Brazilian Girls Nov. 25 at Metro

This concert got off to a very late start, but it was worth the wait. The doors were supposed to open at 11, with opening act the Prairie Cartel coming on at 11:30 and Brazilian Girls at 12:30. But everyone waited in line outside until 12:30, the opening act mysteriously disappeared from the evening’s roster of entertainment, and Brazilian Girls finally took the stage around 1:50 a.m. — to a mix of applause and shouts of “It’s about fucking time!” However, watching Sabina Sciubba for a few minutes was enough to forget about all that waiting.

True to form, she wore a weird get-up. With baloons of various colors attached to her tight gold outfit, she looked like a refugee from a Fruit of the Looms ad. Her eyes were not quite as hidden as they’ve been at most previous appearances, though she still had ornaments on her head, making it hard to get a full view of her face. She seems to enjoy playing a game of sexy peek-a-boo.

The band played songs from both of its records, including two with outrageous choruses that are natural for audience sing-alongs: “Pussy, pussy, pussy, marijuana,” and “Sexy asshole.” Speaking of marijuana, some was actually smoked onstage at this show. Talk about lackadaiscal security. The security guys (contractors, not the usual Metro staff) looked like they were ready for bed, and didn’t care much what was happening. Some fans took advantage of that and jumped onto the stage, some of them partially disrobing. I was sort of hoping Sciubba would pop more of her baloons by the end of the night, but I guess you can’t have everything. The concert wrapped up around 3:30 a.m.

Click here or on the picture above to see my photos of Brazilian Girls in concert.

Tom Waits’ "Orphans"

Telling one of his trademark shaggy-dog stories, Tom Waits recalls chasing a woman as she hops into her car outside a grocery store. “I grabbed her leg and I started pulling it — just the way I’m pulling yours,” he says. And so Waits’ story ends abruptly, without the expected punch line. It’s also the end of the hidden tracks that come at the very end of Waits’ sprawling new three-CD collection, “Orphans: Brawlers, Bawlers & Bastards.”

Those skeptics who don’t appreciate Waits tend to think that he is just pulling our legs. Is his whole act — that famously gruff voice, the freak-show lyrics, the non-sequitur-sprinkled stage banter, that porkpie hat — just shtick? Waits isn’t the only example of a performer whose persona and real person are hard to pin down. Genuine oddball artists aren’t easy to distinguish from gimmicky poseurs. Which artists are delivering surreal visions straight and unfiltered from some loopy brain lobe, and which are hiding behind a wall of jabberwocky because they’re afraid to reveal themselves with truly personal art?

In a recent interview with The Observer, Waits acknowledges asking similar questions about himself during the years after he married Johnsburg, Ill., native Kathleen Brennan, quit drinking and took a more peculiar turn with his music. “I was trying to prove something to myself, too,” he says. “It was like, ‘Am I genuinely eccentric? Or am I just wearing a funny hat?’ All the big questions come up when you get sober. ‘What am I made of? What’s left when you drain the pool?’”

Even Waits fans have to wonder if his public persona is just a beatnik character he’s been playing all this time. The impression he gives in interviews, however, is that he really is that guy. Maybe he invented this persona decades ago, but he has become the character he created. In any case, his music is so rich, so full of the beautiful and the beautifully ugly, that you can’t help feeling the presence of a genius — and yes, a genuine oddball — behind it all.

“Orphans” brings together 24 Waits rarities, including songs from movie soundtracks and tribute albums, with 30 new recordings. Waits is being deliberately vague about the recording dates, so it’s hard to tell exactly what’s truly new. In another recent interview (with Stop Smiling magazine), Waits explains: “A lot of these were recorded within the last year. It’s new stuff. I don’t want to go into the origin of everything, but for me, they’re from questionable sources. I didn’t put any liner notes in because I didn’t want to overexplain it.”

Maybe the air of mystery is designed to make “Orphans” feel more like a cohesive new album rather than a collection of rags and bones. In fact, it’s a little bit of both. Some of the new tracks really are new songs. The most obvious of these is “Road to Peace,” the most explicitly political song Waits has ever recorded, with lyrics pulled from New York Times coverage of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Thanks to a reference to President Bush in that song’s lyrics, no carbon-dating is necessary on this one.

Other “new” tracks are recent recordings of old compositions, some of which Waits originally wrote for other artists, including Sparklehorse and Ramblin’ Jack Elliot. Others are songs from his stage plays, “Franks Wild Years,” “Woyzeck” and “Alice,” that did not make it onto the albums based on those musicals.Three styles of Waits music are segregated into three discs. The bruising, bluesy rockers are on “Brawlers.” The aching ballads are on “Bawlers.” And “Bastards” is full of monologues and more experimental music. That’s the general idea, anyway, but there’s actually a motley mix of styles on each disc. That’s fine, since some of Waits’ best albums, such as 1985’s “Rain Dogs,” were marked by jarring juxtapositions.

Unlike the typical Waits album, “Orphans” includes cover songs, showing Waits paying tribute Kurt Weill, Leadbelly, Jack Kerouac, Daniel Johnston, Skip Spence and the Ramones. Even the spoken-word pieces are dominated by other writers, as Waits reads texts from Charles Bukowski, “Woyzeck” author Georg Büchner, his father-in-law (an homage to a Pontiac) and the World Book Encyclopedia.

It all hangs together surprisingly well. “Brawlers” is both rousing and moody, with majestic moments like “Bottom of the World” offering a breather between the basement-blues numbers. “Bawlers” is reminiscent of another ballad-heavy Waits album, “Alice,” underlining Waits’ sentimental side and his knack for writing direct and simple melodies — tunes that sound so familiar, even if you can never quite place where you’ve heard them before. Weighted toward monologues and oddities, “Bastards” is an entertaining listen for Waits fans, but it will be the least appealing of these discs for the uninitiated.

