Category Archives: Music
FAITU#9
FRIDAY AFTERNOON IN THE UNIVERSE
(FAITU#9)
2002-04-15
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Source info:
2002-04-15.fob.dpa4022.9274.t-flac16
– SET I (tracks 1-5) –
– SET II (tracks 6-16) –
– SHACK THOUGHTS –
FRIDAY AFTERNOON IN THE UNIVERSE (FAITU#9)
The Shack Project celebrates MMW @25 years!
Scrambled at the last minute for this week’s FAITU pick — had a different idea that didn’t work out this week (stay tuned for next week!), but then stumbled back upon this gem from spring ’02, a tour known for its inclusion of the Uninvisible Horns led by Steven Bernstein (plays in Billy’s new-ish band Wicked Knee). However, this gig precedes the point where the horns join the tour (and the players differed a bit over the tour, with Bernstein being the only constant), but we’ve still got a couple of guests adding nice flavour to the gig. Brahim always fits nicely with the guys … I have a very neutral attitude towards DJs in general … none of them make me overly excited, and others work better than some … P Love fits fine for my tastes and there’s some fun interplay in the 2nd set with him, Brahim and illyB …
– SET I –
Show begins exploring the space with a nice beat from Billy and Brahim, P Love sprinkling sounds, and John and Chris making noise, albeit searching noise that settles in eventually with the 5 performers all locking into this spontaneous composition. A fine start to any evening, which moves ever so smoothly into the opening notes of Henduck. Henduck has cool percussion/DJ breakdown in the middle, with Billy kicking in on the kit at one point and we’re led back to the closing refrains of Henduck … and that pairs so well with the Lifeblood that follows — this opening Improv > Henduck > Lifeblood is exactly what you’re looking for. Check it.
The set closes in a less brooding atmosphere with the combo of Pappy Check > Partido Alto — again, so nice playful sounds from Brahim during the transition between tunes, and he fits perfectly on Partido! End set.
– SET II –
The set begins with the swirling gospel organ intro to I Wanna Ride You, and then the trip begins. Nice tight concise version of the tune gets us dancing, followed by the HEAVY groove of Uninvisible — oh, I dig that bass! — which is the beginning of a nice run taking us into another HEAVY groove in Big Time, and wrapping with the wackyness of Seven Deadlies which grows out of the usual open ending from Big Time, and that open ending has some fun sounds from Brahim.
After a brief pause we’re suddenly on Fire, MMW/Hendrix style! And where there’s fire there’s Smoke — seriously, at this time these tunes are virtually inseparable, switching their order on any given performance, but together like 99% of the time. I always liked that though, how we couldn’t have Smoke without Fire, or vice versa depending on the show.
Out of the Smoke a super slinky Improv emerges, maintaining that Smoke-y vibe but a substance all its own which helps open up a VERY playful mood for the remainder of the set.
The run Ten Dollar High > Percussion Improv > Percussion/DJ/Bass > Bass Solo > Shacklyn Knights > Percussion’n’DJ > Moti Mo is, once again, exactly what you’re looking for — you better download or listen to this gig! Seriously, this closing of the show involves so many wonderful moments between all 5, or just a couple players at a time, to just some solo moments. Moti Mo is the perfect closer, bringing us back to the methodic grooves that opened the show.
Then some Wiggly’s Way leaves a smile on your face … at least it does on mine.
enjoy the grooves,
dug
THE SHACK STREAM
LISTEN/DOWNLOAD ANOTHER SHOW!
FAITU#8
FRIDAY AFTERNOON IN THE UNIVERSE
(FAITU#8)
1999-11-14
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Source info:
1999-11-14.mg-m210.117421.t-flac16
– ONE SET (tracks 1-20) –
– SHACK THOUGHTS — The Shack Project celebrates MMW @25 years!
