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Friday, July 31, 2009

OEA Summer Showcase tonight and tomorrow...

This weekend is easy: Just head to Benson for the Omaha Entertainment and Arts Awards Summer Showcase. There. You're done. No more thinking necessary.

Performances are tonight and tomorrow beginning at 8 p.m. Wristbands are sold at the door of every performance spot. A one-time $10 charge will get you into all five venues all night long; or do as I do and spend an extra $5 and get access for both nights

I'm told that this two-day event is actually a fund raiser for the OEA organization, and that the real academy-targeted showcase -- that will feature bands nominated for an award -- will be held sometime this fall. So this one is really "just for fun," an exposure-generator for 60 local bands whose music cuts across multiple genres.

As seems to be the case with most OEA events, the acts chosen to perform are mostly bands that regularly perform in Benson anyway, which makes this more of a "come-to-Benson" exposure-driven event. We'll see if the crowd consists of out-of-Bensoners or the usual crowd (who, strangely, didn't show up for the Lincoln Invasion festival just a few weeks ago).

My advice on how to best enjoy this festival: 1) Find a designated driver, 2) Get your wristbands in order, 3) Proceed to drink you face off while stumbling from venue to venue. Benson-based showcases are really just high-end drinking games involving music. The OEA folks would be advised to organize a taxi stand so game participants can get home safely after the party's over.

Anyway, here is the schedule as posted on the OEA website. For those who need help deciding which bands to see, I've placed an asterisk (*) next to my recommendations -- keep in mind that I haven't seen or heard half of these bands.

Friday July 31

Barley Street Tavern

8:10 p.m. — Spiders For Love
*8:55 p.m. — Answer Team
9:40 p.m. — Travelling Mercies
10:35 p.m. — Matt and Ben
*11:20 p.m. — Boy Noises
12:35 a.m. — Black On High

The Sydney

8 p.m. — Jason Fergusen
8:45 p.m. — Little Black Stereo
9:30 p.m. — Akita Ken
*10:15 p.m. — The Filter Kings
*11 p.m. — Shiver Shiver
*11:50 p.m. — Thunder Power

P.S. Collective

8 p.m. — Pat Higgins Trio
*8:45 p.m. — Honey & Darling
*9:30 p.m. — Sarah Benck
10:15 p.m. — El Genius
11 p.m. — Funk Trek
11:50 p.m. — Rock Paper Dynamite

Burke’s Pub

8 p.m. — The Pilots
8:55 p.m. — Chris Massara
*9:40 p.m. — Dereck Higgins
*10:35 p.m. — Goodbye Sunday
11:15 p.m. — Vago
12:05 a.m. — DJ Spence

The Waiting Room

8:10 p.m. — Lunatik
8:55 p.m. — Mitch Getman
*9:40 p.m. — Anniversaire
10:35 p.m. — Ten Club
11:20 p.m. — The Cowboy Dave Band (ex-40-20)
*12:05 a.m. — Brad Hoshaw & The Seven Deadlies

Saturday, Aug. 1

Barley Street Tavern

8: 10 p.m. — Broken Truth
8:55 p.m. — Strictly Roots
9:40 p.m. — Raven Carousel
*10:35 p.m. — Sweet Pea
11:20 p.m. — Platte River Rain
12:05 a.m. — Vinyl Haze

Burke’s Pub

8:10 p.m. — 24 Hour Cardlock
8:55 p.m. — W.E.R.D.
*9:40 p.m. — Matt Whipkey
*10:35 p.m. — Black Squirrels
11:20 p.m. — Son Of 76 & The Watchman
*12:05 a.m. — Brent Crampton

The Sydney

8 p.m. — After The Fall
*8:45 p.m. — Kyle Harvey
*9:30 p.m. — The Show Is The Rainbow
10:15 p.m. — Surreal
*11 p.m. — Midwest Dilemma
*11:50 p.m. — Paria

The Waiting Room

8:10 p.m. — Kethro
8:55 p.m. — Flight Metaphor
9:40 p.m. — Poor Mans Opera
10:35 p.m. — Oxygen
*11:20 p.m. — Fortnight
*12:05 a.m. — It’s True

P.S. Collective

8 p.m. — Jess Winter Band
8:45 p.m. — ASO
9:30 p.m. — Edge Of Arbor
10:15 p.m. — Qubit
11:20 p.m. — The Last Few
*11:50 p.m. — The Big Al Band

Watch for updates via the Lazy-i Twitter feed (follow me), along with some shaky, grainy, out-of-focus iPhone photos.

--Got comments? Post 'em here.--


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posted by Tim McMahan - Lazy-i.com at 10:44 AM

Thursday, July 30, 2009

Column 231: Eyes Wide Shut; Dark Town House Band tonight…

Only the top half of this week's column is new; the bottom half appeared here a week ago. No new updates on the Mousetrap reunion, though I've heard from two drummers who said if Craig and Patrick can't find anyone to handle the drum parts, they'd be honored to step in -- they grew up listening to all those Mousetrap albums. As for the top half, I just noticed that tickets for the Oct. 28 Monsters of Folk show at The Holland are nearly $50 and go on sale tomorrow. Wonder how fast it'll sell out? I also noticed that the first three songs on the Monsters' upcoming album are now on their Myspace page.

Column 231: Eyes Wide Shut
It's Bright Eyes, not Oberst, who's calling it quits.

They're worried about Bright Eyes in Jakarta.

That's Jakarta Indonesia for all of us geographic illiterates. Where last Tuesday in the Jakarta Post there was an item in their "Reverb" section about the demise of Bright Eyes. Jakarta. Indonesia.

It was just one of what seemed like 50 online publications that regurgitated a story written by Kevin Coffey of the Omaha World-Herald that was published now almost two weeks ago, where Saddle Creek Records head honcho Robb Nansel repeated what was in Rolling Stone almost a month ago -- that Conor Oberst was retiring his Bright Eyes moniker once and for all after a final Bright Eyes release on Saddle Creek sometime in late 2010.

Maybe it was a slow news week, but what was essentially old news got picked up by Pitchfork -- the New York Times (or more accurately, The TMZ) of the indie music world -- before exploding across the Intergoogle on website after website until it ended up in Jakarta last Tuesday. And the whole time I just shook my head.

Bright Eyes' demise was being treated as if Oberst himself was retiring from the music business, which is anything but the truth. Have people forgotten that Bright Eyes is really just a name for Oberst and whomever he wants to perform with on any given record? Sure, starting with Cassadaga Oberst declared that Bright Eyes' core ensemble was a trio consisting of himself, Mike Mogis (who's been along for the ride since the very beginning) and keyboardist/pal Nate Walcott. But the guy driving the bus -- the one writing all the songs -- was Oberst, and Oberst ain't going away.

Does the retirement of the Bright Eyes name mean you'll never hear "Padraic My Prince" or "Waste of Paint" or "I Must Belong Somewhere" performed live on stage by guy who wrote them? Maybe, but it would make absolutely no sense. Moreso than being Bright Eyes songs, those are Oberst songs, tied more closely to the person who wrote them than the name printed on the record sleeve in which they appeared.

If there's a loser in this whole "death of Bright Eyes" story, it may be Saddle Creek, who released almost every Bright Eyes album. Conor Oberst's other identities -- The Mystic Valley Band, The Monsters of Folk -- are being handled by other record labels. When Oberst said he "wants to lock the door, say goodbye" to Bright Eyes, did he really mean he wants to lock the door on Saddle Creek?

Nansel and business partner Jason Kulbel -- who are still licking their wounds from the loss of The Faint last year -- continue to control Bright Eyes back catalog, and then there's the final album. After that, well, that's the real question, because after the Monsters of Folk go their separate ways and the conclusion of the Bright Eyes Farewell Tour sometime in 2011, Conor Oberst will be left as Conor Oberst, releasing albums simply as Conor Oberst -- albums that will sound strangely like Bright Eyes albums.

* * *

Just imagine how big that Bright Eyes reunion tour is going to be. Huge!

Speaking of reunions. A couple years ago at a show at The Slowdown I bumped into Craig Crawford, bass player for one of Omaha's most important '90s punk bands, Mousetrap. Craig had mentioned at the time that he'd been in touch with Mousetrap frontman Patrick Buchanan and that there had been talk about a possible band reunion.

