It's Barely Even Worth Playing the Gig.....Right? - by JCE

Wrong!  Have you ever been to a show where there were so few people in attendance that you wondered whether the band would even play?  I read Hitless Wonder, so I know Watershed has played some gigs like that.  I have been to quite a few shows like that, and while I feel empathy for the bands having to play to such a paltry audience, I secretly love the intimacy of those shows.  You walk into an empty bar excited to see a band you came to see, and you think, “Crap, the show is cancelled.  Or if it isn’t, they’ll soon announce it is and give me my money back.”  But that never happens, because bands don’t work like that.  If they did, they probably wouldn’t last very long.  I’m pretty sure that the few people there usually have enough appreciation to make it worth the effort.  I thought I would relate my top four stories about nights like this.

The Reds / Washington, D.C. / Nightclub 9:30  

This show took place in June of 1981.  I remember this because it was the day that I graduated from high school.  The Reds were a band out of Philadelphia, PA.  They had a record deal with A&M and had put out a nice 10” record, followed by a self-titled debut LP.  They put out several more records over the years.  I totally loved the Reds and was excited to celebrate graduation by going to this show with a couple of my best friends.  We walked into the club and there was no one there.  No.  One.  I was amazed.  A short time later a few people came in to have drinks at the bar, but by the time the set started only a total of five people were standing in front of the stage paying any attention.  The band played like it was a packed house and we supported them like it was as well.  A crowd that small was rare at the old 9:30 Club, so it was all that much more surprising, and disappointing for the band I’m sure.  The 10” had a nice cover of the Doors’ “Break on Through” and the debut had some great tunes as well.

 

The Outlets / Norfolk, VA. / Kings Head Inn

One afternoon in 1988 or so, no idea what month it was, I got a call from a friend who lived in Norfolk, VA.  I lived in Charlottesville, about 2½ hours away.  My friend was calling to tell me that The Outlets were playing a club called the Kings Head Inn that night.  The Outlets, from Boston, were and still are one of my favorite bands ever.  I called my friend Ted, and a few hours later, five of us were crammed in Ted’s Suzuki Samurai headed for Norfolk.  It was a rainy night, and a weeknight, I think.  We rolled up to the Kings Head Inn in plenty of time to ensure we didn’t miss any music.  There was a handful of people there who seemed mildly interested, but our group of about ten fired-up fans were ready to see The Outlets.  I was particularly psyched for this one.  This would be the first and – unfortunately – the last time I ever got to see The Outlets play live.

The Outlets came out and played a really great set.  At the time, the Restless Records release, “Whole New World” was the only music I knew by The Outlets, but I loved that record.  They played most of the songs from the record, a couple I did not know, and then said they were taking a break but would be back.  I was stunned and so excited that they were going to play a second set.  The Kings Head was small, not much to it, so we went back to talk to the band between sets, giving them no rest whatsoever.  I talked to Dave Barton, and I recall two things in particular.  First, I asked him to make sure they played “Tilted Track” in the second set, but he said no.  He said they refuse to play that song anymore, but he wouldn’t say why.  The other thing he told me was that he thought “Whole New World” was a terrible record.  I told him I loved it, but he insisted that it sucked.  I still love that record to this day, but I will say that having heard some additional live recordings, and after the release of the amazing “Outlets Rock 1980” which came out in 2007, I can see his point.  “Whole New World” does not capture the true rocking sound of The Outlets.  It tames down their sound quite a bit.

The second set was as good as the first.  The opportunity to see The Outlets at the Kings Head Inn was a treat I will never forget.  They were a powerhouse of a three-piece band with simply great songs.  Dial up You Tube and watch a live set from The Rat in Boston, and you’ll see how good they really were.  

 

The Blake Babies / Charlottesville, VA. / Zippers Restaurant. 

This show was around 1990.  Zippers was a weird, short-lived restaurant/bar in Charlottesville, VA, which had bands play occasionally in a corner of a room with no real stage at all.  Unlike the Reds show, this was in a hole-in-the-wall joint where you couldn’t have anything but a small crowd.  Still, me and two of my friends knew the Blake Babies were from Boston and one of us even had one of their CD’s.  We went to this place, paid a $2 cover, bought some beers and sat down in the room all by ourselves.  Three of us.  The Blake Babies came out and played us songs while we talked to them between songs, like they were in our living room.  I left the gig thinking the band was pretty good, and for the next week I got tired of my friend oohing and aahing about how much he was in love with Juliana Hatfield.  She definitely was way cool and pretty, too.  Still, only now that I love all her solo records (of which there are many) and her efforts with Paul Westerberg in the I Don’t Cares, do I realize how much of a treat that night really was.  If you’re not a big fan of Juliana Hatfield, you may want to dig a little deeper.  She’s done tons of solo stuff, plus the Juliana Hatfield Three and Some Girls.  Juliana also did a record with Matthew Caws of Nada Surf, calling the band Minor Alps.  Of course anything with Westerberg gives you instant credibility, but working with Nada Surf is awesome too.  Her latest record, Pussycat, is very good (and angry!).  Ms. Hatfield is one prolific musician, that’s for sure.

