Wednesday, August 29, 2007

My Ode to Hilly Kristal

Hilly Kristal, who died yesterday, would stand sort of by the door at CBGBs, lingering back behind a desk, just watching over the club, the scene that he'd created. Every time I was there, he was there, or it just seemed that way...never said much but ala Andy Warhol, his aura just made things happen. Benign neglect? Happenstance turned business plan? Whatever the case, I'll say that he deserved every accolade he's gotten and is going to get; CBGBs deserved every laud ever paid to its influence and its place in the New York - the world's - rock and roll history.

It was mythical already by the time I started going in Sept 1982. As a Columbia freshman from a few hours away suburb, broke or at least on tight budgets, I'd subway down. The first time, a crew of us, with only a vague idea of where it was and what the city grid was like, took the wrong train and ended up threading our way there, grumbling but excited. The area was seedy, dirty, and so was, famously, CBs. The Bowery was empty, a bar or restaurant here or there but nothing and no one else save legions of old-fashioned winos from the missions.

Typically, the nights were late - the band you usually were there to see went on around 2am, and the clubs haphazard booking policy mostly meant nothing good to see until then. But you could stay for hours just by paying the 6 or 8 dollars it cost to get in, or nurse a cold beer along the long, scarred bar, sitting on a stool behind kind of a wooden corral. Then, after, an hours long trek home on graffiti-filled freak-show subway trains, running intermittently in the dead of the night.

Back then, it seemed like there were only a couple of clubs that all the good bands (the ones Christgau "Picked" in his Choices) played at, but primarily it was CBGB. In this rush, here's what I can remember: 10,000 Maniacs, Del Fuegos, Butthole Surfers, Replacements, Meat Puppets, Camper Van Beethoven, Didjits, Flaming Lips, some benefit with Wayne Kramer and Jeffrey Lee Pierce, Yo La Tengo..dozens more headliners and hundreds more openers. It was often packed to the rafters, but more than once I remember being there at say 3am with three or four others in the room.

Alas, once more band-friendly clubs opened in the early 90s, the bookings went down hill fast, and they were never very consistent in the first place. My last hurrah was just perfect: a set by the Avengers last year during the run up to CBs closing. Hot, sweaty, packed, loud, dirty...and late. I'd already said goodbye to CBGB, but now, sadly, it's time to say goodbye to Hilly Kristal.

Monday, August 27, 2007

Numbers & Letters

Caught a set by Numbers & Letters, an indie band lead by Billboard scribe and Shore Fire friend Katie Hasty. Katie's got a great set of pipes, whether cooing in her jazz-inflected encore, ringing out in falsetto for a song about Jesus or digging in for a from-the-gut M. Ward cover. I'm eager for the upcoming EP; they're a fast-rising band with a gifted singer-songwriter at the helm.

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Bloggers Know A Thing Or Two About Music


The After The Jump Fest this past Saturday at the ultra hip Williamsburg, Brooklyn club Studio B (just steps from the house I grew up in) was curated by bloggers and brought some fine talent to my neck of the woods. The draw for me was the electrifying garage rock band Locksley (left) and despite playing at what seemed like the crack of dawn (3pm) the fab four didn't disappoint.


I also discovered some new favorites including Ra Ra Riot, Apache Beat and Bling Kong (right). The later put on a big production with 3 drummers and a projector coordinating films to their music. I don't think 3 cheerleaders/lead vocalists are necessary for their disco/funk/rock but they sure are fun.

Former Shore Fire clients Golem (right) also ripped it up.

Shows continued through the night but unfortunately my stamina didn't.

Photos by Mr. Photog at Going.com

Baily - Phillips Bash Over the Weekend

Shore Fire's own Nick Baily got married over the weekend to the wonderful Becky Phillips, under a towering oak tree on Long Island's tony Shelter Island. Bride and groom were joined by many of their oldest friends, family and co-workers. Other than say that "gorilla suits" was a running theme throughout the speachifying, I'll keep the rest of the revelations in-house for now. I'm told that Saturday ran late, with an after party following a sweaty set by famed D.C. Go Go inventor Chuck Brown, in full band and full costume, playing to a room of 50 rather than his usual thousands. Lobster was in abundance at the Montauk Park rehearsal clam bake and at Saturday's wedding too (in the form of lobster salad blinis)...a good time was had by all, as they say. Congrats Nick and Becky.

Here Becky and Nick near the "I Will" part of their ceremony.


Becky with Shore Fire President Marilyn Laverty



Shore Fire's Mark Satlof, Nick Baily and Rebecca Shapiro

Wednesday, August 22, 2007

Construction Diary: Day 1

(Alternate post title: Dude Where’s My Conference Room?)

There are some big changes going on at Shore Fire, and I mean that in the most literal sense. Over the next few weeks we’ll be renovating our offices here in Brooklyn – knocking down a few walls, putting up a few walls, painting, etc – and giving you an inside look (pun absolutely intended) at all the action here on the blog.

