Blog Archives
FAITU#26
FRIDAY AFTERNOON IN THE UNIVERSE
(FAITU#26)
2002-07-04
![]() |
|
|||
![]() |
||||
![]() |
||||
![]() |
||||
![]() |
||||
![]() |
||||
| Trouble playing tunes? | ||||
Source info:
2002-07-04.fob.neumann-km184.11843.t-flac16
– SET I (tracks 1-6) –
– SET II (tracks 7-16) –
– SHACK THOUGHTS –
FRIDAY AFTERNOON IN THE UNIVERSE (FAITU#26)
The Shack Project celebrates MMW @25 years!
The Montréal theme picks back up after another absent week last Friday – sorry, folks, it’s summer and last minute plans to hit the sunshine/woods/beach can get in the way of sharing tunes … but I’m not going anywhere, so more tunes will always be coming, if a bit delayed, and of course The Shack Project is open 24/7/365 for streaming/downloading HUNDREDS of shows. But back to the gig at hand (or at ear?) …
– SET I –
Big Time > I Wanna Ride You kicks of the 1st set in fine energetic fashion, and then Brahim Fribgane joins the trio for Lifeblood and the sounds get a little more expansive and percussive over the rest of the set, and show when Trilok Gurtu joins in as well. Brahim adds a nice layer in Lifeblood that carries over into the plodding opening to Think – illyB and Brahim, along with John’s squonks, lay the bed that Wood bows over and moves to plucking, building up the tension as we wait for the Think melody to really kick in from John just before the 2min mark. There is some stellar piano work from John in the middle of this tune – like, wow! – before the tune opens into a Drums/Percussion session for a couple of minutes that eventually leads us to Fire! Hendrix-style, through an MMW lense … and where there’s Fire, there’s Smoke (sometimes the reverse) – a subtly groovy end to this pumping set. Clocking in at just under an hour, that is still some dense musicality to wade through – it’s about quality, not quantity. The set has a perfect overall feel and arc to it … the 2nd set gives us a little more quantity with our quality though …
– SET II –
After roughly a minute of sounds gurgling and building, the HEAVY Uninvisible bassline begins, everyone jumps in and this set is off to a HIGH energy start – there’s quite a sound palette on stage with the trio now that Charlie Hunter (8-string guitar) and Trilok Gurtu (tablas & percussion) have joined the mix in addition to Brahim. So when the Open Improv busts out the end of the track, it actually develops into this percussive heavy groove by the end of it before veering into a very smooth Improv on the next track, again with a heavy percussive feel. Oh yeah, this sounds real nice and eventually the melodic instruments drop out and we are in a full on drums jam – sweet! These guys are having fun together, lots of different toys in the mix, Billy (presumably) moves to the kit after a while as the other two(?) carry on with some more hand-based percussion. The Percussion Improv takes us into a jiggly Jelly Belly, and again so cool to hear the sounds the guests bring to this familiar tune, which opens into its common Drum Solo outro, but Billy is once again accompanied by our percussive guests who colour the classic Nostalgia In Times Square as well when the others join back in after the drum break. Interestingly, Nostalgia isn’t its usually medleyed-self since Sun Ra’s Angel Race (I’ll Wait For You) is absent from the performance, so instead we get a full fleshed-out take on this old tune with the life of these new young sounds.
Next up is Start/Stop, which is a groove I can’t get enough of. Love the way the tune pushes itself out into space, further and further with each “stop” break, again HEAVILY coloured by percussion, so these moments of open space have a little extra umph to them (and is Charlie absent here? Not sure I hear him? Sometimes he’s getting lost in the mix though, so …). Just when you’re not sure if the open space is just pushing out further only to “start” again into the main melody, or whether the band is just pushing out into open space more, suddenly a beat starts @11:20 of the track and we are instantly Toy Dancing – nice! Love when Billy starts that beat on his hand drum. So this has a nice slow burn for a start as the percussive groove builds up more and more, creating a bit of tension to finally be released when the tune kicks in a bit more, Billy moves to the kit and the groove settles out – not sure if that’s Trilok on vocals? I think so … only show we have with the guy, and I don’t recall Brahim ever vocalizing in the past. Charlie steps up nicely in Toy Dancing for an extended solo, before the track eventually simmers down to more percussion interaction and then eventual silence, followed by some line-up announcements by Billy.
