Return to Forever IV, Greek Theater

September 20, 2011

 

Chick Corea, Jean-Luc Ponty and Stanley Clarke

Chick Corea, Jean-Luc Ponty and Stanley Clarke

There are only so many seminal musical moments in one’s life, and the first time I saw Return to Forever live was one of them.  I felt as if my head cracked open and exploded from the inside.  But I digress.

As a teen of the 70s, I was drawn (without explanation) to artists signed to Manfred Eicher’s ECM (e.g., Edition of Contemporary Music) label.  It wasn’t just the stunning zen like imagery on the cover of every pressing.  And I was probably still too young to fully appreciate the unprecedented freedom Eicher the producer afforded his international roster of artists any time they entered the studio.  Still, something about the utter musical liberation completely unmoored from tradition and the mainstream got its hooks into me.  Even if some of the music was so arcane and outside to my ears, I took pride in my ability, if not patience, to expose myself to such intellectual pursuits that aimed straight for the head.  I didn’t read Kerouac or Ginsberg (at least until later), I listened to Jan Garbarek and Terje Rypdal.  This from a kid who had been spinning Zeppelin, the Allmans, the Who, the Stones and anything else guitar driven and blues influenced since I was a wee lad.  It was truly a new universe of possibilities.   I had heard Miles, maybe a little Coltrane, and some of the more mainstream CTI catalog like Freddy Hubbard, George Benson (before he tunefully opened his mouth) and Hubert Laws, but my jazz vocabulary was limited to about, well, what you would expect for a musically curious 14-year old in the earlyish-70s.  ECM blew that door wide open and I was introduced to the likes of Gary Burton, Pat Metheny, Ralph Towner, John Abercrombie, Keith Jarrett, and yes, Chick Corea, for the first time.

Light as a Feather (released on Polydor), didn’t blow my mind, it blew me away.  This was world influenced jazz not bound by tradition, but grounded in the rich humus of an ancient rainforest and stirred to flight to move body and spirit. Flora’s ethereal refrains, the killer sound of Chick’s Fender Rhodes running fleetly in step with Airto’s can’t keep it in frenetic pace.  The quieter moments when the ensemble steps back and Stanley Clarke’s tone is as fat and satisfying as a deep blue lake, then moves and hustles like a greyhound while never losing that same tone.  Joe Farrell’s tenor and flute a perfect foil to all, with solos that breathed and inspired.  This was jazz as I’d always wanted to hear it.

Flash forward a year or two, and the influence of guitar heavy rock was absorbed by jazz players everywhere, for which many a critic hold Miles’ ”Bitches Brew” accountable and certainly the alums of that project, Chick Corea and John McLaughlin among them, embraced with great enthusiasm.  This was hyper-attenuated, black hole dense stuff not for the faint of heart.  Of course, I took to it like a narcotic, the denser, the more complex and precise the playing, the better.  I ate it up.  Mahavishnu Orchestra’s Birds of Fire or Inner Mounting Flame, or RTF’s Hymn to the Seventh Galaxy were not exactly meditative and introspective.  My unhealthy attachment to jazz fusion was an acting out, not a cry for help, but a need to be different.  It was my ‘90s grunge phase, just 20 years earlier, it didn’t get me a lot of dates, but I made some good male friends with similar musical tastes.

Which brings me back to the first time I saw RTF live.  Somehow, my 15-year old self and a buddy found our way into the legendary Troubadour for their first tour with Al DiMeola.  We were seated at the foot of the stage and to open the show, Scatman Crothers, who must have been in his mid-60s at that point, came out armed with nothing more than a ukulele and a lot of courage.  He entertained the room for a half-hour or so.  Herbal substances may have been involved and the incongruity of the billing had my not so nimble mind confused, and the anticipation for the headliner on high boil.  This was the “Where Have I Known You Before” tour and from the moment these four guys hit the stage, it was lights out.  I had never experienced music so physically imposing live.  The room could not contain the intensity.  The barely out of his teens DiMeola had recently replaced Bill Connors and Chick was a long way from the gentle Fender Rhodes sound of Light as a Feather.  This was knife edge stuff.  Lenny White must have had four hands and Stanley Clarke was simply a force of nature.  The world looked different, brilliant, potentialized after this show.

Not until recent years have I dared to revisit much of this music, fearful that time would not treat it kindly in the 2000s.  To the contrary, our downloadable era of forgettable singles, classic rock pimped to the extremes, faux playback that fills arenas and Garage Band, reflects rather well on the jazz fusion pioneers of the ‘70s.  In fact, the in your face compositional and technical brilliance expressed by RTF and others stands out as strikingly immediate, pungent and real.  So, it was with great anticipation I headed to the Greek to hear the fourth gen of the band (billed as RTF IV).