Whatever musical idiom he chooses, Waits is a master lyricist, filling his songs with vividly named characters (Scarface Ron, Buzz Flederjohn) and references to places (Elkhart, Ind., and Kenosha, Wis., surface here). Waits has that rare gift for writing lyrics that stick in your mind like lines from Bartlett’s Familiar Quotations, a pulp-novel jacket or an apocryphal book of the Bible: “A rat always knows when he’s in with weasels.” “It’s the same with men as with horses and dogs/Nothing wants to die.”

For those listeners who haven’t yet converted to Waits fandom, his gravelly vocals are the biggest obstacle. I’ve heard his singing compared to the Cookie Monster and Scooby-Doo. Yes, it is an acquired taste, but it’s also one of Waits’ best assets. He doesn’t always sing in the same style. In fact, he has several distinct voices: an unrestrained gospel holler, a gruff blues growl, a distant tone that resembles a transistor radio transmission or a megaphone announcement (only partly due to studio effects), and a falsetto that sounds slightly ill, almost lovely.

In a press release for “Orphans,” Waits describes his own voice as well as anyone else ever could: “At the center of this record is my voice. I try my best to chug, stomp, weep, whisper, moan, wheeze, scat, blurt, rage, whine, and seduce. With my voice, I can sound like a girl, the boogieman, a Theremin, a cherry bomb, a clown, a doctor, a murderer … I can be tribal. Ironic. Or disturbed. My voice is really my instrument.” Hearing that instrument is almost reason enough to make “Orphans” one of the year’s most noteworthy releases.Middle photo by Michael O’Brien; bottom photo by James Minchin III; from www.anti.com.

Portastatic Nov. 18 at Schubas

I’m a latecomer to Portastatic (and before that, Superchunk — though I did see Superchunk open for the Mekons eons ago). But I adore the two most recent albums by Portastatic, including the great 2006 release “Be Still Please.” The band’s performances of the songs from that album and the last one, “Bright Things,” were really superb. This is essentially melodic indie pop (almost power pop at times), the sort of music that is performed in concert with a flat understatement. But Portastatic leader Matthew “Mac” McCaughan obviously isn’t one for that sort of performance; he gave it his all, including some highly energetic guitar solo. Margaret White’s violin playing gave the music a lovely feeling of orchestral pop. Portastatic capped off an excellent show by playing an unexpected cover — the Brazilian tropicalia hit “Baby” by Os Mutantes.

Opening act Benjy Ferree was fairly enjoyable. In my recent review of his CD, I harped a bit too much on the fact that he sounds like Jack White (at least as far as his vocals go). I still heard that similarity, but he’s no copy cat. He played his songs in an acoustic setting, accompanied just by cello, which brought out their folkie side.

Click here or on the picture above to see photos of Portastatic and Benjy Ferree.

Three Million Tongues Festival

The first night of the Three Million Tongues Festival, Nov. 17 at the Empty Bottle, was a truly weird lineup. Most of it falls under that misnomer of a rubric, “Freak Folk,” and some of it actually was freaky. Up first was Nick Schillace, doing some very nice instrumental fingerstyle guitar. The next main-stage act was Spires That in the Sunset Rise, a trio of women playing slow, experimental dirges on autoharp, banjo, thumb piano and assorted other contraptions. The overall effect was like listening to a silverware drawer being dumped onto the floor, accompanied by unearthly wails and moans. As bad as that might sound to some people, I rather liked it, though the slow tempos did get to me after a while.

The least folky act of the night, Steve Mackay & the Radon Ensemble, played some intense avant-garde jazz, including a fantastic, frenetic drum solo. (Actually, it was two drummers, so I guess that’s a drum duo?) The horn players left the stage at one point to march through the club, returning for a final flourish that saw Mackay squirming on his back. In between these acts, the Empty Bottle presented other performers on a “stage” located near the sound board, so the music was pretty much continuous — though you couldn’t always see what was happening over there if you were near the main stage.

The headliner for the night was English folk-rock legend Bert Jansch, once a member of Pentagle. It’s interesting that this guy is suddenly getting buzz and indie-rock cred, all because a new generation of musicians including Devendra Banhardt have cited him as an influence — and because his new album, “The Black Swan,” has been issued by one of those really cool record label, Chicago-based Drag City. I dare say that Jansch would have been playing in front of a much different crowd a few years ago if he had ventured to Chicago then. I picture him playing at some coffeeshop and getting barely any publicity. Well, in any case, he deserves the attention he’s getting now. He played in front of an audience that included a few older folk fans but looked prety much like the Empty Bottle crowd on any other night — a lot of people in their 20s who are into diverse music and tolerant of experimental sounds that might clear another room. There’s something cool about watching young people reverentially listening to an older guy playing an acoustic guitar.

I’m a latecomer myself to Jansch, so I wasn’t familiar with too many of the songs, other than the ones I’ve begun listening to lately on “The Black Swan.” He played some old solo and Pentagle songs, tunes by other artists including a couple by Jackson C. Frank. Jansch was a calm presence onstage, seeming a bit bemused by the attention he was getting, including the overly enthusiastic excalamations of one passionate fan standing near the stage. (When Jansch insisted he would be coming back to Chicago, this guy said he didn’t believe it, pointing out that Jansch is playing only three U.S. cities on this tour. “You don’t love us, man.”) Jansch complained about the Bottle’s typically dim lighting, but the venue seemed incapable of turning the lights up any higher. There was one brief series of bursts as they lights went up and down in brightness. Wow, such sophisticated technology. “The lights are buggered,” Jansch remarked.