FRIDAY AFTERNOON IN THE UNIVERSE (FAITU#8)
This week’s pick actually contains a version of the song Friday Afternoon In The Universe — and it’s awesome! This whole gig is fantastic, one of the tops of ’99 for sure, and it’s just one long set …
– ONE SET –
As the guys are often prone to do, the set begins with some open space, but this quickly resolves into Going Home. This is a nice gentle groove that just keeps pulsing along with Chris carrying the melody — what happened to this song? Why didn’t they ever play this much? Is this an original or a cover tune? I’ve never been sure … I did some snooping and found songs called “Going Home” written/performed by Miles Davis, Elvin Jones, Kenny G (!?), and numerous others that pre/post-date MMW’s original ’97 performance of the tune, but none of them really sound like it to me … I mean, we’re playing in blues-territory here, so maybe some of those are really all the same song-HA! Who knows! If *you* do, please speak up! Regardless, this is a great tune with some cool sections, and eventually simmers down a bit as John slides into the organ and we are served a hefty Philly Cheese Blunt rocking the usual gospel-groove. This Blunt actually expands out in slightly unusual way, taking a minor twist just before 5min, so you can really feel the hit – nice! Then things quiet down a bit as Chris pumps out that line, John drops out, and just Billy and Chris give us some further Philly news riding out the ending, unusually, with a Bass’n’Drums outro.
Afrique follows with John jumping right in on the end of Philly Cheese — just listen! The way this tune works and the way MMW manipulate that structure is sublime.
Tsukemono (literally “pickled things”) is one of the wild tunes I love off The Dropper album. When you listen to each guy separately the song just makes no sense — more so than the usual result this exercise might exhibit about any song and its musicians. It seems Chris and Billy share holding down the song proper for the most part, with John interweaving and sprinkling onto their base with the piano and the, what is that? Is that the mellotron he wields at times with those crazy symphonic fills? I think so … whatever it is, that coupled with John’s usual tearing apart of the ivories yields a VERY intense pickling session, which is boiled down to a short Piano Solo accompanied by some Bowed Bass that leads us into Seven Deadlies, so John’s sticking on piano for a while more.
It’s occurring to me right now that Seven Deadlies is similar in structure and attack to the older tune Oscillation, yielding far different results. Both tunes build an intensive groove the boils over until the band seemingly falls apart, and then they start putting it back together again. Oscillation is soothing in this exercise; Seven Deadlies is nerve-rattling and anxiety inducing — why do I like this? HA!
A short drum beat carries us over into a Coconut Boogaloo which doesn’t boogy too long before Ancora slides in — oh, I LOVE this tune! I could Ancora everyday, all day … Ancora’s vibe is so wicked good — could listen to this over and over … and it slides into Hey-Hee-Hi-Ho to get our butts movin’ again!
Night Marchers busts out the end of HHHH, Logic joins, and the next 30min+ is just nasty! The Marchers take us into one of the weirdest versions you’ll ever hear of Where’s Sly? — like, where is he? Because this version is almost unrecognizable at times, but Sly’s there!
The wacky vibe continues as the band moves into the track bearing our series title, Friday Afternoon In the Universe — it’s nice this isn’t played often, but when it is it’s SO NICE to hear! I love how the song drifts in/out from the melody to open space and back … one of my favourite MMW compositions, hands down (This share is for you Mike V! (aka shackaholic)). Just when you think they’ve broken out into free space, the universe circles us back around to Friday’s groove … so nice …
Then listen to The Lover — what’s John doing in there in the opening? Cool sounds! (Or is that Logic??) A Bass Solo erupts out the end of The Lover and bridges us to the set’s closing tune, Chubb Sub, which is always a cool rockin’ closer.
The gospel beauty of MMW’s take on Hendrix’s Hey Joe is played the Encore, easy us out at the end of the night with a peaceful vibe …
enjoy the grooves,
dug
THE SHACK STREAM
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FAITU#7
FRIDAY AFTERNOON IN THE UNIVERSE
(FAITU#7)
2000-10-23
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Source info:
2000-10-23.fob.b+k4022.28543.t-flac16
– SET I (tracks 1-8) –
– SET II (tracks 9-19) –
– SHACK THOUGHTS — The Shack Project celebrates MMW @25 years!
FRIDAY AFTERNOON IN THE UNIVERSE (FAITU#7)
This gig is MMW’s first trio show after their Hendrix tributes a couple of days earlier on 10/20-21 (see 2000-10-21 Stream) — and they are retaining both the vibe from the gigs and a few of the tunes, in addition to the Hendrix tunes they already had in their repertoire (Crosstown Traffic & Hey Joe).
– SET I –
The Improv to start the evening is broad in scope — it sounds like it’s trying to fill large space and after a couple of minutes an angular melody jumps in from Medeski, briefly, more sounds in and from space, more melody … settling a bit after this into more of a groove. illyB kicks in a solid beat and Chris grabs hold under Medeski’s atmosphere, and then the keys start to join the groove a bit more. John drops out for the last minute or so, and we get a Bass’n’Drums breakdown, that eventually breaks down to just the drum beat with Billy solo. Full stop.
