by-line

All Writing and Photography © Alex Livingstone/Owner's Closet

Friday, February 25, 2011

Top 5 American Rock and Roll Bands


After getting cut at the bar the other night, I sat down next to my friend Dom Aiello and enjoyed a cold beer. We got to talking about many things and as conversations go amongst musicians, we started talking about music. We were out back at the Hole and as many of you may know, the juke box out there is nothing if not eclectic. I believe a Creedence Clearwater Revival song came on and I declared that they are the best American Rock and Roll band. Of course, this isn't necessarily true, but it set the tone for the next 45 minutes.

I soon posed the Top 5 List subject: "Top 5 American Rock and Roll Bands."

We soon established that while many acts from the fifties who were responsible for Rock and Roll should maybe be on the list, their importance came more into play with how they affected young pale men in England. Dom sees a lot of that stuff as rockabilly anyway and I see it as lightweight. That "Bands" is in the title is important as well. This excludes the Bill Haleys, the Jerry Lee Lewises, the Elvises, and the Buddy Hollies. We're talking bands here. And we talked bands. I suprised myself by considering some bands who I would otherwise blow off, only because of their undeniable Rock and Roll aesthetic. And no, Cheap Trick wasn't even brought up.

We saw eye to eye on most every band that we discussed and found it really difficult to choose 5. While each of our Top 5's would have been different, we could at least agree on 14 to choose from. I don't remember who he chose aside from ZZ Top, which I agree with. Maybe we agreed on X too. Anyways, now that I've had a few days I'll try and pick.

ZZ Top
The Allman Brothers
X
Creedence
The Doors

See, it's hard. Whatever. Of course it doesn't matter. It's fun is all. Here's the master, in my own hand.




Saturday, February 12, 2011

Gigs: Feb 11 & 12

Last night I played with Grand Champeen at the Elk's Lodge and then with Excited States at ND. While they were rather different shows, both were fun. The Elk's Lodge gig was a joint birthday celebration which allowed Grand Champeen some room to stretch out and play some fun covers. We also played some originals fairly poorly, but that's ok. Right? From what I can remember...

Wounded Eye
You May Be Right (BJ)
Records & Tapes
And Your Bird Can Sing (Beatles)
Cottonmouth
Get Back To The Quiet
Hey Tonight (CCR)
Winterlong (Neil)
Foreplay/Come On Come On (Boston/Cheap Trick)
Root and Branch
Radio Radio (Declan MacManus)
Come On Baby Let's Go Downtown (Neil)
Can't Hardly Wait (Westerberg)
Paid Vacation
Just Want To Get You Alone
Bottleglass
Another World, Another Planet (Only Ones)
All The Young Dudes (Bowie)
Walk Of Life (Dire S.)


At 10pm I hauled ass over to the ND, found a parking spot right outside the door, and walked into The Decade Show's third to last song. They have really spruced up that venue since the last time I was there. I feels like a real club now. Right on. Excited States went on second and delivered a searing set of catchy, angular, rock gems. That set went a little bit like...

Victories
1983
The 15th (wire)
Found Some Tapes
New Song
Pretty Little Cages
Slow Cooker
Feel The Sting
New Song
Under The Weight
Look What the Wind Blew In (Thin Lizzy)


The next evening, Grand Champeen shared the "middle" stage at the Hole in the Wall with Pink Nasty, and The Mother Hips from California. Jack Wilson played short sets between acts on the front stage and helped make a great night all around. Pink Nasty delivered a solo set that was full of good songs and an endearing, stark honesty. Grand Champeen played second and tore the room apart, leaving a splintered stage for the Mother Hips to repair with a couple of hours of smooth Northern California tunes. Despite the nearly unrecoverable state in which we left the room, they managed to put on a great show. Perhaps it was their creative songwriting that displayed their mastery of mid-song tempo changes. Or it may have been their outstanding musicianship and singing abilities. The loyal and excited crowd was a no doubt a big help. I don't know what happened on the first night of the Hips' two-night stand when Smoke and Feathers and December Boys opened, but I hope for them that it went as well as our night did. We did something like this:

Join Us
Good Slot
Diff Sort
Records &
Get You Alone
Root &
Get Back TTQ
Wounded
Death Of
PGPA
Haste
Ides
One &
Rott
Come On Baby Let's Go Downtown
Rest Of
Fakin' It

Or at least I think that's how it goes. Some fella who flew into town to see/bootleg the Mother Hips recorded us as well. I want to find this guy and get a copy. He said he'd give us one. If the recording turned out, it should be a good snapshot.



