June 2006 - Antigravity Magazine
Transcription
June 2006 - Antigravity Magazine
[vol.3 no.8 june. ‘06] [your new orleans music and culture alternative] 2ND ANNIVERSARY ISSUE WITH THE K CHRONICLES’ KEITH KNIGHT ALSO: DANIELSON I BAND OF HORSES DJ QUICKIE MART I DEADBOY & THE ELEPHANTMEN I BALLZACK I SEAGAL? antigravitymagazine.com FREE! ON THE COVER: DEPARTMENTS: Keith Knight_page 19 Letters from our readers Freefloating Ramblings_page 4 No, It s Not Aaron McGruder Anti-News_page 6 FEATURES: Live New Orleans_page 8 DJ Quickie Mart_page 9 A review of the new series Toupydoups Some of the news that s fit to print The Bad Off, 6/6/6/ with Potpie, Electrical Spectacle Snap Judgments_page 22 Hip-Hop Made Easy Comics_page 23 How To Be Happy, Qomix, The K Chronicles, Writhe and Shine Band Of Horses_page 10 Burst Out Of The Gate mpFree_page 24 Deadboy & The Elephantmen_page 16 Lawful downloads Dax And Tess Hit The Night Sky Projections_page 25 Ballzack_page 17 Revolutions_page 26 Suck On Some Wine Candy The Da Vinci Code, Art School Confidential, Brick The Fiery Furnaces, Gnarls Barkley, Ray Davies, White Rose Movement, Lansing-Dreiden, Phoenix Premonitions_page 29 Event listings DANIELSON The Brother’s Gonna Work It Out_page 14 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 Contributing Writers: Billie Faye Baker bfbaker@uno.edu Miles Britton milesbritton@gmail.com Dan Fox foxart@earthlink.net Marty Garner martygarner@antigravitymagazine.com Lisa Haviland haves34@hotmail.com James Jones jj@antigravitymagazine.com Jared Kraminitz jkramini@tulane.edu Dakota M sil3ntstatic@yahoo.com Darren O Brien darreno@antigravitymagazine.com COVER ART BY KEITH KNIGHT W ho are those handsome men on the cover of this issue? Yeah, yeah, it’s the three editors whose words appear on this page every month (and the guy who’s used to being in his comics, Keith Knight). We admit it–it’s kind of immodest to do it, but when you have the chance to be immortalized in cartoon form by one of your favorite artists, wouldn’t you take it? And considering all the adversity and roadblocks we’ve all faced in the past nine months, I hope you can forgive us this one slightly egotistic act. But is it June again already? It seems like June ‘04 was just the other day and we patrolled the streets of New Orleans for the first time, looking for businesses and people that would take our little magazine. As quickly as our first year passed, this past year flew by even faster. Two months off in September and October will do that to a year, I guess. We came back in November, better than ever (we hope) and just as committed to putting out the best magazine possible. Since then we’ve added new departments, like the LiveNewOrleans column, our ANTI-News, interviews that accompany our featured album review...and we’ll keep adding things we think make AG better. To celebrate this month’s momentus occasion, we’ve got a few events on tap. We have a concert planned for June 24th with Deadboy & The Elephantmen and Ballzack at One Eyed Jacks. Before that we have this month’s cover artist and creator of the K Chronicles, the aforementioned Keith Knight, presenting his slideshow at Handsome Willy’s on June 23rd. We hope you’ll join us for those events and that you continue to pick us up every month–as long as you people support us it’s easy for us to do our best. This month and every month, we’ll see you out and about! ––Leo McGovern, Publisher Michelle Reagan michellereagan@antigravitymagazine.com Aaron Santos aaronsantos@antigravitymagazine.com Jason Songe jasonsonge@antigravitymagazine.com Advertising Associate: Clark Theriot clark@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 the New Orleans area. ANTIGRAVITY is a publication of ANTIGRAVITY, INC. Strange things are afoot in the Crescent City. Our much ballyhooed, two-month mayoral ordeal resulted in rehiring the same guy we had before, roughly the democratic equivalent of walking around the block twice to find your front door (sorry for the lack of drama, Soledad). It’s June, again, time for our 200,000strong washing machine to go back on its six-month spin cycle. Perhaps strangest of all, ANTIGRAVITY turns two this month. Seems just yesterday we were a helpless, sniveling, eight-by-ten newborn, barely able to control our bowels or get an even trim job; now, wide-eyed and wobbly legged, we stumble confidently into toddlerhood with a tabloid-sized head of steam (the bowels we’re still working on). In commemoration, local friends (Deadboy & The Elephantmen, Ballzack, DJ Quickie Mart) and out-of-town guests (Danielson, Band Of Horses, Fiery Furnaces) will converge upon the cozy confines of Handsome Willy’s on Friday, June 23, craving spaghetti and Italian sausage and eager to catch a glimpse of our special emcee—the illustrious illustrator Keith Knight and his infamous slideshow. All of which affirms AG’s office mantra of the moment: “Don’t evacuate—celebrate!” Amen to that, brother. ––Noah Bonaparte, Senior Editor ANTIGRAVITY MAGAZINE is a trademark of Leo J. McGovern III. No part of this magazine may be reprinted without the publisher s permission. Resources: Homepage: www.antigravitymagazine.com MySpace: www.myspace.com/ antigravitymagazine 04_antigravity: your new orleans music and culture alternative N ow that hurricane season has finally arrived (I thought it would never come!) I’ve compiled an evacuation list of necessary items in the hopes of benefiting those of you who are readying your preparations. Please feel free to make additions in accordance to your personal circumstances. 1. Full tank of gas 2. Mr. Bumby 3. Diazepam 4. Resume Good luck out there. ––Patrick Strange, Associate Editor Sometimes, people like us. And every once in awhile they tell us about it. We get all giddy inside like...well, like people who just found out someone likes them. Then we print their letters for stalker-like mementos. When someone tells us they hate us we cry, dry our eyes, and gorge on Cheez-Its, the NFL Draft, and flakes of our own sunburned skin. Alas, no flakes of our own sunburned skin this month. Carolyn, via MySpace Greetings folk of Antigravity-dom! The name’s Carolyn, and I was introduced to your magazine [I mean amazingness] this Cinco de Mayo. I strolled into Handsome Willy’s around 3 in the afternoon to visit a friend of mine bartending at that time. I catch a glimpse of an interesting looking mag on a table by the door, grab it, and sit down with a beverage. Two pages later, I was hooked.. and knew I had to find you. When I saw that you had a MySpace page, and being that I am, as of late, quite the MySpace junkie, I figured this would be the perfect way to get in touch with you cats. What made me fall: The Letters from the Editor. The AntiNews. The first interview. That’s all I needed. The style of your writers/editors is mine to an effing tee [pardon my faux-French]. I was floored to finally have found a publication that gets me. And you guys got me. I’m all up for people seeing what non-Top 40 music/media really has to offer to their lives. Top 50 really isn’t so bad, you know? Oh yeah, hah. Wait. So we’ve established that my name is Carolyn. I’m a Communications/Music Major at Tulane University. I’ve been writing since Kindergarten and only stop when I sleep, which isn’t very often. I’m a musician as well, currently preparing for my past band’s 2nd reunion show, a new band starting up in August, and perhaps a few Open Mic nights in the near future with a dear keys-banging friend of mine. The way I live my life: If I’m not telling a story, I better as hell be making one. Correspond with you soon. Have a good night/day, kids. JUNE E-MAIL CONTEST: BEARD MATCH Match the follicles on the right with the hirsute men you know too well. Send your answers to feedback@ antigravitymagazine.com __AG editor Leo McGovern __Built To Spill front man Doug Martsch __Iron & Wine’s Sam Beam __The world’s most wanted: Osama bin Laden The first e-mailer with the correct answers gets these albums: All it takes is an e-mail like this to set us off. Is it a coincidence that all three editors of this magazine are on the cover this month? Nope, when our heads get built up like this there’s no stopping the arrogance that eminates from these pages. If we were creepy guys, Carolyn would get several, uh, creepy messages. She has nothing to worry about, though. We feel bad enough about all the self-congratulatory things going on this month. Seriously, though, thanks for the kind words, Carolyn. Now on to our e-mail contest from last month. The mission was to send us an e-mail that details your favorite snowball flavor, and the winner gets a signed copy of the New York Doll DVD. Here we go: Jeanne Stallworth, via e-mail June s Guest Judge: Blues Artist Steven Seagal mmmmm, you know what I like to do? Get a lime flavored snowball and have them put condensed milk in the middle and it is just like key lime pie. In fact I think I’ll go get one down the street right now. darn, I bet the line should be long! Mike Ciardi, via e-mail The best snoball ever. The one you wait and wait and wait to get from sno blitz on tchoupitoulas cause its never open and then you get it. and its got real fruit. Its awesome! Chris Columbo, via e-mail Who doesn’t like going to weddings? Free food. Free booze. Everybody looks hot. And best of all, the wedding cake is like dessert drugs. Whoever learned how to juice one of these into a sno-ball flavor is in my will. Give me a $1.50 cup with condensed milk on a 95 degree day in July and I’m all set. “It’s too sweet!” you say? Fine! Enjoy your boring-ass strawberry, pickle-puss! Considering that Chris Columbo is in the great local band Rotary Downs and Mike Ciardi used to work with Infectious Publicity, and that giving the DVD to either of them would be kind of weird, the New York Doll DVD goes to Jeanne Stallworth (plus, we save on the postage it would take to send a package to Mike in Brooklyn). That’s it for this month–check out the next e-mail contest to the right! Fire Down Below Fire Down Below 2: Marked For Maalox 05 antigravity: your new orleans music and culture alternative_ ANTI-NEWS SOME OF THE NEWS THAT’S FIT TO PRINT HOWARD STERN BACK IN NOLA? THE CONSORTIUM OF GENIUS CELEBRATES 10TH ANNIVERSARY, PRODUCES TV SHOW Since the self-proclaimed King of All Media left terrestrial airwaves in December ‘05 for the more debaucherous pastures of Sirius satellite radio, New York fans too cheap or lazy to get a subscription for the pay service have taken to scanning the lower parts of the FM dial, which the Sirius radio dock transmits its signal to, so they can partake in Stern’s broadcast. One source in New Orleans reports that, upon turning off his Sirius receiver after parking on the corner of Magazine and Race on May 1st, he heard the Stern show on 90.9 FM. The Consortium of Genius, a New Orleans multimediabased band that’s a cross between Morgus the Magnificent and Adult Swim, celebrates their 10th anniversary in July with shows at the Howlin’ Wolf on July 1st and the Big Top on July 3rd. C.O.G. will record portions of the Howlin’ Wolf show for an episode of their TV series, the pilot of which airs July 2nd on Cox 10 at 8pm. The show features C.O.G. interacting with local bands, and the first episode features Egg Yolk Jubilee. For more info, go to consortiumofgenius.com. PUBLISHER RELEASES COMIC WITH ART BY LAFAYETTE ARTIST On June 7th, Boom! Studios releases Tag #1, a horror comic “in the tradition of The Ring,” according to the publisher’s website. Lafayette-based artist Kody Chamberlain (IDW’s 30 Days of Night: Bloodsucker Tales, Punks: the Comic) provides the artwork while longtime comics veteran Keith Giffen (Blue Beetle, Trencher, Formerly Known as the Justice League) writes. Tag features Mitch, a regular guy who gets “tagged” with an ancient pagan curse that makes his skin rot and his joints seize from rigormortis, and the only way he can save himself is to “tag” someone else. For more info, go to kodychamberlain.com and boom-studios.com. VOODOO ADDS DURAN DURAN On May 9th the Voodoo Music Experience announced the addition of Duran Duran to their 2006 lineup. The British rockers join the already-announced Red Hot Chili Peppers. In other Voodoo news, the Experience has sold out of a special, limited amount of $25 weekend passes and has moved to its next ticket promotion, a $30 weekend pass coupled with a $3 charitable donation. TheVoodoo Music Experience is scheduled for October 28th and 29th, and tickets are available at www.voodoomusicfest. com/2006/tickets. VERONICA MARS RETURNS FOR THIRD SEASON Because we need a reason to run a photo of Kristen Bell –her teenage sleuth drama is one of a certain hairy editor’s favorite shows (as if this issue isn’t already self-referential enoughEd.)–the new WB/UPN combo network, CW, has picked up Veronica Mars for a third season. For more info, go to upn. com/shows/veronica_mars. Please submit sightings to feedback@antigravitymagazine.com. Celebs in compromising positions preferred. John Goodman, funny big man and default celebrity at Mardi Gras balls, has been a busy body as of late, having been spotted twice in two separate occasions. A fellow bibliophile spotted Goodman stepping out of Borders in Metairie on Tuesday, May 9 toting a shopping bag full of paperbacks. Speculation reports that the titles of his books included Fat White Vampire Blues, Feminist Television Criticism: A Reader, and Cigarettes are Sublime. The blues man was also spied driving his loaded 2005 Mercedes E-Class in the L.G.D on the morning of April 25. Stalker notes indicate that he “appeared half-awake and even more disheveled than usual…probably bringing his teenage daughter to school.” Giancarlo Esposito, the fedora-clad, cigar-smoking FBI agent in The Usual Suspects (not Chazz Palminteri), got caught having Eggs Sardou and lemonade at Café Rani on April 30. An eyewitness claims that in true Hollywood fashion, Esposito’s attire mirrored that of the characters that he plays: plump stogie in mouth, brimmed hat tilted low and starched collar shirt. Rumors circulate that he is in town putting his type-cast rep and inquisitive side glances to good use in Spike Lee’s upcoming investigative documentary about Katrina. LOHAN S RECORD COMPANY FINED $12M In another example of how you can trust only ANTIGRAVITY, the Universal Music Group has been fined $12 million for payola. New York attorney general Eliot Spitzer levied the fine against UMG after finding that the label provided graft to radio stations, including a laptop computer and vacations. UMG was also found to have manipulated MTV’s Total Request Live to bump up call-ins for Lohan videos in June of 2005. AG has yet to field an offer for “pay-for-play.” 06_antigravity: your new orleans music and culture alternative Fantasia, 2004 American Idol winner and darling of the Idol marketing machine, was seen in the St. Charles Ave. neutral grounds on Thursday, May 25 waving to “whooping and hollering” construction workers who drove by in their pick-up trucks. The astonished observer also notes that Fantasia, who has already wrote a book about being a young unwed mother and recorded a song entitled “Baby Mama,” was standing barefoot and appeared to be seven months pregnant. However, it is still uncertain whether Fantasia is indeed pregnant or just in costume for her upcoming made-for-TV movie, Life Is Not a Fairy Tale. - A Rose is a Rose ON SALE NOW! MAKE MAKE MAKE MAKE MAKE MAKE MAKE MAKE MAKE MAKE MAKE MAKE MAKE MAKE MAKE MAKE LEVEES, NOT WAR! MAKE LEVEES, NOT WAR! LEVEES, NOT WAR! MAKE LEVEES, NOT WAR! LEVEES, NOT WAR! MAKE LEVEES, NOT WAR! LEVEES, NOT WAR! MAKE LEVEES, NOT WAR! 