A high energy combo of Pappy Check > The Lover, so new > old, closes the set. Oddly, it sounds to my ears like both Brahim and Trilok have left the stage when Pappy Check begins, leaving only Charlie to guest on this tune, but then it seems like those guys return to close out the set on The Lover.
And then as the encore, for the first time in 2002, Bubblehouse is played much to the crowd’s delight! (I sometimes wonder if folks calling for “Bubblehouse” at every show even know *what* song they’re requesting, but I digress.) Billy announces they’re going to play this song for the LAST TIME ever simply because of the very special guests – last time Charlie played with them in ’96 Bubblehouse was one of the tunes – but that they don’t play this song anymore, and this is basically it. (They do play the song again, but not until 2003 which only has like 2 performances, 2004 has 4 takes on the track, and it starts coming back a bit more after than until we get to the Radiolarians years, after which Bubblehouse makes a triumphant return being the *only* song requested for *every* show on the band’s 2011 tour where they solicited audience requests for their first sets along the tour, and improvised the 2nd sets.) And the version’s intense Bubbles bring the House down!
So anyway, this is a very HEADY version of Bubblehouse so soak it up and check out this whole show top-to-bottom as you enjoy your Friday Afternoon In The Universe …
enjoy the grooves,
dug
THE SHACK STREAM
LISTEN/DOWNLOAD ANOTHER SHOW!
FAITU#24+#25
FRIDAY AFTERNOON IN THE UNIVERSE
(FAITU#24 & #25)
2000-07-05
2001-06-29
![]() |
|
|||
![]() |
||||
![]() |
||||
![]() |
||||
![]() |
||||
![]() |
||||
| Trouble playing tunes? | ||||
![]() |
|
|||
![]() |
||||
![]() |
||||
![]() |
||||
![]() |
||||
![]() |
||||
| Trouble playing tunes? | ||||
~ 2000-07-05 ~
Source info:
2000-07-05.sony-lapel.5588.t-flac16
– SET 1 (tracks 1-9) –
– SET 2 (tracks 10-20) –
– SHACK THOUGHTS — The Shack Project celebrates MMW @25 years!
FRIDAY AFTERNOON IN THE UNIVERSE (FAITU#24)
It’s been a busy couple of weeks, being on the road out of town for the Fridays, so I’m making it up a bit this week, sharing shows #24 & #25 for FAITU’s 25th week, the theme of which will extend over several weeks throughout the summer.
Festival Int’l de Jazz de Montréal.
MMW in Montreal, for this Canadian fan was a sweet deal. Unfortunately, I was unable to make it the first few times, but did catch a couple of the Montreal “events”. Each time MMW played Montreal it was a little special, at least to my ears. Always more than you might find from the trio at other festivals – not to say other festivals haven’t featured some killer MMW, which often depends on time slots, but Montreal seemed to always offer a good slot which afforded the band the chance to really put on an “MMW show”, rather than a more typical festival set.
This week we’ll dig into the first Montreal Fest gig from 2000, and the following year’s return in 2001.
