Dirty Glitter 2013 In Review #4: Sunset Strip Music Festival Edition

posted by Unknown | Saturday, December 14, 2013 | 12:18 PM
Saturday, August 3rd in West Hollywood, CA was the Sunset Strip Music Festival. Born in 2008, it takes place on and along the notorious Sunset Boulevard as well as inside it's world famous venues the Viper Room, the Roxy and the Whiskey where, once upon a time, the Doors were actually the house band. The fest is all about honoring and promoting the live music scene that the Sunset Strip was built on and every year's festival has a special honoree who has been an influence on The Strip: past honorees have been Ozzy Osbourne, Motley Crue, Slash and last year, the Doors. This year the Strip recognized that girls rock, too: 2013's honoree was none other than the one and only Joan Jett. Why? Because just like us, the Sunset Strip loves rock & roll.

Dirty Glitter 8/1/13: Sunset Strip Music Festival Edition

Andy Clockwise- "Everybody's In A Band"
He's charming, roguish, audacious, a bit of a wild man on stage...he's Andy Clockwise. An Aussie who came to Los Angeles for a visit and, in discovering that he felt quite at home among the madness, never left. "Schizo pop" is Clockwise's trade but what it sounds like is a swaggering maestro of wit and awesome. On Saturday at the Sunset Strip Music Fest Clockwise played the Viper Room stage where he did, indeed, pull out this song: from his 2011 release The Socialite (which was an examination of the cult of celebrity through humorous and partially vodka-iced eyes) it's appropriately titled, "Everybody's In a Band."


Sabrosa Purr- "The Lovely People"
Sabrosa Purr is an LA four-piece that sometimes defies description but often gets compared to notable bands like Smashing Pumpkins and Jane's Addiction. I simply call them "a collision of stoner fuzz and metal punched up by guitar rock, glam and as ethereal and enigmatic as any drug induced head trip". They've two EPs and one full album and listening to them takes the mind on multiple trips as Will Love’s vocals bend from pliant, boy/man coos to eye-watering, nu-metal howls that would earn Kurt Cobain’s seal of approval...and those will be happening in this song. During SSMF they occupied Viper Room stage. Sabrosa Purr is guitar driven, ethereal, haunting, bombastic, occasionally quiet and with a female rhythm section, it officially makes them one of the sexiest bands, period.


Black Rebel Motorcycle Club- "Rival"
The Sunset Strip isn't the typical stomping grounds for garage rockers Black Rebel Motorcycle Club but Los Angeles is their home, LA loves them and BRMC are always ones to rock for a good cause. The good cause in question was the non-profit Music For Relief (which was founded by headliners Linkin Park). A portion of SSMF ticket sales went to MFR which is all about musicians supporting disaster relief efforts. So on Saturday BRMC did their awesome thing at the festival on the main stage and it was loud and from the heart, which there's a lot of tucked inside the leather jackets of Peter Hayes, Leah Shapiro and Robert Been. This track is from their latest release, Specter At The Feast, and it's Black Rebel Motorcycle Club at what I described as possibly their 'hi-octane grungiest'. It also contains my favorite drum performance from Leah Shapiro since she joined the band in 2008.

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VIDEO: Black Rebel Motorcycle Club Shed A Little Light

posted by Unknown | Friday, October 25, 2013 | 8:47 PM
It's no secret that my head and heart are both card-carrying members of Black Rebel Motorcycle Club...in spirit, which is truly all that matters. It's a club that asks precious little of its members, gives no directives, charges no dues, does not participate in hazing and whose motto is, effectively, "Come As You Are" and I have. Bless their hearts, they've been quite gracious and welcoming and accepting.
BRMC’s music and I go back a ways. I don’t claim to have discovered them on some dark and stormy night after randomly popping into the revered Los Angeles venue and launch pad known as the Silverlake Lounge and I cannot give you an approximate date when I officially became acquainted with the Robert L. Been, Peter Hayes and Nick Jago version of BRMC (we've since welcomed Leah Sharpiro to the fold) or what song served as the introduction. But the detail, itself, is a minor plot point within the bigger picture because, at this point, it just feels like they've always been there.No matter how darkly lit the room, it's been all of the subsequent moments, the lyrics, the guitar chaos, the ridiculously athletic bass lines that followed that have solidified them, made them musically and in some ways, emotionally necessary and, oddly, a point of light. So much so that Ive found myself going the extra mile to see them, hear them, experience them.
“I fell in love with a sweet sensation, I gave my heart to a simple chord…”
In 2007 I found it necessary to see BRMC (opening for Kings of Leon at the time) at the Greek Theatre, in Los Angeles, Radio City Music Hall in NYC and the Tower Theatre in Philadelphia. Oddly one of the most vivid memories of that Tower show: when doors opened and we entered the venue, the floors were nastily sticky. As in “Did no one mop up after last night?”-sticky.
In 2008 it was necessary to see BRMC in June in at the Ink 'n Iron Festival in Long Beach, CA (that show where Robert did that thing with rail) and on tour with Stone Temple Pilots in July at Qualcomm Stadium, San Diego, CA and in August at Jones Beach, NY.