John kicks in the gospel organ squonks, Chris and Billy sporadically join, until they all lock in to serve us a delicious Philly Cheese Blunt. This song is always playful, if not too short, and gives way to another and more developed Drum Solo, sticking on the kit, and then the driving beat kicks in, drops, kicks in, and WE ARE ROLLING! I have never had the pleasure of catching We Are Rolling live, but would love to as I just really dig that heavy vibe and the off kilter reggae jam it opens up to … this version is a complete performance where the reggae jam is contained and leads back to the tune’s head, unlike it’s often veering off into another tune or improvisation, but it’s cool to hear it close up nicely (and actually, it might not be until into 2001 or so before we start hearing We Are Rolling often performed unfinished).
We have a curious start down Ray Charles’ Lonely Avenue — in a good way! — that kinda colours the opening groove of the song. VERY cool mid-tune bass solo with some percussion accompaniment that also drops, and it’s just a nice quiet feel. That quiet vibe moves ever so smoothly into the opening notes of Nostalgia In Times Square, which quickly picks up the pace and we’re off dancing in the square — no sign of Angel Race (I’ll Wait For You), which is most often used with Nostalgia to create a medley. Whether or not the lack of medley is the reason, Nostalgia is cut a wee short as we drift into an illyB Drum Solo. The Solo begins with a steady beat that picks up tempo after not too long and gradually Billy starts colouring the beat with fills and we’re suddenly morphing into something other, and something other, and … slam! John drops the opening notes to Hermeto’s Daydream and we are in dreamland — this is a wild tune that’s never been played all that much, at least not in MMW’s recorded history, but when it is played it’s always a treat.
The set closes with our first Hendrix taste of the evening giving us Manic Depression, and it is scrumptuous. This is a tune I’d love to hear in rotation today, but it didn’t stick long beyond this fall 2000 tour (only one known 2001 performance, and that’s it, I think). It rivals 3rd Stone for my favourite Hendrix cover MMW have performed — I’d rather hear this than Crosstown Traffic any night! HA! Anyway, first trio-only version of Manic Depression is solidly transformed into an MMW tune. End set.
– SET II –
Again, fresh off the Hendrix tribute gig, Third Stone From the Sun quickly enters MMW’s repertoire and sticks hard for a while — and that’s good news for our ears! Beginning out of a noisy rumble that finally gushes forth that opening refrain, and we’re off into outer space. The band is clearly having a good time with this song. This gig on 10/23 is really the first time the guys let loose on the tune by themselves, and I think it kinda becomes the tune for Fall 2000 — I mean, they played it alot! HA! They played this tune at EVERY show we have copies of from this gig until the final gig of 2000 on 12/16! And it’s *real* fun to listen along as they get more and more comfortable with the tune … this performance opens into some cool open exploration mid-tune, coming back around to the melody, and then breaking down into a Drums’n’Bass jam that leads us into the dark territory of Shacklyn Knights. This is a murky groove that to me always sounds like I’m heading down an alley … Shacklyn is the name of the studio MMW have used in NYC, and they are its Knights.
Brigas Nunca Mais chimes in to relieve any tension and just help us feel good in its Latin beauty, and as its easy vibe breaks down we are met by a sister groove in Partido Alto, but the groove intensifies — that’s the deal with Partido Alto! Love how playful MMW are with this tune, and fall 2000 so LOTS of that. The beat leads us to another illyB solo, again carrying the beat out and then colouring it away from itself, which brings us some Mercy Mercy Mercy! John starts out an odd melody right off the bat, different than I’ve heard in the other few takes MMW have done of this Joe Zawinul tune, and it kind of bleeds into this take making it a little different than usual — we like that. Here’s a nice live version of the tune I found within it’s original context, performed by the Cannonball Adderly Quintet – Zawinul wrote the tune while a member of the group:
Big Time drops, and my head bops. Everytime.
The slinkyness of Jelly Belly slides in, and John is doing something in that first minute that almost makes me nauseated when I focus on it (NOT nauseous! His playing is nauseous making me nauseated). The opening is dark to my ears and I don’t know if it’s the recording affecting my listening, but the rest of this version carries that too. As the Jelly often does, we are taken into a Drum Solo, but it only lasts a couple of minutes before Chris joins back for some Drums’n’Bass improvisation — and this opens into some really interesting exploration that leads to the hauntingly beautiful Afrique. Afrique too has a dark edge, which the tune just exudes anyway, and when it wraps we get the opening soothing notes of Note Bleu. Nice to hear this breath of groove so deep in the 2nd set actually.
