New Colin Gawel Song CD102.5 Friday @ Noon! Tune In! Spread the Word!

Hey all, just giving you the heads up that today (Friday, June 27th) at noon,  CD102.5 FM here in C-bus will be giving you the first listen to a brand new song by yours truly. And just in time for Comfest weekend to boot! 

Because CD102.5 is one of the last independent rock n roll radio stations left on the planet and are so cool as to be so supportive of new music, it is crucial we tune in and let them know how much we appreciated them.

So, Tune into CD102.5 this Friday at noon to hear a brand new Colin Gawel tune and if you dig, let them know you dig. Dig?

Text: request colin podcast  To: 68683               

Thanking you in advance and see you at Comfest, Sunday June 29th, 7pm.  (Off Ramp Stage) - Colin G.

 

Review: Nick Cave and The Bad Seeds, Louisville, KY - by Nick Taggart

    Remember when you were younger and just about every concert you attended was THE BEST FUCKING CONCERT you’d ever seen?  Then as you aged, they became fewer and further between?  There were still some really good shows, but rarely something to knock your socks off.  Maybe it’s because you were seeing fewer shows each year and those you did go to were your aging musical heroes who were basically phoning it in.

    You can imagine my pleasure and surprise then when I stepped out of the Louisville Palace last week on a late Kentucky spring night and thought to myself, THAT WAS ONE OF THE BEST FUCKING CONCERTS I’VE EVER SEEN!  Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds had just kicked off their North American tour, and I do mean KICKED.  If I wasn’t already very content with my current life, this would have had the potential to be a life-changing experience.  It was THAT good, but I’m probably too old to begin following bands around the country.  Probably.

Photo by Nick Taggart

Photo by Nick Taggart

Wow!  What a show!  And I mean a show!  Not of the smoke and mirror variety, or in a Wow-that-singer-sure-can-choreograph-her-dance-moves-while-lip-synching sort of way.  I mean a rock show with a charismatic singer at the helm rocking the house.  

The show took off with a pair of songs from last year’s release, Push the Sky Away.  In the studio, “Jubilee Street” maintained a rather steady volume and rhythm.  But in concert, the band ramped it up, building to a crescendo that slammed the far seats with a throbbing wall of noise.  It wasn’t volume for volume’s sake, it was an emotional blast that penetrated the body, if not the soul.  This music had something to say and you’d better listen or get out of the way.

The other six musicians on stage pretty much stood their ground while Cave swept back and forth across the stage, leaping up and down, plunging into the audience.  He couldn’t seem to get enough of the crowd.  “Come closer, come closer,” he kept pleading, even as he was wrapped up in fans.  He made a few trips out to the floor during the course of the evening, getting as far as the 20th row at one point.  That’s way deeper than any radio station will ever get into his catalog.  Whoever the roadie was responsible for keeping Cave’s mic cord untangled was not getting paid enough.

The set list was a roller coaster ride through the band’s 30-year career.  Cave could settle down at the piano one moment for the quietly barbed “God Is in the House”, but then stick it to you the next with the brooding and tumultuous “The Mercy Seat” about a man heading to the electric chair.

But what made it so good, you might ask.  How does one define the sublime in a rock concert?  Greatness is as difficult to explain as the Higgs boson, but Nick Cave has got it.  You’ll just have to take it on good authority until you experience it yourself.  Cave is a poet and showman.  His songs explore sexuality, brutality, mortality; all the really great -alities.  He could be touching with a love song, “Into My Arms” (“I don't believe in an interventionist God/But I know, darling, that you do”), then vulgar with the ballad of American anti-folk hero Stagger Lee, a “bad motherfucker.”  He was funny, poignant, and naughty, yet always adhered to the ABR of entertainment: Always Be Rocking!

And that voice!  Deep and dark, lusty and bluesy.  Even if his lyrics weren’t so exquisitely intelligent and imaginative, you’d want to listen just for the pure pleasure of that rich and sonorous sound.

