Thursday, November 27, 2014

This week's hot concerts


Kat Dahlia
Friday  9 p.m., Chop Shop, 399 E. 35th St., $10-$12, www.chopshopnoda.com
On her single "Gangsta" the Miami-based, Cuban-American artist comes off as a sassy rapper and a deep folk singer with a touch of Shakira. On the lighter, swagger-heavy single "Crazy" (No. 3 on iTunes’ Latin chart) she’s more Michelle Rodriguez-meets-Nelly-Furtado. Her full range will be revealed when her debut album drops in January.

Groove 8 After Thanksgiving Party
Saturday  5 p.m., Double Door, 1218 Charlottetown Ave., $12, www.doubledoorinn.com  
The Charlotte jazz funk octet (whose members have gone on to play with Prince and Fleetwood Mac) celebrates its tenth anniversary with an eclectic concert and potluck that promises surprise guests and new songs. Moonshine Racers, the Josh Daniel/Mark Schimick Project, New Car Caviar: A Jamgrass tribute to Pink Floyd, Coddle Creek, and the Chemist also play.


Anna Rose
Tuesday  9 p.m., Evening Muse, 3227 N. Davidson St., $20, www.eveningmuse.com
With a flowery name, you might expect a demure folkie or Disney princess (her dad is Disney songwriter Alan Menken). But the confident New York rocker is a gritty guitarist and soulful singer slinging funky electric riffs and belting hard rock, blues, and adult pop on her latest album "Behold a Pale Horse." With Howie Day.

French Montana/Jeremih
Wednesday  8 p.m., The Fillmore, 1000 NC Music Factory Blvd., $33.58, www.livenation.com 
The Kardashian connection has probably done more to make him a household name than his many guest raps ever will, so Moroccan-American rapper French Montana is striking while his name is hot. He headlines the Set It Off Tour with another go-to collaborator, Jeremih. Both are anticipating the release of new albums.

Death (DTA Tours)/Obituary
Thursday  7 p.m., Tremont, 400 W. Tremont Ave., $22-$25, www.tremontmusichall.com  
The death of founding vocalist Chuck Schuldiner from brain cancer in 2001 put an end to the influential death metal stalwart, but some of the surviving members formed this live tribute to continue his legacy. Death to All teams with fellow sunshine state death metal vets Obituary, who is celebrating its well-received new album "Inked in Blood," Massacre, and Rivers of Nihil.


Valient Thorr
Thursday  8 p.m., Chop Shop, 399 E. 35th St., $10, www.chopshopnoda.com
The globetrotting Carolinians are one of the best bands touring in any genre. It’s still building its audience at home, wowing crowds with over-the-top evangelical metal, squealing guitar solos, rapid fire riffs, and blatant hooks that aren’t afraid of a little cheese. Scowl Brow, the Bleeps, Hungry Girl, Animals and Swell Friends make for a strong bill.


Alexz Johnson
Thursday  9 p.m., Double Door, 1218 Charlottetown Ave., $10, www.doubledoorinn.com
The Canadian TV and film star of “Final Destination 3” and “Instant Star” (where she wrote much of the music in addition to starring in the series) raised $50,000 toward her fan-funded new album "Let `Em Eat Cake," which is a darker, bluesier, broader and more polished record than the Brooklyn transplant’s previous work.


Gates
Thursday  9 p.m., The Milestone, 3400 Tuckaseegee Rd., $8, www.themilestoneclub.com
The New Jersey post-rock combo’s expansive new album "Bloom & Breathe" plays like an emo Explosions in the Sky. Guitar lines climb and intertwine like musical ivy against dynamics-driven, swelling masculine angst, and stop/start tempos. Fans of Charlotte’s defunct HRVRD should take note.



Saturday, November 22, 2014

My 5 year old has a new internet radio show

Sunday marks the premier of my son’s new internet radio show. I really didn’t think I’d be making this announcement so soon. He’s only 5. 

The Devo Radio Show, which airs at 5 p.m. Sunday on Plaza Midwood Community Radio, isn't really a kid's show. It just happens to be hosted by a kindergartener who has such a deep knowledge of rock n’ roll that, once a friend at PMCR clued into it, it seemed only natural for him to share his passion and interest and get some broadcasting experience.

I can see where you might think, "Oh, this woman is clearly humoring her child," but I had almost nothing to do with the show getting on the air. Devo chooses all the music, does all the commentary - aside from his brother introducing his pick - and my husband records and edits it to fit in an hour block. You see if you let him, Devo will go on and on about the Who, the Ramones, Kiss, Neon Trees, Cage the Elephant, Rancid and whatever other band he’s into, naming dates, band members, and other facts he's memorized.

