elements of great production and the feel of his live sound. It's also the first release that marks his complete financial independence as an artist, after disbanding his last record label and reorganizing things so that he has complete artistic and financial control of his music. In many ways, it's a new peak for the artist.

Prisoner of Conscious contains a variety of sounds. The album's biggest two production triumphs are capturing Kweli's live verbal cadence and adding a wide range of guests, who exceed expectations. Kweli keeps the listener engaged with little idiosyncratic commands that are so customary during his live performances. It's a repetitive process where Kweli squeezes these into the smallest spaces of each song and they fit like small puzzle pieces that make the picture clearer as his high-speed vocabulary washes over you in this age of distractions.

Likewise, the artist has utilized guest appearances in the past, but never to this extent. Sometimes that's a recipe for failure, but Kweli gets the best out of each performer. The list is impressive, featuring up and coming artists like Miguel and Kendrick Lamar along well-known names like Buster Rhymes.

 "I love music/I'm complete in my devotion," intones Kweli on the autobiographical "Turnt Up," the album's third track. Here, Kweli alludes to the cerebral influence of his mother, an English professor at Medgar Evans College in New York City.  His love for music oozes from each track. The next song, "Come here," which features rising star Miguel, is a lyrical sauna. It has a sensual Marvin Gaye fell to it . In a perfect world, you would hear this song drifting smoothly from car speakers all summer long,

Kweli also documents his constant travels around the world on the record. On "Favela Love," Kweli recounts some memorable thoughts on a balcony in Rio de Janeiro with the help of Brazilian singer Seu Jorge. "A feeling of panic engulfin' the whole planet/Yet my words are slow dancin', my language is romantic." Elsewhere, he drops a reference to a show at Sacramento's Ace of Spades on the whirlwind "High Life," a song that has the flavor of Ghanian style hip-life music.

He calls out phony rappers and has fun trading boasts with Busta Rhymes on "Rocket Ships." On the quirky "Upper Echelon" he says "Rap been laughable over the last year or two." However, he says it best on "High Life"-"I'm fishing with dynamite/now I got a freezer full of rappers." Part of the reason this album is so refreshing, is that Kweli doesn't mince words when being critical about the genre that he loves so much-or anything else.

Kweli returns to his biggest strengths-challenging the everyday perceptions that keep many in our country so stuck in the same place. He calls out the whiners that pollute the internet and airwaves with lyrics like "Stop it. With all the soap operas and the soap boxes" and "They're saying that we need a revolution, but their passion is reduced to all-caps on a computer."

All of this is set to a variety of uptempo beats, catchy hooks and notebooks full of thought-provoking metaphors. Chances are this will be his biggest album to date. But no matter what happens, Kweli will make out well, especially now that he has become a completely independent entity.

And don't forget that he sometimes pairs with Mos Def (now Yasmin Bey) in the legendary Black Star. Lesser known, is Idle Warship, an amazing electronica/rock/rap project with longtime collaborator Res.Some nights he just drops in and DJs at clubs to keep his feet to the ground. It's called creativity people. Keep goin' Kweli!


Here is the video of "High Life"

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KvTNj5--a9o

 Or a live version of "Turnt Up"
 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HTnxCmDXBsU

And finally, the GREAT Kweli classic "Get By"

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J2ou1Yh1IVY











Friday, May 3, 2013

When we were Kings




The Beet Seeking Missile was saddened to hear of the passing of the great Slayer guitarist/songwriter Jeff Hanneman earlier today. The musician had been suffering from a terrible flesh-eating disease called Necrotizing Fasciitis that he contracted from a spider bite a couple of years ago while on tour in South America. He perished from liver failure related to the condition. Hanneman was 49 years old.

Born in Oakland, California, the young Hanneman was fascinated by his father's tales of World War II as well as his older brother's experiences in the Vietnam War. Much of this influenced his songwriting, which often portrayed the starkness of war and other dark aspects of the human condition. Additionally, he was raised by these men to become a huge Raiders fan. It was no great irony, when years later, the first full-length Slayer concert video was shot by NFL Films. 

