Wednesday, December 23, 2009

The Tour Is Over

Finished it up in Brisbane, Australia with two nights at the Brisbane Entertainment Center. The crew band got to play it's final show together, reprising our version of AC/DC's "Whole Lotta Rosie" during the encores. You can see an audience member's video of that here.

It's a 13-hour flight from Brisbane to Los Angeles, then we stood in line at security for over an hour, then a 3.5 hour flight to Nashville. Needless to say, I am jet-lagged.

Got a call from management that they won't be keeping many of us around for next year, so I am on the hunt for a new gig.

Lots of fun with the band and crew in 2009, looking forward to meeting a bunch of new folks in 2010.

Sunday, December 06, 2009

A Season to Remember

With a few exceptions, and some exceptional ones at that, I have come to view the current crop of music stars as a replacement team in a strike year. Not saying they don't have some talent, not saying they didn't pay some kind of dues or at least made a few monthly payments on some dues once, way back when they were ten or something.

I look around and I listen around and I'm pretty sure we can do better. I have not seriously listened to mainstream Pop, Country or Rock radio in years, at least not in the manner that I used to listen to those formats. I keep up with what's out there - to a point - but I really have lost the desire to put in the effort.

Growing up in rural Wisconsin, I had my head glued to a Panasonic clock radio (with the rolodex-like flipping numerals) using a mono earphone from Radio Shack (The Nation-wide Supermarket of Sound) to listen to WLS out of Chicago and Lake Delton's WNNO. My preteen years had Acker Bilk, Frank Sinatra, Perry Como and Buck Owens blasting out of various transistor radios compliments of Juneau County's own WRJC. There's a song I remember hearing a lot that had a choir or chorus singing it using nonsense syllables like "Shobby Shoooba..." in some jazzy mode. I remember "Music To Watch Girls By" and "A Boy Named Sue". Everybody liked Johnny Cash back then - you, your parents, your friends, your older brother, everybody except yucky girls. In high school, some station in the Fox River Valley had a DJ that used "Shine On You Crazy Diamond" as the them music for his album rock show. I had to run a pretty long wire speaker wire as a makeshift antennae to catch that station.

I have an emotional attachment to music that makes me incredibly easy to manipulate. I am an addict for good music. I want to believe. I have a wide open heart and if whatever you're playing moves me, I like it and I buy it. And then I champion it and give it as gifts and talk about it and blog about it and force them to listen to it through my computer speakers and am left to wonder why they aren't blown away by it. I'm more apt to write them off as temporarily tasteless cretins than abandon music I like.

These days the artists that I really enjoy tend to be obscure, under-the-radar types playing Rock, Electronica, Power Pop, and Americana/Roots Rock. Nothing that the majors are selling is appealing to me, and that's a fairly recent and disturbing trend. Not even having the fun of pleading a guilty pleasure lately. So, Team Popular Music, forgive me for not rooting for you, not buying the program, not eating the hot dogs or drinking the Kool-Aid, and not wanting to put your names on the back of the jerseys.

Saturday, December 05, 2009

To the Sea, To the Sea

Eric Woolfson died from cancer on December 2, 2009. He was 64 years old.

Eric Woolfson was the voice on The Alan Parsons Project's "Time" and "Eye in the Sky", and co-wrote nearly everything on all ten of their studio albums.

I like those songs and I like the way he sang them.

Thanks, Eric!