I-94 BAR TOP TENS

Barflies discuss their Best for 2009…

Archive for November, 2008

Steven Danno

Steven “Danno” Lorkin is an occasional I-94 Bar reviewer & photographer from Sydney, Australia. Cool Charmers guitarist. Mug punter. 

 

Top 10 2008 (not in any order so stop pouting)Top 10 2008 (not in any order so stop pouting)

1) Asteroid B612; Not Meant for This World 2008 2CD reissue. This in my mind was real high point for the Asteroids, the song writing, the musical chemistry, Grant’s psychotic emotional vocals and of course the live shows were dynamite. The bonus demo tracks on this are as raucous as you’d expect.

2) From The Jam. The Forum Sydney. Hey, it was two chaps who use to be in The Jam backed up with some great players. They played Jam songs and played them bloody marvellously. 

3) Stiff Little Fingers – The Forum Sydney. Christ who’d of thought Sydney would finally get SLF after all these years. I’ve dug the first 2 albums since they first got released. Every old school punk in Sydney must have been there.

4) Do the Pop Redux. Laingers (that’s David Laing to you) has done a great job in once again making available all these great Oz 70s + 80s gems. Keep em coming Dave!

5) Cool Charmers. Live + rehearsals + after rehearsal pub band meetings. Barman, are we still allowed to use these end of year Top 10 tens to promote our own bands? Good …cause I had a blast playing with this Sauvé bunch. Come to our next concerto Y’all.

6) Pete Wells Bodgie Dada CD. Pete’s final studio recordings before he left this world in 2006. Backed up by Rob Grosser and Lucy De Soto this CD really goes beyond what people have come to expect from Pete, at times weirding out ala Beefheart.

7) X at the Sando. Of course X are always great, even when they sucked they are masterful. Using borrowed amps and drum kit they weren’t their usual brutal self’s but still a great rock n roll show.

8) Hitmen reissues/gigs. Did the Shock reissues come out this year?? Anyway they were a fine tribute and salute to one of the rockin’ worlds most hated bands (everyone has a Hitmen story it seems)…and the gigs were great fun. Bizzos & Annandale were a blast. I hope this line up sticks together.

9) Visitors CD reissue + live at the Empire Hotel. Finally this great recording is available again (and with some brilliant photos in the booklet I might add) the Empire show saw Dr Deniz playing with a bizarre cooking injury which held him back a tad but they still blew the venue apart . 

10) Roxy London WC2 Box Set. Six-CD set with all of the existing recordings from this infamous 70s UK Punk venue , These versions of The  Adverts tracks are better then their studio recordings and hearing entire sets from the early Buzzcocks and X Ray Spex is a punk rock history lesson.

Honorary mentions – Tony McCann 7” EP on Zenith Records; Purple Hearts LP; 13th Floor Elevators Mono debut LP reissue; New Christs at the Annandale and the Bizzos; Sonic Youth Scientists double header at the Enmore; Tactics at the Annandale; Tactics reissues; The Residents Duck Stab 30th Anniversary reissue (shite how many of my top 10s are “ reissues” ?);  Masters Apprentices Apprenticeship in the Garage 1966 CD, Hoody’s Birthday at the Excelsior; Angels reissues of the first 2 albums and SBS Doco on telly; Launch of Pete Wells album at the Bridge with Angry Anderson, Dave Tice and a cast of thousands; Judith Lucy at Glee Books; My DJ set at Take it or Leave It; Sham 69 at the Gaelic; AC/DC Black Ice


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J.P. “Thunderbolt” Patterson

 1) President Barack Obama: This is a no brainer, but it has to be #1. We in the USA look forward to re-joining the International community.

 2) The Ting Tings “Great D.J.”: The perfect punk/pop/dance/electronica hybrid. Love ‘em to death, and they’re great live.

 3) My beloved New York Giants: American football champs of the world, marching towards another title; a blue collar, smack you in the mouth team.

 4) AC/DC, “Black Ice”: always glad to have new pounding from the great Phil Rudd.

