Bruce Springsteen & the E Street Band, The River Tour, Live In Cleveland, 2/23/2016 - by Ricki C.

(writer’s note: I first saw Bruce Springsteen & the E Street Band at the Ohio Theater, April 5th, 1976.  This coming April 12th – forty years & one week later – I will see them again at the Schott.  There’ll be a big forty year Springsteen round-up at that point, so just consider today’s blog a kind of preview to that show. – Ricki C.)


The first three things you’ve gotta know are:

1)    For this tour, Bruce Springsteen has scaled the E Street Band back to (almost) their original lean, mean, rock & roll machine line-up: eight men and one woman.  No horn section.  No back-up singers.  No percussionists.  No bullshit.  Three guitarists (which is one too many, more on that later), one bass player, two keyboards, one sax, one violin, one (magnificent) drummer, five people singing their hearts out.  As I said, no bullshit.

2)    Bruce’s 1980 album The River gets played, in order, in its entirety to open the show.  The opener in Cleveland was River outtake “Meet Me In The City.”  (It’s probably been the opener everywhere, but I’m not the kinda guy to go on the InterWideWeb and pore over set lists & such.  Consider me, from this point on, your Saturday Night Live Weekend Update Drunk Uncle.)  I was hoping for more outtakes interspersed in the set (I’d’ve given anything to hear “Roulette” – video provided below), but Bruce & band just get down to it and alternately sear & simmer their way through the double-album.  Expected Highlights: the entire first side of record one, from “The Ties That Bind” to “Independence Day” (and holy shit, how many records have a whole side as great as that one?); the song “The River” itself, possibly the most grown-up rock song written to that point, and the one that extended Bruce’s Darkness On The Edge Of Town theme that everything in Springsteen World was not gonna be all fun ‘n’ games, cars & girls.  (Not that there’s anything wrong with that.)  Unexpected Highlights: “I Wanna Marry You,” a song that often got skipped in my back-in-the-day listening (I was getting divorced at the time) and “Stolen Car,” which at that time might just as well have been the story of my life and that divorce; a truly great romp through what I have always considered the throwaway rocker “Ramrod,” including a little dance move from sax player Jake Clemons that I can’t do justice to here, you’re gonna have to go on YouTube or come to the Columbus show.

And that’s just the first two hours of the set.

3)    The next 90 minutes of the three and a half hour show are a selection of E Street Smashers that in Cleveland included “Candy’s Room” and “Because The Night” played back to back and a furious run-through of “Youngstown.”  (Culminating in the lyrics, "Now you tell me the world's changed / Once I made you rich enough / Rich enough to forget my name."  Words to remember in this election season.)  

Really, E Street Band sets make almost all other rock & roll shows seem silly and perfunctory.   
    

The second three things you’ve gotta know:

1)    Bruce Springsteen is the luckiest rocker on the planet that Clarence Clemons had a nephew who plays tenor sax the way Jake Clemons does.  Goddamn, that kid is great.  (sidelight: When Bruce crowd-surfed from the pit runway back to the stage during “Hungry Heart,” any other performer would have a roadie help him back onstage.  Oh, but no, no, no, that’s too simple for an E Street Band show; Jake hauls Bruce back one-handed WHILE BLOWING A SAX SOLO WITH THE OTHER HAND.  It’s a sight to see.  Photo below, after the videos.)  

2)    Oddly – maybe because Jake is SO good at what he does – I find myself missing Danny Federici more than I do Clarence Clemons.  Part of that, though, is because former Seeger Sessions organist Charlie Giordano is such a mook that I find I can’t even look at him on the stage.  (Luckily, my tickets in Columbus are behind Charlie, so I’ll be looking at his back.)  Seriously, Bruce, Danny didn’t have ANY relatives you could have hired before Giordano?

3)    I’ve fully known it since 1978, but this River Tour crystallizes just how tightly orchestrated and GREAT Max Weinberg’s drumming is.  It’s as good and as exact as anything Brian Wilson came up with on those killer Beach Boy tunes like “God Only Knows,” or anything classical composers came up with for tympani & snare drum parts, but simultaneously POWERS the E Street Band through 3 & ½ hours of killer rock & roll.  I witnessed Who drummer Keith Moon in his 1969 & 1972 prime, Max Weinberg is the only drummer I have ever seen even come close to that force-of-nature rhythmic onslaught.  And Keith was in his twenties then; Max is 64 fucking years old.  Really, you have to bow down to the man.

