January 11, 2011

My 2010: In One Ear and Out The Other (the “Live” show)

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Baroness at Bumbershoot ::: photo by Abbey Simmons

Ladies and Gentlemen, hold on to your hats, this is for all the marbles….

“You’re Not From Around Here…Are You?” – Best Live Performance By A Touring Act

Winner(s): Goodie Mob. Coalesce. Baroness. Almost Winner(s): Jay Electronica.

Judging by the fact that I have multiple winners listed, this was a difficult decision to make. Goodie Mob gave me a reason to believe in the concept of “reunion tours” again. I graduated from the school of thought where if you break up once, you should probably stay separated. Unless you’re a fan of daytime television or have the desire to construct a Greek tragedy in which you are the star, it’s probably in the best interest of all parties involved. This Goodie Mob tour could’ve went a lot like a Naughty By Nature (who?) reunion tour. But it didn’t. Big Gipp rocking a bullet proof vest in tongue and cheek fashion. Cee-Lo playing the part of the big bad wolf by blowing the “house” down with his vocals. It was a thing of beauty. Coalesce took a decade of mockery by yours truly and shoved it down my throat and into the pit of my stomach. I’m still removing the crow from my teeth and the show happened back in May. Baroness may be the crown jewel of this trio. They braved the elements. an unfavorable set-time (competing with lots of other acts at Bumbershoot) and still came out as the undeniable kings of the mountain. They literally destroyed generations of people. Never have I seen someone who isn’t old enough to know the mathematical concept of “multiplication” rock out so hard. They performed with a precision and charisma that was unmatched in the calendar year of 2010. Kudos to them. On the other hand….

The Thermals at Bumbershoot ::: photo by Abbey Simmons

“Who Are You Boning For Your Success?” Worst Live Performance By A “Touring” Band

Winner: Free Energy. Almost Winner: The Thermals.

For as long as Free Energy are in existence, this is their award to lose. The kings of pomp. How many Mick Jagger “How To Be A Frontman” VHS tapes can we watch in one night? No. Let’s choreograph the moves we see in RockBand.  Maybe if we wear makeup, people like us more? Suddenly we’re opening for a souless, cowardly Weezer. Go figure. The Thermals are a band that I enjoy, at times. Here’s where I utter the predictable “I like the first album, but that’s it” go-to critic line. I saw them in the KEXP Bumbershoot Lounge or what have you. Easily one of the most boring, uninspired performances I’ve ever seen. Billy Corgan is looking in the mirror, shining his bald head and mocking toasting this display of live mediocrity. Well done. The well-trained people in the audience clapped after every song. Why? Was it because it was live radio and that was your job as a studio audience? Sheep. I wanted to “boo” and maybe “hiss.” Tomatoes would have been heaved in the Thermals general direction. There is the possibility that the Thermals were saving their passion for the Broad Street Stage later on that tonight. That’s not a legit excuse in my opinion.

Drew Grow and the Pastors’ Wives ::: photo by Abbey Simmons

“‘It’s Getting Better All The Time…’No Seriously Your Band Is Like That Beatles Song…” Live Show Award.

Winner: Drew Grow and the Pastor’s Wives. Almost Winner(s): What What Now.

I’m just stating the facts. Every time I see Drew Grow and the Pastor’s Wives, they are better than the time before…and they are always really good. After the first four or five times this happened, I was shocked. Now this is just something I expect. It’s too bad for them, they’re fucked by their own greatness.  Sooner or later I fully expect Drew Grow to utter this in the middle of a live performance: “While all of you had your eyes closed during It All Comes Right, Seth and Jeremiah have built a spaceship out of your adoration. Look around you. Ladies and Gentlemen, we are currently floating in space…I’m not kidding.” I wouldn’t be surprised in the slightest. In fact, I demand that this happens the next time I see them. Don’t mind me. I’m a first child. We’re the spoiled ones.