So, the mood is mellow and relaxed now and Chris starts in with a slow brooding Bass Solo, lasting a nice lengthy time, building, and picks up into the Chubb Sub groove just around 4min, with the other guys starting to join in and Billy playing along more than John who’s tinkering with space sounds which then prompts Chris to toy around the bass a bit — illyB holding the building groove — and things sound like they’re almost falling apart just over 6min when the groove stabilizes in a very relaxed way and we’re off and running with the Chubb, which gradually builds more into its usually full large feeling groove. And we’re out – boom.
A rocking Crosstown Traffic gives us another nod to Jimi, which we’ll hear throughout fall 2000 (more so than usual!), and that ends this killer gig.
What’s cool about this gig and the early November 2000 shows, for me, is it’s just the trio. No other guests, no guitar, etc. I love me some full on trio, and hearing them bust out the Hendrix is rockin’ to my ears.
enjoy the grooves,
dug
THE SHACK STREAM
LISTEN/DOWNLOAD ANOTHER SHOW!
FAITU#6
FRIDAY AFTERNOON IN THE UNIVERSE
(FAITU#6)
1995-10-22
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| Trouble playing tunes? | ||||
Source info:
1995-10-22.dsbd+akg451.matrix.32330.t-flac16 [TSP1995#10]
– SET I (tracks 1-9) –
– SET II (tracks 10-19) –
– SHACK THOUGHTS –
FRIDAY AFTERNOON IN THE UNIVERSE (FAITU#6)
The Shack Project celebrates MMW @25 years!
From the Oxford English Dictionary’s entry on the word “Oscillation”:
Etymology: A borrowing from Latin. Etymons: Latin ōscillātiōn-, ōscillātiō.
< classical Latin ōscillātiōn-, ōscillātiō the action of oscillating < ōscillāt- , past participial stem of ōscillāre oscillate v. + -iō -ion suffix1. Compare French oscillation (1605)1.
a. The action of oscillating; movement to and fro; periodic motion about a position of equilibrium, as the swinging of a pendulum.
b. Chiefly Science. A single movement to and fro; a vibration.
c. Music = beat (n.1 8a.)
1890 Cent. Dict. (at cited word), Oscillation… In music, same as beat..or beating.
… and then there’s a footnote to the n.1 8a. definition for “beat” in the OED:
A throbbing or undulating effect taking place in rapid succession when two notes not quite of the same pitch are sounded together; the combined note alternates rapidly between the minimum of sound produced by the mutual interference of their vibrations, and the full effect produced by the coincidence of their vibrations.
And then back to the further definitions for “oscillation”:
2.
a. fig. Vacillation, fluctuation, or wavering between two states, opinions, principles, purposes, etc.; an instance of this.
b. Psychol. (disused). Fluctuation of attention or mental efficiency.3. Electronics. A rapid alternation in the direction of flow of a current; the state of a circuit in which this is occurring. Also: an electromagnetic wave produced by such a current.
4. Math.
a. The difference between the greatest and the least values of a function in a given interval.
b. Variation consisting of alternate increase and decrease without convergence to a limit or divergence. Cf.
… I find it interesting how all the various definitions pertaining to particular areas of study are actually all very similar in what they are meaning, that attempt at describing a repetitive fluctuating vibration that is not quite just a repetitive fluctuating vibration. In slighly more user-friendly terms Wikipedia states:
“Oscillation is the repetitive variation, typically in time, of some measure about a central value (often a point of equilibrium) or between two or more different states. The term ‘vibration’ is precisely used to describe mechanical oscillation but used as a synonym of ‘oscillation’ too.”
– SET I –
MMW’s Oscillation moves back and forth from chaos-to-groove, a common pattern for MMW tunes in some sense so the tune could be see as a microcosm of MMW’s entire creative output and intent, but the tune is unique in itself — and I do love that groove John plays on the Wurlitzer (?). There is some splendidly struck stand-up bass notes throughout — like, Chris is gonna break one of those fat strings! Deep digging.
(Much of the rest of this set and show will showcase tunes that end up on the next year’s album release of Shackman, a landmark album for the band in many ways.)