He met guitarist Kerry King in 1981 and after forming Slayer together, the two quickly became the twin demons of thrash in a band that was the epitome of speed metal with a punk attitude. The band became a favorite of both punks and metalheads with their no holds barred approach, propelling them on a similar tangent with Metallica, to become the twin kings of the thrash ranks.

 Much of their music was characterized by big, fast, memorable riffs and Hanneman's chaotic phrasing, that always contained an element or two of beautiful, twisted melody. He was a fan favorite who went all out onstage every night, sporting Dead Kennedys stickers on his guitar and a Raiders jersey on his person.
Hanneman wrote or cowrote many of the band's most recognizable songs including "Angel of Death," "Seasons in the Abyss" and "Behind the crooked cross." Although his health had kept him off the road for the last couple of years, at the time of his death, he was reportedly working on new Slayer material.

The Beet Seeking Missile first saw Slayer on the Reign in Blood tour in 1986 at the El Dorado Saloon in Sacramento. That album, still the best 29 minutes of metal ever recorded, was played in it's entirety in front of the kind of fierce crowd that came to define the band's fan base for the next 25 years. I was completely blown away by the aggressive attack coming through the Marshall stacks and once made the mistake of wandering too close to King's stack-and still have a decent amount of ear damage to show for it.

I don't recall the final count of Slayer shows I've been to over the years but it's probably about fifteen. Every one of those shows became a great place to meet up with some of my dearest music following friends over the years. Slayer continues to inspire an unparalled tribal passion amongst the lovers of their music.

As a writer, my personal highlight occurred near the beginning of the Seasons in Abyss tour at the Henry J. Kaiser in Oakland. The band had just returned from Egypt, where they had shot the video for the title track and had ridden all night by bus to get to the venue after getting off a plane in L.A.

I encountered a drowsy looking Hanneman walking toward the dressing room and introduced myself . I asked him if I could have an interview. He said he wasn't really awake yet, but to hit him up after the show and he'd be glad to talk. At that, he sat down, cracked open a St.Pauli Girl and started a video game (Super Nintendo).

After an epic set, I waited backstage as the band entertained a huge entourage of well wishers and starstruck folks. When Hanneman had signed his share of autographs, he sought me out and we sat down for an interview where he was glad to answer any and all questions that I had for him. Very polite and professional and a hell of a nice fellow. It amazed me that this writer of so many dark classics was so affable in the way of The Dude from The Big Lebowski.

The last time I saw Slayer was at the Sacramento Memorial Auditorium was a few years back and the band was still bringing it with the same fierceness as their early days. The bloodlust "Slay-er! Slay-er! Slay-er!" chants of their fans were filled the air with the same passion as the early days. I recalled how fighter pilots in the Gulf War had requested Slayer's "War Ensemble" to be blared on the runways of Kuwait before they took off on missions over Iraq.
 I had recently seen a great documentary about Muhammad Ali's 1974 "Rumble in the jungle" with George Foreman in Zaire called "When we were Kings." The locals despised Foreman because he had traveled to Zaire with a German Shepard. Little did he know, when he got off the plane with that dog, that the Dutch Imperialists who controlled the country had used that breed to viciously control unruly crowds who had the audacity to rise up against them. Thus the locals would chant "Ali boma ye, Ali boma ye" which translates to "Ali, kill him" as Ali went on training runs on the rural roads of the country.

Naturally, I had to try out a little "Slayer, boma ye!" on this rabid crowd of loyalists. It seemed to click. Fitting, since like Ali, the band remain kings to many of their fans all over the world.
Jeff Hanneman, you will be sorely missed.

Long Live Slayer! And Long Live the memory of the great Jeff Hanneman! Feel free to share your Slayer and Jeff Hanneman memories with The Beet Seeking Missile.