After a 30-year break, this tour is the second RTF reunion in 3 years and has a slightly different look.  The core of Corea, Stanley Clarke  and Lenny White remains intact and is interestingly augmented by ‘70s fusion pioneer in his own right, violinist Jean-Luc Ponty, with Frank Gambale stepping in for DiMeola.  The buzz for the tour has been very strong, the band reaching back to cover signature compositions including Corea’s “Spain”,  Ponty’s epic “Renaissance” and Clarke’s “School Days”.  Sets for earlier dates had been consistently 8-9 tunes in length ensuring ample exploration from all.

The Greek was filled.  A great sign to begin with that this music still has a strong audience.  And it was an appreciative one at that.  The performance was introduced by none other than RTF aficionado Kareem Abdul Jabbar.  Kareem, not known for his public verbosity was warm and chatty, and that’s saying a lot right there.

 

Master of Ceremonies

Master of Ceremonies

Opening with “Medieval Overture” (from 1976’s Romantic Warrior), RTF IV launched headfirst into what would be an off the charts night.  With Ponty effortlessly blending into the band, and interestingly enough, lending the same instrumentation that defined Mahavishnu (with whom he played in the band’s later years), the virtuosity of the RTF unit was on full display and would remain so throughout the 100+ minute performance.  The control and finesse to take the composition through its entire dynamic range, each player matching the other note for rapid fire note was pretty staggering, as it was for “Captain Senor Mouse” (from 1973’s Hymn to the Seventh Galaxy) which followed.  “Captain Senor Mouse” had Chick standing and ready to jump with the composition’s Spanish influenced flourishes and synth runs, accompanied by Frank Gambale’s uncanny ability to turn on every twist and accent.  Dipping again into Romantic Warrior (three of the nine tunes from the performance were off this album) for Lenny White’s “Sorceress” and then segueing into “Shadow of Lo” (from 1974’s “Where Have I known You Before”), the piece began with a lengthy intro featuring fine work by Ponty that morphed into a funk groove.  As the cool night air met the intensity of the stage, steam was emanating from all the players, and Lenny White in particular appeared to be the answer to the country’s energy issues.  With the segue into “Shadow of Lo”, Chick seamlessly moved between has Yamaha grand and synth/electric keys.  The bridging/blending of acoustic and electric throughout the evening was a pleasant surprise and a trick to pull off, given the character and intensity of the band’s overall sound and compositional approach.  On these (and other) tunes, each player found new ways to converse with one another with great moments of interplay between Corea and Ponty, and especially Corea and Clarke.  RTF IV are giants of musicians and the touch and finesse they bring to material that could so easily become heavy handed is beyond impressive, it’s a feat that defies science.  Yes, I’m speaking superlatives, but it was that good.

 

Chick Corea, where have I known you before?

Chick Corea, where have I known you before?

A moment about Stanley Clarke.  Few living musicians have transformed the bass into a lead instrument the way Stanley Clarke has.  Period.  And the man is in fighting shape. Heck, until he stood next to Kareem, I’d almost take Clarke to get the better of a one-on-one between the two.  For Ponty’s”Renaissance” (from his 1976 Aurora), Clarke pulled out his upright and Ponty put down his trademark blue electric as the whole band went acoustic.  Clarke played below the bridge, top of the neck, slapping, thumbing, fingers moving faster than the flying horsehair of Ponty’s bow.  His solo was a highlight in a performance full of highlights.  As the audience found out later in the evening (with all but Gambale taking turns as emcee chatting warmly with crowd), Clarke had many friends and family at the show and no doubt even more inspired to be at the top of his game.  On his “After the Cosmic Rain” (also from Hymn to the Seventh Galaxy), Clarke’s fingers were dancing faster than a flamenco master while RTF moved from galloping Spanish dance to total swing and back again.

 

Stanley Clarke and Frank Gambale, sheer mastery

Stanley Clarke and Frank Gambale, sheer mastery

The title cut from Romantic Warrior displayed glimpses of Chick’s classical side with Clarke later pushing him to swing again, harder (perhaps Ponty’s influence brought these occasional swing elements into the mix).   Corea’s “Spain” (from 1972’s Light as  a Feather) is easily considered a contemporary jazz classic, with many varied interpretations through the years (including his own).  Beginning with an almost somber intro by Ponty, the entire RTF unit simply flew from start to finish with Lenny White engaging Corea in a brief duel of sorts to punctuate and play with the song’s familiar time.  Perhaps most impressive, however, was the ability of Corea to engage 5,000 people in a jazz sing along.  Not a few la-la-las, but up and down and around the composition’s complex melodies, echoing Chick’s keyboard runs.   Corea was introduced earlier in the set as simply “The Maestro”.  After pulling that off, I couldn’t put it any better.

 

The Maestro

The Maestro

Clarke’s “School Days” (from Clarke’s 1976 album of the same name) provided a raucous “encore” to the evening with opener Dweezil Zappa duking it out with Gambale, and Clarke practically shredding his 4-string to pieces.  The interplay with Ponty, Clarke and Corea was dazzling and there were enough 256th notes (or so it seemed) to go around for everybody.  As the set finished and the house lights went up, RTF remained on stage greeting friends, shaking hands with fans and hanging out.