Love when the band drifts into Lifeblood … a relatively new tune to the repertoire at this point, the opening is not as drawn out as it gets so illyB kicks in with his shuffle pretty quick, John is tinkering along with jabs and runs while Chris keeps things creeking as he bows his bass — drops the bow just before 2min and now we’re hoppin’ with that plunk/slide bassline as John comes in and Billy keeps us cooking. Nice young energy in this early Lifeblood.
Last Chance To Dance Trance (Perhaps) has become an elusive treat in recent years, but back in ’95 the band played the hell out of this tune and often. The song has a very grand feel to it, almost strangely so in an epic way. It has tiny moments of what Oscillation milked to the extreme, these tiny unravelling moments that seem to slingshot the trio back into main LCTDT(P) theme. Around 5min John’s tone gets real nasty — in a good way! — and illyB is beating those toms while Chris holds it all down, moving nicely back into building up the theme as we approach 7min with John’s organ just swirling my head! This all leads to the usual mid-tune Drum Solo from Billy — again, never cared much for drum solos before I started listening to MMW, but now I dig ’em and the journey they explore (last MMW gig I caught Billy closed the show with a KILLER solo!). When John slides back in with that organ and the band finishes this out, it’s always BIG!
After a brief pause, we get Sequel with what sounds like a tribal-ish beat of some kind; tiny high-end plunks from the bass; then some Clav mashes as the bass bites in a bit more — that beat is still driving us, a swirl of keys and smatter of bass, and we’re into the Sequel groove. The title being a reference to the fact that this a “sequel” to (i.e. reworking of) an earlier tune called It’s A Jungle In Here — a curious reworking and re-titling. In some sense it just sounds like they solidified what they felt was a better arrangement of IAJIH, but then gave it a whole new title as well — which might be driven more by the appearance of each tune on successive album releases. Regardless, once Sequel made an appearance we were never welcomed to the Jungle again until a surprise appearance in a 3-set one-off gig in NYC from May 2012 when It’s A Jungle In Here closed the first, and MMW-only, set of the night — and it rocks as it’s own arrangement after all these years! Anyway, Sequel swirls us around and around it’s dark-ish vibe, building and building up and up until the release back to the light Sequel bounce that wraps us back around to moments reminiscent of the start of the tune. Done.
The band toys with some open space leading us into the Belly of the Jelly groove. Jelly Belly is still young at this point and the band is still carving out their approach to the tune, but they aren’t shy about ripping this up until it ends and slams into the start of Is There Anybody Here That Love My Jesus, a nice pairing. ITAHTLMJ is one of the eariliest MMW tunes I remember hearing as I got into the band over ’95-’96, and I just love the opening notes. John grinds out some nice work deep in the tune eliciting some vocal calls from Billy – fun! A classic MMW take on Duke Ellington’s classic Chinoiserie closes out the set in high energy fashion.
Many of the tunes really are just passing the solo-hat around — this is early MMW, and the group-mind/interplay develops more and more over time, at least to my ears, where the idea of one of them “soloing” is often masked in the communication between the 3. It’s certainly there in the mid-90s — that’s why we all loved listening even then! — but this develops over the years, and for me the guys are never tighter than their last gig. I mean, listen to those Jamaican gigs from Jan ’16 where they haven’t played together since an MSMW gig in summer ’15, and before that it was 2 gigs with the Alarm Will Sound Orchestra in Feb ’15, but still the trio is locked-in and just grooving. Yes, they mostly relied on older tunes they’ve known for years, but they rocked and their improvisation was fresh and exploratory — what more can you ask for 25 years into a band? HA! Anyway, ’95 is a young version of that but the 3 have certainly always seemed to have a special connection …
– SET II –
We get some thumping from Billy; then some organ work from John; followed by some thumping from Chris this time — then the trio bounces this around a bit, taking turns exploring sound-in-the-round (not that they’re playing in-the-round, but that they are passing the sound around), so to speak. Sometimes the fill is chaotic, sometimes melodic, or a bit of both. This all eventually mashes into a caucophony of chaos (?) and suddenly Billy is riding that opening jingle that builds some tension before — BOOM!
