Philip Glass? Yes. Brian Eno? Sure. Carl Stone? Well, no. That is unfortunate because of his place in the history of sampling and computer music. Stone studied under Morton Subotnick at CalArts in the 70s and started sampling and computer collaging music at roughly the same time as Grandmaster Flash. Instead of turntables and scratching, Stone used an exacto knife and tape splicing to sample music and field recordings for his product. The storied California new music scene is the birthplace of the cream of avant garde composers, Terry Riley, Fred Frith, Pauline Oliveiros just to name a few. Stone collaborated and rubbed elbows with many of these music philosophers. His body of work has been under the radar until recent illumination by the great Unseen Worlds record label. Compilations of his decades of work starting with “explorations on the Macintosh” sounds comically outdated today. His recent anagrammatic release, Stolen Car has been embraced by hipster culture. Happy then for a rare concert viewing, as Carl spends most of his time in Japan. The show was supposed to happen at Wesleyan’s Crowell Hall, but was moved to the gamelan garage known as the World Music Hall. The uncomfortable subterranean cement igloo WMH was better suited for the slim crowd, but not for my 60 year old tailbone. The music is challenging and the introduction stated that the pieces were new. In concert, there is not much to view. A 70ish white guy dressed in black armed with a computer, an iPad and a card table does not portend for a stunning visual. The songs were compact with the samples difficult to discern. Metallic whooshes, sped up and slowed down splicing were present in each “song”. One tune sounded like a cement mixer full of teletubbies, another had a chopped and screwed Strangers in the Night. I was anxious to hear Stone talk about the evolution of technology on his craft, I mean can’t he just ask AI to spit out what a cement mixer of teletubbies would sound like? Like many polymaths, talking was not in the cards. The audience was left to imagine the source and process of this sound. While I didn’t hear “Paul is Dead”, I was able to be affected by these strange sounds. If Carl was Stoned, and spending his formative years within waft distance from Humboldt county it was likely, his next record could be Coastal Nerd, anagrammatically speaking.
Sunday, September 29, 2024
Saturday, September 28, 2024
Steve Gunn w/ Geologist 9/26/24 Spaceland
Glad to have caught a bit from opener Geologist. He is the beatmeister for the freak jam outfit Animal Collective. Legend has it the name came from a misrepresentation of his college major or possibly the headlamp he uses while trying to navigate his console on a darkened stage. This show was held in the intimate front room, so personal lighting was not an issue. Geologist had a table with effects and sequencers and a hurdy gurdy. The hurdy gurdy is an unusual instrument for the beats scene. A crank, some strings, some keys, dampening mechanisms and a boat shaped hollow body that he had strapped to his waist. He looked like a cotton candy seller at the ballpark. The sound leaned middle eastern, with the addition of a backbeat made for a trancey exotic set. After the show, I chatted with Geologist wondering if the instrument was homemade, a soap-box-derby-hurdy-gurdy if you will. He said that some guy in France was responsible.
Steve Gunn is one of the best musicians you’ve never heard of. A guitarist from Philly now based in Brooklyn, Steve has been making varied and excellent music for years. Originally drone and instrumental, he has recently strayed into singer songwriter territory. 2019’s The Unseen In Between is a great starting place for the uninitiated. He hit the stage armed with a couple of acoustics, some effects pedals, and a small fender amp. A compact setup that makes travel and stage management easy, there was no lack of sound coming from the stage. Steve had one effect pedal that could only be described as a Day In The Life box that sounded like an 80 piece orchestra tripping upstairs when pressed. The songs and lyrics seem simple but reveal complexity when viewed live. Steve seems to be on the spectrum, and I mean that in the most complimentary way, he seemed to autistically waltz while playing, bending toward the fender to stretch and enhance notes. The setlist had some gems, Way Out Weather from the 2014 release and some cuts from the recent Other You. He played one unreleased number about a chance meeting with a musician friend on the early morning streets of Auckland. Fantastic cover of the Velvets I’ll Be Your Mirror. While Steve might not have much in common with Nico, the original vocalist, his fractured croon has similar qualities to the original. While I’m happy to go on having Steve be my quasi-personal troubadour, it would make sense for y’all to get your head out of the sand and support him when he comes your way. Better yet, keep your head in the sand, find Steve on your YouTube channel and prepare to be mesmerized by this truly original musician.