Okay, I’m well over my 500-word limit.  Everything else – including how revitalized Steve Van Zandt is on this tour, which I haven’t even touched on – is gonna have to wait until April.  All I can say right this moment is: if you haven’t already, buy a ticket to that Columbus show, you WILL NOT be sorry.  – Ricki C. / February 25th, 2016.  

   

Bruce's Three Mile Island song, one of DOZENS of outtakes presented on various box sets, compilation albums & bootlegs.  I swear, Springsteen has more and better OUTTAKES than many other rock & roll acts have SONGS.    

Check out the little moment between Bruce and Steve Van Zandt at the 1:55-2:30 mark.......

photo by Jodie Weaver; Cleveland, Ohio, 2/23/2016


Paul Stanley Solo Record Gets Hall of Fame Nod. See, It IS Better than Ace's Solo Record. - Colin G.

Click here for the complete list of 2016 nominations to THE Pencilstorm Hall of Fame.

Remember awhile back when I wrote the story, "Paul's Solo Record is Better than Ace's". Well, a bunch of you Space-Acers lost your shit and, frankly, the chatter got a little nasty. As I recall, I was even kicked out of a Facebook Ace group because - though I really liked Ace's record - I just thought Paul's was better. Geez, you would have thought that I said Peter's record was the best KISS solo record....

Well, I hate to say I told you so, but look what got nominated for THE Pencilstorm Hall of Fame? Yup, Paul Stanley's solo record. Not Ace's.

There you have it. Case closed. I win. Paul's record is better than Ace's. If it wasn't, how do you explain Paul getting nominated for THE Pencilstorm Hall of Fame and not the Spaceman?

You can't.  

And not to run up the score, but Paul's solo album contains the best song written by any Kiss member both with the band or solo. The breathtaking "Wouldn't You Like to Know Me." (And yes, Ricki C., it's better than any power pop song the over-rated Raspberries ever churned out) 

I ask my fellow committee members to give serious consideration to the Paul Stanley solo record joining THE Pencilstorm Hall of Fame. - Colin G.  #pstormhof 

The song by Paul Stanley Wouldn't You Like To Know Me

The best song on the best KISS solo record and maybe just flat out, the best KISS song ever recorded.

From the One Live KISS DVD, recorded in 2006 at the House of Blues, released in 2008. Check out the One Live KISS DVD, and CD, and Paul's album Live to Win, and pick yourself up a copy!

The Pencilstorm Interview: Casey and Jesse Cooper of The Receiver

The Receiver are made up of brothers Casey and Jesse Cooper. Their latest record All Burn is out on kscope music and getting rave reviews. The boys are heading out on a grueling tour to take their music to the streets and were kind enough to answer a few of my questions before hitting the road. You can find all their music, tour dates and videos by visiting Thereceivermusic.com  Do yourself a favor and check it out. - Colin G.

CG) Your tour starts February 17 in Thomas,WV and you play 18 consecutive nights and 31 shows in 32 days. That is a crazy schedule, so I have to ask some band questions to start. What do you guys travel in? Is it reliable?

J: Ha, well, we hope so! It’s a 1999 Ford E-150 van. It’s beat-up but beautiful. I’d like to think it’s been sitting pretty, just waiting to shine in this moment. I guess time will tell. We’re trying to prep it as much as possible. The last thing we want is to be broken down in the middle of winter.

C:  The most important thing is that it’s comfortable, and boy can I sleep in it.

CG) Where do you guys stay when you are on the road?

J: This is a TBD situation after every show. We’re really hoping each night someone will want to host a couple of dirt heads in a band at their home. We do have a plan ‘B’ of sleeping in the van.

C:  I have no problem sleeping in the van.

CG) Who decides what you listen to when traveling?

J: We’re pretty good with taking turns with the stereo but the moment Casey passes out, it’s fair game.

C:  I’m really picky when I’m awake.


CG) Who decides where you eat?

J: Budget is going to decide on this tour. We’re really trying stretch our dollars on this outing since it’s a long one. We will be completely open to gift cards, grocery store samples, and road- kill this time around.

C:  I’m saving the fast food for special occasions and congratulatory meals.  Otherwise, I’m sticking to grocery bought items.  Sometimes those double arches are hard to resist, though. 