I guess I did have something to do with that.

When I found out I was pregnant with him I started keeping a journal where I recorded what concerts I went to and what I was listening to as I was writing - usually on Shuffle to get an even mix. After he was born I kept it up, making iPod mixes and seeing what songs resonated with him. I continued this process for his little brother, who has much more eclectic tastes (ABBA, Phantogram and Against Me! are favorites). I considered it my unscientific study of how what we hear as infants and toddlers inform our tastes as adults. I’ll continue this “study” as he grows up.

He is a mini me in a lot of ways. I began teaching him rhythm listening to Alkaline Trio’s "Calling All Skeletons" in his car seat at about 18 months. The first things constantly on repeat and performed in our living room were "Run" by a rocking hip-hop duo called the Knux and "Diane" by the defunct Chicago power pop trio Material Issue. The latter was because his teacher was named Diane and I started singing it to him one day. That’s all it takes.

Blur’s “Song 2” popping up on Shuffle led to an obsession that included naming action figures after the band. He pontificates about the stronger versions of certain Blur tracks (remix vs. original, seriously).

I was singing "Rockaway Beach" in anticipation a beach trip and that opened the floodgates. He became Joey Ramone. He wore nothing but jeans and t-shirts for a few months. I had to buy him a leather jacket (fake of course). Our family dressed as the Ramones for Halloween. And when asked if he’d rather go to Disney or make a pilgrimage to see the Ramones' graves, he - in all seriousness - chose the Ramones.

That’s just scratching the surface. His latest obsessions are Kiss and the Who (the former sparked by this summer's Kiss Tour). If you saw our Halloween pics on Instragram (yeah that's us), that pretty much sums it up (it's done wonders for my makeup skills).

His interest in music, which also includes playing drums, guitar, and taking piano lessons, has also helped him learn how to read (googling bands), do math (calculating ages and birth and death dates faster than I ever could), and about geography (through mapping tours and reading about where acts are from).

I never expected when I logged my first journal entry about realizing I was pregnant at Bonnaroo and keeping it to myself until after the Cure show when we got home, that the “experiment” would lead to a 5-year-old with a radio show. The most important part is that he seems to be having a blast doing it and it's given him something he and his dad can share (my husband's still hoping for the day Pink Floyd is on the playlist).


Tune in Sunday at 5 p.m. EST.

(Photos courtesy of Courtney Devores and Lauren Marlowe)

Friday, November 21, 2014

This week's hot concerts




Love and Theft
Friday  8 p.m., Coyote Joe’s, 4621 Wilkinson Blvd., $12, www.coyote-joes.com  
Matthews-native Eric Gunderson - one half of this country duo best known for 2011’s "Angel Eyes" - is one of a handful of national artists returning home for pre-holiday concerts. He and Stephen Barker Liles embark on their first headlining trek with the "Night You’ll Never Forget Tour" in anticipation of a new album in February.

Wretched
Friday  8 p.m., Tremont, 400 W. Tremont Ave., $12, www.tremontmusichall.com  
After a run on this summer’s Rock Star Energy Mayhem Festival the technical metal wizards - whose self-produced album “Cannibal” has been drawing accolades - play a hometown show at their old thrashing grounds before heading out on the Warriors of Winter Tour with Battlecross next week.


Anberlin
Friday  8 p.m., The Fillmore, 1000 NC Music Factory Blvd., $33.58, www.livenation.com  
Five days before it ends its 12-year run at the House of Blues in Orlando not far from its hometown in Florida, the alternative hard rock band makes its last Carolina appearance  on its Final Tour, folling the July release of its final album "Lowborn."

Amigo
Friday  10 p.m., Snug Harbor, 1228 Gordon St., $5, www.snugrock.com
Amigo frontman Slade Baird celebrates his birthday performing his last show of the year with his rising Charlotte roots rock band. He invited two of his favorite bands - Magnolia Collective and Sinners & Saints - along for the ride before Amigo gets serious upping its touring efforts in 2015.


The Flatland Tourists
Saturday  9:30 p.m., Puckett’s, 2740 West Sugar Creek Rd., $5, www.puckettsfarm.com 
This Union County roots music collective of seasoned players and songwriters laces bluegrass instrumentation with shades of early `70s rock and classic country and then tops it with the soulful bluesy singing of Rachel Garcia. Its self-titled, Mark Williams-produced debut EP, which was released earlier this month.


Tyler Ramsey
Saturday  10 p.m., Evening Muse, 3227 N. Davidson St., $12-$15, www.eveningmuse.com
The Asheville-based Band of Horses guitarist who has released three solo albums and often opens for his more famous band returns for an intimate set of haunting, dreamy pastoral folk that’s reminiscent to Neil Young (thanks for Ramsey's voice and delivery).