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It’s like a despair, destroying this world. —The Neverending Story I’ve lived here my whole life, and I’ve never heard so many people talking about leaving New Orleans for the summer.The heat is already weighing down shoulders, and the people aren’t exactly looking forward to who-knows-how-many mandatory evacuations, so I understand the exodus. Hell, this is the closest I’ve come post-Katrina to throwing up my hands and saying, “Screw it,” but I still want to stay and fight for my city and pump money into the economy because I can’t live anywhere else. Yesterday at the Circle Bar I overheard a man say, “We’re not in New York anymore,” as he leaned into the bar next to me to get his friends a drink. I thought, “Thank God.” New York’s a wonderful city, mainly because every concert passes through there, but it’s still a nebulous free-for-all where the beers are $5. Yesterday I also ran into Jimmy Ross, a local poet and performer who has been hosting the Thursday night reading at the Gold Mine as of late. He said he’s going to spend the summer in Colorado, the reason being the paranoia that is beginning to saturate the streets. I feel it, too, but that’s only because I let it get to me. Every failure and wrong turn gets exacerbated by my tense surroundings, but I’m going keep hope, even if I feel like the city has lost hope in me, because despair spreads like a disease. Still, reality beats platitudes. A month ago New Orleans had a natural diminished population, but now, the city is starting to look like it did the first month after people were let back in: a little empty (hopefully college enrollment won’t take a nosedive in the fall).The fear and trepidation regarding upcoming tropical storms and hurricanes times the return and possible upturn in crime times a smaller number of people on the streets equals a situation where, as Wyclef would say, “Anything can happen.” When friends tell me they’re leaving for the summer, I want to tell them I need comrades, but I also want to ask them, “Don’t you want to stay for the big show?” Here it comes, the most crucial moment in the city’s history. Will we be put out of our misery, or will we be spared? Will people leave the city for good, spouting, “Fooled me twice, shame on me,” or will we come through the season with levees intact, a sign to refugees that it’s OK to return for good? 6/6/6 Does it mean anything for the city that the sixth day of the sixth month of the sixth year is this summer? Nah, right? Big Hair Productions and Backporch Revolution will celebrate the evilest of days by presenting a night of music at The Big Top that will be devoted to the darkest of bands—Black Sabbath. Local minimalist/drone musician Potpie came up with the idea for the show because he had always wanted to be in a Sabbath cover band. Even though most of the show is made up of electronic/noise musicians, they’ve all grown up with and shown a deep love for Sabbath. Except for Jonathan Freilich. According to Potpie, Freilich had never heard Sabbath’s music before he began assembling a Yiddish Sabbath band, Jonathan Freilich and The Dark Shabbos. Like the Klezmer All- Stars, but Sabbath. Reinterpretation of Sabbath is the order of the night, while local space-rockers Shatner will be shedding their trippiness for a hard-pounding, loyal take on Sabbath. Shatner will be performing “Into the Void,” “Lord of This World,” “Sweet Leaf,” “Behind The Wall of Sleep,” “Black Sabbath” and “Electric Funeral,” according to Ozzy, a.k.a. Anton Gussoni. Chef Menteur will perform, along with a nightclosing performance of the Twisted Karaoke Band (all Sabbath), but the big news is that local analog electronic band Electrical Spectacle will reunite for a performance of “Black Sabbath,” “Paranoid” and a possible third song. Drummer Louis Romanos has moved away since the storm, so the duo of Gussoni and Mike Mayfield will play with drum machines. “Sabbath is appropriate because they’re based on riffs, just like Electrical Spectacle,” Mayfield said. “It’s been a long time since Anton and I played together. We conjure up some pretty cool sounds, but he’s been mentioning that he might be moving, so this might be one last hoorah.” Mayfield will use a vocoder for the vocals and a theremin for the guitar solos. Also on hand will be Moogs and organs. Tickets are $6.66. RUMINATIONS –During my Katrina-imposed, one-month exile, nola.com was my number one source for New Orleans news. The website also showed the positive power of the Internet as it brought together lost family and friends. Lately, though, the website has been updated sporadically, and it really dropped the ball during the mayoral election. CNN.com presented our election results before nola.com did. And, speaking of elections, are we the laughing stock of the nation because we re-elected Ray Nagin? As he begins his second term, I have two suggestions for the mayor: 1.Take a retreat with Bush, Blanco, and your city council, work your stuff out, and then come back with a better idea of how to communicate and 08_antigravity: your new orleans music and culture alternative not point fingers. 2. Get a PR person. Hell, they don’t even have to possess a degree or a title. Find the person you listen to, and then when they tell you not to say something, do that. –The music always sounds purer when a rock band plays an acoustic set. When local band Mahayla unplugged for a few songs at the Circle Bar a few months ago, the songs they played possessed a beauty and clarity impossible with loud drums and distortion. Local band the Bad Off is working on finishing their first full-length album, and since drummer Jody Smith is living in New York, the band sat on stools at a recent Howlin’ Wolf performance. Their drum-less experiment was moving because it spoke to the heart and not so much the groin. Erik Corriveaux remains one of the best—if not the best—rock vocalists in New Orleans. THE IN AND OUTS OF N.O. HIP-HOP WITH DJ QUICKIE MART BY BILLIE FAYE BAKER D Js don’t exactly warrant much attention. Their role within the music industry can best be described as court jester-flashy, energetic and—to “serious music connoisseurs”—downright comical. No one has ever felt or learned anything from their music; they have none to call their own. They simply spin another’s hard work and thoughts, taking displaced credit. But what happens when the music they play causes one to feel and learn, and their enthusiasm for a type of music inadvertently transmits ideas and feelings to someone jaded? Such is the case with myself and DJ Quickie Mart, and such is the case where the DJ should be praised. Among the flooded-out car dealerships and crack houses of Tulane Avenue lays the 900-square-foot shack that is Nick’s Bar. A longtime favorite among college kids, Nick’s was known for cheap drinks and slack doormen, both of which packed the inside and surrounding shell lot most Friday and Saturday nights. But it was Monday nights that traded Tulane’s richest for NOLA’s hippest, all there to pay respects to the city’s most talented turntablist and coolest white boy to ever rock shell tops—hip-hop’s local golden boy, DJ Quickie Mart. To call Quickie New Orleans’ hip-hop “golden boy” may seem unsuitable, but the only other descriptor would be savior. In January 2005, The Times-Picayune did a multiple page feature on Quickie and his underground comrades, hoping to shed light on the city’s unknown, unsigned hip-hop artists that were about more than ass-shakin’ and bling-bling.The Lagniappe spread featured Quickie and fellow Media Darling Records emcees and producers bent on bringing new life to Big Easy hip-hop. They focused on everything from respecting women to being “dead-broke and proud,” all the while rejecting the label politics that threatened to corrupt art for art’s sake, and misrepresent a genre whose roots had nothing to do with violence or money. Quickie’s playlist couldn’t consist of the organic underground alone; the crowd wouldn’t allow it. By midnight Nick’s became less of a secret and more of a spectacle. The mere existence of a hip-hop weekly in New Orleans is hard to come by, and consequently saw patrons more interested in hip-hop’s Top-40 than shit only heard on satellite radio. Quickie acquiesced and threw on old Tupac and Biggie records as a compromise. But around two the format changed. Most of the thugs had smoked themselves stupid, and the only kids remaining were those with a weakness for blown glass, the b-boys thankful for a place to stunt and the true underground heads that surrounded them in honor. Here Quickie had his way with the wax he played at home, the wax on which the focus was “fam” and the only thing getting blown up were record contracts and diamond chains. Here Quickie introduced us to hip-hop’s most conscious cousins. Raise the lights, cut the track and shield my eyes as my car door opens onto Napoleon and Baronne. I finally get to meet the man whose mixtape introduced me to every artist I’ve dug in the past year. I can’t wait to discuss the pitfalls of Top40 narcissism, and the new underground philosophy trying to change all that. I should feel thrilled; I just feel nervous. “Are you Billie?” “I am. Nice place.” “Oh, it’s my manager’s,” Quickie says. “I’m just staying here for awhile.” He seats me at a table overflowing with documents endorsing Media Darling Records, his record label that does a surprisingly good job of promoting what’s billed as “unpromoted.” Stacks of leaflets adjoin piles of label stickers and flyers for their “Below Sea Level” tour. I have no room for my computer. With Nick’s gone to the gods of geo-thermal weather patterns, Quickie’s essentially had to start from scratch in a city that took years to warm up to him. But with Nick’s as proof of his ability to draw a crowd, post-K prospects were not hard to find. His first gig had him behind the velvet rope at NOLA’s newest stage for the twentysomething glitterati, the Warehouse District’s Republic. Following format conflicts, Quickie left the Republic to concentrate on Hookah Café, the Frenchmen Street locale were he spins every Thursday. Relocating to the couch, I ask him about the memory of Nick’s and his new Hookah engagement. ANTIGRAVITY: So, tell me about Hookah Café. Are you excited about that? Quickie Mart: It’s cool. It’s kinda low, not real loud, and everybody’s just laid back and chill. You can actually sit down and have a conversation.Thursday nights is straight underground stuff. AG: So, kinda like the Nick’s format? QM: Kinda. I get a lot of people that are like, “I used to go to Nick’s!” I love that ‘cause that was my favorite weekly. It was kinda dingy and packed to the walls, but it was like the best DJ weekly in town at the time. I miss it more than anything. You can’t take stuff for granted like that. Someone got killed a couple of blocks away right before the storm. It killed the crowd. I went from making a lot to making nothing at all. AG: Yeah, the storm. But it seems like your doing even better now. QM: Yeah, I went from playing six nights a week [pre-Katrina] to playing nothing. It was hard for me to comprehend, you know? The label had to kinda start from ground zero which really sucks. I put a lot of money in it even though it’s not my company. We’re starting from zero. All the contracts are up. We lost a lot of our investors, and we’re just like starting from scratch again. But we’re coming back, you know? Touring again. Starting to save some money. AG: New Orleans isn’t exactly known for its underground scene. I can’t help but think you would do better somewhere else like New York or Los Angeles where underground hip-hop has a hold. QM: Whether they like it or not, we are New Orleans music. We’re trying to make the underground known. AG: That’s nice that you’re staying here even without the huge following. QM:Yeah, I mean, I love New York. I love going up there, spending money and stuff, but I don’t think I’d do better as far as DJ-ing gigs. In places like Los Angeles or New York, it’s almost impossible to get and maintain a solid weekly. AG: Well, it’s nice that you’re staying out here and helping us get the word out on the underground. Isn’t that what it’s all about anyway? QM:You’re right. I mean, if I stick with it I guess the money will come eventually. AG: So, what are three core values of underground hip-hop? QM: DJ is one. AG: Oh, actually I meant more like ideas. QM: Free speech is one. Being able to say whatever the fuck you want … [At this point, his friends walk in and interrupt. They share a laugh about something I don’t understand, but are clear about it not being “on the record.”] What was I saying? AG: Isn’t hip-hop about not only saying what you want to say, but about living your life in a different way? QM: Yeah, if you can make it. I mean, I don’t know. I’m the only artist on the label that’s kinda making a living off of it. They’re all pretty poor, you know? Like, I’m getting there. Saturday, 6/10; Thursday, 6/22; Saturday 6/24 DJ Quickie Mart, Hookah Cafe, 500 Frenchmen St., (504) 943-1101 www.hookah-cafe.com Wednesdays: 6/14, 6/21 DJ Quickie Mart, The Pop Bar, 533 Toulouse St., (504) 568-1940 www.thepopbar.com Friday 6/23 DJ Quickie Mart, Shiloh, 4529 Tchoupitoulas, (504) 895-1456 For more info on DJ Quickie Mart, go to: www.myspace.com/quickiemart 09 antigravity: your new orleans music and culture alternative_ BAND OF HORSES SNAP, CRACKLE AND SUB POP BY NOAH BONAPARTE W ith names like Nirvana, Sebadoh and Sleater-Kinney at the head of its credits, the roster of Seattle imprint Sub Pop reads like either a waiting list for the Rock ‘N Roll Hall Of Fame or the greatest music festival of all time.The venerable label has, in recent years, transformed into a farm system for indie-rock luminaries: Its outposts include promising prospects (Chad VanGaalen, Kelley Stoltz, Holopaw), mid-level risers (Rogue Wave, Comets On Fire, Constantines) and everyday players (Iron & Wine, Wolf Parade, Shins). Amidst the bad baseball analogy, Band Of Horses is the brawny rookie breakthrough, the man among boys. Everything All The Time, the band’s accomplished March debut, packs in crashing percussion, towering melodies, layered guitars and reverb-drenched vocals. On spacey opener “The First Song,” frontman Ben Bridwell is Doug Martsch flying with the Flaming Lips; for sturdy single “The Great Salt Lake,” he’s James Mercer fronting a steroidal Crazy Horse. ANTIGRAVITY tracked down the head Horseman in Seattle to talk about Everything. ANTIGRAVITY: How are things up in Seattle? This is your first big headlining tour, correct? Ben Bridwell: Before the album came out, we toured down to South By Southwest, and then Seattle. It was like a two week, two-and-a-half week tour. So this is definitely our first shot to headline, go test the waters a little. AG: Has the last year exceeded your expectations? It has to be thrilling to get so many raves right off the bat for your first record. BB: You know what, it is, but I think for any good review, a bad one will kill like five good ones. So, honestly, no, I wasn’t prepared for anything like that, for people to get excited about it critically. But as soon as I saw some of that stuff, I decided that I should pull myself away from it. Hopefully I’ve avoided most of it. AG: It must be strange, though: You’ve experienced the toil of establishing a band— Carissa’s Wierd—to little national fanfare, and now suddenly you’re experiencing the opposite. BB: We did work for a long time without really getting any sort of acclaim at all. In Seattle we did pretty well. And we toured, and had small turnouts, but we were able to go out and do it. So now, to be in this band and have it take off so fast, it’s almost like we could’ve done it before. We had an option to sign with Sub Pop with Carissa’s Wierd, and we were like, fuck it, we’ll keep it really indie and do it ourselves. [Laughs] But, honestly, when you do that, you can really shoot yourself in the foot. I think Carissa’s Wierd was caught shooting itself in the foot, maybe a little bit on purpose.To have this band now, doing as well as we’re doing, or as well as I think we’re doing, it’s fucking hilarious. AG: Like, what strange combination of forces … BB: It’s ridiculous! You can’t prepare for anything like that, and you can’t imagine that anything like that is going to happen, but it seems that it has, so we’re just kinda staying cool. AG: Did you immediately know you wanted to form another band? BB: We had decided we were going to split up, that band, on tour. So we rode out the rest of the tour, and the wheels started turning during the long ride home. I’d always kind of thought about it, you know, wondered if it was something I could do. And when we got home, no one was using our practice space—everyone was wishy-washy about jumping right in to anything. I just when down there to get some alone time, and messed around with every instrument and came up with these songs. AG: What was the chronology of the record? Did the songs have a long gestation period? BB: Um, let’s see … It was pretty bad at first. [Laughs] One of the songs that we recorded that didn’t make the album, but is coming out on an EP sometime on Sub Pop, it had like a really bad, modern-rock kind of bridge. [Laughs] For some reason I thought I had to throw in a bridge. AG: Going through a Creed phase. BB: I guess so! Something like that. It’s so fucking stupid. AG: So they’re all new compositions then? BB: Exactly, none of them came from when we were still in Carissa’s Wierd. They all kind of came in a big bulk. AG: You and Mat [Brooke] shared the songwriting duties? BB: Mat wrote two songs on the record, “St. Augustine” and “I Go To The Barn.” He wrote those, and I wrote the rest of them. AG: What was your impetus to start writing songs? Looking for closure on Carissa’s Wierd? BB: Definitely, man. It was important, I thought, to start something and be fresh with it, to put the old one to bed and get something new going. AG: I read about an aborted outfit between you and Mat … November 16th? BB: That was really short-lived. When we were on that tour, as we were breaking up, we had talked about being in