 

Rhino Bucket w/ The Factory / Springfield, VA. / Jaxx Nightclub.  

This show took place in 2011.  Rhino Bucket has been making AC/DC-style rock n roll for decades.  They are one of my favorite metal bands.  Just good, old fashioned hard rock.  The Factory is an old D.C. band that came oh so close to making the big time, only to be brought down by the usual rock n roll cliché problems of addiction, etc.  The Factory had been gone for decades when they resurfaced in about 2010.  Their awesome vocalist, Vance Bockis, had overcome years of addiction problems and some 1980’s recordings were dug up from various recording studios around D.C. in order to allow Acetate Records to release a CD.  The Factory started playing a few shows again, and Rhino Bucket also had a new record out on Acetate.  When I saw this double-bill coming to a strip mall suburban nightclub an hour so from my house, I was all in.  I got some tickets on line and my wife and I headed out for a blast from the past.  The Factory had been a favorite of mine for so long, and I was really excited to see them resurrected.

Upon arriving at the club, the gruff dude at the door told us to come back in an hour, because the bands hadn’t shown up yet.  We went to a pub and came back an hour later.  The door guy took our tickets and tossed them aside and we were in.  There was a tiny smattering of people, but most were probably with the bands.  The Factory came out and played a set that took me back in time.  They sounded great to me, and they even looked great still.  Rhino Bucket followed and played a killer set of straight-ahead rock n roll.  I could yell out a request and they’d ignore me and then play it a few songs later.  I would say there were about fifteen people there, and Jaxx is a big place with a great light and sound system, even if the outside of the place looked like a total dump.  An empty metal show might be the strangest kind of show to see practically by yourself.

It’s only been a few years, but Jaxx is now closed & gone and Vance died of natural causes about a week before The Factory was scheduled to open for Kix at a show in D.C.  He had invited me to hang out with the band at that show, which never happened.  R.I.P. Vance.

A video of vintage Factory – The Factory performing “Girl I Want”:

A mini-documentary called SHIFT featuring Vance, probably not too long before he passed:

 

JCE is a good friend of Ricki C.'s whom Ricki has never actually met in person.  A lot of us here at Pencilstorm have friendships like this; long-distrance liasons that sometimes eventually result in face-to-face meetings if you're on tour enough, but sometimes remain letter-to-letter (back in the day) or e-mail to e-mail or text-to-text in these oh-so-modern times of ours.

Ricki and JCE (John, to his friends & family) first bonded over their shared mutual love of Boston's Finest Sons - The Neighborhoods - and everything extended out from that rock & roll ripple.  JCE lives in Culpeper, Virginia with his wife & daughter, and thinks a long-rumored new Neighborhoods record being released in 2018 would make this a perfect year.
 

House Party Concerts, Marah & Hogan Productions - by Ricki C.

“Johnny’s in the basement, mixin’ up the medicine” – Bob Dylan, 1965


Basement house party gigs are weird.  And great. 

The first time I ever played music in public – 50 years ago next autumn – that gig was in one of my high school classmates’ basement. From my vantage point of 65 years on the planet I have watched rock & roll shows progress from those basements to festivals in huge, barren fields and football stadiums in the 1970’s, and now back to people’s basements.

I spent the decade of the 2000’s as road manager for an act from New York called Hamell On Trial – aka Ed Hamell, a four-man punk band rolled into one bald, sweaty guy – and right at the end of my tenure on the road Hamell started playing house concerts.  Nine years earlier – July 1st, 2001 – Hamell had opened a sold-out Ani Difranco show at the 7,000 capacity Universal Amphitheater in Los Angeles.  By 2010 Ed was playing in people’s dining rooms.  Sometimes, looking back, I think that’s the entire history of what the music industry did to rock & roll music in the early 21st century, in a nutshell.