CG) Do you bring anybody to help on the road?

J: We’ve taken a couple of friends to help out here and there but this tour is looking like it’ll be just the two of us. We wouldn’t want to put anyone else through something like this with little or no pay.

C:  It would be great to take someone to help, but it’s cheaper to travel as light as possible.  Plus all the deals we’ve made for the clubs and lodging have only included us two...and we don’t want to mess that up.

CG) I was watching your performance on the Mug & Brush sessions, is that the gear you tour with or was that just for the show?

C:  That was a stripped-down performance, and a lot of fun.  Although we will be playing some shows just like that, we tour with quite a bit more.  Jesse will be using his full drum kit, as well as the sampler.  I’ll be bringing a bass head/amp & guitar, pedalboard, three synths, and my keyboard amp to use only when necessary.  Plus we have a road case with DI’s, in-ear’s, a small mixer, and cables galore.  It’s my goal to make being a two-man band as inconvenient as possible.

- Let's take a quick break and check out a performance from the Mug & Brush Sessions

All Burn - the group's debut on Kscope is OUT NOW CD: bit.ly/1Na1X4e Vinyl: bit.ly/1Lk2mmB Download: smarturl.it/TR_AllBurn_Download Stream: bit.ly/1TNcyXg www.kscopemusic.com/rec Comprised of brothers Casey (vocals, synths/keyboards, bass) and Jesse Cooper (drums & vocals), the siblings call All Burn their "best material to date which focuses on a dreamier aesthetic than our earlier work."

CG) Ok, switching gears, Obviously, both of you guys have some serious musical gifts. What's going on in the Cooper family? Where did it come from?

C:  Well, thank you for that.  For me, it isn’t so much about having any gifts as it is about being too stubborn to give up.  Plus, I’m not more interested in or better at anything else, so my choices are slim.  But our mom started us on piano very young, which always sets a nice foundation for anyone.  Then I continued to be a band nerd all the way through high school and college.  But now I have long hair which makes it cooler.  Jesse was always in some pretty awesome bands, and I couldn’t help but follow his lead and play in bands myself.

J: I’ve always just been a huge fan of music and bands as far back as I can remember. Like Casey mentioned, our mother pushed us to learn piano at a very young age. Casey actually stuck with schooling in music, while I drifted more heavily towards playing in bands and relying on my ear to get me through.  

CG) Where did you guys grow up? Did you start playing together at a young age?

C:  We lived in the Sharon Woods area of Columbus originally, then Mt. Vernon for a couple years.  I ended up with our mom in Hilliard through high school, and Jesse ended up with our dad at DeSales.  We’d play my parties in high school when my mom was on business trips and Jesse was way older than everyone else, which was sweet.  A lot of that was jams that went nowhere, but we thought it was cool.  Plenty of E and A.

CG) Can you remember your first public gig together?

C:  I joined Jesse’s band, Lucid’s Dream, for a couple different songs at South Heidelberg on keys and trumpet.  But I’ll never forget our first “real” show because I was scared to death.  Jesse’s band had a gig coming up and their bass player had just quit to go to some music festival for the weekend.  So I was asked to fill in, and I really thought I hit the bigtime.  I was 18.  We had a couple rehearsals, and then the show at Little Brother’s.  I remember forgetting the chord progression in the last song, and the guitarist had to shout them to me on stage.  And there was a dude sitting in a chair in the middle of that huge room with nobody around him, reviewing us with pen and paper in hand.


CG) Many brother combos in music are notorious for being combative such as the Davies or Galleghers. Do you guys ever feel like beating the shit out of each other?

C:  It never really escalates to anything like that for us.  Sure we get on each others’ nerves, but we’ve been playing together and living together for so long that it’s sort of just white noise at this point.  We sure do love to argue about things that really don’t matter, though.

J: Yeah, any arguments usually blow over within minutes. As Kansas would say, “Everything is dust in the wind.”

CG) How do you feel like All Burn differs from your previous work?

C:  I think it’s our most complete album yet.  A lot of our older material sounds a bit young now when I go back to it.  So it’s paying off to get old I guess.  But we had a clearer idea of what we wanted for this album than any other.  The songs feel more complete, the fat is trimmed a little more, and the album as a whole moves more willfully than the others.  And we wanted everything to be dreamier and loftier than anything else we’ve done.  So that was a common thread we stuck to throughout the entire album.