a band together again and doing new things. So, for a second, we came in and tried to do some songs. But the commitment—Mat’s commitment to it and, I guess, my commitment to it—we were just a little unsure about what we were actually doing. Like, I wasn’t sure if Mat wanted to get right back into being the singer for a band again, all that stuff. So, because of that band not really forming is why I started Horses. AG: Tell me about Brown Records. That was your label? BB: That was my label, yeah. I put out the first Carissa’s Wierd and the second one, and I put out Jen from Carissa’s Wierd, her first solo album—that’s called S. And I put out this band from up here called Aveyo, who later signed to Barsuk. That was also kind of out of necessity. Carissa’s Wierd, I wasn’t in the band at that point, but they needed to get a record out. And I decided I could save up my money and put it out. It was more like a hobby. I couldn’t do for us what a normal label could actually do for a band, but it was supposed to be AG: Nice position to be in with your debut record. BB: It was great.Well, it wasn’t, actually—it was a really difficult decision, because they’re both just so great and different in their own right. So it was really kind of a confusing time, just figuring out what we’re gonna do. AG: The first time I saw you was in Gainesville, Florida, with Sam [Beam]. BB: The Common Grounds? AG: The Common Grounds, exactly. Great show. BB: Thanks. What was the time frame? AG: It was June of last year, I think. Was that before or after you latched on with Sub Pop? BB: It must have been a little less than a year before that show in Florida. Sam came up to play two shows by himself here in Seattle, and I asked him if we could open up for him and he obliged. And that’s when Sub Pop bought the demo. AG: So, there wasn’t much time elapsed after the Carissa’s Wierd breakup? BB: Surprisingly, yeah. The songs all started showing themselves around the same time. I was lucky enough to get them recorded quick. We did the Sam show, and he asked us to go on tour that summer. AG: How was the process of signing to Sub Pop? Were there any concessions? BB: Total artistic freedom. There was no compromise even asked of us. AG: Was Phil Ek your choice to produce or theirs? BB: Totally my choice. We had met through some friends, a while before we had actually signed a deal with anybody. And I was like, “If we have the fucking money, Phil, I swear I’ll use you. But if we’re not on a label that can give us that kind of money, you’re gonna have to fuck yourself.” [Laughs] So we talked about it for so long, and eventually it did work out that we got to work with Phil. It was absolutely amazing working with him. He is owed as much credit as any of the rest of us. He really turned it on for us. AG: It’s interesting listening to the latest Built To Spill record—the first without Phil at the helm—and then listening to your record. Can you pinpoint exactly what Phil brings to the table as a producer? BB: At least for me, for this album, it was the fact that he knew exactly what the album should sound like, and we didn’t. I mean, at first we thought we could go in there and play live, basically; we thought we could get like a nice live, raw sound going, and just kind of breeze through them. Phil knew exactly what the fuck it was supposed to sound like. So he made us do everything a million fucking times. There was a lot of screaming. [Laughs] And this being my first foray into singing on a record, it was fucking painful. To double and triple up vocals, stuff like that … He would bust my balls completely. He would not let me get away with anything. So his stubbornness, I think, was really what helped—it’s probably the only reason I’m talking to you right now. I would’ve easily made a shitty record. He’s got such a knack for—not so much just tones, and the way something should sound, but he’ll hear little bits and pieces of things that you normally wouldn’t do that he wants you to throw in. He has a great grand, whole vision of things before you’ve even started. We’ll definitely be using him again. “I think for any good review, a bad one will kill like five good ones. So, honestly, no, I wasn’t prepared for anything like that, for people to get excited about it critically.” just like a stepping-stone kind of label. I can make sure that people can get a CD in your hands and hopefully the label will make you up. AG: Any thoughts of releasing the Horses debut on Brown? BB: Oh, no. I know how bad of a job I do. I can’t even trust myself to promote myself. Fuck no. AG: But you cut the demos before you had an affiliation with Sub Pop. BB: I recorded the demos—my friend actually recorded them for me, in our practice space—just to see what was wrong with the songs, or what was right with the songs. And then later we put them on to a disc and sold them at shows.That’s when Sub Pop got a hold of it, and our friends at Barsuk got a hold of it, and they were interested as well. It took us a little time, but ultimately we decided to go with Sub Pop in the end. Friday, 6/23 Band of Horses, Mt. Egypt, the Can t See, the Parish @ House of Blues, 225 Decatur, (504)310-4999, 9pm, $12 www.hob.com/neworleans For more on Band of Horses, go to: www.bandofhorses.com [mpFree approved!] 11 antigravity: your new orleans music and culture alternative_ 12_antigravity: your new orleans music and culture alternative hazeablaze.blogspot.com hazeablaze.blogspot.com hazeablaze.blogspot.com the blog of lisa haviland 13 antigravity: your new orleans music and culture alternative_ WHERE IS DANIEL SMITH OF DANIELSON? OR, “DID I STEP ON YOUR TRUMPET?” BY MARTY GARNER W here is Daniel Smith? It’s raining here in Baton Rouge as I walk my dog and somewhere in the Pacific Northwest, Daniel Smith and a van full of strange, strange people are driving about. I can see them in my mind’s eye. Smiling. Laughing maybe. Probably singing a sugary little song. You may have forgotten about me, but don’t think that I’ve forgotten about you, Daniel. Who is Daniel Smith and why do his carefree travels bother me? And why should you care? Because May 9 saw the release of Ships, the latest effort from Danielson, the collective headed by Smith, a.k.a. Br. Danielson. And don’t be fooled; that “Br.” stands for “Brother,” as in Christian Brother. That’s right. There’s something strange happening with Christian music up North. While most people associate Christian music with Godspell and pipe organs, musicians like Smith and Ships contributor Sufjan Stevens have been blazing a holy trail through small bars just outside the gates of college campuses and down the pipelines of Soulseek. Consider it bringing the gospel to the indie masses. But unlike most better-known Christian bands (and you know who I’m talking about so I’m not going to drag names through the mud), Danielson are, uh, good. Very good. So where is he? It’s May 22 and I’m in Atlanta, visiting my dad and watching the Flaming Lips; I’m scheduled to talk to Daniel at 1:30 pm. I scribble down questions in my journal (shut up): “Ships is much more rounded and complete. Less sugar, more substance. Why the shift?” “How complicated is it to make noise-pop with a band small enough to fit in one van?” “How on Earth did you, a Christian, get along well enough with Steve Albini to record with him?” I glance at my cell; 1:45. Quick call to Leo, who puts in a quick call to Secretly Canadian, Smith’s label. The interview, it seems, has been rescheduled to Wednesday. Part of the reason that I’m so anxious to interview Daniel is because I myself am a Christian who is a part of the (and God knows how much I hate this term) indie scene. In my imagination, Daniel and I chat lightly about his music before moving on to issues with the American church, the awesomeness of grace, or good Christian bands (post-rockers Saxon Shore make my list). I scratch in my journal about what it must be like to be a Christian musician touring in largely non-Christian venues, playing to mostly non-Christian people. Are they hostile? Does the faith get attacked? Are they patronizing? Respectful? Do they even care? Faith would be no issue for you, gentle reader, if Smith’s lyrics weren’t peppered with references to his relationship with God. Despite the mile-a-minute, Unicorns-on-speed music which his fans have come to adore, Smith’s lyrics are straight from the Confessional, more personal than the Dashboard variety. It is this insight into the artist that gives Ships its most tender moments, particularly when the parade stops and Smith quietly weeps over his guitar. In “When It Comes to You I’m Lazy,” Smith’s boozy melancholic lament to the lack of vitality in his spiritual life, mournful trombones and whirring organs transform the squeakiness of his voice from annoying into heartfelt. It’s at these sparse, vulnerable moments that the album (and its author) becomes something real; gone is the man who ate the one-pound bag of Skittles in favor of man whose spiritual life looks less like a bottle of Xanax. These are the sounds being choked from my Camry’s speakers as I sojourn back to 225. It strikes me now that the manicdepressive state of the music on Ships is perfect for exactly what I am doing: growing up. I’m 21 years old, Christian for almost one. Perhaps unintentionally, Danielson have captured that nervous spirit that life-changing events yield in a person’s psyche, from the album’s rickety title to its cover’s silver and blue stars. See, I had violent tension headaches for a while after my conversion which were caused by my persistent fear that my inability to be perfect was pissing God off. Smith captures this tension in the noisy final segment of “Two Sitting Ducks,” with pianos crashing against overly-dubbed vocals while the horn section (the Holy Spirit?) wails away in pain. Of course, “Two Sitting Ducks” plays into the gorgeous “My Lion Sleeps Tonight,” whose twinkling bells sprinkle down like grace upon my burning head. ∞ Finally back in Baton Rouge after many slow miles, I settle down again to interview Daniel Smith. “Hello?” Holy crap, his voice is just as nasally when he talks as when he sings! With Dictaphone rolling, and boring preliminary questions out of the way, I begin the real interview. “How hard is it to make all of the noise on the record with a six-person band?” Allow me to make at this point in the article a comment regarding cell phones. Yes, they’re lovely. But when you’ve been chasing down one of your musical idols and finally get him on the phone, the last thing that you want is for him to drive through West Virginia, home is the most appealing aspect of the Christian faith when it’s working in your favor, but when you have to dispense it, it’s not so attractive. ∞ A few days pass. I have yet to hear from Br. Danielson, which was initially a relief given the amount of work which looms over my head, but that work includes this very interview, so I give him a ring again. “The publicist didn’t get back to you? I told him to set up another interview.” Another quick call to Leo, a quick call back from Secretly Canadian, where I am assuredly on speed dial by now. Sunday at 1:30. Daniel was in the Eastern Time Zone when I last attempted to talk to him. His publicist nonchalantly tells me that Daniel will be somewhere in the Mountain Time Zone when I next talk to him. Two days and he’s halfway across the country. ∞ Danielson.info, the collective’s website, details an anecdote from Daniel’s sixth grade band class. One fine day, a kid named Billy left the band room only to discover upon his return that his prized silver trumpet’s bell had been caved in. Billy immediately accused Daniel, who, like any good sixth grader would, quickly denied any wrongdoing. But that was 20 years ago. Daniel states on the website, “I really do not know if I stepped on it or not. I feel like I may have.” As some sort of bizarre 20-years-too-late act of penance, Smith recorded “Did I Step On Your Trumpet?” as an apology, encouraging his fans to make amends with anyone whom they have accidentally offended by politely asking, “Did I step on your trumpet?” The move has become the major marketing campaign behind Ships, with fans writing their apologies on a 3x5 card and mailing them to Daniel, who in turn personally inserts a “Did I step on your trumpet?” pin and mails it out to the offended. ∞ “Perhaps unintentionally, Danielson have captured that nervous spirit that life-changing events yield in a person’s psyche...” of mountains, moonshine, and apparently not enough people to warrant a decent phone tower. “Let me call you back from a truck stop,” I pull from the static. That’s fine. I’ll be here. ∞ Now, for those who do not know, the most crucial tenet of the Christian faith is that of grace. Like I mentioned before, grace was the secret anodyne for my miserable headaches. Grace tells me that God loves me exactly the way that I am, that I don’t have to look like everyone else in my church and that I don’t have to watch the same movies, listen to the same bands, or vote for the same politicians. God just wants me to love Him. Grace causes every single sin I could ever commit, from the theft of a car to the relatively innocuous (but still grievous against God) itty bitty white lie, to be completely overlooked by God. For those who put their faith in Jesus Christ, the Bible teaches, there is no punishment for sin. Of course, the love of God in a person’s life should compel them not to, uh, smoke crack or anything like that, but grace exists to erase any and every stupid thing, past and future. As Christians, Daniel and I are called to distribute this same sort of grace to the world (You remember the Our Father: “Forgive us our trespasses, as we forgive those who trespass against us.”). Put shortly, grace “Hi, this is Daniel Smith. Please leave a message.” It’s Sunday, and this is what my end of the phone gets at 1:30 pm. I try again 30 minutes later. With a thousand apologies, Daniel explains that the interviewer before me ran over time and the group is now eating in a Cracker Barrel in North Dakota and can he call me back when they are done eating? Sure thing, I say. Sure thing. ∞ As of this writing, I have yet to interview Daniel Smith. We have an appointment for 4:00 tomorrow, seven hours past ANTIGRAVITY’s deadline. To his credit, every time that I have talked to him, Daniel has been incredibly friendly and very apologetic concerning the situation. He just forgot to call me back, and I can forgive him for that. See, one of the hard things about being a Christian is that people expect us to be angels on Earth. We are never to lose our temper, never to offend anyone in any way, never to pass judgment. That’s a tough image to live up to. But that’s the beauty of grace. I’ll tell you right now, I’ve sinned like 50 times in the writing of this piece alone. I’ve lied (ooh, try to find it!), I’ve cheated (I read other people’s reviews), and I’ve procrastinated like a bandit (sloth, frighteningly enough, is a sin). But if God’s grace can forgive me for all of that and for implying that I may one day steal a car, then surely I can forgive Daniel Smith for stepping on my trumpet. Wednesday, 7/5 Danielson, Spanish Moon, 1109 Highland Rd., (225) 383-MOON www.thespanishmoon.com For more info on Danielson, go to: www.danielson.info 15 antigravity: your new orleans music and culture alternative_ take to the sky by miles britton A lot’s changed for Deadboy & The Elephantmen since ANTIGRAVITY last talked with them a little over a year ago. Back then, frontman Dax Riggs and drummer Tess Brunet were New Orleans’ best kept secret, unsigned and still a few months shy of recording their then unnamed debut. But once the haunting garage rock of We Are Night Sky hit the nation in February, there’s been no holding them back. Four-star reviews in Rolling Stone and Maxim, a tour opening up for Fat Possum labelmate the Fiery Furnaces, a lengthy spot on NPR’s Weekend Edition, and gigs at everything from Sasquatch Fest to the upcoming Lollapalooza.You would think that all that success would have gone to their head, but the local-band-done-good will still take the time for us (or maybe we’re that big, hmmm). AG caught up with Tess on the road, in a hotel somewhere in Vancouver. ANTIGRAVITY: So how’s the tour been going? Tess Brunet: Good, good. Tiring, but good. Musically, it’s been going really well. We’ve been playing with a lot of different bands, and their audiences have been really receptive. And there’s been a pretty good crossover of fans from Dax’s old bands [Acid Bath, Agents Of Oblivion], even though we sound quite different. So there’s sort of this permanent, built-in fan base for whatever he does. But there’s a lot of people who like what he’s doing now that have no idea of his previous stuff, and may not have necessarily even liked it. AG: You were on the road with Fiery Furnaces for a while. What