February 2007 - Antigravity Magazine
Transcription
February 2007 - Antigravity Magazine
vol.4 no.4 feb.‘07 your new orleans music and culture alternative QUINTRON & THE NINTH WARD MARCHING BAND ARE OUT TO HAVE FUN ALSO: EXPLOSIONS IN THE SKY HELEN HILL AND DINERRAL SHAVERS WET CONFETTI I MARDI GRAS BEADS? www.antigravitymagazine.com FREE! PHOTO BY MANTARAY PHOTOGRAPHY vol.4 no.4 feb.‘07 your table of contents ON THE COVER: Quintron_page 17 The bandleader talks up the Ninth Ward Marching Band FEATURES: Don t Stop The Music_page 10 Lisa Haviland investigates how the murders of Helen Hill and Dinerral Shavers affected those around them DON T STOP THE MUSIC, PAGE 10 Explosions In The Sky_page 13 If you drive a Cadillac, read this interview COLUMNS/DEPARTMENTS: Freefloating Ramblings_page 4 Leo s hairless again ANTI-News_page 5 EXPLOSIONS IN THE SKY, PAGE 13 Some of the news that s fit to print NOLA Stalkin _page 5 A Rose Is A Rose tattles on the infamous Live New Orleans_page 6 Antenna Inn and show notes The Column_page 7 Single in New Orleans̶what a life Sound Advice_page 9 Legalese from AG Paginations_page 21 Mosquito Illustrations_page 22 How To Be Happy, Qomix, The K Chronicles Snap Judgments_page 23 Pirates Of Coney Island Projections_page 25 American Hardcore Revolutions_page 26 Wet Confetti, Dear + Glorious Physician, Sondre Lerche Premonitions_page 28 Event listings and show previews WET CONFETTI, PAGE 10 FREEFLOATING RAMBLINGS SEND HATEMAIL TO: FEEDBACK@ANTIGRAVITYMAGAZINE.COM OR: P.O. BOX 24584, NEW ORLEANS, LA 70184 Your Crack Staff: Publisher/Editor-in-Chief: Leo McGovern leo@antigravitymagazine.com Senior Editor: Noah Bonaparte noah@antigravitymagazine.com Associate Editor: Patrick Strange patrick@antigravitymagazine.com I’ve got Super Bowl hangover—not from the actual Super Bowl itself, partly because I couldn’t care less about the Bears/Colts match-up, partly because this is being written while the big game is still a few days away, but mostly because the Saints aren’t one of the teams in it. Rather than harp on the NFC Championship game, I’d rather focus on this issue, if you don’t mind. We’ve got one of Marty Garner’s favorite bands, Explosions In The Sky, an in-depth interview with Quintron about the Ninth Ward Marching Band and a look at how the tragic deaths of filmmaker Helen Hill and Hot 8 Brass Brand drummer Dinerral Shavers affected the multitudes of people who loved them both. By the way, it’s Mardi Gras time, and while we at AG don’t generally cover much to do with Carnival, there are tons of great shows coming around since bands use Mardi Gras as a reason to come to town (or, for some bands, come back home). Check out our Premonitions for more, and chances are we’ll see you out! —Leo McGovern, Publisher Senior Writer: PLAY THE “WHY DID LEO SHAVE?” GAME! Contributing Writers: WITH BEARD Dan Fox foxart@earthlink.net Henry Alpert henry@henryalpert.com Sarah Andert sarah.andert@gmail.com Liz Countryman liz@antigravitymagazine.com Jenelle Davis jenelle_davis@yahoo.co.uk Marty Garner martygarner@antigravitymagazine.com Lisa Haviland haves34@hotmail.com Carolyn Heneghan chenegha@tulane.edu Jared Kraminitz jkramini@tulane.edu Joseph Larkin joseph@josephlarkin.com Dakota M sil3ntstatic@yahoo.com Darren O Brien darreno@antigravitymagazine.com Jason Songe jasonsonge@antigravitymagazine.com J.W. Spitalny jw@antigravitymagazine.com AG editor Leo McGovern usually has facial hair, and that’s the way he likes it. He is very rarely clean shaven. Why did Leo shave? The first person that selects the correct answer and e-mails it to leo@antigravitymagazine.com will receive a choice stack of CDs! Your choices: Leo is beardless because: A) He committed a heinous crime of some sort, is on the run from the law and shaved to throw off the authorities. B) With no baby on hand, he wanted to see what a baby’s bottom really felt like. SANS BEARD Advertising Associate: C) A bird had nested in it. D) While trimming his beard with a pair of electric clippers, he made the clasic mistake of taking the guard off the clippers to clean up an area and mistakenly ran the guardless clippers over his cheek, ruining his entire beard. Steve Garafono steveg@antigravitymagazine.com We like stuff! Send it to: PO Box 24584 New Orleans, La 70184 ANTIGRAVITY is a free publication released monthly (around the 1st, like a gub ment check) in New Orleans and Baton Rouge, as well as online. E) He was preparing for Mardi Gras and didn’t want King Cake crumbs to build up around his chin. ANTIGRAVITY is a publication of ANTIGRAVITY, INC. F) He’s not beardless, the photo to the lower left is a Photoshopped fake. Resources: www.antigravitymagazine.com MySpace: www.myspace.com/antigravitymagazine Let the entries fly! This Month s Guest Judge: Mardi Gras Beads Throw me something! You know that s just plastic, right? 04_antigravity: your new orleans music and culture alternative a rose is a rose is... NOTABLE UPCOMING SHOWS 3/17: VAST, Howlin’ Wolf 3/17: Diplo, Bonde Do Role, Republic 3/18: The Walkmen, The Parish @ House Of Blues 3/19: RJD2, The Parish @ House Of Blues 4/7: TV On The Radio, The Noisettes, One Eyed Jacks 4/12: Sebadoh, TBA 4/24: Clap Your Hands Say Yeah, Republic 5/5: Mono, Grails, World’s End Girlfriend, Spanish Moon GAS FOOD & LODGING BEGINS TO SHAPE UP The lineup of Gas Food & Lodging, the Baton Rouge-based sister event to South By Southwest, is beginning to take form. The Spanish Moon has released their slate of shows, which begins March 10th with Colour Revolt and Terror Of The Sea. Other GF&L shows at Spanish Moon shows include: 2/12: Silversun Pickups, The Rosebuds 2/13: Pelican, Daughters, Russian Circles 2/14: Asobi Seksu 2/15: Astranautalis, Ballzack, Club Of Sons 2/17: Jason Isbell (Drive-By Truckers) 2/19: Hella, The Dirty Projectors 2/20: Apes, Six Parts Seven, Antelopes 2/21: Say Hi To Your Mom, Bishop Allen FRUIT VENDOR REAPPEARS AG readers and Other Planets fans remember the mention of New Orleans fruit vendor Arthur Robertson in our December interview with Anthony Cuccia—Robertson’s easilyrecognized voice, usually projected by a megaphone attached to his truck, is the first thing you hear on the Other Planets’ new record, Eightballs In Anglola—and how Robertson has been missing from the streets of New Orleans since Katrina. In early January, Robertson was sighted by at least two people who say that the fruit vendor is finally back and making his pre-K rounds. BIG EASY ROLLERGIRLS MATCH RESCHEDULED, TRYOUTS NEAR The Big Easy Rollergirls have rescheduled their cancelled January bout against Las Vegas’ Sin City Rollergirls, which was to be BERG’s first home-field inter-league match, has been rescheduled for May 19, 2007. The Rollergirls travel to Philly on March 18 for an interleague bout before returning to the Big Easy for a doubleheader on March 24 against the Green Country Rollergirls of Tulsa, OK and The East Texas Bombers of Tyler, TX. In other BERG news, the club will entertain girls who want to showcase their skating ability and perhaps become one of the newest Rollergirls. E-mail tryouts(at)bigeasyrollergirls.com for more info. AG TO APPEAR AT AUSTIN, TX EXPO If AG’s Alternative Media Expo has kinship with any show, it’s Austin, TX’s STAPLE!: The Independent Media Expo. AG is planning a drive to Austin for STAPLE! ’07, and you can grab our March issue (after it hits the streets in New Orleans, of course) and other swag we may have with us. STAPLE! ‘07 guests include Dean Haspiel (The Quitter, American Splendor), Viper Entertainment (Dead @ 17, The Middleman) and Top Shelf (Lost Girls, Blankets). For more info, go to stapleaustin.org. DOMINO SOUND RECORD SHACK OPENING Longtime DJ and reggae fan Prince Pauper is taking the plunge and opening Domino Sound Record Shack, a music shop specializing in the rarer and more visceral genres like African, Punk, Soul, and, of course, Reggae. Lots and lots of reggae. Also, the shack will be a haven for those knights of the turn table who still like their tunes thick and crackly, stocking tons of vinyl and the equipment to play it on. The shack is at 2557 Bayou Road at Broad St. Maybe we can finally find some of that Arabic Hip-Hop we’ve been looking for all these years. Saturday, February 3rd will be the grand opening and Soul Sister, Dub Insurgent, and Brice Nice will be warming up the inventory. Support your local business and find out what social justice music is all about. In analog, mon. Mayor C. Ray Nagin, the offensively blasé, sleepy-eyed local civic leader, materialized briefly at the coffee shop in the Convention Center Blvd. Marriott on the morning of Friday, January 5. Customers in search of their daily helping of caffeine and day-old bagels stood in utter shock as the mayor, always equipped with impeccable taste and timing, joked with a friend about the rising murder rate in New Orleans. Only days before the march on City Hall in protest of the rampant violence in the city, Nagin had the presence of mind to ask his companion in the crowded room, “So, what are we gonna do about all these murders?” Although the query was posed with that sarcastic chuckle inherent in a George W. delivery, those who overheard the question given by the one person who should actually have the answers did not find it amusing, “puking up their lattes as they realized that charm doesn’t really take the place of competency.” Pudgy grandpa and parish-wide dictator Sheriff Harry Lee was holding court at the Common Grounds restaurant in Old Gretna on Friday, January 12. In anticipation for the Saints-Eagles playoff game, Lee wore an oversized Joe Horn jersey that wafted in the air as he made his procession through the dining room at the popular West Bank eatery. Commoners reportedly “swooned with awe” as the chief settled down for a greasy sandwich and a large order of fries, which the big guy digested with much “deliberation and care; similar to how he conducts his police work.” One by one, customers took an audience with Lee and gave praise and sometimes aired grievances, such as one fisherman who offered his “first born son” in return for “extra victuals for his family.” At the sound of such obstinacy, Lee reportedly “banished the man to the East Bank, closing the gates of the CCC on him forever.” Saints quarterback and regional savior Drew Brees was ogled at the Uptown Whole Foods Market on Tuesday, January 23. Perusing the nut aisle with his lovely wife Brittany, Drew looked “radiant under the supermarket’s soft fluorescent glow, known to make even the poorest Uptowners look appropriately rich.” After several minutes of loitering behind the couple as they discussed the culinary value of overpriced organic Korean pine nuts, the stalker approached Brees to thank him for a “wonderful season.” According to eyewitnesses, Brees was the epitome of graciousness and charm, breaking from his conversation with his wife to acknowledge the adoring fan. After walking away, the stalker writes that the “couple promptly resumed discussion over seeds and almond substitutes.” New Orleans native and “Sweatin to the Oldies” guru Richard Simmons was caught leading a herd of white-haired secretaries and fanny-packed Metairie mommas on a “wellness walk” around East Jefferson General Hospital on Thursday, January 25.The Brother Martin graduate was back home to help kick-off the American Heart Association’s Start Program and assault the public-at-large with high-pitch shrills and nauseating instructional phrases.Wearing his patented red pinstriped running shorts and net tank-top, an aging Simmons showed that he could still “bend, squat and bounce” with the best of them as he implored the group of nearly 500 people to “shake those hips until they felt the burn.” 05 antigravity: your new orleans music and culture alternative_ T he local rock scene seems to have been caught in a daydream as of late, so it was nice to see Antenna Inn come out of nowhere to art-rock the pants off everyone at One Eyed Jacks in January. The seven-piece (including several vibe players and two drummers) showcased well-arranged songs that stretched out noise and abstraction just short of annoyance. The music included unforeseen meter and personality changes. Steely Dan-ish jazz met with a cappella chanting, atmospheric guitar transmissions, and noise free-for-alls. It was wonderful, and I’m going to see The Black Rose Band for the first time on January 27th, which will hopefully only strengthen my hope for the future of rock in New Orleans. By the time you read this, I’ll also have seen Jeff Tweedy on Friday the 26th. A Ghost is Born is a modern classic, along with Yankee Hotel Foxtrot. It’ll be interesting to see whether Wilco can roll a turkey with their May release, Sky Blue Sky. Radiohead and the Flaming Lips both attempted to continue their streak of critical and consumer acclaim with their recent albums, but they failed. Radiohead was trying for four-in-a-row with Hail to the Thief, which seemed more like an anxious, forced breath than anything, while the Lips were reaching for their third masterpiece with At War With The Mystics, which wasn’t a consistent or complete thought like their previous two. But, don’t get me wrong. I like both Thief and Mystics, but they’re no Amnesiac or Soft Bulletin. Of course, I’m assuming we’re all on the same page regarding Kid A, which we’re probably not. Regardless of whether it was or wasn’t a big middle finger to everyone’s expectations, it still works, and I still like it. I guess the only reason it’s interesting to me whether these bands succeed is because they seem to be the only large rock bands around that are taking chances. They’re the only established bands that will probably do a 180 to create unexpected music that is both original and good. Of course, nothing is truly original, but there are some right combinations, or meetings of sub-sub-sub genres, that haven’t yet been attempted. People are always attempting wrong combinations. That’s not difficult at all. Opening for Tweedy is Scott McCaughey, a pop