 5) The Rachel Maddow show on MSNBC: Quick, smart, funny, wise, kind, and the cutest butch lesbian on television. Our finest pundit.

 6) Emilie Cardenaux with JoJo Mayer, live: a terrific singer/songwriter, backed by the current “world’s best drummer”…at a tiny bar, no less.

 7) The satellite radio merger: FINALLY. Sirius rules, with Howard Stern, “Buzzsaw”, and “Little Steven’s Underground Garage” ( The Handsome Dick Manitoba Show, weeknights).

 8) Peter Erskine at the Buddy Rich Tribute Concert, 2008: a true swing drummer, showing all the interlopers how it’s done.

 9) The Dictators in Madrid : The reason YouTube is great. Modesty prevents me from placing this higher, but we still got it.

 10) F1 World Champion Lewis Hamilton: should’ve won it last year, but it was only a matter of time. Now we just need to get him a girlfriend who’s not in the Pussycat Dolls.

 J.P. “Thunderbolt” Patterson is the long-time drummer for New York Punk legends The Dictators. He currently also backs rock chick Patti Rothberg and space folkie Erin Hill. His solo record “Thunderboss: Thunderbolt Patterson with Ross the Boss” is available on all the legal download services or from Poptown Records. As an actor, J.P. can lately be seen in the Lindsay Lohan flick “Just My Luck”. Russell Crowe has nothing to worry about.   

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Mo Mayhem

Guitarist Mo Mayhem from Sydney band Hell City Glamours gives us his Top 10 Albums:

 

  • Hell City Glamours – Hell City Glamours hahaha
     
  • Johnny Casino and the Secrets – I am who I am, not what you want me to be
     
  • AVO – Domestic Violence Kept the Neighbourhood Quiet
     
  • Front End Loader – Laughing With Knives
     
  • Hellacopters – Head Off
     
  • Motorhead – Motorizer
     
  • The Gaslight Anthem – 59 sound
     
  • Hot Water Music – till the wheels fall off
     
  • AC/DC – Black Ice
     
  • Airbourne – Runnin Wild 
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    Richard Sharman

    Melbourne based music photographer at www.blackshadow.com.au

    It’s pretty hard to put these in order but I’ll give it a bash. My top ten gigs of the year were:

    1. Patti Smith at Hamer Hall – simply one of the best rock performances I have ever seen. Her voice and stage presence were magnificent as were her band. She’s still got it!

    2. Eddy Current Suppression Ring album launch at The Corner. You always knew this was going to be a big one with tickets selling out in short order with virtually no publicity. The place was jam packed, hot and sweaty and Eddy Current Suppression Ring unleashed a sonic fury that sent the crowd into a frenzy. Usually shy Brendan Suppression had a manic glint in his eye as he encouraged more and more mayhem from the mosh pit. Sensational stuff

    3. Devo at Festival Hall. Devo showed that they still have it and remain the kings of electro rock – their performance was great.

    4. Died Pretty + Ed Kuepper Don’t Look Back performance at The Forum. This was a very special night – you could literally see the years fall away from Ron Peno as he was out front of Died Pretty – magical stuff.

    5. Ween at The Forum. I’d only heard bits and pieces of Ween on the radio over the years. I wasn’t sure what to expect but they delivered a three hour joyful musical journey. Very impressive stuff

    6. Airbourne at The HiFi Bar. This was the last show that Airbourne played in Melbourne before relocating overseas in their quest for world domination. It was a stinking hot January night, people were crammed into The HiFi like sardines and Airbourne were ready to rock. And rock they did! Yes they cut it very close to old AC/DC but they know how to put on a show and they leave nothing in the tank.

    7. John Fogerty at the Point Nepean Music Festival. On Easter Saturday John Fogerty took to the stage, with a full moon back drop and ocean views he delved into the Creedence catalogue and delivered two hours of greatness. He was there to play – his voice and fiery guitar work were masterful. Classy stuff.