This information was a bit surprising based on an interview I had conducted with Buchanan in March 2004 when his band at the time, After Dark, was coming through town for a show at The 49'r. Buchanan said he couldn't even listen to Mousetrap records because they brought up "too many memories, most of them bad." He concluded that interview with this: "You might think you made some good records, but you never know if you're creating anything important. I guess we did. Maybe in 10 or 15 years I'll be able to listen to them again."

Now here was Crawford a few years later saying that a reunion was a possibility. I was skeptical. Two years passed and nothing happened and I thought that was the end of it.

Then last week I got a message via Facebook from Crawford that said, once again, a Mousetrap reunion was in the works.

"We are 90% committed at this point," he said. "Patrick lives in Detroit now, and is planning on commuting into Chicago for practices. He wants to use a drummer from one of his old Chicago bands, and I have no problem with that. I have access to a warehouse and large-scale PA here, so that is good. I also want to document this when it happens. I've got cameras and all sorts of shit! This should be fun. Patrick is very excited about this, and I am as well. I would love to see if Scott (Miller, Mousetrap's original drummer) would want to be involved, but I do not know how to get ahold of him." Hey, anyone know Scott's whereabouts these days?

Craig said this landmark show had yet to be booked, but I have to believe that just about any of the major clubs in town would be honored to host a Mousetrap reunion show. How well would it draw? That's a good question. Among the Saddle Creek Records contingent and Omaha's dynamic noise-punk scene, Mousetrap is the stuff of legends. But that's not a terribly large crowd. For many (including myself) this would be a can't-miss event -- that is if this time it actually happens.

According to the Barley Street Tavern online calendar , The Dark Town House Band is scheduled to play on the Barley Street stage tonight. I've seen nothing promoting this show anywhere else. Expect an SRO crowd (if it's true). $5, 9 p.m.

--Got comments? Post 'em here.--


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posted by Tim McMahan - Lazy-i.com at 10:33 AM

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Anvil! The Story of Anvil rocks; Dave Dondero, It's True tonight…

As you know, I generally don't review movies on Lazy-i unless they have a music tie-in, and Anvil! The Story of Anvil certainly does. The documentary, which is now playing at The Dundee, is one of the best music docs I've seen since Some Kind of Monster, the 2004 Metallica doc, and in many ways, it's better. The movie tells the story of '80s Canadian metal band Anvil as it continues to reach for the rock 'n' roll golden ring even though the band's members are now in their 50s.

Brief interviews with members of G 'n' R, Slayer, Motörhead, Metallica and others lay the groundwork before the opening titles. We're then introduced to the key members of the band -- Steve "Lips" Kudlow and Robb Reiner -- as they struggle with their daily jobs and their daily lives before heading off to a disastrous European tour. The film has been called a real-life version of Spinal Tap, and the incidents depicted in many ways resemble that film. The difference, of course, is that this is real.

It is virtually impossible not to feel something for these lovable schlubs who, through bad timing, bad luck and a series of bad managers, record labels and recording experiences, missed the boat that made all those '80s hair metal bands millionaires. Now all they want is their chance with a major record label. You can't help but shake your head as they walk into the iconic Capitol Records building in LA carrying a bagful of CDRs with them name written on them in Sharpie.

This film won the Audience Award at the 2008 Sundance Film Festival. Within two months, it became the highest-grossing rock documentary in U.K. history. It's only now getting U.S. distro and has a rare 100 percent Top Critics rating at Rotten Tomatoes. The whole time I was watching it I was thinking that these guys' lives will forever be changed by this documentary, that their days of playing to nobody in tiny bars is over (for now, anyway). Sure enough, when I got home and did some Googling, I discovered that Anvil is opening three stadium dates for AC/DC next month.

I don’t know how long The Dundee plans on screening Anvil, though they usually change films on Fridays, so make plans to see it tonight or tomorrow. It's well worth your time.

* * *

Speaking of things worth your time, Dave Dondero is playing a gig tonight at The Barley Street with Micah Bruce. $5, 9 p.m. Also tonight, It's True is playing at Slowdown Jr. with Theodore and Andrew Bryant. $7, 9 p.m.

--Got comments? Post 'em here.--


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posted by Tim McMahan - Lazy-i.com at 10:47 AM

Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Yo La Tengo? Built to Spill? Nice; The Start, Birdlips tonight…

I was clicking through the One Percent Productions website today and noticed a couple awesome additions to their calendar. On top of the list is Yo La Tengo coming to Slowdown Oct. 9 -- almost three years to the day that they played at Sokol Underground. That show, reviewed here, made my list as one of the best of '06, partially because I'd been waiting 10 years for someone to book YLT in Omaha. This is a must-see show. Also, looks like our friends Tortoise is coming back to The Waiting Room Oct. 1. I didn't think we'd see them again after their last appearance here back in June 2007 (see review) failed to sell out. And one of Omaha's favorites, Built To Spill, has been booked to play at Slowdown Sept. 23. This was one of the first big national touring band to play Slowdown after it opened in the summer of 2007. This is winding up to be one of the stronger fall seasons for One Percent (and Slowdown).

OK, but what about tonight? Well, over at the Waiting Room, No Wave dance band The Start is playing with Normandie and Omaha expatriates Drake's Hotel. $8, 9 p.m. Meanwhile, Slowdown Jr. is hosting Charlottesville/Washington D.C. indie duo Birdlips, with Brad Hoshaw and Midwest Dilemma.$7, 9 p.m.

--Got comments? Post 'em here.--


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posted by Tim McMahan - Lazy-i.com at 10:53 AM

Monday, July 27, 2009

Live Review: Azure Ray/Cursive; Beat Seekers tonight…

A handful of people told me that they didn't go to the free concert outside at Slowdown Friday night for fear of large crowds, parking congestion, etc. They had nothing to worry about. I showed up after Flowers Forever and parked on the street on the east side of the Slowdown complex. After strolling through the entrance between Slowdown and American Apparel you were met with a sort-of festival environment, with booths for food, merch and most of all, booze. There were maybe 500 people there when I arrived. Another 250 showed up in time for the Azure Ray reunion set.

The stage was tucked into the nook behind Slowdown and Film Streams -- very nice. Not so nice was the sound system, at least during Azure Ray -- the vocals were overblown (ironic when you consider who was doing the singing), and crackled and dropped out throughout the set. Very unfortunate. That said, the duo was in good voice, and it was nice to hear some of these old AR tunes again. Andy Lemaster, who played guitar in their band, continues to resemble a 17-year-old boy, which will only continue to stoke the speculation that he's a vampire. See action photo.

By the time Cursive hit the stage, it looked like more than 1,000 people were there, though it never seemed crowded. My guess is you could have had double those numbers within the parking lot/compound and it still would have been comfortable, which raises the idea of Slowdown hosting two or three of these kinds of outdoor shows per summer, that is if the residents of the new "22" apartment complex don't mind -- hey, what did they expect when they moved into a building linked to Omaha's indie-music ground zero?

Cursive came on just as it was getting dark. Behind them on two large screens was a video created especially for the event that juxtaposed footage from Mutual of Omaha's Wild Kingdom with old movies (including a Dustin Hoffman chestnut). It worked pretty well; Cursive should consider bringing the video on the road with them. Their set was a selection of classics reaching as far back as Domestica to new stuff off Mama, I'm Swollen, and it all sounded great. I assume the sound system was selected with them in mind (and not Azure Ray). Tossed into the mix were covers of The Cure's "The Lovecats" and Bowie's "Modern Love." Overall, it was a lot of fun. Let's do it again a few more times next year.

* * *

Tonight there's a rare Monday evening show at The Sydney featuring The Beat Seekers with Brannigans Law and The Moves. $5, 9 p.m.

--Got comments? Post 'em here.--


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posted by Tim McMahan - Lazy-i.com at 10:49 AM

Thursday, July 23, 2009

Cursive: The Lazy-i interview with Tim Kasher…

Just posted right here, the Lazy-i interview with Tim Kasher of Cursive. Tim talks about the meaning (or perceived meaning) behind the band's latest album, Mama, I'm Swollen, and the realities of getting older alongslide the band's fans. Read it here. The story, which appears in today's issue of The Reader, is in support of tomorrow night's free concert in The Slowdown's parking lot featuring Cursive, a reunited Azure Ray and Flowers Forever. More details about the show tomorrow.