** Wednesday, July 05, 2000 **
Medeski Martin & Wood w/ Marc Ribot, George Garzone, Mino Cinelu & DJ Logic
– SET I –
We Are Rolling has to be one of the BEST opening tunes. Ever. Killer version that stretches out there a bit into that wacked reggae mid-section before wrapping around and drifting into the Latin love of Brigas Nunca Mais. Macha starts a run that leads the trio through to the end of the set, first finding comfort in twisting out ITAHTLMJ before the Latin beat pushes forth again with Latin Shuffle, featuring solos from illyB and Chris before an Open Improv leads to the set closer Swamp Road, which is a super groovy way to close the set, surprisingly played without Logic on stage, who comes out next set. Love when MMW give you a full trio set before settling in with some guests for an evening, and this hour of music – before the 2hr 2nd set – is more than satisfying on its own. But how great for there to be a 2nd set …
– SET II –
With a full stage of musicians, the set begins in some open exploration of HUGE LAYERED sound – everyone is looking for their pocket and gradually the sound breaks down a bit, thins out, as various musical conversations erupt across the stage, interjections interrupting ideas while others flow a little more smoothly. All the while, those on stage are working together towards something meaningful. This is beautiful to hear even if it is ugly and harsh to start. As we approach the 5min mark of the opening Improvisation a groove has settled and Garzone and Ribot have been zapping each other with Medeski playing along. This develops into a solid groove and track #2’s Improv is really like a natural outgrowth of the first Improv’s development – but also sounds DAMN familiar! Like a crossbreed of Note Bleu (played later in the set) & Smoke (debuts over a year later). Whatever it is, it once again has fantastic interplay between the three lead voices (Medeski, Garzone, & Ribot) while the rhythm section (Martin, Wood, & Cinelu) lays the bed for the play – and of course, nobody adheres strictly to these roles, but that’s a general breakdown. This slides nicely into Start/Stop which fits this group so well, moving through a cool Percussion/Logic breakdown into Dracula – which has this odd percussive “boom-boom” at the end of the usual bassline melody run, presumably initiated by Cinelu, and it adds a cool twist to Dracula’s usual sly groove, making it bumpier. A Percussion/Logic Improv gains some momentum for a couple of minutes before launching into the Sugar Craft groove, where the solo hat gets passed around to wonderful effect. The Sugar groove just keeps pushing out there landing in Hey Joe – now, it sounds to me like the guests have left the stage or are silent for this tune, but then you can hear them in the final outro chord crescendo which oddly just leads to silence. After a quick break Note Bleu kicks in – reminding us of that earlier improvisation – and the guests are throwing in full on this tune, extending it nicely to lead into the EVER welcome Africa. Africa once again allows the ensemble to breathe together and show off a bit for each other before driving us home with the Bubblehouse groove – complete madness with these 6 players on stage.
Moti Mo, with all these cats, is so full and rich – and when Garzone belts in with the melody on his tenor sax it all just feels so right … what a wonderful celebration Moti Mo is for ending an evening. I often think of it as a quieter number, but the build that rises over the performance, as the solo hat is passed around and group interplay weaves those moments, it really brings the energy way up – yeah, a celebration!
=================================
** Friday, June 29, 2001 ** >>> 2001-06-29
And so begins our run through MMW’s history at the Festival Int’l de Jazz de Montréal.
As always, BIG THANKS to the tapers, and a special shout-out to Blane Harvey for all his work in getting Canadian shows taped and/or shared – as a fellow Canuck, I’m forever grateful, and I’m sure the other MMW Shackers are too! Not sure if you’re still out there, Blane, but next time MMW hit Montreal we gotta have a beer together!
More Montreal MMW Madness coming over the next few Friday Afternoons In The Universe …
enjoy the grooves,
dug
2001-06-29
Source info:
2001-06-29.mbho603-200.5589.t-flac16
– ONE SET (tracks 1-16) –
– SHACK THOUGHTS — The Shack Project celebrates MMW @25 years!
FRIDAY AFTERNOON IN THE UNIVERSE (FAITU#24)
It’s been a busy couple of weeks, being on the road out of town for the Fridays, so I’m making it up a bit this week, sharing shows #24 & #25 for FAITU’s 25th week, the theme of which will extend over several weeks throughout the summer.
Festival Int’l de Jazz de Montréal.
MMW in Montreal, for this Canadian fan was a sweet deal. Unfortunately, I was unable to make it the first few times, but did catch a couple of the Montreal “events”. Each time MMW played Montreal it was a little special, at least to my ears. Always more than you might find from the trio at other festivals – not to say other festivals haven’t featured some killer MMW, which often depends on time slots, but Montreal seemed to always offer a good slot which afforded the band the chance to really put on an “MMW show”, rather than a more typical festival set.
This week we’ll dig into the first Montreal Fest gig from 2000, and the following year’s return in 2001.