Slayer
Sunday  7:30 p.m., The Fillmore, 1000 NC Music Factory Blvd., $52.91, www.livenation.com
The Big Four metal giant takes a break from working on a 2015 release to reteam with Suicidal Tendencies and Exodus for its first Charlotte headlining show in many years. The upcoming album will be its first without founding guitarist Jeff Hanneman (who died in 2013) and its first since 2001 with drummer Paul Bostaph.


Lyfe Jennings
Sunday  8 p.m., Neighborhood Theatre, 511 E. 35th St., $35, www.neighborhoodtheatre.com  
Make it a date night fellas. The R&B crooner may have weathered his share of drama (two stints in prison), but the reformed musician wows as a Luther Vandross-style romantic showman that nearly sings the clothes off the ladies without getting raunchy.

Mannheim Steamroller Christmas
Sunday  8 p.m., Belk Theater, 130 N. Tryon St., $39.50-$84.50, www.blumenthalarts.org  
The holiday juggernaut rolls into uptown to kick off the season as it celebrates its 30th Anniversary Christmas Tour. With such high demand and such a short window of time to celebrate, this is one of two simultaneous tours hitting the US between now and New Year’s.


Saturday, November 15, 2014

Review: Kid and adult-friendly, Marvel Universe Live! blasts into uptown

Marvel Universe Live! blasted into Time Warner Cable Arena Friday with a cast of high flying and motorcycle stunt-racing superheroes. The live-action show, which pairs the Avengers, X-Men and Spider-Man not to mention an all-star group of Marvel villains, runs through Sunday.

Although there were plenty of distractions in the lobby for younger kids that couldn't quite hang for the whole show, the real attraction was on the arena floor where all the comic book franchise's heavy hitters gathered to battle Thor's brother Loki for an all-powerful Cosmic Cube. Loki kidnapped The X-Men's Storm, Wolverine, and Cyclops in order to power a clone Cosmic Cube since Thor busted up the real cube and scattered it around the globe.

Sound confusing? That's the nature of superhero stories. Thor with the Avengers, Spider-Man, and Wolverine team up to reassemble the original cube in order to beat Loki. As with most of the movies, the story is secondary to the action here which incorporates aerial stunts, ground combat, car chases, and motorcycles, The latter steals the show. The biggest gasp occurred when two-wheeled Captain America scaled a ramp and jumped on stage chasing Red Skull up and down a half-pipe that doubled as Tony Stark's office (Peter Parker uses it as a skateboard ramp during his inspired introduction earlier in the show).

Marvel Universe Live! is definitely a kid's show although I found myself wincing as Wolverine sliced through enemies like a wound up Freddy Krueger and wondering if I would spend my evening separating my boys. The dialogue, which reflects the quick banter of films and cartoons, and the stunts will appease older fans. The teaming of Wolverine and David Banner, whose amusing scenes acted as segues to bigger battles, seemed especially tailored for adults. Adults could also appreciate the skill the cyclists exhibit as well as the dead-on casting of characters like Loki and Captain America (dead ringers for the big screen versions).

The show is divided into two parts with plenty of time to peruse merchandise during intermission. The first half sets up the premise and brings the team together, while the second, longer section finds our heroes battling familiar villains.

The Statue of Liberty-set battle between Spider-Man and Thor and Green Goblin, Black Cat, Rhino, and practically all of Spidey's foes was particularly riveting as was the motorcycle-stunt filled battle led by Captain America. Both utilized a climbing spiral walkway which mimicked the Statue of Liberty's stairs and morphed into a tiered motorcycle ramp for the next act. Each act benefited from more and more cast members on the floor. Black Widow fought Madame Hydra in one corner. The winged Falcon dodged moving bikes in another as Captain America sent his shields rocketing (via wires) through the air to take down Red Skull. By the last fight all the characters, including a cartoonish Hulk towering over the other characters, share the stage.

Not everything was as fast-paced as the cyclists or Spider-Man's acrobatic fight sequences though. Iron Man was a bit clunky, but its hard to be agile wearing a bulky suit of armor. Kids didn't seem to mind.

Including intermission, the show clocks in at two hours. I was worried my four-year-old couldn't hang. He did voice his desire to go home during the second half, but I placated him with snacks and juice, and was happy to provide loud commentary ("I'm going to get that guy" - aimed at the Hulk). My older child was happily along for the ride, afraid it was over after each battle. Spider-Man waving at my him as the show closed eclipsed everything else.

Marvel Universe Live! has three more performances at Time Warner Cable Arena this weekend - at 7 p.m. Saturday and at 1 and 5 p.m. Sunday. Find more information and tickets here.

