Posted inMusic

‘Grass Town, USA: Mountain Standard Time’s accelerated trek from Nederland, Colo. to your eardrum

Who's that guy in the van waving at?There is a place in Colorado called Nederland. If you listen to
bluegrass or any of the myriad of styles that orbit around that genre,
you probably know about this little mountain town. I've never been
there, but this is how I've often pictured it: Everyone is playing a
banjo, a mandolin or a double bass and some people are playing two of
those things at the same time. I picture people picking together on
street corners, stopping only to wave at passersby and saying something
folksy like, "Have a good day, ya hear!"

In reality, the actual
town of Nederland most likely isn't anything like that, but it is the
home of members of Yonder Mountain String Band, String Cheese Incident,
as well as Vince Hermann of Leftover Salmon and Great American Taxi
fame. Now, you can add another name to the ever-growing roster of
Nederland bands, Mountain Standard Time, a sextet that's touring the
West Coast (which includes stops at Saturday's Earth Day celebration
then another show at the Silver Moon that night) and hitting up the
summer festival circuit before ever releasing a record.

Posted inMusic

On Stage: Easter Fro-Day

I was gonna lock the door, but then I got high…Easter Sunday. It's a day for crowded churches followed by crowded
brunches and topped off with a whole hell of a lot of ham followed by a
slow-moving Monday morning. This Easter in Bend you can add one more
thing to your holiday docket and that's the blunt-smoking, Colt-45
swilling goofball rapper Afroman.

That's right, the author of the
smash turn-of-the-millennium hit "Because I Got High" is just the
latest rapper to make a return appearance here in town. The party-hardy
rapper is touring in preparation of the release of his new album
Frobama (how can you avoid a golden pun opportunity like that?), slated
for a May release. The record is quintessential Afroman, plenty of
silly skits and boasting cuts about well, weed malt liquor and some
digs on his former label, Universal. And yes, most of this is hilarious.

Posted inMusic

And the Youth Shall Lead: We Are Brontosaurus’ sack lunch indie rock adventure

Dylan Howe is eating what appears to be a peanut butter and jelly
sandwich at a table in a cramped Northwest Crossing coffee shop while
talking about his band, We Are Brontosaurus. In a few minutes, the
power trio's guitarist will also dig into a stick of string cheese - a
staple of any sack lunch - as he attempts to fit a meal into a life
that includes playing in one of Bend's most intriguing rock bands,
ultimate Frisbee practice, and being a junior in high school.

Across
the table from Dylan, the band's lead singer, Owen Quon, speaks acutely
about Bend's youth music scene in a soft yet deep voice that is a mere
whisper in comparison to the rampaging vocals he unleashes on the
band's indie rock recordings.
"It's amazing to see that the
music scene in Bend is starting to grow, especially in the youth music
scene there's a lot of kids starting to play in bands," says Quon, the
son of Mark and Linda Quon, who together play around town as The Quons.

Posted inMusic

From Soul to Metal in 24 Hours

OK, so Bend’s music scene might not be the most diverse in the Northwest, but don’t tell that to Team Sound Check, which went from

OK, so Bend's music scene might not be the most diverse in the Northwest, but don't tell that to Team Sound Check, which went from a club full of aging Deadheads to a raucous bar packed with metal heads in the span of 24 hours. How's that for genre shock?
Thursday night, we were at the Domino Room where Steve Kimock Crazy Engine brought in a dedicated fan base to watch the guitar master's new band, which funkified the place for two full sets of originals with a few choice covers mixed in for good measure.