That same August it became necessary to rearrange certain flight plans because BRMC decided to add a headlining show at Irving Plaza in Manhattan a few days prior to the Jones Beach gig. Arriving at JFK airport that evening, my luggage and I hauled ass to the venue in order to make the show. Mission accomplished. My luggage enjoyed the show as much as I did.

In October of 2010 I had the strangest urge to ditch work and fly to Atlanta for BRMC at the Masquerade, so I did. After the show near the back bar I heard someone call my name. Having no idea who the hell in Atlanta would know me, I turned around to find Julian Dorio of the Athens, GA band the Whigs, staring at me. Our conversation went exactly like this:
Julian: "What are you doing here???"
Me: "What are YOU doing here?"
Julian: (cocked his head, gave me a "Really?" look): "I live here. What's your excuse?"

Fuck. Black Rebel Motorcycle Club.
So technically I have gone a few thousand extra miles, but I well know that I’m not alone. This disturbing pattern has repeated itself and as prophet of truth iAN Ottaway has keenly divined, this is a thing, a condition that may require treatment. Meetings. A withdrawal program, even. Or not as I honestly believe that we are all safe within this particular realm of dependence. 
Earlier this year I reviewed Specter At The Feast and called the song "Sometimes The Light" a pause in the album's aggression to "genuflect, soul search and spirit-chase." It's a beautiful and typically atypical moment of grace from the band that feels like a hymnal on the ears and a warm balm to the soul. Yesterday iAN decided to gift us with visual accompaniment to the song; something iridescent and reflective, cherry blossomed and almost too pristine to bear. So when you watch this video (when, not if) should you feel something akin to your heart squeezing itself a little too tight within the confines of its containment or a certain shaft of pure clarity, almost absolute in its ability to make you believe in the God that you swear doesn't exist, feel that. Pause and feel yourself as Hayes' voice, part beacon, spins gossamer threads of web to keep you safe. Now revel in it for just a moment.
Felt good, didn't it? Of course it did and that feeling, my friend, is also a gift. Because, whether or not you knew it or perhaps you just needed a reminder, sometimes the light turns out to shine with everyone. In everyone...including you.

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Black Rebel Motorcycle Club Prep Return w/ New Album, Club Dates

posted by Unknown | Monday, December 17, 2012 | 8:13 AM
12/13/2012
“The war is over, let the battle begin-
The album was officially completed and wrapped in the studio on 12-12-12…
ROBERT LEVON BEEN*” 
This was the Facebook announcement that many have waited for with breath bated and the many collectively exhaled.
Because it meant that a certain wondrous thunder was about to roar again: Los Angeles based trio Black Rebel Motorcycle Club have wrapped up their seventh studio album (due out March 2013, title unknown) and follow up to 2010’s stellar Beat The Devil’s Tattoo. Nine months from beginning to end as the band entered the studio in March of this year, Been summed up this finale with, “Not a moment to late…and not a moment to soon.”
This on the heels of their mid-November announcement of three intimate West coast club shows to close out the year. Shows in the types of spaces which they and their music seem to thrive where BRMC will road test some of the new material on some of their most avid fans. The fortunate few/locations/venues and dates are:
Dec. 19th @ Slim’s, San Francisco, CA (SOLD OUT)
Dec. 20th @ The Catalyst (the Atrium), Santa Cruz, CA (tix available HERE)
Dec. 21st @ The Troubadour, Los Angeles, CA (SOLD OUT)
The musical landscape always welcomes the return BRMC (Peter Hayes, Robert L. Been and Leah Shapiro); they are one of the most disarmingly understated, hard working, notoriously enigmatic bands yet the quality of the atmospheric fuzz, psychedelic and blues infested noise they make resonates louder than anything they could possibly say. Except when Been said, "Peter, Leah and myself are dying to get out of this studio right now and back into the fight. It's taken us a long while getting back on our feet, but the time has come." And it’s that ethos that continues to endear them to the many.
Come Spring 2013, Black Rebel Motorcycle Club takes on Europe and the UK with the first leg of their world tour. Check the dates right HERE so that you can catch this rock and roll gang doing what they do best. 

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Simple Words w/ Robert L. Been of Black Rebel Motorcycle Club (Archives)

posted by Unknown | Wednesday, August 6, 2008 | 12:58 PM
Jones Beach Theater, Wantagh, NY August 6th, 2008

This is a reflection of a point in time;  a not-so-random random event that can be filed under "Rock and Roll Moments" of the cerebral kind:
When you have the pleasure, enjoy it. When you have the opportunity, ask for it. When the spirit moves you, thank it. 
   