(Photos courtesy of Marvel Universe Live!)

Thursday, November 13, 2014

This week's hot concerts

Wayfaring Strangers: The Musical Voyage from Scotland & Ulster to Appalachia
Friday  7:30 p.m., Great Aunt Stella Center, 926 Elizabeth Ave., Free (donations accepted), www.folksociety.org
NPR’s “The Thistle & Shamrock” host Fiona Ritchie and Swannanoa Gathering founder and former Charlotte Folk Society president Doug Orr penned the recently published book chronicling the roots of Appalachian music, which gives the concert its title. They’ll share history and stories. Little Windows provides the soundtrack for the multimedia show.


Cameron Floyd Band/Life Size
Friday  7:30 p.m., Amos’, 1423 S. Tryon St., $12, www.amossouthend.com 
The local acoustic pop band celebrates the release of its new album, “Dancing the Distance.” Standout track “Change” indicates it’s an impressive collection. On its own debut EP “Mockingbird Alarmclock,” Salisbury soul-pop outfit Life Size flits between Dave Matthews-style acoustic pop and meatier almost gospel-flavored rock with emotive harmonies and colorful piano fills.


Alvvays
Friday  8 p.m., Neighborhood Theatre, 511 E. 36th St., $10-$12, www.neighborhoodtheatre.com  
This female-fronted, Rolling Stone-endorsed Canadian combo’s self-titled album of deeply infectious indie pop lands somewhere between influential `80s alt-rock, `90s K Records, and Best Coast. It went to No. 1 on the college charts this summer. The group is paired with fellow Toronto band Absolutely Free and Charlotte’s Late Bloomer.


Daley
Friday  8:30 p.m., Visulite, 1615 Elizabeth Ave., $15, www.visulite.com  
On his 2014 full-length debut “Days and Nights,” the British R&B singer/producer who got his break guesting on Gorillaz’ “Doncamatic,” skirts retro tags while making some of the most classic yet still modern R&B around. To prove it he embarks on a acoustic tour - a rarity for an electronic age artist that brings to mind Bill Withers’ moving `70’s shows.

Benefit for Luke Hill
Saturday  8:30 p.m., Neighborhood Theatre, 511 E. 36th St., $10-$20, www.neighborhoodtheatre.com
Charlotte musician (Animals, Public Radio) and Neighborhood Theatre bartender Luke Hill was injured by a hit and run driver walking home November 4. Locals Flagship, Junior Astronomers, Jeremiah Wilde, Warsong, One Amazing Kid, Solis, the Business People, Deep Sky and Animals will play to help with his mounting medical bills.

Max Drake & Sheila Grady Carlisle/The Mannish Boys
Saturday  9 p.m., Double Door, 1218 Charlottetown Ave., $10-$12, www.doubledoorinn.com 
During the `70s and `80s Drake and NC-native Carlisle’s band Arhooly was a popular blues rock fixture on the East Coast circuit. They return to the Double Door for the first time since 1989. They’ll be joined by Charlotte’s own Mannish Boys, whose sound is a throwback to classic `60s garage rock n’ roll.


Justin Townes Earle/Cory Branan
Monday  7:30 p.m., McGlohon Theatre, 345 N. College St., $20-$28.50, www.blumenthalarts.org  
The now well established singer-songwriter son of Steve Earle - whose sound is deeper ingrained in the blues and old-timey rock and country than his dad’s - turns another corner through sobriety and marriage on his new album “Single Mothers” and its follow-up “Absent Fathers.” Fellow Nashville renegade and stellar songwriter Branan also plays.

Powerman 5000
Thursday  7:30 p.m., Amos’, 1423 S. Tryon St., $20-$25, www.amossouthend.com  
After the sudden death of scheduled headliner StaticX’s Wayne Static, Powerman 5000’s Spider One (whose band toured with StaticX in the early days and saw the upcoming bill as a reunion) stepped up to continue the tour in honor of Static (Atlanta’s show even features a StaticX tribute). With American Headcharge and Wolfborne.


Dillon Francis
Thursday  9 p.m., The Fillmore, 1000 NC Music Factory Blvd., $27.51, www.livenation.com
On his long-awaited debut album, “Money Sucks, Friends Rule,” the rising EDM DJ/producer gathered disparate guest artists like Panic! at the Disco’s Brendon Urie, Major Lazer, and Twista and mixed his slower signature moombahton style with unapologetically guilty-pleasure pop that’s melting dancefloors.