rocker that formed the Young Fresh Fellows and The Minus Five and also toured as an extra musician for R.E.M. “Aw Shit Man,” off the latest Minus Five release, is a worrisome yet freewheeling punk-paced song and the reason iTunes was invented.The chances of me buying the M5 record aren’t great, but the chances of me buying that one song and rocking along with it as I put up posters are pretty darn good. “Aw Shit Man” is careless yet concerned, which I can really relate to, for some reason. It’s the feeling that even though you’re too lazy to change your flaws, you can still take the time to sit back and feel bad for what you’re doing. Playing drums with McCaughey will be Junior League leader and Bipolaroid drummer Joe Adragna. Adragna has been working in Michael Blum’s home studio finishing the follow-up to Catchy. Also in the studio, this one in The Fountainbleau, is The Public, who are eager for people to hear their new album. I got a listen, and I was impressed. The songs are less trashy and more propelled than the old ones. It seems a lot of time was put into making song structures more interesting. BEATLES VS. STONES I listened to the first two Rolling Stones albums today, and it seems like The Beatles were more creative with their first batch of original songs than The Stones. I couldn’t tell the difference between the covers and the originals on the first two Stones albums, but I think I could discern what was a Beatles song and what was a cover from the first Beatles albums. And not just because I’m more familiar with the Beatles material than the Stones’.The Stones songs eventually became more involved, but it seems like The Beatles had their talent from moment one. The Beatles became themselves quicker than The Stones. This is what Electrical Spectacle keyboardist and all-around Moog maestro Anton Gussoni had to say about the subject: “The Beatles were something so extraordinary and exceptional that it is hard to put another band as comparison.The Stones were great. In fact, the Stones made great records for a long period then the Beatles. But, the Beatles were able to fill those few years with so much creativity and expression. It is sometimes hard to say if they helped bring some of the changes or caught the wave and went with it. Well, that is my opinion. The Stones could not write ‘Because’. Of course, the Beatles could not write ‘Sympathy for the Devil’.” RECOMMENDED 1. Robert Greenfield’s book Exile on Main Street: A Season in Hell with The Rolling Stones 2. Doug Stanhope’s comedy album Something to Take The Edge Off 3. Jackass Number Two 06_antigravity: your new orleans music and culture alternative the by patrick strange Going to Extremes For Reagan In no other place in America does the question “Why are you here?” require such painfully honest answers: Skip the job talk. Ignore the obvious. Tell me your deepest darkest secrets. The typical explanations for why we continue on here just don’t cut it anymore. If anything, people in New Orleans know bull shit when they smell it, and know that the “I-just-love-the-pace-of-the-city” routine is not only passé, but a complete departure from reality. Life is tough here, and has been long before any hurricane came and made things worse. And it doesn’t matter if you’re a college student boozing it up at the Balcony or a single mother of three making ends meet in a combustible government trailer, odds are that life would be easier for most of us in some other city in some other circumstances. I know that.You know that. Then why keep bringing it up? I’ve never in my whole life formed such fast and intense relationships with complete strangers. At the bar or in the grocery aisle or riding in the elevator— still, after a year and a half—informal conversations turn plaintive without cause or warning. What used to be talk about last night’s movie is now talk about grief and guilt and loyalty and co-dependence and new suburban therapists. It’s not that any of this is new since the big washout; it’s just that it keeps going on and on. It’s like collecting strangers in a line-up for the most fucked-up—and it’s my face on every one of them. And so we talk and we talk. Within the time it takes to criticize the mayor and the (lower-case “p”) president, I’m having heart-to-hearts with that guy who rides the funny bicycle with the big ole front tire or that old lady who’s always dressed as if she’s going to a funeral on a really cold day. I guess the constant pressure to make decisions that matter and to figure out once and for all if I’m a winner or loser in all this has its consequences. Hell, we’re all on the same page here—dealing with the day to day in a city we love until our hearts break—and I guess we get to know where we stand by talking it out, and getting to know each other over and over…and over. (And by the way, being 28 and single in this town doesn’t really help matters either. I’m falling in love with reckless abandon, and opening emotional trapdoors that would better reserved for pillow talk rather than over a Bloody Mary at the track.) And all of this is not to say that there isn’t something exhilarating about being here right now, because there most certainly is. There’s a more-than-common feeling about sharing such a pleasant burden with so many people—the same feeling I get when I hear people singing in unison or see a crowd march on City Hall. The same feeling when I actually do something that might make a difference; if only a very small one for a very short time. I mean—to be immediately attached to those we meet is therapeutic, if not redeeming, and may be the greatest benefit in having a this “big” shared experience. But you know, sometimes I just want to get away from here and the people that remind me of what we’re dealing with and how crazy we all must be for doing it. Damn, I love being loved, but sometimes I miss the freedom to tramp around and run into strangers that stay that way. Which brings me to this as the carnival season approaches: In a city where our most intimate fears and desires have become all but required information when forming even the most casual acquaintances, this year’s Mardi Gras hopefully will not only be a distraction but bring a needed dose of that good-old fashioned anonymity. So, I’m putting on a mask and wearing it for as long as I can. If last year’s carnival was about converging from across the country to sustain the traditions that have made New Orleans the sexiest damn city on this side of the Atlantic, then I say this year is about covering up and taking a break from all the exposure. And maybe a little costuming can change the world or at least change the feeling that we can’t flee unless we move to Portland or Austin or the greatest land of constant selfdelusion, “I’m-not-who-I-say-I-am” Los Angeles, Ca. Maybe, just maybe, if I dress up as a Cajun centaur or a pugilist for a couple of days I’ll get the reprieve I need to sustain me, and make even a temporary stay far away from here—and far away from all of me—delightfully unnecessary. 07 antigravity: your new orleans music and culture alternative_ ������������ ���������������� ����������� ���� ��������������� ���������������������� ������������������������� 08_antigravity: your new orleans music and culture alternative SOUND ADVICE ENTERTAINMENT AND MEDIA LEGAL TIPS BY ANDREW BIZER, ESQ Dear Andrew, I’m in a band and we want to get signed. We just finished a great sounding demo and we’re going to send it to record labels. Is there anything we need to include in the package? Thanks, Gary G. Gary, Congratulations on finishing your demo. Unfortunately, most record labels will not even bother listening to it. The major labels and most independent labels won’t even open your package. They will either throw it away or return it to you unopened. There are two main reasons why many record labels do not accept unsolicited demos. First, record labels still get hundreds of submissions per week and they simply don’t have the manpower to open all the packages and listen to every demo. Second, record labels are sick of getting sued for copyright infringement by people who claim that their artists stole songs from a demo they sent in. The record labels figure that they can’t get accused of stealing a song they never listened to. But don’t worry, if you want to get signed, there is a lot you can do without sending out a bunch of demos in the mail. To begin with, I strongly urge you to focus on your songwriting. You can have the greatest gear and the most unique sound, but if the songs aren’t there, no one will care. It always amazes me when I see a guy using 20 guitar pedals to play a crappy song. The best bands have the best songs. That Line 6 Liqua-Flange guitar pedal may sound cool (well, that’s debatable), but it won’t make your songs better. Now that I have gotten that off my chest, one way you can get your demo in the hands of record labels is by getting to know everybody in the local music business. The more people you know, the better your chances of getting noticed are. If you have a gig, talk to the person at the club who booked the show. Tell him or her how much you like playing their club. Tell them you’d like to be considered when a nationally touring band needs a local opening slot. Be persistent. Talk to the other bands on the bill. Maybe they have a manager and if so, talk to their manager. Give him or her your demo and ask him or her what they think. Talk to the doorman and the bartenders. Give them your demo. The odds are, the bartenders and the man or woman at the door are better connected than you and your bandmates are. And if they like your demo, they’ll pass it along to their musician friends. And no, you don’t need to move to New York to get noticed. Plenty of bands from towns like Albequerque (the Shins), Dayton (Guided by Voices), and Oklahoma City (Flaming Lips) have “made it”. Tour as much as you can. Befriend bands in Baton Rouge, Austin, and Memphis. Set up shows for them in New Orleans and have them set up shows for you in their city. The more places you go, the better your chances are of getting noticed by the right people. Here’s my best advice-- don’t wait for a record label to come to you. If you are happy with the sound of your demo, press up a few hundred CDs, call it an EP and sell it for five bucks. That’s all it takes to start your own record label. Send a copy to the editors at Antigravity, the Gambit, and the Times-Picayune as well as WTUL and WWOZ. If its good, and you’ve been talking to musicians around town, you’ll get noticed. And if nobody reacts, you haven’t wasted your time waiting for the phone to ring. You will have already put out your debut CD and you’ll have learned from your mistakes so that your second self-released CD will be that much better. Good luck, Andrew Bizer Andrew Bizer, Esq. is an attorney admitted to practice in Louisiana and New York. He previously served as the Manager of Legal and Business Affairs at EMI Music Publishing and has worked in the legal department at both Matador and Universal/Motown Records. When he was an undergrad at Tulane, Mr. Bizer was the Music Director at WTUL. This column is to be used as a reference tool. The answers given to these questions are short and are not intended to constitute full and complete legal advice. The answers given here do not constitute an attorney/ client relationship. Mr. Bizer is not your attorney. But if you want him to be your attorney, feel free to contact him at andrew@bizerlaw.com. Or, just email him a question and he’ll answer it in next month’s ANTIGRAVITY. 09 antigravity: your new orleans music and culture alternative_ DON’T STOP THE MUSIC A LOOK AT HOW TWO MURDERS MOVED A COMMUNITY A fter Dinerral Shavers’ death, the old band room, number 314, at Rabouin High School served as a shrine of sorts for the students’ band leader, teacher and friend; his desk was taped off because they didn’t want any other teacher sitting there for a while, explains Rabouin’s social worker, Glenis Scott. As we walk down hallways and up stairs, we pass poster after poster commemorating Dinerral, though many have been taken down now that a month has passed. Dinerral began his one-semester tenure at Rabouin as a substitute French teacher in late September, became a daily sub and, as a young man of twenty-five, stirred interest and enthusiasm among his students as well as his coworkers. Dinerral had been featured in the December issue of the school’s newsletter, The ‘R’ Report, with students later cutting out the article and taping it to their shirts to symbolize their support and respect for the man who, in addition to being the Hot 8 Brass Band’s snare drummer since its 1996 formation, was the man to bring music to the Rabouin campus. “When he first started working, he said that he was a member of the Hot 8 and was I interested in starting a band,” says Kevin George, the school’s principal. “Rabouin never had a band program—we didn’t have the facilities, the instruments. He would ask two and three times a week and I would rebuff him. Eventually, he started coming to me with a plan. I told him to put it on paper and he brought me something the next day.” Aided by instrument donations from the Tipitina’s Foundation and filmmaker Spike Lee, Dinerral assembled eighty-five students spread across four grades and had them begin practicing, sans instruments, before school, after school and during their lunch periods, with the group’s first assignment being to learn how to read music. Flags and majorettes joined the fledgling musicians and enthusiasm for the endeavor grew as the semester proceeded. The instruments were due in after the holiday break and arrived as expected, though the celebration paled in the wake of gunfire one Thursday afternoon on St. Philip Street. “The first thing I saw when I came back to school was band uniforms and equipment,” remembers George, “and it hit me that he was gone.” Just as Dinerral made music more accessible to his students, Helen Hill, filmmaker, animator and