 

The Zappa legacy replete with full circular motion

The Zappa legacy replete with full circular motion

Zappa Playing Zappa was an appropriate first act, especially with Jean Luc Ponty’s connection to Frank (Exhibit A, 1970’s King-Kong: Jean Luc Ponty Plays the Music of Frank Zappa).  Chick Corea joined the band mid-set for  “King Kong” to Moog it up, and trade licks, wails and squelches with Dweezil.  The elder Zappa’s SG playing is legendary and under-acknowledged and Dweezil eerily matches that guitar voice and fury.  In fact, he custom built his SG to replicate his father’s and the replica is so accurate, it is often mistaken for Frank’s original guitar by fans (so says Wikipedia).  Many Zappa “hits” ensued including “Don’t’ Eat the Yellow Snow” (replete with full circular motion), “St. Alfonzo’s Pancake Breakfast (from 1974’s Apostrophe) – where I stole the margarine, “Dancin’ Fool” (from 1979’s Sheik Your Booti) and “Pojama People” which opened the set (from 1975’s One Size Fits All).  Ben Thomas’ vocals were uncanny in capturing Frank’s inflection and humor.  This is a musical legacy that truly lives on, however acquired a taste.

 

Dweezil gets some air

Dweezil gets some air

RTF still plays as if possessed by a single Vulcan mind meld and the performance at the Greek was nothing less than astonishing (another superlative).   I latched on to the cerebral appeal of the music when I was younger and am now celebrating its maturity, cohesion and warmth.  Yes, warmth that comes from generations of playing together, that pushes and challenges each individual, and the exuberance from everyone on stage at the Greek.  Cohesion that comes from balancing quieter moments of introspection and thunderous power to a satisfying resolution.  Maturity that comes from almost unexplainable intuition and nuance.  For me, it really was a return.  A reminder of the sheer power of contemporary music and its timelessness.  Return.  To Forever.

Postscript:  A special shout out also goes to Yamaha, to which Chick Corea has been a loyal customer for many years, and whose sponsorship helped make this tour (and blog post) possible.

 

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Babette Ho Benefit with Jackson Browne and Ben Harper, The Mint

September 19, 2011

 

Jackson Browne and Ben Harper doing good

Jackson Browne and Ben Harper doing good

A friend asked me to describe Ben Harper’s sound and the best I could come up with was world-infused, surf-influenced, rhythm, roots and soul.  Harper is a singer/songwriter/guitarist who defies description and has a relentless following (pun intended).  I’ve seen Ben Harper a few times – almost two decades ago in The Mint, when it was half the size and maybe 150 people squeezed in, and then in 2009 before 50,000 some odd headlining the Acura Stage at Jazzfest.  I am a fan, but more from afar, not knowing his deeper catalogue.  That same friend mentioned how influential Ben Harper’s music had been on her high school years, and I felt old, as the rise of this musician from the IE with the Weissenborn guitar that created such a stir is still freshly emblazoned in my musical memory.  Reflecting on the Mint show of the early 90s, I thought the cat who sang “Momma’s Got a Girlfriend Now” (from 1994’s Welcome to the Cruel World) with seemingly straight up truth, then busting out some wicked slide on a lap guitar that looked closer to a dulcimer, was pretty damn cool.  No airs, this one.  That stayed with me.

 

Ben Harper, straight up truth y'all

Ben Harper, straight up truth y'all

Not long after, the world took notice and Ben Harper was the man.  When I last caught him at the 2009 Jazzfest (with the Relentless 7), he took the stage as an internationally known, two-time Grammy winning, politically inspired headliner and had a huge crowd right there with him.  His contributions to benefit projects and causes reads like a classic moveon.org resume, and that’s not a bad thing – he embodies the social power of music.  And he’s fearless with killer chops, great combo.  Case in point – few could stand shoulder to shoulder with Eddie Vedder covering the Freddie Mercury parts of the classic Queen/Bowie collaboration “Under Pressure”, as Harper did at last year’s Hard Rock Calling Fest in Hyde Park.

True to form, Harper made a very rare club appearance at The Mint, a room he knows very well, to raise money for Babette Ho, the wife of close friend and master surfboard designer Jeff Ho, who is ailing from cancer.  I relished the opportunity to see Harper again in such an intimate setting, coming full circle to the earliest parts of his career.

There was a knowing vibe that portended a special night.  It was no secret by the time doors opened that Jackson Browne would be doing a set before the headliner.  After the Ooks of Hazard (4 ukes + percussion = chimey melodies) warmed the crowd, Ben Harper introduced Tal Wilkenfeld and Jackson Browne to the stage.  Yes, Ms. Wilkenfeld first.  For those who did not catch this monstrously talented bassist touring with Jeff Beck at the tender age of 21 (and projects/appearances with the likes of Chick Corea, the Allman brothers, Prince, Rod Stewart), suffice it to say that Jackson Browne had the low end covered when the two took the stage a little after 10.  Hearing JB play his signature tunes in such a relaxed and intimate setting had many reliving the best of their high school days, they were that much of a soundtrack.  “Doctor My Eyes” (from his self titled debut), a song older than most in the room, never loses its world weary wisdom and showcased Ms. Wilkenfeld with some elegantly creative soloing.  Browne’s “Alive in the World’ (from 1996’s Looking East) soon followed.

