
Wow, what an honor! Los Lobos has asked me to join them on stage this Thursday, April 1 for their 8 p.m. show at Performing Arts Center in the Cohan Center. Ever since they saw me singing along in the audience at the Fremont Theatre during their Kiko tour, theyāve had their eye on me. Now itās my time in the spotlight. To say Iām excited would be a gross understatement! Iām freaking out! Whizzing in my pants! But thereās more!
Leo Kottke, whoās a pretty good guitarist, is also going to be there, and heās asked me to play guitar with him. Me and Leo. The accolades just keep on coming!
I mean, how many lowly small-town music journalists are asked to join East L.A.ās premiere rock band and a world-renowned acoustic guitarist on the same night? Not many, Iād reckon. Just think, me and all these multi-Grammy Award winners. Whatās next? The Pulitzer? The Medal of Freedom? A date with Jessica Simpson? My own reality TV show?
Los Lobos mixes blues, rockabilly, jazz, Latin, and their own Mexican-American heritage into a career about which Rolling Stone Magazine said, āWith the exception of U2, no other band has stayed on top of its game as long as Los Lobos.ā
And now that Iām going to play with them, who knows how high their career will soar?
And Leo Kottke, widely-known for his innovative fingerpicking style that draws on influences from blues, jazz, and folk music, and his syncopated, polyphonic melodies, is going to sound even better with me strumming along on my student-grade Sigma. Yeah, this is going to be awesome!
Student and adult tickets range from $29 to $48 (756-2787). Throw me some roses, OK? This is my big night!

Making the scene
This Friday, April 2 at Downtown Brew is going to be huge! Two bands from what I canāt help but describe as a scene that rivals the ā90s juggernaut days of Bottle, Rodriguez, Little Wings et al. has been quietly building steam. These bands are on the verge of taking over the world! Or at least the middle coast.
The Mighty Fine is releasing their new CD, PK will be there, as well as one out-of-townerāSan Joseās Picture Atlanticāand local up-and-comer Please Do Not Fight (7 p.m.; all ages; $6 presale or $8 at the door). Thatās a helluva lot of alternative indie punk rock action.
āWeāre trying to create as much of a buzz about the show as possible,ā said Mighty Fine drummer Chris Scott. āWeāre by far one of the hardest working bands in the area. Between all of us working full time, going to school, and doing everything from web design to hand-making our CDs, we still manage time to practice two to three days a week, which means members in the band drive from Paso Robles, San Luis Obispo, and Arroyo Grande, all the way to Santa Maria.ā
The last time I saw PK, they had the Brew packed to the gills, filled with sweaty, moshing, smiling kids. These kids understand the Internet and social networking, which has allowed them to tap into an audience far beyond their geographic locales.
Said Matt Depaw of PK, āIāve been reading interviews with musicians who have made it big and were at one point based out of SLO County. Guys like M Ward, Damon Castillo, and John Anderson of Yes are good examples of people weād like to learn from. They would mention that no one would
come out to shows in SLO, so they had to go elsewhere like Portland or Seattle to get any scene going. But you know, maybe they werenāt trying hard enough. It doesnāt take a big city to create strong scene. You just have to give people a good enough reason to spend their hard-earned money.Ā Bands in every city tell us, āItās a hard scene; kids donāt come out.ā We say forget that! Weāre going to MAKE our own scene. Thatās why weāre working so hard to make ticket prices cheaper and promoting in different ways (like playing high school shows).Ā And you know, so far that has paid off really well.ā
Ā Check out the rest of Downtown Brewsā shows at dtbrew.com.

Hear the Crown
What do great musicians from established bands do when they start to get restless? They form a supergroup, which is exactly what the Bay Areaās Black Crown Stringband is.
āComprised of founding members of the Earl Brothers and the Mercury Dimes, the band first appeared at the 2008 Berkeley Old-Time Convention Stringband Contest where their hard-driving sound earned them first prize,ā according to the bandās press materials. āBlack Crown combines the best elements of old-time stringband music and Bill Monroeās āhigh lonesomeā sound to create a unique fusion that is at once old-school and brand new.ā
This Saturday, April 3, Black Crown Stringband plays the Red Barn Community Music Series in the Red Barn at South Bay Community Park, Los Osos at 7 p.m. (as usual thereās a 6 p.m. potluck; the showās $10 at the door).