co-founder of the New Orleans Film Collective, strived to extend the art of filmmaking to the community at large by holding filmmaking bees at the Mid-City home she shared with her husband, Dr. Paul Gailiunas, who headed The Troublemakers, as well as a solo act, Ukulele and the Machine. “Her guests would have tea and work on each other’s – literal - film strips and talk,” explains Rene Broussard, founder and curator of the Zeitgeist Theater. “It was filmmaking as a social activity.” Broussard cites his 2004 nomination of Helen for the Rockefeller Media Fellowship, which she received for her film-in-progress, The Florestine Collection, as his proudest curatorial achievement. This unfinished work was inspired by Helen’s discovery of clothing patterns made by a blind, 90-year- BY LISA HAVILAND old African American woman and discarded in the street after her death, with the film centering on her sense of connection to this woman via the dresses. Helen is perhaps best known for Mouseholes, a tribute to her “Pop,” who died when she was a young girl, and for films like Scratch and Crow, The World’s Smallest Fair and Madame Winger Makes a Film: A Survival Guide for the 21st Century in which she laments that she is unable to achieve her goal of making a vegan film because all film stock utilizes animal products. “Her films are brilliantly simple,” says Jeremy Campbell, documentary filmmaker and founder of New Orleans’ Flicker Film Festival. “They achieve what so many filmmakers are afraid to attempt: to speak to the audience, not at them.” “She was like a pied piper in a way; she just brought with her a breath of fresh air,” Broussard says. “This is an artistic community with a lot of eccentric people—yet, everyone would meet her and Paul and say, ‘Are they for real?’” Wendy Treat, keyboardist and backing vocalist for the Troublemakers and front woman for Treatus, the precursor to Glorybee, echoes this sentiment. “The first time I met Helen was at this Dafa Fungus jam comic book meeting. She and Dr. Paul were so enthusiastic, so excited and so happy about everything. I thought that they were the fakest people I had ever met,” Treat remembers. “It turned out that they were actually like that.When my mom met Helen for the first time, we were at a party or an art gathering or something like that, and Helen showed her around and over to the refreshments. My mom helped herself to a big helping of tofu ice cream and it was the grossest stuff she’d ever tasted. We laugh about that still.” On January 18, the new band room at Rabouin, number 102, is abuzz, a cacophony of horns, drums and shouts that later streamline under the watchful eye of a Nightline camera. “For a beginning band, we’re doing pretty good,” the new band director, Darryl Person, tells me. “This is a band director’s 10_antigravity: your new orleans music and culture alternative dream; we’re playing with brand new horns and drums.” The band’s song list is comprised of I Want to Know, Neck!, Stuntin’ like my Daddy, Can You Feel It?, Stay, Morris Brown and Missing You, which is Darryl’s favorite because it is specifically dedicated to Dinerral. The Hot 8 have performed at Rabouin twice since December 28, first at the January 9 basketball pep rally and then for the January 12 “Day of Memories” ceremony honoring Dinerral. The Truth Brass Band also played and choir director Damon Williams sang, with students Jamika Barnes, Quincy Bridges and Thea Daniels reading original poems written for the occasion. “He was like a brother to me,” says Harry “Swamp Thing” Jones, bass drummer for the Hot 8. “That was my right hand man on the back row, on the drums.” When asked how she would like Dinerral to be remembered, majorette choreographer Jamika Saul instinctively replies, “As a man who loved children and one who had the children’s best interests at heart.” There is sadness, there is disbelief, too, encircling those interviewed, those called upon to highlight life over death. “He worked so hard for this. He had this vision and he wasn’t able to see it through,” says Kevin George. “It’s just impossible to imagine her being the victim of violence,” says Rene Broussard, who, like the Hot 8 and Rabouin, will honor his friend and colleague, specifically with a Zeitgeist tea party featuring Helen’s trademark peppermint tea and cotton candy on Sunday, February 4, at 3:30. In “Get Up,” a song Dinerral penned for the Hot 8’s latest CD, “Rock with the Hot 8,” one of the victim’s lyrical laments lives in the refrain, “My people, keep the peace, keep the murder rate down.” When I come home from a long walk one day, having left my stereo on and The Troublemakers in rotation, I enter my apartment to Dr. Paul singing,“You’ll never be alone, you’ll never be alone, you’ll never be alone” and can’t help but wonder. 12_antigravity: your new orleans music and culture alternative EXPLOSIONS IN THE SKY BY MARTY GARNER I think it’s safe to say that we are a region equally accustomed to both tragedy and comedy. We have shown the rest of the country that it’s okay to laugh when you cry, that we are more than King George’s Court Jester.We are inherently self-obsessed, forever wary of outsiders (except those named Drew or Reggie) but always ready to accommodate. We are a city of paradoxes, a tragedy of sometimesShakespearean proportions ready to make any heart quake, but a ribbon of victory runs through our collective garment.We celebrate ourselves despite ourselves. Because no matter how thick the lake mud gets, there’s always a Crescent City Water Meter underneath it. Maybe that’s why I like Explosions in the Sky so much. The Austin post-rock group’s newest record, All of a Sudden I Miss Everyone, is forty-five minutes of absolutely terrifying noise bowling in some of the most beautiful, emotional, and affirming music being made. All without saying a word. The four-piece (guitarists Michael James, Munaf Rayani, and Mark T. Smith along with drummer Chris Hrasky) have been specializing in a sort of new Romanticism within the admittedly depressing post-rock scene since 1999. 2003’s gorgeous and heartbreaking The Earth is Not a Cold Dead Place made fans out of the film industry (EITS scored the high school football film Friday Night Lights) and Madison Avenue (who used “Your Hand in Mine” and “Six Days at the Bottom of the Ocean” to sell Cadillacs). The band previously found themselves in the national spotlight following the release of 2001’s Those Who Tell the Truth Shall Die, Those Who Tell the Truth Shall Live Forever. The album, which came out in late August of that year, bore several strange similarities to the following month’s terrorist attacks, including album art that showed a plane captioned with “This plane will crash tomorrow.” 13 antigravity: your new orleans music and culture alternative_ Make no mistake about it. All of a Sudden I Miss Everyone is by all means a sad record. But among the sadness, there’s a sense of majesty. There’s beauty. There’s a spirit of triumph working its way through each song, sometimes so quietly that you have to listen closer than you otherwise would to hear it. Under the noise of three guitars feeding back, a piano twinkles a prayer. The patter of a floor tom, the raising of the eyes. And sometimes the majesty screams at you, direct and in the front of the mix, the three guitars now holding hands around a maypole, twisting and turning not out of agony but out of a love for the sheer weightiness of being. It’s always there. Beauty rests among the sadness. It’s everywhere. This is exactly the record that we all need. It’s always great to be alive. ANTIGRAVITY: What does the songwriting process look like for Explosions in the Sky? Chris Hrasky: It’s basically just sort of a trial and error. Usually, someone will come in with something they thought up at home, some little part or phrase. Basically it’s just us screwing around until something comes of it; or, more often than not, nothing comes of it. It’s really just kind of sitting around and talking and playing over and over again. It usually takes us a while to actually complete anything. But it’s mostly just trial and error; that’s probably why we’re not as prolific as we’d like to be. AG: “Six Days at the Bottom of the Ocean” (from The Earth is Not a Cold Dead Place) is about the Russian submarine that sank a few years back. Are any of your other songs about specific events? CH: Not very many of them, actually. I think sometimes if we’re having trouble finishing a song we’ll think up a storyline or even just a phrase, or a one-sentence story to guide us to figure out how we want to finish the song or whatever. It’s not too often, but with you calling from New Orleans, I should mention that there’s a song on the new record like that. While we were working on it was right in the middle of Katrina and the aftermath of all that and I think that it sort of influenced one of those songs for sure. AG: Is it “What Do You Go Home To?” CH: Actually, it’s “It’s Natural to be Afraid,” although “What Do You Go Home To?” makes sense title-wise. Of course, the artwork, obviously. A lot of people have made mention or have asked us, “Is this a Katrina reference?” It’s strange because the artwork wasn’t really intentionally like that. We sort of had some of these ideas before it happened, but I think afterwards it was like, “Well, you know, we’re going to get questions about it. You know, there’s a flooded city on the front; people are going to make assumptions about that.” I think we felt pretty okay with that considering one of the songs was influenced by that, or it was something that was going through our minds when we were working on it. AG: That’s strange, considering the controversy that you guys had with album art after September 11th. CH: Yeah, we get all of the US disasters. Our artwork parallels all of that. [Laughs] AG: That’s one of the things that I like about your music, though, is the ambiguity of it. When I hear the rainy piano and the thundering drums on “What Do You Go Home To?” and I look at that album cover, all I can think about is hurricanes and rooftop helicopter rescues, but some dude in Iowa or Wisconsin may think of something completely different. CH: Yeah, and that’s why we hesitate when people do ask us what our songs are supposed to be about. Rarely do we have a moment where we say, “Oh, this song is about this,” or “This guitar line means this,” or whatever, but we do like the idea of people personalizing it. That’s always been real interesting to us. There’s some message board where some kids have posted that All of a Sudden I Miss Everyone is a soundtrack to Catcher in the Rye. They went through it point by point as to why. It’s not, of course. But I like to see stuff like that. It’s pretty cool that somehow they’re engaging in it in some way. AG: Catcher in the Rye, though? CH: [Laughs] Yeah, it was pretty strange. They were like, “Well, the first song is called ‘The Birth and Death of the Day,’ and, in a way, Holden Caulfield is reborn…” I really do appreciate that, though. AG: Well, you must have a series of weird moments now, what with the Friday Night Lights soundtrack 14_antigravity: your new orleans music and culture alternative and the Cadillac commercial and all. CH: Yeah, they’re pretty surreal. The Cadillac commercial isn’t really surreal; I guess I would say it’s a bit uncomfortable. AG: Really? CH: [Pauses] Well, yeah. Not really uncomfortable but it’s just kind of…to be perfectly honest, we’re not real proud of having our music in that. I will readily admit that. Completely honestly, the only reason that we did that was for money. As horrible as that sounds, it’s the truth. So it’s the kind of thing where, like, my parents will call and say, “Hey, we just saw the Cadillac commercial!” and I just say, [Sarcastically] “Great!” Because to a parent, that’s like the ultimate goal, that sort of deal. But to us it’s more of an embarrassment, I guess. We don’t feel that way about Friday Night Lights but, Cadillac, yeah. AG: Yeah, there was this really weird moment this fall when LSU was playing Auburn in football and it was a really intense game and we’re all sitting around screaming at the TV, and they cut to commercial so we fall silent for about fifteen seconds, then the Cadillac ad comes on and everyone starts screaming again and phones are ringing off the hook because all of our friends are calling. CH: Yeah, it’s pretty strange. I honestly thought we’d get more of a backlash or resentment for it. I don’t think that that’s unwarranted either. When I see a band that I like’s music in a commercial, I can’t help it, I’m kind of bummed out a little bit. But it’s weird that that really didn’t happen. Mostly it was people congratulating us. I don’t know if that’s a good or a bad sign. [Laughs] AG: Yeah, and of Montreal played here last weekend and when they started playing their song that’s in the… CH: Yeah, the Outback Steakhouse song? I think a lot of it is just these music supervisors who work for these ad agencies and all that sort of thing are all guys in their 20s and 30s who listen to that kind of music so they’re putting it into their commercials. There’s definitely this weird sort of shift in the last four or five years. I mean, I’ve seen Modest Mouse songs in like four or five different commercials. AG: What inspires you guys to write? CH: It’s something that we love to do, so we just keep doing it, you know what I mean? It’s not really like something will happen in our lives that will move us to write a song about it. All four of us have played music for so long that it’s become something we actually do for a living. It’s kind of a weird shift. We just all love playing music and I think that the four of us just really seem to like playing music together. AG: When you guys write, do you think with an album theme in mind, or are you writing track by track? CH:We try to always keep it by album. As we’re writing a song, we just look at it as a specific song but we also look at it in terms of “Where can this