 

Tal Wilkenfeld

Tal Wilkenfeld

JB expressed a lot of love for Los Angeles and his roots throughout his set, reflecting that  “The Pretender” was written in his Echo Park days – a song that retains poignancy, perhaps even more so in an economy and culture that seem to have completely lost their footing.  This was living room familiarity as demonstrated when JB briefly served as his own keyboard tech by the light of a borrowed Blackberry.  Not your average Hall of Famer.  He then proceeded to cover Leonard Cohen’s  “1,000 Kisses Deep” before Ben Harper joined him for Harper’s “Steal My Kisses” (released as a single in 2000), the audience right there with the feel good chorus.

 

No Pretender

No Pretender

Around 11, Harper and his crew started their set, but not before an expression of thanks for coming together to help Babette and Jeff Ho, and their family and friends.  PLUG: If you surf (which I don’t), buy a Jeff Ho board.  Buy more than one, tell your friends.  It will change your life.  PLUG OVER.

So, here’s a disclaimer.  I wasn’t expecting more than a satisfying night of solid sincere music.  I did not expect to get religion.

Harper launched into a tender take on Van Morrison’s “Crazy Love” with guest Joan Osborne and I was already smitten.  These two brought new/old soul and earth to this classic Morrison tune.  Harper stayed in the same lower key by following with a cover of Springsteen’s “I’m on Fire”.  Then the set exploded with intensity probably familiar to many Harper fans, moving from almost ska-like grooves baked in southern blues to sick Hendrix like runs from his Asher lap steel guitar.  As one fascinated by traditional instrumentation voiced in unique ways, whether it’s Robert Randolph’s sacred steel or even going back to the late Jeff Healey, Harper’s intensity and punch at The Mint was a knockout.  “Diamonds on the Inside” sparkled, indeed.  I love this tune.  Harper followed with a new song “Masterpiece” inspired by Jeff and Babette, slow and touching with the refrain of “loving you is my masterpiece”.  Jackson Browne returned to join Harper again for “Pray that Our Love Sees the Dawn” (from 2011’s appropriately titled, Give Til Its Gone), which they had only played once before on the Letterman show.

 

Ben Harper and Joan Osborne

Ben Harper and Joan Osborne

The entire R7 had come out of the gate red-hot and that intensity was reflected especially well with muscular turns by Jessie Ingalls on bass and Jason Mozersky’s sharp and twistedly sonic playing throughout the night.  You know it’s a good night when the audience is at complete attention for the drum solo, especially when in the hands of Jordan Richardson.

“I Shall Not Walk Alone” (from 1997’s “Will to Live”) was full of the burden and beauty imparted by the lyrics.   Well past midnight, Harper then sat alone center stage with his Weissenborn and introduced a song by Neil Young.  His solo take on Ohio was shiver inducing and uniquely Ben’s, some 40 years after Young first wrote it.   “Don’t Give Up on Me Now” (also from Give Til Its Gone) featured more soaring finger work by Mozersky.  As the set moved past 1 AM on a Tuesday morning, Harper had one other guest to bring out.  Tom Morello, in full Nightwatchman mode, and Harper, could not be better suited for each other on Morello’s “Save the Hammer for the Man”.  With that, the house lights went up, but the glow remained.

 

Harper and Morello, meant for each other

Harper and Morello, meant for each other

The evening would not have been possible without the good folks at The Mint and at Red Light Productions, who ensured that everything ran smoothly and the performers could give it their all without too many distractions.  Much love for The Mint was expressed, especially from both Browne and Harper, and for Harper it is a rousing homecoming from playing Monday nights almost two decades ago.

Earlier in the evening I asked a Claremont local (Harper’s hometown) by way of Kentucky to describe the pull of Ben Harper’s music.  “He writes his emotions, it’s all real.”  After experiencing this set, with its fiery peaks and introspective reflection from beginning to end, I could not agree with her more.  Music matters, life matters, Ben Harper is its witness.  Amen.

 

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Donald Harrison, Jr. Electric Band and Jon Cleary’s Philthy Phew, Santa Monica Pier

September 8, 2011

As a native Angelino, attendance at any of the Santa Monica Pier Twilight Dance Series performances truly is a rite of summer.  Gorgeous nights, ocean air, sand between your toes.  Hard to beat.  Despite a rap that Southern California indulges in the frivolous and expensive – 8 figure “homes”, 6 figure cars, $15 cocktails, every summer Los Angeles and environs offers abundant opps to hear great music for nothing from downtown to Hollywood to the beach, and we are spoiled for it.  2011 marks the Pier Twilight Dance Series’ 27th year and if the last performance is supposed to mean that summer is almost over, it’s so not true.  We all know SoCal doesn’t really bake until October while the rest of the country tastes the first chill of autumn and winter ahead.