--Got comments? Post 'em here.--


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posted by Tim McMahan - Lazy-i.com at 11:12 AM

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

Mousetrap to return; Pitchfork likes The RAA; Bowerbirds tonight…

A couple years ago at a show at The Slowdown I bumped into Craig Crawford, bass player for one of Omaha's most important '90s punk bands, mousetrap. Craig had mentioned at the time that he'd been in touch with mousetrap frontman Patrick Buchanan and that there had been talk about a possible band reunion.

This information was a bit surprising based on an interview I had conducted with Buchanan in March 2004 when his band at the time, After Dark, was coming through town for a show at The 49'r. Buchanan said he couldn't even listen to mousetrap records because they brought up "too many memories, most of them bad." He concluded that interview (which you can read in its entirety here) with this: "You might think you made some good records, but you never know if you're creating anything important. I guess we did. Maybe in 10 or 15 years I'll be able to listen to them again."

Now here was Crawford a few years later saying that a reunion was a possibility. I was skeptical, but I still mentioned it in my year-end "predictions" article. Two years passed and nothing happened and I thought that was the end of it.

Then last week I got a message via Facebook from Craig that said, once again, a mousetrap reunion was in the works.

"We are 90% committed at this point," he said. "Patrick lives in Detroit now, and is planning on commuting into Chicago for practices. He wants to use a drummer from one of his old Chicago bands, and I have no problem with that. I have access to a warehouse and large-scale PA here, so that is good. I also want to document this when it happens. I've got cameras and all sorts of shit! This should be fun. Patrick is very excited about this, and I am as well. I would love to see if Scott (Miller) would want to be involved, but I do not know how to get ahold of him." Hey, anyone know Scott's whereabouts these days?

Craig said this landmark show has yet to be booked, but I have to believe that just about any of the major clubs in town would be honored to host a mousetrap reunion show. How well would it draw? That's a good question. Among the Saddle Creek Records contingent and Omaha's dynamic noise-punk scene, mousetrap is the stuff of legends. But that's not a terribly large crowd. For many (including myself) this would be a can't-miss event. More to come...

* * *

Saddle Creek Records seems to have shaken its Pitchfork jinx with this recent review of The Rural Alberta Advantage's Hometowns. It scored a massive 8.0, and these comments, "...Rural Alberta Advantage were known as the best unsigned band in Canada before Saddle Creek snapped them up and re-released this debut. And it's a good thing they did; songs this good deserve to be heard by audiences as large as their sonic scope." This is the highest-rated Pitchfork review for a Saddle Creek act in recent memory (or perhaps ever?). Keep in mind, this is a re-release. Let's see how well The RAA scores with their first Creek-exclusive album.

* * *

Tonight at Slowdown Jr. Bowerbirds plays. They're out on the road supporting their latest album, Upper Air, on Dead Oceans. They play pretty acoustic folk-rock with accordion and plenty of harmonies. Opening is Megafaun. $10, 9 p.m.

Did anyone notice that Amazing Baby is scheduled to play at Slowdown Sept. 27? They've yet to list the date on the 1% or Slowdown websites, however. Amazing Baby is one of the hotter (and better) new indie rock bands on the scene. Check 'em out.

* * *

By the way, Pt. 2 of my guest appearance on the Worlds of Wayne podcast (celebrating the show's 100th episode) is now available for your listening pleasure at www.worldsofwayne.com.

* * *

Hey, where's this week's column? Column space this week was used for an extended interview with Tim Kasher in support of Friday night's free Cursive show at the Slowdown parking lot. The interview will be online right here tomorrow.

--Got comments? Post 'em here.--


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posted by Tim McMahan - Lazy-i.com at 10:48 AM

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

It happened last weekend; Our Fox, Gogol Bordello tonight…

I'm still catching up on last weekend. The most notable event was, of course, the first annual Speed! Nebraska / O'Leaver's adult soapbox derby held at Seymour Smith Park. As predicted, there was plenty of bloody mayhem in the form of grisly crashes. The crowd was... unfortunate. When I showed up shortly after 11, only 20 or so people were there. That number would balloon to about 50 when I left at 1, and I was told by an organizer that another 100 or showed up later in the afternoon. This was the first time for this annual event, after all. I don't think anyone expected a Horsemen's Park-sized crowd. Six soapbox cars entered the fray, and from its first test run it was obvious that the three-wheeled death contraption driven by Jon Taylor of Domestica was going to win the whole thing, for among other reasons it was the only entry able to make it to the end of the course. It was also scary fast, like watching someone luge head-first staring at a spinning blade. Here's an awesome picture someone took of Taylor and his ride prior to the race. Frightening.

Gary Dean Davis' race car also was bad-ass (here's my not-so-awesome photo), and would end up coming in second pace. O'Leaver's El Camino took third-place honors.

But who cares about the race results? People go to the races for the crashes, and there were two doozies. Taylor lost control of his death mobile the third time down the track and went airborne before performing a tumbling exercise on the asphalt mat that scored him a perfect 10 along with a gashed elbow. Very exciting. After I left, Mike Tulis and his rolling piece of plywood crashed into a guardrail. The damage could still be seen on his face later that evening at O'Leaver's. So yes, there was blood, but no permanent damage except maybe to the pride of the guy who raced the H1N1 pig mobile...

Later that evening the racers took a musical victory lap at O'Leaver's. I caught the tail end of The Third Men's set, along with all of Domestica's, which sounded better than ever (see photo). At the end of the day, a few hundred bucks was raised for Special Olympics of Nebraska, which made everyone a winner.

Earlier in the evening I caught Neko Case's sold-out performance at The Slowdown. It was a different crowd than the usual hipper-than-thou scenester/slacker club -- mostly couples in the late 20s and 30s out for a date night. Case is an indie-music diva who appeals to a smarter, more refined audience than you'll find at, say, a Sheryl Crow concert. She sounded terrific on Slowdown's big stage, backed by five musicians including a back-up singer who was more of a stand-up comic, playing the role of EmCee in charge of keeping the laughs rolling between songs while Neko tuned her beefy Gibson SG. Neko got a few choice lines in as well, but it was mostly the side-kick that kept the audience engaged. While her music is uplifting, Neko's lyrics are agonizingly depressing. Adding to the gloom, projected on a stage decorated with a giant crowned owl, were images that looked like were shot on Super 8 film of storm clouds and buildings being demolished and gloom. Depressing indeed. Still, Case was in her usual terrific voice, and the band was dead-on -- one of the better shows so far this year.

* * *

There are a couple shows worth mentioning tonight. Down at Slowdown Jr., new local indie super group Our Fox opens for country-flavored Tennessee chick-punks Those Darlings and Tin Kite. $7, 9 p.m. Also tonight, eastern European carnival ride Gogol Bordello plays at Sokol Auditorium. $25, 7 p.m.

--Got comments? Post 'em here.--


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posted by Tim McMahan - Lazy-i.com at 7:00 AM

Friday, July 17, 2009

Beef Curtains tonight; Speed! Soapbox Derby Day, Neko Case tomorrow…

One perfect weather weekend coming right up. And it ain't bad musicwise, either.

Tonight at The Stir Cove at Harrah's in beautiful Council Bluffs, The Beef Curtains return to the stage with a little help from Bear Country, The Filter Kings and Little Brazil. This one is absolutely free, folks, and starts at 6:30.

Also tonight, the return of Janglepop at The 49'r. It's probably $5 and probably starts at 9:30.

Then tomorrow, Saturday, the event you've been hearing about for weeks (months?): The Speed! Nebraska / O'Leaver's Adult Soapbox Derby at Seymour Smith Park, 72nd & Washington St. entrance. The racing action begins at 11 a.m. with teams fighting for the right to call themselves The King of the Slope! The event includes a beer garden (just what these guys DIDN'T need) along with plenty of grilled food and raffles, with the proceeds going to the Special Olympics of Nebraska. Afterward, O'Leaver's is hosting a checkered-flag party featuring Domestica, The Third Men, Wagon Blasters, Filter Kings and The Sons of the Soapbox Derby. $5, 9:30 p.m. This could well prove to be the EVENT OF THE SUMMER. Don't miss it.