go in an album?” So if we write one song and then another similar song, we want them to sort of fit in the vision of an album. We basically work on songs until they’re done and once it’s done we’re pretty certain that it will go on the album. We never have like, eight songs and have to choose the best six to go on the album. We’ll be writing and once we have six songs it’s like, “Well, there’s the album. We’re done. That’s enough, that’s enough songs. We don’t need any more than that.” But we always look at it as an album. We spend a lot of time figuring out where songs should be placed. AG: How closely did you work with Esteban Rey on the album art? CH: Oh, real closely. He’s one of our best friends. He lives with Michael and stuff. It was a daily struggle. You know, we would just beat him on a regular basis. He’s an amazing artist but he’s got some procrastination problems, so we’d have to abuse him and whip him into shape. It’s always been that way with us. We’ll have these ideas – and he’ll come up with ideas, too – and he’ll work on stuff and he’ll show it to us and usually it’s like, “No, just start over again,” and so on and so on. So it’s a pretty torturous process for him. Ultimately, he loves doing it. Once it’s done, anyway. We spend a lot of time on that stuff. We feel like it’s as important as the music. We know that it’s not really the way things are these days, with people downloading stuff, but the artwork is part of the package of the album. There’s the music, artwork, and titles. We spend a lot of time and get frustrated working on the artwork. AG: Where did the title for the new record come from? CH: I can’t remember which one of us even came up with it but we were talking about what we wanted the album to be about, this real loose theme or whatever, and it was this idea of someone just kind of going about their life and then all of a sudden, well, missing everyone, coming to this realization that they’ve isolated themselves and lost touch with the people they’ve loved. I don’t know why that was the theme. So the artwork is this guy out adrift in this flood, floating around in these small little memories of things he misses, people he misses.That’s basically it. I’m not sure why we always have such melodramatic and depressing themes, but that’s always how it kind of turns out. [Laughs] AG: Well, all of the interviews and reviews of the new record that I’ve read mention how depressing this album is, how it’s your darkest record and all, but I hear a spirit of triumph beneath it all that I feel sort of wins in the end, especially compared to something like (the considerably darker) Those Who Tell the Truth Shall Die, Those Who Tell the Truth Shall Live Forever. CH:Yeah, and Those Who Tell the Truth just feels so long ago now. The last record is one that got us known and it’s the one that people always talk about.This record definitely feels a lot darker than that record. But, I don’t know! I say that, but there are some bright moments on the new record! I don’t know. It seemed like it was darker, but I don’t know that it necessarily is. There are parts that are. AG: How do you avoid being repetitive, particularly in a genre that seems prone to repetition? CH: Hopefully we have gotten out of that trap. I know that some people who have heard the record think we have, but we’ve also heard people say that it’s more of the same, that we’re doing the same thing over and over again. I guess that’s valid but I don’t personally agree with that. Again, though, it’s just trial and error. We spent a lot of time working on [the “We’re not real proud of having our music in (the Cadillac TV commercial). I will readily admit that.” songs on] this record and we threw a bunch of songs away because they kind of seemed like it wasn’t anything particularly exciting or interesting. Everything sounded like stuff that could be on the Friday Night Lights soundtrack. All kind of pleasant to listen to, but there wasn’t really anything else going on. I think we really wanted to not do that. It’s really just working on things until we thought that they were unique enough. And like I said, some people think that they are and some people think that we’re just treading water. But there are people who think that all four of our records basically sound the same. I don’t agree, but, you know, I’m also biased. I also feel like this record has a bit more of a … well, there are rock parts on all of the records but I feel like this is the most, like, traditional rock record that we’ve made. This is going to sound ridiculous, but we joked that this record sounds like AC/DC, even though it doesn’t. But there are moments with big chords and more traditional rock chords as opposed to what we’ve previously done. And that was intentional; we wanted this one to be more of a rock record. I think it’s different, but I’ve also been analyzing it every day for the last year. AG: It took you guys two years to write it, right? CH: Well, basically, we toured through all of 2004 and did the Friday Night Lights stuff, so we took early 2005 off and started writing around May of 2005. We worked on stuff for several months and didn’t get anywhere. I don’t think we started getting anything for this record until about a year ago. For several months we were just throwing stuff away and sitting there in despair, thinking that we were doomed. We seem to have gone through that phase with every record, like, “Well, it was fun while it lasted, guys.” AG: I saw you guys in Houston about a year ago and when you got to the climax of “The Only Moment We Were Alone,” people started screaming and maybe losing control of themselves in really bizarre ways, throwing themselves around. CH: (chuckles) Yeah. AG: Why do you think your music strikes such a deep, emotional chord with people? CH: I don’t know! We love that that is the reaction some people have. We used to talk about it, but we’ve stopped because we don’t know how or why this is happening or why people are responding to it that way. I really don’t know. Sometimes I think that people realize that this music means everything to us and that it’s something we truly are passionate about, but I don’t know if that’s something that would cause that. I don’t know, I guess they just like it. I mean, it’s weird because that is the intended effect. We want to make music that people can lose themselves in and hold close to their heart. Luckily, so far we’ve been able to accomplish that. Our goal is to always be able to do that. We should try to figure it out so we can crank one out every year. [Laughs] AG: Is it hard for you guys to put that much emotion into playing every night? CH: Sometimes. That Houston show was easy because we hadn’t been playing live much. Once you’re touring a lot there are times when you start to get real robotic about it. You’ll be playing and you realize that you’re starting to think about what’s for dinner or praying that the hotel has something awesome on HBO. I would say most of the time we’re able to get lost in it, especially if it seems like the people watching are getting lost in it. It’s an amazing feeling when the people watching seem like they’re rooting for you. AG: You guys are a bit more positive than some of the bands that you get compared to often. You don’t really have the dark side that a band like Godspeed or Mogwai has. CH: We don’t want to make music that would be just sort of one emotion.We’d rather have a song that is more emotionally complex.We try to have a song that sounds like someone falling in love and ten seconds later it sounds like a guy with a gun in his mouth. We try to have a broad spectrum. I feel like music that’s always dark and depressing has its place. Godspeed gets that a lot, but there are also Godspeed songs that are really beautiful and lush. AG: Who do you consider to be your musical peers? CH: I don’t know, I guess it’s hard to say. I guess people will say that it’s bands like Mogwai and Godspeed. We listen to so many bands and when you tour a lot you kind of run into so many bands. I guess our peers would be anybody making music. That’s too hard of a question for me. [Laughs] AG: Was there any one moment when you guys realized the, I don’t know, to put it in some sort of cheesy superhero way, the power that you guys hold in your hands when you play? CH: [Laughs] There have definitely been moments like that, but it’s hard to me to remember any specific ones. I know that there was one time when we played this festival in Belgium and we were doing “The Only Moment We Were Alone.” We were in a tent and there were something like 3,000 people there and up to that point that was the most people we’d ever played in front of. We were doing the part where it’s only the bass drum and a little bit of guitar and the whole place started clapping along. It was the first time that anything like that had ever happened. That was the first time on a large scale. That freaked us out. In a good way. But even playing shows in the early days for five people and someone coming up afterwards to tell us that they started crying during the show, that was so meaningful to us. I like the notion of being a superhero, though. We are now superheroes. AG: What is your proudest musical moment? CH: Up to this point, it’s probably this newest record. In terms of actual music we’ve done, this is what I’m most proud of.This is the first one that when it was done and mixed we’ve been unanimously excited about. The others took a bit more time. We’re all really happy with this one. I don’t know, maybe we’re deluding ourselves. Thursday, 3/8 Explosions In The Sky Republic, 828 S. Peters St., (504) 528-8282 www.republicnola.com For more info on Explosions In The Sky, go to: www.explosionsinthesky.com 15 antigravity: your new orleans music and culture alternative_ MR. QUINTRON TALKS THE NINTH WARD MARCHING BAND BY LEO MCGOVERN T o say that Quintron is unlike most New Orleans-based artists would be a g r and under statement. His live shows draw quite a crowd, yet he doesn’t overbook himself, which makes his few shows (generally with partner and puppeteer Miss Pussycat) extra special. He’s the odd N.O.-based alt artist who tours successfully, but he maintains an air of credibility in the local scene. No one would dare brand him a sell-out and he garners respect like it’s going out of style—people who know him say he’s a “master organizer” and the “brains behind” the Ninth Ward Marching Band. It’s the Marching Band that brings ANTIGRAVITY to St. Claude Ave. and the Spellcaster Lodge on a cold, dreary late-January evening. When AG enters the Spellcaster, the Marching Band is wrapping up practice. With at least fifty musicians in the Lodge, a number that includes members of local bands like Egg Yolk Jubilee, the Buttons,Triple Delight and the Morning 40 Federation, it becomes clear that the Ninth Ward Marching Band is, in effect, the New Orleans rock scene’s preeminent supergroup even though you wouldn’t hear the Marching Band’s music at any of those aforementioned bands’ shows.After speaking to several attendees, one simple thing is certain—every member has a passion for being a part, no matter how big or small that part is, of the Ninth Ward Marching Band. Over its decade-plus existence, things have generally been simple for the Marching Band; play marching versions of classic rock songs (‘06’s repertoire included “Rock You Like A Hurricane,” “Love Is Like Oxygen” and “House Of The Rising Sun”) and march in a parade or two (the group has become a fixture in Muses and traditionally marches, in the early morning after the Maritime Ball, from the Spellcaster to Mimi’s in the Marigny) while looking snappy and, above all, having fun. After Katrina, doors opened for the Marching Band.With many students still absent from the area and high school bands at a premium, krewes had rare open slots. Proteus, a parade that not only shares the group’s colors but, because of its old-school status and attitude, is respected immensely by Quintron, hired the Marching Band. The added exposure plus the national media attention given to the first post-Katrina Mardi Gras didn’t always work in the band’s favor, however. The New York Times published a “Mardi Gras Diary” entry that alluded to the Marching Band, and the simple fact that its members are almost all white, as a “telltale sign” that New Orleans was undergoing a “cruel demographic shift.” Was the notion a shrewd deduction or a complete misunderstanding and ignorance of the Ninth Ward Marching Band’s history? ANTIGRAVITY talked to Quintron not only to set the record straight regarding that N.Y. Times article but also to get some of his history with New Orleans and what the Marching Band means to him. 17 antigravity: your new orleans music and culture alternative_ AG: Why did you move to New Orleans? Quintron: I was touring with my original Quintron, One Man Band thing, and in 1994 I played at Pussycat Caverns, which is the club that Miss Pussycat ran at Piety and Burgundy. I met her, and I was just literally passing through town. I basically came here for a girl. AG: How did the Ninth Ward Marching Band come together? Quintron: I’ve always been blown away by high school marching bands. That genre or mode of creating music is the ultimate way to make music, ever. Creativity and individual artistry is taken out of the picture and it’s about getting a hundred people to do the same thing at the same time, to show up, play the same lines the same way and no one is really expressing themselves or soloing or doing anything like that. But when you put it all together…you know the feeling when a marching band passes you by and you see the level of playing is widely varied from virtuoso players to people who can hardly play, but they’re playing the same thing at the same time and they’re playing together…it makes the hair on the back of your neck stand up. It’s the most beautiful example of collaboration. AG: Do you think marching bands here are different than those in other cities? Quintron: In other cities, it’s like marching bands are doing their homework, but here people are playing with guts and soul. They want to be a marching band, they want to be First Trumpet and they want to play their ass off and walk down the street with their friends cheering them on and following them down the street. Second lines start with high school marching bands, which are the shit. They make me cry… they’re the best. There are a million that are great. They’re not expressing themselves individually, necessarily. That group-wide monster pride is amazing. I wanted to make that with adults, with us freaky, rock ‘n’ roll, wacky people who don’t have jobs and aren’t in high school or the military, but make us do the same thing (those marching bands do). Forget your rock band, forget your composition masterpiece, we’re going to play these stupid classic rock songs, and we’re going to play these songs in unison and the power’s going to be in that we can actually do it. I think that works. The fact that we got it together enough to do it and no one’s jamming or being an individual, and they’re wearing a uniform and it’s clean and tight and looks good…it’s powerful, a symbol of unity, of people coming together and agreeing to do something together and achieving it. The sound represents that. AG: How do you think the Marching band is tied to the Ninth Ward? Quintron: Loosely. The drum corps is mostly from the Ninth Ward, and if you’re talking about whether they’re from New Orleans or not, probably close to seventy-five percent was born and raised in the city. The Marching Band itself has nothing to do with the Ninth Ward. Originally it had to do with our neighborhood, people who had moved into the white Ninth Ward art scene, which featured people who moved here from other places because rent is cheap, houses were cheap, and this was the East Village in New Orleans. The genesis of the “Forget your rock band, forget your composition masterpiece, we’re going to play these stupid classic rock songs, and we’re going to play these songs in unison and the power’s going to be in that we can actually do it.” 18_antigravity: your new orleans music and culture alternative marching band was those people. I’d say that the drum corps and a couple of the girl groups are still rooted in that original neighborhood group of people. AG: How many members of the marching band are from or live in the Ninth Ward? Quintron: All the drummers are from the neighborhood. Everyone else is from Metairie, the Northshore, all over the place. The residency of the band has nothing to do with the Ninth Ward. That’s just the name. To cop out and make it the “New Orleans Marching Band” or the “Mardi Gras Marching Band…” It was originally called the Ninth Ward Marching Band…it looks cool, the cat logo looks cool. I mean, none of the Metairie guys care that it’s called the Ninth Ward Marching Band. They’re not, “What about Old Metairie or the Mandeville Marching Band?” For people to nitpick at that, like critics or media people…to answer the media or whine against them, it’s fruitless. AG: Did your admiration for marching bands exist before you came to New Orleans? Quintron: It came totally from New Orleans. AG: Were you in a marching band when you were a kid? Quintron: I was never in a marching band when I was a kid, but I studied military snare for years and years, just rudiments and stuff like that, just marching stuff. AG: Why are all the songs the marching band plays classic rock? Quintron: Mostly so that no one has sole ownership of the music. If I were to write the music, some quick Quintron songs, it would make it like I want them to help me do my thing. I could make it as democratic as could be, but it’d still be the “Quintron Marching Band,” and I don’t want it to be like that at all. I want it to be this dumb, learning, rote…no one owns it, no one’s getting all the glory for the creation of the actual music. A bigger reason is because there are so many people in the band—if you’re playing material that’s familiar to a certain age group, and classic rock is the one genre that spans the widest age group, more than hip-hop or even oldies. The right classic rock songs, Little Gregory has heard them, and forty-year-old Jeff the tuba player has heard them…it sets something in your head in advance that allows us to, in a month and a half, to put this shit together; it gives people a head start, they know the melodies, you know when the chorus is coming because you’ve heard it a million times. And for the girl groups who are doing the dances, they can get their dances together before we get the music to them. It’s a crutch that allows it to be achieved, and if it were an original composition by me, no one would know what it was, it wouldn’t have that memory attached to it. AG: How does the composition of the songs come about? Quintron: We take the song and simplify it, pull out the elements, dumb it down to marching tempo. The best marching songs have distinct bass lines with overlaying melody parts that work well with each other. The classic rock bands that are all nerdy about music, like Styx or ELO, are great for marching bands because they really composed their music. You never think about classic rock that much until you start arranging it for marching band, but there’s a reason why certain bands are popular with marching bands—it’s because the bass lines are really distinct, they’re easy to arrange and the chords are really thick and you can do cool things with the chorus. We start by choosing the stuff that way, and then I get together with Eric from Egg Yolk Jubilee. He’s the chord arranging genius, and we figure out all that stuff. The drummers are working separately. AG: How does one get selected for the Marching Band? Quintron: It’s not a selection. People think it’s this elite thing. There are people I hear about second-hand who think, “Why don’t I get picked for Marching Band?” It’s like, “Maybe because you play guitar, you don’t read music or play a horn or play drums.” It’s not this totally democratic thing that’s open to everybody. The band’s got a twelve-year history. The drum corps has been basically the same corps since day one, with one or two additions or subtractions over the years. And the gun girls too, and the baton girls. I mean, it’s kind of random how people get added. A bass drummer dropped out this year, and this guy walked up to me on Frenchmen St. because he’s a friend of a friend of a friend of one of the other bass drummers. He said, “I’ve seen your band before, and I really love it, and I’ve got the time and I really want to do it.” Right there, I said, “Give me your phone number.” It was early enough in the process that he could learn the material. We’re a lot more likely to take great horn players late in the game, as long as they can read music. There’s a whole new trend of hippier, rock marching bands around the country that are kind of like drum jam bands. Over 75% of the people here have marched in high school; they know that you start the one on your left foot…that’s why we’re good. If it was just drums and a few wankers pretending to play some songs, it would suck. It takes those dudes who played at Rummel, you know, being good. The more horns the better. You add too many drums and it’s a mess. I’d take a hundred good horn players, though. AG: What numbers would the marching band top out at? Quintron: This year we have eighty-five members, and if it gets too much bigger than that it’s a hassle. Whenever we have to cancel band practice or something like that I have to personally call eighty-five people, and that could take all day. AG: What was it like for the Marching Band last year, marching in the first post-Katrina Mardi Gras? Quintron: We marched with Proteus and Muses, and the regular parade after the Maritime Ball. Of course, the national media was down here and the N.Y. Times wrote something about the Ninth Ward Marching Band… AG: We should say that that was Adam Nossiter (N.Y. Times, Feb. 25th, 2006), and he said, “Another group styled itself the Ninth Ward Marching Band, but it was almost all-white — clearly commemorative, rather than representative, of what had been a black neighborhood, now gone. The band members wore military-style helmets with “9” on them. The once-obscure Ninth Ward is now a world-famous war zone.” Quintron: He said that we were “a telltale sign” of what the Ninth Ward would become—mostly white. We’ve been around for twelve years, and have always been, while not being all white, majority white. That was really annoying, but to be expected. Now I feel a little weird about the fact that we’re called the Ninth Ward Marching Band and that in the last year and a half the Ninth Ward has gotten all this publicity and been the symbol of the black victims of Katrina. That’s true, but anyone who lives here knows about the Upper-Nine, the Lower-Nine and the Bywater, that the Ninth Ward in the‘70s was all white and eventually became Chalmette. You wouldn’t expect the national media to understand that, but now I feel like “What are people seeing when they see us marching down the street with a banner that says ‘Ninth Ward Marching Band?’” In a way, I don’t even want to address it, because it’s like, we are what we are, we have been what we have been, and if you don’t know, you don’t fucking need to know. It’s still a weird issue. AG: The guy who wrote that article is actually from New Orleans, and an odd thing is that Thinknola. com just called him out for his N.Y. Times piece on the recent crime march to City Hall. Thinknola posted links to four stories, and while the other three talked about creating accountability in the New Orleans government, his was about race and how most of the people in the march were white. Race seems to be at the forefront for him. Quintron: That’s bullshit. I hate it, and I hate that the national media is making everything about race, like it’s us versus them, white against black, with white people being the evil race and black people being the victim, and that’s bad for both sides. For him to turn our band into a beacon representation of the downfall, the white-ization of New Orleans is really offensive to me. My immediate reaction was that I wanted to tell the world the way it is, but I kind of don’t feel that right now. AG: Would you ever change the name of the Marching Band? Quintron: I’ve never thought, “Oh, we should change our name,” but I know we’re going to get shit, even more than last year. We’re not going to change our name. The real question is, “Why aren’t there more black people in our Ninth Ward Marching Band?” The answer is that it just started from a neighborhood of friends who hang out and collaborate and communicate with each other. Why aren’t more of my true brothers in New Orleans black people? If there were, they’d be in this band. I’m not saying I’m a racist, but that’s a question for everyone right now. The racism thing in New Orleans is weird. I think it’s actually one of the least racist places in America. I think black people and white people understand each other fundamentally in a way that’s above and beyond most other places in the U.S. At the same time, our hardcore communities don’t mix, and everyone kind of likes it that way. You know Little Gregory, right? He’s in the band because he’s got guts. Associating with older people, and white people…he insists on being a part of all this crazy stuff that we’re doing, 19 antigravity: your new orleans music and culture alternative_ and there’s open-minded people and people crazy enough in our scene that accept that and we’re true friends now. Why can’t that happen more? Those are things that people who aren’t from here can never understand. They don’t know race relations in New Orleans, and they never will. Us shouting “Ninth Ward,” or whatever, was a way of bonding in this little art community that we’ve got, in the same way that other groups of people in the city do, whether it’s Uptown or St. Thomas or whatever. The cool thing about neighborhood pride existing on such a minute local level that you’re actually talking about ten square blocks. It’s so ridiculous and beautiful that that was part of the original Ninth Ward “thing” for us. In a way it’s New Orleans pride, but it didn’t become this touchy racial issue until Katrina, which turned everything into a touchy racial issue, which sucks. AG: How did you get involved with Proteus? Quintron: Proteus paraded a long time ago, and then stopped and started parading again. I used to be an electrician for Proteus, and I love their floats. Really oldschool. Foil leaf, flower petal style, kind of like Rex but even more flowery and beautiful, the big giant wagon wheels and stuff. For years and years, the Ninth Ward Marching Band only did their own parades from the Spellcaster to the French Quarter and we were like this renegade thing. My mission the whole time was, New Orleans can be decadent and weird enough, but I never wanted to be anti-Mardi Gras or anti-New Orleans, I want to be in the real shit. Being in a real parade is as important as being this late-night, freak parade. I want to march down Canal St. and St. Charles Ave. Our first ever parade was with Shangri-La when it was in Chalmette. It was fun, a total country-style parade. Then we marched with Muses for a couple years, and after the hurricane, I had an opportunity to step it up. All these krewes needed marching bands because so many dissipated. I knew I didn’t want to march with Rex, and Zulu would be weird and controversial, and the super-krewes take too long, they stop forever and have a bunch of celebrities. I wanted to march with Proteus, the snarkiest, most old-line, Uptown, beautiful parade that exists, in my opinion. We even share their colors, red and white. I got their number and called them, and they were into it. It has nothing to do with sharing politics with them, I don’t even want to get into that. Joining up with them was about being in a high-profile Lundi Gras, classy parade and being able