Tuesday, November 11, 2014

Locals bands unite to help musician injured in hit-and-run

While walking home on the morning of November 4 local musician Luke Hill was struck by a vehicle at the corner of E. 36th and The Plaza. The car did not stop. Hill was rushed to Carolinas Medical Center with a broken arm and fractured ribs and brain surgery was performed to relieve bleeding and pressure.

Friends and colleagues from local bands will play Neighborhood Theatre Saturday to help cover Hill's medical expenses.

Friends and co-workers report that Hill, who was initially in ICU and placed in a medically induced coma, has since woken up and is talking. Hill is a bartender at Neighborhood Theatre and plays in the band Animals. I knew of him from the band Public Radio, where his animated, shirtless wailing on the drum kit always brought to mind Tommy Lee.

Given the outpouring of generosity his accident has sparked in the local community, it's safe to say Hill is deeply beloved. Saturday's concert features Animals (with Leo Solis stepping in for Hill), Flagship, Junior Astronomers, WARSONG, One Amazing Kid, Jeremiah Wilde, Solis, Business People, and Deep Sky. T-shirts and patches and other items are also being sold to raise money.

As of Tuesday donations had reached nearly $18,000 through a GoFundMe page for Hill and his wife Charis started six days ago.

Businesses have also donated items for a raffle Saturday. Greenlight Tattoo, for instance, is offering up three $150 certificates toward tattoos as part of the raffle.

The funding goal is initially $20,000, but mounting medical bills and lost wages will certainly exceed that. Even if you don't know Hill, the show at Neighborhood Theatre features a great lineup of local artists and I always encourage people to catch local multi-band bills where they can really get a good overview of what Charlotte's music scene has to offer. It's also a chance to witness an outpouring of generosity that we don't witness often enough.

Admission is a $10 or $20 donation. All proceeds will go to benefit Hill. T-shirts are available for purchase here. Tickets to the show are available here.

Photo courtesy of Neighborhood Theatre.

Gabba returns for unforgettable show

When Yo Gabba Gabba announced its return to Charlotte this year, I felt like this might be our last time seeing the Gabba gang live. My oldest son will be 6 this winter and his brother isn't far behind. While Nick Jr.'s "Yo Gabba Gabba" was a near 24/7 fixture in our home for the first four and half years of their lives, they have already moved on to other entertainment from superheroes to other Nick Jr. shows that are now in more regular rotation than Gabba like "The Bubble Guppies" and "Paw Patrol." Those shows are fine, but I doubt I'll ever embrace a children's TV show the way our family embraced "Gabba." We are a pop culture family and Gabba is pop culture incorporating `80s video games, indie rock, skateboarding, Puff N Stuff-style creatures, and music that is more contemporary than kiddie (my favorites are the title songs to the episodes "Flying" and "Big").

Sunday's show at Ovens Auditorium marked my older son's fifth time seeing it live and his brother's third. We went the first time in 2010 when my son was only one and a half. We sprung for VIP passes that first time and had our picture taken with the gang, but Sunday's show at Ovens was the first time I felt like my kids were comfortable enough to really let loose.

Sunday wasn't without a hiccup though. The earlier show was interrupted by the massive power outage. When we arrived DJ Lance, Leslie Hall and the characters were holding an impromptu meet and greet to pass the time and reward patient toddlers. WSOCTV reported that attendees were offered tickets to the later show in exchange as well.

The format hasn't changed much over the years, but as co-creator Christian Jacobs stated in our recent interview, this year's tour is more about the series' greatest hits and plays more like a participatory concert than a typical kid's show. More so than years past I felt like it hit on more songs in quick succession - like they were trying to cram in as many favorites as possible. Kids' songs are short and they zipped through "Party in My Tummy," "Get the Sillies Out," and "Dancey Dance" and combined "Try It, You'll Like It," "Jumpy Jump," and "Don't Bite Your Friends" into a medley.

Regular tour guest Leslie Hall joined in for "All My Friends are Different" and led the "Razzle Dazzle" dance, which was a big hit with kids bouncing and dancing in the aisles. Gabba is the only place you can witness spastic dancing, sleeping babies, meltdowns, and literal rolling in the aisles simultaneously. I'd heard of rolling in the aisles, but I'd never seen it until a little boy did a forward roll down the inclined walkway beside me. Gabba creates unbridled elation for children. For a parent it's hard to keep your eyes on the stage when so many cute kids are freaking out around you.

Speaking of freaking out, I was sitting there filming my kids getting the sillies out out on my phone when it happened - every Gabba mother's dream. A tour staff member tapped me on the shoulder and asked if my kids wanted to get on stage and dance. Seriously? For real? I asked them both, because you never know with kids. They might be completely petrified. I always try to hide under my seat during Blue Man or when Chris Isaak cruises the crowd for ladies. They both agreed and a little while later they were on stage beatboxing with Biz Markie in their fuzzy orange DJ Lance hats and pogoing to his classic hip-hop set. It was one of the most amazing moments.

