Sunday, May 15, 2016

SUSAN HYATT's PERFECT PARTY MUSIC, PINUPS & TRUMPETS

 
 
Susan Hyatt is a now Nashville-based singer with a clear, clean soprano she can twist into sultry contortions, and a pop music historian's P.O.V. for inspiration. For instance, my above left photograph documents Susan performing 1967's "How Does It Feel To Feel" by The Creation in 2014! The formula worked profoundly with her band Stimulator's 2010 original cut "Lovelier In Black," a celebratory morbid ditty that should have been right up there with Nine Inch Nails' "Head Like A Hole" for altGoth anthems.

Her newest effort PinUps & Trumpets, to be released 5.23.16 on Orchard Records, is perfect party music for any fun but slightly unsettling occasion as rather pretty offerings that challenge. An effective career-oriented musician, Susan and her past musics have been heard on all manner of mainstream television broadcasts, so there's no reason to doubt this offering will as well.

The official press release as follows: 
Susan Hyatt’s new record “Pin­Ups & Trumpets” is an all covers album celebrating her favorite rock songs growing up. Recorded in Nashville, the album was co­-produced with trumpet player Zack Leffew.

The record marks a new musical direction for Susan, who thus far was known as a rock chick fronting bands Pillbox and Stimulator. This record melds indie rock with prominent jazzy flavors and sultry female vocals  on cuts by Motley Crue, Alice Cooper, Marilyn Manson, Depeche Mode, David Bowie, Judas Priest, Roxy Music, The Eagles and The Cars.

 Left, Susan Hyatt, center, in the 21st Century Pandoras (see LINK); right, promoting a book proposal with her own guided, free Pilates/gym workout for the press and others!

Monday, May 9, 2016

LESLIE KNAUER AND AL TEMAN LIVE 4.23.16, Maui Sugar Mill Bar




Leslie Knauer, (left) vocalist, songwriter (past groups Precious Metal and Kanary, see LINK and LINK) with her soulmate Al TeMan (right) of their current bands Naked Hand Dance and Diamond Star Halo played a rare gig at Maui Sugar Mill Bar, Reseda, in the Valley sector of L.A. 4.23.16.

Leslie is a world class singer, so even their opener of a wacky Roger Miller cover sounded more polished than it deserved to. But the set really takes flight with selections from Leslie's vast repertoire of amazing, original songs which better showcase her soaring vocals. The room filled immediately with the stragglers waylaid outside. Percussionist Scott Breadman rounded out the trio.

 Left, Leslie's typically ebullient stage manner; right, also on the bill, a Greek singer from band appropriately named Electra.
 

























PHOTO OPS:
 Above, Al, Leslie and Len Fagen, legendary booker the much missed Coconut Teaszer Club in Hollywood, an Alternative oasis in 1980s/90s Hollywood which was the first U.S. club to give a residency to British songstress P.J. Harvey (essentially breaking her for this country) and so very many other acts I photographed from Bo Diddley to Ron Asheton.

 Below, Leslie with Donna Balancia, Editor of California Rocker and West Coast Rocker.
 
Leslie, Al and two of Leslie's many friends and wellwishers.

Wednesday, May 4, 2016

THE JIGSAW SEEN, THE BLESSINGS, THE TIGHTY WHITEYS, LIVE for those in the know

 THE JIGSAW SEEN
THE BLESSINGS
THE TIGHTY WHITEYS

To know about them is to love them, these three bands with so very many avid fans. They seem to perform or record so very infrequently that it further stokes claims of "best kept secrets" in our music biz universe. Los Angeles nonetheless hosted the rare-ish events of all three in the third month of the new year of Our Lord, with The Jigsaw Seen at the Silverlake Lounge on 3.12.16, The Blessings gigging at The Roar Room 3.26.16, and The Tighty Whiteys hitting the Cafe Escobar stage on 3.19.16.
 The Jigsaw Seen, one of those cellectives where one's first reflex is to omit the article, as in long ago colleagues The Cream and The Buffalo Springfield, actually reminded me of Kaleidoscope (who wisely deleted "the" in the course of their career of four albums betwixt 1966 and 1970) insofar as their genuine eclecticism of sounds was matched by great proficiency and interband connection in playing them all.
 
 I indeed saw the original Kaleidoscope live in 1968, as I booked them for my senior prom (yes, really, see LINK) whose songs veered from the morbid country classic "O Death" to proto-world music mash-ups of Mid-Eastern sounds with Indian ragas effected with guitars. Kaleidoscopic expertise came via multi-instrumentalist David Lindley (see aforementioned link,) Chris Darrow and host of misfit L.A. expert instrumental practitioners. 

Similarly, the Jigsaw Seen live is a hyper-competent, noisy rock and roll celebration with each song sounding vaguely different for reasons one knows not beyond the oddness of the material lyrics-wise. Their most popular release Bananas Foster (whose package includes cooking recipes and scratch'n'sniff banana scent) sports "Cave Canem" (latin for "beware of the dog" as excavated from a Pompeii watchdog mosiac, and not on the Silverlake lounge set list) whose lyrics trace incredibly obscure, extinct dog breeds and why they went extinct. Its melody is just as sad as its content, but then again, what highly listenable pop bands write songs about the Alaunt and Molossus these days?