Chemical Warfare '85

 Seasons in the Abyss-The Video


 

Monday, April 29, 2013

She don't love me, she loves my automobile

ZZ Top in the pre-"Sharp Dressed Man" days
"With my New York brim and my gold tooth displayed, no one will give me trouble because they know I've got it made."-I'm Bad, I'm Nationwide
During my 14th summer, my parents made the wise choice to ship this precocious Greek/Italian lad off to the podunk town of Lincoln, California. The gig was to go wash dishes at a restaurant owned by some Greek friends. Being from the sticks myself, I quickly acquainted myself with Main Street. Not much there to do or see. Lots of pick-ups being driven with one arm crooked at a sun-baked 90 degree angle out the window.
It was on one such ride, with the son of the couple who owned the restaurant, that I became acquainted with ZZ Top. At the time, the band had been together for almost a dozen years.Currently, they are the longest touring group with the same line-up, followed by Golden Earring and Rush. This summer will be their 44th together as a trio.
Back in the early 80's, rock radio actually rocked and Sacramento's KZAP was a great example of that. Naturally, it was just out of range in Tracy, where I had originally embarked on this Greyhound journey. Or at least it wouldn't come through on my dad's radio dial, which was always stuck on sports talk. Anyways, here I was, riding in this root beer brown Chevy step-side and suddenly "Party on the patio" comes blaring out of the speakers and cracks me across the head with it's guitar and whips hook. I had never heard anything quite like it.
The basic premise of the song was that these locals would find a vacant house with a hot tub, proceed to have an impromptu party where anyone was welcome-as long as they brought booze or a bikini, and raise hell.The only standing rule was to jump the fence and run for it if the cops showed up. The song blazes with infectious bearded boogie- vocalist/guitarist Billy Gibbons vocals an urgent staccato cadence. The whole thing races by in under 3 minutes. But what a ride!
I had to find out more for myself about this Texas barroom band and immediately immersed myself in the album from which the song had come- El Loco. A little while later, I was introduced to it's predecessor Deguello, on my friend Frosty's Hi-Fi. I was immediately smitten and it remains a top ten favorite to this day.
Those of you familiar with El Loco, know it contains such lascivious gems as "Tube Snake Boogie" and "Pearl Necklace," both considered modern day double-entendre standards. Overall, it's a solid record with some fine bluesy gems like "I wanna drive you home" and the synth experimentation on the trippy stomper "Groovy little hippy pad" is kinda cool too. However, the defining moment of utter weirdness on this record is "Ten foot pole." The song starts off with a shuffling, mumbling scat of a vocal, then the breakdown section switches gears to a bluesy vocal rasp and a guitar part that is kind of a jagged blues meltdown. Great song. Someday I'll figure out what the hell they are singing about on that one.
Deguello, on the other hand, is the nadir,* or high point of the band's career.  Prior to the making of the album, the band had been on a damn fine roll with early albums that were rooted in the dirty blues like Rio Grande Mud and Tres Hombres. Those records had spawned gems like "Francine," "Waiting at the bus stop/Jesus just left Chicago" and "La Grange." But the group went on a three year hiatus due to the after effects of their Worldwide Texas Tour that had followed.This excursion had featured live animals onstage-including a longhorn steer, a buffalo, rattlesnakes and two vultures. Also traveling with the band were a saguaro and prickly pear cactus or two. This two year undertaking had driven them to the point of exhaustion and insanity. The buffalo needed a rest as well. They took three years off before going back to the studio.
When the group gathered in the studio again, recharged and full of life, they kicked-off Deguello with the beautiful "I thank you," a soul classic that Isaac Hayes had penned for Sam and Dave in the late 60's. In fact, Deguello teeters wonderously between blues power and freak power like no one ever has heard before or since.There's a cover of bluesman Elmore James' "Dust my broom" and "leopard skin tights" and a call and response in "Lowdown in the street." There's the great funky soloing on "Cheap sunglasses," one of the band's most identifiable tracks, that demonstrates a fuller sound for the groovin' thump of bassist Dusty Hill and drummer Frank Beard.
 But the powerhouse of this record is the back to back pairing of "I'm bad, I'm nationwide" and "Fool for your stockings."  The former summarizes the ZZ Top philosophy: Hot rods, hot broads and bad-ass attitude.Gibbons plays a wicked guitar on the track as his phalanges effortlessly slide up and down the neck, dripping with emotive finger grease.
On "Fool for your stockings," a slow, steamy number, Gibson makes his intentions clear, in a subtle way. The jazzy blues licks that propel the solo on this song, are some of the finest he's put on record. In fact, the whole record is tracked almost perfectly, moving seamlessly blending between sounds from different eras that are all fused together by a vision to make a great rockin' record that pushes the boundaries of blues and strange, funky weirdness.