I profess to only catching a few Pier shows the past few years, but could not miss Jon Cleary and his Philthy Phew (aka, Piano, Bass & Drums) with Donald Harrison’s Electric Band for the series closer on September 8th.  NOLA funk, meet Santa Monica mellow.

I’ve seen Donald Harrison, Jr. in many configurations at Jazzfest, be it in full Indian regalia or blowing straight ahead in the Jazz Tent, and was rather looking forward to what he would pull out with his electric band.  He took the stage dressed in a crisp white suit and black collared shirt as the warmth of the day lingered after sunset.  He wouldn’t have looked out of place in South Beach, either.  Unbeknownst to me, Harrison, Jr.’s Electric Band has found success on the smooth jazz charts, an idiom to which I am musically allergic, and when he introduced 2003’s “Tropic of Cool” with a crowd query of who listens to “The Wave”, I feared the worst (full disclosure – when the Mighty MET, KMET, went down, only to find the WAVE in its place, it was a day of radio mourning never to be forgotten).  I do not besmirch any performer for finding success wherever they can, especially one as supremely talented and integral to the lifeblood of contemporary New Orleans music and musicians, as Harrison, Jr., but my disappointment was rising.   This was a side of Harrison, Jr. where he is clearly comfortable, his sharp, twisting tenor right at home with the mainstream material.

 

Donald Harrison, Jr., setting the mood

Donald Harrison, Jr., setting the mood

Backed by a band mixing NOLA vets and younger, powerhouse players, including Detroit Brooks (g), Max Moran (b), Joe Dyson (dr) and Zaccai Curtis (p), the tone soon shifted to the familiar New Orleans crowd pleasers that sprinkle so many sets these days – Aiko, Aiko, Cissy Strut, Hey Pocky Way and the inevitable Treme song and obligatory Saints.  These tunes are all feel good music, no doubt, and Harrison, Jr. wrapped his playing around their themes with precision and passion.  Detroit Brooks always plays with class, touch and soul and the rhythm section of Moran and Dyson embodies a powerful force of youth and experience.  Zaccai Curtis, who was showcased on several numbers, stretched out amply and concisely, climbing and resolving his solos with fiery satisfaction, leaving my ears begging for “please sir, may I have some more” (no surprise to find him on Christian Scott’s Rewind That, one of my favorite jazz releases of the past 5 years).  The Donald was all smiles, all night (when isn’t he), clearly having a good time throughout.  Me, love the beach, but I’ll take the Jazz Tent any time.

 

Zaccai Curtis, up close and personal

Zaccai Curtis, up close and personal

Enter Jon Cleary and those Phew (wildly famous Treme actor and bass/sousaphone player extraordinaire, Matt Perrine, and Doug Belote on drums), and mellow got seriously funked up.  Cleary has been working with the trio format for a while and it suits his barrelhouse style to a tee.  Didn’t take long for Cleary to be schooling the crowd on Professor Longhair, and that was well before he launched into a rollicking version of Tipitina (now that’s one I never get tired of hearing).  “Help Me Somebody” from 1999’s Moonburn, put Cleary’s blue-eyed soul sound on full display early in the set and the as yet to be recorded “Bringing Back the Home” was dedicated to the people of NOLA and the gift of New Orleans music to the world.  Got the message, he can be the messenger, anytime.

 

Jon Cleary, schooling us with feeling

Jon Cleary, schooling us with feeling

The stage was warmed, the mellow vibe more energized and then it got really philthy.  Not quite hide the women and children philthy, but not far from it, either.  From a B-flat shuffle to churchy influenced chunks of joy, Cleary relished each and every tune, even managing to get these denizens of the beach to feel a little Mardi Gras in their bones.  The R&B groove of his soulful nature really shined on “When You Get Back” from 2002’s Jon Cleary & the Absolute Monster Gentlemen, especially when his solo took flight Caribbean style – a beautiful sound, indeed.  With more homage to the Professor on “Go to the Mardi Gras” (featured on 2008’s live Mo Hippa recording), Donald Harrison, Jr. joined the Phew and you could hear Frenchmen calling.  With further nods to Earl King and Jellyroll Morton, the healthy set moved from heartbreak to history to straight up, grab your ass messy, syncopated funk.  Cleary’s take on Little Richard’s “I Can’t Believe You Want to Leave” even left me wondering if the Beatles may not have copped a little for “Oh, Darling”.

 

Harrison, Jr. and Cleary make some philthy noise

Harrison, Jr. and Cleary make some philthy noise

As the set ended and Angelinos scattered for another summer, I reflected on the musical legacy of the great city of New Orleans and an unlikely British minstrel spreading the word of Professor Longhair.  Crazy World, huh.  Just don’t call it another day at the beach, or I’ll have to smack ya philthy.