** Wednesday, July 05, 2000 ** >>> 2000-07-05
** Friday, June 29, 2001 **
Medeski Martin & Wood w/ John Scofield & DJ Logic
– ONE SET –
Exploring some open space that’s really just a loose intro to Bone Digger – once again letting the Montreal crowd know that the trio is not just laying down your typically groovy funked-out festival set – they are here to find new sounds with this festival audience, and that’s what they do. MMW keep Digging the Bones – man this tune is wacked! – and this dying groove slides into the more upbeat Big Time and lets the band welcome the crowd with a bit more friendly sounds, and begins a run of some more groovier numbers that should get the crowd dancing.
Big Time, always a nice big groove itself, moves into its outro as some Coconut Boogaloo emerges, coloured by some nice Medeski piano work, sprinkled with a small illyB solo, some raunchy bass fuzz from Wood, and joined by Logic near the end of the tune before we head into the PHAT groove of Jelly Belly – it’s THICK! Some wonderful back and forth between Medeski and Logic on this tune before it busts into a Drum Solo … and interestingly, since he’s onstage, but Logic doesn’t join in with illyB … a few years previous, when Logic was a on tour more often with the trio he and Billy would regularly jam off one another when John and Chris dropped out.
The sweet bassline of ITAHTLMJ pops up next, some wonderful screeching from John’s keys on the main theme, Logic jumping into the fray, while Billy propels us along. A solid take on the tune with Logic bits for intrigue, but then the tune drifts into some short open space exploration that leads us into the crazy Felic groove – it’s a weird tune and I love it for that reason; not easy listening.
More wacky Open Improvisation follows Felic, and Scofield finally joins the fray in the aftermath, tinkering as his sound cuts right into the Open Space – he’s unmistakable, much to the chagrin of some, and to the joy of the rest of us. The overall sound thins out as Medeski, Sco and Logic trade some “licks”, illyB gets his talking drum in there, Chris plunks a little, and it all drops into The Dropper. For you Sco haters out there, just check out the imagination on this tune as he creates his own part throughout the song – this is NOT a tune Sco guests on, usually, but this is the 2nd – and last – time within a week, so he’s not oblivious to the song, but still! Very interesting to hear Sco’s input on The Dropper, vs. Ribot’s (plays on the album version and a couple of live performances).
Next up, another MMW live staple, Partido Alto has Logic and Scofield adding new textures, before we get to some Scofield tunes from the A Go Go album he made with MMW a few years prior. The title track, nice slinky groove, and Hottentot, a rocking groove, follow next with Sco taking charge a bit for those tunes. (An aside: I caught Sco at the Montreal Fest in ’98 after the release of A Go Go. He was the featured musician that year so he played like 5 nights with different ensembles, so we caught the A Go Go night with Bill Stewart, Larry Golding, and some terribly boring bass player (seriously, especially in comparison to Wood’s input on the album itself), but the overall music was incredible; then we caught Sco with the Dirty Dozen Brass Band and finally got to stand and dance at the festival – upon request from the DDBB to get our butts shakin’!)
The guests remain onstage until the end of the show, but we’re back to some MMW live show tunes again, with first Note Bleu – another chance for comparing Sco’s input to Ribot’s album take – resulting in a hefty Bass Solo intro into the Hendrix tune, Third Stone From The Sun – again, Logic fits nicely in here, as usual, and cool to hear Sco’s take on the rock number. MMW’s take on the Hendrix tune is ALWAYS a treat!
The Hendrix theme continues into the encore, and so do the guests, with a PUMPING Crosstown Traffic to close out the evening.
And so begins our run through MMW’s history at the Festival Int’l de Jazz de Montréal.
As always, BIG THANKS to the tapers, and a special shout-out to Blane Harvey for all his work in getting Canadian shows taped and/or shared – as a fellow Canuck, I’m forever grateful, and I’m sure the other MMW Shackers are too! Not sure if you’re still out there, Blane, but next time MMW hit Montreal we gotta have a beer together!