to march down St. Charles Ave. for tons and tons of people, little old ladies and little kids and high school students. Proteus is up there with Rex and Zulu as the best and most traditional. AG: I was talking with Lefty (member of the Marching Band, owner of the Circle Bar) the other day, and he talked about this feeling that some people who move to New Orleans have. Almost that some people who grew up here don’t respect transplants, that people who move here can never become “real” New Orleanians. Obviously, some people are kind of “adopted” by the city (Archie Manning was born in Mississippi but is widely considered a “New Orleanian,” for example), but what do you think about that attitude? Quintron: I will never be born and raised here. I will never be born and bred New Orleans. There’s something about you guys that will always and forever separate you from us. I don’t have a problem with that, but too many outsiders who move here get hung up on wanting to be born and raised here. There’s something in the water that makes y’all a certain way, that you have something over us, a magic power that people who were born and raised here have. What makes the city work, and function, and is beautiful about New Orleans is that it is a melting pot and accepts outsiders. I’m here for a reason, and I wouldn’t live anyplace else. I consider this my hometown, and I’m a military brat and I’ve lived here longer than I’ve lived anywhere, so in a way it is my hometown. But I’m not Jude Matthews. AG: Who else could be Jude Matthews? Quintron: Nobody, and that’s the point. I worship and respect that, to the Nth degree. I don’t know what to say about that. I’m not hung up on it. I’ll tell anyone that I’m not born and raised here. But if you have disrespect for me just because I’m not born and raised here, then you’re an idiot because I was a little baby, how could I have a choice? We’re all citizens of the world. And there are people born and raised here who are fucking idiots, that are narrow-minded and racist and useless, and there are genius and amazing people who are born and raised here, and there are genius and amazing people who move here. It’s almost easier for the outsiders that are here to stick it out as it is for you to seek greener pastures because it ain’t romantic for you like it is for people who are from somewhere else. For people who are coming here now from Portland, Oregon or New York, the liberation of New Orleans is this new beautiful thing. If you’re from here and your grandparents are from here, you see this whole cycle of horribleness that’s a part of the city and it’s easy to say, “Fuck this, I can make a lot more money in L.A. being a smart, creative person.” Honestly, it takes a lot of guts to stay in New Orleans. I have a lot of respect for the people who were born and raised here and haven’t left. There are a lot of reasons to leave. The reasons that you have not, that Jude has not, that Rik Slave has not, that Mike Joseph has not, are the same reasons that I’m here—forever and ever.” Thursday, 2/15; Monday, 2/19 Ninth Ward Marching Band Marches in Muses and Proteus Parades. Check your Mardi Gras guides for details. For more info on the Marching Band, go to: www.quintronandmisspussycat.com/marchingband 20_antigravity: your new orleans music and culture alternative PAGINATIONS Mosquito Alex Lemon (Tin House) without succumbing to the strong emotion just barely held in check. In “MRI,” the speaker endures seeing the tumor inside him by keeping his eyes open and his mental associations humorously unsettled: I’m half- Alex Lemon’s Mosquito is a book of poems born out of the experience of illness, and for that reason, you might open it up with a certain set of assumptions. You might expect, for instance, to find a lot of plainly stated autobiographical detail—possibly flavored with self-pity—and not much sex, and probably not much in the way of experimentation with language and form. Sick people have more immediate concerns, right? Fortunately, the 28 year-old Lemon has written a book that successfully defies the entire schema we sometimes bring to the poetry of illness, and manages to be inspirational in a much broader way. In Mosquito, hope comes through the words themselves, which carry such blunt oddness that they don’t just paint a picture—they force our brains to start working in weird ways; they effectively put us in the position of taking nothing around us for granted. The experience of reading Lemon’s poetry is rewarding for the same reason it is uncomfortable: while every sense is turned up to its most intense level, the voice in the poems is also an objective one, focusing on both the physical experience of pain and the tossing and turning of the mind naked, shivery with chicken skin, napkin-gowned. But I don’t laugh because I think the veined cobweb looks like Abraham Lincoln’s profile on the penny. So let’s pretend I’m not sick at all. I’m filled with golden tumors— love for the nurse who feeds me to the machine. The poems in Mosquito that deal directly with Lemon’s experiences as a patient are, fittingly, the most pressurized. But the physical and emotional pain is not communicated directly; instead, it hits us by way of the quality of the language, which seems to grow tougher and more brutally opaque as the experiences grow more difficult. In “Last Body,” a catalogue of examples assembled so that “others / Might understand” quickly dissolves into chaos, as Lemon poetically bangs his head against a wall confronting the futility of that effort: For example, the oak vamping de-limbed In winter, or how each pair of tennis shoes is Unwound from the power line. But none of this Shines like a rain of thumbtacks. For a mouth Open is no different than frostbite or a bucket of bolts Slopping into the sun’s bath. Not all of Mosquito moves with meaningful difficulty. As the book develops, the voice seems to relax just a bit, and the poems take on other subjects besides illness without losing their bite. “Love Is a Very Small Tsunami,” which opens the book’s second section, is just as frenetic as “Last Body,” but here, the underlying emotion is joy. And while the freewheeling motion of “Love” provides a welcome contrast to the tension of some of the earlier poems, Lemon’s depiction of love is no less conventional than his handling of pain. Resisting direct narrative, he instead creates excitement through a rush of associations that spills down the page: “I race to the lake / where bodies drown in algae and the mind / flexes everything naked.” Even in moments of outright eroticism, Lemon maintains an awareness of his own solitude. In “Plum,” although the lover is near to him in space (“your wetness stuck, cried, like a mouse / in a glue trap”), the poet keeps an observer’s stance, and so accepting is Lemon of that distance that at times he lets his scope slide fully to the panoramic: “I could see the patch of hair you’d missed shaving / glow on your calf like a gold brick in an Iowa cornfield.” Wisdom doesn’t occur in Mosquito in the same way you might find it elsewhere: almost nowhere in Lemon’s collection can you hear the ring of a lesson being imparted. But his poems are wise by example; they place us inside a mind doing the hard work of constantly remembering how fragile and coincidental life is. It’s the pressure of that knowledge that makes his work so vital and real—and such an inspiring feat for a writer who’s still so young. —Liz Countryman 21 antigravity: your new orleans music and culture alternative_ ILLUSTRATIONS 22_antigravity: your new orleans music and culture alternative Pirates Of Coney Island #1-3 Rick Spears, Vasilis Lolos (Image) P irates of Coney Island is the natural inheritor of the title “best angry anti-establishment youth comic” from Rick Spears’ previous effort, Teenagers From Mars. Spears brings together a gritty, realistic look at the life of young juvenile delinquents, but he flavors it with heavy doses of crazy characters, outrageous car chases and style that most real young punks probably can’t muster. Spears’ wild ideas have already found a natural mate in the anarchic art of Rob G., but Vasilis Lolos is just as simpatico, with an edgy punk look reminiscent of Becky Cloonan and Amazing Joy Buzzards‘ Dan Hipp and flashy, gorgeous colors that remind me of the work of Supermarket’s Kristian. Pirates of Coney Island is a burst of pure pop entertainment with a darkly compelling and violent mean streak underlying it. The pacing on Pirates of Coney Island can be a bit offputting at first, as the entire first issue goes by without even introducing the titular characters. Instead, our pointof-view character, a runaway new to the New York area, has a nasty run-in with rival female gang The Cherries, and it isn’t until issue two that he joins up with the Pirates. It’s a questionable pacing choice, but by the time issue two rolls in and Spears and Lolos are introducing us to the Pirates, or issue three features a kickass act of roadway piracy, all is forgiven. Pirates may start rolling a little slow, but once it gets going, it doesn’t let up. It’s also clear that everything introduced in the first issue, from the Cherries to the mysterious enforcer driving a “Cadillacula,” will show up again before the miniseries is done. From the start, I fell in love with the artwork on this book. Vasilis Lolos has a great storytelling style, making terrific use of long horizontal panels, several pages of 8-10 panels to cram a lot of small moments into one page and then busting out a big two-panel page that serves as almost a splash for effect. He doesn’t use full- or two-page splash panels at all in the first three issues, and the result is room for a whole lot of story and action. Lolos also does the kind of thing you see more often in manga and European comics, tossing in panels of background detail that give a good sense of place, like the “slow pan” over Coney Island in mid-issue one, the atmospheric opening page of issue two or a shot of street signs in issue three. Beyond just a good sense of storytelling, Lolos has a compelling visual style. His characters have exaggerated faces, big eyes and teeth that allow them to really stand out as characters as well as show key emotion, even if they’re not given any dialogue. The burning anger and slow acceptance of our point of view character, and the glee that Black Jack, Tats and Knievel show in the driving sequence of two or the pirate sequence of three are just a couple of examples. There’s also a lot of bright, occasionally almost day-glo, color used by Lolos and colorist Nick Filardi, which works very similarly to the unusual color palette of last year’s Supermarket. Lolos also fetishizes the important elements of the book, from the characters’ clothes and affectations to the beauty of the cars that the Pirates hunt. Oh, and there are sound effects… great, glorious, old school sound effects, rendered in big, loud, postmodern fashion. The book’s got a great visual hook, but there’s substance beneath the hood. Spears presents a world that at first seems to be something of a gritty look at the life of a teen runaway, where one day the wrong word to the wrong girl gets your eye cut out and another you’re picking pockets and getting chased by cops. By the second issue, though, it becomes clear that Pirates of Coney Island embraces the upside of anti-social behavior in a way that is part Scorsese, part Tarantino and Rodriguez and part Tony Scott, with maybe a little Blues Brothers thrown in for good measure. Pirates of Coney Island is a celebration of the outlaw way of life, but the aggressive behavior and criminal acts of the Pirates are presented in such an over-thetop and entertaining manner that it’s hard not to crack a smile and go along for the ride. There’s a sheer anarchic joy to be found when Black Jack, leader of the Pirates, proudly tells the new kid that their van has “three fucking gears of reverse” as their crazy driver Knievel races them through a backwards chase with the cops. Same goes for issue three, when the Pirates pull up on a ‘66 Pontiac GTO and, like modern pirates, board it and cart it away. It’s insane, outright criminal behavior, but you can’t help but root for the free-spirited Pirates, who look and act like they’re having the time of their lives. antigravity: your new orleans music and culture alternative _23 24_antigravity: your new orleans music and culture alternative PROJECTIONS SPONSORED BY: CANAL PLACE CINEMA www.landmarktheatres.com (504) 363-1117 American Hardcore Paul Rachman (Sony Classics) Watching Paul Rachman’s documentary American Hardcore: The History of American Punk Rock 19801986, I couldn’t shake Mike Muir’s indignant refrain from Suicidal Tendencies’ “I Want More.” While showcasing an impressive array of artists and performance videos from the era, the film fails to hold interest for anyone but the most fervent hardcore devotee. Based on the Steven Blush book “American Hardcore: A Tribal History,” the film follows the emergence of American hardcore punk as a reaction to the Reagan presidency in 1980. Energetic shows by black D.C. hardcore pioneers the Bad Brains highlight the film, and their influence speaks to disaffected mostly white suburban teens countrywide. With a little nurturing from the Bad Brains, Ian MacKaye launches Minor Threat. Interviews with MacKaye, Black Flag vocalist Henry Rollins and H.R. from the Bad Brains are promising, but the message and overall impact gets diluted by the filmmakers inclusion of almost anyone willing to add a sound bite. Sometimes less is more in film, and by including so many voices in the story, the omission of major hardcore players like the Dead Kennedys and Suicidal Tendencies except in passing, American Hardcore seems like the movement itself to be little more than a missed opportunity. American Hardcore plays out no differently than when an old friend pointed out a nondescript Camp Street building where he saw Black Flag perform: here’s a band, here’s a place they once