The woman in front of me asked if we knew someone on the tour. Nope, it seemed completely random although I think maybe having an older child who they could be confident wouldn't bolt without a parent and the fact that they were dancing so animatedly - but at their seats right beside me - that their escort knew exactly who to ask for permission. Maybe it was just luck, but I'll take it.

They were returned to us safely and the show finished up just like each TV episode with a remix of the day's set. If it was, as I suspect, our last Gabba exceeded all expectations.

There is really nothing like it and, as I said, I doubt there ever will be. That age is a unique time and "Yo Gabba Gabba" is a unique show. I love sharing live music with my boys and taking them to see Against Me! and Damon Albarn earlier this year will go down in the scrapbooks, but "Yo Gabba Gabba" truly belongs to them. They know every single word, absolutely adore the cast,
and they can really let lose without the shadow of adults looming. I imagine someday when my kids are grown and I'm old and lonely, I'll watch those Gabba DVDs and sob. Heck, I may do that next year.

Monday, November 10, 2014

Review: Chrissie Hynde at Ovens Auditorium

Chrissie Hynde's voice has not changed since the Pretenders released its first album in 1980, a fact she confidently demonstrated Saturday at Ovens Auditorium playing tracks by her band and material from her first solo album, "Stockholm."

She may now be 63, but age was never a factor for Hynde. Beneath shaggy black hair that hid her eyes, it was hard even in the early days to tell her age. That hasn't changed. I had to wonder early on when she shed her sequined blazer revealing bare arms, a simple black vest and man's white tie if this is what a lifetime of vegetarianism does for you. As she sauntered to the front of the stage in skinny jeans and Doc Martens during the new song "In A Miracle," she exuded a kind of sex appeal that can't be trumped by skimpy clothes and twerking. Like fellow sexaganarian Lucinda Williams, she's just got it.

Notoriously honest, funny, and outspoken, it shouldn't have been a surprise that Hynde played what she felt like. She hit on a handful of Pretenders' hits, but it was not a hits set. The show flowed almost opposite of most concerts from slower, almost adult-contemporary openers to full-on punk, yet it was so good that first 17 songs whizzed by within the first hour.

She opened with "Don't Lose Faith in Me," a slow bluesy burner from her the last Pretenders album and followed it with a few more methodical mid-tempo numbers, "Biker" (which closed 1999's "Viva el Amor!"), 1994's "977," and "In A Miracle."

Another new song, "Like in the Movies" helped segue from moody to pop to rock. "Talk of the Town" kicked off the latter, raising the tempo and energy and bringing the crowd to its feet. It remained there for "Kid." The surf guitar and girl group feel of "Talk" and "Kid" were well matched with the Wall of Sound spirit of the new solo song "You or No One" which opens "Stockholm."

Guitarist James Walbourne (Son Volt, Pernice Brothers and with Pretenders since 2008) proved a consummate, flashy sideman delivering ripping bluesy solos with animated expressions.

Instead of classic rock staples "Middle of the Road" and "Brass in Pocket" and the monster `90s ballad "I'll Stand By You," she opted for lesser hits "Night in My Veins" and "My City is Gone," obscure album tracks and early tracks "The Phone Call," "Precious," "Pack It Up," and "Tattooed Love Boys" (the latter three played during two encores) aptly plucked from the late `70s/early `80s punk and post-punk new wave period that birthed Pretenders.

The Kinks' "I Go To Sleep" opened the second and final encore. It was a really beautiful rendering that the group first covered on its sophomore album in 1981. For those still expecting "Brass," Hynde threw another curve breaking out her current single "Dark Sunglasses" as the final song of the night.

The crowd - many of them baby boomers like Hynde and the generation that followed - didn't seem to mind the omissions as they grooved and danced like it was 1984. The biggest hits "Don't Get Me Wrong" and "Back on the Chain Gang" enjoyed the biggest response from the crowd, as expected. This was MTV pop music in the early `80s when female rockers like Hynde, Pat Benatar, Debbie Harry, and Stevie Nicks - fully clothed musicians I might add - were our role models. Today's girls and even women her own age can still learn from Hynde's confidence and preservation.

Friday, November 7, 2014

Merlefest 2015 lineup high on roots vets, up and comers, and Carolinians


Merlefest's initial lineup was announced earlier this week with Bela Fleck and his wife Abigail Washburn and reunited bluegrass allstars Hot Rize will open the festival on Thursday, April 23.