Jansch’s guitar playing is very impressive, even though it doesn’t feel like he’s showing off. His picking patterns serve the songs, and it’s only when he does a fast flourish at the end that his full virtuosity becomes apparent. He was coaxed back onstage for a two-song encore, including the wonderful title song from his new album.

Click here or on the picture above for photos of Bert Jansch and the other artists at the Three Million Tongues Festival.

Undertow bands Nov. 16 at the Hideout

Chicago’s venerated Hideout played host to three bands on the dependable Undertow label. First up was Magnolia Summer, out of St. Louis, who have a nice disc from earlier this year, “From Driveways Lost View.” The band gets some of its atmospherics from the violin; and there were also a couple of songs with those tinkling quasi-notes you get from playing the tight part of the guitar strings below the bottom bridge. It all sounded a bit more muscular in concert than it does on record; well worth checking out for fans of Americana.

Playing second, Dolly Varden previewed some of the songs from its forthcoming album, “The Panic Bell.” Finally! A new Dolly Varden album. It’s been, what, four years since the last one? (Not that the members of the band haven’t been busy with solo records, side projects, art exhibits, T-shirts, etc.) Steve Dawson and Diane Christiansen are one of those great on-stage couples, teasing each other with a deprecating sense of humor. The new songs sound like strong additions to the Dolly Varden repertoire. At one point, Dawson said, “Here’s a new song. It’s sad as fuck.” Audience member: “It’d better be.” Christiansen: “That’s why you came, right?”

Glossary, a roots-rock band from Murfreesboro, Tenn., played last. Glossary’s one of those groups that keeps its songs within a limited sonic range. At first, a lot of the songs sound similar, but that’s just because Glossary doesn’t vary its formula all that much. Once you get to know the tunes, they do grow on you. They’re even better in person, cranking up the guitar for some rousing moments. This was Glossary’s first time at the Hideout, and as the band played, these Tennesseeans got to witness a distinctively Chicago phenomenon — the “tamale guy” came through, calling out for tamale-hungry patrons.

Hideout owner Tim Tuten was in rare form. His introduction at the beginning of the night turned into an extended imitation of the Who at their recent Chicago concert. At a couple of points, Tuten noted, “I don’t even know why I’m talking about this.” Neither do we, Tim, but please keep talking.

Click on the images below to see more photos of the Undertow bands.

Norfolk & Western Nov. 15 at Subterranean

I was very distracted at this concert. Distracted by camera problems. I showed up, camera in hand, all ready to take photos. And then, as opening act Corrina Repp began to sing, I realized my lens was malfuctioning. The same lens I’d had fixed three weeks earlier was, once again, refusing to focus. Argh. Back to the repair shop with that one.

Anyway… I was not really in a good state of mind after that to review the performances by Repp or the next of the opening acts, For All the Sweet Children. Both seemed OK to me.

Norfolk & Western finally pulled me out of my funk. This is a really nice band, with some excellent interplay between the instruments. And when Rachel Blumberg (also heard in the Decemberists and backing M. Ward) gets into a frenetic patch of drumming, the music takes on a power that I haven’t noticed in the studio recordings. She’s something else.

My Brightest Diamond Nov. 11 at Schubas

It’s a puzzle why some artists get tons of critical and blog buzz and others go unnoticed. My Brightest Diamond isn’t exactly unnoticed at the moment, but she (Shara Worden, that is) isn’t getting nearly as much notice as she deserves. Her album, “Bring Me the Workhorse,” is definitely going to be near the top of my year-end list. And, yet, she didn’t get much publicity for her headlining gig last night at Schubas, and the show was not sold out. Just wait, though — with performances and recordings like this, My Brightest Diamond will rise in prominence, hype or not.

This turned out to be a great triple bill. The first performer of the night, Via Tania, played cool mellow pop. A touch of Norah Jones but much cooler than that, with a blend of electronica with ukelele, some of that laid-back electronic vibe of groups like Broadcast. I liked it quite a bit, and noticed a gaggle of concertgoers going up to the stage at the end of the set to enthusiastically praise Via Tania.

The second band of the night, Pedestrian, was unfamiliar to me, though a number of people in the crowd were obviously fans Terrible name, good band. With tenor vocals and pretty guitar arpeggios building into dramatic climaxes at the ends of the songs, Pedestrian sounded a little like Radiohead or Coldplay (sorry for the Coldplay comparsion — I don’t like that band much, and I don’t mean it as an insult toward Pedestrian). I was duly impressed and now I’m eager to check out Pedestrian’s recordings.

Shara Worden joined Pedestrian onstage for part of the group’s set, and then Pedestrian functioned as her backup band during her set, demonstrating considerable musical prowess. I loved My Brightest Diamond’s opening set at the recent Sufjan Stevens concert at the Rivieria, especially because she had a full string section, but it was just too short. She topped that performance with the one last night at Schubas. She was lacking strings, but her music had even more strength with a full-on rock band. She began by herself, playing a Nina Simone song, then ran through most of the songs off “Bring Me the Workhorse.” Worden has an incredible voice. She has a degree in operatic singing, and it shows, but she also knows how to adapt those talents to rock music. After switching between guitar and keyboards, she sang without playing any instrument on the last song of the night, “Freak Out,” which gave her the freedom to twirl around the stage like a whirling Dervish.

Click here or on the above picture to see my photos of My Brightest Diamond and Pedestrian.

Click here or on the above picture to see my photos of Via Tania.

Bettye LaVette Nov. 10 at the Old Town School of Folk Music

Every note she sings is intense. On her first song of the night, LaVette shakes and shimmies across the stage like someone one-third her age. Can she keep up this energy level all night? Yes, though she does settle down with the dance moves.