was that like? TB: [Laughs] They’re kind of like librarians. You know, just kind of quiet. It took a long time to get to that point where we could actually joke around. The last couple of shows of the month tour, I felt like we were just getting to the point where we all could kind of open up. But it’s always such a weird thing for bands that don’t know each other to be thrown together. I mean, you don’t know them, and all of a sudden you’re having to work together everyday for the next month. And sometimes its works the opposite way, where you open up to people right away and then towards the end it gets weird. Someone in one band ends up getting pissed off at someone in the other band… AG: Really? It’s so funny, as an audience member, you never even think about all that Behind The Music-type stuff. You just assume all the bands get along as one big happy family. TB: Matt and Eleanor were really nice, though. And Jason Lowenstein from Sebadoh was on tour with them playing bass, and he’s super cool to be around. He just had one of those energies and spirits that brought this calmness to everything that made life a lot easier for me on the road. Not to sound all hippie-dippy or anything. AG: You all have really blown up since the last time I interviewed you. I just recently heard that spot they did about you on NPR… TB:Yeah, I got a lot of e-mails about that. And it was really kind of neat because it was all from people who had never heard us before, but, you know, listen to NPR every morning. They were really excited to learn about us. AG: And I read on your website that you’re going to be on the Henry Rollins TV show? TB: Yeah, that’s airing in June, but we actually shot that about a month ago. AG: I didn’t even know Rollins had a TV show. So was it like a talk show, like Rollins interviewing you? TB: Sort of, but he actually wasn’t there. He was on a spoken word tour in Amsterdam or somewhere. But I think they’re going to edit it to look like he’s there. [Laughs] AG: So what’s next for you? Any thoughts yet on a new album? TB: We actually just started talking about that yesterday. We have this block of a month and 10 days off coming up after Bonnaroo, so that’s when were planning on concentrating on the new songs, working all that stuff out so we can start recording the next album. We probably have enough material for two albums. Now it’s just a matter of picking the songs we really want to focus on. 16_antigravity: your new orleans music and culture alternative AG: Any change in the sound? TB: No, it’s similar to We Are Night Sky. The way the songs are written, and the process and where the songs come from, that’s all the same. But we might add some different sounds to it. Though only change we’ve had recently is that we have a bass player now for tour, Alex. He’s been with us for a couple weeks. AG: That’s a fairly big change. Do you think he could become a permanent member? TB: I’m not really sure. We’ve always discussed the possibility of another member, but we’re just going to see how it goes on this tour for whether or not we’ll have him on the next one. But I think probably so. It seems to be going pretty well. AG: And last question. Lollapalooza—are you psyched? That’s something we’ve been dreaming about playing since we were kids. TB: Ummm, to tell you the truth, I’m actually more excited about Bonnaroo for some reason. I don’t know why. Probably because I just recently heard about Bonnaroo, and it’s not something that has been around for that long. I’ve been to Lollapalooza a couple of times when I was younger, and it’s not really a mixture of ages. It’s like the Warped Tour, just a bunch of young, young kids. It’s not like Jazz Fest or something, where there’s everybody from babies to old people with walking sticks. There’s something about that that’s really nice. Honestly, I’d play Jazz Fest over Lollapalooza any day. Saturday, 6/24 Deadboy & The Elephantmen, Ballzack, One Eyed Jacks, 615 Toulouse St., (504) 569-8361 www.oneeyedjacks.net For more on Deadboy & The Elephantmen, go to: www.deadboyandtheelephantmen.com B allzack is one of those personalities that could only be borne out of New Orleans. Like the city, Ballzack seems able to make sense of all that is good and really bad through therapeutic doses of wit and humor. His first two records touch on everything from transgendered Asians to schoolyard antics to hand jobs to suburban malaise, but while the themes are always comedic, the stories are told through the guise of someone who is forever self-mocking in his jibes. Hence, you can’t blame him when he says, “Action figure porn, origami vibrator/I think she really liked me even though she made me pay her/I used to be a groupie for Striper and Slayer/I know it sounds gay but my cousin’s even gayer.” When Ballzack is sticking it to someone else, he’s also sticking it to himself. Ballzack is currently working on a third album that is somewhat a divergence from his past projects. Although surely retaining the playfulness that is characteristic of his material, Ballzack plans to release a record in the fall that will consist entirely of bounce music. As he explains, the idea to make a bounce record came from the recording of a song for a WTUL compilation disc. The track, “Wine Candy,” is a hodgepodge tribute to the lifestyle (and local products) of New Orleans laid over traditional bounce beats. The upcoming record promises to build upon the lyrical and musical content of the single. ANTIGRAVITY was lucky enough to join Ballzack on his cab ride home from the airport after he returned to New Orleans from an extended stay in New York. During the 20-minute trip to the Westbank, we talked about his new record while pausing intermittently to discuss prostitutes, record collecting and Cstudent governments. ANTIGRAVITY: So, you just got back from NYC. What were you doing up there? Ballzack: I had some meetings with some guys who were really interested in what I’m doing, but my whole thing was, “I don’t care how much money you’re going to throw at me, if you don’t understand what I’m doing and don’t really get my music, you’re not going to be the right people to put out this record.” AG: Did they at least show you a good time? BZ: Sure, they threw a bunch of money at me just to get me up there to meet with them. They took me out, threw lots of drugs in my face, but I turned them down.You know, I don’t do drugs. Strippers. Prostitutes. Dildos. But the bottom line is I can make more money independent, and I don’t care if you signed the Beatles, Steely Dan or Megadeth. I’m happy just to sell records to the people on my street.They just didn’t get it up there. They even wanted me to go the Bloodhound Gang angle. Make me a clown and bullshit. Forget it. AG: So what’s the new record going to be like? BZ: The theme is going to be bounce music; New Orleans bounce music. AG: So it’s new original Ballzack material—only bounce? BZ: Well, it’s as original as bounce music can be. There’s a standard bounce formula and we are trying to pay homage to that formula but at the same time trying to break out of it and do new things with it—just do bounce songs that no one has done before. Of course, there are the standard Triggerman Beat bounce songs, but we’re making space bounce songs and punk bounce songs … well, maybe not punk bounce songs. AG: Have you always been a fan of bounce music? BZ: Well, I’ve always been big on stuff like Manny Fresh and especially earlier stuff like TT Tucker, DJ Jubilee and DJ Irv. I mean, in New Orleans you didn’t have to go far to hear the music. Plus, my dad owned a store in the St. Thomas projects where he would hire DJs like TT Tucker and all those other guys to perform outside in the front of the store.That was back in the ‘80s when that whole scene was really getting momentum. That might have been the inception of my interest in the music—I don’t know. But I remember always wanting to make a bounce record. There was some other stuff I needed to get out of my system first, but now the time is right. AG: Who are you working with during the making of the album? BZ: Well, the album is being co-produced, recorded and engineered by Jay Yuenger. He helped me record “Wine Candy” for the WTUL compilation disc and it went over pretty well. We had a lot of fun doing it and we thought we would make a whole album that would pay homage to New Orleans rap. So, we did it. AG: How has the process been thus far? Has it been challenging to change gears from the content on the previous two records to something different? BZ: Not really. We’ve been having fun with it. I’ve always felt that you should make songs that you want to hear, and that’s what I try to do. I always ask myself, “Wouldn’t it be cool for someone to make a song about pencil crack or making groceries or whatever?” So, I just make them. That’s why there are going to be different themes and variations on the record … I mean, I don’t think anyone has ever made a space bounce song or talked about time machines over bounce beats. We just try to do something new.With this one, we just want people to enjoy it and have fun with it. But sure, I make the songs and then I listen to them and love myself … AG: So, you’re a fan of your own work? BZ: Yes, I actually own every single one of my CDs. I am a Ballzack album collector. Every copy I own of my own CDs is an autographed copy. And I will never run out of autographed copies unless I run out of me. AG: Would you ever sell your collection? BZ: I would never part with my autographed copies.Well, maybe I would. I know a guy who sells them. I could find more. AG: Well, back to the new project—when this record comes out, do you plan to hit the road with it? BZ: No. I don’t want to tour. I don’t know why. I know I don’t want to tour any farther than the southeast. I mean, going out to some place you’ve never heard of in some van to try to start a following just doesn’t do it for me. I mean, did BG have to tour? [Laughs] Probably not. I mean, he had followings in a lot of cities but it had nothing to do with touring. I’m lucky to have fans in other cities but it’s not because of touring—the power of the internet, I guess. AG: It sounds like you’re really happy to be in New Orleans. Do you have any reservations about staying here? BZ: I love to be able to stay in New Orleans. Sure, it might get destroyed but we’ve lived with that risk even before. It’s not much different, it’s just now we’re more aware of the consequences and know what it actually looks like. So, I’m going to stick it out. I love the city and couldn’t go anywhere else. But I do wish New Orleans would get its act together. It really seems like a city run by C students. AG: Maybe not even C … BZ: Yeah, not even C students—D students. It’s a bunch of people educated in the same bad school system who end up running that same bad school system. AG: And when they get elected, they use the fact that they grew up here and were educated here as a selling point. BZ: Yeah, to say you grew up here is something to be proud of but not to say you’re educated here. I mean, that’s the truth. I was educated here, but I wouldn’t rely on that to run for office. Still, I really hope they get their act together. When you go to another city, you realize how a city is really supposed to operate. It’s just a mixture of incompetence and corruption. I hope they really care and just don’t say they do to get where they want to go. AG: Well, it looks like we’re here. Anything else you want to add? BZ: If anyone has a picture of Tom Foot, please send it to me through my website or on MySpace. I can’t find a picture of Tom Foot anywhere. AG: Will do. BZ: Oh yeah … pay the driver. Saturday, 6/24 Ballzack, Deadboy & The Elephantmen, One Eyed Jacks, 615 Toulouse St., (504) 569-8361 www.oneeyedjacks.net For more on Ballzack, go to: www.myspace.com/ballzacknola 17 antigravity: your new orleans music and culture alternative_ 18_antigravity: your new orleans music and culture alternative d n i h e b t s i s t e r l a c i n e o t th r u h o c b k a the to ag ast e s , k l s ta luence t f s n i a r o s i o s c f h u t o g s n m i e a w w f a n i r d n d s i , a h s e i d t i n l a a , t d n me and ma n p s . T e w o h s e d i l s Y VIT A R IG ANT his is in an era of unparalleled awareness for the art of cartooning. N R E V O G C M O E BY L Between George Bush’s uncanny ability to stimulate political cartoonists, the now-infamous Danish Muhammad cartoons, animated series based on strips like Aaron McGruder’s Boondocks, and—while much tamer—the domination of the box office by comic icons Spider-Man, Superman and Batman, more people are experiencing comics than ever before. One comic strip that can run the gamut of emotions produced by all the above is Keith Knight’s the K Chronicles, a unique foray into politics, pop culture and human emotions. Keith Knight is just as likely to reference Star Wars as he is to mention his mother, and in any given strip you may be treated to the lighthearted optimism of “Life’s Little Victories,” a theme that celebrates the times when the simple things in life go your way, or an unabashed send-up of Dick Cheney’s latest hunting misadventure. When you may least expect it, Knight can deliver a heart wrenching or heartwarming slice of life; whether it’s his wife’s cancer-scare (she’s okay), the death of an influential artist (like comic great Will Eisner) or a tribute to the people of the Gulf Coast. Knight’s not a Johnny-come-lately; some hanger-on to McGruder’s faux-provocativeness–he’s a seasoned professional creating comics for over twelve years. He started out as a caricature artist in his hometown of Boston and, once he moved to indie-comic mecca San Francisco, worked his way from ‘zine artist to full-fledged newspaper comics page contributor. Since the K Chronicles became entrenched in national and international publications, he’s started a second strip, (th)ink, a comic created in single panel style (a la a serious Far Side) meant to take on race and politics. He’s also illustrated a book called The Beginner’s Guide To Community-Based Arts, a book that tells the stories of several activists from across the country who use art to improve the life of their communities. The man’s got legs, as they say, and one method he’s used to accumulate fans is his slideshow, an indie-comics convention favorite. Knight hosts the show like a comedian, moving through pics of his strips and elaborating on their history like the college professor you always wished you had. ANTIGRAVITY has been on the Keith Knight train since the beginning–the K Chronicles was the first strip ever published in this magazine, and when an opportunity to host a slideshow presented itself we pounced on it. AG presents the Keith Knight slideshow in the latter part of June, and we spoke with Knight about growing up in Boston, working for ESPN and MAD, and some of his more controversial strips, like the one where he smoked crack with God. 19 antigravity: your new orleans music and culture alternative_ ANTIGRAVITY: Let’s talk about The K Chronicles a bit. What were some of your influences for the strip at the beginning of your career? How have those influences evolved? Keith Knight: Early influences include MAD, Garry Trudeau’s Doonesbury, Berke Breathed’s Bloom County, Bill Watterson’s Calvin and Hobbes, Warner Bros. cartoons (especially Chuck Jones, but also Robert McKimson’s stuff), the cartoons in Parliament/Funkadelic albums and Charles Schulz’s Peanuts. Then, after moving to San Francisco, I discovered the legacy of underground comics. Matt Groening, Nina Paley, Jaime Crespo, Pete Bagge, Robert Crumb, Harvey Pekar and Harvey Kurtzman, plus the humor of Paul Mooney, Richard Pryor and Bill Hicks helped shape the strip into what it is now. AG: How did growing up in Boston influence your cartoons? KK: Well, you’re totally influenced by your surroundings and Boston’s known as a pretty racist place, though you don’t really realize it when you’re growing up there. When you go someplace else they’re like, “Oh my God, you grew up in Boston, that must’ve been crazy.” I grew up with different types of people, so that was a big influence. And lobster rolls and the Red Sox. Hip-hop was a big thing, but they never let hip-hop groups play in Boston; it was pretty much banned. You had to go to Providence, Rhode Island to see a lot of bands and stuff. I remember Run DMC played at the Metro in ‘83, and Madonna played there too. AG: Was cartooning a big deal in the Boston area? KK: It was a big deal for me, obviously, but I don’ t know that it was a big deal in the area. My cousin Joel and my friend PJ used to do comics too. We’d all do the same characters, like it was our own company or something. I was influenced by them and I’m sure they were influenced by me. And by influenced I mean that they quit (laughs). I know I learned a lot from those guys. AG: When did you realize