Sunday, September 22, 2024
Weird of Mouth 9/20/24 Firehouse 12
Was able make it to the fall inaugural voyage of the Firehouse 12 series. This group was a trio with Craig Taborn on piano, Ches Smith on drums, and Mette Rasmussen on alto sax. The room was well attended (although this free jazz blowout had some neophytes slinking toward the exit). Taborn is a frequent flyer at F-12 and I think he enjoys sitting down in front of the monstrous Cadillac Steinway that offers such a great sound. The chameleonic Smith has been lauded here many times. Last years Haitian group, supporting guitarists Will Bernard or Mary Halvorson, Ches square pegs himself into many a round hole. His lanky drumming style allows him to effortlessly play complex runs. Piano and drums were necessary foils to the alto force Rasmussen. Danish born, but now based in Trondheim Norway, Mette is certainly a young lioness. She has played with a wide variety of jazz luminaries and does time in the legendary Fire! Orchestra. She squeaked and squawked like Peter Brotzmann and then played lyrical passages like Sonny Rollins. Not sure where the Weird of mouth moniker came from, certainly Smiths facial expressions were unusual, but the weird mouth goes to Rasmussen. She coaxed many sounds, screeching staccatos and repetitive blasts gave this challenging music a trance-like quality.
Saturday, September 21, 2024
Soft Machine 9/20/24 Small Batch Cellars, North Haven
Progtastic fall is here and what better way to start than an “early bird special” held in a winery garage on a dead end street in North Haven. The promoter’s website listed doors at 5, show at 6 which seems like a blue hair time slot for this pillar of prog-Jazz. It’s been 50 years since the primordial ooze of the Canterbury scene birthed Soft Machine. If John Mayall’s Bluesbreakers was the teething ground of British blues rock and rollers, Soft Machine served the same purpose for the British prog-jazz movement. Started by Daevid Allen, Mike Ratledge, Robert Wyatt, Kevin Ayers, and Larry Nowlin, all luminaries of the form, SM pioneered psych-prog jazz like no other. Members over the years include Allan Holdsworth, Jack Bruce, Hugh Hopper, Elton Dean, even Andy Summers was a member for a spell. The music comes with extended song forms, instrumental jams with periods of jazz improv dipped in psychedelia. Robert Wyatt famously quipped that the Softs extended song structure is a deliberate attempt to reduce the audience’s ability to boo. The current lineup consists of long time member John Etheridge on guitar, Theo Travis on soprano, alto saxes, and flute, Fred Thelonious Baker on bass, and Asaf Sirkus on drums. The setlist is kind of irrelevant since there are virtually no hits from this band but some tunes from the Etheridge era (late 70s to the present) were performed: Burden of Proof, TheTale of the Taliesin, Tarabos, The Visitor at the Window, Kings and Queens. They did a great version of the Kevin Ayer’s tune Joy of a Toy, which Etheridge stated was written in the unlikely prog chord of D major. The band was limber with each member taking extended solos. Etheridge, the elder statesman, was equally comfortable playing mind numbing leads or lyrical passages. Travis could jive and wail or switch to flute. Some tunes with flute had a 60s soundtrack feel. Sirkus plays in other bands and his muscular style powered the proceedings. Baker’s bass throb moved toward krautrock. I heard Mahavishnu, Red era King Crimson, even some Pink Floyd touches. The influence of this band cannot be understated, they opened for Hendrix on multiple tours, they played backup on Syd Barrett’s solo work, and have been a revolving door for creative musicians. I enjoyed this early bird special, may I recommend the patty-face-melt with a side of noodles.
Sunday, September 15, 2024
Eggy 9/12/24 Hartford Live
The jam lingers on at the HL series. Eggy carries the jam torch lit by guitarist’s Jake Brownsteins father Mark in his seminal jamtronica outfit The Disco Biscuits. The Biscuits were a tri-state area force that fused the extended freak outs of jam with the electronic wizardry of house. It allowed the tie-dye and corduroy crowd a chance to get down without getting laughed out of da clerb. They held these upstate NY forest ragers called Camp Bisco. Imagine, then, being a 6-12 year old Jake backstage at one of these things, god knows what he heard and witnessed. Seems natural to find a crew, hone your chops, and follow the path. Fast forward to 2024 where Eggy plays two solid sets behind the Old Statehouse. First set was tame and ballady but got some heads bobbing. The flow of these shows is critical to the concert experience. You can’t start with a face-melter and then sing Color My World (they did not do this). Fact is, Eggy could have. Talented quartet has Brownstein joined by bass, drums, and keys. They all sang, but drummer did the majority. Set two was where Eggy cooked: Smile , Remind Me, A Moments Notice, Shallow Rivers, Southern Cross (CSN), Wayless One, One Stop Shop, Atomic Age, Must Come Down, encored with an extended Tom Corn Walker. Good crowd and perfect weather.