When I interviewed her recently (my article for Pioneer Press is here), she said her voice is more similar to male singers like Wilson Pickett than it is to female singers like Aretha Franklin. I see her point. It’s not necessarily that masculine of a voice, but it has a straining quality that isn’t exactly feminine, either. When she spoke between songs, her voice sounded quite hoarse — you wondered how she was able to sing so well when she could barely talk. However she does it, there’s something quite magnificent and powerful about her singing voice, the way she imbues each note with emotion.

She scattered in comments about her career, a tale of decades of struggle finally resulting in some overdue recognition the last few years. Her band left the stage one by one, and then she was alone for her closing song, an a cappella version of Sinead O’Connor’s “I Do Not Want What I Haven’t Got.” One woman’s voice filled the room and everyone stood in awe.

The Pernice Brothers Nov. 9 at Schubas

The Pernice Brothers is one of those bands that doesn’t really change its songs much in concert from the studio recordings. But even though they play the songs pretty much by the numbers, the live performances bring a certain clarity. For one thing, they show that Joe Pernice and his sidemen can recreate that sensation of perfect light indie-pop without the aid of studio tricks. Pernice hits all of those high notes in his breathy tenor, and guitarist Peyton Pinkerton nails all of those great guitar leads and solos. With the guitars cranked a little louder than they are in the studio, the band added a little intensity to the songs.

Joe Pernice jokingly introduced himself as his brother, Bob (who played on the latest album, “Live a Little,” but is not touring with the group), saying that Joe no longer tours. The set included a cover of “The Butcher’s Tale,” a song by the Zombies from their “Odessey and Oracle” record, which Pernice introduced as war protest. Actually, it’s one of the few songs in the rock canon about World War I. An odd choice of a cover, but the Bros. almost made it sound like one of their own tunes.

Click here or on the picture above to see my photos of the Pernice Brothers.

Robyn Hitchcock Nov. 8 at Metro


Strangely, the last time I saw Robyn Hitchcock was the day after the 2004 presidential election, and this concert came a day after the 2006 mid-term election. At that concert in 2004 (a solo acoustic show at Schubas), the political mood was grim. Hitchcock offered condolences to his American audience and performed his song that proclaims: “Rumsfeld is the anti-Christ.”

Last night, Hitchcock arrived in Chicago in a more celebratory political mood, noting that the “occupation” was coming to an end, and he reprised the song about Rumsfeld and the Bushies. As much as I like seeing Hitchcock perform acoustic shows, it was good to see him with a band for a change. And how cool to see Peter Buck of R.E.M. and Scott McCaughey of the Minus 5 playing with him. Buck could be doing pretty much anything he wants, but he obviously is having fun working as a guitar sideman for one of his friends.

The songs off the new album, “Ole! Tarantula,” sounded good, making me think that perhaps I’ve underestimated how strong this record is. I like it, but haven’t listened to it that much. The opening track, “Adventure Rocket Ship,” was also the night’s opener. Another highlight was Hitchcock’s long-winded introduction to “(A Man’s Gotta Know His Limitations) Briggs,” describing that song’s origins in the “Dirty Harry” film “Magnum Force.” Somehow, I get the feeling that this drawn-out monologue won’t make it into the eventual WXRT broadcast of the concert.

The concert also featured several terrific Hitchcock oldies, including “The Queen of Eyes,” “Madonna of the Wasps,” “Chinese Bones,” “If You Were a Priest” and “Somewhere Apart.” For their encore, Hitchcock and the Venus 3 played “Eight Miles High,” with climaxed with a seering double guitar solo, and then the Soft Boys’ “I Wanna Destroy You.”

The opening act, Mark Pickerel, has a decent album out on Bloodshot Records. His set was pretty good, though a little snoozy. I think I’d enjoy his music more with a full band.

Click here or on the photo above to see my photos of Robyn Hitchcock at Metro.

New Randy Newman songs

I tracked down an audience recording of the two new Randy Newman songs I mentioned in my last post. These are from his Oct. 14, 2006, concert at Convocation Centre in Toronto. Some audience noise (nearby people laughing and breathing) is audible, but the sound quality’s decent enough to hear the songs.

The political song is essentially one of Newman’s monologues, with just hints of melody and piano noodling underneath. This isn’t a classic in the same league as “Political Science,” but it’s still vintage Newman and a timely song. At least a few of the words were different in the Chicago performance, when he mentioned the color coding of terror alerts. When he introduces the song to the Toronto crowd, he notes that it isn’t finished, so we may hear some other lyrics when this finally surfaces on a studio album.

mp3 files:
LOSING YOU
A FEW WORDS IN DEFENSE OF MY COUNTRY

Here’s my transcription of the lyrics from the Toronto performance.

A FEW WORDS IN DEFENSE OF MY COUNTRY
By Randy Newman
I’d like to say a few words in defense of my country
Whose people aren’t bad nor are they mean
Now, the leaders we have, while they’re the worst that we’ve had,
Are hardly the worst this poor world has ever seen.
Let’s turn history’s pages, shall we?
Think of Caesars, for example.
Well, the first few of them, they were sleeping with their sisters,
Stashing little boys in swimming pools, burning down the city.
One of them, he appointed his own horse to be counselor of the empire.
That’s like vice president — well, wait, that’s not a very good example.
But here’s a good one, the Spanish Inquisition,
Putting people in terrible position.
I don’t even like to think about it.
Well, sometimes I like to think about it.
Just a few words in defense of my country
Whose time at the top may be coming to an end.
Oh, we don’t want your love
And I guess respect is out of the question at this point.
At times like these, we could sure use a friend.
Hitler, Stalin — men who need no introduction. Much worse.
King Leopold of Belgium. That’s right, everyone thinks he’s so great.
Well, he owned the Congo, you know, and he tore it up, too.
It was the Switzerland of Africa.
He took the diamond, he took the gold, he took the silver.
You know what he left it with? Malaria.
You know, a president once said,
The only thing we have to fear is fear itself
Now it seems like we’re supposed to be afraid. It’s patriotic, in fact.
Afraid of what? Why, afraid of being afraid.
That’s what terror means, isn’t it?
You know, “House of Wax,” stuff like that.
Not anymore it doesn’t.
You know, it pisses me off a little when I think that this Supreme Court’s going to outlive me.
A couple of young Italian fellas and a brother on the court now, too.
But I defy you, anywhere in the world, to found two Italians like the two Italians we got.
And as for the brother, well, Pluto’s not a planet anymore, either.
The end of an empire is messy at best
And this here empire’s ending just like all the rest.
Like the Spanish Armada, adrift on the sea,
We’re adrift in the land of the brave and the home of the free.
Good-bye, Good-bye, Good-bye.