Traveling is hard work; just ask...well, me (no this isn’t a plea for your sympathy but I’d been on the road since 4 AM Tuesday August 5th in my attempt to get my rear end from coast West to coast East for yet another of my random musical adventures). February brought me and a little wind chaffing home to NYC to get my face rocked off by The Foo Fighters at Madison Square Garden (“Oh fuck...I’m snowed in.”). So now what was I up to?

This latest jaunt had a very specific purpose which evolved into a three-point plan: seeing Kings of Leon at the brand spanking new All Points West Music Festival in Jersey City (where?) on August 9th.Kings Of Leon is one of the few bands that lights my fire enough to travel for and here I was traveling again for the rock of the dirty south. The two additional points fell into my lap when Black Rebel Motorcycle Club decided to tag along with Stone Temple Pilots on their greatest hits road show (I mean let’s be honest, if Stone Temple Pilots doesn’t drop an album of fresh new deadlies soon, we can just chalk this tour up to a large scale lounge act on repeat). I do dig me some “Unglued”, “Sex Type Thing” and “Sour Girl” so once again I was going to get a groove on that satisfied that primal part of my brain at Jones Beach Theater, NYBRMC tossing in a headlining show at Irving Plaza in New York City just put the week over the top.

It was late on Tuesday night, slipping into early Wednesday morning and the post-concert veil was lifting somewhat. Stone Temple Pilots and Black Rebel Motorcycle Club had just done their duty at the Jones Beach Theatre in Wantagh, New York which is a fine venue, out in the boonies for sure (now I remember why I was never a regular at Jones Beach while growing up in Brooklyn), but it was a good show for opening band and headliner, alike. Scott Weiland’s megaphone love is still intact.

Now I’m writing not so much as a fan but more an observer; as a mind, an eye and an ear turned towards a subject: an understated subject who is seemingly as pleased with the shadows as he is with the light. I had a minute that remarkably turned into an hour…and I had the pleasure of watching him shuffle his feet in a deserted parking lot. Deserted save for the merry travel mates and their transitive home; have tour bus, will travel, and travel, they do, across this country making a distinct noise somewhat aged for the young men who make it and yet a generation of new souls is eating it alive.
After initially leaving the island of Jones Beach where the venue is located, I told my cab driver to turn around and take me back. I wanted to talk to them and damned if there was no time like the present! It was approaching 1 AM when my cab pulled up alongside their tour bus and I wander into their calm. Alongside Robert’s current mobile home was a circular seated cast of characters, the road crew, his dad Michael (Papa Been) relaxing, enjoying their quiet and some *ahem* post-show libations. Does it get more casual than this? If it does, it's probably not by much. I introduced myself; this group was a friendly lot of faces that I’d seen at shows several times before and, for goodness sake, did one of those guys say that he recognized me from MySpace? I’m not sure if that’s a good sign and it might have “stalker” written all over it, but then I have to remember that I do kind of stand out in a crowd…even an online crowd. After being told that I was “lovely” (and don’t think that I don’t know when the Jack Daniels is talking), I asked a question: could I possibly borrow one of the guys for a few minutes; the “guys” being BRMC’s Peter Hayes and Robert Levon Been. Fortunately neither Michael, Micah, Eric nor anyone else asked what I’d like to “borrow” them for as that was a pretty loaded question, it was after one in the morning and I was hardly the sharpest tool as it had been an exceedingly long day. Plus my self-editing switch was broken; it had been since I came home. One of the merry mates headed inside the tour bus with my request.

*In a perfect world time spent with “you” would be just that: time spent. Not wasted or meandered, not tolerated or killed but spent with care because our thoughts and feelings are precious jewels to share. At their worst they can be weapons and poisonous but at their best, diamond lights even in the middle of the night at Jones Beach*

Robert Levon Been literally slinked out of his road quarters; long legs not taking long strides yet before I expected it, there he was before me looking no different than the musical creature on stage who had been physically, almost violently, wrestling chocolate tones from his guitar some four hours ago. Hi. I’m me, you’re you; thanks for coming.

So it began, this impromptu meeting; less an interview, more a conversation where he entertained me for an hour with a steady stream of intrinsic ramblings that, if you listened carefully, really did follow a path. Although not necessarily a linear one, he was clear and thoughtful in his musing. Even though soft-spoken, the man had a lot to say and was 75% chattier than I expected as a word or question tended to extract some thought or memory that segued into an opinion or story. Who knows if that’s his norm or if he was just in a giving mood; either way, pleasant. I hardly know how his mind works but it appears to shift along with his body when he speaks. Crossed arms, crossed legs in thought; then, the mind uncoils with an illuminating statement and the body follows suit. Hand to face, downward glances, reserved yet open smiles that could easily be a guy’s best friend in key moments or a most effective deflection. At this point I’m not even sure if he’s comfortable in his clothes because the shifting body acts like it wants out of them.

