
8-Day
Week
A weekly e-newsletter from the publisher of Chronogram containing:
Up-to-date Mid-Hudson events, listings, selections of insight
for conscious living, and social & political commentary.
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Backbone >
Ear Whacks
CD Reviews
Allen Shadow: King Kong Serenade
Blue City Music
New
York city native Allen Shadow traveled a long way to record King Kong
Serenade. Four years in the making, Serenade was recorded pre-9/11 in
Nashville-where Shadow was employed as a commercial songwriter in Nashville
for most of the 90s-and is a musical portrait of Shadow's hometown that
contains an auguring darkness of events to come. The album's first track,
"Downtown", is the discordant doppelganger to the tune Petula
Clark made famous that seems quaintly naive now; Shadow's vision of New
York is darker, grittier, and is played out in minor chords: "Platform
cheek to cheek/the paper hides the morning geeks/signs read in shock speak/sunglassed
to the knees/the drive for sex so sleek/it rushes 42nd Street." Shadow
walks the same New York streets as Lou Reed before him, another bard of
the underbelly of Gotham, creating verbal mosaics out of urban decay.
(Shadow published two books of poetry in the 1980s.)
Shadow is joined on Serenade by some heavy hitting music industry veterans:
John Jackson (played with Bob Dylan and Lucinda Williams), drummer Paul
Griffith (played with John Prine), and keyboard player Randy Leago (played
with Janis Ian). Back-up vocal work was handled by Etta Britt, who's vocal
on "You, Coney Island" is eerily reminiscent of EmmyLou Harris'
backing on Desire for Bob Dylan.
An off-beat opus, King Kong Serenade takes the rock album down the path
of Nick Cave, Tom Waits, and Patti Smith, weaving stories over minimalist
backing music at times propulsive, droning, and plaintive. Shadow has
taken off toward the idiosyncratic edges, looking under the unfamiliar
stones for a true rock story.
-Liam Drauf
Allen Shadow will be appearing at The Uptown, 33 N. Front St. in Kingston
for a CD release party on Saturday, October 12. For more information,
call 339-8440. www.allenshadow.com.
David Johansen and the Harry
Smiths: Shaker
Chesky Records
Face
it: the music business is lousy with examples of cultural poaching, from
Elvis Presley to Paul Simon to Eminem. Historically, blacks hoed the musical
fields and whites reaped the royalties. Muddy Waters remarked that whites
can play but not sing the blues, and in the years following the civil
rights movement, most would pay lip service to the observation. But such
thinking may have run its course; in 1990, white professor Lawrence Hoffman
wrote in Guitar Player magazine that it was "absurd to think that
the lifeblood of blues could be extended by anyone who, in essence, could
never be anything more than a convincing, expressive copyist." The
publication was flooded with letters of protest.
Dividing the issue along color lines is facile. Pioneers like the recently-deceased
musicologist Alan Lomax (a white man) saved an oral history of early Negro
blues and work-songs from extinction by recording them for posterity.
Yes, Robert Johnson is likely never to get his dues. Reparations to generations
of black musicians, like reparations to the descendants of Negro slaves,
will remain a thorny issue.
A Smithsonian Institution colleague of Lomax, Harry Smith (also white),
accomplished the same rescue mission of Southern blues and folk, issuing
six LPS on Folkway Records in 1952. His invaluable anthology provided
the material and namesake for David Johansen and the Harry Smiths. Shaker
is the second album from the group, spawned by a one-night gig at New
York City's Bottom Line. Their first album garnered strong reviews from
both musical purists and wealthy white men simply looking to glom onto
some free-floating pain.
Frontman David Johansen remains a chameleon. His metamorphoses to date
include: the lipstick-and-scarves glam rock of the New York Dolls; priapic
rocker ("Marquesa De Sade" from his solo Here Comes the Night
album is required listening); and party-hearty Buster Poindexter. That
he slips easily into his current persona, replete with hangdog look and
unkempt hair, is a testament to his acting chops. But raspy deliveries
of classics by Furry Lewis, Lightnin' Hopkins, and Muddy Waters, among
others, suggest channeling more than mere mimicry. Especially wistful
is "Let the Mermaids Flirt with Me." (Hosannas equally to Brian
Koonin and Larry Saltzman on guitar, Kermit Driscoll on bass, and Keith
Carlock on drums.)
All 14 cuts on Shaker cast a spell that pulls you back into the past.
But if you're keen on paying tribute to the pioneers, track down the original
Harry Smith anthology. Your purchase price may not mink-line their coffins,
but paying a cosmic debt has to start somewhere.
-Jay Blotcher
The Fighting McKenzies: I Know
this Lady
In
the four years since the Fighting McKenzies' last record, titled, appropriately,
The Fighting McKenzies' Last Record, the band has undergone some changes
of personnel, with corresponding shifts in sonic inflection. Now comprising
Wayne Montecalvo, John Hughes, Corliss Block, Warren Perrins, Dean Jones,
and Chris Cullo, the band leans more heavily on vocal harmonies and indulges
in fewer of the unidentifiable thuds, squeaks, and rasps formerly provided
by percussionist Mike Crawly; and the addition of Block's slyly sexy voice,
replacing the shouted narratives of former guitarist John Wirtz, lends
the ensemble a more balanced vocal tone-a strange attribute for a group
that takes imbalance to the level of art.
Still, the McKenzies are unchanged at their quirky core. Sculptor/painter/songwriter
Montecalvo, who fronts the band on accordion and gold tooth, continues
to pen songs of debauched cowgirls, insane cab drivers, and childhood
in a Jersey factory town, all set to catchy, Irish and Spanish-influenced
tunes that jerk at the ear like an errant fishhook. Montecalvo also scratches
out some melodies on fiddle, which, he says, he's not very good at-but
bad fiddle playing is appropriate for these songs.
If clear, linear narrative is your bag, you don't want to know from the
Fighting McKenzies. The opening verses of "Main Street," for
example, paint a typically jumbled picture: "One peg leg, one steel
arm / Can't reach the pedal 'cause he doesn't drive a car / Up all the
way with the radio on / Only way to sleep with the racket in the yard."
All the pieces are there, but, like most true things, you have to put
them together by yourself.
Montecalvo says he'd like to get radio play, and hopes the band's new
disc will be seen as more professional than their last. "I'd like
to tour somewhere," he adds. "Pretty much anywhere that would
have us." That should be everywhere, but for now, look for the McKenzies
at Waitstock (the Tom Waits festival held October 26 at Uncle Bob's Dead
Battery Farm in Poughkeepsie). The new disc will be available at the gig,
along with their first two albums and the coveted McKenzie Songbook, containing
the lyrics to the McKenzie oeuvre.
-Todd Paul
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