Yesterday marked the official start of it all, with changes to the conference room happening so quickly that I didn’t even have time to take a proper “Before” picture. (You can get a pretty good idea of what it looked like here.) Here’s what it looks like now:



Jose Gonzalez/ Rainy Day Playlist

I've been anticipating Aug 21st for quite a few months now. Last night Carrie and I saw José Gonzalez play Spiegeltent at the South Street Seaport.

Gonzalez's hands frolicked around his acoustic guitar strings creating a solo symphony. I'm sure it was his taping foot that kept the beat but it could have been the sound of his heart reacting to the beautiful poetry his gentle voice revealed.

It was the perfect soundtrack for the cool, damp weather we've been experiencing here in NYC so here's a playlist I suggest for those "is it really Fall already" days:
-Jose Gonzalez "Slow Moves"
-Simon & Garfunkel "The Only Living Boy In NY"
-Iron & Wine "Such Great Heights"
-Interpol "NYC"
-My Morning Jacket "How Could I Know"
-Great Lake Swimmers "Changing Colors"
-David Gray "Alibi"
-Slowlands "Eisenstein"
-Martha Wainwright "Far Away"

Friday, August 17, 2007

Trifecta of Leo Birthdays...

Rudi Meyer, Carrie Tolles and I share early August birthdays, so we collaborated on the party this year. As Brooklynites, we chose Junior's Cheesecake, which is a hop and a skip from our office....regular, strawberry and chocolate swirl.

L-R Rudi Meyer, Mark Satlof, Carrie Tolles

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Wednesday, August 15, 2007

Obama Girl Joins TuneCore

Just learned that the makers of the YouTube smash "I Got a Crush... On Obama" have signed up with TuneCore to sell their song via the digital download stores. The Obama Girl video's been seen over 3.1 million times. This is a strategy that worked for Liam Sullivan, who's sold over 100,000 songs on iTunes. TuneCore's allowed him to keep all of his profits and all of his rights. Check out Obama Girl here:

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Tuesday, August 14, 2007

I Lost on Jeopardy

The death of Merv Griffin reminded me that, in the immortal words of Weird Al Yankovic, I lost on Jeopardy!, which Merv invented. To my eternal chagrin, my downfall came on an audio daily double: "This detective show's theme song was this tune ("Harlem Nocturne," if you don't want to follow the link). Okay, your turn: Dah-DAH-dah-DAH-dah-dah-DAH (hum that Jeopardy theme, which Merv, who retained the rights to it even after he sold the show, once estimated made him $70-80 million). Did you get it, in the form of a question?

Thursday, August 09, 2007

Mad Lollipops

From martini to stilettos, I've always been a retro kind of girl. Which is why my favorite new show is Mad Men. Recently and inexplicably, I've had the 1962 song "Lollipops and Roses" and its antediluvian lyrics stuck in my head, so I thought I'd share it. Here's a dapper Jack Jones crooning the tune on Judy Garland's TV show. But I actually like the tune best as a jazz waltz, and would love to hear the refreshingly un-retro Manuel Valera swing it.

Monday, August 06, 2007

A Look Into West Africa



After a recent trip to Sierra Leone and Liberia, EMMY award-winning producer Peter Buffett composed a soundtrack to some moving video footage of the places and personalities he visited. Peter filmed and edited the entire video himself. He was so inspired by all the amazing people he met that he wrote the dynamic and stirring "Anything" which accompanies the short film. The socially conscious music video is a realistic and emotional look into West Africa.

The NoVo Foundation, which Peter co-chairs has pledged 15 million dollars in West African aid.

Friday, August 03, 2007

A Going Away Pizza Friday

We said goodbye to Aliza Rabinoff today over the traditional Pizza Friday here at Shore Fire...she will surely be missed by all of us. After ten great years, Aliza is moving on to work hooking up travelers to Spain with musical artists based there...sort of a concierge service for music. Here's the Shore Fire Staff gathered around Aliza at her desk...

And earlier at the pizza table...


And after, the scrum and scramble for Aliza's cd discards!

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Thursday, August 02, 2007

Michael McDermott Brings the 'Noise' at The Living Room

Chicago native Michael McDermott returned to NYC for his first show here in over a year at The Living Room Wednesday night, where he performed songs from his upcoming One Little Indian release 'Noise From Words' (August 28). I've never heard a singer fill that room with sound like Michael did that night- he has an amazingly powerful, passionate voice, and his guitar playing is incredible.

As McDermott jokingly described it from the stage, the show was more of a "confession" than a concert, as he shared stories, some funny, some sad, from his life. For example, He introduced the song "My Father's Son" with the tale of how he and his dad both spent time (in different years) in the same Chicago jail.

McDermott will be back at Living Room on August 15 and 29, so if you missed this show be sure to mark your calendar to check him out then! And you can watch the video for his song "Mess of Things" here

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