More Montreal MMW Madness coming over the next few Friday Afternoons In The Universe …
enjoy the grooves,
dug
THE SHACK STREAM
LISTEN/DOWNLOAD ANOTHER SHOW!
FAITU#23
FRIDAY AFTERNOON IN THE UNIVERSE
(FAITU#23)
2010-02-27
![]() |
|
|||
![]() |
||||
![]() |
||||
![]() |
||||
![]() |
||||
![]() |
||||
| Trouble playing tunes? | ||||
Source info:
2010-02-27.rode-nt5.107380.t-flac16
– SET 1 (tracks 1-7) –
– SET 2 (tracks 8-18) –
– SHACK THOUGHTS –
FRIDAY AFTERNOON IN THE UNIVERSE (FAITU#23)
The Shack Project celebrates MMW @25 years!
This week’s FAITU pick is leaning on the first set for why I chose it, although Set 2 has plenty to offer as well – I also wanted a 2010 gig and to pick a show from the West coast since I’ve focused a lot of FAITU picks on the East coast. But Set 1 is just a perfect shape and feel all around. Excellent variety in song choice both in terms of era and composition: we get some oldies, and newer tunes along with the recent Radiolarians influx, all covering a wide range of musical styles while remaining quintessential MMW. Having spent most of 2008-2009 focused on Radiolarians, the guys are now nailing those tunes with master manipulation and infusing the sets with more variety than the previous 2 years. The Fall of 2010 will see some astounding balls-out improvisation, but in the spring that improv is kept within the confines of tunes for the most part, and this show milks that in spades.
– SET I –
The gig begins with a John Zorn composition from MMW’s contribution to the Book Of Angels series, the album Zaebos (#11 in the Zorn BoA series). While the band did play the actual Zaebos album in Europe on tour with Zorn in the summer of ’09, only four tunes from that album have made any usual contribution to a regular MMW setlist, and on this night it’s a tune that they seemed to dig in the opening slot: Agmatia. The composition has Zorn written all over it, but of course, MMW put their own stamp on it. (I only caught one gig in 2010 and this tune opened the show I saw too – it was wicked cool in that slot!) Showcasing some frenetic drumming from Billy, swirling keys from John, and stellar plunking from Chris on the acoustic, this tune’s got it all!
Junkyard is such a raunchy sounding tune, I loved it from the first listen when shows circulated during the Radiolarians 2 tour. I mean, listen to what that guy (Medeski) can do with a frickin’ Melodica! It’s unreal … he has such a personal touch on the various keyboards he’s played over the years, and has said numerous times that he prefers the older tech that requires more of a touch to how the keys sound, not like a synthesizer. The keys are his voice and he wants to be as close to that sound as he can be, and it really pays off EVERY time he touches a set of keys. Chris has some dirty slide playing in here and hefty plucking, and illyB works the tambourine and the kit with such control that you forget how hard the guy is working. Love the moments where John and Chris lock-up in the melody, and then the way it splinters off with each part. Comes to almost a grinding halt …
But Billy kicks a funky beat and HELL YEAH, 3rd Disrobe of the tour (3rd show in a row as well), and I just loved hearing them do this tune at the time with the more mature sound they have at this point – and that’s no knock against the ’97-’98 Disrobes! Just awesome to hear … funky keys, bowed upright bass, and a funky beat – I’m sold. (Side note: When MMW played Disrobe the following spring, March 2011, Billy spoke about the tune and said that the spring ’11 performances were the first since the late ‘90s – apparently he forgot they dug the tune up on the 2010 winter tour the year before … but he’s probably not tracking that as closely as I am.)
The guys slide into Dollar Pants, another odd tune to my ears that seems almost jarring when present in the flow of a set, but in a good way (like when they cover Coltrane’s Syeeda’s Song Flute, as I noted back in FAITU#16). There’s just something about the overall tone of the tune that makes my focus/concentration twist. Chris is loving the bow tonight, and Dollar Pants has him bowing ALL over the tune – it’s a very cool aspect to the song’s composition.