See the rest of Phil’s live favorites (and least favorites) after the jump… (more…)

March 2, 2010

Who’s That Peeking In My Window? Goodie Mob at Neumo’s

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goodie_jpg_595x325_crop_upscale_q85 Goodie Mob Promotional Photo

First off let me congratulate you Seattle! I’d like to thank all those who went out to Neumo’s  last Wednesday night to give Goodie Mob the sold out audience that they deserved. I didn’t buy my ticket until 2pm the afternoon of the show and informed a friend of mine that there were still tickets left. I didn’t think it would sellout by the time I made it to Capitol Hill, but I was wrong. We get out front of Neumo’s around 10pm (I’m a genius and left my house without my ticket initially) and saw a queue the size of one those monsters from the movie Tremors.

My gut said “Good grief!” but my fiesta said “High-five!”

The time had come to formulate a plan, how do I get my friend into this sold out show? Let us order some drinks at the Moe Bar and flex some of our novice networking muscle, let us see what we can’t do. Bummer. The conundrum left us with nothing to enjoy but the sights and sounds of other bar patrons instead Helladope’s set. I didn’t mind too much, observing a crowd that came to watch a lineup of MC’s can be as entertaining as How I Met Your Mother.

To point out the obvious, you can’t have a hip-hop show without an audience. In the instance that it does happen, it’s like witnessing a fatal car accident. On the other hand, Rock n’ roll can survive in a cave, without food, water and someone to love. The energy of the band and music can exist on its own without any kind of fanfare or adoration. Compare the unsaid importance of a crowd at a hip-hop show in relation to that of an audience that goes to a venue to get down to some rock n’ roll and your talking about two drastically different worlds. It’s that connection between audience and performer that draws a wider variety of people to hip-hop shows than that of the rock persuasion. Currently, hip-hop is saying something that rock n roll is not. Even if an overwhelming majority of  contemporary mainstream hip-hop isn’t saying anything of significance.

Just before Goodie Mob took the stage, my friend somehow managed to gain entry into venue. This is a perfect example of never giving up on your dreams kids. If you wait around long enough, you too might have the opportunity to attend a sold out show at Neuno’s when you don’t have a ticket. I can’t tell you how he did it, let’s just say Calgon (ancient Chinese secret).

Goodie Mob took the stage with all four members dressed in black from head-to-toe. You had to wonder if there was some symbolism to their fashion sense. Was this reunion tour really a funeral march of redemption for southern hip-hop? Goodie Mob was one of the pioneers at the forefront of the southern hip-hop movement. A genre that has since been hijacked by syrup sippin’ empty vessels called “artists”, backed by one-hit wonder krunk inducing club beats. We’re talking about hand-me-down imitators of DJ Screw and Shawty Redd, rappers with less staying power than Lord Tariq and Peter Gunz. This is not what the people want and the Mob knows this.

With every song serving as a “Remember me?” bludgeoning overture, they made home fries out of would-be small potatoes MC’s. All your unwritten bars became a desolate grey wasteland of never-had, courtesy of  the Goodie Mob’s blunt ashes. They tore through a set old favorites that occasionally featured an unexpected sample or two. “Get Rich to This” had a sample of the Eurhythmic’s “Sweet Dreams” that was seamlessly included into the song. “Cell Therapy” had the guitar intro from “Stairway to Heaven”. I’m sure the first thing that came to Jimmy Page’s mind when he wrote that riff was Big Gipp jumping around Neumo’s stage in a bulletproof vest.  I didn’t think it was possible but “Goodie Bag” sounded more threatening and confrontational than it does on record. “Dirty South” highlighted the around my way storytelling that made rappers from the south so unique at a time when hip-hop was getting most of its attention in New York and Los Angeles.  The crowd erupted when “Black Ice” started up, the only thing missing was the guest appearance from Outkast.

The Mob did a couple of songs from side projects that featured at least one   member of the group. Cee-Lo performed the Gnarls Barkley (his project with DJ Danger Mouse) hit single “Crazy”. He also performed the song “Closet Freak” from his solo album Cee-Lo Green and His Perfect Imperfections. Initially it was hard for me to embrace some of the projects that Cee-Lo was a part of. I would’ve rather heard new Goodie Mob tracks instead. However, his vocals are unyielding and so impressive in person; you have to appreciate the fact he ever decided to do rap in the first place. Goodie Mob also performed Outkast’s “Liberation” off of Aquemini. I was hoping by the time they got to the part of the song where Erykah Badu absolutely kills it, that Mrs. Badu would repel down from the rafters and blow everyone’s minds. “You can catch me in my too short drop/Mouth got colors like a fruit loop box…” Smile for me daddy. I completely forgot Big Gipp was on Nelly’s hit single “Grillz”, until I heard those eerie holiday chimes accompanied by the sinister artificial string section over the P.A. speakers.