Also tomorrow night, Neko Case plays at The Slowdown with Imaad Wasif. $22, 9 p.m. Meanwhile, over at The Waiting Room, it's The Pendrakes with Landing on the Moon and The Ground Tyrants. $7, 9 p.m.

See you at the park.

--Got comments? Post 'em here.--


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posted by Tim McMahan - Lazy-i.com at 12:11 PM

Thursday, July 16, 2009

Live Review: The Rural Alberta Advantage; racing begins today…

Other than Nils Edenloff's twangy croon, the first song on the new Rural Alberta Advantage album, Hometowns, sort of resembles a DCFC song -- warm keyboards, bells, thumping percussion. But despite having performed that very song last night at The Slowdown, there wasn't a single moment during their set that resembled how it sounds on their record, and that's not necessarily a bad thing.

The RAA -- a trio with Nils on lead vocals/guitar/keyboards, drummer Paul Banwatt and fetching female vocalist/percussionist/keyboardist Amy Cole (there is no bass) -- more closely resembles the dusty Americana sound of Deer Tick. I'm not the only one who thought so. I got a text halfway through their set from someone on the other side of the crowded room (not a sell-out, incidentally, but a beefy 140), saying "way more Deer Tick than Great Lake Swimmers." Yes it was. More Deer Tick than DCFC or Neutral Milk Hotel, who they also have been compared to.

The Deer Tick comparison left me wondering who I would pick between the two bands if I owned a label. Deer Tick seems to be riding a slightly higher wave, in part due to a longer history, NBC's Brian Williams and SXSW. Despite that, I'd still pick The RAA if only for the fact that their music is more interesting to me. Their songs have better variety and better hooks, and I like Hometowns a lot more than DT's Born on Flag Day, which has its moments but overall is forgettable.

Last night, the trio kept it simple, with Nils out front on acoustic guitar throughout most of the set while a giddy Cole pranced around stage with a maraca or leaned into a large drum at her feet. Their relatively short set was capped with a two-song encore that included one cover -- Nils doing a solo acoustic version of "Eye of the Tiger." Sweet.

I did catch most of Dave Dondero's solo acoustic set -- it's always nice to hear where Conor got his famous bray. I missed UUVVWWZ entirely. It seemed odd that one of the bands celebrating its CD release would be slated to go on first at 9 p.m. sharp, instead of in the middle (the sweet spot for any show) or last. I'm not sure what that says about how the label -- which owns the club -- perceives UUVVWWZ compared to The RAA (or ol' DD, for that matter).

* * *

A non-music aside…

This is a racing weekend. As I mentioned a couple days ago, the Speed! Nebraska/O'Leaver's adult soapbox derby is this Saturday at 11 a.m. at Seymour Smith Park (6802 Harrison St.). You don't want to miss the carnage. But that's not the only racing going on. Starting tonight, Horsemen's Park is hosting its annual 4-day track meet -- live horse racing -- with post times at 6 p.m. today and tomorrow and 2 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. If possible, I shall be at all four days of racing as I cannot get enough of the spectacle. I hate casinos, I don't bet football and I've never been into cards. This is the only gambling that I do. And it's only one weekend per year.

For those of you wondering if it's worth your time, consider the following essay that I wrote for The Reader in 2004, an ill attempt at capturing The Sport of Kings. So angered was Horesmen's Park by this article that they pulled their advertising from The Reader (Hats off to John Heaston for having the cajones to run it as is). Although five years have passed, the facts (for the most part) remain the same. Sit back an enjoy:

* * *

A Day at the Races (First published in The Reader, July 21, 2004)

There's a scene in the 1989 Richard Dreyfuss horse racing classic Let It Ride where Dreyfuss' character, Jay Trotter, is accosted by his pissed-off wife, Pam (played fetchingly by Teri Garr), inside the track's Jockey's Club. Trotter's already had a good day, and it would only get better. Anyway, while sitting at a table with Trotter and a few other high rollers, Pam asks the essential question that cuts to the heart of horse racing: "Why can't you people just watch the horses run around the track without betting on them?"

Everyone titters with rolled-eyed laughter, and afterward Trotter explains it simply, calmly, matter-of-factly: "Because, Pam, without betting there would be no horse racing."

It really is as simple as that.

Look, I could write 800 words that try to capture the majesty of the so-called Sport of Kings with colorful, poetic descriptions of sweaty horses and tiny jockeys. I could make metaphors for how this "sport" is the ultimate test of man controlling nature against man. And while all of it may be true, it has nothing to do with why thousands of people showed up at Horsemen's Park last weekend for the annual four-day track meet.

* * *

After two days of relative success betting on individual horses "across the board," the final day was deemed "All Exotics Sunday." I would bet only exactas and daily doubles. By this point, I was still on the plus side moneywise for the weekend (not including what I spent on beer and food).

On the way to the track we figured that, like the year before, no one would show up on Sunday. Wrong. Of the three days we attended (we skipped Friday because of the nightmarish 311 concert) this seemed like the largest crowd. We did our best to dodge the insane people as we pulled into the makeshift parking lot / mud field adjacent to the track. They were driving around the barriers and through taped-off mud holes desperately trying to find a place to park. They ran from their SUVs dragging their children behind them by their wrists -- My God! Post time was in five minutes!

I'd done my research on the way to the track, busily underlining the names of horses in the day's program. Even so, there was no way we were going to run to the betting window in this heat. But just as we parked, up came a shuttle bus and we rode in air-conditioned comfort to the front door of the main building, passing the huffing father and his crying 5-year-old as they rounded the far corner of the track, lost in a cloud of dust.

Too bad we made it in time. Like the previous days, my bet in the first race was a loser. Keeping with the exotics theme, I had bet the 3-5 exacta and a 3-1 daily double -- a total of $5. My partner in crime bet the No. 10 horse -- $2 to win -- for no other reason than she liked the name: "What About David." She won $7.40. My No. 3 horse came in second to last.

It didn't matter. I figured I actually saved $1 by placing the exacta bet instead of the usual $2 across-the-board bet (total $6) that had been so successful the past couple days. Gambling means always looking at the positive side of losing.

The second race featured 1 and 1A horses -- that's two different horses that you can bet for the price of one -- a real bargain. I boxed an exacta with the 3 horse, "Lost in a Rush," which seemed like a sure thing. This time I got the lingo right at the betting window. The first time, the 60-year-old woman behind the window glared as I took five minutes explaining what I wanted to bet. "You mean Box the 3-5 in the first?" she asked through her smoker's hack. "Honey, you need to learn how to say it right if you wanna bet exotics."

After placing the bet, I was left with something like 50 minutes before post time and nothing to do. If you're a hardcore gambler you can waste money betting on the televised races inside the main facility. If not, you're left with either listening to the band (On the Fritz playing a cover of "Jesse's Girl"), watching the horses get examined in the paddock, listening to drunks explain why they always bet horses with blinders, or sitting in the grandstand under the canopy to avoid the scorching, blistering sun.

I took a moment to soak it all in and examine the humanity that makes up the usual day at the races:

On the far end of the spectrum were the crazies. For example, the shaggy old guy with a full beard, cowboy hat, long-sleeved dress shirt and red suspenders that held up a pair of denim shorts that revealed red-and-white Cat in the Hat-style knee-highs tucked into a pair of cowboy boots. There was plenty of this type to go around.

There were groups of older Mexican guys groomed in western shirts, wrinkleless blue jeans, immaculate boots and straw hats, quietly talking to their senioritas.

There were the suburban, blond-dyed housewives with their hair pushed behind visors revealing cocoa tans and made-up faces. Alongside them, their matching husbands in bright, tacky golf clothes.

There were kids everywhere -- since when is going to the track a family affair? Children ran around on the hot white rock, slapping each other with rolled-up racing programs and running absentmindedly into angry beer-soaked strangers. There's nothing like seeing a young, goateed father in Nascar gear bully his way to a betting window with a stroller, cigarette in the one hand, telling his five year old to "Find your mother. I'm out of money. Go!"