 

Celebrity, Matt Perrine, taking in the sea air

Celebrity, Matt Perrine, taking in the sea air

 

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Moonalice, The Mint

The esteemed Pete Sears, with Roger McNamee

August 6, 2011

“Moonalice is a band of seasoned musicians who feel that live music should be a communal experience where the listener and musicians feed and derive inspiration from each other. Their songs try to speak to everyone, mixing a variety of genres with extended musical improvisations that evoke a sense of adventure and exploration.”  So says their story on www.moonalicetv.com, the first HTML5 driven band site that allows fans to HD stream any live performance to their iPads, iPhones, etc.  What, are these guys from the future?  Well, for sure, behind the mythology that is Moonalice, behind the gloriously handcrafted homage posters for each and every show, behind the jam rock immersion and the Dead elephant in the room, stands a band of the now.  Look under the hood, and you see great touring musicians of 30+ years, the likes of which just only seem to be getting better, and no doubt, they lean heavily toward their tied-dyed twirling brethren.   The Phil and Friends, Other Ones, Dave Nelson Band, Hot Tuna, Jefferson Starship, Bruce Hornsby CVs merely fortify the obvious.  But Moonalice is not just of, or about, the past.  Wrong.  They climbed on top of the social media age and turned traditional music industry business models on their collective asses.   Not a lot of self-proclaimed hippie bands can credibly sit side-by-side with the next generation’s ProTools and banjo indie hipsters to provide total accessibility to their music and shows free of industry pollution to build their audience…and make it not just work, but fly.  This bird has wings, musically and beyond.

 

Moonalice CTO, and multi-stringer, Roger McNamee

Led by Roger McNamee (and de facto CTO), Moonalice has morphed from a band of shifting personnel to the nimble intuitive unit that seems to grow a seventh, eighth and ninth sense with every gig (and full disclosure, I’ve been to a few).  There is both wisdom and discovery here, and it shows.  Bass player/keyboardist Pete Sears is royalty as far as I’m concerned and his gentlemanly stage presence belies musical journeys that would make some of the best blush with envy.  His rhythm section partner John Molo, doesn’t have a game face. Molo’s exuberance simply spills out with every joyously expressed, finger-licking good, fill – a drummer’s drummer.  Barry Sless moves effortlessly between his pedal steel and six-string, exploring galactical edges, but always returning home with texture, grace and soul.   Ann McNamee lends her vocals and keys to a collaboration of spirit obvious in her mile-wide smile when on stage.

 

Gamer, John Molo

A Moonalice show usually starts with Steve Parish regaling the audience with Jerry campfire tales that could only come from living with (and surviving) 28 years of the Grateful Dead.  Talk about a mood setter.  Like their progenitors, Moonalice can adapt a slightly countrified persona that serves as a launching pad for scripted and unscripted musical peaks, but with less wandering.  Covering material that feels constantly familiar, and is almost entirely original, the Moonalice sound is especially sweetened by Sless’ steel playing and the versatility of players locked in to each other individually and collectively.

 

Barry Sless, captivating the crowd

The Saturday night performance at The Mint had a relaxed vibe to accommodate the proverbial Moonalice tribe.  Minus Ann McNamee (away tending to a recovering family member), the boys obliged with a very satisfying 10-song set that indeed lived up to their billing of “extended musical improvisations that evoke a sense of adventure and exploration”.  No shit (besides, how many bands do you know can pull off covering Leonard Cohen and the Dead comfortably in the same set).  Three tunes in, “Kick It Open” found Sears behind the keys with Sless leading his bandmates on deep journeys that strayed near and far from the comfort of the song’s bridge and chorus.  With the aforementioned take on Cohen’s “Halleluah”, McNamee wrung all the sorrow and beauty from the poet laureate’s words.  By the time they hit “Joker’s Lie” (available as part of a 6-EP series through the www.moonalice.com website), with Sears taking the vocals again and six-stringing it, the band was in full rollicking, crackling, Dead homage mode that brought some Saturday night joy to all.  Then it got better.   The gentle cascading intro of “Nick of Time” led to some of the best jams of the night, with Sless and Sears climbing up and over each other, then back down again, just to take it up two notches a few more times.   Elevation was in the house (a little peak musical joy, anyone?), only to gently land with a sparkling cover of “Stella Blue”.  The set closed with “Never Satisfied”- as anthemic as the band gets.  Indeed, lack of satisfaction was no issue here.

 

Sears and Sless, we're enjoying the ride

It’s no surprise that Moonalice often shares the bill with the Southland’s most Deadicated band, Cubensis, as they did at The Mint show.  After decades of gigging throughout SoCal, this was my first live Cubensis experience.  The room filled for their midnight set as the band covered all things Jerry, Bobby and Phil, tightly, smartly, and passionately.

 

Craig Marshall and Christine Sherman of Cubensis

Nobody’s pulling punches here with a Moonalice-Cubensis combo.  The demo skews older and the aromas are strong, but make no mistake, do not adjust your wayback machine.  It is Summer 2011, political lords are playing chicken with the economy and Minnesota is melting.  May this music never stop.  We need it more than ever.

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Jim Brock’s Photography featured on Honey Island Swamp Band site

Jim Brock Photography and EyeOnTheMusic.com‘s recent posting on the June 26th Honey Island Swamp Band show at The Mint is currently featured on the HISB web site.  This was the band’s Los Angeles debut and a great set that did not disappoint.  Check them out at www.honeyislandswampband.com.