Randy Newman Nov. 3 at Symphony Center

Randy Newman’s one of those artists who doesn’t need a new album as an excuse to tour — any concert by him will be an event, even if he doesn’t have new songs. I can’t believe I hesitated about whether to see last night’s show. It will certainly make my list of the best concerts I’ve seen in 2006. On the spur of the moment, I decided to check for tickets yesterday and bought one of the nosebleed seats for $25. It was way up on the sixth floor of Symphony Center, the section known as the “Gallery,” which is above the two balconies, with a steep view that seemed almost straight down to the top of Randy’s head and the strings and hammers of that big old grand piano. That was fine with me, though. The acoustics in this place are excellent, of course, so as far as the sound goes, I might as well have been sitting right next to Newman. At one point, he cracked that he had considered singing without a microphone, like the opera singers who appear in the same hall, but that it had scared the technicians.

This was Newman at his best, just him at a piano, singing songs from throughout his career and entertaining with his ever-witty banter. I’ve always liked Newman’s songs best when they are just voice and piano. He’s a marvelous piano player, with a great sense not only for blues and boogie but classical flourishes, too. He’s one of those rare musicians who successfully bridges the musical sophistication of the classical world with the simplicity of pop and folk, without ever sounding pretentious. And his voice? It’s been said so many dang times that this guy can’t carry a tune, and yet I think he has one of the best and most distinctive voices. Then again, I prefer singers who sound like regular people, quirks and all.

Newman played a couple of new songs, including a bit of satire in the tradition of “Political Science,” which he said he’d had to write for his recent performances in Europe. The song is called “A Few Words in Defense of My Country,” and you can pretty much imagine where it goes from there.

What struck me as I heard so many of my favorite Newman songs again was how beautifully phrased they are, both musically and lyrically. Some of the songs are verbose, filled with comedic patter (sharing a certain sensibility with hip-hop, though they sound nothing like rap), but others are so concise, just a few telling lines.

After I saw a Newman concert in 2003 at Park West, I listened to a cassette tape of him playing a show about a decade earlier, and I noticed that he had used much of the same banter and jokes at both shows. Talked about relying on canned jokes. This time, I didn’t recognize too much of the banter — he did use his standard line, “This is sort of like Schubert, but shittier,” and as always, he remarked that “You Can Leave Your Hat On” has come to seem less funny as he’s grown older. Newman did not make an overt references to Hurricane Katrina when he played “Louisiana 1927” — the song speaks for itself — but when playing another song about New Orleans, “Dixie Flyer,” he remarked, “It’s not a great place for fixing things. If a toaster is broken, they have to take it to Mississippi.” After playing “Rednecks,” he said, “I’m proud to say because of the songs I’ve written, racism is no longer a problem.”

Let’s hope Newman follows through with his plan to record an album next year. The two new songs he played last night sounded good. More than ever, we all could use some new Newman songs.

SET LIST
It’s Money That Matters
Yellow Man
Bad News From Home
Short People
Birmingham
Marie
The Girls in My Life (Part 1)
The World Isn’t Fair
I Miss You
Red Bandana
Losing You (new song)
A Few Words in Defense of My Country (new song)
You Can Leave Your Hat On
I’m Dead (But I Don’t Know It)
Guilty
Political Science
(BREAK)
Last Night I Had A Dream
Love Story
In Germany Before the War
The Great Nations of Europe
Baltimore
You’ve Got a Friend in Me
Real Emotional Girl
My Life is Good
Follow the Flag
Song for the Dead
Dixie Flyer
Rednecks
Louisiana 1927
Shame
I Love L.A.
(ENCORE)
Lonely at the Top
I Think It’s Going to Rain Today

So much music: Best of 2006, Part 1

It’s early November, which means we’re heading into the home stretch of that insane year-long project known as the Top Ten List. Actually, make that Top 50 or Top 100. I do wonder about the sanity of this endeavor, trying to listen to as many new albums every year and then picking the best ones.

There’s so much damn music, and so much of it is good (yes, a LOT of it is mediocre to dreadful, too). I wouldn’t be able to do this without keeping a database of what I’ve heard and what I need to hear. November is my month for trying to find what I’ve missed so far. One last chance to hear some albums worthy of consideration for my list.

I do get a fair amount of CDs for free from publicists and record labels, which is fantastic. But I also buy a lot. And I download many songs through emusic, which is really a bargain and highly recommended for anyone who’s serious about music. I also subscribe to Rhapsody, which lets me listen to a great deal of the ohter music out there via streaming. Also highly recommended. And I feel like I’m just beginning to tap into the ever-growing pool of mp3 files out there on the Web and songs streaming at sites like myspace.