played and mayhem ensued. While the Do-It-Yourself aesthetic of the bands is admirable, larger issues of why youths acting out against Reagan-era politics amount to little more than repeated fan on fan violence with a soundtrack remain largely unexplored. For all their acting out against normalcy, some twenty years later almost all the interviewees seem, well, normal. In the end, Reagan wins re-election, the Bad Brains go reggae and the movement dies. I want more. —J.W. Spitalny 25 antigravity: your new orleans music and culture alternative_ REVOLUTIONS SPONSORED BY: THE OFFICIAL RECORD STORE OF ANTIGRAVITY 1037 BROADWAY MUSIC, DVDS & MORE 10am–MIDNIGHT 7 DAYS NEW ORLEANS, LA 70118 504-866-6065 IT’S WORTH THE TRIP BUY-SELL-TRADE NEW + USED Wet Confetti Laughing Gasping (Pampelmoose) After five years of honing their musical skills and a lot of doit-yourself hard work, Wet Confetti will release a new album, Laughing Gasping, during the first week of February. Produced in collaboration with Dave Allen from the influential English post-punk group Gang of Four, Laughing Gasping is the band’s first album to be backed by a third-party label—Allen’s own Pampelmoose. A trio of aspiring creeps from Portland, Oregon, Wet Confetti has worked hard to get their music out and to confuse everyone. Due to a mixture of dark humor, calculated sheepishness and front woman Alberta Poon’s sassy, upbeat bubblegum attitude, the band’s sound has been interpreted by a broad audience in every which way possible. Most conveniently akin to something like Blonde Redhead, Wet Confetti nevertheless evades easy classification with their jangling, pretty, punky noise and colorful indifference. But while everyone else is busy trying to figure out what the group sounds like and why anyone should listen to Laughing Gasping, Wet Confetti’s been getting their shit together and making themselves known. Having left industry-driven Seattle because they felt stifled by its ‘who-you-know’ vibe, they’ve landed in Portland where everyone knows them and no one tells them what to do. Instead, they do what they want—when and how they want. Right now that means getting on a label, putting out an album and above all, trying to book a U.S. tour. And as lead singer Alberta Poon details in her conversation with ANTIGRAVITY, getting the pieces to fall into place is never that easy. ANTIGRAVITY: Wet Confetti has been together since 2001 and produced two early albums on its own. Has the band changed a lot since then, particularly with the release of Laughing Gasping? Alberta Poon: When we first started playing we were a very different band. Dan did all the singing and now I do all the singing. I did not grow up playing music or have any influence from family members who played music, so I was mortified of singing my whole life—I wouldn’t even sing happy birthday when people would sing. At one point we were both kind of singing, but the boys really wanted me to start so at some point Dan stopped and I took over. We’ve changed a lot but it’s been a very gradual change from the beginning until now—we’re a completely different band. AG: Who does most of the songwriting? Do you generate most of the material or is it a collaborative thing? AP: It’s very, very collaborative with our band—a lot of songs come from jamming. We’ll just start jamming and if something 26_antigravity: your new orleans music and culture alternative SINCE 1969 YOUR ROCK ‘N’ ROLL HEADQUARTERS MUSIC + MOVIES cool comes of it, usually I take it home and structure it and write words. Sometimes it’s just me who writes a song or it’s just Dan who writes a song. We write in every different way but a lot of it comes from jamming. AG: Were there any particular artists that were really influential in the creation of the new album? AP: As for songwriting, there wasn’t a real influence other than what we do and what we want to do. As for how the album sounds—this is an insult to the album—but what we really wanted to sound like was a Heart album. I can’t remember the main Heart album we were aiming for, but Heart’s production value was some of the best in history. And we were like, “we want it to sound like this” but there’s no way unless you go back in time and go into the same studio they recorded it…only pretend and strive for it to sound like that. AG: So Laughing Gasping is the band’s third album and was produced with Dave Allen from Gang of Four. How did he get involved with Wet Confetti? AP: We recorded Laughing Gasping ourselves two and a half years ago. We love it but there are a few songs that should’ve been out in 2005. They’re just going to be coming out now and we wrote them that long ago. The boys are more involved in the recording process, while I do everything else, so they obsessed over the album. Because we recorded it ourselves and had no one to answer to… they just kept tweaking and working on it and fixing it and adding this, to the point where the album didn’t even sound like us and it was just a mess. By the time we were done with it, we were all like, “What are we doing? Are we putting this out?” And we gave it to one of our friends and he actually gave it to Dave Allen. He heard it and agreed it needed a lot of work and there was potential in the album and that’s when he approached us. AG: Did working with Dave Allen change the band’s output on this album in a way that differs from your previous work? AP: I think working with him didn’t necessarily change the outcome of our album much. I’d say the only thing that would have been different from us working alone versus with him, is that the album is definitely higher production than anything we’ve ever done. Everything we’ve ever done is pretty, you know, low production I guess. It’s definitely more polished than anything else. He helped produce it, and Mike Cozzi was also a producer, but the band had a lot of say as to how the album sounds. AG: Any aspect of the album that you were particularly satisfied with? Any favorite tracks? AP: We definitely have our favorites but we’re also writing so much new stuff right now. I think a lot of bands are like this—by the time an album comes out they have all this new written material and they just want to be playing that. But we have to fight that because our album’s not even out. We have all of this new material and we want to record it and put it out, but we need to sit and wait on the new stuff. But I’m very happy with the new album. I love the track “Sorry Dinosaur” where Dave actually played a little bit of bass on that. It’s a catchy, cute little tune the way it all came together. AG: Your vocals have been described in a variety of ways, from sexy, pretty and whispered to strung-out, caterwauling and urgent. What do you think of the way listeners and critics respond to your music? AP: Not just with my voice but with our music, it’s so across the board what people think of our band. People love us. People hate us. I think we’re a really hard band to classify and I think when writers can’t pigeonhole a band they tend to over-criticize the band. Reviews for our band are pretty all over the place. A writer recently said something about our unlikely matching of innocent and evil and I thought that was really clever because we do have this definite dark side to the music but it’s also very innocent too. And to hear a writer say that, I was like, “wow, she wrapped it up.” I thought that was really insightful. AG: How do you feel about touring? I know you have some dates scheduled for California, any plans to broaden the tour? AP: There are bands that love touring and there are bands that hate it. I think we’re definitely on the side of liking it, but we also haven’t toured a lot. We’ve only done little West Coast and Midwest tours but we haven’t done a full U.S. so we haven’t had the chance to completely hate each other yet…We’re going to do a bigger West Coast tour with The Thermals in April and that’ll be really good, but booking a U.S. tour is a lot of work unless you have someone helping you. But booking agents are hard to come by, especially good ones…it’s easier to get signed than it is to get a booking agent. It’s the hardest thing you can come by, at least a good one, because there’s only a handful of really good ones. All the good, bigger Indie rock acts are on like ten booking agents. There are more labels than booking agents. It’s either do it yourself or get on one of these. AG: It seems like everyone’s looking forward to an impressive list of new releases from a lot of big bands this spring. Aside from Laughing Gasping obviously, is there anything you’ve been really into lately? AP: Actually, on Monday we went and saw Menomena. I think they’re the new ‘it’ band for sure. They’ll probably take off huge this year. They’re a local Portland band and they got a lot of hype for their album and their live show is amazing. I didn’t know what it would be like because their new album has a lot of layers and a lot of things going on. They had a 22-piece choir singing with them and they’re a rock band; it was really interesting and really, really good. They’re gonna be huge. —Sarah Andert ANTIGRAVITY IS A PROUD SPONSOR OF Dear + Glorious Physician Self-Titled (New Granada) D ear and Glorious Physician are the Westfalls, four blond-haired siblings from Gainesville, Florida. Their self-titled debut album is exactly what they claim it is, heavily influenced by bands like the Pixies, the Talking Heads and Fugazi. The band’s name, also influenced by earlier work, comes from a 1958 historical novel about the life of Luke the Evangelist. (If you aren’t familiar, Luke wrote the Gospel according to himself, as well as the book of Acts, both included in the New Testament. However, he was primarily a physician and never actually a disciple.) That said, taking the history of this moniker into account one could perhaps say that the group’s new album serves as their own version of a rock gospel, the Gospel of the Pixies According to Dear and Glorious Physician. While the group has been proselytizing its way throughout Florida over the past year or so, they have collected an ever-increasing number of followers, earning a significant reputation within their local scene. What they deliver is a refreshing interpretation of the Pixies’ style plus a little Dead Meadow- still edgy, yet younger and softer. Charles and Jillian exhibit a vocal rapport like that of Black Francis and Kim Deal while their ‘start and stop’ guitar riffs are certainly reminiscent of the Pixies’ Joey Santiago. However, at times they lack the jagged abrasiveness of the 90’s and therefore the effect is something slightly more subdued and less impressionable. On the other hand, while they may follow in the Pixies’ footsteps they aren’t just disciples; what they have produced is far more than a reminder of what was going on twenty years ago. While their work maintains a rock mission similar to the Pixies, they have departed from an unforgiving hardness which makes their work easier to swallow. Their evangelizing then is perfectly suited for their time and their audience. So really, their album is a gospel according to themselves and likewise, it’s something I don’t mind listening to. —Sarah Andert Sondre Lerche Phantom Punch (Astralwerks) Aw man, he’s huge in Norway they say. A baby-faced, skinny and scruffy young man by the name of Sondre Lerche writes and sings these power pop songs that move along nicely from one to the next on “Phantom Punch” and close crisply after three minutes or so, often rushing to get to the end. (By the way, I had a Norwegian friend pronounce the last name which to me sounded something like “Lerrrkye,” so I’m just going to keep saying “Lersh.”) His band, playing the standard rock instruments of guitar, bass, and drums, is well-integrated into the songwriting so that the album indeed feels like the work of a band, not a solo artist. The title track sports a spiffy, jangly riff building up to a catchy chorus. The other punchy tracks distantly recall some Brazilian tropicalismo, or maybe the Pixies, maybe the Strokes. But perhaps unfairly, I keep wanting to compare Lerche to his fellow Scandinavian, the Swede Jens Lekman. Lekman’s songs are less busy, allowing his melodies to shine through and quickly sink into your head. And Lekman’s lyrics reveal his sly, melancholic sense of humor and feature clever word-play. Lerche’s lyrics on the other hand don’t add up to much, just as his music feels cobbled together from aspects of his favorite bands. Ambitious singers in the biz build their popularity on their distinctive personalities and visions as much as any musical ability, but Lerche’s presence is amorphous. It’s as if his musical career got this far because family and friends recognized his talent and encouraged him to develop it, but he doesn’t really know what to do with it. —Henry Alpert 27 antigravity: your new orleans music and culture alternative_ PREMONITIONS NEW ORLEANS The Big Top 1638 Clio St., (504) 569-2700 www.3ringcircusproductions.com Cafe Brasil 2100 Chartres St., (504) 947-9386 Carrollton Station 8140 Willow St., (504) 865-9190 www.carrolltonstation.com Checkpoint Charlie’s 501 Esplanade Ave., (504) 947-0979 Chickie Wah Wah 2828 Canal St., (504) 304-4714 www.circlebar.net Circle Bar 1032 St. Charles Ave., (504) 588-2616 www.circlebar.net Coach’s Haus 616 N. Solomon D.B.A. 618 Frenchmen St., (504) 942-373 www.drinkgoodstuff.com/no Goldmine Saloon 701 Dauphine St., (504) 586-0745 Green Space 2831 Marais Hot Iron Press 1420 Kentucky The High Ground 3612 Hessmer Ave., Metairie, (504) 5250377 www.thehighgroundvenue.com Hi-Ho Lounge 2239 St. Claude Ave. (504) 723-3113 House Of Blues / The Parish 225 Decatur, (504)310-4999 www.hob.com/neworleans The Howlin’ Wolf 907 S. Peters, (504) 522-WOLF www.thehowlinwolf.com Le Bon Temps Roule 4801 Magazine St., (504) 895-8117 Maple Leaf 8316 Oak St., (504) 866-9359 Marlene’s Place 3715 Tchoupitoulas, (504) 897-3415 www.myspace.com/marlenesplace One Eyed Jacks 615 Toulouse St., (504) 569-8361 