J: I’ve never been so excited about anything we’ve done. Every song on All Burn captures a mood and is distinctly its own yet is a just a piece of the big picture. I’m a huge fan of the classic album format and I feel we finally got it right on this one.

CG) Which songs are your favorite to play live?

C:  I’m really enjoying a lot of the newer material right now.  The aggressive tunes like “To Battle An Island,” “Collector,” and “The Summit” are great for gritty bass and loud drums.  But others, like “All Burn” and “Dark Matter” are refreshingly laid-back but not at all boring for me.  I’m sure we’ll be sick of everything by the time this tour wraps up though.

-- Let's take a break and check out your latest video for the song "Transit"

CD: http://bit.ly/1Na1X4e Vinyl: http://bit.ly/1Lk2mmB Download: http://smarturl.it/TR_AllBurn_Download Stream: http://bit.ly/1TNcyXg - Director: Youssef Nassar - www.youssefnassar.com - Cinematographer: Youssef Nassar - Production Designer: Fares sokhon - Editors: Youssef Nassar - Fares Sokhon - Colorist: Jad Beyrouthy - Compositing and Retouching: Nadim Khairallah - Post Production at Pandora - Make up artist: Maria Cheble - Cast: Anna Cheble - Nadim Khairallah Comprised of brothers Casey (vocals, synths/keyboards, bass) and Jesse Cooper (drums & vocals), the siblings call All Burn their "best material to date which focuses on a dreamier aesthetic than our earlier work."


CG) You guys have made some great videos. How did the latest for Transit and working with director Youssef Nassar come about?

C:  We met Youssef Nassar through our label, Kscope.  He had recently shot a video for Steven Wilson, and it was Kscope’s idea to bring him in on “Transit.”  We were open to anything.  So we gave him the green light to conceptualize and shoot whatever he wanted.  It was a little scary not knowing at all what is going on, but the end product turned out much better than we expected.  And it’s a lot of fun giving someone free reign to reinterpret your music through a different medium like video.  We have a newer video coming out very soon for “To Battle An Island,” shot and directed by our friend Matthew Smith.  And the same idea applies here.  He had a concept, and we let him run with it.

CG) How has signing with KSCOPE records changed things for the band? 

C:  It’s great to finally be part of a team and a roster with Kscope.  And the label has such a loyal fan-base, so it’s helped us a lot to be exposed to their fans.  They’ve helped a lot with merch and promotion.  We’re always in a tricky spot though.  In some ways, we’re not quite “proggy” enough for a lot of their fans, and we’re not poppy enough for people who don’t care at all about prog.  I guess it’s not a bad problem to have.  But we’re fighting the good fight every day.  And there’s nothing more to do than get busy touring and writing the next album.

Thanks again to Casey and Jessie and don't forget to check it all out at thereceivermusic.com 

THE RECEIVER DEBUTS "TO BATTLE AN ISLAND" MUSIC VIDEO, ANNOUNCES COLOSSAL U.S. HEADLINING TOUR CD: http://bit.ly/1Na1X4e Vinyl: http://bit.ly/1Lk2mmB Download: http://smarturl.it/TR_AllBurn_Download Stream: http://bit.ly/1TNcyXg COLUMBUS, Ohio - Midwest symphonic dream-prog duo, The Receiver, has launched a new music video for the track "To Battle an Island," taken from its recently released full-length, All Burn, out now on Kscope.

 

Colin Gawel founded Pencilstorm in the downtime at Colin's Coffee. He also plays in the band Watershed. His latest solo record is Superior - The Best of Colin Gawel.

Pencilstorm's Complete Grammy Awards 2016 Coverage - by Ricki C.

I was gonna write a complete minute-by-minute report/review/dissection of the 2016 Grammy Awards show, but then I remembered that I stopped drinking in 1982 and stopped smoking pot in 2000 when I got my first cardiac pacemaker, and realized that I had no proper means to numb/anesthetize myself for the likes of 3 & 1/2 hours of Lady Gaga, Kendrick Lamar & Bruno Mars, so I decided to just flip over during commercials on MeTV to catch the debut of The Hollywood Vampires, the new "rock" concoction put together by Alice Cooper, Joe Perry and 21 Jump Street star Johnny Depp.

