From Bill@thehubs.net Tue Feb 11 06:09:32 2003 From: Bill@thehubs.net (Bill Hub) Date: Tue, 11 Feb 2003 00:09:32 -0600 Subject: [Granite-and-tumble] A sparkled shiny diner was a home for wayward miner.... Message-ID: <000201c2d194$2578e480$7c6414ac@US1087764> So, I am driving back from a Gypsy Shiny Diner just east of Chapel Hill listening to Richard Buckner's Impasse, when a familiar truth revisits me, enjoyment of music depends so much on your state of mind and place in time. It is always strange when an idea you know empirically to be true strikes you with profound meaning in the current context. Quickly digressing, I was thinking back to a concert in 1993 that I saw at the Palace in Dayton, OH with a number of my dearest friends, including my now wife. The show was Rodan opening for Sebadoh. We were there to see Sebadoh, but went to enjoy all the acts. Well lets just say we all thought Rodan was beyond shit, we went into another room to shoot pool, and proceeded to complain, "Can't those fuckers turn that shit down, they don't even know how to play the instruments their holding." It is amusing to me now, considering I not only Rusty, but I also own the Rachel's Sea and the Bells, the Shipping News' Very Soon, and in Pleasant Company, and Retsin's Egg Fusion. The connection some may ask, all bands built from the ashes of Rodan. Not that Rusty, Rodan's one and only album, is one of my favorites; I certainly still do not like it nearly as much all the indie rock critics, but I still own it and listen to it on occasion. The reason for the digression, I recall a now similar experience, going to a concert in 1997 at Schubas in Chicago. My dearly departed Uncle Tupelo had disbanded but Max Johnston the instrument extraordinaire from UT was now playing with Freakwater. My good friend David Dooling was a big fan of Freakwater and he had previously turned me on to some of favorite music. David interestingly was also with me at the Sebadoh show in 1993, on a side note so was Bob Pollard (the GBV Legend), who after the show was hitting on a girl friend of ours, but now I have seriously digressed. Anyway, back to the matters at hand, with Max Johnston in Freakwater now; I wanted to check them out. As an added bonus the opening act was a critical darling Richard Buckner, who must have been touring on his highly acclaimed album, Devotion and Doubt. I had not listened to him, but this to me had the makings of a great show. If memory serves, Margasak had this as critic's choice. I rounded up all kinds of friends to hit the concert, promising them a great show. I literally brought no less than 10 people. The Buckner performance if you can't guess from my earlier story was very strangely a bomb. No one really paid attention to Buckner, I don't think he won any of us over. In fact, we made fun of his boring sob tunes for years after that show. We dismissed the critical acclaim as sheep following the one critic, who was somehow related to Buckner, that wrote a kind review for his relative. A few years later, after a Pedro the Lion show at the Schubas, I picked up Secretly Canadian's The Unaccompanied Voice: An A Capella Compilation. Strangely on this album was non other than Richard Buckner, singing with PW Long, the outstanding, "Ain't No Grave Can Hold My Body Down" I loved the song but still thought, sure he fucking nailed that one but that does not mean I would like a solo album. After all I love Edith Frost accompaniments, but I was never sure about her solo stuff. (Note to self, go out and buy, Calling Over Time) Jump to modern times, last Sunday, I had a typical splurge at Reckless buying many outstanding records, including the unbelievable find Shrimp Boat Volume 1 - only a thousand copies made and now I own one. One of the pickups, Richard Buckner's Impasse. For those of you interested, also purchased were Brokeback's Look at the Bird, Matt Pond Pa's The Green Fury & I Thought You were Sleeping, and the Mountain Goats' Tallahassee. Jump to present, I listen to "Loaded @ the Wrong Door" and I think to myself; how could I have ever not liked this. This is quite simply an amazing song, and I promise yet again to all of you who were at that concert several long years ago, and to those of you were not; you will love this song, and this album. The part that puzzles me the most is how something that sounds so moving, so pleasing now; passed as ambient sound years earlier. Some things are difficult to solve. I know state of mind and time in place play an integral part, but I feel I need a better explanation. Good music could be great music given a better time, but even in a bad time, it still should be good music. The only conclusion I can draw from my stories, second, hell third, fourth chances are well deserved to everyone who gives their life to make music. I bet if anyone is putting their heart and soul into anything for many years; there must be a silver lining. Perhaps Richard has warped my typical pessimistic viewpoint, but for now the ears are going to re-open. Bill P.S. Don't think I didn't notice that Kevin Coultas was an assistant mixing engineer on Jason Lowenstein's debut last year. For those who don't know Kevin Coultas was a founding member of Rodan who was opening for Jason Lowenstein's Sebadoh back in 1993. P.P.S Bob Pollard sings about a shiny diner on Bee Thousand, which was the name of the diner I ate at this evening, and he also attended the said show in 1993. Strange indeed, the stars must be aligned.