Posted inMusic

Hair Metal Ain’t Dead – Just Ask Dirty Penny

Nuthin' but a good time. As far as we can tell, Dirty Penny is serious about what they do.
Well, as serious as four big-haired, eye-lined 20-somethings who play a
mid-1980s brand of glam metal can be…which probably isn't all that
serious.
Dirty Penny started out under the not-so clever handle
Antidote covering tunes from '80s glam poster children Poison - and the
act is clearly still an influence on the band. They dropped the name
and the covers and cultivated a collection of originals that, although
new, are full of the guitar wails, echoing drums and arrogant lyrics
that made glam rock, well, glammy. Oh and did we mention these guys
look totally awesome in huge hairdos, tattered t-shirts and eyeliner?
Because they certainly do, which is to be expected from members with
stage names like Binge Daniels, Jonny Prynce, Tyno Vincent and Spanky
Savage and music videos featuring no less than 15 completely
intentional boob zooms.

Posted inMusic

Somebody is Going to Make it Big Time: Central Oregon’s take on the Grammys

Another local guitar pickin' poet. Songwriters. They're pretty much omnipresent in these parts. Whether
it's a strumming solo man or a minor-chord-pounding pianiste, there are
people writing music around every corner in this unsuspecting town.
That reclusive neighbor of yours? Yup. He very well might be crafting a
rock opera out in the garage, which hopefully explains those 2 a.m.
sousaphone soliloquies.
But you know what? These people tend to
know what they're doing here in Bend when it comes to song
construction. At least that's what Dennis Plant says. Plant isn't
merely the treasurer of the Central Oregon Songwriters Association
(COSA), he's also a musician himself and the owner of Bon Vivant
Studios in Tumalo where he records local artists. He says that COSA's
Song of the Year Awards Show slated for the Tower Theatre on Saturday
night will be, in a way, similar to a local version of the
Grammys…minus, of course, the eye-coveringly-awkward Jonas
Brothers/Stevie Wonder duet, among other things.

Posted inMusic

CD Review- The Decemberists: The Hazards of Love

The Decemberists

The Hazards of Love

Columbia Records
This
is how Decemberists front man Colin Meloy described the Portland band's
new record, The Hazards of Love, a few months ago: "…the tale of a
woman named Margaret who is ravaged by a shape-shifting animal; her
lover, William; a forest queen; and a cold-blooded, lascivious rake,
who recounts with spine-tingling ease how he came to be living so easy
and free."

Posted inMusic

Pushing Through: Steve Kimock revs up his Crazy Engine

Nice barn!One way to describe Steve Kimock's career is that he became well known
for being unknown. Why? Well, once upon a time, Jerry Garcia called
Kimock his favorite unknown guitarist, and, as you'd expect, Kimock
became exponentially less "unknown" soon thereafter.

Kimock isn't exactly a household name even today. Rather, he's sort of
a musician's musician - a guitarist whose skills are as admirable as
the music he produces. He's also the sort of musician who is often
brought up whenever the always-contentious Rolling Stone's Greatest
Guitarists of All Time debate of 2003 is reprised. And after years of
playing in an array of bands, many of which are branches of the
Grateful Dead family tree (Heart of Gold Band, Phil Lesh and Friends,
Rat Dog and others), the past decade has seen Kimock achieve a senior
statesman status within the jam rock world. And now, he is taking his
new ensemble, Steve Kimock Crazy Engine, out on the road this spring,
playing what the guitarist implies is good times music for what some
people might consider bad times.

Posted inMusic

Scot’s Folk

Huge in Scotland.We've already learned over the past few years that the
Sisters Folk Festival means business when it comes to booking and their
Winter Concert Series is no exception. Just this year, we've already
seen Sisters Folk wrangle in traditional bluegrassters Steep Canyon
Rangers as well as emerging folk stars Jeffrey Foucault and Kris
Delmhorst.

Now, the Winter Concert Series has gone across the
Atlantic to bring to Sisters one of Scotland's most respected musicians
in Dougie MacLean. Some have gone as far as to refer to MacLean as
Scotland's "preeminent singer-songwriter" leading us to wonder if
perhaps MacLean is to Scotland what Bob Dylan is to the U.S. For those
of you who enjoy SAT analogy format, here's another way to phrase our
proposed analogy…Dougie MacLean : Scotland :: Bob Dylan : United States.

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