The Lover burts into the scene, getting everyone’s butts movin’ with a groove. As The Lover dissolves into the bass bowing as usual from Chris it doesn’t last long before John starts sprinkling in some spooky intro sounds accompanied by illyB shaking some toys and we’re actually making our way through an opening lead into Dracula! Dracula begins a run of newer (at that time) songs, with it debuting roughly midway through ’95 (7/5 is the earliest known recording). Nice Dracula, as usual, and it adjoins nicely with Henduck as the two tunes share similar structures with the open-space-sounding starts/ends to each tune — similar to their eventual Shackman album mate, Lifeblood, also a ’95 debut. Henduck wraps up after some particularly meaty plucking from Chris throughout, and the 3rd and oldest of these run of newer tunes, Think, pops up and I *think* you can tell it’s been around a little more. Having debuted near the end of ’94, Think has gotten some considerable attention since then, with some larger versions in the spring of ’95 and seemingly settling into the structure of the tune as most of us would know it now. Think starts with illyB kickin’ in the beat and slowly builds — loving John’s tone at this time!
Worms is, to my ears, silly fun. It’s intense, sorta, but when I just step back and listen — all the while with “worms” floating through my brain in some way — I just laugh. I dig that. Nice illyB solo in here before the concluding Worms march.
’95 is a good sounding year for Ray Charles’ Lonely Avenue — I mean, all 3 of the guys are so young and their sound is so raw at this point. Again, John is so raunchy at times, like the opening of the tune, it’s great. This moves swiftly onto Chubb Sub, no solo to intro the tune, and it hops along quite briskly. Billy back introduces the tune mentioning how it’s on the soundtrack for the album Get Shorty. Another MMW classic, their cover of the Hendrix tune Crosstown Traffic, wraps up this set on a high energy note. The encore takes us down into a more mellow vibe …
As Bemsha begins John is playing a curious melody … unusual placement but a nice start to the tune! Tune plunks along on at a fairly lazy pace, just hangin’ out … this is a wonderful merger of two great songs, Bemsha Swing/Lively Up Yourself, that I can’t hear them without the other now, even in other contexts. This is a real sweet way to close out the night …
That wraps up another Friday Afternoon In The Universe, unfortunately a day late this week — I was outta town catching a show and got back too late to post! This gig was worth the delay though …
enjoy the grooves,
dug
THE SHACK STREAM
LISTEN/DOWNLOAD ANOTHER SHOW!
FAITU#5
FRIDAY AFTERNOON IN THE UNIVERSE
(FAITU#5)
2005-10-23
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| Trouble playing tunes? | ||||
Source info:
2005-10-23.s1-at943c+s2-akg-c1000.87712.t-flac16
– SET I (tracks 1-3) –
– SET II (tracks 6-9) –
– SHACK THOUGHTS –
FRIDAY AFTERNOON IN THE UNIVERSE (FAITU#5)
The Shack Project celebrates MMW @25 years!
Does anyone else remember how strangely awesome it was to start getting access to shows the day after or shortly after a gig? From 2003-2005 I remember this becoming more common place, certainly some bands are covered more by tapers, but those capturing MMW’s grooves in certain regions became quick to share too — as always, we owe HUGE THANKS TO ANY/ALL TAPERS!!! LOVE YOU GUYS! And so I remember this fall ’05 tour, the last really big tour MMW have played, really, as us getting to hear shows pretty quickly. This particular source didn’t come out at that time, but this is a better capture of the evening thanks to JAZ and Steve!
2005 retained much of the ’04 improvisational spirit, taking us even further at times. LOTS of Improv to soak up from ’05 too and this week’s show gives us a nice taste of that in the 1st set.