Rocking out on the World Wide Texas Tour
*We all know that the band's history doesn't end with those two albums. Eliminator, which followed El Loco, made them MTV darlings. With it's catchy hooks and slick outlaw imagery, the band saw success like never before. After continuing to veer further into pop territory, they steered back to their bluesy roots about fifteen years ago.
This summer ZZ Top will be opening for Kid Rock. I could stop there but I won't.
 I continue to be mystified by Kid Rock's appeal. I just can't find anything all that interesting or worthy in the guy's music.His biggest hit is a straight-up rip-off of two extremely recognizable songs with a few words changed?
But then that horror was topped when I saw the concert flyer for the show, and Uncle Kracker, the third band on the bill, was given nearly the same font size as the second seeded bearded bunch.Uncle Kracker?! It's amazing what passes for southern-fried groove with suburban white folk and other light beer drinkers these days. Rodney Dangerfield rolls in his grave at the lack of respect.

So for now, when the weather is heating up and the feeling is just right, the Beet Seeking Missile will open a beer, put on his sunglasses and some ZZ Top on the hi-fi will more than likely get his mojo correct.

"And the choice is up to you 'cause they come in two classes/Rhinestone shades or cheap sunglasses."
Cheap Sunglasses


*Example of the Beet Seeking Missile going a little haywire with the thesaurus.










Monday, April 15, 2013

Coachella Smoachella!

Over the past weekend, hipsters have been flocking in droves to the high desert to see the latest electronic dance crazes, college radio chart toppers and countless others. There's no mistaking it, there are always lots of really great bands at Coachella, but lately the big festival has been angling towards becoming the music industry's top itunes sales tool.

But there was no need to travel all that distance and sleep in the dirt-plenty of time for that later. You could have just ventured out to the Blue Lamp on Alhambra last Saturday night and had your world rocked all kinds of ways.We had a double-dose of madness and magic all in one little room last night.

First, the highly anticipated debut of Brubaker, named for the 1980 Robert Redford film. To describe the show, I'll attempt an analogy from another 80's movie-"Ferris Bueller's Day Off." Do you remember the scene where the kids leave Cameron's dad's babied 61 Ferrari 250 GT Spider with the dubious looking valet, who says "You guys have nothing to worry about, I'm a professional?" Then, instead of parking it, he proceeds to go for a roaring joyride through the streets of Chicago. Brubaker was the sound of that car and the attitude of the valet. There was no pussy-futting around. They took that thing out on the road, punched it up to high speeds and drove it like it was supposed to be driven. Brubaker nailed it! Fasten your Goddamn seatbelts and hope they play near you soon!!


Ironically, headliners Jello Biafra and the Guantanamo School of Medicine, had just played Coachella the previous day and were in fine form as well. They blasted through a great set, sounding punk as hell, with Jello occassionally indicting everyone from Ba"Rock"Star" Obama to the greedy money addicts running the Wall Street. Wonder if the eletctro dance kids in the desert knew that "California Uber Alles" was originally written about Governor Jerry Brown??

See what a finski can do to a guy's attitude?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XVACbEHkV2Q


Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Brubaker

One band against a cruel system.

Years ago, the Sacramento band Kai Kln were playing a show in the Bay Area with Victim's Family, the legendary hardcore band on Jello Biafra's Alternative Tentacles label. Biafra, the former Dead Kennedy's singer was in attendance that night. After Kai Kln finished their set, he approached drummer Neil Franklin and complimented his drumming. After a pause, the punk provocateur wryly added, "But, your music is a little too Woodstock-ish for me."

Flash forward and ironically, the two are on the same bill at the Blue Lamp in Sacramento this Saturday night. Or maybe not so ironic. Franklin is playing as part of a supergroup that features his old Kai Kln band mate Gene Smith along with Victim's Family/Triclops bass monster Larry Boothroyd and the gifted guitarist Christian Riley of Blu Chunks/Walrus fame.

