Something to Crow About

On wax, Bantam Rooster’s T. Jackson Potter comes across like a certifiable head case, whooping and hollering like a man on fire and twisting his vocal cords into all sorts of intriguingly weird positions. But away from the mike, the native Michigander is amiable, soft-spoken, even inhibited–the polar opposite of…

Art and Hovercraft

Seattle’s Hovercraft remains best known not for its fascinating instrumental music, but for the love life of bassist Sadie 7, aka Beth Liebling, who’s married to Pearl Jam’s Eddie Vedder. In fact, Vedder played drums with the instrumental trio during its 1995 tour with Mike Watt and the Foo Fighters…

The Soundies of Yesteryear

From the outside, Bill Cook’s house, perched atop a heavily forested hill on the periphery of Woodland Park, near Colorado Springs, looks like a posh but typical mountain hideaway, and most of its interior follows suit. The basement, however, is a completely different story. Placed against its unfinished walls are…

A LaFave Rave

Electric guitars fade up from a distance and start ringing like the chimes in rock-and-roll heaven. A moment later, a drumbeat kicks in with the force of an Oklahoma tornado while an organ blares its warning siren. Then a voice at once fragile and full of raw muscle, sweet like…

Playlist

John Williams Star Wars, Episode I: The Phantom Menace–Original Motion Picture Soundtrack (Sony Classical) The week before the film that birthed it arrived in theaters, the Episode I soundtrack entered the Billboard sales charts at number three, vaulting past Shania Twain and Britney Spears and lingering behind only Tim McGraw…

Size Doesn’t Matter

When Michael Chapman speaks, his words make him seem like the sagest of club veterans. “You want to get that positive response, watching people dance and go nuts to your music,” he says authoritatively. “If you’re not reading the crowd, they’re not going to respond to what you’re doing, and…

Pucker Up

Humor is a fairly rare commodity in pop music, in part because artists who display even a modicum of it are often dismissed as wannabe comedians. Such is the lot of the Kiss Offs, a group that dares to spice its spritely sound with, of all things, entertainment value. “We…

Feedback

During the early years of his career, Bob Dylan could do no wrong–but by the late Sixties, he’d figured out a way. Over the last thirty years, he’s interspersed good-to-great albums (Blood on the Tracks) with erratic but worthy curiosities (Empire Burlesque), predictable filler (Real Live) and downright stinkeroos (I’m…

Alternative Universe

“I didn’t set out to write kids’ music,” says Molly Bowers, “and I didn’t plan to do anything topical, either. I just wrote this song that was so cute and catchy that I decided to write more songs like it. And before I knew it, I had a whole album…

In the Guralnick of Time

The Tom Guralnick Trio makes challenging music–but that doesn’t mean that Guralnick, an Albuquerque saxophonist, is insulted when people actually enjoy it. “Putting together the pieces and developing the pieces is a very collaborative, interactive process that’s really fun,” he notes. “And I think it’s okay to have fun. And…

Walkin’ the Walk

Lots of bands tout the virtues of the MC5 and the Stooges these days, but few are as dedicated to these Detroit-reared punk godfathers as Los Angeles’s Streetwalkin’ Cheetahs. For proof, one need only cue up Live on KXLU, the group’s triumphant new offering on XXX Records. In addition to…

Feedback

Since the April 20 shootings at Columbine High School, most of us have heard about the harassment of anyone whose clothes bear even the slightest resemblance to the ones favored by Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold. But Rachel Fulmer, manager of the dark-sounding act decanonizeD, has lived it. “A few…

Wink, Wink

“I like playing deeper records,” says Josh Wink. “But it’s just hard sometimes, because people expect me to play bangin’ music all the time.” Such expectations are natural: Among dance-clubbers from Rio to Helsinki, this dreadlocked white boy is as famous for his hard-techno sets as fellow Philadelphian Dick Clark…

Feedback

Earlier this month, Bret Dowlen, the man who designed the sound system for the Fillmore Auditorium, formerly known as the Mammoth Events Center, warned me not to make any judgments about the acoustics of the building for several weeks. After all, he said, every room needs to be tweaked. But…

The Mellowing of Mr. C

When Elvis Costello was approached by fans during the mid-Eighties, he would squelch their questions with a two-word conversation stopper: “I’m retired.” He used this reply, he says, “because it was just easier than trying to explain what I was actually doing.” Chuckling, he adds, “What a bastard I was.”…

Obliqand Proud of It

Jeff Holland, Nathan Jantz and Dave Alexander are computer experts with enough collective know-how to bring the Pentagon’s systems administrator to his knees. But even though the three are more interested in making electronic music than in committing cyber-terrorism, there’s still a subversive element to their work. The pieces they…

The Oblivion Express

Whoever said that the classics never go out of fashion probably wasn’t referring to popular music. In a field where styles date faster than President Clinton on a weekend fundraiser, it’s hardly startling that for most artists, fame is as fleeting as the glow of a nearly spent spliff. What…

Hell Raisers

“People are forgetting about the rock,” says Kenny Hellacopter, bassist for Stockholm’s self-proclaimed action rockers the Hellacopters. “Especially in the States, where it’s rooted and where it sprung from. Which is a shame, because it is such an important heritage. Americans should respect that and not mess around with it.”…

Feedback

Local artists captured for posterity. Hot on the heels of Between the Lines: The Complete Studio Recordings, a gorgeous reissue of late-Eighties/early-Nineties sessions issued in 1998, Fred Hess and the Boulder Creative Music Ensemble are back with Ninth Street Park, a new collection that finds the act’s members with their…

Peace and Love, Nineties Style

Chuck Morris is frantic–as usual. The veteran promoter and manager perpetually travels in fourth gear, his movements abrupt, his eyes intense, his words coming in short, speedy bursts that recall his New York origins even though he’s spent most of his adult life in John Denver country. But on this…

Playlist

Blur 13 (Virgin) Fans who were enthusiastically awaiting the release of this disc because they loved the ultra-catchy “Song 2” from Blur’s eponymous 1997 album may be sorely disappointed: At first listen, the quartet seems to have turned into an art-noise band. (That’s not the speakers buzzing; it’s Graham Coxon’s…

Growing Up in Public

Last week, Garth Brooks was named Entertainer of the Decade by the Academy of Country Music. But that doesn’t mean C&W-loving punk-rocker Mike Ness is suddenly filled with newfound admiration for him. “I can give you a perfect description of how I feel about Garth Brooks,” he says, his voice…