So here’s where things stand right now on my quest for the Best of 2006: I have either actual physical copies or downloaded versions of 231 CDs that came out this year. I also compiled a list of other records I should hear (culled from Mojo, Harp and Magnet reviews, Pitchfork’s recommendations, the Metacritic list, word of mouth, and other sources), which is now up to 379. It appears that about half of those albums are available for streaming on Rhapsody; so far, I’ve listened to 35, and partially listened to 9. There’s no way I can get through all of those, but I hope to listen to at least a little bit of most of the records.

Even though I have fairly broad tastes, there are certain styles and genres that just don’t appeal that much to me. A hip-hop or heavy metal record has to be something very special to connect with my personal tastes, and mainstream pop music rarely does anything other than bore or annoy me. So, while I try to keep an open mind, there are many albums that I can listen to and decide within a minute whether it has any shot of making my top 10.

The tough part is that vast number of pretty good albums — the ones that very well might grow on me if I had the time to listen more. Unfortunately, I have to make snap judgments and decide within minutes or seconds how much potential a recording has.

At the end of the year, I hope to have discovered some music that isn’t getting the attention it deserves. I’ll be posting some of my reactions to the music I’m hearing here over the next two months.

Tributosaurus becomes the Replacements

I wasn’t actually planning to see Dag Juhlin twice in one week, but there he was again — this time performing as part of Tributosaurus for the band’s Replacements tribute at Martyrs’ last night. In general, I’m not one for tribute bands, but Tributosaurus tackles nostalgia with an interesting twist — becoming a different band every month for one show.

Last night, Tributosaurus “became” the Replacements, and they did a fine job playing 21 of the Mats’ classic punk-rock tunes. Despite the fact that he looks nothing like Paul Westerberg (or just about any other singer he’s imitated), Matt Spiegel did often sound very much like the Replacements’ lead vocalist. Dag and some of the other band members had fun interjecting pieces of several ELO songs for no particular reason… and then, for its encore, Tributosaurus revealed it will become Supertramp for its next gig. I think I’ll have to skip that one. But the New Year’s Eve shows as Sly and the Family Stone ought to be fun.

Click here (or on the picture above) to see photos of Tributosaurus as the Replacements.

DAG JUHLIN & JASON NARDUCY AT SIMON’S

Dag Juhlin, former (?) member of the Slugs and Poi Dog Pondering, current solo artist and member of the Goldstars, teamed up Sunday night with Jason Narducy, formerly of Verbow, more recently a touring musician with Bob Mould and Robert Pollard. The two talented singer/guitarists played almost entirely covers of classic rock songs during an almost entirely unpublicized gig at Simon’s Tap in Andersonville. It was a low-key event, but still pretty fun. Juhlin’s as much of a card as ever, and it was nice to hear them weave together well-known tunes with identical chord progressions.

Why is this man wearing a dress?

…That’s the question, plain and simple. I just happened to find these photos — really, I’m not fishing for photos about cross-dressing — when I was searching through the Chicago Historical Society’s terrific archive of old Chicago Daily News photos, which is posted at the Library of Congress Web site. Some of the photos, including these particular images from 1906, come without much in the way of explanatory information. This is apparently a man named Julius Duc, who was sitting at a police station, wearing a dress. He doesn’t look too happy. And if he had been trying to pass as a woman, that mustache must have been a dead giveaway. Or was this just some sort of police prank? Hmmm. (Click on the photos for larger images.)

Recent Chicago theater

Chicago’s theater season “starts” in the fall, if you pay attention to most of the schedules put out by theaters, but in truth, it runs all year-round without much of a pause. However you look at the calendar, Chicago has a bounty of good to great plays this fall.

ARGONAUTIKA
Director Mary Zimmerman’s latest adaptation of a Greek mythology (following such marvelous productions as “Metamorphoses” and “The Odyssey”) is another wonder to behold. Watching a Zimmerman production is like seeing a bunch of talented actors and designers truly at play — playing with all of the toys at their disposal. There’s an infectious sense of fun about the stagecraft of Zimmerman and her collaborators. It’s amazing to watch how the seemingly simple stage is used to achieve different settings during the course of the show, and Michael Montenegro’s puppets are an especially fascinating addition.

Of course, this is the story of Jason and the Argonauts. Like some of Zimmerman’s earlier plays, it injects modern vernacular and humor into an ancient story. At times, the changes in tone can be a little jarring, but once you accept the self-reflexive nature of the play, the tale unfolds with ease. A few of the performances were top-notch, including Glenn Fleshler as Hercules, Atley Loughridge as Medea and Mariann Mayberry as Athena.

The last part of the story, more famously told in “Medea,” is summarized fairly abruptly. As a result, the motivations of Jason (Ryan Artzburger) get a little bit lost in Act 2. But then comes a closing scene involving the constellations that was almost breathtaking in its beauty. “Argonautika” continues through Dec. 23. See www.lookingglasstheatre.org. MY RATING: 3.5 out of 5.

HAMLET
This is one stark “Hamlet.” The set is basically a big, black slab of a floor. The backdrop is sometimes just a black wall, sometimes a big mirror. Lots of fog wafts down. All of the actors are dressed either in white or black — until the acting troupe within the story shows up. They’re clad first in grad overcoats, and then they perform all in red. In this almost existential setting, Ben Carlson gives a powerful performance as the famous Danish prince, particularly in the way he brings out the humor — the sardonic, bitter humor — in so many of Hamlet’s lines. Also noteworthy: Mike Nussbaum as Polonius, and Lindsay Gould, who really plays up Ophelia’s nutso scene. “Hamlet,” directed by Terry Hands, director emeritus of the Royal Shakespeare Company, continues through Nov. 18. See www.chicagoshakes.com. MY RATING: 4 out of 5.