Meanwhile, headliners Jello Biafra and the Guantanamo School of Medicine feature Victim's Family guitarist Ralph Spight and the amazing bassist Andrew Weiss of Ween/Rollins band fame. The rest of the band includes drummer Paul Della Pelle, formerly of  Helios Creed and guitarist Kimo Ball. Given Biafra's agitprop bent, the group's music is about many things political-including torture policies and austerity. Their album titles include-"The audacity of hype," "Advanced methods of questioning" and their latest"White people & the damage done."

 The Brubaker bandmates, along with Spight,  have been close friends for quite awhile. Riley has most recently played with Franklin and Smith in the Ricky and Del Connection, a bluesier infusion of Kai Kln.

Smith, who wrote and sang most of both Kai Kln's and Ricky and Del's music, is doing the same with Brubaker. Smith is a natural writer, with a proclivity towards the bombast of 70's power chords and melodies, albeit revved up to a tempo that some have called "Cream on 78 rpm. "Gene has been on a writing tear lately," said Franklin of the singer/guitarist. "We have five new songs that we would love to record." It will be interesting to hear the contributions of Boothroyd and Riley, considering their combined jazz, punk, funk and metal influences. Propelling it all will be Franklin, who in addition to being one helluva drummer, is also the band's onstage spokesman, wise cracker and all-around talent at keeping things loose. If he were a baseball player, you'd want him in your clubhouse.

Since both Boothroyd and Riley reside in the Bay Area, the group has been going between practcing in Franklin's Sacramento garage and Smith and Franklin heading over to Emeryville. Franklin feels that things are getting tighter and better with every practice. "We're getting back to really crushing it with electric guitars!" he chirped."Hopefully, we're a little heavier than Woodstock these days."

As the famous line from Brubaker goes-"Mess with me now, you're gonna regret it later."

Come out and see for yourself. It's going to be a night of beautiful madness at The Blue Lamp.And if you're on your best behavior, you just might hear a little Dead Kennedy's too.

Jello Biafra and the Guantanamo School of Medicine
w/ Brubaker
@ The Blue Lamp, Saturday, April 13
9pm   21 and over

                                                     The cast and crew of Brubaker:








 Kai Kln rocking in Cesar Chavez Park in 2007
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SrneFRpSHYM




Sunday, April 7, 2013

New venue, new headliners

Last Friday night brought The California Honeydrops to Sacramento's newest venue-The Assembly. The Honeydrops are an up and coming band from the Oakland, while the Assembly is a new space near K and 10th.

The Honeydrops started slowly, but once they got it going they drew the crowd on the dance floor with their accessible sound, a funky blend of blues, R & B, and most notably Second Line New Orleans jazz. The five piece group is led by vocalist/guitarist/trumpateer Lech Wierzyski. Wierzyski is a versatile talent, with a great singing voice and advanced skills on the trumpet. The apex of the band's performance was when all five members left the stage and hit the floor Second Line style, with drummer Ben Malament shining on the cowbell. Malament also plays a mean washboard.

The band have great potential as a live act, but need to figure out a way to consistently boost their sound a bit, particularly with the great variety of instruments that they play. If they plan on headlining medium venues like this, they need to play closer attention to this factor. Their sound was much crisper when they recently opened for ALO at the Fillmore and also at Harlow's. Look for them to have a breakout summer though, after their new album "Like you mean it" hits the streets. From there, they go on to play big festivals like the High Sierra Music Festival, where their "hit the floor" approach will go over big .

The Assembly is the size of a small school cafeteria. There is a spacious floor, a very large stage and a small section of two-tiered lounge seating in the balcony. High utilization is the key word here. The space doubles as a stage for the B Street Theater, which does 7pm improv shows on Friday and Saturday and clears out prior to the music starting. The venue has good sight lines and an impressive looking  lighting rig mounted to the ceiling. The stage is backlit and the curtain is set far to the rear of the stage, giving bands an immense space in which to set up their equipment.