    8. Children Collide at Revolver. I’m writing this list the morning after this show. The gig kicked off a tour to launch this Melbourne trio’s debut album. Sonically intense, musically adept and with a great performance that erupts several times during the show. This was an hour of pure rock – no encores, no bullshit, just a damned fine show. Definitely the band to watch in 2009 – I have a feeling they are going to make it big.

    9. SixFtHick at Roxanne’s Parlour showed that the twin headed rock n roll hydra from Queensland are still one of the best live acts in this country… loud, nasty and in your face… yes please!

    10. X at Cherry Rock – Steve Lucas, Cathy Green and Kim Volkman fired up this old warhorse again and blew every other band away at this year’s Cherry Rock. They made the competition including the likes of The Supersuckers and The Hitmen looked tame in comparison. X is not the same band as with Ian Rilen on bass, but still a force to be reckoned with.

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    Scott Morgan

     

    Vocalist and guitarist for The Rationals, Sonic’s Rendezvous Band, Scott Morgan Band, Lightning, the Hydromatics, Dodge Main, The Solution and Powertrane, amongst others.

    I’LL PREFACE THIS LIST BY SAYING IT’S GOING TO BE DETROIT SOUL.  HAVING SAID THAT, YOU CAN IMAGINE THAT EVEN NARROWING THE SUBJECT DOWN THAT FAR, 10 IS JUST GOING TO SCRATCH THE SURFACE, BUT HERE GOES.

    • RESPECT-ARETHA FRANKLIN
    • MY GIRL-THE TEMPTATIONS
    • REACH OUT I’LL BE THERE-THE FOUR TOPS
    • DANCING IN THE STREET-MARTHA AND THE VANDELLAS
    • VILLAGE OF LOVE-NATHANIEL MAYER
    • AIN’T NO MOUNTAIN HIGH ENOUGH-MARVIN GAYE AND TAMMI TERRELL
    • BEECHWOOD 45789-THE MARVELETTES
    • OOH BABY BABY-THE MIRACLES
    • LOVE MAKES THE WORLD GO ROUND-DEON JACKSON
    • AGENT DOUBLE O SOUL-EDWIN STARR

    OK, YOU CAN SEE THIS IS IMPOSSIBLE.  I MAY HAVE TO DO VOLUME TWO!

    http://www.ScottMorganMusic.com

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    Carrie Phillis

     

    Carrie Phillis is lead singer for Sydney garage band The Booby Traps,  owner (with husband Tim Chillingworth) of Faster Pussycat stores in Sydney and Melbourne, and Mum to April

    1. Eli Paperboy Reed & the True Loves -Roll with you (album)

    2. The Supreme Genius of King Khan & The Shrines (album)

    3. Not Quite Hollywood (Documentary)

    4. The Stems at The Annandale-April

    5. The Breadmakers at The Sando Newtown-August(w The Booby Traps)

    6. Los Hories at Brunswick Club

    7. Johnny Casino & The Secrets- same gig

    8. Beccy & Carrie’s birthday bash at Cosmos Rock Lounge (featuring the return of  The Thurston Howlers!)

    9. The Ugly Beats-(fave band at the moment)

    10. Barack Obama being elected as US President

    (adios to a few of the greats: Paul Newman, Rudy Ray Moore, Nathaniel Mayer)

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    The Barman

    He’s The Barkeep at The I-94 Bar and I-94 Bar Records and you’re not. Be thankful. In no particular order, here are his Top Ten Albums (although he’s invariably forgotten someone): 

    I AM WHO AM, AND NOT WHO YOU WANT ME TO BE – Johnny Casino & The Secrets
    (Off the Hip)
    This list is no particular order – with one exception. This is Album of the Year. It’s good old rock and roll but on a higher plane to most everything else around right now. It’s well-produced and arranged (with the punch of horns on some tracks) and has some superb songwriting. The confidence, presence, vocal delivery and confidence (all interrelated) of main man Johnny Casino seems to be coming on in leaps.  