Which brings us to Marah at Hogan House Productions’ basement concert a coupla Friday's ago.   

Early in my service as a roadie for Watershed back in 2005 (to supplement my Hamell income), Colin & the guys opened a Marah show at the old High Five Club.  It was sold out, hundreds of people, the place was packed, and Watershed and Marah deployed one motherfucker of a rock & roll show.  Power, passion, volume to the point of pain; on that particular evening both bands mightily kicked out the jams.  

So last week I saw the Bielanko brothers – Dave & Serge – of Marah with Colin opening for them in a guy’s basement.  That’s a really different show than a packed High Five.  But then again, this is a really different basement.  P.J. Hogan’s home base for his shows seats maybe 50 people, the walls are lined with great classy DVD’s, there’s a decent little sound system and PROXIMITY to the performers that you’re not gonna get in a larger setting, even the intimacy of a small listening room club like Natalie’s Coal Fired Pizza (my current favorite singer/songwriter venue in Columbus).

At Hogan House you’re almost TOO CLOSE to the performers.  After the first song Colin asked me and the audience – “Am I WAY too loud?  Do we need to turn this down?  Is this volume okay?” – because he was so close to the listeners it seemed overwhelming.  But it wasn’t.  Admittedly you could probably play PJ’s basement with no PA system at all, just sing and strum guitars and the sound would be fine, but the presence of that little bit of power & electricity just makes the show that much more exciting.  It's a rock & roll truism: Volume makes EVERYTHING better.

So Marah are, it almost goes without saying, genius-level great in the context of a basement house gig.  At one moment in the show – during a particularly dissonant Dave Bielanko guitar solo – his brother Serge (who normally is the lead guitarist of Marah, but at that point is grinding out a GREAT rhythm guitar bed for his brother’s solo) leans over and says, “Somethin’s tryin’ to get out,” as if Dave is attempting to conduct some sort of sonic exorcism with his beat-to-shit black acoustic guitar. 

It’s a rock & roll moment I won’t soon forget, and one I probably wouldn’t have gotten in even a small club, and most CERTAINLY would never have apprehended in Nationwide Arena or the Schott.  And it was a moment I got because I saw Marah in P.J. Hogan’s basement.  Thanks P.J.  Thanks Marah.  – Ricki C. / April 24th, 2018


The next Hogan House Production is Amy Rigby on Saturday, May 5th.  

Here is a link for details on that show: https://amyrigbycolumbusohio.brownpapertickets.com/.  I’ve seen Amy Rigby two or three times in the past – but again, never in somebody’s basement – and to my mind this show would be the absolute best use of twenty dollars of your entertainment budget for all of 2018 that I could possibly think of. 
 

For more info on Hogan House Productions in general, check out P.J. Hogan Talks About Marah and His Successful House Shows earlier in Pencilstorm. 

 

Downsizing From My Rock n Roll McMansion to a Condo With a Small Yard - by Colin Gawel

I’ve ended some bands and started a new one. Well, it’s sorta new: Colin and the Bowlers will be playing Sunday, April 29th at Little Rock Bar from 2-5 pm. Yes, you read that right, it’s a day drinking gig for all you Sunday Funday folks. It’s a kinda new idea for a kinda new band. No cover, either.


In the past three years I've recorded or performed with the following bands:

  1. Watershed

  2. The Lonely Bones

  3. Why Isn’t Cheap Trick in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame?

  4. The League Bowlers

  5. The Willie Phoenix Tribute Machine

  6. Dead Schembechlers

And I was still playing solo gigs and trying to pump out shite for Pencilstorm.

Don’t get me wrong, I did this to myself and it was all tons of fun, but after the release of League Bowlers - Some Balls Deluxe in December 2017, and the passing of our great guitarist Mike Parks in January 2018, I knew it was the end of an era. And besides, I’m getting older and all these early morning coffee shop hours make me sleepy. It was time to downsize from my rock n roll McMansion to a condo with a small yard.

Bowlers vs Bones. That was the question.

The League Bowlers were my original side band: a way to blow off steam between Watershed shows. Once Watershed went on hiatus, it’s didn’t make much sense to have a side band for no band, so I formed The Lonely Bones. I felt like I needed to make a real attempt to establish myself as a valid solo artist (pardon that pretentious term). I wasn’t gunning for the top of the charts or anything, I just had to challenge myself to exist outside the world of Watershed. Thanks to the help of many, I feel like The Lonely Bones accomplished all we set out to achieve. With the release of Superior - The Best of Colin Gawel in 2016, I was ready to close the chapter on that band, if not the songs.