KING LEAR
The Goodman Theatre’s production of “King Lear,” directed by Robert Falls and starring Stacey Keach, has closed, but it’s worth mentioning again. This show really polarized critics and audiences. I’ve heard as many people say they loved it as I’ve heard people saying they reviled it. I count myself in the first camp. Yes, it was nasty, modernized, sexualized and Balkanized (literally). No, this isn’t the “definitive” version of “King Lear” you’ll ever see. It’s just one interpretation — and a damn interesting one. And it was exciting to see something this provocative on the stage at one of Chicago’s most prominent theaters. MY RATING: 4 out of 5.

ANOTHER PART OF THE FOREST
Lllian Hellman’s “Another Part of the Forest” was the prequel to her best-known play “Little Foxes.” This production by Writers’ Theatre in Glencoe is filled with nearly perfect acting performances, including superb turns by some local regulars, Joel Hatch and Penny Slusher. It’s the drama of a dysfunctional Southern family in the late 1800s, with every dysfunction malfunctioning more as the play goes on. It’s a story that gradually builds in power. Even the characters who behave immorally have their reasons and a certain amount of symptahy. Now, if only some theater group were performing “Little Foxes” — that would be a great double bill. “Another Part of the Forest” continues through Nov. 26. See www.writerstheatre.org. MY RATING: 3.5 out of 5.

DENMARK
Victory Gardens Theatre has a glorious new home — inside a classic old theater, the Biograph. The last time I was in the place was to see “Pulp Fiction” on the big screen. Of course, it looks entirely different after all of the renovations. It’s an almost luxurious place to see a play, with comfy seats and great sight lines. And Charles Smith’s “Denmark” is an excellent show to break the place in. The play has nothing to do with the nation of Denmark, but rather is named for a freed slave in pre-Civil War South Carolina named Denmark Vesey. This is a drama that presents historical data and ethical dilemmas in way that’s both very natural and very clear — it never feels like a history lesson or an ethics lecture, but it gets across its points with just as much clarity. Anthony Fleming III brings a great deal of intelligence as well as emotion to his role as the title character. And there are quite a few other actors who shine in “Denmark” as well, with special kudos to A.C. Smith as Reverand Brown. “Denmark” continues through Nov. 12. See www.victorygardens.org. MY RATING: 3.5 out of 5.

THE PILLOWMAN
Of all the plays I’ve seen this fall, the most memorable — and the most powerful — is Martin McDonagh’s “The Pillowman,” directed by Amy Morton at Steppenwolf Theatre. The Chicago Tribune’s Chris Jones has an advantage over me, in that he saw “The Pillowman” in its earlier New York production. And he says that one was even more terrifying and disturbing. It’s hard for me to imagine it being much more upsetting than it already is without becoming too much to stomach.
But it’s not just an unsettling story about people committing unspeakable acts (people torturing children, murdering your parents, murdering children, police torturing people during interrogations) — it’s also a deep examination of the creative process. The channeling of violence into creativity is a key theme, and despite everything, there is a slight glimmer of humanity in all of this, even as the play takes us to bleak places. The cast is fabulous, including Jim True-Frost (who’s also so good on HBO’s “The Wire”) and Michael Shannon (who gave one of the best performances I’ve seen this year, in the earlier play “Grace” at Northlight, and then turned up in a so-so role in Oliver Stone’s “World Trade Center”).
“The Pillowman” continues through Nov. 12. See www.steppenwolf.org. MY RATING: 5 out of 5.

INHERIT THE WIND
Northlight Theatre’s production of “Inherit the Wind” is a mixed success. The scenes that set up the story — and the ones that end it — are stilted, an awkward mix of old-fashioned script writing and contemporary stage tricks that make it all seem rather artificial. But the courtroom scenes are really compelling, with two rousing performances: Tony Mockus as Matthew Harrison Brady, a character modeled after William Jennings Bryan, and Scott Jaeck as Henry Drummond, the surrogate for Clarence Darrow. Watching these two guys go at it in the courtroom battle over evolution and creationism is a hoot. But with this play being a fictionalized version of the Scopes Monkey Trial, it just whets the appetite for a more authentic telling of the true story. “Inherit the Wind” continues through Nov. 12. See www.northlight.org. MY RATING: 3 out of 5.

VIGILS
Something odd happens early on in this new play by Noah Hindle at the Goodman Theatre. The main character, a widow having trouble getting on with her life, is talking with her late husband’s soul, who is right there in the room with her, played by an actor. Just a figment of her imagination? Well, no, not exactly, because then it turns out that other people can see and hear this “soul” as well. And so “Vigils” takes place in a sort of metaphysical universe, not quite real. It alternates between comedy and some fairly serious topics with surprising grace. Certain memories play out repeatedly, with video projection providing the sort of special effects this play would probably not receive in a typical small production. Not all of it works, but overall, it’s a worthwhile and intriguing play. “Vigils” continues through Nov. 12. See www.goodmantheatre.org. MY RATING: 3 out of 5.

ENDGAME and PANTOMIME
A couple of plays that just closed still deserve some belated praise. Curious Theatre Branch’s performance of Samuel Beckett’s “Endgame,” part of the Rhinoceros Theatre Festival at Prop Thtr, captured the absurdity of the strange world that Beckett created in that script, making it all seem like an alternate world that operates by its own set of rules. And Pegasus Players’ production of Derek Walcott’s “Pantomime” was a low-key but engaging dialogue about race. ENDGAME RATING: 3 out of 5. PANTOMIME RATING: 3 out of 5.

Bob Dylan Oct. 27 at Sears Centre

I’d seen four Bob Dylan concerts before this one… which means I’m still a greenhorn compared to most Dylan fans. When I went to my Dylan show (a double bill with Joni Mitchell at Maple Leaf Gardens in Toronto around 1999), I was blown away — and I immediately regretted having waited so long before catching Dylan in concert. He was so passionate that night, and I was especially impressed by how much fun he seemed to be having playing the guitar, even taking solos on the electric guitar, not something he was famous for.

