![]() Special Features |
New Times / MusicThe following articles were printed from New Times [newtimesslo.com] - Volume 23, Issue 8
Pants? We don't need no stinking pants!Still Time wallows in their slacker milieuGLEN STARKEYThe boys of Still Time like to boast about their van, a “sweet” Ford Econoline with “double cassette player and VCR,” the same van that’s been hauling the SLO Town band up and down the West Coast this past summer in an endless loop of concerts. I peak my head into the van and can still faintly smell the reeking dregs of socks worn for too many days in a row and the stale odor of convenience store microwavable burritos. Ah, life on the road. All but one of them graduated from Cal Poly and, ignoring what their degrees trained them for, Curcio and fellow bandmates Paul Smith-Stewart, Jon Vucinich, Chris Arntzen, Nick Bilich, and newest member T-Bone Steak, the only married and non-Cal Poly alum, have committed totally to their music. This band of brothers is living, eating, sleeping, and breathing rock’n’roll. And to prove how serious they are, Downtown Brew co-owner Todd Newman has come on as their manager, hoping to propel the clearly talented group to the Next Level! Da da dunt! “It made sense,” says Curcio. “Instead of all of us doing the work haphazardly, we got someone who’s good with business. Still Time has sold out the club six or seven times,” notes Newman with a tug on his beer. “That’s why we’ve got them booked for two nights this weekend. Other than the Expendables, that’s the only band we’ve done this with.” So wait a minute! Has the band gotten overly serious? Part of their allure has always been the good time vibe they give off in live concerts. “Last Monday we were drinking cheap tequila chased by tortilla chips and hot sauce while we played [the video game] Rock Band with our neighbors,” offers Curcio as proof that the band still knows how to party. Still, the band members often clock 10- or 12-hour days spreading the word via the Internet and booking shows. There are benefits to such work, of course. “I was on-line for 12 hours the other day booking shows on the Internet, but when I’m at home, I don’t have to put on pants. Fuck pants,” says Smith-Stewart. Yes, fuck pants. Sure, these guys could be pulling down $40 or $50K a year each instead of sharing a ghettofabulous apartment, but instead they’re rockers. Deal with it, bitches! See Still Time on Friday, Sept. 26, when they open for the Dirty Heads at Downtown Brew, and again on Saturday, Sept. 27, when the Dirty Heads open for them. Each show costs $10 presale or $12 at the door. Friday is all ages Saturday is 21-and-older. Pants optional. See more band photos at figgphoto.com, and catch up with Still Time’s ongoing blog at www.blogspot/stilltimemedia.com.
To SLO, with one love One of the many marvelous things about Wendy Oliver, owner of Bali Isle and tireless promoter of reggae and world music, is her indefatigable spirit. She’s absolutely unflagging in her love of music, and this year she’s hoping SLO County will catch her fire as she promotes her third annual SLO Music Fest, schedule for this Saturday, Sept. 27 in the SLO Mission Plaza.
“The SLO Music Fest is about our community, families, and commerce, too,” explained event organizers.“Festival goers will be able to explore a marketplace featuring green and exotic ethnic and world vendors and artists.They can tap into local community groups, meet citizens running for office, and register to vote.A children’s play area will be open during the afternoon hours.International cuisine will be available and a beer garden will be open for those who are age 21 and older.The Earth Day Alliance, a nonprofit organization responsible for coordinating the annual free Earth Day event, will be a beneficiary of SLO Music Fest.” Keifas & Ark Roots Band, The Kicks, Mrs. Brown, Shival Experience, Vance of Resination, Leroy Shakespeare, Ras Rebel, Ras Danny & the Reggae All Star Band, and Stevie Culture are all scheduled to appear. Get $8 advance tickets at Bali Isle, Boo Boo Records, or Information Press. Tickets will cost $10 at the gate. “[The SLO Music Festival] is a joyful way of pulling all of the best things in SLO together—business, community, and students,” said Oliver, who also produces the Tribal Fusion Festival, an annual celebration of the winter solstice and belly dance.This year’s festival is on Dec. 13 at the SLO Veterans Hall, so mark your calendar. For more SLO Music Fest info, call 544-7662 or visit www.slomusicfest.com.
Bound for glory!
The power trio ram-rods through 17 tracks on their new disc, mixing straight-ahead punk, hardcore, and glimmers of surf guitar into hook-laden nuggets featuring a tight rhythm section and ripping guitar work, not to mention balls-out harmony vocals. If each song didn’t feel like a sucker punch to the gut, you could almost call them pop punk. On Saturday, Sept. 27, the band goes head to head with Christian metal band Perceive The Symphony during Hoover’s Battle of the Bands. Attendees receive ballots and vote for who moves onto the next round. You can hear an interview with Honor Bound Heroes as well as a couple of acoustic songs on the New Rock 107.3 FM, 4 Minutes to Freedom Show with Tristan at the 4 o’clock hour on Thursday, Sept. 25.. According to Perceive The Symphony, they’re a Christian band that’s not quite metal, but harder than alternative rock music.“We sometimes refer to ourselves as ‘Petal Music’ (Punk/Metal),” said the quintet. “What we desire to do is spread the word of God through our music.” Will it be a battle of good versus evil? Be there and bear witness. The show starts at 9 p.m. and costs $3.