Monday, September 9, 2024
CT Folkfest 9/7/24 Edgerton Park
The CT Folkfest is underwater. Not figuratively, but literally. Back in the day, the Doppler was a Gomer Pylish Hilton Kaderli predicting a “gulleywhomper “ of a storm happening sometime between May and March. In today’s world, when the Doppler says it’s gonna rain at 5pm, it pretty much rains at 5. So what to do about a lineup that gets cooking at 5? Go at 5 and hope Kaderli is driving the low pressure system. We know how this ends, show up at 5, see a few tunes by 83 year old folk royalty Tom Rush, who gets flooded from the stage by said gulleywhomper. I mean it rained sideways. We took shelter in the beer tent before surrendering for the day. This festival has some great memories for me: Steve Earle, Mary Gauthier and Greg Brown with recent highlights of Donna the Buffalo, Maria Muldaur, and Oliver Wood. It’s sad to report that today’s headliner Leyla McCalla and warmup act Kaleta and the Super Yamba Band were scratched due to rain. Kaleta has lineage to the afrobeat progenitor Fela. Ive seen him a couple of times and it was truly enjoyable. Don’t know much of McCalla, but she’s billed as a Haitian guitarist, cellist, activist. We can only imagine how this show would have been because Mother Nature had other plans. It’s doubly sad to realize that climate change has affected our way of talking about the weather. Instead of “April showers bring May flowers”, we are left with “September deluge brings beer tent refuge”, which just seems wrong on so many levels.
Saturday, September 7, 2024
Max Creek 9/5/24 Hartford Live
“ Bring out yer dead! Bring out yer dead!” Who can forget Eric Idle’s Monty Python scene. That movie line easily applies to a Max Creek show. Starting as a Connecticut based Grateful Dead cover band some 50 years ago, local hippies have been Creekin since way back. The business model is simple: get a somewhat reliable vehicle, learn some Dead songs, and play every bake sale, block party, and backyard in the tri-state area……for 50 years! A friend who is my vintage stated that he has seen Max Creek over 100 times, I believe it. Being in the business that long allows one to hone their chops and MC has morphed into a regional jam juggernaut with some excellent originals that dot their tease-heavy set. I arrive 630ish to see the band already on their journey. They play till 930 without a set break, a 3 hour tour if you will, you heard right, a three hour tour. The cast and crew were all there, Skipper and Gilligan natch, Ginger and the Howells were dressed in their finest tie-dye finerie, the Professor and Maryanne, well you get the picture. The nerds at setlist.com must have been smoking a big fatty because their call seemed to have some gaps. Emotional Railroad, Feelin Alright, Angel of My Mind, Jones, Gone at Last, Brown Water, Wild Side, Something is Forming, Yes We Can Can,, Drums, Same Things, Blood Red Roses. I know I heard Diamonds on the Soles of Her Shoes and Magic Carpet Ride in addition to Grateful Dead licks but who’s counting. In order to remain a band for 50 years, there must be some core chemistry. The original 3 of Scott Murawski on guitar, Mark Mercier on keys, and John Rider on bass are joined by current percussion duo Bill Carbone and Jamemurrell Stanley who weren’t even born when the Creek was founded. I love Hartford Live, and thanks to the Infinity Hall folks for making it happen. They even have a sense of humor. On the lawn near our group a large “ no smoking section “ sandwich board was placed, it’s a Creek show for goodness sakes, the no smoking section was several blocks away.
Monday, September 2, 2024
Jake Blount 9/1/24 CT River and Roots Festival, Windsor
Maiden voyage for this fest held on the Windsor town green. Nice mix of craft and food vendors with the local Dudleytown Brewery providing libations. Jake has been positively reviewed in this blog before. He is an ethnomusicologist, multi-instrumentalist master of string band music, deftly providing an educational tour of historical music from the American south. Playing fiddle and banjo, he is joined onstage by Nashville cat acoustic picker Ethan Hawkins. The pair roll through a nice selection of reels and jigs on the small stage. Ethan takes lead on the 50s novelty Plastic Jesus and Jake gives a history lesson for the traditional John Henry ( popularized as Spike Driver Blues by Mississippi John Hurt). I will never forget a previous viewing where Jake explained that the advent of the Sears Catalog supercharged the spread of the banjo diaspora. The focus was folk and roots music from the black and indigenous community, so it was no surprise that Jake got political in his tone. At this point, some elderly right wing crank stood up and gave the thumbs down while hastily bagging his chair to leave. Jake reiterated the thrust of this festival and the music he was playing as if to tell the guy “ what did you expect?” I guess if he launched into the classic “Talking Hillary Pizzagate Blues” the guy might have stuck around. Maybe he was late for the Ted Nugent / Kid Rock double bill down the street. Inexplicably ( which I later learn to be explicable), Jake and Ethan take a set break and yield the stage to local indigenous skronker Mixashawn Rozie and local poet and storyteller Robert Peters. Poems focused on racial justice and climate action were backed by Rozie’s sax, wooden flute, and the unusual berimbau. I’ve seen a lot of music over the years, but this was the first time viewing When Doves Cry and Johnny B. Goode delivered on the berimbau. Jake and Ethan did reappear for their final lap. Folk music has always championed civil rights, climate justice, and gender equality and it is refreshing to see young artists rally to the cause. The weather mostly held for a nice afternoon on a town green that was new to me. As for the cause? The answers my friend were blowing in the wind.