Tuesday, February 1, 2011

Upcoming Gigs!!

I am in, like, five bands and it's starting to get busy around here. Here is my schedule for the upcoming month or two. I'll be updating as I find out more, especially regarding SXSW.

Feb 11 10:30pm
Excited States @ ND w/ fivehead, The Decade Show, Militant Babies

Feb 12
Grand Champeen @ The Hole in the Wall w/ the Mother Hips, Pink Nasty

Feb 16
Past Prayers @ Ghostroom w/ Nic Armstrong, Beta Rhythm

Feb 19
Bremen Riot @ Hole in the Wall w/ Polite Society, Melissa Bryan, Sissy Spaceship

Feb 23 (11pm)
Excited States @ Carousel w/ Why Not Satellite

Feb 25 (9pm)
Grand Champeen @ Club Deville w/ Lil' Cap'n Travis, Boxcar Bandits

Mar 4
Bremen Riot @ Bryce Clifford's House; House Party!!!!!

SXSW Week

Mar 15 (8pm)
Grand Champeen @ Hole in the Wall w/ Glossary, Romantica, Vulture Whale, Lil' Cap'n Travis, The Mighty Deerlick/Militant Babies, Bremen Riot

Mar 16 (2:15pm)
Freelan Barons @ Treehouse (501 E. 6th street)

Mar 17 (3pm)
Freelan Barons @ Threadgill's

Mar 17 (5pm)
Grand Champeen @ Trophy's; Ballard day party

Mar 17 (7pm)
Bremen Riot @ Dog and Duck w/ the Minus Five

Mar 18 (7pm)
Freelan Barons @ Taproom @6th w/ Madison Square Gardeners

Mar 18 (10:30pm)
Freelan Barons @ The Treehouse; "We Are Columbus" showcase

Mar 19 (9pm)
Freelan Barons @ Lustre Pearl; official SXSW Showcase

SXSW is over

Mar 31 (12:30am)
Past Prayers @ Hole In The Wall w/ Right or Happy, Austerity Measures

Thursday, November 11, 2010

Who Does That?

I was sitting next to this guy at a traffic light the other day. He was smoking a cigarette in a brand new Mercedes Benz with the windows rolled up. Who does that?

Saturday, November 6, 2010

Hater

I think that when a person is deemed a hater by someone else, it's just the deemer making themselves feel better about their own righteousness. Does a person have to like everything on earth in order to not be a hater? If a person expresses their opinion and it doesn't line up with another person's, does that make one of the people a hater? I think calling someone a hater is pretty shallow. It seems to imply a sense of narrowmindedness; that the "non-hater" won't accept that other people might not have the same likes or opinions as them. In this ever self-satisflying world, this mentality is only gonna get worse. As it gets easier and easier to program every gadget and convenience to a person's exact specifications, humans' acceptance of others' methods and preferences will diminish.

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

A Letter To The Chronicle

(This is a letter I've written to The Austin Chronicle. I had to submit each section individually online but I'm mailing the letter in it's entirety via USPS. It is posted here as I wrote it. To read the article that drove me to distraction, click on this: http://www.austinchronicle.com/gyrobase/Issue/story?oid=oid%3A1027791)



Dear Chronicle,

This letter is a reaction to Margaret Moser’s feature story regarding the five Jimi Hendrix albums released in March by Sony Legacy.

I

While I understand that the previously unreleased Jimi Hendrix recordings that have just been unleashed on the world warrant critical attention, I believe the need to review his groundbreaking and game changing original 40-year old recordings is banal. Does Moser or the Austin Chronicle truly think that any of their reading audience hasn’t heard these albums? Really. I would bet that the number of people in Austin who are intimately familiar with the recorded works of The Jimi Hendrix Experience outnumber 2:1 the number of people who voted in the last local election. Anything more than a review of his latest posthumous release, which barely exists in this feature, is telling us what we already know.