cartooning was what you wanted to do? KK: When I was a junior in high school I read Animal Farm in an English class. I had all these other books, Catcher in the Rye, one by Jack London, Treasure Island–I never read any of them, but I really liked Animal Farm. For some reason I could relate to farm animals. We had to do book reports and I told my teacher, “There’s no way I can do justice to this,” and he let me do a parody of Animal Farm in comic form. Instead of animals taking over a farm, I did students taking over my high school. I had myself, my friends and all these other people in it, and caricatures of teachers. Instead of rules like “four legs good, two legs bad,” it was like “under 18 good, over 18 bad.” The teacher loved it, and my only regret is that he scribbled over the whole thing. I got an A++, and he said I should be doing a syndicated cartoon strip. AG: What did that lead to? KK: It was the first time I’d heard “syndicate,” and was like, “whoa.” I had no idea about anything, so I did up a bunch of cartoons and went to my local paper and said, “I’m ready to be a cartoonist.” The guy was like, “You’re such a cute little boy, but we get our strips through a syndicate.” So, as a junior in high school I sent my strips off to a syndicate and never heard back (laughs). I got into my high school newspaper, then my college newspaper, then I moved to San Francisco and did a ‘zine, and then got into some papers and magazines out there. AG: What prompted you to move to San Francisco? KK: I had a job drawing caricatures in Boston that was the cushiest job in the world. You sit on your ass all day, in the sun, and it’s beautiful women all over the place. I was good at drawing gags and making people laugh, so I made a lot of money at a young age. In the late ‘80s I was making anywhere from $15 to $30 an hour and then meeting women, going on break during happy hour, just having a good time. There was a guy who worked at the caricature place for like 30 years. He was a very large man who sat there all the time, and I saw me and him there 30 years from then. He was like, “Get out now.” I don’t even think he said that, it might have been a vision I had. Then there was another artist there who was very good, and he’d get sent nationwide for jobs, and he got sent to San Francisco. He came back and said that it was a gigantic version of all the places I hung out at in Boston. When I got out of college I just saved over that last summer, then took a few thousand bucks to San Francisco and never looked back. AG: What are some of the differences in moral sensibilities in different parts of the country where your strips run? KK: There’s this East Coast mentality I have that’s way different than the California mentality. I think it helps that I live on the West Coast but have that East Coast mentality. A lot of people get that humor. The only way to describe it is that in California people have an insincerity almost, like “I’ll call you, blah blah blah” and you never get a call, where on the East Coast they’ll just say “Eff you, get out of my face.” That I miss, and I live vicariously through my comics. The places I have the most trouble running things are in San Francisco and Orange County, just over the Golden Gate bridge. There’s this kind of bizarre, uptight sensibility of “Oh no, we’re afraid of offending white people.” I drew myself smoking crack. It was a joke, and the fact that Charleston, North Carolina and all these places would run it and this one editor wouldn’t is just weird. Living out here, there’s almost an arrogance that everyone’s so open-minded that they have a stick up their butts. Again, at least on the East Coast they’ll tell you. I did this thing called “Cruel Joke To Play On a Black Jogger,” which is this white guy walking down the street and sees a black jogger pass by. The white guy screams “Thief!” The next panel the cops show up and start beating the jogger, That garnered more e-mails than I’d gotten in years. Tons and tons of e-mails and letters. People offering everything from their thoughts and stories to doctors from WebMD writing and a hospital in Boston offering their services. Amazing, nice letters. It was overwhelming, and I didn’t realize how many readers I had until that happened. I saved all of those, and some day I’m going to incorporate them into a slideshow. After 9/11, when I started questioning what George Bush was doing–some people just don’t believe you should question the government. AG: Was that feedback from actual readers or people who just stumbled upon it? You wouldn’t think people who read the strip on a regular basis would be that surprised. KK: You’d be surprised. There were people who wrote me saying that I shouldn’t do politics, or that I should watch my mouth. Some people were concerned. Granted, I did get more political after 9/11, but it’s not like I was doing something completely different than I was doing before. I’m sure if people looked back at what they wrote then they might be ashamed. AG: How’d you get your gigs at ESPN and MAD? KK: This is advice for any cartoonist coming up–it’s perseverance. I’ve been around for twelve years now, and people who grow up liking your strip then work at papers or magazines and they get into positions where they can hire you. The guy at MAD, Jon Bresman, was a fan who lived in Berkeley. He was an intern at MAD and rose up to editor. That’s one of the highlights of my career, being in MAD. It’s one of those magazines that, when people ask where I’m printed, you can tell them and they get it. ESPN happened because a friend of mine, Dave Eggers, worked on the magazine. We did cartoons for the same paper for awhile. They were looking for a cartoonist and he recommended me. When I talked to them I told them I was from Boston and grew up with the Red Sox (before they won the ‘04 World Series), so it may have been a little sympathy on their end. AG: What are some of the challenges in doing sports strips? KK: It’s funny you say that, because I’m on deadline now. Because the magazine comes out every two weeks, it’s got to be good ten days from now, so it can’t be of the moment. I did a strip about how Detroit was suddenly a big sports town–they’d just held the Super Bowl, the Red Wings were favored (to win the Stanley Cup), the Pistons are favored to go all the way, the Tigers are in first place, but all of a sudden the Red Wings get knocked out in the first round, the Pistons might get knocked out, and by the time the magazine comes out the Tigers may not be in first place. AG: Politically, how do you incorporate your views into the strips, and is there a worry that you might get too overbearing? KK: Sometimes you don’t know you’re being overbearing until it happens. I haven’t done too many political strips lately because I’m worn out by it. If someone had suggested all the things that have happened since 2000, how ludicrous would it have been? At this point, nothing would surprise me, even if they said they were grinding children in the White House basement and and the white guy’s walking away and whistling. People called selling the meat to McDonalds. I’m starting to focus on other me a racist. I’d actually done the strip a long time ago, and things because that’s so depressing and it doesn’t seem like it’s nothing happened, and reran it not long after the whole Danish going to change any time soon. So much stuff has happened, Muhammad cartoon thing, so I think people were bent out of who wants to become President next? shape about that. It happened in Colorado and on a college AG: It’s like the sports coach mentality. You don’t campus in Salem. The whole country got tight, I guess. want to be the guy who follows the guy, you want AG: And that was after the “Smoking Crack with to be the guy who follows the guy who followed God” strip. the guy. KK: That ran everywhere. KK: I might incorporate that into a strip soon. We hold our AG: So there are two strips with you smoking sports teams and coaches more responsible for their behavior crack… than we do our government. Grady Little got fired from the KK: Yeah. “Smoking Crack with God” was just so over the Red Sox because he didn’t take Pedro out early enough, but we top. The other one I wasn’t really smoking crack. I said, “Oh, don’t have that kind of accountability with our government. lookee here, all this crack and no one to smoke it with,” and it AG: You’ve been to New Orleans a number was me standing next to this giant rock. I did “Smoking Crack of times–what are some of your New Orleans with God” after because it was so over the top, and it’s me and experiences? God smoking crack. You’d think they wouldn’t run that one, but KK: I first came to New Orleans during an Association of I guess that’s less realistic than God hating people. I mean God Alternative Newsweeklies Convention. I was part of a group made crack, why wouldn’t he smoke it? of indie cartoonists that was being ignored by all the editors. AG: Besides the controversial ones, from what We’d all go out into the night and have an amazing time strips have you gotten the most feedback? drinking, partying and complaining. At the same time, my friend KK: I did a series of strips where my wife was diagnosed with a (and writer of the Beginner’s Guide to Community-Based Arts) tumor in her chest. The strips had her going in for the operation. Mat Schwarzman had just moved to town and was living in 20_antigravity: your new orleans music and culture alternative the Treme. I was staying there and checking out the Mardi Gras Indian Museum just around the corner and hitting a lot of local spots and meeting some amazing people. I was getting both the tourist and the local experience at the same time. I remember meeting Ray Nagin while he was campaigning for Mayor the first time. Man, it seems so long ago. Anyway, I fell in love with the city like everybody else does and came back a number of times for Jazz Fest and to work on the Beginner’s Guide. And I try to do New Orleans right when I mention the city in my strips. AG: You’re coming to New Orleans because of the Beginner’s Guide to Community-Based Arts. What’s the book about, and how did you get involved with it? KK: It was all Mat Schwarzman’s idea. The idea behind the book is that there are all these amazing artists around the country using their art to address community issues and create change, yet there was no book that encompassed the methods and celebrated the outcomes of what everybody was doing. He had me contribute to a sort of teaser version of the book that he could show to funders and it received some good feedback, so we started to move forward on the real version. Mat went around the country and interviewed different artists and organizations that used art to address and confront issues in their community. He transcribed the interviews, sent them to me and I formulated these comic strip stories from them. It was a five year project that was a grueling process, but it was worth it in the end. Since being released this past October, the book has been added to the curriculum of ten different colleges around the nation, including Harvard University and Columbia in Chicago. AG: What are some of the differences in drawing for the Beginner’s Guide and doing the K Chronicles or (th)ink? KK: Going beyond one page is neat, and I get to draw larger. Plus it wasn’t just coming from me. Mat interviewed people, and while it was a nightmare listening to all that tape, it was fun making a story out of it. I didn’t meet any of the artists until years after I’d finished the drawing, though I’d looked at tons of pictures. I picked up on things that I didn’t realize before, like their senses of humor. The best thing about it is that it brought me to New Orleans for the first time. AG: One of the more popular aspects to your convention appearances is your slideshow. How are these put together and how does the audience get to interact? KK: Well, I look for strips that read like I’m doing stand-up comedy. The drawings make it all the more effective. And I’ve done it enough to hone it to a smooth-running machine. Hopefully, the audience finds the strips funny, and I hope they think about stuff, too. I also have a post-slideshow Q & A that usually yields some really great questions. AG: Finally, when you get to New Orleans, what are you looking forward to the most? KK: Gosh, there are too many things. I think the biggest thing is reconnecting with all the folks I know and hearing from them how the rebuilding of New Orleans is going. I really want to hear the personal stories instead of the frustrating bullshit that we get in the mainstream media and political hot-head talk shows. And a few more: Verti Marte, Hubig’s pies, Jacque-Imo’s, Monday nights at Donna’s, WWOZ, the kids at YAYA, Mat’s dog, Crawfish boils, “Palmetto Bugs,” Blackened Catfish Nuggets, and that unique combination of vomit, urine, cheap liquor and squalor that is the odor of Bourbon Street. Friday 6/23 Keith Knight Presents a K Chronicles Slideshow, Handsome Willy s, 218 South Robertson St., (504) 525-0377, 7pm www.handsomewillys.com For more on Keith Knight, go to: www.kchronicles.com 21 antigravity: your new orleans music and culture alternative_ Kevin McShane Toupydoups #1-2 (Lobrau Productions) I magine a Hollywood where comics are bigger than movies... a place where Peter Parker is a bigger star than Tom Cruise. A town run not by movie studios, but by comic book publishers.” Now imagine that comic book characters have a life of their own, that they have to audition for parts in comics, that they might start out in a college humor strip as the equivalent of doing theatre work and then move out to Hollywood to try out for work in the “majors” of Image, DC and Marvel. That’s the high concept of Toupydoops, and it’s a pretty good one. Starting from this strong basic premise, Kevin McShane launches his new independent series with strong cartooning skills and whipsmart comic timing to provide one of the few potential indy breakouts in an industry dominated by multi-part crossovers of a continuity-bending nature. It’s pretty clear in reading Toupydoops that it is the outgrowth of Kevin McShane’s college comic strip into a comic book. The characters read like they came out of a college humor strip, being a man/bear cross and a guy who is either a man/bug or just has weird blue skin and antennae for no particular reason. They have a pet monkey who smokes and plays videogames and displays a bad attitude.They might as well have “look at us, we’re quirky” t-shirts on. Oddly enough, though, while this kind of quirkiness can easily read as forced or unfunny, McShane pulls it off in part because their stereotypical comic strip nature is part of the gag. These guys are bit players in the world of comics looking to make the big move up. Or at least, Toupydoops is–his roommate Teetereater (what is up with these names?) seems more like the kind of hangers-on exemplified by Turtle in HBO’s Entourage, supportive of their friends insomuch as they can make their friends famous and rich enough to not have to work anymore. With premise and characters firmly established in the first four pages of the book, including a new quirky character, flamboyantly fabulous landlord Auntie Nathan, McShane moves right into establishing the tone of the book. There’s a terrific one-page gag involving moving a couch that establishes his ability to tell a joke, and Nathan comes back to the couch later on to reinforce McShane’s timing and ability to pay off a setup. Then the first issue splits off, with Toupy going into the world of spoof comics and Teetereater battling it out with a six-foot cockroach in their apartment. While Toupy’s story is full of references to Superman and Vertigo (DC’s line of mature comics), Teeter’s covers the world of movies and videogames, with a dead-on evocation of Street Fighter II battles and a tossed-off Ghostbusters reference that works perfectly in context. Pop culture references can easily become tired, but when used to flavor the piece instead of being the whole point of dialogue, they work, and that’s what McShane serves up with his references here. You see, the references are never the point of the scenes in Toupydoops. The Street Fighter II echoes, with the cockroach borrowing Dhalsim’s moves as Mr. Bananas plays the game in the background, are accents on the amusing scene of a man battling it out with a giant cockroach. Superman is there to allow Toupy to make a fool out of himself, and to point out Toupy’s role in the new hierarchy of comic book stars. Toupydoops plays out like the pilot episode of a better-than-average sitcom, clearly establishing characters, premise and tone and providing plenty of laughs, not worrying too much about a grand over-arcing plot or even relationship arcs at this point. The relationships are saved for the second issue, where McShane starts to develop the book a little bit more as an ongoing concern. It’s still essentially a gag, one-off concept, making Toupydoops that rare creature, a comic that can be read as standalone issues, but it develops the romantic situation for the main characters and presents a new character who I think could become a regular in that department. McShane also skewers the L.A. club scene as effectively as he did breaking into the entertainment business in issue one and reinforces the dynamic between Teeter and Toupy, which is that ever-popular “good with the ladies/not-so-good with the ladies” dynamic. Issue two closes out with a four-page strip originally submitted to the Small Press Expo anthology and rejected, McShane suggests, “probably for being too awesome.” He’s being tongue-in-cheek, but he’s right, because this strip is a dead-on parody of Brian Bendis’s Fortune & Glory, showing Toupy and Teeter going around trying to sell the book. In fact, the description I quoted at the beginning of the review comes from their pitch. This four-pager perfectly nails Bendis’s style, spoofs Marvel Comics editor-in-chief Joe Quesada, DC Comics VP and Executive Editor Dan Didio and Spawn creator and Image Comics founder Todd McFarlane and ends on a great sight gag. It’s a great little bonus, and with that and two full issues under McShane’s belt, I feel pretty confident in predicting that Toupydoops has plenty of life in it as a funny book. The main weakness Toupydoops has, frankly, is the name, which is the name of the main character but sounds both offputting and overly goofy and does nothing to describe the book. Everyone that I’ve personally told about the concept of the book has responded by saying that it sounds like fun, but not one of them picked up a book named Toupydoops off the shelf thinking that the Hollywood/comics spoof I described might be contained within. There’s a certain whimsical fun to saying the name of the book once you know what it’s about, but as a marketing tool the name could probably use some adjustment. 