And now for something completely different!
According to Kreitzer, the recital will feature “the lilting and exquisite melodies of composers whose subjects and texts are delicious and sometimes manic.” Expect works by Frances Poulenc, Charles Loeffler, Kurt Weill, Jake Heggie, Franz Lehar, and Leonard Bernstein, with texts by Bertolt Brecht, Paul Verlaine, Edna St. Vincent Millay, Emily Dickinson, and Guillaume Apollinaire. Sounds wicked! Kreitzer and Davies will also premiere “Utterances,” a piece composed by recent Music Department graduate and SLO native Alex Kato-Willis. Guest appearances will be made by Nancy Nagano, cello, and music major Adrienne Stallings, mezzo-soprano. Tickets cost $10 for the public and $6 for senior citizens and students. Buy in advance at the PAC Ticket Office or call 756-2787.
More music The always popular HorrorPops, hot off the heels of their Vans Warped Tour appearances, return to Downtown Brew this Thursday, Sept. 25 for their “All Hallows Eve Tour 2008” tour. Touring in support of their critically acclaimed third album, Kiss Kiss Kill Kill, the crowd-pleasing psychobilly and pop punkers hit the stage at 7 p.m. for a 16-and-older, $14-presale show ($15 at the door). Longway will open.
At 6 p.m. this Friday, Sept. 26, Stacked Stone Cellars hosts a performance by James Paul Dyer and the Streets of California Band, performing music from their CD Streets of California. Tennessee Jimmy Harrell will open the show backed by the Streets Of California Band, followed by Dyer at 7. This is the last Stacked Stone concert of the season and admission is free. The venue is located at 1525 Peachy Canyon Road, about a mile off Spring Street, just west of Paso Robles. For more info call 238-7872. The Refugees play a 7 p.m. Musica Del Rio House Concert this Friday, Sept. 26. The all-female harmonizing folk band has been described as a female version of Crosby, Stills & Nash. They are all working mothers and even grandmothers who have had individual careers. Visit musicadelrio.org for more info. Larisa Stow—winner of the Los Angeles Music Awards’ Singer-Songwriter of the Year—isn’t your ordinary performer. Her aim isn’t merely to entertain she also wants to inspire a spiritual awakening in her listeners. Stow integrates the sounds of popular music, world-based rhythms and melodies, with the ancient form of Kirtan: devotional call and response music. On Saturday, Sept. 27 at 7 p.m., Larisa Stow & Shakti Tribe will hold a Circle of Spiritual Enlightenment, at the Adult School, Room J-2, 1500 Lizzie St., in SLO. Tickets cost $15 in advance (995-1390 or spiritualcircle.org) or $20 at the door.
Hailing from Austin, Texas, but a longtime SLO favorite, Michael Fracasso makes his annual West Coast swing with local openers Bob and Wendy this Sunday, Sept. 28, at 8 p.m. in the Steynberg Gallery (Tickets cost $10 at the venue). Expect well-crafted songs performed by seasoned singer-songwriters, and because Bob & Wendy and Fracasso are longtime friends, expect some magical collaboration! Welsh rockers People in Planes open for Filter on Tuesday, Sep. 30 at Downtown Brew at 8 p.m. for an 18-and-older show ($15 advance at Boo Boo Records and the venue $17 at the door). People in Planes just released their sophomore album, Beyond the Horizon, while Filter’s newest, Anthems for the Damned, is its first in five years since The Amalgamut. Filter lead man Richard Patrick calls this new album his “howl in the night,” a harsh indictment of civilization that doesn’t exclude himself from its vision of a world falling apart.
CD Reviews
Lykke Li—Youth Novels
GZA—Pro Tools —Malik Miko Thorne, of Boo Boo Records and KCBX’s “Night Train.” Glen Starkey spent his vacation thinking of you. Tell him how much that creeps you out at gstarkey@newtimesslo.com. |
Hobnobbing With Helen
Foster a kitten, save a life
Total recall? - A group of Santa Maria residents is trying to recall school board member Will Smith
Welcome to hemp house? - A bid by Knapp's Castle's owner to build the state's first home out of industrial hemp materials hits roadblocks
Surrender your pot ... and throw in the Kinkade paintings, too
The Berns case continues
Findings regarding a Santa Maria police officer's death are still to come
|