While the facility is nicely set up, it could use a few tweaks over time. Their needs to be more color added to the side walls and the area near the front of the stage to create more warmth in the room. The bar service was pretty slow, so one or two bartenders would be a welcome addition as well. There didn't seem to be much utilization of the big lighting rig on the ceiling, it would be nice to see what that can do. However, the biggest tweak needs to be figuring out how to fill the room more completely with sound. All of these things can be improved over time. And just like the aforementioned band, this venue has big potential. 



The California Honeydrops doing their thing in Sacramento

 And for some live sounds, check out The California Honeydrops recent live performance at the Fillmore:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=Os8JOx6WxJY#!

Merle, Motorhead and a great new Clutch album

One of the great things to happen on the latest season of the great zombie series "The Walking Dead" was a scene where Merle, the redneck everyone loves to hate, is trapped in a car drinking whiskey and cranking up some Motorhead. It just so happens that he is jamming to "Fast and Loose," a fine cut from the group's landmark album Ace of Spades. The perfect tune for a Merle to enjoy whiskey straight out of the bottle as zombies drool, paw and claw all over the car.

Last season, there was an episode of the show called "Nebraska," that featured a great Clutch song called "The Regulator." Some great music is making it's way onto this show. The new Clutch disc needs to make it onto your CD player.  

Earth Mover is a volatile beast of an album. Brimming with attitude and sheer power, it starts strong and keeps building momentum that never stops building until the final track, "The Wolfman kindly requests." And by that point, the urge to play whole thing over again is undeniable. Go get this album.

Here is the audio track to a great cut called-"DC sound attack"

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VXIzmM1DaW8









Saturday, April 6, 2013

Ladies and Gentlemen....your credit card please!

I want to personally thank the Rolling Stones for the obscene ticket prices on their upcoming tour. By relinquishing their cheapest seats for a mere $250 each, they have helped validate what I am trying to do with this blog. Did you know that same total you can see about 16 shows (at an average $15) in the Beet Seeking Missile price range.

As a lifelong Stones fan, I continue to have a strong affinity for the band. I think their influence is especially prevalent in today's music. But it's sheer madness to fork over that much dough to see any band, regardless of the fact they haven't put out a good album in over 20 years. That's not the point. We all know these guys are icons and long ago achieved their deserved place in the Pantheon of Rock Gods.
But to pay that price is to feed into the mentality that has driven up concert ticket prices over the past two decades, ever since the Eagles started routinely charging over $100 per ticket. And don't get me started on the Eagles.
Why not instead check out a bunch of new groups? None may become the next Rolling Stones, but you may end up with a substantial amount more satisfaction than you would have by blowing that hard-earned cash and you just might find an up and coming band that you really, really like. Don't spend your music budget in vain.


 



Monday, April 1, 2013

Heartless Bastards-Mini Review

I could hear the voice a block away. As I walked towards Harlow's Nightclub on J. Street in Sacramento on this rainy night, I could hear this deep, booming, husky female voice permeating the walls of the club and resonating onto the wet streets. This voice could have come from ancient times. The deep, perhaps ancient soul behind the voice was almost unsettling as it penetrated through the walls.
At first I thought it may have been a recording, but as I got closer and heard the sound of live drums and the thrum of the crowd, I knew it was the golden voice of Erika Wennerstrom of the Heartless Bastards.

Upon entering the usually noisy club, it blew me away how quiet and reverent the crowd had suddenly become, a hush fallen across them as the band started a quiet number. They were taking it all in on this Easter night. Eventually the band changed course, as they are apt to do, breaking through the intimacy with their raw, blues based rock and amazing cohesiveness.
At one point someone in the crowd shouted "Thanks!" to the band for playing here and Erika thanked him back, then paused, "We thought it was a little strange to play on Easter Sunday, but being here with all of you sure beats sitting in a hotel room" said the road worn singer. With that, the fun commenced again and the Heartless Bastards rocked the room some more.