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Jim Brock Photography raises over $1,100 for the Tipitina’s Foundation

Three Jim Brock Photography prints raised over $1,100 for the Tipitina’s Foundation as part of this year’s Instruments A Comin’ event during Jazzfest.   The featured images were of Donald Harrison, Jr., James Singleton and Snooks Eaglin, with the Snooks image well exceeding the maximum suggested bid.  Jim Brock Photography is very pleased to have contributed to the Tipitina’s Foundation mission and encourages visitors to this site to support the Foundation and learn about Instruments A Comin’, the T.I.P intern program, Sunday workshops and more at www.tiptinasfoundation.org.

 

Snooks Eaglin, New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival, May 4, 2008

Snooks Eaglin, Jazzfest 2008

Donald Harrison, Jr., Jazzfest 2009

James Singleton, Jazzfest 2009

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Stanton Moore Trio, The Mint


Robert Walter and Stanton Moore all smiles

July 13, 2011

Stanton Moore is everywhere, deal with it.  And no drummer jokes, please.  Seriously, it seems like Stanton Moore is the Warren Haynes of the skins, playing wherever, whenever he can and not only like he’s having a great time, but also as if his life depended on it.  Whether leading his Galactic mates through a snare fed fury that turns the band into the equivalent of a human trap set, sitting in seemingly every night during Jazzfest he’s not gigging with the propulsively manic Garage a Trois, the brass royalty of the Midnite Disturbers, his own trio, or Galactic, this is a man who literally can’t sit down when he plays.  He is simply having too much fun to keep still.  Last year, Mr. Moore anchored Anders Osborne’s epic American Patchwork recording and tour in 2010 and fortified his collaboration with Hammond wiz Robert Walter. The tribal material and arrangements that grew from this collaboration resulted in one of the best albums of the year.  Moore and Walter, along with guitarist Will Bernard, have further shaped their unique funk with the Stanton Moore Trio over the years and for those who love their B3 sound dripping in swamp juice and punchy percussive attacks that serve as smelling salts to the senses, you’ll like what you hear.

 

Mr. Stanton Moore, respect, please

The New Orleans percussionist has taken up a month long Wednesday residency at The Mint for July, providing free all ages drum clinics before every show – a thoughtful give back for aspiring and seasoned players alike. Each show rotates in a different guest and I elected to hit the July 13th gig with Karl Denson.  Within minutes of the 9:50ish start, the room was full. Not bad for the Wednesday night before Carmeggedon.

Karl Denson, 'nuff said

Opening with Walter ‘s staccato riffs on “Pie Eyed Manc” from 2010’s aptly titled Groove Alchemy, the set I heard started strong and headed higher.  The chemistry between all three players was astonishing.  Walter’s bass lines alone pushed and grabbed the trio, and especially Moore, to punch back and dig deep.  The sound was vintage, old school and often organ driven (OK, Yamaha on wheels), shifting from a complex soul groove to in your face rapid fire I gotcha soloing.  Heck, I half expected to hear the snap, crackle and pop of vinyl between notes.  Denson altered his horn’s tone to great effect that only enhanced, not detracted, from some wicked and adventurous playing.  By the time they hit “Magnolia Triangle” mid-set (from 2002’s Flying the Koop), the trio was a single swinging, squonking, fiery unit (wouldn’t have been surprised to see wisps of smoke rise from the bell of Denson’s tenor).  The set closed with Dirty Dozen Brass Band’s, “Who Took the Happiness” (from 2008’s Take It to the Street), that stripped a larger brass band sound to it’s rawest elements with circular interplay wrapped around Walter’s keyboard bass and jungle-like swing.  This was great stuff.  Call it funk, call it jazz, call it soul.  Don’t matter.  As long as you respect the drummer.

 

Robert Walter getting deep with Stanton Moore

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Honey Island Swamp Band, The Mint


Chris Mule and Aaron Wilkinson doing some shredding

June 26, 2011

Honey Island Swamp Band swung into the Westside on Saturday, another NOLA nugget appearing at the Mint.  This is a New Orleans band that reflects its Katrina Diaspora-Bay Area birth with chunky and soulful jams, tight arrangements and great material.  If you are expecting ballads, standards, and second lines, this ain’t that NOLA band.  Whether moving easily from moments Dead infused or Dr. John influenced, their self-described Bayou Americana sound never loses sight of its swampy swagger or solo driven joy.  The band has kicked ass at Jazzfest the past few years, so a chance to enjoy them here in the Southland was indeed a treat, and to my knowledge, The Mint gig is their first Los Angeles show.