This was my first Nick Cave concert.  I admit it, I was late coming to the party (or to the Birthday Party, if you will, the name of Cave’s former band).  I always knew the name, but never bothered to listen to the music.  Then I heard the title track from the 2008 release, Dig, Lazarus, Dig!!!  That led to the rest of the cd, and then to last year’s release and then to his older work.  I was hooked!  At least I thought I was hooked.  Apparently, I was just playing at being a devotee.  It wasn’t until experiencing him live that I became a true disciple.

That’s why I pardoned him for not playing anything from Dig, Lazarus, Dig!!!  Who cares if there’s no shrimp cocktail when you’re already enjoying filet mignon?  And all was definitely forgiven when the night closed with “The Lyre of Orpheus”, his mythically-inspired composition from a decade ago.  Any songsmith who can pair Orpheus with orifice in rhyming lines is already in a state of grace!

    I’m sure there are many “real” Nick Cave fans out there rolling their eyes at my Cavean naivete and bad Bad Seed knowledge.  It’s true, I can’t name all their albums and Louisville was the first time I really heard “Red Right Hand” or “The Ship Song”, two of the band’s more “popular” tunes.  Whatever.  You probably shot up with Nick in a back stage toilet in ’88, too.  Fine, you win.  You’re cooler than I am.  But there’s no zealot like the recently converted, am I right?



Nick Taggart was born and raised in Columbus, Ohio, and works in the Genealogy, History and Travel division of the Columbus Metropolitan Library.  His turn-ons include genealogy, local history, and travelling around Ohio and the world with his wife, Michele.  

That Summer Feeling

Ricki C. here: I thought Pencilstorm should acknowledge the Official Arrival of summer in some manner, so I took it upon myself to choose a song to honor the season.  (Summer is my favorite time of year, followed closely by autumn & spring, but not by winter, which I largely despise, except when I get great Christmas presents.)

Any blog could trot out the Beach Boys or John Fogerty to welcome summer, but I've decided to go left-field with Jonathan Richman, whose 1983 release "That Summer Feeling" is one of my all-time favorite tunes.  (And though I'm fairly certain I'm gonna run afoul of Mr. Wal Ozello here, I'm gonna state in print that I think Jonathan is one of the 20 Greatest Rock & Roll Vocalists Of All Time, certainly in terms of passion & originality if not RAWK! power & bombast.) 

Crack open a cold one, lay back on your deck chair and enjoy.  Welcome to summer.......

author's note: It's certainly not for the casual Jonathan Richman fan or for the faint of heart, but if you type "The Modern Lovers Live @ the Stonehenge Club, Ipswich, MA, 1971"  into YouTube, there's just under 90 minutes of Jonathan's early-70's Boston band The Modern Lovers in full-blown art-damaged rock & roll splendor.  Imagine The Velvet Underground fronted not by Lou Reed, John Cale or Nico, but by Jerry Mathers of "Leave It To Beaver" fame, and you kinda get the idea.  

Classic.

Our Debut "Podcast" Coming Next Week. Stay Tuned.

Words, words, thoughts, thoughts, reading, reading. It all gets very tiring doesn't it?. In an effort to soothe yours and our overworked brains, Pencilstorm will be featuring a Podcast the week of June 23th. Now you can just mindlessly listen to your favorite Pencilstorm staff members chat about all the interesting topics we love to cover for your pleasure and forget about that cumbersome reading that is so taxing on your eyeholes. So stay tuned  and click on the link to our "Podcast" when it appears next week. I personally guarantee satisfaction and a pleasant surprise as well. - Colin

Three Things, Richard Thompson by Colin Gawel

"What do you have going on?"

"Not too much. Same old really. Trying to get in the summer groove. I AM going to see Richard Thompson at the Southern Theater, though. I had a coupla beers one night and just bought tickets online so I knew i couldn't back out. Same system from back in my younger days. I would go to the Out r Inn and pound a few beers and then go directly down the street and buy a bunch of used records. Numbs the buyer's remorse."

"Yeah, uh, whatever, who is Richard Thompson?"

"You know, he's done a million things. He sings that motorcycle song."