II

Amongst the few informative passages actually addressing the recent Hendrix releases, one that addresses non-musical information with any real insight is one that refers to Stevie Ray Vaughan. You just had to mention him, didn’t you? In a seemingly desperate attempt to continue to blow Austin’s exaggerated historical self-worth out of proportion, Moser connects Stevie Ray Vaughan to Jimi Hendrix by comparison of their penmanship! Weak. If musicians’ stylish misspellings provide glimpses of greatness, look for the next Chamber of Commerce mascot in the gear rental agreements at Rock N Roll Rentals. Better yet, double check the piles of rejected SXSW applications that will accumulate over at the Chronicle office this fall. After considering all the musicians who have emulated, worshipped, and covered Hendrix over the years, I’m confounded as to why Stevie Ray Vaughn was mentioned at all.

III

Moser, I can’t believe you had the nerve to state that at the time of his death, “Hendrix hadn’t discovered Texas guitarists yet.” Knowing that Hendrix was a big fan of Billy Gibbons is Rock 101. Gibbons’ Moving Sidewalks opened for The Jimi Hendrix Experience on their first tour of the United States. If you had been paying attention in all the greenrooms and Austin Music Awards ceremonies your presence has graced, somewhere along the lines you would have heard that Jimi Hendrix very much admired and respected Billy Gibbons as a guitarist.

And by the way, what’s a blues native? Why did you interrupt an article about one of history’s greatest musicians with an anecdote about a teenage blues band that covered two Hendrix songs? I bet that has never happened before. Oh, wait. Millions of other burgeoning rockers and I all did that in the 9th grade. As difficult as it may be, please try to tell us something we don’t already know.

IV

I too remember when Hendrix burst into my life. I contracted chicken pox in the eighth grade and for two weeks I stayed at home employing my parents’ record collection as a substitute soundtrack to Super Mario Bros. I remember Are You Experienced? and Heart’s 1985 hit-monster Heart being the two albums that were in heavy rotation. After repeated listens I became frustrated that “Third Stone From The Sun” skipped at the end during the industrial/piledriver fadeout. While this blemish prevented me from being able to hear “Third Stone” resolve the way Hendrix intended, the dynamic and rhythmic tour de force that had already occurred became the blueprint that would shape my musical world. And as millions of others’ stories go, my first band was playing “Hey Joe” and “Purple Haze” in my friend’s garage the next year. (Sorry ‘bout that, Jimi.)

And now that I’ve shared this story I ask myself, “So what?” For a period of time in my youth, that Heart album meant as much to me as “Are You Experienced?” Does that mean that because badass Austin bassist Mark Andes played on that Heart album that he has anything to do with Hendrix? No. Nor does it mean that anyone wants to hear about my chicken pox any more than they want to hear about your crabs.

V

When I first read Moser’s article, The Big Lebowski analogies rushed to my mind as I imagined my The Dude to Moser’s Walter Sobchak. With hopes that my oft repeated question will actually be answered, I raise my voice to ask, “What does Stevie Ray Vaughan have to do with anything?” This question is a symptom of my exhaustion brought on by the nostalgia pedaled by the Chronicle, and Austin in general, on a regular basis. Nearly every week, the names of fallen heroes and venues fill the feature stories and gossip column as if these ghosts were the only major players the Austin music scene had to stand behind. Let’s move on, people. There are hundreds and hundreds of people alive in Austin, right now, renting PAs, recording equipment and rehearsal spaces, making their own music and hoping to be heard. And of those living people, dozens of them truly deserve to be heard by the millions just as the Sahms, Foleys, Vaughans, and Van Zandts have been.

Another way of saying this is that it’s sad that with so many musicians, bands and songwriters in this town, long gone B-list dinosaurs like Moby Grape are the ones getting a cover story. Moser, please don’t attempt a feature about the newly remastered and repackaged Exile On Main St. Rolling Stone already did the heavy lifting on that one.

Alex Livingstone

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

Horses For Courses: The White Album as a single album

While flying down the highway in the van with Tim Easton last year, the subject of a single-disc White Album came up. The suggestion that The White Album would have been better as one album than as two is 40+ years old and still interesting to me. I've often entertained the idea of it being a single disc because I've always thought that there's some serious filler spread across the four sides of The Beatles' November 1968 release.