There were plenty of folks in their twilight years, taking a day off from the boats to enjoy some outdoor gambling. Saturday night's race featured the excitement of an apparent heart attack or heat stroke. The poor guy was white as a ghost, staring blankly ahead in the stands after the day's final race. Passing eyes shifted between the gasping man, the overhead odds board and the security people holding walkie-talkies and waving to the EMTs.

For every grinning, giddy first-time winner ("I can't believe it! My 'place' ticket won!") there was a bitter lifer, swearing "shit!" as he tore his losing tickets, tossing them like confetti into the summer breeze. Two minutes of sulking later, he was buried in the forms picking the next "winner."

"Exotics Sunday" ended up being a bust, and after the second race I returned to picking single horses on hunch bets. Both "Fajita" in the Third and "Chuckie's in Love" in the Fourth died before they hit the stretch, and I ended down $20 for the weekend. Not bad for three days of entertainment and a slice of Wal-Mart style Americana that can't be found anywhere else in Nebraska... at least until that gambling initiative passes in November.

* * *

That gambling initiative, as we all know, didn't pass.

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Wednesday, July 15, 2009

Column 230: Seeing Red; The Rural Alberta Advantage, UUVVWWZ tonight…

Little Brazil's Greg Edds said that when the production company showed up at the West Omaha house for the video shoot last Saturday morning, it garnered plenty of attention from the neighbor, followed by cops, who merely did drive-bys. "There were 15 dudes standing in the front yard at 6 a.m. with giant equipment," Edds said. "We stuck out like a sore thumb. Everyone had to think that a porno was being shot."

Column 230: Seeing Red
Little Brazil and the art of the video.

Upon arriving at The Sydney at around 11 a.m. last Sunday -- the time the "shoot" was scheduled for the Little Brazil music video -- only a handful of people were mulling around in the bar. Near the entrance, four guys in jeans and t-shirts were stringing lighting equipment above the curtained-off front windows. Scratch that -- only one guy on a ladder was actually doing something while the other three "grips" watched and gave advice.

Track had been constructed along the floor in front of the bar -- two shiny chrome rails like long strippers' poles lay side by side. A large push car sat on one end with the camera rig waiting to go. This was no ordinary camera; it was a Red One -- a state-of-the-art digital cinematography camera capable of shooting up to 4,096 by 2,304 pixels -- huge by industry standards, or so I was told. Little Brazil was going all out, diving head-first into the artistic realm of music videos. And it wasn't cheap.

Video director Bill Sitzmann, a still photographer known for his quirky, artistic style of shooting rock bands (including many featured in this newspaper) hustled me down to the Sydney's dusty basement for a demo of the Red One in action. On a Powerbook connected to two portable hard drives, Sitzmann played video from the previous day's 16-hour shoot at a West Omaha home. Recorded at 100 frames per second, the effect was surreal -- intricately detailed images of children playing in a back yard, frozen in the air on a swing set, every nuance, every speck of detail captured crystal clear, near 3D, ghostly, like CinemaScope at a wide-screen ratio of 21 x 9. This wasn't a video, this was a motion picture; this was art.

To Little Brazil guitarist Greg Edds, it was the art that made it all make sense. Because it wasn't the band's label -- Anodyne Records -- or their publicist picking up the multi-thousand dollar tab for the shoot; it was the band along with Edds himself.

"This is our first major production of a video," Edds explained. "We've done things in the past with HD cameras and crews, but I wanted to take a step forward. We were raised in the MTV generation. I remember the videos more than the songs themselves. I can't remember Peter Gabriel's 'Sledgehammer,' but I remember its crazy video."

Now with YouTube and Hulu, millions of music videos are viewed every day. "You can do a lot with flip cameras and camera phones, but there's a quality issue," Edds said. "From an art perspective, that's where the Red One came to mind."

It was Sitzmann who told him about Red One. Edds saw some examples, including two recent feature films by Steven Soderbergh shot with the camera as well Maria Taylor's video for "Time Lapse Lifeline," shot by Alan Tanner.

"I knew (the camera) would give the whole idea for the video new meaning," Edds said. "The rest of the guys (in the band) jumped on board. It's a big financial gamble. We're not going to make money from it; it's just another creative aspect of the music that will make the song hit home."

The song is "Separated," from Little Brazil's recently released record, Son, a concept album that tracks the lifeline of a family from a couple's first date to its suicidal demise and beyond. "Separated," comes toward the end, after the couple splits. The husband (played by Workers Deli sandwich chef Francis Rowe) struggles with losing his wife (played by Son Ambulance vocalist Jenna Morrison) and seeing his children bond with her new boyfriend. He daydreams about getting back together with her.

The sequence being shot at The Sydney is part of that daydream -- the couple's glorious hand-in-hand entrance into a party greeted in a cloud of confetti thrown by all their friends. Unfortunately, this Sunday morning Little Brazil's friends hadn't shown up. Frantic calls for "extras" were sent via text and Twitter and Facebook. It wasn't until 2:30 that Sitzmann yelled "Ready!" while standing atop the bar, telling everyone to go crazy when Francis and Jenna enter the front door. Queue the song, and then… action. In rushed the talent, pushing through the crowd's smiling, screaming faces -- the same faces you'll see on a typical night at O'Leaver's or The Sydney or The Waiting Room -- while the Red One and its operator floated beside them down the chrome rails.

The shot was done again and again and again. Extras ran out of confetti. Little Brazil bassist Dan Maxwell found a new use for The Reader, tearing its pages to tiny bits. By 3 o'clock, Sitzmann yelled "Moving on," and the crowd cheered. But that wasn't the end of the shoot. Everyone stayed for three more hours for shots of the couple dancing while the band played on The Sydney's stage.

Now Sitzmann along with editor Jon Tvrdik will cut the video, with Edds looking over their shoulders. Post production could take two to three weeks. With the band scheduled to tour in the beginning of August, they hope to have a screening scheduled when they get back two weeks later. After that, copies of the video will be sent to their label and publicist, who will filter it to different networks and online outlets, with hopes of it "going viral."

As for Edds, he's already thinking of the next shoot. "It was a fun experiment," he said. "It's exciting and really addicting. Now I want to do it again." But next time, he said, it'll be 48 minutes instead of 48 hours, and lot less expensive.

* * *

It's a duo CD re-release party tonight at Slowdown Jr. The Rural Alberta Advantage, who I wrote about in the last issue of The Reader (read it here) is celebrating the re-release by Saddle Creek Records of Hometown; while UUVVWWZ is celebrating the re-release -- also by Saddle Creek -- of its self-titled debut album. On top of that, Dave Dondero is in town and opening this show. Except a very crowded front room (maybe even a sell out?). $8, 9 p.m.

Also tonight, another chance to catch Brad Hoshaw (third show in less than seven days?) along with Anniversaire when they open for Chicago's Cameron McGill & What Army at The Waiting Room. $7, 9 p.m.

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posted by Tim McMahan - Lazy-i.com at 5:22 AM

Tuesday, July 14, 2009

Speed!-ing along at 33 rpm; Wholesome tonight…

As I type this I'm listening to the new EP on Speed! Nebraska Records called Speed! Soapbox Riot, a six-song compilation by six different Speed! bands, all built around a theme that involves cars and racing and... speed! Featured artists are Wagon Blasters, Filter Kings, The Mezcal Brothers, Domestica, The Third Men and Ideal Cleaners. All the tracks except for the Filter Kings' song were recorded at Fuse Recording Studios in Lincoln by Charlie Johnson (FK's "Steal Your Car" was recorded by Tim Cich at Baseline). Think of these as sort of modern takes on Commander Cody's "Hot Rod Lincoln." Except of course for The Third Men's cover of Deep Purple's "Space Truckin'," which screams.

The record is a celebration of the First Annual Speed! & O'Leaver's Soapbox Derby, which goes down this Saturday at 11 a.m. at Seymour Smith Park. I suspect that it'll be a bloody extravaganza -- here's hoping they have an ambulance on stand-by. All proceeds from the race benefit the Special Olympics, so I guess that makes everybody (that survives) a winner. That very evening there will be a checkered-flag celebration at O'Leaver's featuring many of the bands on the 10-inch. Incidentally, the record (that's right, it's vinyl) is available at all your favorite local independent record stores.