www.oneeyedjacks.net Republic 828 S. Peters St., (504) 528-8282 www.republicnola.com Sip Wine Market 3119 Magazine St., (504) 894-7071 www.sipwinenola.com Tipitina’s (Uptown) 501 Napoleon Ave., (504) 8958477 (Downtown) 233 N. Peters www.tipitinas.com BATON ROUGE Chelsea’s Cafe 2857 Perkins Rd., (225) 387-3679 www.chelseascafe.com The Darkroom 10450 Florida Blvd., (225) 274-1111 www.darkroombatonrouge.com North Gate Tavern 136 W. Chimes St. www.northgatetavern.com Red Star Bar 222 Laurel St., (225) 346-8454 www.redstarbar.com Rotolos (All-Ages) 808 Pettit Blvd. www.myspace.com/rotolosallages The Spanish Moon 1109 Highland Rd., (225) 383-MOON www.thespanishmoon.com The Varsity 3353 Highland Rd., (225)383-7018 www.varsitytheatre.com Friday, 2/2 The Upstairs Divine, Julie Odell, Analog Theatre, One Warmer Blue, Smiles In the Key Of Death, Darkroom, 7pm, $10 Zydepunks, N.O.madic Belly Dancers, American Graveyard, Dragon’s Den, 10pm Despite The Fall, Siever’s Drive, Kill Romeo, High Groundi, 7pm, $6 Midlake, Rotary Downs, Republic, 10pm A Screening of Iraq In Fragments, Zeitgeist, 7:30pm Falry Ball, One Eyed Jacks Monty Are I, Over It, The Summer Obsession, House Of Blues Stand Up For Kids Benefit w/ National Comedy Co., Neal Stastny, Red Star Bar Shamarr Allen, Elliot Cohn’s C.S.S., Le Bon Temps Roule, 11pm Roberto And Lissa, Checkpoint Charlie’s, 7pm Slewfoot, Checkpoint Charlie’s, 11pm Andy Wagner, Steve Eck, Fly By Nights, Hi Ho Lounge, 10pm Saturday, 2/3 Mod Dance Party, Circle Bar, 10pm The Armoury, In Memory Of, In Fear Of The Fall, Rest A While, Infinite Hours, Darkroom, 7pm, $10 Krieu Du Vieux After Party, Hosted by Gravity A, Dragon’s Den, 10pm The Sticky Bandits, Skanomatopoeia, The Shots, High Ground, 7pm, $6 Morning 40 Federations, Big Blue Marble, The Transmission, Howlin’ Wolf, 10pm A Screening of Iraq In Fragments, Zeitgeist, 7:30pm Country Fried, Le Poisson Rouge, Luke Allen Band, One Eyed Jacks Dance Fever, Red Star Bar Palo Viejo, Spanish Moon Domenic, Checkpoint Charlie’s, 7pm Mike Darby Band, Checkpoint Charlie’s, 11pm Greg Vendetti, Hi Ho Lounge, 10pm Sunday, 2/4 DJ Pasta, Circle Bar, 10pm The Other Planets, Dragon’s Den, 10pm Shamarr Allen, Elliot Cohn’s C.S.S., Le Bon Temps Roule, 11pm Three-legged Dog, Checkpoint Charlie’s, 7pm Monday, 2/5 Sista Otis, Almost Rhonda, Dragon’s Den Orangeburg Massacre, Something Fierce, Tamerlane, Green Space, 7pm, $5 AFI, Sick Of It All, House Of Blues Patient Zero, Checkpoint Charlie’s, 7pm The Fens, Checkpoint Charlie’s, 10pm Bluegrass Pickin’ Party, Hi Ho Lounge, 8pm 28_antigravity: your new orleans music and culture alternative Tuesday, 2/6 Sip ‘N’ Spin, ANTIGRAVITY Edition, Sip Wine Market, 6:30pm Drop, Presented by DJ Proppa Bear, Dragon’s Den, 10pm Steel Pulse, House Of Blues LiveNewOrleans.com Presents: The Lemonheads, Vietnam, The Parish @ House Of Blues Acoustic Open Mic w/ Jim Smith, Checkpoint Charlie’s, 10pm Wednesday, 2/7 Alex McMurray, Circle Bar, 10pm DJ T-Roy, Dragon’s Den, 10pm Washboard Chaz Trio, Le Bon Temps Roule, 10pm Kenny Holiday & The Rolling Blackouts, Checkpoint Charlie’s, 9pm Teresa Storch, Checkpoint Charlie’s, 7pm Kenny H., Checkpoint Charlie’s, 10:30pm Thursday, 2/8 DJ Bomshell Boogie, Dragon’s Den, 10pm Eyehategod, Arson Anthem, Rise Above, Howlin’ Wolf, 10pm, $2 Soul Rebels, Le Bon Temps Roule, 11pm American Cheese Trio, Checkpoint Charlie’s, 10pm Fast Times ‘80s Dance Night, One Eyed Jacks Lips & The Trips, Checkpoint Charlie’s, 7pm Trickbag, Checkpoint Charlie’s, 11pm Sunday, 2/11 Guitar Lightning, Kitty Lynn, DJ Pasta, Circle Bar, 10pm The Panorama Jazz Band, Dragon’s Den, 10pm Reverend Spooky LeStrange and Her Billion Dollar Baby Dolls, Tarantula Arms (209 Decatur St.), 9pm, $5 The Wailers, House Of Blues New Orleans Craft Mafia Presents: Crescent City Craft Market, The Big Top, 2pm, FREE Shamarr Allen, Elliot Cohn’s C.S.S., Le Bon Temps Roule, 11pm Three-legged Dog, Checkpoint Charlie’s, 7pm Monday, 2/12 Suburban Legends, MC Lars, Patent Pending, High Ground, 7pm, $8 Destruction, Sadus, One Eyed Jacks, 10pm Reckless Kelly, House Of Blues Patient Zero, Checkpoint Charlie’s, 7pm Monday, 2/12 Friday, 2/9 Zydepunks, Goodman County, Circle Bar, 10pm Sender Receiver, Secretary, Cattle Drive!, Hyacinth, Darkroom, 7pm, $10 Wativ, N.O.madic Belly Dancers, Dragon’s Den, 10pm MV/EE, Hi Ho Lounge, 10pm Roses Are Red, Rookie Of The Year, Four Letter Lie, Scenes From A Movie, High Ground, 7pm, $8 Dick Dale, Howlin’ Wolf, 10pm Gal Holiday & The Honky Tonk Revue, Red Star Bar Eames Era CD Release Party, Harlan, Spanish Moon Sol Fiya, Le Bon Temps Roule, 11pm Roberto And Lissa, Checkpoint Charlie’s, 7pm Lara Price, Checkpoint Charlie’s, 11pm Matt Valentine, Erika Elder, Hi Ho Lounge, 10pm Saturday, 2/10 Fracture, Below C Level, Dragon’s Den, 10pm Chin Up, Meriwether, The Robinsons, Trash Trash Trash, Green Space, 7pm, $5 Sworn Enemy, Kataklysm, As Blood Runs Black, Too Pure To Die, High Ground, 7pm, $12 The Bingo Show, Spanish Moon, 10pm Dance Fever, Red Star Bar Big Sam’s Funky Nation, Le Bon Temps Roule, 11pm Metronome The City, The Good Guys, Dragon’s Den, 10pm W ouldn’t it be great to be a tourist in town for Mardi Gras and accidentally stumble into the Dragon’s Den during Metronome The City’s set? Chances are you’d already be in a very “accepting” state of mind and your whole life might change in the smoky red haze of the Den. You might start to wonder whose character you are and hyperventilate. Gulp down some fresh air on the balcony then head back in to your life’s new chapter... —Dan Fox The Fens, Checkpoint Charlie’s, 10pm Bluegrass Pickin’ Party, Hi Ho Lounge, 8p Tuesday, 2/13 Drop, Presented By DJ Proppa Bear w/ White Colla Crimes, Dragon’s Den, 10pm Everclear, Jonny Lives!, The Alternate Routes, House Of Blues Acoustic Open Mic w/ Jim Smith, Checkpoint Charlie’s, 10pm Sip ‘N’ Spin, Sip Wine Market, 6:30pm Friday, 2/16 Wednesday, 2/14 Alex McMurray, Circle Bar, 10pm DJ T-Roy, Dragon’s Den, 10pm Boys Like Girls, Cartel, Cobra Starship, Permanent Me, The Parish @ House Of Blues Largely Ironic Karaoke, Red Star Bar Henry butler, George Porter, Johnny Vidacovich, Le Bon Temps Roule, 10pm Groove Sect, Le Bon Temps Roule, 2am Kenny Holiday & The Rolling Blackouts, Checkpoint Charlie’s, 9pm Thursday, 2/15 Bounce Nite, Circle Bar, 10pm The Bombshelter w/ DJ Bomshell Boogie, Dragon’s Den, 10pm Better Than Ezra, House Of Blues Yo Mama’s Big Fat Booty Band, Tipitina’s (Uptown) White Ghost Shiver, Dimestore Troubadours, Red Star Bar Soul Rebels, Le Bon Temps Roule, 10pm Ross Halen & The Hellbenders, Checkpoint Charlie’s, 7pm American Cheese Trio, Checkpoint Charlie’s, 10pm The Happy Talk Band, Kitty Lynn, Hi Ho Lounge, 10pm Fast Times ‘80s Dance Night, One Eyed Jacks Friday, 2/16 Punk Rock Mardi Gras, w/ Zydepunks, Fatter Than Albert, The Flaming Tsunamis, The Brunt Of It, The Can Kickers, Big Top, 6pm, $5 The Detonations, Viva L’American Death Ray Music, Circle Bar, 10pm Landmines, Baby!, Rose To My Dear, In Dystopia, The Fight Between Frames, Darkroom, 7pm, $10 Chocolate Kitty II: A Celebration Of NOLA’s Female DJs w/ Soul Sister, Beverly Skills, Bomshell Boogie, Dragon’s Den, 10pm Rebirth Brass Band, Soul Rebels, Howlin’ Wolf, Midnight, FREE Morning 40 Federation, One Eyed Jacks, 10pm Better Than Ezra, House Of Blues Scarlet Speedster, Red Star Bar Bones, Shark Attack Mardi Gras Ball, Spanish Moon Roule, 10pm Papa Mali CD Release Party, Le Bon Temps Roule, 2am Slewfoot, Carie B., Checkpoint Charlie’s, 1pm Teeth Of The Hydra, Checkpoint Charlie’s, 7pm Sour Vein, Checkpoint Charlie’s, 11pm Fay Wray, Hi Ho Lounge, 11pm Sunday, 2/18 Punk Rock Mardia Gras w/ The Zydepunks, Fatter Than Albert, The Flaming Tsunamis, The Brunt Of It, The Can Kickers, The Big Top ometimes that cultural music-meets-punk thing can seem intimidating, but rather than create some kind of “fusion,” The Zydepunks seem to grasp a common thread between genres and create some really incredible, organic music. The rhythm section is soundly rock and roll/punk and sets the mood for the violins, accordions, and harmonicas to really go crazy. This entire show will be like an instrument convention: Fatter than Albert’s horns, the Can Kicker’s washboards and various guitars and banjos all add to this sonic smorgasborg. Bring your stompin’ shoes. —Dan Fox S The Noise Parade, Circle Bar, 6pm Black Rose Band, Wizzard Sleeve, River City Tanlines, Circle Bar, 10pm New Orleans Klezmer All-Stars, DJ Wizdum, Dragon’s Den Mardi Gras All-Stars, Howlin’ Wolf, Midnight, FREE Johnny Sketch & The Dirty Notes, Maple Leaf, 10pm Papa Mali, One Eyed Jacks, 10pm Old Crow Medicine Show, House Of Blues Wild Magnolias, Le Bon Temps Roule, 10am Papa Gros Funk, Le Bon Temps Roule, 10pm Shamarr Allen, Elliot Cohn’s C.S.S., Le Bon Temps Roule, 2am Three-legged Dog, Checkpoint Charlie’s, 7pm Ross Halen & The Hellbenders, Checkpoint Charlie’s, 1pm Three-legged Dog, Checkpoint Charlie’s, 7pm Anders Osborne, Le Bon Temps Roule, 10pm Brotherhood Of Groove, Le Bon Temps Roule, 2am Roberto And Lissa, Checkpoint Charlie’s, 7pm Creatures Of Habit, Checkpoint Charlie’s, 11pm Jimmy Cousins, Little Howlin’ Wolf, Hi Ho Lounge Saturday, 2/17 Hazard County Girls, Circle Bar, 10pm My Doppleganger’s Casket, St. Valentine’s Day Massacre, Purity Undone, Darkroom, 7pm, $10 Zydepunks, The Can Kickers, The Pine Hill Haints, Dragon’s Den, 10pm Rebirth Brass Band, Papa Grows Funk, Howlin’ Wolf, Midnight, FREE Bingo!, DJ Joey Buttons, One Eyed Jacks, 10pm Cowboy Mouth, House Of Blues Dance Fever, Red Star Bar Little Brazil, Wilderness Pangs, Spanish Moon Morning 40 Federation, Le Bon Temps 29 antigravity: your new orleans music and culture alternative_ MC Trachiotomy, Hi Ho Lounge, 11pm Monday, 2/19 Die Rotzz, Carbonas, Circle Bar, 10pm Ratty Scurvics, Burlesque Review, Six Pack, Dragon’s Den, 10pm Ligeia, Burn In Silence, The Handshake Murders, Apiary, High Ground, 7pm, $2 Bag Of Donuts, Howlin’ Wolf, Noon, FREE George Porter Jr. & His Runnin’ Pardners, Bonerama, Howlin’ Wolf, Midnight, FREE Mad Happy, Dragon’s Den Billy Iuso’s Restless Natives, Le Bon Temps Roule, 2am Gill Landry, Checkpoint Charlie’s, 4pm The Fens, Checkpoint Charlie’s, 7pm The Can Kickers, Zydepunks, Checkpoint Charlie’s, 10pm Tchoupchupacabra, Brain Rex, Amateur Egg Fight, Hi Ho Lounge, 10pm Monday, 2/19 Kajun SS, The Poots, Die Rotzz, Circle Bar F inding yourself at the Circle Bar on Lundi Gras will certainly put you in the fabled catbird seat; it’s the perfect launch point for either heading back uptown to catch beads with your kids or downtown to catch hell in the post apocalyptic wasteland that will be the CBD & French Quarter. The Poots play rock and roll for your genitals and Die Rotz will give you some easy one-liners to battle all the Mardi Gras zombies: “I ain’t got no change for you / you are completely screwed!!!” The Kajun SS regroups on this eve of all eves to round out this incredible line-up. —Dan Fox Tuesday, 2/20 Mardi Gras Throwdown w/ Gov’t Majik and guest DJs, Dragon’s Den, 10pm Against All Authority, Whole Wheat Bread, Angry Banana, High Ground, 7pm, $8 Acoustic Open Mic w/ Jim Smith, Checkpoint Charlie’s, 10pm Suplecs, Checkpoint Charlie’s, 5pm Morning 40 Federation, Checkpoint Charlie’s, 10pm Wednesday, 2/21 DJ T-Roy, Dragon’s Den, 10pm Largely Ironic Karaoke, Red Star Bar Kenny Holiday & The Rolling Blackouts, Checkpoint Charlie’s, 9pm Thursday, 2/22 The Bombshelter w/ DJ Bomshell Boogie, Dragon’s Den, 10pm Soul Rebels, Le Bon Temps Roule, 11pm American Cheese Trio, Checkpoint Charlie’s, 10pm Fast Times ‘80s Dance Night, One Eyed Jacks Friday, 2/23 Lady Doom’s Hip Hop Revue, Dragon’s Den One Ring Zero, Red Star Bar Subtle, Dose One, Jel, Spanish Moon Absinthe Minded, Le Bon Temps Roule, 11pm Roberto And Lissa, Checkpoint Charlie’s, 7pm I Tell You What, Checkpoint Charlie’s, 11pm Saturday, 2/24 Louisiana Drum ‘N’ Bass Party, Dragon’s Den, 10pm Barr, Marnie Stern, Peppermint Pony, Dummy Dumpster, Ratzinger, Green Space, 7pm, $5 (Stag) or $7 (Couple) Royal Sinners Ball w/ The Polecats, One Eyed Jacks, 10pm Red Sparowes, Dead Child, Spanish Moon, 10pm, $8 Dance Fever, Red Star Bar Red Sparowes, Planes Mistaken For Stars, Spanish Moon T-Bone Stone & The Lazy Boys, Checkpoint Charlie’s, 7pm Hi-Five, Checkpoint Charlie’s, 11pm Fish: A Celebration Of Pisces In House, Hi Ho Lounge, 9pm 30_antigravity: your new orleans music and culture alternative Thursday, 3/1 Sunday, 2/25 James Singleton & Friends, Dragon’s Den, 10pm Southern Culture On The Skids, The Parish @ House Of Blues Shamarr Allen, Elliot Cohn’s C.S.S., Le Bon Temps Roule, 10pm Three-legged Dog, Checkpoint Charlie’s, 7pm One Ring Zero, Hi Ho Lounge, 10pm Monday, 2/26 Outlaw Nation, Fuego, Demolition, Dragon’s Den, 10pm A Johnny Cash Birthday Celebration w/ Happy Talk Band, Gal Holiday & Her Honky Tonk Revue, Country Fried, The Honky Tonk Disciples, Howlin’ Wolf, 10pm Patient Zero, Checkpoint Charlie’s, 7pm The Fens, Checkpoint Charlie’s, 10pm Bluegrass Pickin’ Party, Hi Ho Lounge, 8pm Tuesday, 2/27 Drop, Presented by DJ Proppa Bear, Dragon’s Den, 10pm Lions, The Wayhighmen, Thou, Spanish Moon Acoustic Open Mic w/ Jim Smith, Checkpoint Charlie’s, 10pm Sip ‘N’ Spin, Sip Wine Market, 6:30pm Wednesday, 2/28 Alex McMurray, Circle Bar, 10pm Largely Ironic Karaoke, Red Star Bar Groove Sect, Le Bon Temps Roule, 10pm Kenny Holiday & The Rolling Blackouts, Checkpoint Charlie’s, 9pm Thursday, 3/1 Grizzly Bear, Papercuts, Chelsea’s Fast Times ‘80s Dance Night, One Eyed Jacks ANTIGRAVITY PRESENTS: Dr. Dog, The Teeth, What Made Milwaukee Famous, The Parish @ House Of Blues Previously in AG: Dr. Dog W hile it’s possible that Dr. Dog might be a bit too un-ironic for the hipper-thanthou crowd, there’s no doubting the sheer joy to be found in its music. We All Belong continues down Easy Beat’s shambolic, Beatlesborrowing path, toning down the psychedlia while ramping up the sound quality and adding a few seriously expansive arrangements to the mix. —Noah Bonaparte 31 antigravity: your new orleans music and culture alternative_