Sunday, March 31, 2013

Heartless Bastards-Easter show in Sac

The Heartless Bastards are truly a merciless musical bunch. "I'm gonna see what tomorrow brings/ I'm gonna take it to the world outside" invokes vocalist Erika Wennerstrom in "Be so happy." The Bastards have done just that in the last year. In a time when folk rock is coming on strong, the Bastards stand apart with their raw blues-based rock that naturally spills over to the folk genre. The band have relentlessly toured and taken strong it to the people with each live opportunity. 
The mega-talented Wennerstrom fronts the band, writes most of the music and sings with ample soul, power and conviction. Her songwriting keeps getting better with each album and the band's most recent release "Arrow" is a fine example of this.
The thunderous backline of drummer Dave Colvin and bassist Jesse Ebaugh form the rhythm core of the band.. Many of the groups' songs begin as these wonderful, sometimes dark and bluesy explorations that expand, reshape and take on grander meaning as the band, which also includes guitarist Mark Nathan, who adds excellent leads and rhythm, help her work things out with a healthy dose of cymbal crashes, abrupt changes and driving force .I only say all of this since this will be the fourth time I've seen this band in the last 10 months and I gladly keep coming back for more. Go see this band!
Heartless Bastards w/Jonny Fritz
Tonight at Harlow's Nightclub 8p..
$15


Friday, March 29, 2013


ReviewBlack Star @ The Fox, Oakland, Ca. 3/23/13

Telegraph Ave. in Oakland is a scene full of hustle and bustle on a warm Saturday night. The crowd is young, urban and eager for some hip-hop. We wind our way through a variety of bars, bbq joints and people on the street. All around there is a buzz in the air about Black Star, the superstar hip-hop act featuring Talib Kweli and Mos Def (who now calls himself Yasmin Bey), that rarely tours.
Upon entering the beautiful Fox Theater, I am reminded how the landmark venue's $75 million facelift five years ago made it the most stunning music venue in the Bay Area. With a lush, spacious bowl and rich hues and visceral textures enhancing the building's architectural splendor, it's easy on the eyes.And more importantly, the acoustics are designed for ear candy.

Starting things off were First Light, featuring Pep Love and Opio, a pair of MC's from the Souls of Mischief and Hieroglyphics crews. The duo's battery of stream of consciousness lyrics enthralled many in  the crowd for a while, but as their set wore on, it was clear to them and everyone else, that they were losing steam as the amped crowd anticipated what was coming. It would be nice to see the group stray from the pattern of oft-repeated phrases that have already been done to death from the book of abstract. 

Black Star doesn't tour that much. Talib Kweli is all over the world, all year long with his solo work and occassionally his great group with singer Res called Idle Warship. Bey, the former Mos Def is completely booked with a film career that leaves little time for music.
Thus, it's difficult to get the two together. They only play a handful of shows every year, yet are still considered one of the most talented and creative duo's in hip-hop.

After hitting the stage 40 minutes late, Yasmin began the night  with an apology because he was not feeling very well. He did sound a bit froggy, his usual rich tenor, was audibly scratchy and irritable. But like any real pro, he promised to give it his all. True to his word, that is what he proceeded to do.
Meanwhile, Kweli came out at his usual 120% and floored the audience, who could really care less about anything other than the fact that they were lucky enough to have these legends in their presence.
 Like an overloaded freight train heading downhill, the duo steamed through hit after hit after hit from the Black Star lexicon, Bey, only pausing briefly between songs to take sips of tea. Bey(it's hard not to say Mos Def!) croaked out a staccato stream of lyrics and would occasionally loosen up his voice enough to keep up with Kweli's mad pace. Wisely, at times, he just danced, with an unrehearsed smoothness that only comes from being in the spotlight since his teen years.
The duo kept it up, song after song, until the end when each played a hit of his own. Bey (Def!) going with a nice medley of "Umi Says" and the "Boogie Man" songs. Naturally Kweli could only follow this with a thunderous version of "Get By" that sent the crowd happily back out the door to Telegraph, where food vendors happily fed the hungry bellies since the soul had already been fed.