* * *

Tonight at O'Leaver's Wholesome (which, according to their Myspace page, consists of members of Rasputin, Hedge, Bloodcow, Head of Woman, The Dinks, and Members of the Press) plays with San Diego's Archons. $5, 9:30 p.m. Also, Minneapolis hip-hop posse Doomtree is at The Waiting Room with GaiDen Gadema. $8, 9 p.m.

* * *

I spent a good chunk of my Sunday at The Sydney watching the Little Brazil video shoot for "Separated." These guys are going all-out for this video, and putting their money where their mouth is. The shoot, the technology and reasoning behind it is the subject of this week's column, which will be online tomorrow.

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posted by Tim McMahan - Lazy-i.com at 11:21 AM

Monday, July 13, 2009

Some Saddle Creek news (Orenda, Old Canes)…

Quick weekend recap -- the only music I experienced was last night's Songs for a Cure benefit at The Waiting Room, which drew a pretty good crowd for a Sunday night. Of course the bands that I saw -- Dan McCarthy, It's True and Brad Hoshaw and the Seven Deadlies -- were exceptional, as per usual. Bonus for all who attended and will attend The Waiting Room in the future -- the club just got a new high-efficiency cooling system, so you'll never sweat at their shows again.

A couple news items of note:

Saddle Creek sent out a press release last Friday where they announced a couple new releases for the fall. First is a new Orenda Fink album called Ask the Night, slated for Oct. 6. According to her publicist (Cobra Camanda Publicity), "Ask The Night was primarily recorded live to 8-track by Stephen Bartolomei (Mal Madrigal) in Orenda's former Omaha, NE, basement (she is now based in Los Angeles, CA), as well as by Andy LeMaster in his Athens, GA, living room." The album features a number of guest performers, including Bartolomei and LeMaster, Isaac Brock of Modest Mouse, Dan McCarthy and Adrianne Verhoeven (Dri, The Anniversary, Art In Manila).

Orenda is one busy lady. This album comes just a few months after her last album, O+S, was released, and she's also reunited with Maria Taylor for Azure Ray, with the duo apparently working on a new Azure Ray album. Prolific.

Also tucked into the last Saddle Creek press release was an apparent new signing by the label -- Old Canes, who will be releasing their album Feral Harmonic on Saddle Creek Oct. 20. Who is Old Canes? Well, Cobra Camanda, who's also handling their press, hasn't sent out the info yet, but according to their Myspace page, Old Canes "is Chris Crisci (Appleseed Cast), Jordan Geiger (Minus Story), Tyler French, John Anderson (Boy's Life / White Whale), Kelly Hangauer (Save The Whales), and Kelsey Richardson."

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posted by Tim McMahan - Lazy-i.com at 10:51 AM

Friday, July 10, 2009

Filter Kings tonight, Songs for a Cure (Hoshaw, It's True, McCarthy) Sunday; WofW 100 is online...

All shows this weekend are local -- no national acts worth mentioning (or that I know of -- chime in if you know something I don't).

Tonight at The Waiting Room the mighty Filter Kings headline a show with Cowboy Dave Trio and JJ Wills Band. Wear your shit-kickers and cowboy hat. $7, 9 p.m.

Tomorrow night Brad Hoshaw opens a singer/songwriter showcase at The Saddle Creek Bar with William Fitzsimmons (He's from Illinois, so there goes the local spin angle) and Jenny Owen Youngs. $5, 9 p.m.

Also Saturday night, The Mercurys play at The Waiting Room with Vago. $7, 9 p.m.

Sunday night, The Waiting Room is hosting Songs for a Cure, a benefit concert for the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation (JDRF), that features some of the area's best singer/songwriters. On the showbill are Brad Hoshaw, It's True, McCarthy Trenching and Raven Carousel (Benn Sieff, guitar/vocals; Cass Brostad bass/vocals, and Jerry Kuhn, drums). The totality of your $5 admission will go toward JDRF. Do yourself and the JDRF a favor and check this one out.

* * *

The 100th Episode of Worlds of Wayne went online yesterday at worldsofwayne.com. Now all of you who ever wondered what my voice sounds like (or who has doubted that I actually exist) can find out by listening to the podcast. The show features Wayne Brekke and I discussing the history of WofW, his favorite guests and in-studio performances, along with music and other h-jinx. Wayne had so much material to work with that he's split the episode into two parts. Part 1 is available now. Check it out.

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posted by Tim McMahan - Lazy-i.com at 10:49 AM

Thursday, July 09, 2009

Cover story: The Rural Alberta Advantage; open call for Little Brazil video...

Just placed online, an interview with Nils Edenloff of The Rural Alberta Advantage (read it here). Nils talks about the band's Canadian origins at an open-mic night in Toronto, their quick rise to national notoriety and their relationship with Saddle Creek. It is amazing how quickly they've rocketed to national indie acceptance in such a short time. This tour that brings them to The Slowdown next Wednesday is their first one that's lasted more than a few weeks. In that context, they've got a lot in common with fellow new labelmates UUVVWWZ, who are opening that show. They're also a rare example of living the dream that is SXSW, where Nils said it all came together with Creek. Maybe going to Austin isn't such a waste of time after all? Anyway, read the story here or in this week's issue of The Reader.

* * *

Little Brazil is inviting everyone to The Sydney late Sunday morning to be extras in their next rock video, being shot and directed by Bill Sitzmann, whose photos have appeared numerous times on this here website (as well as countless national magazines). The shoot begins at 11 a.m. and will run until 2. You have to be 21 and wearing "Graduation Party" attire, which I guess means business casual and summer dresses. Sayeth Little Brazil guitarist Greg Edds, "We're gonna be using the mother of all cameras. It's called the RED ONE. Costing us $1,500 a day for this bad boy. It's the same camera that was used to film the new Star Trek, for all the camera nerds out there. Little Brazil is taking a step forward into the costly creative world." No kidding. So stop by. You might not only end up in the video, but also in a column written about the shoot...

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Wednesday, July 08, 2009

Column 229: Worlds of Wayne 100; The Stay Awake tonight...

Years and years ago, I was asked why I didn't have a podcast. I certainly could -- I'm loaded with Mac equipment, which makes such things easy as pie. My answer was/is that I barely have time to keep my blog updated let alone sit in front of a microphone and read the blog to those too lazy to read it themselves. Sure, I suppose I could do a lot of stuff other than just read what I've written, but it would cut into time I need to write and rewrite, not only Lazy-i but also the music features I try to write on a regular basis (and on top of that, if I depended on recorded interviews, it would double the time necessary to write due to transcription, and I hate transcription). Anyway, I don't need a podcast because Wayne has his. And though we generally don't follow the same music (Wayne's taste runs drastically more mainstream and less indie than mine) our reporting paths do overlap (sometimes). And there's no way I could do it as well as he does.

Find out Friday when Worlds of Wayne episode No. 100 goes online at worldsofwayne.com. I'm the special in-studio guest. Tell me how well I did, because I very likely won't listen to the program due to a severe phobia about listening to my own recorded voice -- another reason why I don't do a podcast.

Column 229: Omaha's Podfather
Worlds of Wayne turns 100

And with a click of a mouse, the Worlds of Wayne Show was on the air.

Well, not really "on the air." Worlds of Wayne isn't broadcast in a conventional sense. Actually, Worlds of Wayne isn't broadcast at all. It's a podcast, a digital recording that you listen to on your computer at worldsofwayne.com, or download and take with you on your iPod or whatever kind of portable music device you prefer. When WoW began three years ago, it was kinda/sorta new technology, a way for talented talkers like Wayne to get their message out without having to deal with the bureaucracy and idiocy of mainstream radio.

It was that idiocy that drove Wayne to first plug his microphone into his tower PC, slap on a set of "cans" and begin sharing his worldview -- along with his favorite music -- with an audience wandering in that dark, crowded nether world that we call The Internet.

"Wayne," by the way, is Wayne Brekke, drummer for such famous Omaha pop bands as Five Story Fall, The Get and Anonymous American; graphic artist, freelance writer (whose assignments include work for this very newspaper), husband and father and music-loving man-about-town. As of last Monday evening, Wayne had recorded 99 episodes of Worlds of Wayne. For his 100th, he invited me to sit in on the festivities. How could I say no?