The Mad Hatter: If you’ve noticed the trio’s primary bass man rocking a fierce pimptastic look, well you have some random fan from the London Roundhouse to thank for his fashion-forwardness (a round of applause for that fan, please). During a show there, said hat found its way onto the stage. Now Robert, being self-professed picky about his headgear (Can you blame him? Who’d cover up that hair if they didn’t have to?), fancied the brim and sports it. I suppose that we should all be grateful that it was black. *And no, this is not a call for you fans to now take up habitually assaulting the guy with random bits of your wardrobe or other goodies*
From Russia, With Love: I made an admission to Robert: I think that we in the immediate Southern California area are a little spoiled by their presence and their constantly making themselves musically available to us. But since it’s not all about us, I wondered what some of his favorite places to play were. His answers never would’ve crossed my mind: Japan, South America and Russia. Russia, you say? His emotional logic was clarifying as his words gave me a mental picture of the scene. To play for a crowd who may not have the freedoms or the luxury of self-expression as we do or may not have the bands that they really want to see come to them very often, he said that it feels incredible to give them the gift of live music and watch it release them, save them even. As if that’s what the music does for him. The guy speaks like an “artist”.

King for a Day: Every family or good band should have a designated King of Useless Information for entertainment, if not educational purposes. All hail Robert Levon Been, a guy who hates to use words or phrases that he has no idea what they mean and don’t people do that all the time? See Robert as he regales and enlightens me with the etymology of such gems as “gibberish”, “the whole 9 yards” and “severance pay”. Fortunately I didn’t betray where my mind wandered on that last one as I mentally noted that Mary Queen of Scots probably should have tipped better.
The Invisible Man: Investing yourself in making and performing music, a profession by it’s very nature that reaches out as well as in, hardly seems like a career choice if you wish to attain or maintain a semblance of anonymity. So the oddity is in Robert’s thinking that being a musician would’ve made it easier for him to get lost in a room of people. I could see that happening for you Robert…if you sucked. The problem with your theory is that you’re quite good at what you do, so the expanse of your world is pretty much your own fault. Monochromatic by accident and not design, he leaned towards the concept of being somewhat nameless, faceless characters with the music coming through. I’ve a description for you, Robert: understated musicians whose gritty and textural music does all the talking for them. Nameless, faceless yet relevant.
The Ugly American: Perfectly good songs can get lost on me if they amble on over a certain length and overstay their welcome. Such songs tend to result in me developing a restless index finger towards my iPod or car stereo. It’s a rare sonic thing that catches and holds it’s listener with brooding chords, tight rhythms, shadows and light, and layers of kaleidoscopic sound only to lay it and its listener bare. Earlier this year BRMC played a show at The Wiltern in Los Angeles and it was a fine show except for one thing: the absence of the ridiculously tight, atmospheric, dark and disturbing beauty of the 9-minute long opus that is "American X". It’s headphone worthy and as much as I appreciated and respected that song, I was more than comfortable not knowing what was going through the mind of who wrote it when he wrote it. There’s a certain comfort in distance from the painful truth. Robert told me anyway.

His apartment was burglarized. His possessions, including notebooks full of his simple words, were stolen. He and his life had been violated.

What started out as a reflection on the undercurrent of perversion in society and the changes in our culture suddenly became a cathartic and poetic exorcism of the hollow that such a breach left inside of him. Give the man a dark room, a patch of floor, a guitar and an agitated mind and the end result was “American X”, a song that never gets old to his ears. I concur. In retrospect, one can say that you never know how, when, why or what will provoke the epiphany or what will arise from the riot inside, but in this case we can thank it.

Now it was time for them to hit the road; the reason that they’d hung around in this empty parking lot was because it was either kill time here or kill time where they were going. Peter, Micah, Ben and Eric hustled around and out came the usual suspects: the rocket fireworks. Looking like men on a mission, this was serious business and Robert and I hung back and watched them handle it. That, indeed, seemed like the safest thing to do. Once the contraband was assembled, four neatly in a row, one by one each fuse was lit. All but one gave up its pretty spark and fire perfectly but the deed was done and, just like their rockets, they were about to trail off into the dark with the night properly sealed. Coolness, but they’re lucky that I didn’t call the cops. I know people.
So as conversations go, it’s safe to say that I’ve had worse. On that note, I can say “thank you” to Robert and his band of mates for a good show, good conversation and some quality time spent in an empty parking lot way past my bedtime. And for the offer of Rice Krispies.

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