22_antigravity: your new orleans music and culture alternative There are two issues of Toupydoops out so far, with another due in July. For more information on Toupydoops, you can check out http://www.lobrau.com/, which includes previews of #3 as well as early Toupydoops strips and other material. COMING ATTRACTIONS These comics aren’t out yet, and in fact won’t be hitting the market until July, but you might want to keep an eye out, because I think they’re going to be good. The Escapists #1 (Dark Horse) - Despite a remarkably impressive array of talent (they got Will Eisner, for God’s sake!) on the Adventures of the Escapist books from Dark Horse, I was never quite able to plug into Michael Chabon’s invented Golden Age-style hero and his escapades. Until the last issue, when Brian Vaughan, Phillip Bond and Eduardo Barreto ran the first installment of The Escapists, a meta story about a young comic book team trying to revive the Escapist character in modern times. This kind of thing has been done before, comics that focus on the comics makers, but the first chapter was just riveting stuff, and Bond and Barreto were bringing their A-game. Then the book was cancelled. The good news (especially for those, like me, who found the Escapist anthology a little pricey for its total entertainment value) is that The Escapists feature has been rescued to run as its own miniseries, with Steve Rolston and Jason Alexander picking up the art chores. The even better news for those who missed it is that the first issue of The Escapists, presumably reprinting that first chapter, is going to be available on its own for the bargain price of a buck. A great artist, the best writer in comics at the moment (for my money) on a story I’ve already read and can tell you for sure is great? For a dollar? What more do you need? A Frank Miller cover? OK then. You can have that too. Batman #655/Detective Comics #821 (DC) - If you were to ask me my ideal writers on Batman, I don’t think I could do much better than suggesting Grant Morrison on one book and Paul Dini on the other. I might have said Frank Miller, but now that we’ve seen All-Star Batman and Robin, we all know I would have been wrong. Morrison is the guy who can take seemingly any character and give it a fresh, likable spin, whether it’s Superman, the X-Men or less well-known players like the Guardian and Zatanna. Paul Dini is the guy who, alongside Bruce Timm and others, created what was probably the best Batman of the last 20 years with the animated series. If you’ve ever been a Batman fan, now is probably a good time to be reading the books. Wasteland #1 (Oni Press) - This will be only the third ongoing series that Oni has launched in its existence, which speaks well of their confidence in it. It’s by the team of Queen & Country: Declassified Volume 3, a story which for me surpassed creator Rucka’s Declassified Volume 2, and it’s got an interesting if non-specific apocalypse called “The Big Wet” which has left the world a bit of a desert. If you’re not sure about this book, the creators have also gone out of their way to provide handy preordering information. Such as a 21-page preview available in PDF, CBR and JPG format, sketches from artist Christopher Mitten, character bios by writer Antony Johnston... they’ve even got a theme song! Check it all out at http://www.onipress.com/ thebigwet/index.php. COMICS antigravity: your new orleans music and culture alternative _23 MPFREE COMPILED AND SPONSORED BY: Scared to download music from Kazaa or other services that could get you sued by big business? No worries here. These are 100% free mp3s from artists who know how to promote their music--by letting people hear some of it for free. So check these out and buy the album or see their show if you enjoy hearing it. Beirut ‒ Postcards From Italy Folky indiepop from Gulag Orkestar (Ba Da Bing! Records) Raz Mesinai (Badawi) ‒ The Burrow Experimental dub from Before The Law (Tzadik Records) Jimi Tenor ‒ Miracles (Alternative version) Jazzy lounge originally from Beyond the Stars; web exclusive track The Fiery Furnaces ‒ Single Again Psychedelic/electronic/New(er) Wave from EP, Rough Trade Records Orbit Service ‒ Sparrow Heavy headed, muted pop from Songs of Eta Carinae (Beta-Lactam Ring Records) Snowglobe ‒ Dry Bouncy psychopop from Oxytocin (Makeshift Music) Tom Vek ‒ I Ain t Saying My Goodbyes Lo‒fi disco‒rock/New(er) Wave from We Have Sound (Tummy Touch) Visit TWX for these free songs and others not listed here. TWX does not profit from the information provided on the blog or from the mpFree column. ANTIGRAVITY is not responsible for the content on The Witness Exchange. Please contact the site author if you are one of these artists and wish to have any links or files removed and your request will be honored immediately. Are you an artist with mp3s available on your web site or another free music service? If so, send an e-mail with your URL, along with a description of your sound (press clipping preferred), to: mpFree@antigravitymagazine.com. 24_antigravity: your new orleans music and culture alternative PROJECTIONS SPONSORED BY: CANAL PLACE CINEMA www.landmarktheatres.com (504) 363-1117 Art School Confidential Directed by Terry Zwigoff (United Artists) I n films such as the Robert Crumb documentary, Crumb, and his adaptation of the Daniel Clowes comic Ghost World, director Terry Zwigoff’s consistently given a voice to those our society marginalizes. Unfortunately, Art School Confidential, Zwigoff’s latest film written by Clowes, wanders off course and doesn’t seem to have the same clarity of vision demonstrated in his earlier works. The first half of Art School Confidential is a witty, snarky sendup of the fascinating world of art education. The film follows a young artist named Jerome (Max Minghella) as he enters the bewildering and fascinating world of art school. I studied art at an east coast liberal arts college and Art School’s take on this world is spot on. The life-drawing classes with nude models, the semi-pretentious critiques in which students regurgitate concepts from their text books and the 19 and 20-year-old kids trying hard to convince everyone that they have somehow glimpsed the world in a way that it has never been seen before all are ripe for derision and Zwigoff and Clowes take full advantage. One of the film’s best characters is a film major named Vince (Ethan Suplee from TV’s My Name is Earl) who gloriously either doesn’t care about or doesn’t get the whole art school aesthetic. Behaving like a mini Hollywood mogul and constantly barking into his cell phone, he is loud, crass and side-splittingly unsubtle. In one scene from his student film about a campus murderer, the clichéd tortured villain/maniac transparently screams, “I am Hell on Earth personified!” Sadly, there’s a second act to this film in which the focus completely shifts from the movie’s strength, making fun of the art world, to something no one in the audience cares about, a second rate murder plot. The audience visibly gave up on this storyline, and we may never know whether it was because of the hollow central performance by Minghella, or the ill-fated idea of inserting multiple homicides into a comedy about art school. ––James Jones Brick Directed by Rian Johnson (Focus) T ruth in advertising: The most enticing trailer of ‘06—a shadowy, smokewisped teaser for rookie director Rian Johnson’s teen-noir thriller Brick—has yielded the most exciting motion picture of the year. Flaunting the film’s two chief draws, a head-spinning invented vocabulary and a gaggle of scheming, scowling vixens, the preview smartly miniaturizes Johnson’s tightrope-toeing plot, which without spoiling too much involves bad drugs, a botched rub-out and droves of tough-talking, Bogie-approved rogues. The coup-de-grace here is the genius transposition of the beendone potboiler to a middle-class SoCal high school, a setting which lends the story a perverse, Dashiell-Hammett-meetsDylan-McKay fresh face. The anti-hero, a game, glib Joseph Gordon-Levitt (Third Rock From The Sun), finds his estranged girlfriend (Lost’s Emilie de Ravin) slain in the film’s arresting first shot, and soon is embroiled in a Big Sleep-like goose chase where motives are always ulterior and the truth lurks just out of reach. Engaging as the story and sly visual style are, the real lure on Brick’s hook is the language, an endlessly clever lexicon for the ages that’s deserving of its own fine leather binding. In Johnson’s verbiage, proper nouns and verbs equate to coded, single-syllable euphemisms, each exchange a rat-a-tat tête-à-tête (choice quotes: “I gave you Jerry to see him eaten, not to see you fed” … “The ape blows or I clam” … “Throw one at me, hash-head—I’ve got all five senses and I slept last night, that puts me six up on the lot of you”). Such celluloid swagger hasn’t been seen in a debut screenplay since Christopher McQuarrie’s The Usual Suspects, a stunning turn followed up by the eternally stupid The Way Of The Gun. So maybe we shouldn’t crown Rian Johnson the king of cinema cool-talk just yet. But damn if you won’t get knives in your eyes thinking of a more enjoyable trip to the theater. —Noah Bonaparte The Da Vinci Code Directed by Ron Howard (Columbia) I n a moment of divine clarity, Kurt Vonnegut once referred to the arcane symbols found on the back of U.S. currency, such as the gleaming eye hovering atop a pyramid on the one dollar bill, as “baroque trash.” Ron Howard’s The Da Vinci Code, a thriller rooted in theology, conspiracy and “symbology” (a word that doesn’t clear my spellchecker) is not necessarily baroque, but it is certainly engaging and delightful trash. The Da Vinci Code opens with a murder in the Louvre. Visiting lecturer and Professor of “Symbology,” Robert Langdon (Tom Hanks), is called to consult at the bizarre crime scene. The victim is the museum’s curator, who in his dying moments posed himself as Da Vinci’s classic Vesuvian Man. Codebreaker Sophie Neveu (Amelie’s Audrey Tautou), the curator’s granddaughter, arrives just in time to inform Langdon he is being implicated in the murder. She then helps him escape from the French policeman (The Professional’s Jean Reno) laying a trap for him at the murder scene. While being chased by the authorities and a self-flagellating albino monk named Silas (Paul Bettany), Robert and Sophie follow clues left by the curator and stumble onto a cover-up that may date back to the times of Christ. They enlist the help of religious scholar Leigh Teabing (Ian McKellen) to escape to London to find, you guessed it, the Holy Grail. The Da Vinci Code resembles another staple of summertime entertainment, the roller coaster, with its thrilling twists and turns. You see them coming but they’re fun nonetheless. The supposed controversy surrounding this film is baffling. The fact that anyone could get their shorts in a bunch over a silly pop entertainment like this just shows you how misguided and bored some people can be. It’s obvious that Tom Hanks gets it; his performance is his lightest in years, and at times you forget he’s even there at all. Bringing the Official Tom Hanks Acting A-Game (on full display in films like Philadelphia and Saving Private Ryan) to this popcorn flick would have made everyone look ridiculous, so he dials it down a bit. In fact, there’s a scene late in the film in which a character unexpectedly pulls a gun on Hanks’ Langdon, and his reaction suggests that he didn’t even realize the stakes were that high. Because of Hanks’ remoteness, this is really Tautou’s show. She has a history of playing whimsical characters that kind of teeter on the edge of sanity. Here she is called upon to be tough, intelligent, and calculating and she pulls it off. She has a great scene with the captured Silas where she slaps and beats him as he menaces her in his bonds. She coldly turns his faith on him, pointing out that according to his beliefs the blood on his hands has earned him a place in Hell. By the end of the scene she has startlingly transformed into a 90-pound bully. For all its mock-seriousness and pretentious subject matter, The Da Vinci Code is just plain fun. It’s briskly paced, captivating garbage and that is all it needs to be. To treat this movie as anything other than that is a waste of time. To quote Mr. Vonnegut once more, “We are here on earth to fart around, and don’t let anybody tell you different.” ––James Jones X-Men 3: The Last Stand Directed by Brett Ratner (20th Century Fox) C oming off a solid twomovie run, the Xfranchise returns for a third go-round with a story that melds classic X-Men tale The Dark Phoenix Saga with the idea that a cure has been found for mutants. The beauty of the first two films was that director Brian Singer treated the characters seriously, which kept the campy moments to a minimum and focused on story. Here, Brett Ratner (Rush Hour, Layer Cake) seems to want each character to have their own “special moment” and forgets that, when superheroes are running around in leather and hitting stuff, story is the only thing that prevents a laugh-fest. Plot points are rushed along, a major character dies off-screen (and, despite evidence that points to obvious foul play, no one questions the character’s disappearance for quite awhile), major changes to the status quo are switched back minutes after the big event—one has to wonder how, coming off a an above-average film like Layer Cake in which the characterization was great and the pacing spot-on, Ratner could make a film that more resembles Rush Hour than the source material that is so rich. Singer’s upcoming Superman Returns ignores Supes’ movie mythology after its second installment—it may be best to do the same with X-Men. ––Leo McGovern 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 The Fiery Furnaces Bitter Tea (Fat Possum) D SINCE 1969 oes Matt Friedberger ever sleep? Since 2003, the insanely prolific songwriter for this sibling duo has been pumping out an average of two 70-minute opuses (opusi?) a year. Bitter Tea, the latest addition to the Fiery Furnaces family, fuses together the best elements of the band’s past work, mainly the noodling prog-rock of 2004’s Blueberry Boat and the straightforward pop of 2005’s EP. Which sounds like the perfect union, right? Surprisingly, it’s not. Breezy little synth ditties like “Teach Me Sweetheart” and “Benton Harbor Blues” are constantly being dragged down into pits of murky sound-squalls and reverse vocals, wringing out all the bittersweet charm of the bouncy computerized beats and cartoonish tack pianos. The more experimental numbers, like “The Vietnamese Telephone Ministry,” fare even worse. The five-minute droner never develops beyond its weird musical patchwork of backwards looping and occasional talking narrative, rendering it less avantgarde and more just plain boring. The fact that these are some of the catchiest melodies the band has ever