Besides showcasing songs from other projects, the Goodie Mob had a tongue and cheek “rock n’ roll break” during their set. Snippets of the following songs were all blared over the loudspeaker at one point, Danzig’s “Mother,” Marilyn Manson’s “Beautiful People” and Nirvana’s “Smells Like Teen Spirit.” I thought it was pretty hilarious. I guess they figured, “Hey, Seattle, flannel, grunge is still kind of around right?” Looking back on the break now, it was more a strategic move than anything else. One of the biggest problems with hip-hop acts is that they sometimes run out of gas by the end of the set. This was not the case with the Goodie Mob.

Like the prizefighters you knew they were, the Goodie Mob answered the bell until the final notes of “They Don’t Dance No Mo’”.  In my faux old age, I’ve become skeptical of reunion tours because they often leave me heartbroken and disappointed. Goodie Mob’s performance will cause me to second guess my instincts the next time another one of my favorite acts reunites and comes rolling into town. And as they continue from one city to the next, I hope that the true spirit of southern hip-hop will rise again and lay waste to the ring tone rap that it unintentionally gave rise to.

February 23, 2010

Show Preview: Goodie Mob at Neumos

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goodiemob

“Now what they know about the banana and mayonnaise/Two slices of toasted bread on a napkin?/Straight up nuts with this country drawl/It ain’t no reason looking for it, ain’t no fucking flaw/I didn’t go to bed without my lucky bear claw/ See I’m a red stud looking to bloom like a mushroom in a jug/ Under hot lights, crystallize so nice/ When I think twice, I love long summer nights/Four records deep and I still get stage fright/From small towns to the big city night life….” - Goodie Mob “Fly Away”

Now I’ve heard a lot of hip hop in my lifetime (I’m black, it’s a prerequisite for my existence), but the beginning to Goodie Mob’s Fly Away might be my favorite opening verse in a hip hop song. It’s not rapid-fire or particularly tricky, it wasn’t born out of some legendary stoop cipher or corner store L break. Although the rhyme scheme is fairly pedestrian, the delivery and feelings behind the words hit you so hard that the melody never leaves your head. I use to recite these lyrics all the time; in the shower, on the way to the basketball court, coming home from class, going to class, on the way to a show, right before I grab some drinks with some friends etc. Those words never got old or feel like they lacked conviction of any sort. Praise the gods that grab the mic that Goodie Mob is back. If you’re not familiar, then I don’t know what to tell you. Where have you been? Ever since that first Outkast album, they should’ve been on your radar. Don’t tell me that you were 11 years old when that album was released, that’s no excuse. Convert your ipod to a time machine; let this handsome brother take you back…to 1995! That’s right! That’s when Goodie Mob’s major label debut Soul Food was released. Did you know that the title track off that album was discussed on NPR?!?! Now that I’ve got your attention, you hipster intellectual you, go here and listen to Bun B (of UGK fame or if you’re unfamiliar with that influential group, Jay-Z’s “Big Pimpin”) talk about the importance of Goodie Mob.

While Soul Food is a great album, better than almost anything that is coming out in the music industry today, Still Standing is better in my opinion. I express bias due to “Fly Away” being one of the tracks on there, but overall I just feel it’s a stronger album.

You don’t have much time. Goodie Mob will be appearing at Neumo’s tomorrow Wednesday February 24th with Helladope. You need to listen to Soul Food, Still Standing and grab Dungeon Family’s (Goodie Mob and Outkast) Even in the Darkness. All of these albums are certified classics! Three albums in 36 hours? Gentle reader, I know you can do it.

For a taste of what is about to come. Goodie Mob performing “Fly Away” at the Tabernacle in Atlanta last week. They’re like a mix of Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band and Parliament. It’s a beautiful thing:


Snag advanced tickets for Wednesday night’s show from TicketsWest for $20 a piece.