Raw nerve
On Nowhere Nights, Kasey Anderson peals back the layers of his considerable intellect to reveal a songwriter of incredible depth. Songs like opening track āBellingham Bluesā drip honey-sweet melancholy heartacheāhurts so good.
āFor almost a decade I lived in this insulated little community,ā Anderson said of Bellingham, Washington, where he spent eight years before moving back to his hometown of Portland, Oregon in 2007. āI woke up one morning and just knew it was time. I was numb all over. I was just a perpetual fuckup, yāknow? Burning everything around me and then wondering why I smelled like smoke. I had to get out.ā Ā
Anderson can just as effortlessly switch from mournful ballad to a country rocker like āAl Lit Up,ā which is why itās easy to compare him to Steve Earle, but itād be a mistake to dismiss him just because heās approaching Earleās greatness. Listening to Nowhere Nights, Andersonās fifth recording, itās clear thereās room for both these countrified folk-alt-rockers.
āNowhere Nights is shorthand for whatever it is people get lost in, or sink into,ā said Anderson of his album, which he describes as āequal parts charge, benediction, apology and indictment.ā
See him Saturday, April 3 at the Steynberg Gallery.
More musicā¦
Scots whaā hae! This Saturday, April 3 is National Tartan Day, and the place to be is Paso Roblesā Crooked Kilt at 1 p.m. when the Central Coast Scottish Society and Central Coast Pipes & Drums enjoy an afternoon of āhaverinā anā Scottish celebratingā as they commemorate National Tartan Day with live Scottish and Celtic music by the Gillie Wheesels.
Jazz, flamenco, and classical guitar fans, donāt forget that Robert Earl Longley will perform on Saturday, April 3 from 1 to 4 p.m. at Sculpterra Winery & Sculpture garden during a free show. āTaste through the featured selection of wines while listening to the amazing sounds of this guitar virtuoso,ā said Kyle Coots. āIt is a new American music with the soul of improvisational jazz, but with the dense syncopation and fingering of flamenco that touches you at the core.ā
Billy Foppiano, akaāthe Guitar Wizard, wrote to tell me about his bandās next show: āTo celebrate Easter weekend, the Mighty Croon Dogs are unleashing some tail-wagging tunes in Morro Bay, on Saturday, April 3. In the afternoon while the Morro Bay Farmers Market is taking place downtown, you can catch the Dogs at the Fuel Dock on Main Street from 3 to 6 p.m. Next itās on to the Otter Rock on the Embarcadero, where the Croon Dogs take the stage from 7 to 11 p.m. for your dancing and sunset-watching pleasure. No cover charge either place. Ā At the Otter Rock, itās owner Jamieās birthday month (gotta celebrate all month when your birthdayās on April Fools Day, so stop on by and fool around). And by the way, the Fuel Dock will now be featuring some great local bands every Saturday afternoon during the Morro Bay Farmers Market. And since itās Morro Bay, famous for its hardworking police patrol, always make sure you have a designated driver if youāre imbibing!ā Thanks, Billy!
Brush up on your salsa moves this Saturday, April 3 at the Inn at Morro Bay when De La Bahia plays from 7 to 10 p.m. All ages welcome. āCome and hear new tunes in the De La Bahia songbook,ā said ensemble member Michael Raynor.
Duke Ellington! Glen Miller! Count Basie! This Saturday, April 3, take some free swing dance lessons and then practice what you learned when Cal Polyās University Jazz Band No. 1 plays swing-era tunes from 8 to 10:30 p.m. in Chumash Auditorium in the University Union at Cal Poly. The dance lessons start at 7 p.m. Admission to the dance is $10 for the public and $6 for students.

Babylon Saints returns to the area to play a couple shows to promote the release of their self-titled Citation Records debut this Saturday, April 3 at Frog and Peach (10 p.m.) and again on Saturday, April 10 at Mongoās (10 p.m.). The bandās got an unusually big sound for a quartet thanks to their island-style mix of Melodica, MIDI keys, and steel drums. Socially conscious lyrics and harmony vocals add to their rootsy sound.
Rock-fusion-funk quintet Crackerjack Highway is zipping down the coast in support of their self-titled debut, a recording engineered and mixed by Jaimeson Durr (The Dead, Gomez, Chickenfoot, David Grisman) at San Franciscoās legendary Hyde Street Studios, and the band will hit Mr. Rickās this Sunday, April 4, a free 2 p.m. show. Mixing funk, ā70s-era fusion, and classic rock, the band has drawn comparisons to everyone from Radiohead, Parliament, Umphreyās McGee, Steely Dan, and Jeff Beck. Expect originals with select covers of The Beatles, Allman Brothers, Stevie Wonder, and Edgar Winter.