    WHERE THE FACES SHINE VOLUME 2 – Iggy Pop (Easy Action)
    A great advance on the first box set with a whopping six CDs (seven if you’re quick) and a DVD making for a generous package. Unlike the first which partly sought to sonically upgrade some of the bootleg material already out there, the vast bulk of this live box set is unreleased. Best for mine is the bonus CD of a 1989 Adelaide, Australia, show. It’s a little rough, sonically speaking, but it’s a fearsome show and the ultimate Iggy set list from that “Instinct” tour. Other shows cover the “Zombie Birdhouse” and “Blah Blah Blah” periods and it’s noticeable how the material from both albums was so much stronger when played live.   

    THE SECOND CHANCE – Sonic’s Rendezvous Band (Easy Action)
    LIVE MASONIC AUDITORIUM – Sonic’s Rendezvous Band (Rockarama)

    You can’t have too much SRB and both of these are vital in their own way. “The Second Chance” gives you insights into some works-in-progress and imparts a sense of a gang working their own turf. “Masonic” shows SRB primed and intent on making the most of a prestigious support to a band that actually looked up to them. The Yin and Yang of Sonic’s loose and limber drawl and Morgan’s soulful vocal attack are damn near irresistible when married to a powerful engine room thud and an all-out guitar assault.

    ED KUEPPER LIVE VOLUME 2 – Ed Kupper (Prince Melon)
    There’s a slew of Ed official bootlegs out there and this is the pick of the litter for mine, if only for the slightly clearer sound and John Gauci’s keyboards which give an extra set of legs to a couple of the re-interpretations. Really, I could have picked any of the series. They’re that good.

    THE HITMEN – The Hitmen (Savage Beat)
    IT IS WHAT IT IS – The Hitmen (Savage Beat)

    I try to avoid plugging things I have involvement in but the deluxe treatment Dave Laing of Savage Beat/Shock gave to the Hitmen re-ishes deserves your undivided attention.  The live shows with a new but DNA-matched line-up kick 66 sorts of shit too.

    THE VISITORS – The Visitors (Citadel)
    Same as above. It’s long past time this one was back in print and the mastering brings it up just a tad. These are some of Deniz Tek’s best songs and the rest of the band were clearly having a ball putting them into action.

    APA STATE MENTAL – Apa State Mental (self released)
    Malmo punk monsters. Best “new” (as in: to these ears) band I’ve heard in 2008, apart maybe from Boris. Apa State Mental have a disarmingly smart/dumb approach.  

    BORIS – Smile (DIW/Southern Lord)
    In-your-face psych-out guitar terrorists from Japan. They’ve been around for 14 albums, you say? Shame on me.  I haven’t back-tracked through their entire oeuvre and a physical copy is on order form Santa (downloads feel so unclean) but this one is like a body-slam with the canvas replaced by concrete.

    HELL CITY GLAMOURS – Hell City Glamours (self released)
    Can’t put this one down. It’s just a bunch of road-wise skinny white boys playing in-your-face glam rock songs about the usual topics, but it has bigger balls than King Kong and swings like a $2 Bali wind chime in a hurricane.

    HONORABLE MENTIONS:
    Depending on the week, any of these could have made the Top Ten List:

    THE GOODNIGHT LOVING – The Goodnight Loving (Off The Hip)
    Backwoods punks play country-tinged, idiosyncratic pop. You know it makes sense.

    WHAT’S THE TIME – Los Hories  (Off the Hip)
    We’re going to kick New Zealand’s arses in the cricket this summer but they’ve already kicked ours with this bucket of stumblebum, greasy garage rock.

    ELECTRIC ABORIGINES – Awesome Color (Ecstatic Peace/High Spot)
    A beautiful collision of dissonance and throat-clutching Midwest psych rock. 

    HIGH TECHNOLOGY – The Reactions (Off the Hip)
    If the Stems and the Hoodoo Gurus came from Tasmania and were cousins, would they have a child like this?