Black Star Live on The Colbert Report




Wednesday, February 13, 2013

ALO Tour d'amour blazing into SacTown


Word has it Steve Adams may show up sans the stache.
Lebo-Loved with or without the cool white shades
The great, groovin' funkateers known as ALO (Animal Liberation Orchestra) will be at Harlow's in Sacramento this Saturday night. They are promoting nothing but love on this tour. Love of music. Love of life.And most of all-some hot, steamin', drippin', no holds-barred love for all of their fans!
 D'amour, which translates to "love affair" in French, can be used to describe what the group's fans have felt right back for this great band for over a decade. In that space of time, ALO has grown into nothing less than a movement. The Beet Seeking Missile says Check Em Out!


Check out the band's website:
http://alomusic.com/soundslikethis/band

ALO w/ California Honeydrops
Harlow's Night Club, Sacramento
Feb.16th
Tix $25
Show at 9p.m.

Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Kenny's Kiss band's BIG SHOW

My favorite all-time Kiss cover is Garth Brooks' version of  "Hard Luck Woman." When i first heard the tune sung by the country great, it reminded me that underneath all that make-up and glimmer, Kiss were really great songwriters. I must admit I was never a true fanatic. Fact: While most of my young friends were hardcore KISS ARMY, I was a little more into Elton John as a youth-don't shoot me I only write this stuff...!). But I always enjoyed their shtick. And a little "Cold Gin" here and there never hurt.

Some people are a little more devoted. That would include my good friend Kenny Serrano. Kenny, a lifelong KISS ARMY guy,  has been wearing the Kiss make-up since he was a youngster at Banta Elementary School. I've seen the pictures that prove it. Kenny does a mean Gene. He's a great bass player, showman and his singing ain't so bad either. And you should see what he can do with fire and blood.
He has been in a couple of different Kiss tribute bands and tons of other bands. One of the early Kiss bands had a shy Paul Stanley.
However, his most recent and successful Kiss tribute band is called Destroyer. They have serious chops and put on a really fun show. Everything you would expect from a Kiss tribute band-The make-up, the boots, lots of blood and even bit of fire.
The group recently headlined at The Great American Music Hall in San Francisco. Did you know this place was named one of the top ten music venues in the United States recenly? That's a pretty good gig!
Check 'em out the next time they come around and tell 'em that Gene's friend sent ya!

Destroyer w/The Butlers and Cruella
Great American Music Hall
San Francisco

Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Nicki Bluhm and the Gramblers to play Sactown


 Sacramento music lovers are in for a great treat this Thursday, when Nicki Bluhm and the Gramblers drop in at Harlow's. Bluhm had a sensational year in 2012, touring almost nonstop with a variety of homespun  bands, including the stellar Brokedown in Bakersfield.
 Now, fresh off early January's Jam Cruise, where both Brokedown and the Gramblers played, they are ready to do what they do best on dry land again.
Things really took off for the group a little over a year ago, when a cover of Hall and Oates "I can't go for that" was seen by almost two million people on YouTube. The video was shot inside the group's van on an iphone while they were rolling down the highway. It was part of a series of popular songs the band has covered in a continuing series called The Van Sessions. Part of the appeal of the band's stripped-down version of the song was Nicki's kazoo solo. The other part of it's appeal was that the band treated the song with obvious love.
But as popular as that was, it did not overshadow the fine originals on the group's great sophomore album "Driftwood." Recorded in husband Tim Bluhm's Mission Bells studio in San Francisco (where the couple reside), the album is a gem. Sounds that range from vintage country to folk and blues with great songs about unfulfilled yearnings, premeditated heartbreak and life on the road make the record a must listen. Nicki can sound tough and tender at times. Vulnerable or filled with verve at others. The Gramblers are no musical slouches either. Great music, great harmonies and some real nice subtle touches all over the place. Best of all, an unrushed vibe that is very inviting and makes a repeated listen welcome. Some of the highlights include "Jetplane," "Stick with me" and "Before you loved me."
The group are preparing to drop a new release in 2013 and if the pair of new tunes on the band's website are any indication, we will see them reach new heights this year.
Take a listen by going to the band's website.

http://www.nickibluhm.com/


Nicki Bluhm and the Gramblers w/ The Easy Leaves
Thursday, January 31 at 8p.m.
Harlow's Nightclub
$15