Singer-songwriter Kyle Williams returns to town this Tuesday, April 6 to play the Steynberg Gallery during the 6:30 p.m. Songwriters at Play series ($5; all ages). Williams can sound a bit like Ben Harper as he blends blues, jazz, and folk with a touch of sweet-sounding soul. According to his bio, āHis mother saturated him in the sounds of James Taylor, Simon & Garfunkel, John Denver, The Temptations, The Carpenters, Whitney Houston, Carol King, and the like, which have obviously influenced his thoughtful lyrics, approachable melodies, and very conversational style of songwriting.
Dubluva, an original reggae rock band out of San Clemente, is coming to Frog and Peach this Tuesday, April 6 at 10:30 p.m., hot on the heels of their 2009 Jagermeister Music tour with PennyWise and Pepper.
In 2009, Dana Hubbard picked up these awards: 1st Place Winner: Indie International Songwriting Contest; 1st Place Winner: Telluride Blues & Brews Festival; 2nd Place Winner: Utah State Instrumental Championships. Not bad, eh? Now you can see him Tuesday, April 6 at The Clubhouse for the Songwriter Showcase (6:30 to 9:30 p.m.); and next Thursday, April 8 at the Otter Rock CafĆ©ās Songwriter Showcase (7:30 to 10:30 p.m.)
Elvis fever!
Just so you know, as of last Monday, the Performing Arts Centerās Elvis Costello concert was 80 percent sold out, so if youāre planning on going, may I recommend you get your ass in gear and buy a ticket. He plays Monday, April 12 at 8 p.m. Tickets for the performance range from $56 to $74 and may be purchased at the Performing Arts Center Ticket Office, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. weekdays and 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturdays. To order by phone, call 805/756-2787; to order by fax: 805/756-6088. Order online at calpolyarts.org.
Glen Starkey wishes you a hearty Aprilās Fool from the PAC stage. Throw him cyber roses at gstarkey@newtimesslo.com.
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CD Reviews
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Erykah BaduāNew Amerykah Part Two: Return of the Ankh
Erykah Badu is hitting her stride and then some. Slowly moving away from her early Billie Holiday-influenced retro soul, Badu has shaped herself into something immeasurable. Taking the influence of ā70s politically minded soul, she swathes her lyrics around her feminist outlook that pendulums from hard-as-a-bayonet, militant tough to mama-butterfly womanly soft. On New Amerykah Part Two, Badu is on an investigation of love and relationship. āWindow Seatā is the craving of necessary isolation all women need, to examine themselves, their thoughts, and grow, yet at the same time be missed and yearned for. The closing 10-minute, three-part epic āOut My Mind, Just In Timeā meanders from sparse piano solo to wonky, liquidy funk as she moves from being devotional to fleeing. Musically, Badu continues to be spacey and open-ended, with her own jazzy, loose, organic arrangements mixing well with production from Madlib and J. Dilla. She borrows lines from Notorious B.I.G. and will suddenly drop the pitch on her vocals in honor of DJ Screw. Badu has stretched soul to include her wide influences, thus creating a hopeful blueprint from the redundancy of most of her contemporaries.
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Sharon Jones & The Dap-KingsāI Learned The Hard Way
Sharon Jones is our Ms. Dynamite Soul. A spark plug of three-octave power, sheās built like a tank and hits the stage with adrenalized hysteria. And with her backing band, the Dap-Kings, replicating the musical references of the sweet blare of Muscle Shoals horns, the sultriness of Memphis soul, and the clean, sophisticated Motown backbeat sound, the formula is impressive and unmatchable. With their latest album, I Learned The Hard Way, gone is the super-heavy James Brown funk. Instead, the timeless sentiment of heartbreak, infidelity, and impoverishment is filtered on steamy ballads and mid-tempo grooves. āMoneyā name-checks Wall Street, gas-prices, and folding banks in a muscular groove recalling the OāJays similar tale. āWithout A Heartā flirts with the Chicago-soul of Mayfieldās Impressions, while the blues promenade stroll āMama Donāt Like My Manā is stripped-down to guitar and handclaps, giving you a clear perception of Jonesā husky gospel voice.
āMalik Miko Thorne, of Boo Boo Records and mikovision.blogspot.com, where youāll find archived reviews and soundclips.
This article appears in Apr 1-8, 2010.