Aaron Wilkinson feelin' it

At Fest performances and in the studio, HISB often fattens their arrangements with horns, and Saturday had that taste with Karl Denson sitting in for both sets contributing frequent solos and locking into some killer grooves with Trevor Brooks on keys and Chris Mule’s SG/Strat driven leads.  When not providing the good time feel of a summer day front porch harp, Aaron Wilkinson switched between mandolin and his hollow-body Tele, taking the bluegrass string thing into Hendrix/Page territory, while the rhythm section of Sam Price and Garland Paul just kept having too much fun and pushing the band ahead.  HISB can swing easily from romps like “Natural Born Fool”, and the Anders Osborne reminiscent “Till the Money’s Gone,” to there and back deep intense jams like “Wishing Well”.  While the material is straight ahead, HISB is not shy about stretching out live.

Karl Denson sitting in all night

The mixed crowd ranged from music savvy date night couples, thrilled to have the tables gone and the dance floor open for the second set, to the usual NOLA diehards that wouldn’t miss it.  The vibe was relaxed and up.

This summer tour behind the their recent Threadhead Records release, “Good to You”, takes HISB from the where it all began of San Francisco’s Boom-Boom Room, to the where it was always meant to be at Tipitina’s in NOLA.  I suspect they will be back in the SoCal soon, and playing bigger places.  Catch them while you can.

Mssrs. Mule, Wilkinson and Price

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New Monsoon, The Mint

Bo Carper and Jeff Miller

 

June 3, 2011

When you know of a band, but haven’t really seen them live yet, it can go either way. The freshness of the moment can pick you up with unexpected potency, or leave you uninvolved with the lack of familiarity. New Monsoon has been part of the jam scene for over 10 years and my first show Friday at The Mint had me from the beginning. Playing to the expected jam-rock devoted and male dominated audience in the intimate confines on Pico Boulevard, New Monsoon brought creative, driven arrangements that never wandered without destination. I am admittedly new to the NM set list, but recognized originals such as Friendly Ghost and gems of covers like the Talking Heads Slippery People.

Jeff Miller

This is a team effort, the whole much bigger than the parts. The acoustic guitar/banjo, SG/Strat frontline of Bo Carper and Jeff Miller, the constant interweave of Phil Ferlino’s solos and texture, and the rhythm section of Marshall Harrell and Sean Hutchinson, kept moving and pushing, not straying. Towards the end of the first set, Bo Carper’s banjo led New Monsoon into raga-jam territory, transforming that most traditional of sounds into a burning bluegrass sitar that elevated the whole band. Neat trick.

Bo Carper

New Monsoon topped a bill that included a strong opening set by Pasadena’s Old California, followed by Spider Gawd covering the likes of The Band and folk-blues standards older than all of us, such as Sitting on Top of the World, in a keyboard/bass/drums trio. Three bands of original voice and excellent musicianship, 4 hours of music, for a cover that won’t get you a craft cocktail at most places. Neil Young was right, “live music IS better, bumper stickers should be issued. For my first New Monsoon show, it couldn’t be fresher or more satisfying. For sure, it won’t be my last.

Phil Ferlino

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Jazzfest 2011 closing thoughts

Jazzfest 2011 is in the books.  Weekend 2 brought the it could only happen here bag of familiar closers (Jimmy Buffet, the Nevilles, et al), epic sonics (Arcade Fire, Wilco), roots, (not so) alt-country and blues (Lucinda Williams, Greg Allman, Willie Nelson), mind-bending bills (Trombone Shorty>The Strokes), sentimental moments (Rads farewell, Christian Scott proposing in the middle of his set), jazz giants (Sonny Rollins) and local and regional artists who have been, and always will be, the heartbeat of the Fest.  The lack of a jam band closer seemed to go unnoticed, supplanted by an edgier, “indie” orientation – an eclectic mix even by Fest standards.  “Only at Jazzfest could….” 50/60-somethings leave their front row seat for Robert Randolph and the Family Band to catch Kid Rock.

Christian Scott, WWOZ Jazz Tent, May 5, 2011

Greg Allman, Blues Tent, May 8, 2011

The weather cooperated to the point of being freaky.  Not a drop of rain all seven days, temps warm to warmer, but not scorching.  As always, the food will take a year to work off and worth it.

Kirk Joseph's Tuba Tuba, Jazz and Heritage Stage, May 7, 2011

Whether at the Fairgrounds or night shows, I couldn’t split myself in half.  Simply too much good stuff to go around.

Anders Osborne, Down on the Bayou III, Howlin' Wolf, May 5, 2011

Most of my time shooting circled the Jazz and Blues Tents, and unexpectedly (or not), the moments I took away most from this second weekend, both personally and as a photographer, were provided by the New Orleans musicians and artists I’ve covered/attended many times over.  Sure, Henry Butler, Sonny Landreth and Robert Randolph tore up the Blues Tent on Sunday, and Aaron Neville’s Amazing Grace brought church to the Acura crowd as the sun went down.  But the stage debut of Nine Lives during the week, and songs transformed by the Rolling Road Show at the Fest were something so big, you had to step back, smile and cry a little.  There seems to be new meaning and new power in New Orleans.  Rebuild, renew, that’s what people do, indeed.

Paul Sanchez and the Rolling Road Show, Lagniappe Stage, May 7, 2011

Aaron Neville, Acura Stage, May 8, 2011

 

 

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