And what a debut it was!  I'm puzzled as to how Alice 'n' Joe - two men who wrote some of the finest hard rock songs of the 1970's ("Elected," "School's Out," "Generation Landslide," "Walk This Way," "Sweet Emotion") - chose the leaden dud of a "song" they performed as their nationwide prime-time TV debut (on the Grammys, no less).  The "tune" contained not one ounce of melody, no hooks, lame riff and a spoken-word interlude by Depp of which not one syllable could be discerned or understood.  Talk about not hearing a single.

Then, to make matters worse, Da Boyz essayed a really powerful, kinda great cover/tribute to Lemmy Kilmister of the all-powerful Motorhead rocker "Ace Of Spades" that made it PAINFULLY obvious how lame a song The Vampires had preceded it with.  (Sidenote: Part of the appeal of "Ace Of Spades" was a great vocal from Duff McKagan from the original Guns N' Roses.)  (Further sidenote: Serious question to faithful Pencilstorm reader Jim Johnson, one of Columbus Ohio's GREAT drummers - Is there a worse hard rock/metal drummer on the planet than Matt Sorum?  That guy seems to think he's John Bonham, but he drags every band I see him play with down into the tar-pit-morass/zero-concept-of-swing-or-excitement-sludge-pit he seems to love wallowing in.  No wonder Guns N' Roses sucked after Steven Adler got sacked.)

The only other musical performance of the night that I saw was The Alabama Shakes, who seemed kinda uncomfortable with their transformation from fake Stax/Volt thrift-store-dresses rags-'n'-tatters-indie-rocker chic to Broadway Darlings, complete with gowns, suits, backing singers & a full-time percussionist.  Or maybe that's how Brittany Howard & the guys roll now.  Beverly Hillbillies, anyone?

Oh, and I did catch Taylor Swift pulling open her dress on her way up the steps to accept her Album Of The Year award, the better to show off her purple panties underneath.  Now that's entertainment.  - Ricki C. / February 16th, 2016

     

Looking For Something to Do This Weekend? Look No Further than Natalie's Coal Fired Pizza.

Just admit it. You have no plans this weekend. And I know you have no plans this weekend. "How's that?" you say? See, I own a coffee shop and over the past two days I have asked around two hundred people, "What's going on this weekend? Anything fun going on?" Usually at least one person is going ice fishing on Hudson Bay or a tequila binge in Cabo. Not this weekend. Except for that one dude going to Lowe's to buy floor tile for his kitchen, the rest of us are BORING.

However, I have good news. Natalie's Coal Fired Pizza has put together one of the finest weekends of Columbus music you are likely to see until Comfest. If you are looking for great food, beer, & music, look no further.

So what's up?

Friday and Saturday night is Helling Yeah! A benefit/memorial show for the late Brett Helling, who was a beloved person, musician & employee at Natalie's. 100% of the proceeds go to benefit the American Federation of Suicide Prevention.

Friday night features: Winter Makes Sailors, Bicentennial Bear and The Kyle Sowashes

Saturday night: Colin Gawel, (yeah, that's me), The Moving Parts, Fisted Mister, The Whiles.

Trust me when I tell you, I am the least talented person on this bill. So if you like what I do, you will love the other acts.

Click here to read a story about the event by Andy Downing for the Columbus Alive.

And here is when it gets crazy....Sunday might be better than Friday and Saturday.

Sunday brunch features the jazz stylings of the ultra-talented/ overall bad ass, Derek DiCenzo and his trio. FREE!

Sunday night features the one and only Tim Easton.  One of the best singer-songwriters on the planet.

Derick DiCenzo and Tim Easton on the same day. Sunday no less. Can I get a witness?

Click here to reserve you table and check out the fabulous Natalie's menu.

 

Colin and Joe to Discuss Hitless Wonder Live w/ The Rock n Roll Book Club Tuesday Jan 26th at the U.A. Library

The Rock n Roll Book Club will be doing a live taping of their acclaimed podcast Tuesday January 26th at the Upper Arlington Library on Tremont Road. The episode will feature the book: Hitless Wonder - A Life in Minor League Rock n Roll with author Joe Oestreich joining the conversation via Skype. Watershed member Colin Gawel will also be on hand to play a few tunes. Complimentary coffee will be provided by Colin's Coffee.

Admission is FREE and the show starts at 7pm.

Click here to visit the Rock n Roll Book Club

Click here to read about the Rock n Roll Book Club in the Columbus Alive.