Scene, heard

The Immaculates will play their last show together on December 23 at the XPO Lounge, at which point the world will come to an end and the Exposition Park area will become a scorched mess of imploded buildings and paranoid looters trying to keep their footing among freak storms of…

Across the Bar

New Year’s evil Maybe it’s just us, but it seems like very few people are ready to party like its 1999 one last time on New Year’s Eve. After scanning the club listings, New Year’s Eve just looks like another night — the same lineup of bands at the same…

Still prophesying

Russell Hobbs laughs a little when he’s told about a mural he allegedly painted a decade ago on the side of what is now the Curtain Club on Commerce Street. Yes, he remembers the mural, the one that simply had two words painted on it: “style,” with an arrow pointing…

Out Here

Turtle Creek Chorale The Best of Turtle Creek Chorale (TCC Recordings) Over the years, I have been asked a few times to attend a Turtle Creek Chorale concert, and whenever I have declined, there has always been surprise. It’s like — “Hey, you’re gay, they’re gay. It’s a natural marriage…

Home groans

In these pages last year, Robert Wilonsky wrote, “I can’t remember a year when so many local bands released so many albums that I’ll play well into next year and beyond.” And, at the time, I agreed with him wholeheartedly. Looking at the 20 albums we had singled out, it…

Book ’em

Around this time of year, I like to take a while to assess the annual output of rock-and-roll reading, acknowledging the good, the bad, and the stuff that just leaves you wondering, “Who the fuck thought it was a good idea to publish this?” Here, then, are the results of…

Out There

Rakim The Master (Universal Records) When Rakim hit the scene in 1987 with Paid in Full, he was Michael, Jermaine, Marlon, and Jackie; Eric B., the DJ he nominated for president in the late ’80s, was Tito. Back then, Rakim “held the microphone like a grudge,” but he never stood…

Dreck the halls

It’s that time of year again, the season for eggnog, pine wreaths, ribbons and wrapping paper, and — shudder — Christmas albums. Every year, a blizzard of holiday records falls upon the record racks, most all of them filled with a certain spirit: the spirit of commerce. Because I actually…

Bigmouth strikes again

We’re still a couple of weeks away from the final onslaught of best-of lists, but we’ll go on record right now as saying that Cary Pierce has to be the best sport around, whether you’re talking about this year or any other. Last Thursday at Trees, following a set by…

Scene, heard

Earl Harvin Trio makes one of its infrequent appearances on December 22, with a performance at the Gypsy Tea Room along with Hairy Apes BMX. Expect the group’s shows to become even rarer next year, since Harvin will be on the road with The The. Harvin — who’s toured with…

Pink panthers

Calling Pinkston a new band is a bit of a misnomer, even though it hasn’t yet been a year since the quartet’s first show. Sure, that was Pinkston’s first show together, but it wasn’t each member’s first ever — not by a long shot. Pinkston is a band of young…

The forever frown

It only grows bigger the further away it moves; object in rear-view mirror may be smaller than it appears. After all, it was only one album, one small collection of songs — many of which have been officially released over the years. Who’s to say how the world might have…

Direct miss

Everything involving Pleasant Grove seems to take a long time. Take the band’s songs, sweet and sour tunes that shuffle quietly along their way, burning so slowly that they appear to be standing still. “Nothing This Beautiful,” one of the tracks on the group’s self-titled debut, discreetly unravels over the…

Out There

Luna The Days of Our Nights (Jericho/Sire) Galaxie 500 fetishists loved that extant band because it evoked the Velvet Underground without, ya know, all that noise and shit getting in the way — and, come to think of it, all those notes. Trying to find a song on a G500…

Out Here

Pleasant Grove Pleasant Grove (Last Beat Records) Pleasant Grove’s long-time-coming debut is seven songs strong, but it could be pared down to just one — the haunting “Nothing This Beautiful” — and remain one of the most compelling records of this year. Rarely does a song so long (a shade…

Billy Joel

Billy Joel I’ve seen Billy Joel in concert twice — once when I didn’t know any better (like, oh, Randy Newman and Richard Thompson and Paul Simon), once when I did. And both shows were pretty tolerable and maybe downright enjoyable, if only because Joel used to write songs that…

Z.Z. Top

Z.Z. Top Word on the street had it that XXX was the Top’s best record since God knows when. Christ, word on the street must have come from the concrete, because this thing couldn’t make an impression on a pillow. Aw, seriously, it ain’t that bad — if, that is,…

Wu-Tang forever?

When the Wu-Tang Clan released its first single, 1993’s “Protect Ya Neck,” Notorious B.I.G. was still a chubby crack dealer and hip-hop was several years away from civil war. Everyone was high on The Chronic, which had been released the year before: Dr. Dre and Snoop Dogg were hip-hop’s most…

Pop smeared

Quick, name five Japanese bands. Chances are, some of the more intense music nuts out there might name-check the Boredoms, Pizzicato Five, and Shonen Knife, and some might even recognize Melt-Banana or Guitar Wolf. But the reality of Japanese pop music — or J-pop, as it is referred to by…

Pickin’ a winner

Half of my enjoyment of music stems from listening without knowing whether or not I’m going to hate something, while many people are like radio programmers who just want the hits and rarely stray from a chosen format. And unlike most folks, I still own records. Lots of stupid ones…

Lounging around

For a while, it looked as though the death of the Dark Room — the Green Room’s performance space — would mean the death of The Enablers. After all, the band had been more of a fixture there than the stage, playing every Wednesday for three years. They liked it…

Scene, heard

Even when we don’t mean to, we can’t help causing trouble; guess it’s just in our nature. For example, last week’s Street Beat featured an item on Crash Vinyl and its new CD, Precious Platinum. It was a fairly innocuous story that mentioned the two girls who dance onstage during…