The next time I saw him was in 2001 at the United Center in Chicago, just after he’d released Love and Theft. Once again, he put on a fantastic show.

I was a little disappointed when I saw him on back-to-back nights in May 2004, one night at the Aragon and one at the Riveria. This was around the time he first switched from playing guitar to keyboards, for reasons that are still a little mysterious. Maybe the rumors are true that he can’t play guitar well enough any longer for physical reasons, or at least well enough to satisfy himself. Or maybe it’s just another one of his engimatic whims. Whatever the reasons, I found those 2004 shows a little lacking. Certainly worth attending, but not up to the standards of the previous concerts I’d seen.

Dylan’s still doing the keyboard thing, but he seems more comfortable with it now. Dylan seems to be stepping back a bit from the spotlight that normally shines on the singer at the front of a band, preferring instead to stand amid the other musicians.

Instead of facing the audience, he stands in profile, singing into a microphone at his side. Dressed in a black cowboy hat and a matching suit, Dylan leaned forward into the keyboard with his knees half-bent, swaying to the beat.

His voice, which was never an instrument of conventional musical beauty, has constricted down to a hoarse croak of limited range. At times, he sounded like a man in bad need of a lozenge. But the creaks in Dylan’s voice also add a feeling of authenticity to his songs, and he has learned ways of softly crooning some of the higher notes, especially on the tunes from Modern Times.

Dylan’s other voice is his harmonica, and he turned to the instrument several times Friday night for some nice solos. His keyboard playing had been almost inaudible on earlier tours, but it could be heard at many points Friday night. The keyboards were usually set to a sound resembling a skating-rink organ. Dylan’s playing was particularly effective when he echoed the guitar licks in “Highway 61 Revisited.”

Changing several songs from the set lists he had been playing a week earlier in California, Dylan opened with a couple of his signature 1960s tunes, a bluesy version of “Leonard-Skin Pillbox Hat” and a full-band arrangement of “The Times They Are-A Changin’” that wouldn’t have sounded out of place on his new record.

Dylan’s backup musicians, attired in hats and suits that made them look like a gang of gentlemen bandits, were nimble, mostly playing rollicking bluesy grooves but also switching to quieter string-band arrangements when the songs called for it.

Fans can count on Dylan digging into his back catalogue for at least one lesser-known track, and on Friday night, it was “Boots of Spanish Leather” from the 1964 album The Times They Are-A Changin’.

For his encore, Dylan and his band played “Thunder on the Mountain,” the opening track of Modern Times, with both the guitars and Dylan’s voice sounding vigorous. He followed that with a somewhat perfunctory “Like a Rolling Stone” and a stirring version of “All Along the Watcher” that divided up the vocal lines into an almost reggae-like pattern.

Overall, it was a great performance, not quite as good as the Dylan concerts I saw in 1999 and 2001 — but those both rank among the best shows I’ve ever seen by anyone.

This was only the second concert at the new Sears Centre in Hoffman Estates, following Duran Duran the previous night. It’s a minor-league sports stadium just a short distance from the very spot where Poplar Creek used to be — the place where I saw my first rock concerts as a high-school kid in the early 1980s, including Eric Clapton, the Animals and Dire Straits. Sears Centre will be the home to soccer, football, hockey and lacrosse teams.

The 11,800 seats were maybe half-full for Dylan, which was a shame… Maybe the ticket prices were too high. Mine was free, thanks to the fact that I was reviewing the concert for the Daily Southtown, but it would have been a steep $77 otherwise.

It’s an antiseptic arena sort of venue — lacking in character, but pretty much what you’d expect. The sound was good, with very clear acoustics and none of the reverberations often heard when rock bands play inside sports arenas. The mix allowed Dylan’s voice to be heard distinctly amid all of the other sounds.

While the Dylan show used little in the way of theatrical effects, Sears Centre showed what it’s capable of with an impressive if stereotypical light show during the opening set by Southern rockers Kings of Leon. The younger Dylan fans appeared to appreciate that group’s loud 1970s-influenced music, and even a few of the older fans could be seen nodding their heads to the rhythm.

BOB DYLAN SET LIST:
Leopard-Skin Pillbox Hat
The Times They Are-A Changin’
Stuck Inside of Mobile With the Memphis Blues Again
High Water (for Charley Patton)
Boots of Spanish Leather
Rollin’ and Tumblin’
Love Sick
Highway 61 Revisited
When the Deal Goes Down
Tweedle Dee & Tweedle Dum
Workingman’s Blues #2
Tangled Up in Blue
Summer Days
ENCORE
Thunder on the Mountain
Like a Rolling Stone
All Along the Watchtower

I did not have my camera with me for this concert … so the best I can manage for visual representations of Bob Dylan is this quick pen sketch I drew in the dark…

Overheard Conversations

So I was in one of those “Golden” restaurants in Chicago. You know, those places that serve pancakes and, well, just about everything else. And even though they don’t seem to be owned by the same restaurateurs, they’re all known as the Golden Something-Or-Other.

The voice of a woman sitting at the opposite end of the room carried through all of the other chatter and clatter, and I couldn’t help hearing what she was saying. This was an older white woman, wearing a cowboy hat, a bolo tie and a red plaid shirt. I later noticed that she was sitting in a booth with a black woman and a Chinese woman.

Three times, I heard the woman in the bolo tie utter important-sounding pronouncements:

“Five hundred thousand years ago, humanoids did not exist.”

“The intelligentsia don’t have a clue because the intelligentsia are in the middle of it.”

“And what about the boy child?”