In that latter respect they somewhat reminded me of my better half's band of 40+ years ago cult-ness, Christopher Milk which always featured weird topics for pop songs, penned with exquisite attention to the right multi-syllabic mots justes or irregular forms of rhyme, internal and otherwise. Clever, in other words, and successfully updated by Jigsaw Seen. How well the JSeen lyrics scan  can be witnessed in a Winterland album cut (also not in the set) that turns Christmas cliches into imperfect reality: "A child is born, to a welfare case, where the rats run around like they own the place." Another CMilk-worthy song title (not played): "Choreography Killed The Cat."

 Example of Jigsaw song titles in action are seen on set list below, with personal favorite for its hardcore Stooge-iness "Where The Action Isn't."
The Jigsaw Seen play so seldom that many of their fans consider them a studio band, belied by their fun and expert live set at the Silverlake Lounge. Thank goodness a friend alerted us! Canny Jigsaw-ists spotted half the band at the Holy Holy gig, original Spider From Mars Woody Woodmansey and producer Tony Visconti's live tribute to David Bowie at the Wiltern Theatre 4.26.16 (while I was photographing Little Caesar and Dee Snider at the Whisky a GoGo.)

The band is:
Dennis Davison- vocals, percussion; Jonathan Lea- guitar; Tom Currier-bass; Teddy Freese- drums. Jonathan and Tom are part of Kink Dave Davies' current solo touring band.
 











PHOTO OPS:


Above, my better half Mr. Twister, fabulous singer Leslie Knauer, and Betsy Rosenthal, aforementioned friend who alerted us. Betsy and writer Terry Moreland Henderson flanking Jonathan Lea. Guest photographer © 2016 Kurt Ingham for photo on the left. 
Below, Betsy with singer Dennis Davison, Twister on the job in the background...


Meanwhile across town at the Roar Room...
They write great songs that one can remember on the way home, and arrange their sound like the early 1970s Rolling Stones with unobtrusive but essential keyboards, two guitars, harmonica and female Gospel-incubated background vocals. In fact their audio dynamic sort of sounds like 'Exile on Main St." outtakes with entirely different vocals. Furthermore they look good doing it... It's THE BLESSINGS 3.26.16 at the Roar Room, Glendale/La Crescenta area of N.E. San Fernando Valley, L.A.

When folks say rock is dead because newer and/or younger bands don't know how to do it  anymore, I point to Dr. Boogie (LINK) and The Blessings as immediate contradiction. Perhaps our American blues underpinning has helped keep this genre vital for a lot of domestic musicians to try out because our unconscious familiarity with same makes it rather doable. (Whereas virtually all youngest Brit and Euro bands one sees on Palladia, the MTVs etc. doing their mid-tempo mush, um, rather suck at it. They think because they're using guitars and drums that it's rock. They so err...)



The Blessings
are: Jeremy White, vocals, guitar, harmonica;
Mike Gavigan, guitar; Jason Upright, drums; Jeffrey Howell, keyboards; Lavone Seetal, backing vocals, percussion; filling in for Duffy Snowhill on bass, Lights Out Levine.

The second desperado with a chapeau, the one to the right in these shots was Tobin Dale, jamming a farewell to L.A. with his Blessings friends. The very next day he moved to Nashville Tenn.
not
lot
of
room
onstage 
to kick up 
one's heels

 

PHOTO OPS:
Sultry redhead Irene LeConto does the lounge thing at the Roar Room. She's a promoter, music events planner, manager, publicist and hottie.


Meanwhile back to the beach at Malibu...
What can one say about a band that sounds like the Wrecking Crew and/or Funk Brothers fronted by one the premiere American vocalists and survivor of Geffen Records' Metal 1980s? One would say go see The Tighty Whiteys wherever they may be. 

Malibu's Cafe Escobar is lucky to book these topflight musicians of studio and stage who love to do the funk, soul, r&b and Motown thangs on the same level as their Memphis and Detroit colleagues. A crumpled up 1/2 of a set list gives a clue to their repertoire. The band's sense of fun and superb musicianship serve these great songs so well.

The Tighty Whiteys remain: Ron Young, vocals; 
Joey Malone, guitar; 
Bruce Witkin, bass;
 Kevin Laurence, keyboards;
  Rob Klonel, drums.

Monday, May 2, 2016

DOG PLAYDATES 2016 THUS FAR


Dog playdates 2016 starring Gia the one and a half year old Scottish Deerhound, Sarabelle the wise old Golden Retriever, Diego the 2 year old Borzoi, Quinn the fast-growing Borzoi puppy plus humans Ian, Sherry, Mr. Twister and yours truly.
                        



Baby
Quinn 
becomes 
closer 
friends with 
Mr. Twister








 ↓guest photographer next  4 photos © 2016 Kurt Ingham
 
                             
                           


Above, Baby Quinn outgrowing his puppy harness, and Gia
Below, Diego in all his Russian Wolfhound glory...
Gia in all her goofy Deerhound puppy glory...



 ♥
Left, Mr.
Twister
right, 
guest
photo-
grapher
© Kurt 
Ingham, 
yours truly,
Sarabelle

 









Letting the 
young 'uns 
romp and race,
 Sarabelle 
prefers to retire 
to her study.
And what does
she study?
According to
Mr. Twister,
Sarabelle
studies 
seashells
by the sea 
shore... 
 
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