    HELLHOUND DOWN  - The Labor Party (Steel Cage)
    Who woulda thunk the wide open spaces of Arizona would spawn a potent album of singalong Dead Boys and Dictators riffage?

    SUPER MINI ALBUM – The Pink Fits (Off the Hip)
    Something’s seriously wrong with rock and roll when these guys aren’t a household name. Should have been an album.

    FEED THE DOGS – The Holy Curse (Turborock)
    France’s finest drop another payload.

    FALLEN BIRDS – Mark Steiner (Stagger Records)
    Euro lounge in a dank and dark space.

    SLOW BURN – The Vandas (Liberation)
    Rockin’ and rollin’, country-inflected tunes done very well.

    NIGHT OF THE COBRA – The Breadmakers (Off The Hip)
    A sweaty live album full of life that sent me looking for back catalogue. 

     

    DO THE POP! REDUX PART ONE – Various Artists (Savage Beat/Shock)
    Was this 2008? Great at any rate.

     

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    Mickster of Off The Hip Records

     

    TOP TEN from MICKSTER, BOSS OF
    OFF THE HIP RECORDS  

    Most played albums for 2008:

    1. THE GOODNIGHT LOVING “S/T”

    2. JOHNNY CASINO AND THE SECRETS “I AM WHO I AM”

    3. SCREWTOP DETONATORS “3,2,1 I’M DONE”

    4. OOGA BOOGAS “ROMANCE AND ADVENTURE”

    5. BRIMSTONE HOWL “WE CAME IN PEACE”

    6. GENTLEMEN JESSE “S/T”

    7. BILLY CHILDISH “THATCHER’S CHILDREN”

    8. VARIOUS “THANK YOU FRIENDS” (ARDENT RECORDS STORY)

    9. THE NERVES “ONE WAY TICKET”

    10. HELLACOPTERS “HEAD OFF

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    Mike Watt

     

    I am mike watt, working bass for the stooges since they reformed in 2003.

    my top ten: 

    “fucked up friends” tobacco

    “smile” boris

    “we have you surrounded” the dirtbombs

    “edit” mark stewart

    “offend maggie” deerhoof

    “phantasia” lite

    “I’m not fine, thank you. and you” 54-71

    “live santa monica ‘72 reissue” david bowie

    “13 blues for thirteen moons” thee silver 

    mt. zion memorial orchestra and tra-la-la band

    “the mike watt e.p.” the widow babies

    on bass, watt
    http://hootpage.com

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    Bob Short

    Bob Short plays guitar for Sydney band The Dead Rabids and was in one of Australia’s first punk bands, Filth. What follows is his almost ten Sydney gigs of the last twelve months in no particular order…
     
    Patti Smith at the Opera House.  Still fucking brilliant after all these years- maybe more so.  A new discipline added raw power.
     
    Visitors at Sylvania.  I enjoyed the gigs at the Empire and Wollongong but this out of nowhere support gig was a mind blower.
     
    Pierced Arrows at the Annandale.  What do you mean you haven’t heard of them?  (We have.) I thought this was rock and roll central.  
     
    Niagra at Sylvania.  Goddess.  Awesome.  (and I do know what the word means and she was awesome)
     
    Lambretta Suede at the Hopetoun.  Another goddess.  She stands about four feet nothing in high heel shoes with a voice that’s pure Wanda Jackson.  And she wears feathers.
     
    Jesus and Mary Chain Enmore.  JAMC still kicked arse and this is from someone who saw them when they’d just released Upside Down.
     
    Passengers at The Excelsior.  I listen to them and first I think I want the big drums and the Phil Spector production but Angie Pepper sings and you have no choice but to listen.  Anything more would just break too many hearts.
     
    New Christs at the Excelsior.  Both shows were brilliant but, for me, the first one just slightly beat the second.  Jim Dickson’s return on Bass has given them just enough pop to let the songs really shine.
     
    Jack Nasty Face just about anywhere they played.  I think my favourite shows have been the ones at Spectrum.
     