written, especially when tenderly sung by sister Eleanor, makes the album that much more frustrating. It’s like someone spray-painting a rose garden to make it more “arty.” Overall, Bitter Tea is not a bad Fiery Furnaces album – it’s a hell of a lot more enjoyable than 2005’s Rehearsing My Choir – it’s just not a great one. But at least we Fiery Fans can take solace in the fact that, hey, the guys at the manufacturing company are probably shrinking wrapping a new album as we speak. ANTIGRAVITY phoned Matt Friedberger to ask some hardhitting questions about the new album, but were so hypnotized by his encyclopedic musical knowledge, we ended up just lobbing softballs about Pete Townshend and the Beatles. NEW + USED MUSIC + MOVIES have to do with each other, but the 2nd song and the 9th song don’t necessarily have anything to do with each other. AG: Are you planning on writing more songs that are... I don’t know if “poppy” is the right word... MF: “Poppy” is the right word. We tried to make it poppy. Eleanor wanted it to be poppy. There are things on Bitter Tea that are like that. Though not really. Actually they’re not really like that at all. AG: I came across an interview you did where you talked about Pete Townshend, and I was pretty impressed by your rock history knowledge. You really know your shit. MF: It’s funny, I was talking to one of the people we recorded BitterTea with about Detroit, and he was talking about this certain type of Detroit guy who is just a rock fanatic. The stereotype is that they all just have huge record collections and know every little detail about rock music. They’ve got their specialties, of course, but they have a good knowledge of it all. And there are people like that all over, not just in Detroit, and all of them know a lot more than I do. AG: So you’re not one of those people? MF: Well, yes... no, I’m like that. I’m not a collector like that. I don’t have a comic book collection or a huge record collection. Where me and my sister grew up, the pop culture was still ‘60s and ‘70s rock, even though it was the late ‘80s. People still listened to Led Zeppelin. I didn’t, but that was still your background. So you knew all about it. When you were a kid, you liked the Bears, or the White Sox, or Michael Jordan, and then when you turned ten you liked rock music. And you put the same sort of fanaticism in that as you did in the stuff before. ANTIGRAVITY: Is there any concept to Bitter Tea? Matt Friedberger: Nope. There are lots of stories on it, but it’s not like Rehearsing My Choir. It’s a more normal record. The songs start and stop, and a song three places from it doesn’t have anything necessarily to do with the other songs, you know what I mean? Though maybe the one song goes straight into the next song and they 26_antigravity: your new orleans music and culture alternative YOUR ROCK ‘N’ ROLL HEADQUARTERS And that was the stuff you would have to have an opinion about. “Do you like the Beatles?” “No, they’re wimpy! I like Dio!” OK, you can say that. Or you can say, “No, I like the Beatles. They’re good!” So you get into that kind of bullshit. I mean, I like the Beatles, don’t get me wrong. AG: Speaking of the Beatles, you all have a song on that Rubber Soul tribute album. I just have to ask, why did you pick “Norwegian Wood?” MF: Well, they asked us to do “Norwegian Wood.” [Laughs] But it’s a good song. You know, the thing about John Lennon is, he is a much much better singer and performer than people give him credit for, and not nearly as good a songwriter as people give him credit for. Now he was a great songwriter, don’t get me wrong, but what he was good at was knowing what things would work for him. He knew how hard he had to write to produce a very good record – with him singing it and the Beatles playing it and George Martin producing it. He knew the sounds and recording techniques he wanted for his songs, and he left space for them. That’s what makes his songs so good. There’s a reason why there are no good cover versions of “Strawberry Fields Forever.” There’s a reason why people cover McCartney songs a lot more, and it’s not just because they’re the cheezy ones. That’s true and it’s also not true. McCartney songs have actual real tunes, in a different way than Lennon’s do. That’s my little John Lennon spiel. He was the best. Period. AG: I want to ask you about your live show. On your last tour, you re-arranged most of the songs from your albums and played them in one continuous set, sometimes even taking a melody from one song and putting in another, or singing the lyrics of one song over another song. It was pretty mind-blowing. MF: We do that for fun. It’s complicated to do, but also you don’t have to worry about trying to re-create the record. Some people think it’s lazy. But it’s not lazy, it’s just ridiculous. Let them try to re-write all their songs. It’s not easy. And for a tour, it works great, because you can just take out the parts of the songs that aren’t sounding good enough, and it doesn’t matter. So you can play just what you think are the good parts. AG: I read somewhere that you all have another album’s worth of material already written. MF: Yeah, we do. We were going to record a record real quick this [past] summer, but we decided that it wouldn’t make much sense because we’d still have to wait until after we’ve released the other two albums. ––Miles Britton (Read an uncut version of this interview on www.antigravitymagazine.com) Islands Return To The Sea (Equator) W hen I was a kid, I had a toy guitar that made really horrific noises, which some 1980s engineer probably imagined rock ‘n’ roll sounded like. And to this day I credit it as God’s grace that my parents didn’t strangle me with the thick plastic “strings” of that guitar when I would attempt to serenade them with my versions of “Louie Louie,” “Good Vibrations” or “Born in the USA. In many ways, this is exactly what Islands has done with Return To The Sea. The former members of the Unicorns have produced a record that sounds like adult music in the mind of a child and played it out note-perfect on toy instruments. The difference between me and Nick Diamonds and J’aime Tambeur is that their inner child has managed to produce some of the most precious and perfect pop music of the year. Every moment of Return To The Sea is captivating, from the nine-minute opener “Swans (Life After Death)” to the stoned calypso of “Don’t Call Me Whitney, Bobby” to Th’ Corn Gangg’s leftover “Where There’s A Will There’s A Whalebone,” which features a pair of rappers from Why? and the thickest bass line to come out of Montreal, um, ever. The departure of that cute, curly haired child from the Unicorns apparently left the remaining ‘Corns with loads of creative running room, and, as it turns out, they are apparently big fans of Paul Simon circa “Cecilia.” From top to bottom it’s as if some crazy Canadian beach party has broken out, with Canucks two-stepping all over the sand. Diamonds keeps careful watch from his lifeguard stand, hair oh-so-perfectly shading one side of his face while he muses mournfully (though with a bit of a grin) about cannibals, bones, ghosts, etc. That’s part of the brilliance of this record: Even though the music has matured, Diamonds does not stray from the youthful subjects of the Unicorns’ Who Will Cut Our Hair When We’re Gone. While the finished mash-up makes little to no sense, the bizarre lyrics and melancholy delivery keep things from sailing into Jimmy Buffett’s waters. Rest assured, this is not the only review that you will read of Return To The Sea, and you should be prepared to see more references to the Unicorns than you can stomach. But where the Unicorns fell short by alienating people with their Casio keyboards and too-cute album art, Islands grows up just enough to be the best scene that Wes Anderson deleted from The Life Aquatic. -–Marty Garner Lansing-Dreiden The Dividing Island (Kemado) O r, How To Get It Right. Lansing-Dreiden are not a band so much as a Miami/New York anonymous art collective pretending to be a corporation, and for this some of the few who have heard of them at all resent them right off the bat, citing the old case of Style v. Substance. But what jackasses like that (I’m gunning for you, Pitchfork’s Chris Ott) don’t realize is that this kind of style—the minimal art work, everything in black and white, the general pretentiousness— is its own substance. Besides, everyone knows that taking yourself really seriously is the new having-a-laugh. But, crucially, everything LD touches turns to gold. The artwork is gorgeous, the videos are amazing, the fiction is … interesting, and the music … mwaah! 2004’s The Incomplete Triangle was in three four-song parts: First the Mamas and the Papas run through the Judas Priest catalog, then Bauhaus play the quieter bits of the Velvet Underground’s oeuvre, then the Chameleons try their hands at some New Order songs, then it’s over. Vice LOVED it. And it shouldn’t have worked, really, none of this should, let alone all on one album, but LD have such a handle on their sound that they can basically do whatever they want and it will be theirs. They also write tremendous songs and hooks, end of story. And so now we have this year’s The Dividing Island, the self-titled opener of which begins as a Gentlemen Take Polaroids-era Japan b-side, throws in some shoegaze vocals, then suddenly explodes into the Beta Band reforming just to write a tribute to Dungen. Short of a track by track analysis, I can’t tell you much more than that. “Two Extremes” missed its chance to be the highlight of a John Hughes film soundtrack by a couple of decades, while “Dethroning the Optimyth” is basically sword metal. Yes, it’s all very over the top and, I’ll say it, pretentious, but it certainly sounds like they’re having a whole hell of lot more fun than White Rose Movement; it’s just up to you to decide whether or not it’s at your expense. Listen to the “woah yeah woah-oh yeahs” in “One for All” and just try not to laugh. With them. And unlike that aforementioned band, Lansing-Dreiden know that when making a great ‘80s influenced album, 4/4 beats, one-fingered keyboard lines, and a singer who sounds like he’s being anally raped are only half the battle. Best thing I’ve heard all year. Then again, I am a huge fan of 80s New Romantic. Japan,Visage, the Associates. All that. —Darren O’Brien Ray Davies Other People s Lives (V2) T he importance of Ray Davies can’t be understated in terms of his influence on all of Britpop—his jaunty songwriting has informed not just individual bands and performers, but entire genres. As the lead singer and guitarist of the Kinks, Davies helped churn out some of the most familiar and timeless melodies during the original British Invasion and beyond:“You Really Got Me,” “Sunny Afternoon,” “Village Green,” “Picture Book,” “Lola,” “Waterloo Sunset,” “Apeman,” “Super Sonic Rocket Ship,” “Better Things” … the list goes on and on. Following the disintegration of the Kinks in 1996, Ray Davies began writing and recording music for an eventual first ever solo-album. For the next 10 years, Davies was beset with bouts of inactivity and times of personal turmoil which culminated in a New Orleans mugging in 2004 that left him with a gunshot wound in the leg. However, Davies persevered and has at last released the album that was a decade in the making. Other People’s Lives is a leap from the familiar electronic crunch of the Kinks, showing that Davies’ interests also lie in varying styles outside the familiar Britpop lexicon. The sound is one of a matured singer/songwriter who delves into heartfelt crooning, hip-hoppish lyricism and fits of bossa nova: “Things Are Gonna Change” employs a big band feel with grand choruses; “Stand Up Comic” starts with stiff back beats and then sporadically adds unexpected saxophone and “Run Away From Time” is Davies’ best British imitation of American soul/rock. However, the best songs on the album are the ones that mix the new Davies with a bit of the old. “The Tourist,” a song that was written during Davies’ stay in New Orleans, has that quirky consistency that made the Kinks so wonderful. Plus, the tune strikes close to home as Davies laments the New Orleans tourist culture, spewing, “I’m just another tourist checking out the slums/With my plastic Visa drinking with my chums.” Another such Kinks-esque track is “Next Door Neighbor,” a song in which Davies explores the distractions of urban living in a way that is reminiscent of one particular previous Kinks project, Village Green Preservation Society. While not all of the songs hit square on their mark, Davies still retains that unmistakable voice and wit that makes even the less impressive tunes respectable.At 62, Davies proves why he’s still considered one of the most gifted songwriters in modern pop music. —Patrick Strange Drive-By Truckers A Blessing And A Curse (New West) I n Kennesaw, Georgia, minutes north of Atlanta, there is a store owned by a 70-yearold named Wild Man. Among the many items which Wild Man proudly sells is a used KKK uniform, several authentic Nazi armbands and grave markers, and countless anti-black t-shirts. Thirty minutes away, in urban Atlanta, is the Martin Luther King, Jr., Center, dedicated to the deceased civil rights activist. Among the many items which the gift shop in the King Center sells is the book I Have a Dream, “non-violence OR non-existence” bracelets, and countless equal rights t-shirts. Tourists can see both of these places on the same broiling Atlanta day if they are willing to make the drive. Most Southerners don’t have to work that hard. Such, as the Drive-By Truckers have been known to say, is the duality of the Southern thang. For several years, the Truckers’ stock and trade has been this exact topic: the relationship between dark and light in Southern culture. The duality of the Southern thang. Light and dark, beauty and dirt. A Blessing And A Curse finds the Truckers no longer painting broad strokes of Southern culture but individual portraits of death, poverty, drugs and depression that could be from anywhere in the U.S. but still sound better when played with a Southern accent. “Feb 14” brings to mind ‘80s punk along the lines of the Replacements moreso than anything by the Allman Brothers. The twangy Southernisms of Decoration Day and the perfect Dirty South are still present, of course, but the focus is no longer on geography but sociology. Each song is a vignette of some poor wretch from Dixie, whether it be the father in “Little Bonnie” who thinks that his daughter’s death is divine retribution or the widowed husband in “Space City” who’s too proud to cry in public. A Blessing And A Curse falls into the fine tradition of Neil Young’s Tonight’s The Night: beautiful albums too dark to see through. After all of this darkness, though, Patterson Hood closes the record by reminding us that “to love is to feel pain” before he moans, half-convinced, “It’s great to be alive.” The South has risen again, and this time they’re fighting with soul. ––Marty Garner Phoenix It s Never Been Like That (EMI) B rainless blockbusters and pristine pop records may seem a small consolation for spiking temperatures and stifling humidity, but from insufferable summers you take whatever entertainment you can get. That said, Tom Cruise’s sanity and shaky foreign relations notwithstanding, space out once again to Mission: Impossible III and, when you’re finished, bliss out to France’s aphrodisiac house band Phoenix. The surprising former signaled the arrival of the annual summer movie season; were there a similarly recognized period for pop music, this fantastic third offering from the latter would have done just the same. Phoenix has always had an inimitable talent for making memorable retro-mod dance tunes—check the unfuckwithable single “If I Ever Feel Better” from the band’s debut United—but they’ve always been buried beneath overly slick electro production and a preening, distinctly Parisian aesthetic. Not here: Saying fuck-all to narcissism and bad luck, It’s Never Been Like That breaks all the mirrors, cranks down the hard top and steps firm on the gas. Guitars are the order of the day, replacing the group’s favored digital synths, and “grininducing” only begins to express the amphetamine pop that follows. Irrepressibly catchy singles “Long Distance Calls” and “Consolation Prizes” are among the year’s top tracks, their exuberant skips and stops recalling the new Belle & Sebastian joining up with the old Strokes, yet they may not be the best songs on their side of the album. Vying for that honor are the beach-trip sing-along “Rally” and the nostalgic roller-rink jangle of “One Time Too Many,” the latter’s sweet shuffle sure to get lodged in your gray matter for days. Side B is almost as engaging—excepting the limp, Scissor-Sistersminus-the-gay disco/rock of “Courtesy Laughs,” glaring only because everything else