The Worlds of Wayne studio is located in a small room in a small house on the north side of Benson, a spare bedroom turned into an epicenter. Behind a mic, computer and console of knobs and dials was Wayne looking like a stocky beat poet in a stretched-out red tank top and black gym shorts that I just assumed he'd been sleeping in only moments before I arrived. He balanced a rim-filled martini glass as he slid into his black leather office chair, carefully avoiding a hairy pile of flesh with a tail called "Timmy J," an overweight white tabby who later would be evicted from the studio upon suffering a wheezing fit.

And with a click of a mouse, we were "on the air." No. 100 was in progress.

It was a retrospective show not unlike those anniversary episodes of Happy Days or Laverne and Shirley where the characters reminisce about the past as lead-in to clips from previous shows. Wayne talked about his favorite episodes, like the one where he had two paranormal groups in-studio to talk about their ghost-busting exploits and play snippets of EVPs -- Electronic Voice Phenomenon, i.e., ghost recordings. Spooky, if you believe in that sort of thing (and I don't).

There were the in-studio performances by the likes of Chris Trapper (of the Push Stars), Seneca, Sweet Pea, Brad Hoshaw, Skypiper, John Elliott, Orenda Fink and Korey Anderson, among others. Wayne is compiling the best ones into a CD -- Worlds of Wayne - Studio Sessions Vol. 1 -- his version of The John Peel Sessions.

And then there are the interviews, including with such notables as KISS guitarist Ace Frehley, Achy Breaky Heart guy and Miley's father Billy Ray Cyrus and Blues Traveler keyboard player Ben Wilson, who was the first guest on the first show July 26, 2006.

That first episode also featured music by Anonymous American and Sarah Benck as well as Wayne's natterings about whatever entered his mind. "I explained the show and what I wanted to do," he said. "I just wanted to focus on music, art and culture, with commentary and interviews with local and national guests." And that's exactly what Worlds of Wayne became, and is. Brekke originally wanted to do it on the radio, until he got a small taste of the business, just enough to turn his stomach.

"I found out how corporate and restricted it was," he said, adding that he was turned off by "the buffoon-ism of the morning shows, where the DJ's knew less about music than my cat. They were behind the times on everything musicwise. It was like listening to your parents try to make a teenage joke."

Podcasting was his perfect alternative. "I can play whatever I want, say whatever I want. I can swear. I can have it be about anything and just put it out there for people to take with them."

And people have. Brekke said Worlds of Wayne is downloaded about 1,500 times a month, with fans from as far away as Europe and Australia. The rise of new media sites like Twitter and Facebook has only helped his audience grow. "I'm now known more for Worlds of Wayne than any band I've ever been in," he said. It's that notoriety that keeps him doing it. "I'm an attention hog. I like the spotlight, but I don't play in bands much anymore. This is my way of keeping my name out there and staying connected with the music scene."

In other words, Worlds of Wayne isn't a money maker, and never was intended to be, though he does have a few sponsored ads, just enough to pay for his mics and cables and other upgrades. Just enough to keep him going, and that's all he wants to do. Until he reaches No. 200, and beyond.

"Part of me is old school," he said. "There's an intimacy that comes with listening to a radio show even if it's on the Internet. I've captured some pretty amazing things."

And with a click of the mouse, Worlds of Wayne signed off... until No. 101.

* * *

Omaha's favorite noise-punk trio, The Stay Awake, opens a show tonight at The Waiting Room for St. Louis' So Many Dynamos and Lincoln's Tie These Hands. $8, 9 p.m. Also tonight, Chicago mid-fi pop band Netherfriends (on Emergency Umbrella Records) plays with adamroberthauG, Conchance and Capgun Coup's Sam Martin and Sean Pratt. $5, 9 p.m.

--Got comments? Post 'em here.--


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posted by Tim McMahan - Lazy-i.com at 10:47 AM

Tuesday, July 07, 2009

Live Review: It's True emerges; Oberst does Letterman, again…

I've been trying to write this for the past couple of days. I've rewritten it three times. What can I say, I've been busy. Yesterday instead of writing the blog entry, I was writing a feature on The Rural Alberta Advantage, which you'll see right here on Thursday. And this week's column is a celebration of the Worlds of Wayne podcast, where I was the "special in-studio guest" for its 100th episode. That column will be online tomorrow and the podcast will be up at worldsofwayne.com on Friday (if Wayne gets his editing shit together).

Which brings me back to last Saturday night and It's True. I wasn't expecting much of a crowd. It being the Fourth of July and all, I figured most people would be home minding their bandages and burnt fingers and early-evening hangovers. Instead there was a sizable crowd at The Waiting Room -- my guesstimate, around 150 -- there to see Little Brazil but also there for It's True, who rarely plays shows these days (whereas LB seems to play somewhere every other week).

There's been a buzz about Adam Hawkins for the past year that's been simmering just below the surface. He's been the "It band" for singers, songwriters and musicians "in the know" since last summer. Now interest in Hawkins and his music is starting to eke out to the rest of the Omaha music scene. The timing couldn't be better. I've seen a few incarnations of It's True, but the one on stage last Saturday night was the apex -- a solid, huge-sounding ensemble that's pushed its way to the top of the list of Omaha's unsigned bands (and it's quite a list).

The set list included material from It's True's debut that came out on Slo-Fi earlier this year. That album was essentially a Hawkins solo record. Last Saturday's set fleshed out those songs to epic proportions, where they deserve to be. Hawkins had talked about holding off on that first album until he could "do the songs right." He did the right thing by releasing it when he did, but now he needs to rerecord it with this band, and let the games begin. If there's a local band that belongs on Saddle Creek, it's these guys. They fill a niche that resides between the songwriting angst of Tim Kasher and the pastoral elegance of Bright Eyes (who we haven't seen the last of, yet). Kasher has a history of taking local bands out on the road with him. The most recent example is cave pop superstars Box Elders, who are currently tethered to a rocket pointed straight to the upper stratospheres of garage rock stardom, fueled by a tour that lasts through August and ends at Goner Fest in Memphis Sept. 26. As good as Box Elders are, It's True would be an even better opening band for Cursive since its style of music compliments Cursive's more recent outings, which are heavier on songwriting than teeth-gnashing noise.

In honor of the holiday, It's True ended its set with a rendition of the national anthem, an American flag draped over Hawkins' back. It was a lead-in to a cover of Springsteen's "Born in the USA" that was sloppy and diabolical. By mid-song, the flag fell from Hawkins' slumped shoulders where it was kicked around on stage (intentionally or not). Afterward, someone asked me what I thought. "Looks like there's a new sheriff in town," I said. (See photo).

Following that, Little Brazil had its work cut out for them, and they met the challenge with another over-the-top set that featured a clean-shaven Landon Hedges once again looking like the second-coming of Bobby Brady. If there's a band that needs to get out on the road for two months, it's these guys. Let's hope a tour is in the works.

* * *

In case you missed it, Conor Oberst and his crazy hat (along with the Mystic Valley Band) were on The Late show with David Letterman last night singing a rather flat version of "Spoiled" from Outer South. Not his/their best performance, but then again, this isn't one of his/their better songs, either. Check it out on YouTube.

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posted by Tim McMahan - Lazy-i.com at 10:54 AM

Friday, July 03, 2009

Live Review: Girl in a Coma; the holiday weekend...

My only concern with Girl in a Coma, the band that played in front of about 50 people last night at The Waiting Room, has to do with their name. If you heard it for the first time, you'd assume this was a Morrissey tribute band instead of a smart, fun, catchy indie rock trio. No matter that on about half of their songs hot frontwoman guitarist/vocalist Nina Diaz sings exactly like Morrissey right down to the odd octave jumps on songs structured from the same boilerplate used for Vauxhall and I. Forget the fact that -- for a time -- they actually opened for Morrissey. Being anchored to such a name could eventually be a hindrance, especially considering that the other half of their music is guttural punk that's too well played to be mistaken for garage rock. They have a well-tooled sheen about them that comes from serious touring and having a mentor in an old-school performer like Joan Jett, whose label (Blackheart) they're signed to. Despite the familiar vocal phrasing, Nina's voice is actually closer to Karen O's and at times could be flat-out gorgeous (although the vocals along with the drums were poorly mixed last night). I listened to their latest, Trio BC, again this morning, and it comes nowhere near the intensity of their live set, but that's not necessarily a bad thing. Bringing everything down a notch and balancing the sound reveals some clever, hook-filled songs by a clever band that could be the next Donnas (but with better skills and songs). See iPhoto from last night.