Rockin' hill country blues brothers North Mississippi Allstars, bluegrass royalty the Del McCoury Band, SC-bred classic country-rockers the Marshall Tucker Band and husband and wife duo Bruce Robison and Kelly Willis (both established solo artists featured in the above video) head up Friday's bill.

North Mississippi Allstars
International Bluegrass Music Award winners the Gibson Brothers, blues and soul singer Paul Thorn play Saturday along with Fleck's New Grass Revival bandmate/mandolin great Sam Bush, Cajun jam favorites Donna the Buffalo, and revered guitar and mandolin player Peter Rowan who all appear multiple days.

Sunday's artists include Doc Watson's grandson and Merle Watson's son Richard Watson, the Nashville Bluegrass Band, Jim Avett, and the David Mayfield Parade.

The festival takes place on the campus of Wilkesboro Community College in North Wilkesboro April 23-26.

The lineup features a strong Carolinian showing in the Kruger Brothers, Jim Lauderdale, Avett, Mipso, Jack Lawrence, Chatham County Line, and Charlotte transplants Time Sawyer.

Other notable performers include the Waybacks, Scythian, Sutton, Holt and Coleman, Blue Highway, JohnnySwim, Blind Boy Paxton, Big Sandy and His Fly-Rite Boys, Two Man Gentlemen Band, the Stray Birds, the Ragbirds, Black Lillies, Black Cadillacs, Pete and Joan Wernick (Pete is also in Hot Rize), Whitewater Ramble, and Farmer Jason (aka Jason & the Scorchers' Jason Ringenberg's children's music alter-ego). The full lineup can be found here. Click on artist names to find out which days they'll be playing.

Early bird tickets go on sale Tuesday, November 11. Find out more about Merlefest 2015 here.

Thursday, November 6, 2014

This week's hot concerts


Rachael Yamagata
Friday  8 p.m., Visulite, 1615 Elizabeth Ave., $18, www.visulite.com  
Having nearly funded her upcoming 2015 album via PledgeMusic (http://www.pledgemusic.com/projects/yamagatatightropewalker) the singer-songwriter celebrates the 10th anniversary of her first album “Happenstance” and reveals new material reminiscent of Mazzy Star and Cat Power.


Sturgill Simpson
Friday  9 p.m., Chop Shop, 399 E. 36th St., Sold Out, www.chopshopnoda.com 
The former leader of Sunday Valley has drawn widespread acclaim for his sophomore album, “Metamodern Sounds in Country Music” and its ode-to-psychedelics first single “Turtles All the Way Down,” but even more is his trippy, dead-on rendering of `70s outlaw country delivered with a deep Waylon Jennings-style baritone and lyrical depth.


Chrissie Hynde
Saturday  8 p.m., Ovens Auditorium, 2700 E. Independence Blvd., $53.82-$93.08, www.ticketmaster.com
It may come as a surprise that at 63 the Pretenders frontwoman is just now getting around to her first solo album, but the resulting “Stockholm” - recorded with Peter, Bjorn and John’s Bjorn Yttling and featuring Neil Young and John McEnroe - is a smart, hip modern rock collection worthy of her past work. 


Winger
Saturday  8 p.m., Amos’, 1423 S. Tryon St., $20-$23, www.amossouthend.com  
Twenty-five years since “Seventeen” rocketed up the charts thanks to a hummable pop-metal hook and good looking frontman, Winger remains an impressive hard rock act that proves its mettle on the new album, “Better Days Comin’.” It’s garnered critical praise for its consistency and composition and charted not far from the last slot it occupied in 1993.

Reverend Horton Heat
Saturday  8:30 p.m., Tremont, 400 W. Tremont Ave., $20-$25, www.tremontmusichall.com
Released earlier this year, the simply titled “REV” marks a return to form after a few stylistic segues for the smoking guitar trio who carved out a niche in the `90s with ripping psychobilly and an evangelical frontman that proudly sung of hot rods, hot broads, and other wild and fantastic rock n’ roll traditions.


Carbon Leaf
Saturday  9 p.m., Neighborhood Theatre, 511 E. 35th St., $16-$20, www.neighborhoodtheatre.com
A regional fixture sprouted from the same Virginian waters as Dave Matthews and Pat McGee, this Richmond-based act continues to marry Celtic-flavored pop with roots rock bite 23 years later. It recently released a rerecording of its 2004 breakthrough as “Indian Summer Revisited.”

Brief Lives
Saturday  10 p.m., Snug Harbor, 1228 Gordon St., $5, www.snugrock.com  
Before returning with his other band Valient Thorr in December, intergalactic rock n’ roller (and Lincolnton native) Valient Himself leads the Richmond-based post hardcore punk quartet who weave Van Halen-esque guitar, methodical riffing, and math rock on its new limited four-track cassette(!) release (that’s also available as a Bandcamp download).