here is so over-the-top inspired. Listen to the record on repeat long enough and even that misstep starts to sound planned, like a requisite breather between the all-too-regular brilliance that surrounds it. Longtime Phoenix fans are going to freak out over this record, and those who’ve never experienced the band’s infectious music have no better place to begin. After all, it’s never been like this. —Noah Bonaparte MORE REVIEWS ON PAGE 28 27 antigravity: your new orleans music and culture alternative_ White Rose Movement Gnarls Barkley St. Elsewhere (Downtown) Kick Pearl Jam Pearl Jam (J) (Independiente) F resh off his collaboration with MF Doom, DJ Danger Mouse has teamed up with Goodie Mob’s CeeLo to form Gnarls Barkley, a duo vastly different from – and arguably more eccentric than – DangerDoom. Aside from sharing one member, in fact, these two groups are almost nothing alike. Where the former melded hip hop and Adult Swim, this album brings in some Al Green era soul feel and mixes it with some sharp, funky beats. The addition of CeeLo’s vocals (sometimes he sings, sometimes he raps and sometimes both) brings to mind old school OutKast and André 3000’s solo work. Heavy on vocals and filled with instrumental flourishes that require close listening (headphones are optimal), St. Elswhere defies easy categorization as it bends expectations and melds genres. Case in point: “The Boogie Monster,” a song that is, unsurprisingly, about a boogie monster. As the narrator says, “I used to wonder why he looked familiar/ Then I realized it was a mirror/And now it is plain to see/ The whole time the monster was me.” The silly lyrics are belied by a slow soulful groove, and this mix seems to define what Gnarls Barkley is trying to aim for: a little frivolity in the vocals mixed with some seriously ornate instrumentation. Further evidence of their idiosyncratic tastes (as if any was needed) is a cover of the Violent Femme’s “Gone Daddy Gone,” which comes in out of left field but somehow manages to sound just right. St. Elsewhere includes a bit of everything, and because of this it can’t be easily encapsulated—it’s a little funk, a lot of soul and some hip-hop thrown in. —Jared Kraminitz I ’m going to lay whatever credibility I may have on the line here and admit that I am a huge fan of ‘80s New Romantic. Japan, Visage, the Associates. All that. So, theoretically, I should be in seventeenth Heaven, what with the ‘80s resurgence that seemingly has no end, which is just fine by me. Unfortunately, no one seems to be getting it quite right and making anything that can stand proudly among its ancestors, or that will even be remembered for the naughties rehash in the 20/20s. There’s Interpol, but after that? Franz Ferdinand are now officially annoying; you cannot look me in the eyes and tell me you can listen to the Bloc Party album all the way through; and the Bravery/Killers have a couple good tunes between them, but anyone who writes, records, and still plays live a song with the chorus, “It’s indie rock ‘n’ roll for me” … well, I really worry about their quality control. So now White Rose Movement, a London quintet with haircuts you could open your mail with, a hot-chick synthesist, and—clutch—super-duper-producer Paul Epworth (Bloc Party, the Futureheads, Maximo Park, every band in this category). If you were paying attention last summer, you’ll know “Love Is a Number,” the still-terrific bit of synth/glam/disco that could only be the highlight of debut album Kick. The fact is, every song here taken by itself would blow some minds, but when collected and sequenced one after the other, we notice a distinct lack of depth, and man it gets old. These songs might as well not have names, they’re so indistinguishable, even after the umpteen listens I’ve given it. It’s quite a shame that an album full of good, sleazy, moody, synth-rock songs should be so impenetrable, but if you happen to have a love for Depeche Mode, Gary Numan, and Nine Inch Nails, and—clutch—own an iPod, this is something you’ll want. —Darren O’Brien 28_antigravity: your new orleans music and culture alternative I must be honest. I remained a devoted fan of Pearl Jam long after Ten went the way of the Meatpuppets and semiaccountable governments. Vs., Vitalogy, No Code, Yield, even Binaural got play in my high school days and later on in all the ratinfested dorm rooms, soiled apartments and Sony Walkmans of my post-adolescence. Granted, there was a steady decline in the novelty of the Pearl Jam catalogue as it grew (although Vitalogy is aging surprisingly well), but I guess my depressive personality and introverted nature won out.Vedder was, and still is, just so filled with anger and self-deprecation—something to which a boy like me could relate.With their new album, Pearl Jam seems to have recaptured some of what made them so iconic a decade ago. I’ve heard people say that the new album is reminiscent of Ten and such a comparison is misleading.This is not Ten, nor is it as good. To expect any band to duplicate the timely urgency of “Alive,” the vernal audacity of “Evenflow” or the confessional power of “Black” and “Release” is an impossible request. What the latest record does accomplish is a return to material consistency and straight forward (post?) grunge rock ‘n’ roll. Crashing drums, vintage McCready guitar riffs and patented Vedder wailings are aplenty on this one. And as long as we are on the subject of Vedder’s vocal chords, it must be said that the latest project resituates his voice as the compositional center piece. It’s not a bad thing either. As always, some songs work better than others in utilizing his signature voice: “Parachutes” is a slow acoustic strum that allows Vedder to do his deep, dark massaging, and “Come Back” is a Pearl Jam-does-blues tune that reveals just how wonderfully plaintive Vedder can be. All in all, the album shows a matured Pearl Jam that has left much of the self-hatred and metaphysical philosophizing behind. What’s left is a solid record that keeps to the basics of unadorned rock. Alas, I guess the teenage angst in me has finally died. And good riddance. —Patrick Strange PREMONITIONS VENUE GUIDE: 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 Circle Bar 1032 St. Charles Ave., (504) 588-2616 www.circlebar.net D.B.A. 618 Frenchmen St., (504) 942-373 www.drinkgoodstuff.com/no Goldmine Saloon 701 Dauphine St., New Orleans, (504) 586-0745 Handsome Willy’s 218 South Robertson St., (504) 525-0377 www.handsomewillys.com The High Ground 3612 Hessmer Ave., Metairie, (504) 525-0377 www.thehighgroundvenue.com 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 McKeown’s Books & Difficult Music 4737 Tchoupitoulas, (504) 895-1954 One Eyed Jacks 615 Toulouse St., (504) 569-8361 www.oneeyedjacks.net The Republic 828 S. Peters St., (504) 528-8282 www.republicnola.com Sip Wine Market 3119 Magazine St., (504) 894-7071 www.sipwinenola.com Shiloh 4529 Tchoupitoulas, (504) 895-1456 Tipitina’s (Uptown) 501 Napoleon Ave., (504) 895-8477 (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 SOGO Live 150 Mayflower St., (225) 387-0321 www.sogolive.com The Spanish Moon 1109 Highland Rd., (225) 383-MOON www.thespanishmoon.com The Varsity 3353 Highland Rd., (225)383-7018 www.varsitytheatre.com THURSDAY 6/1 Walter Wolfman Washington, d.b.a., 10pm Sunday, 6/11 Thursday, 6/1 I Tell You What, Shiloh Hello Asphalt, Stephanie & the Whitesocks, Radionation, Sustenance, Howlin’Wolf, 9pm, $7 Tin Men, d.b.a., 10pm 17 Poets! A Weekly Series, Goldmine Saloon DJ T-Roy, Shiloh Largely Ironic Karaoki, Red Star THURSDAY 6/8 Thursday, 6/8 CEX, the Love of Everything, the Republic, 8pm, $9 FRIDAY 6/2 Friday, 6/2 Lifehouse, Rocco Deluca, the Burden, House of Blues, 7pm, $22.50 38 Special, House of Blues Otis Gibbs, d.b.a., 6pm Matt Lionett, the Whigs, Will Hoge, Howlin’ Stanton Moore/Robert Walter Duo, d.b.a., Wolf, 9pm, $10 10pm, $5 The Gourds, Chelsea’s Cafe 17 Poets! A Weekly Series, Goldmine Saloon The Benjy Davis Project, Varsity Theatre DJ T-Roy, Shiloh Starlight Mints, Dios Malos, Project Octopus, Friday, 6/9 One Eyed Jacks FRIDAY 6/9 Wheatus, Meriwether, the High Ground, 6:30pm, $8 One Reason, Hello Asphalt, the Red Beards, the Hot Club of New Orleans, d.b.a., 6pm Big Top, 7pm, $5 Liquidrone, d.b.a., 10pm, $5 Edwin McCain Band, Garrison Starr, Varsity DJ Real, Shiloh Theatre The Curbs, Cat Jump!, Red Star Steel Pulse, House of Blues, 7pm, $28.50 Hot Club of New Orleans, d.b.a., 6pm Saturday, 6/3 Juice, d.b.a., 10pm, $5 SATURDAY 6/3 DJ Real, Shiloh Happy Talk Band, Chappy, Marcel Flisiuk art The Cassettes, Red Star opening, the Big Top, 6pm, FREE Pits vs. Preps CD Release, Parabellum, SATURDAY 6/10 Saturday, 6/10 Manwitch, Howlin’Wolf, 9pm, $5 Susan Cowsill, Carrollton Station The Junior League CD Release, Circle Bar, 10pm, The Country Teasers, Groch Fock, MC $5 Tracheotemy, One Eyed Jacks Birdfinger, the American Tragedy, Losing Ana, Teena Marie, House of Blues, 7pm, $42.50 Barisal Guns, the Howlin’Wolf, 9pm, $7 John Boutte, d.b.a., 7pm Edwin McCain Band, Garrison Starr, House of DJ Matic, Shiloh Blues, 8pm, $20 Indie Rock Dance Party, Red Star New Orleans Filmmakers Presents: Aperture, featuring work by Kevin Barrace, Todd Voltz, SUNDAY 6/4 Sunday, 6/4 Charlie Brown, Jason Vowell, Christopher Brown and music videos from Morning 40 Yakuza, Dysrhythmia, Behold the Arctopus, Federation, Dannell Booker, The Jesus and One Eyed Jacks Charlie Show, Zeitgeist, 8pm Teena Marie, House of Blues, 7pm, $42.50 Foxy Shazam, StatuesCryBleeding, Arcane Thumbscrew, Abacabb, the High Ground, Theory, Bleed Vader, the High Ground, 6:30pm, 6:30pm, $6 $6 Linnzi Zaorski, d.b.a., 9pm John Boutte, d.b.a., 7pm Sophisticats & Sophistikittens, d.b.a., 11pm, $6 MONDAY 6/5 Monday, 6/5 DJ Matic, Shiloh Indie Rock Dance Party featuring The Honored Tiny Hawks, Handsome Willy’s, 6pm, $5 Guests, Red Star Louisiana Ska & Punk Presents: Authority Sunday, 6/11 Zero, OPM, 6-Pack Deep, Rotolo’s, 5:30pm, SUNDAY 6/11 $10 Jeff & Vida, d.b.a., 10pm Gal Holiday & Her Honky Tonk Revue, d.b.a., 10pm TUESDAY 6/6 Tuesday, 6/6 Quien Es Boom, We the Living, Project Color 3, Shiloh Black Sabbath Tribute Night featuring Potpie and appearances by Elecrical Spectacle’s MONDAY 6/12 Monday, 6/12 Mike Mayfield and Anton Gussoni, Klezmer All-Stars, Chef Menteur, Shatner, the Big Top, Secret Agent Bill, Dirty Dingus, the High Ground, 8pm, $8 6:30pm, $6 Die Rotzz, Pallbearers, Circle Bar, $5 Washboard Chaz Blues Trio, d.b.a., 10pm VH1 Soul Presents: Anthony Hamilton, House Quien es, BOOM, Red Star of Blues, 7pm, $35 Tuesday, 6/13 OTEP, the Parish @ House of Blues, 8pm, $13 TUESDAY 6/13 Johnny Vidacovich Duo, d.b.a., 10pm Sip ‘N Spin, Sip Wine Market The Know How, the Big Top Cabo Wabo Presents: Sammy Hagar, the Wabos, WEDNESDAY 6/7 Wednesday, 6/7 House of Blues, 7pm, $37.50 The Absence, the High Ground, 6:30pm, $6 Soul Rebels Brass Band, Howlin’Wolf, 9pm, $7 Johnny Vidacovich Duo, d.b.a., 10pm Greg Dull’s Twilight Singers w/ Mark Lanegan, Sip ‘N Spin, Sip Wine Market One Eyed Jacks Billy Lusso & the Restless Natives, Shiloh Dash Rip Rock, Carrollton Station Jeff Klein, One Eyed Jacks WEDNESDAY 6/14 Wednesday, 6/14 VH1 Soul Presents: Anthony Hamilton, House of Blues, 7pm, $35 Wade Bowen, Varsity Theatre Steven Seagal, Thunderbox, JJ Bilmour, House of Blues, 7pm, $20-$23 is whole career, Steven Seagal has been defined by dizzying directives: He’s Above The Law, but Under Siege; both Into The Sun and Out For Justice. Exhausted of prepositional phrases, the ponytailed pariah took to adjoining his existing titles (hence, 2003’s Out For Justice/ Hard To Kill hybrid Out For A Kill). Once that got old, Lt. Casey Ryback did what any black-belted asskicker approaching 50 would do: He took up fusion music. In 2004, Seagal released his debut, Songs From The Crystal Cave, a story of one man’s quest to punish the men who killed his fam ... no, that was Hard To Kill, wasn’t it? Damn—seems we’ve never listened to Songs From The Crystal Cave. But it’s by Steven Seagal and it’s called Songs From The Crystal Cave, so we’re going out on a limb and saying it’s both Above Criticism and Beyond Reproach. Happy? -–Noah Bonaparte H (Continued) Wednesday, 6/14 Don’t Die Cindy, Adeline, Infinite Hours, the High Ground, 6:30pm, $6 Walter Wolfman Washington, d.b.a., 10pm El Kaboom, Shiloh Largely Ironic Karaoke, Red Star THURSDAY 6/15 Thursday, 6/15 Big Bad Voodoo Daddy, House of Blues, 7pm, $20-$22.50 Zoso, the Republic, 8pm, $10-$12 Brian Lee, d.b.a., 10pm 17 Poets! A Weekly Series, Goldmine Saloon DJ T-Roy, Shiloh Crawling, Kings, Red Star FRIDAY 6/16 Friday, 6/16 Damiera, Judge Genius, Howlin’Wolf, 9pm, $7 The Original Superstars of Jazz Fusion w/ Bobbi Humphrey, Jean Carne, Jon Lucien, Ronnie Laws, Roy Ayers, House of Blues, 6:30pm, $30 Fatter Than Albert, Razabari Sumthing, A Billion Earnies, the High Ground, 6:30pm, $6 Hot Club of New Orleans, d.b.a., 6pm The Fessters, d.b.a., 10pm, $6 Groovesect, DJ Real, Shiloh Terror of the Sea, the Brass Bed, Red Star SATURDAY 6/17 Saturday, 6/17 The Coup, the Parish @ House of Blues, 9pm, $12 Blockhead, Shiloh John Boutte, d.b.a., 7pm Brian Seeger & The Gentilly Groove Masters, d.b.a., 11pm, $5 29 antigravity: your new orleans music and culture alternative_ Outbreak, the High Ground, 6:30pm, $10 (Continued) Saturday, 6/17 Walter Wolfman Washington, d.b.a., 10pm Homegrown Designs Presents: Blockhead, DJ Signify, DJ Wizdum, Shiloh The Public, the Tomatoes, the City Life, One Eyed Jacks Indie Rock Dance Party featuring the Southern Backtones, Red Star John Hiatt, North Mississippi All Stars, House of Blues, 7pm, $32.50 Th’ Legendary Shack*Shakers, the Parish @ House of Blues, 7pm, $10 Linnzi Zaorski, d.b.a., 9pm THURSDAY 6/22 Jimmy Horn, d.b.a., 9pm Abner, Project Color 3, Smiley With a Knife, Thursday, 6/22 Shiloh FRIDAY 6/23 MONDAY, 6/26 Monday, 6/26 Lamb of God, Children of Bodom, Thine Eyes Bleed, House of Blues, 7pm, $22-$25 Friday, 6/23 Jeff Albert Quartet, d.b.a., 10pm ANTIGRAVITY PRESENTS: A K Chronicles Slideshow by Keith Knight, Handsome Willy’s, 7pm (see feature, page 19) Todd Barry, One Eyed Jacks MONDAY 6/19 Monday, 6/19 Band of Horses, Mt. Egypt, the Can’t See, the Parish @ House of Blues, 9pm, $12 D.R.I., Subzero, Darkroom Drop Dead Gorgeous, Inked in Blood, Stand Up NOLA Presents: Todd Barry, One Scars of Tomorrow, Calico System, Eyed Jacks Darkroom Deadboy & the Elephantmen, Chelsea’s Cafe Andy J Forest, d.b.a., 10pm Hot Club of New Orleans, d.b.a., 6pm TUESDAY 6/20 Tuesday, 6/20 Rotary Downs, d.b.a., 10pm, $5 The Fish Don’t Carry Guns Tour w/ Icon the Mic King, Dos Noun, Educated Consumers, Roger Clyne, the Peacemakers, the Parish Fishr Pryce, Shiloh @ House of Blues, 8pm, $10 Man Alive, the Wedding, Minutes Too Far, Palo Viejo, Maneja Beto, Red Star the High Ground, 6:30pm, $8 Saturday, 6/24 SATURDAY 6/24 Johnny Vidacovich Duo, d.b.a., 10pm Sip ‘N Spin, Sip Wine Market ANTIGRAVITY PRESENTS: A 2nd Sublime Lens, Shiloh Anniversary show featuring: Deadboy & the Rent Night, Red Star Elephantmen, Ballzack, One Eyed Jacks, 10pm, WEDNESDAY 6/21 Wednesday, 6/21 $10 Rasputina, House of Blues, 9pm, $15 John Boutte, d.b.a., 7pm Soul Rebels Brass Band, Howlin’Wolf, 9pm, DJ Matic, Shiloh $7 Indie Rock Dance Party featuring Scarlet Dash Rip Rock, Carrollton Station Speedster, Red Star Bane, Modern Life is War, This is Hell, ��������������� ����������������������������� ����������� ���� Sunday, 6/25 Largely Ironic Karaoke, Red Star Groovesect, Shiloh Largely Ironic Karaoke, Red Star 17 Poets! A Weekly Series, Goldmine Saloon DJ T-Roy, Shiloh Sunday, 6/18 The Comfies, Red Star SUNDAY 6/18 Groovesect, Shiloh SUNDAY 6/25 ��������������� ������������������������� ����������� ���������������������� ��������������������� ����������� ��������������� ���������� ������������������������� ������������������� 30_antigravity: your new orleans music and culture alternative TUESDAY 6/27 Tuesday, 6/27 Legendary Pink Dots, the Parish @ House of Blues, 8pm, $10-$12 Soilent Green, the Acacia Strain, Demiricious, the High Ground, 6:30pm, $10 Johnny Vidacovich Duo, d.b.a., 10pm Sip ‘N Spin, Sip Wine Market WEDNESDAY 6/28 THURSDAY 6/29 Thursday, 6/29 Merry Go Drown, Howlin’Wolf, 9pm, $7 Joe Krown Organ Combo, d.b.a., 10pm DJ T-Roy, Shiloh The Moonlight Towers, Red Star FRIDAY 6/30 Friday, 6/30 The Modern Day Saint, the Silent Game, the High Ground, 6:30pm, $6 Hot Club of New Orleans, d.b.a., 6pm Egg Yolk Jubilee, d.b.a., 10pm, $6 DJ Real, Shiloh SATURDAY 7/1 Saturday, 7/1 Morning 40 Federation CD Release, One Eyed Jacks Wednesday, 6/28 David Dondero, Tilly and the Wall, Spanish Moon Walter Wolfman Washington, d.b.a., 10pm WTUL 91.5 FM TULANE UNIVERSITY • NEW ORLEANS www.wtul.fm WE’RE BACK ON THE AIR! Music is the doctor. Welcome home! Red Hot Chili Peppers and Duran Duran join the ritual. Full line-up will be announced in the coming weeks October 28-29 New Orleans On Sale Now at voodoomusicfest.com