    Booby Traps at the Sandringham on that Sunday afternoon.  Fuck that band has come a long way in the last 12 months.
     
    Finally (and this makes eleven), I have to mention the Dead Rabids at the Bald Faced Stag.  I know we kicked seven shades of shit out of everyone that night.  I’m usually not a big head about it but I felt fucking vindicated by that show.
      

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    Ken Shimamoto


    Ken and grandson Niles

    Ken and grandson Nile

     

     

     

    Longtime part-time I-94 Bar scribe

    1)    Boris – Smile. A band for 16 years now, recording for 12, but I’m slow on the pickup, so I only got hip to ‘em when a friend pulled my coat five years ago, Boris represents proof positive that Japanese rock is now the equal of anybody’s. They cover a lot of bases: drone-y stoner sludge, pummeling punk thrash, languid spacey psych. The 2006 addition of psychedelic axeman supreme Michio Kurihara (White Heaven, Stars, Ghost, Damon and Naomi) to their touring lineup took them to another level entahrly. Their destruction of Rubber Gloves Rehearsal Studio in Denton, whose owner had his ear bitten off (true story – it’s in a jar behind the bar) at a Boris show in another venue last year, was undoubtedly the best live show I’ll see for many moons. And this album, in its many different forms (different tracks/sequence/mixes for U.S. and Japanese CD and double LP versions) is maybe the best thing they’ve recorded so far.http://homepage1.nifty.com/boris/top.html

    2)    Stumptone – Gravity Finally Released. A kind of local avant-garde supergroup whose lineup now includes musos formerly associated with legendary experimental outfits Mazinga Phaser, Mandarin, and Sub Oslo, singer-guitarist-trumpeter Chris Plavidal’s band Stumptone has been kicking around North Texas for a decade now, and this year they dropped this, their magnum opus, on gorgeously packaged green marbled vinyl with accompanying CD-R for the digital-only slaves. Incandescent psychedelia with indie roots touches; referent to conjure with: the Roky Erickson cover. And in keeping with the Barman’s U.S. election riff, they posted a versh of our “Pledge of Allegiance” on the day President Obama was elected that brought a tear to my eye when I heard it. www.myspace.com/stumptone

    3)    The Great Tyrant – “Candycanes” 7-inch. Another confluence of North Texas underground heavy hitters (ex-American Idol contestant frontman from the Pointy Shoe Factory, riddim boyzzz from Yeti) release their offering on vinyl with accompanying CD-R (in this case, a four-song EP including a Magma cover). Dark, theatrical, and proggy, the Tyrant are kind of a heavy band that uses Daron Beck’s keyboards in place of guitars, while Tommy Atkins and Jon Teague play complex, knotty time signatures aggressively. So far this year they’ve released this package, recorded a still-unreleased full-length (There Is A Man In the House) that’s even better, and they’re getting ready to go into the studio again in November. Busy guys. Every live show I’ve seen by them has been different. The most creative act going in my neck of the woods, and they show no signs of stopping. www.myspace.com/thegreattyrant

    4)    Lou Reed – Berlin DVD. Being the kind of fella he is, Uncle Lou isn’t gonna wait for posterity to re-evaluate his canon; he’ll do it himself, thank you. So he records a “cover” of Metal Machine Music with German ensemble Zeitkratzer, and revives this, his initially reviled 1973 “masterpiece,” with a crack band of his most sympathetic accompanists, backing singers, horn and string sections, and a youth choir, performs it in a church in Brooklyn, and has the whole extravaganza filmed by director Julian Schnabel (The Diving Bell and the Butterfly) before taking the whole shebang on the road. And guess what: It is great; maybe not “the greatest rock film of all time” that he claims it to be, but definitely an estimable piece of cinema, the music in the fullness of time sounding majestic rather than tawdry. Now if he can just do the same forMagic and Loss… 

    5)    Sonic’s Rendezvous Band – The Second Chance. Proof positive (as if any more were needed) that Dee-troit rawked in the ‘70s. The Masonic Auditorium set took a slice of the Easy Action box set and made it generally available to people who couldn’t afford the ticket for the high dollar item, but this is better if only because it’s twice as long. Captures the band at a moment when Scott Morgan was still the dominant force, before Fred Smith hit his writing stride and went on to eclipse him. As I wrote in my review, this is rock ‘n’ roll as trance music.