* * *

The July 4 weekend kicks off quietly. Satchel Grande is doing its thing tonight at The Waiting Room with Old Money. $7, 9 p.m. and... that's about all that's worth mentioning. Tomorrow night's hot show is Little Brazil, It's True, Flight Metaphor and David Matysiak of Coyote Bones at The Waiting Room. $4, 9 p.m. While Reagan Roeder's new band, Hubble, is playing at The 49'r with Jake Bellows, Dylan Davis and John Klemmensen and the Party. $5, 9 p.m. The Slowdown is closed Saturday.

Have a happy Indie Day...

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posted by Tim McMahan - Lazy-i.com at 11:00 AM

Thursday, July 02, 2009

Girl in a Coma, Bear Country tonight...

I wish I had tomorrow off. But I don't. Tomorrow is only the third of July, not the Fourth, so my office will be open for business. That, however, isn't going to stop me from going to one of the many good shows happening tonight.

At the top of my list (and the show I'll likely attend) is Girl in a Coma at The Waiting Room with Miss Derringer. GIAC is signed to Blackheart Records (Joan Jett's label) and plays gritty indie rock that borders on punk. Joan, I'm sure, is proud. $8, 9 p.m.

Just down the street, one of the area's best bands going -- Bear Country -- is playing at The Sydney with Andrew Ancona, Adam Robert Haug and Spring Acres. $5, 9 p.m. You won't be disappointed.

Over at O'Leaver's, low-fi punk rock dynamos Ketchup & Mustard Gas are playing with The Fergusens. $3 (a bargain!), 9:30 p.m.

Pop duo Shiver Shiver joins DJ Brent Crampton at Espana as part of the Loom series. $5, 9 p.m.

Finally, Les Claypool of Primus is doing a show at The Anchor Inn with O'Death (who we saw last November at TWR). I've never been a Primus fan ("Jerry Was a Racecar Driver" is the only song if theirs I ever dug) and am even less of a fan of Claypool. Still, the weather should be good and The Anchor Inn is a terrific place to see a show. $25, 9 p.m.

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posted by Tim McMahan - Lazy-i.com at 11:21 AM

Wednesday, July 01, 2009

Column 228: Tilly, Conor and Michael; UUVVWWZ named Nebraska's best (in Boston); Outlaw Con Bandana tonight...

As mentioned Monday, this week's column is a comment about/review of last Friday night's Anchor Inn show, which was a lot of fun. Last week's Michael Jackson comment was tacked on the end for posterity's sake…

Column 228: Anchors Aweigh
Tilly, Conor and Michael…

When we got to The Anchor Inn last Friday evening, one of the translucent openers that are currently touring with Conor Oberst and the Mystic Valley Band was finishing a set of run-of-the-mill indie rock, followed by another in a series of droning bands fronted by women who sing like Cat Power.

Checking out the sparse crowd, I wondered if the show was going to be a bust. But it was early. Only about 50 people were crowded around the stage, while the rest meandered between the picnic tables carrying Bud Lights and pulled-pork sandwiches or wandered down to the river that acts as a backdrop to the Anchor Inn's massive stage.

Things picked up, though, as the sun dropped and Tilly and the Wall began its set. The open patch of grass between the stage and picnic tables was butt-to-belly packed. Tilly guitarist/vocalist Derek Pressnall announced from stage that the band hadn't played a show since last August, but you wouldn't have known it from listening to them. Tilly sounded tight as a tic, as if they'd just come off a two-month tour.

The band's numbers have ballooned to seven, but it wasn't the only thing about Tilly to "balloon." Making assumptions about a woman being in "the family way" can be dangerous, but Jamie Pressnall made the guesswork easy, thanks to her dress that bore a print of a large smiling fetus, complete with umbilical chord.

Jamie usually is the band's centerpiece, eagerly tap dancing above the rest of the cheer team on top of a microphoned "tap box." But with a baby on board, she instead replicated her tap-shoe rhythms by tapping sticks on a drum rim. She disappeared altogether during the end of crowd favorite "Beat Control," only to return -- dancing -- for the rest of the set. Will Tilly go on hiatus while the new band member arrives?

After a half-hour between bands, Oberst and Co. finally took the stage with Conor wearing a crazy black oversized Amish hat that made him look like the boy Samuel from the film Witness. Where's Harrison Ford when you need him? About halfway through the set I realized I was hearing essentially the same thing I'd heard in April at Slowdown.

Mystic Valley is a natural evolution for Oberst -- a midlife crisis for a guy pushing 30. Lyrically, he seems to be reaching for meaning in the most random, benign things, only managing to be profound in slogan-like spurts rather than sweeping narrative arcs. Sure, the Mystic Valley stuff is probably a lot more fun to play, but it's also a lot less relevant.

Between songs, fans yelled song titles, which Oberst kindly deflected with a smile and a "we don't know that one," responding to the perennial Bright Eyes requests. It got me thinking about the Chris Norris-penned article in the last issue of Rolling Stone that solved a couple mysteries, sort of. The story said the next Bright Eyes album will "close the door" on that band. The comment isn't a surprise, and I believe Oberst actually believes it. He'll probably walk away from his Bright Eyes material... for a few years.

But don't think you've heard the last of "Poison Ivy" or "Bowl of Oranges" or "Lua" or whatever. Oberst will retool those songs with a different band, blurring the line between projects. He is, after all, the guy who wrote those Bright Eyes songs as well as most of the Mystic Valley tunes. He can play whatever he wants with whomever he wants. I can't imagine that he'd place a permanent, self-imposed ban on performing some of his best-written material. Oberst has never been the kind of guy to build impenetrable walls, especially around himself.

Like a lot of articles about Oberst, the RS piece tried to define him as the stereotypically lonely, wandering artist, searching for something in life to anchor to. It's a convenient cliché, and like all clichés and stereotypes, it's true until you stare at it long enough and realize there's an even better truth beneath the surface. In the end, Oberst will disappoint Norris and the rest of them. He'll find a serious girlfriend (if he hasn't already), he'll have kids, he'll enter the next chapter of his life and feel a new comfort in family and friends. He'll get a dog. He'll grow up. He'll quit wandering. And his writing will be better for it.

* * *

Speaking of mortality, I would be remiss to not pass along a bit of news that seems to have escaped the attention of the national media: Michael Jackson died last week.

Even in an indie haunt like The Slowdown last Thursday night, there was an underlying buzz about MJ's passing. The discussion: Will another music performer ever reach the same heights of global deification as Jacko? In this new world of multi-media multi-channel multi-message communication, the answer is no. You've seen the last King of Pop. There is no room for royalty in a musical democracy where anyone can listen to anything anytime.

Jackson first and foremost was a performer. Unlike Springsteen or Prince or The Beatles, he wasn't known as a musician and he only wrote about a third of his songs (which included some of the best tunes on Thriller). Elvis was a performer. Sinatra was a performer. And though American Idol is designed to generate more and more performers, we'll see fewer and fewer, and none that will equal the stature of those who came before them.

So here's my question: When Dylan's time comes, will he get as much attention as Jacko is now?

* * *

The Boston Phoenix released its annual Best New Bands in America list, where they declare the best new band from each state. This year's winner from Nebraska is UUVVWWZ. Their reason: "Someone hasn't forgotten that you can royally fuck with melody, hooks, and any semblance of a vocal narrative and still have a buttload of incredible punk-funk jams on your hands." Check out the full list here.

It appears that the staff made the choice amongst themselves (Here's the selection guidelines), though I know that The Reader was among those contacted by the paper's editor, Lance Gould, asking for feedback. Last year's winner, btw, was Tilly and the Wall.

* * *

Outlaw Con Bandana is playing a last-minute show tonight at The Waiting Room with Fancie. $7, 9 p.m.

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posted by Tim McMahan - Lazy-i.com at 10:37 AM

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