Yet again my self-imposed blog assignment was made simpler
by having two concerts I could comment upon, both occurring within the same
week between the last blog entry and this one.
Here you go.
On Saturday, December 4, 2021, I attended a concert at the
Baltimore Soundstage, of a Nashville, Tennessee band, All Them Witches
(Bassist/singer Charles Michael Parks; guitarist Ben McLeod; drummer Robby
Staebler).
This show had originally been scheduled in spring 2020 at
the Ottobar (also in Baltimore), postponed several times due to COVID, and
transferred to this venue. My initial
ticket was will call (as my preference is for non-electronic tickets) and the
box office had my name on a list. No
problems there.
Arriving at the venue was simple: 395 North up past the Pentagon, the GW
Parkway to the Beltway, around to I-95 near College Park, then up I-95 to the
Inner Harbor. Right on Pratt, left on
Gay, right on Water, and I was at the parking garage at 55 Market Street, next
to the Power Plant, literally across the street from the venue. Far too close to complain. Final price paid upon leaving, $15. Not bad.
My travel soundtrack northbound
was Camel’s first album, which tacks on some live bonus tracks on the deluxe CD
version.
The band had a modest merch table, at which I purchased a
yellow t-shirt. Autographed drum heads
for $250? No thanks – the only
non-apparel item of note. Since most
bands have merch available online, what we’re looking for is tour-specific
items you won’t see on the website – so you check the website before the
show. Or – here’s looking at you, Blue
Oyster Cult – a spectacularly unimaginative selection, with the “square
image of most recent album cover on a black t-shirt” being the supreme
cop-out. We’re long past the days where we felt
compelled to buy at least ONE shirt at the merch table, no matter how
lame. For a band which tours so
diligently as BOC – it seems they’ll play any show, no matter how bizarre the
venue (e.g. opening for a puppet show at a theme park) – has such an
unimpressive array of merch, and the days of tour-specific shirts are long
gone. Fortunately the ATW yellow t-shirt
as mentioned before qualified as a special item.
L.A. Witch was the opening act:
another all-girl stoner rock band, they sounded like a close copy of Portland’s
Blackwater Holylight (which is supporting ATW on other dates on this
tour, nowhere close to Baltimore).
My biggest issue was standing. The venue is pretty much standing room only,
which after awhile made my 1969 model year back hurt. I stood up in the crowd for the first few
songs in the set of ATW themselves, then found a remote corner out of the way
to sit down. By the end of the set I was
OK to get up and walk around again. The
venue was full enough that getting anywhere close to the stage was impossible
at the time I arrived (yet I’d done so for Monster Magnet and Texas Hippie
Coalition in the past at this venue).
Oddly, falling asleep was NOT an issue here. The encore included my favorite, “Blood And
Sand/Milk and Endless Waters”. Some of
ATW’s material reminds me of the Allman Brothers Band at the Fillmore East, whereas
this song evokes “Stranglehold” by Ted Nugent.
Oh, I don’t expect the band to be 100% perfect,
note-for-note. If I wanted that I’d stay
home and listen to the CDs, confident that a CD will play the same every time
you play it. Falling down drunk, botched
solos, completely useless? Well, that
might be a problem, but I’ve yet to see a band perform that badly. The two notable exceptions were Leslie West,
i.e. Mountain (opening for Deep Purple, Paris 1985), and the only show I ever
walked out on, the Mars Volta. The
latter I left because a band whose studio material was 50% prog and 50%
screaming in your face nonstop appeared to limit their live set to the latter
50%, which even the band itself (!!!) has acknowledged is not what people want
to see. Then again, there’s another possibility,
which transpired at the next concert – see below.
The audience was well behaved. The most prominent non-ATW band represented
was Clutch, as you might imagine in Baltimore.
Unlike a sporting event, which has two mutually antagonistic groups of fans
varying from friendly rivalry to outright hostility, presumably everyone at a
concert is rooting for the same “team”, and not about to heckle the band –
aside from Flair-like “WOOO” of appreciation.
This crowd was enthusiastic without being boorish or unlikeable, a well
behaved audience you can’t assume as a matter of course. Overall an extremely pleasant
experience.
REZN. A few days later I saw this
band, on December 8, 2021, at the DC9 Club in DC. From Chicago, Illinois, and no array of
rescheduled concerts. Guitarist/vocalist Rob McWilliams; bassist Phil
Cangelosi; keyboardist/sax player Spencer Oulette; and drummer Patrick Dunn. The sax adds a Nik Turner ingredient to the
mix which works well.
Logistically, this was a simpler concert, as DC is far
closer to me in Bailey’s Crossroads than Baltimore: just shoot up 395 and find my way close to
the 930 Club. Street parking was fine so
long as I was willing to walk a few blocks north on Ninth Street. The venue itself is one of these narrow slices
of a city block so slim you walk right past it without even seeing it. But at least this place, far smaller than the
Baltimore Soundstage, had tables and stools to rest my weary back and ass
during the generic stoner rock opening acts.
You like to believe that you’re seeing “the next big thing” when they’re
an opening act in some tiny club, but somehow I doubt Slomo Sapiens (??)
or Dirt Woman will make it big – they’re not even at the Richmond show
the next evening. Then again, both
opening acts finished their short and modest sets without a problem.
Merch was sparse:
CDs, vinyl, patches I already had, and an underwhelming t-shirt less
impressive than the ones I already had.
So make that ZERO purchases this time around.
REZN are a band like Elder and Weedpecker who blend doom
with prog in a nice blend which avoids being too oppressive or too mellow. And I was happy, upon re-listening to their
three albums, Let It Burn, Calm Black Water, and Chaotic
Divine, that the most recent album was the best, showing the band is
progressing rather than regressing. I
had seen them a few years back at the Sidebar in Baltimore, on the tour for the
second album, so it was good to see them again.
Here I was able to get literally right up to the stage, the room being
only about a third full. Not quite “KISS
in 1973 playing through fake speaker cabinets to ten people in the Popcorn Club
in Queens”, but nowhere near capacity.
I suppose after just under 300 concerts, you’re bound to
see something different happen, and this was it.
About halfway through the show, McWilliams wound up having
his effects pedal board, something like 20 pedals, crap out on him. A heroic attempt by him and Dunn to fix the
problem failed, causing the show to be prematurely ended. The sad thing was
that I was enjoying the set up until that point. Hopefully they’ll fix the issue and come back
to DC to finish what they started.
Recently I posted a vid on Facebook about the famous
Rickenbacker 4000/4001/4003 bass guitar.
I’m not a bassist and never have been, and probably never will be. These basses are iconic and associated with
Geddy Lee, Lemmy, Chris Squire, Cliff Burton, and many others. A Facebook comrade noted that this
particular bass is extremely difficult to maintain properly, notwithstanding
its unique sound. Professional musicians
usually have a full-time tech who takes care of their instruments. However, I didn’t see any roadies working for
REZN and the band members set up their own instruments and equipment – and when
something did go wrong, it was up to them to fix it. I suggested going straight through the amp,
to which Cangelosi noted that the guitar really needs all those effects. In this case, going straight through the amp
would be REZN’s equivalent of an acoustic show. Maybe bands need a “shit happens” boot camp,
but I’m guessing that’s called “touring”.
Better luck next time….
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