    6)    Matt Baldwin – Paths of Ignition. Got hip to this via Julian Cope’s estimable Head Heritage website, whose “Album of the Month” feature has pulled my coat to loads of righteous noise. A mainly acoustic Bay Area guitarist, Baldwin starts out in John Fahey “American primitive” territory but transcends it with covers of Krautrock titans Neu! and Pommy metalers Iron Maiden and face-melting electric psych overlays.

    7)    The Fellow Americans – Debut No. 3. Praised to the skies by Stairway to Hell author/ex-Village Voicerockcrit supreme Chuck Eddy for their last outing (Search for Numb), this Weatherford, Texas-based outfit shed their stand-up singer and cut this collection of quirkily splenetic rawkers – equal parts Sex Pistols, Stooges, and Motorhead – as a three-piece. (Guitarist-singer Matt Hickey even mastered it in his backyard shed!) Unfortunately, I just learned that they’re planning on folding the tent. Hickey and bassist Hal Welch have been pounding together since Hal joined the Rio Grande Babies at the ass-end of Y2K, and these days Matt hasn’t been feeling it. Good luck to ‘em in their future endeavors, and for Godsakes buy a CD so that Matt doesn’t have to sleep on ‘em! www.thefellowamericans.com

    8.)    Various Artists – Miles from India. The concept: Put a bunch of ex-Miles Davis sidemen together with Indian musicians for a go at the canon (three each from Kind of Blue and Big Fun, two each from In A Silent Way and Bitches Brew, one from Miles’ post-’81 comeback). Worthwhile if only for the presence of Chicago avant-gardist turned Chess sessionman Pete Cosey, who applied the sting on guitar to some of the Master’s most challenging music (Get Up With It, Agharta Pangaea).

    9)    Dennis Gonzalez Jnaana Septet – The Gift of Discernment. Gonzalez is a Dallas trumpeter, poet, graphic artist, and schoolteacher who performed and recorded with the cream of the jazz avant-garde between 1978 and 1994, then retired from music for a few years until his teenage bass-and-drum-playing sons (who play together as a grindcore duo called Akkolyte) arm-twisted him out of retirement to form Yells At Eels in 1999. This latest outing teams the Gonzalez family with ex-Sun Ra/Art Ensemble of Chicago drummer Alvin Fielder, pianist Chris Parker, a percussionist and female vocalist. Like everything they play, it sparkles with creativity and the thrill of discovery.

    10) Dan McGuire – Funambulist. This arrived in the post the day before the Barman made his call for “best-of” submissions and while it’s not been released yet, I had to include it. McGuire is, of course, the “poetry-rock” guy from Ohio who’s released two albums with the Unknown Instructors (ex-Minutemen and Saccharine Trust musos; third one’s in the can) and two “collaborative compilations” of his verse over heavy psych tracks from everywhere. This time, he got together in the studio with friends from the Ohio experimental outfits Fuzzhead and Terminal Lovers and cut a record that, to these feedback-scorched ears, is even more immediate and alive than any of his others. Wait for it.

    Ken Shimamoto  is over half a fucking century old, lives with the love of his life and works in a grocery store in Fort Worth, Texas, Where the West Begins. This year he gained a son-in-law and two new grandchildren (that makes five!). He blogs at stashdauber.blogspot.com, contributes toiloveftw.com, plays guitar in Stoogeaphilia and PFFFFT! , and is plotting another musical project for 2009. While he doesn’t believe that Obama’s election will solve all of America’s problems, he thinks it’s a step in the right direction – maybe the first one in 40 years – and is guardedly optimistic about the future for the first time in a long time.

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