– SET I –
The opening 3min or so find the band in an Open Improv exploring the sound space of the room, searching for a groove which begins to build just around half past 3min, but really kicks in when John introduces some crazy melodies around the 5min mark — he has a wild sounding keyboard arsenal at this time — where do these melodies come from?? How can he and Chris have this endless source to tap into? In a radio interview a few days before this gig John talks a bit about that seemingly endless supply of grooves they seem to have access to, shrugging off he how he doesn’t know where it comes from but they’ve been given this gift so they explore it. Anyway, back to the gig … as this improvisation develops it’s become a full fledged spontaneous composition by the time the first track hits 10min, just building on the open base they started with and creating a purposeful improvisation. Listening to MMW is kind of a religious experience for me when they’re really open and out there, and this gig has that vibe, especially this opening … which climaxes and then disolves into more open space — I find these sections tickle me sometimes, making me giggle or chuckle out loud, like the opening, but this one is a little more methodic as John comes in with the piano leading us into Ray Charles’ What’d I Say, a fun romping blues tune. Love hearing Medeski rock the piano! He’s spoiled me for listening to other players … the blues take us into some Drums’n’Bass and eventual Drums-only action where Billy makes his way to a hand drum to work the transition into Toy Dancing — I love this move! Billy often finds his way to the hand drum to start the “bloops” that signal the Toy Dancing beat, John sounds out that siren-ish call and we’re dancing with toys …
Post-Toy Improv moves into a thumping tribal-ish plomp … Medeski playing this pretty-but-edges-broken melody on the Rhodes, and jabbing with (what I think is??) the Wurlitzer — maybe it’s the Clavinet? Anyway, that builds to John moving to the Organ as the tribal beat grows intensity with Billy just going crazy by the time the last track of Set I peaks over the 12min point — YEAH!!! Then things get really quiet until, BOOM around 15min! This maniacal “groove” erupts — and is this like an early raw version of Miles Behind?? … the band was debuting some tunes this fall that would end up on the Out Louder release with Sco in ’06 — just in time to take us to set’s end where it just seems to bubble over, like it can’t be contained … set break.
– SET II –
Shackman kicks off the 2nd set, and this was a brand new tune having debuted earlier in the week during the radio spot mentioned above. It didn’t have a title at the time, was dubbed a few different temp names before Billy called it “After the Onsen” during the Dec ’05 Japan run. Then the track was released in 2011 as part of the 20 singles the band produced, and the title on the track’s release was Shackman. 15 years after the album Shackman, we have a song titled Shackman. Makes sense … this tune just dies down at the end and …
Sugar Craft’s call echoes out and the groove kicks in. I dig this tune without Logic because I like what John fills in for some of the sounds … the energy on this version is nice and full with Billy just giving it — pretty heavy!
Shine It’s bass kicks in as the Sugar melts — kind of abruptly, but we’re off in the happy Shiney groove now — John’s on piano! Tune doesn’t differ a whole lot each time, but this is a tight performance. They’re playing the song a lot at this time, so no wonder … playful throughout.
Sasa is always cool, although no other performance has hit the heights the 2/28/04 version w/Ribot hit — transcendent around 6min in on that one! But, this one, as usual, bites nicely into the groove.
The move from Sasa > End Of The World Party is crunchy in a good way! Listen to those sounds morph out of the Sasa groove into the haunting opening of EOTWP — love this shit! If this is the end of the world, these are the tunes for me.
We get some playful tinkering and jabs from Billy and John as Chris really sets up to take us into the main melody of: NOCTURNE! I REALLY LOVE THIS TUNE! And I most especially dug it’s resurgence around the 2005-2007 time period, and this gig is actually the first performance of the song since ’99. Not that it wasn’t great when it debuted in ’98, but John has some new sounds by this time, Chris’ tone is a wee different and I think Billy’s toolkit is expanded as well. Anyway, I can bop my head to this groove for hours — sometimes I’ll just put on a playlist of a bunch Nocturne performances and listen through … love when Billy finally gets to the kit and kicks in a beat as John fills in his end a bit more, all while Chris keeps plucking that beautifully agonized bassline …
Following the drift out of Nocturne with the pumpin’ pluckin’ of Who the Fuck? is a SUPER SWEET pairing. This PJ Harvey tune had been around for almost a year by this point, played at probably over half the band’s shows since that time (if not more!), I remember hearing folks wanting more variety in the setlists, but where the fuck is Who the Fuck? now? Huh?! Enjoy these tunes while they’re in rotation, I say! MMW have often made large shifts in their repertoire and seemingly milked certain tunes for concentrated periods of time, but then those songs can suddenly disappear from rotation and that’s that. This tune simply rocks. HARD. I dig it.
The set wraps up with a common closer for this era, Bass Solo > Queen Bee — love this slinky groove! My wife and I love dancing to this tune, and it reminds me of her groove — I like it! Think I’ll put the tune on when we get home and crack a couple beers …
The evening’s encore is Olde Wyne — love that old school spelling! I always knew the song was a cover, but just looked it up and discovered the original artist to be Afo Executives & Tammy Lynn – who knew? This is not an unusual spot to find some Olde Wyne, and it sooths us nicely as the gig winds to a close.
And that’s another groovy Friday Afternoon In the Universe …
enjoy the grooves,
dug
THE SHACK STREAM
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