So that day, in the van on the highway, I came up with the song sequence for what I think would be the best single disc White Album. Many things were considered before I came to my final 14-song sequence. Without a doubt, my choices revolve around which songs on The Beatles are my favorites and which I think are filler. Perhaps that "my favorites" is the only qualifier based in
my reality makes it one of the most stringent parameters. My favorites are my favorites and while some may disagree, it's my opinion and its the basis for my whole side of the argument. By the same token, I'm not trying to say that some of the songs I omitted from the line-up aren't amongst my favorites. It's just that of the omitted tracks, I have decided that there's something about them that makes them less brilliant, more aimless, or just poopy. For instance, I have always loved the song "Martha My Dear" but for the purposes of this experiment, I feel that it's too sappy and theatrical. On top of those qualities, I've read that the song was borne out of McCartney's desire to write a challenging piano piece as an exercise which comes off as clinical. Then you have the fact that none of the other Beatles played on this track, while a quality not precluding a song from being in my one album sequence, it's certainly not a quality benefitting a song whose merits are already in doubt. Lastly, "Martha My Dear" was not a part of the Esher demos.


Though I came up with my single-album sequence (SAS) in September, I hadn't considered writing about my SAS until I heard the complete Esher demos earlier this month. I had heard the songs from the Esher tapes that were included on The Beatles Anthology 3 but I hadn't fully considered the importance of The Beatles' four track session at Harrison's house in May of 1968. By mid-May, The Beatles had all finally returned from Rishikesh, India with a ton of songs for their next album. I now put a lot of importance on these demos because as a songwriter, I know that when it comes time to make demo recordings, the songs that get priority treatment are the completed ones as well as the songwriters' favorites. So in considering my SAS, a song's presence on the Esher tapes is a feather in its cap.



As far as the framework for the length of the album, I decided that like the majority of their albums had up to 1968, it should include 14 songs. The Beatles contained 30 songs meaning less than half were making the cut. Due to obvious inferiority and overwhelming unpopularity, nine of those thirty had no chance of making it on the album. I bet anybody could guess which ones those are. This left a list of 21 songs to be judged by the aforementioned determinants and the rule that Ringo had one lead vocal per album.

Side One
Back in the U.S.S.R.
Dear Prudence
Yer Blues
Mother Nature's Son
Don't Pass Me By
Happiness Is A Warm Gun
Long, Long, Long

Side Two
Revolution
Sexy Sadie
Blackbird
Everybody's Got Something To Hide Except Me and My Monkey
While My Guitar Gently Weeps
Helter Skelter
Julia


One thing that I didn't consider when I came up with this list is the balance of Paul and John songs that seemed to occur on the earlier albums. I know that during that 24-hour long sequencing session on October 16-17, 1968, they decided that neither John nor Paul would have more than two of their own songs in a row. I also determined that if George got one song per side and Ringo got one vocal per disc like they orchestrated on the original release, that would leave 11 songs for John and Paul to split up giving someone the upper hand. Looking back on my John-heavy sequence, I feel like so much of what Paul did didn't really include the other Beatles that John's tunes would naturally win out. "Honey Pie", "Why Don't We Do It In The Road?", and "I Will" just aren't band songs. Julia isn't either, but it shows a side of Lennon that had rarely been seen up to this point and with it's open-hearted sentiment, it has to be included. "Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da" is the possibly the one song by Paul that I would put on the SAS against my better judgement, mainly because of its popularity. It got cut in the first round because I find it annoying and I know that it took them forever to get it right in the studio, having tracked the song over and over throughout each day of a week. This to me says that they just weren't feeling it or that some of them didn't think it was worthy enough of their hard work and attention to take it seriously and get it right. Perhaps I would substitute "Everybody's Got Something Something To Hide Except For Me And My Monkey" with "Ob-La-Di", making it more balanced. Anyway, I reckon I think John's songs are better.

There you have it. I love "Savoy Truffle" and "Cry Baby Cry" and "I Will" and "Martha My Dear" and "Glass Onion" but I just don't think they make the cut. Sue me. Also, I think Harrison's "Not Guilty" would have been a contender over "Piggies".

As I'm sitting here looking at the 16 songs that didn't make the cut, 6 to 8 of those would have made an interesting double EP like Magical Mystery Tour or maybe a couple four song EPs like they periodically released up through July 1966. I didn't spend much time on the sequence but it might look something like...

Birthday
I'm So Tired
Martha My Dear
Cry Baby Cry


Savoy Truffle
Ob-La Di, Ob-La-Da
Glass Onion
I Will

But I love The White Album. Just sayin's all.