Buddy Guy
Sunday  7 p.m., Knight Theater, 430 S. Tryon St., $34.50-$54.50/$64.50 VIP, www.blumenthalarts.org  
At age 78 - along with B.B. King - the influential Chicago blues guitarist and live showman is one of the of the last of the blues giants left touring. The guitar great’s shows remain one of the more fun live experiences out there proving age hasn’t slowed him down as a player or mellowed his charisma.

DJ QBert
Thursday  9 p.m., Neighborhood Theatre, 511 E. 35th St., $15-$35, www.neighborhoodtheatre.com  
The groundbreaking DJ who helped make scratching an artform released two albums (a double album of sorts) this summer, the otherworldly “Extraterrestria” and “GalaXXXian” as the long, long-awaited follow-up to 1999’s “Wave Twisters.” He brings the Extraterrestrium: The Guided Space Tour to town with Jeremy Ellis.




Spongetone rolls alone on new vocal-centered album


In May Spongetones frontman Jamie Hoover had one of his rotator cuffs replaced - a rather debilitating experience for his guitar playing. Instead of sitting on the couch flipping channels, he decided to use the instrument he had left - his voice - to make a new solo album. He recently released that album, "Jamie Two Ever" digitally and as a limited edition CD featuring eight extra covers. The original tracks are available on iTunes and CD Baby. Physical copies are limited to 300 and are for sale through Hoover's website.

Hoover had a second rotator cuff surgery recently, which will keep him off the stage through late December when he'll join fellow Spongetones Steve Stoekel and Pat Walters for an acoustic New Year's Eve performance at Big Ben's Pub where the band members perform semi-regularly.

"Having these two surgeries got me to thinking - well, what do I have left? My voice!," Hoover says. Stoekel - Hoover's regular duo partner - wasn't really interested in making an a cappella album, so he Hoover decided to go it alone. He approached the project as a challenge.

"Most, but not all cuts are a cappella," he explains. "At times I just banged on pickle buckets and trash cans for drum sounds. Sometimes (I created percussion) just with my mouth."

The album isn't entirely vocal though. It includes a couple of older full band cuts and the last two new songs feature a full band since those were recorded after Hoover healed from the first surgery.

"I figure rule No. 1, no rules!" he adds.

Check out more on "Jamie Two Ever" here and watch the video Cool King Chris created for the track "The Jim Joanne Massacre." Hoover calls the song his version of "My Girl, Bill."

"I got an email from an old friend," he explains. "Due to the large pink signature on it, somehow I decided he'd had a sex change."

The song took flight from there. His friend had not, by the way, but sometimes a suggestion is all it takes to get the creative ball rolling.

"Boy, what an imagination I have."




Wednesday, November 5, 2014

Nick Cave, Bjork films in Charlotte this week


Two films with music ties receive one night engagements in Charlotte this week. "Bjork: Biophilia Live" plays tonight at The Epicentre's Studio Movie Grill. "20,000 Days on Earth" starring Nick Cave is at Neighborhood Theatre in NoDa Thursday with 7 and 10 p.m. screenings.

Directed by Nick Fenton and Peter Strickland, "Bjork: Biophilia Live" is a documentary concert film centered around the Icelandic musician's eighth studio album, "Biophilia," The groundbreaking 2011 album and multimedia experience explores the intersection of music, nature, and technology through the album and a series of apps (the iPad app is the first app that's now part of the Museum of Modern Art's permanent collection). To bring "Biophilia" to life on stage Bjork employed an all female Icelandic choir, a set of nature films, and custom instruments created especially for the project, including a Tesla coil. The film screens at 7:30 p.m. tonight. Tickets are available here. View the visually stunning trailer at http://www.biophiliathefilm.com/

The equally acclaimed "20,000 Days on Earth," which won World Cinema Documentary awards in directing and editing for first time feature-length filmmakers Iain Forsyth and Jane Pollard, follows singer-songwriter Cave through a fictional 24 hours. Originally filmed for promotional purposes, the footage Forsyth and Pollard shot was deemed so compelling the project was extended into a feature film that explores Cave's creative process through his past, his interactions with friends Kylie Minogue, collaborator Warren Ellis, actor Ray Winstone, Bad Seed band member Blixa Bargeld, and psychoanalyst Darian Leader.

The trailer for the film (above) doesn't look or feel like a typical music documentary or an episode of "Behind the Music," but a beautifully shot movie that blurs the lines between fiction and reality.

Tickets for the Neighborhood Theatre screenings are $10 to $15. They're available here.