Meanwhile, getting back together in 2016 with the classic League Bowlers line-up of Jim Johnson, Dan Cochran, Mike and myself was truly a blessing. We had a great two-year run and Some Balls is a record that will live forever. But with Mike's passing, and Dan now busy with three young kids and the Four String Brewery to run, it was time to call it a day. I know this sucks for Jim but I’m hoping a version of the League Bowlers with him and Dan can still make special appearances. For instance, we applied to this year’s Comfest. And the nice thing about the Bowlers is whoever has a shirt on that day can be part of the band. Once this thing gets going we can rotate some folks in and out depending on the schedule. 

But if I am only going to have one band outside of Watershed, I can only have one drummer and Herb Schupp & myself started this journey together as lab partners in 7th grade and we are going to ride this thing to the finish line.

Rick Kinsinger does everything. He records the Bones, Bowlers and Watershed and plays in all three as well. None of this happens without Rick. He is playing guitar. No more keyboards. I threw them in the dumpster while moving out of the McMansion.

With Dan wanting to spend more time with his family and play with his original band Feversmile, we needed a new bass player. I’ve always preferred friendship over musicianship so it’s been a treat to spend time again with my old pal Andy Hindman. For those of you that don’t know, Andy grew up with me in Worthington, was the original Watershed roadie for hundreds of shows before getting a better gig with the Goo Goo Dolls. He still works with them to this day. He is also an accomplished musician and recording engineer himself.

I thought about changing the band name but since my merch table only has two CDs available: Colin Gawel - Superior,  and The League Bowlers - Some Balls Deluxe I just wanted to keep it simple. ANOTHER new band would take all kinds of explaining and who has the time or energy for that when we could be drinking a beer and talking about Cheap Trick?

With the new lineup in place, we have been having a blast getting together in my basement playing Bowlers and Bones tunes along with all kind of covers just for kicks.  Our goal is to be a bar band that we would like to see if we were in a bar. Wearing Bowling shirts of course.

So, Day Drinking with Colin and The Bowlers will be happening Sunday, April 29th 2-5 pm at Little Rock Bar. I can’t guarantee we will be great, but I can guarantee it will be fun. I hope you can join us for the ride. - Colin




 

Jim Johnson With Your Record Store Day Picks

Jim Johnson has worked in the record business since before there were records and is one of Columbus, Ohio's best known drummers. Click here to check him out on The League Bowlers Some Balls Deluxe. Or click here to read an interview

This Saturday, April 21, is Record Store Day: a great reason to visit all your local record stores. That is, if you’re hip to the vinyl resurgence, and really, if you’re reading Pencilstorm, you’re already sorta hip. Vinyl has basically saved the record industry from going down the tubes, an industry - I must admit - that has given me a job for most of my life. It was touchy there for a while, in the early 21st century, when Napster and Apple decided music should be cheap or free, and kids got a kick out of stealing music through the internet. Luckily, people still like to hold a piece of music in their hands, and what better to hold than a round groovy piece of plastic, often in a multitude of different colors?

But I digress, back to Record Store Day. There’s always something for everyone, regardless of your taste. I thought I’d do you a favor, and cut through all the goofy bands you’ll have to sort through, to find the good stuff. After all, does anybody really need any more crappy Phish or Grateful Dead records? I think not.

Here’s my picks:

Chuck Berry’s Greatest Hits. A record everyone that loves Rock & Roll should own. It all starts here.

Blue Oyster Cult / Rarities. You gotta delve deep into their catalog to find the good stuff, so I’m hoping this has some cool early tunes. These guys were way ahead of their time.

Smithereens / Play Tommy. RIP Pat, you did good on this.

Good Rats / Tasty. If you’re not hip the the best band out of Long Island in the 80’s, you’re not really hip.

Kinks / Phobia Their last studio album. Kinks collectors, take note.

Nilsson / Pussycats. Classic Nilsson, produced by John Lennon.

Neil Young / Tonight’s The Night, Live At The Roxy. Classic Neil, in a club. As close to hearing him in a garage as you’re gonna get. That’s a compliment.

The Who / The Kids Are Alright. Soundtrack to the movie. These songs were meant to be heard on vinyl.

Coupla others that look interesting: Steve Earle & The Dukes / Live; Living Colour / Live At CBGB’s; Dream Syndicate / How We Found Ourselves. That’s my picks. See ya at the stores, get there early!