"Don't know it."

"Sure you do. The one with red-headed Molly in it. He is a super bad-ass guitar player. You know him. He wears a beret? You know that song."

"I really don't."

"Ok, check this out."

Richard Thompson performs one of his best known songs at the 2012 Americana Music Festival. His performance and many others recorded at the Ryman Auditorium will air as part of "ACL Presents: Americana Music Festival" November 10th on PBS. http:acltv.com

"Ring a bell?

"Not really."

"Come on. He made a bunch of amazing, semi-tragic records with his ex-wife Linda. This one will just break your heart. Have you ever heard a better bridge? Make sure to stick it out to the end. Then play it again."

Uploaded by Elaine Vydra on 2011-02-13.

"And he is still making really cool records. This is my favorite from his latest LP, "Electric" - "Good Things Happen to Bad People."

Richard Thompson performs ""Good Things Happen To Bad People" at the 2013 Americana Music Association Honors & Awards show, presented by Nissan. REGISTER NOW to attend the September 17-21, 2014 Americana Music Festival and Conference. Follow us on https://twitter.com/#!/AmericanaFest , like us on http://www.facebook.com/pages/America... or visit www.americanamusic.org for updates and info.

Richard Thompson performs at the Southern Theater in Columbus, Ohio Wednesday June 18th. Colin Gawel will be attending.

Journey Reunion: Very Bad Idea

While I've taken June off from blogging to finish my second novel, Revolution 1990, I've got to take a few minutes and share my thoughts on this whole Journey Reunion buzz that's going on.

For those of you who may have been under a rock for the past several weeks, Steve Perry (former lead singer of Journey) has made several surprise stage appearances. He's come on during the encore of a few EELS shows.  This immediately raises two questions: first, "Who are the EELS?" and second, "When's the Journey reunion?"

While I'd love to time travel back to 1985 and see Journey live on stage during their Frontiers heydays, the last thing I want is a Journey reunion and subsequent tour.

Let me be clear: a Journey Reunion is an extremely terrible idea.

Here's the thing: I want to remember them how they were.  If they perform today as Journey, they are going to sound like 60 year old guys trying to play Journey. To me, it's kind of depressing. Did you see the Ringo/McCartney reunion at the Grammys? It was pathetic. Do you want that to happen to your Journey memories?

It's been what, almost twenty years since Trial By Fire and even that was a far cry from their previous album Raised On Radio which wasn't even close to FrontiersTrial By Fire is proof that as a band, Journey had tapped out their hit writing abilities.

Steve Perry has certainly moved on musically since then and that's what I want to hear.  That guy has probably twenty-five years of melodies brewing in his head and I want to hear the best of them.  Most likely it's gonna be more rhythm and blues than corporate rock. Steve even said it himself, 'Well, I hadn't sung in 20 years -- I sounded more like Otis Redding than I did in Journey." That's a hint, folks. He's ready to record and sing stuff that sounds more like "Hard To Handle" than "Open Arms."

Can you imagine the album that can come from Steve Perry's mind and voice today? After decades of the music critics trashing him for being corporate rock, he could comes back and nail it with a deep soul album. That would be huge.

And a concert that follows?  Not one where he plays stadium crowds singing "The Girl Can't Help It," "Any Way You Want It," and "Don't Stop Believin'". No I'm talking one of those smaller venues as a singer in a smoky room, belting out Detroit Motown blues from Sam Cooke, Otis Redding, and Smokey Robinson.

Can you imagine Steve Perry's version of "Who's Lovin' You?" That would be awesome. That would be an evolution of Steve Perry and a departure from his Journey years. (Pun intended there, folks.)

That's what I want to hear.

Come back Steve. But don't regress, be the Steve Perry of 2014 and not the Steve Perry of 1984.

Wal Ozello is the author of Assignment 1989: The Time Travel Wars . He's a resident of Upper Arlington, Ohio and a frequent customer at Colin's Coffee.

Learn more about Wal Ozello and other Pencilstorm contributors by clicking here