Free Go Lily, a tune from the Radiolarians 1 batch, provides some clear and obvious dancing relief with its New Orleans vibe, just good old fun through some intricate interplay. As it will sometimes more than others, the build in the main jam of the tune takes on some dark overtones, much to my delight. And the tune wraps itself up nicely.
Billy invites up “that really old guy from Seattle”, and Skerik makes his way to the stage after some cheers from the crowd. What ensues is probably the main reason I picked this gig – Flat Tires has such a WILD structure, and Skerik’s presence here only adds fuel to the fire. From the open playfulness of the intro/verse sections, to the maddening cacophony of the full drive in the chorus, this just needs to be heard for you to, well, for you to hear it. You won’t be disappointed …
– SET II –
Not going into grave detail here, but I do dig the flow of this 2nd set as well, just the first is pure fire. Amish Pintxos zaps out a starting – love those “stabs” at the keyboard (temp name for the tune during the R2 tour was “Stabs”). We get some older school MMW with I Wanna Ride You, some further Radiolarian colouring from R2 & R3 tunes – wonderful piano work, as usual, on Riffin’ Ed, the Walk Back move > Broken Mirror is cool, and Amber Gris is a wonderfully anthemic tune, usually found in the last slot of the set – but then the walloping bassline from Uninvisible erupts into our ears and the band slams us home with high energy. Again, their mastery of their tunes is just incredible as they twist, tweak, bend, and break the rules.
Baby, Let Me Follow You Down, an old traditional tune you might know from Bob Dylan’s more rocking cover/arrangement, but MMW’s version of the song is all about sweet peace …even the build is soothing … John has some nice keyboard play in here moving off the piano for a portion of the song, before returning to twinkle the ivories into the night air for us … end of show, and hopefully another welcome Friday Afternoon In The Universe …
enjoy the grooves,
dug
THE SHACK STREAM
LISTEN/DOWNLOAD ANOTHER SHOW!
FAITU#22
FRIDAY AFTERNOON IN THE UNIVERSE
(FAITU#22)
2011-08-26
![]() |
|
|||
![]() |
||||
![]() |
||||
![]() |
||||
![]() |
||||
![]() |
||||
| Trouble playing tunes? | ||||

MMW w/ Cyro Baptista + DJ Logic 2011-08-26 – August Residency at the Whitney Museum of American Art, NYC, NY
Source info:
2011-08-26.sl.neumann-tlm170.115868.t-flac16
– ONE SET (tracks 1-19) –
– SHACK THOUGHTS –
FRIDAY AFTERNOON IN THE UNIVERSE (FAITU#22)
The Shack Project celebrates MMW @25 years!
In August 2011 MMW played 4 Fridays as part of a residency celebrating their 20th year together – this week’s FAITU pick is the last Friday. (We have the first Friday streaming, but the 2nd Friday was never recorded and the 3rd Friday is actually lacking Medeski, and I haven’t posted that show here on TSP yet.) The guys and guests are basically set up in a circle of sorts, with the audience surrounding on all sides and from multiple levels in this area of the museum.

MMW w/ Cyro Baptista + DJ Logic 2011-08-26 – August Residency at the Whitney Museum of American Art, NYC, NY
Billy & Logic get things started, after a brief explanation from Billy that the set’s going to start with some duo Turntable Sessions with everyone taking turns playing with Logic. illyB begins a soft snare shuffle of sorts, adds a bit of fill then Logic’s sounds start creeping in – this remains fairly abstract for the most part, little in the way of what we might call “groove”.
John & Logic continue the abstract explorations, with a seamless transition of Medeski swapping in for illyB. But at about the 2min mark of the Medeski/Logic Improv we get a sweet killer groove – I’m presuming the beat is coming from Logic in here since Billy is supposed to be gone (kinda hard to tell!). Space sounds emanating from both the keys and the turntables, but the accompanying groove feels good, if not perhaps a little familiar … reminds me of something Mago-ish, but not quite … eventually this drifts into open space …
Chris & Logic begin after another seamless transition with Wood focusing on some wacky bowed action for the beginning of the interplay, with Logic responding in kind – this creates a perfect Halloween soundscape! Once Chris drops the bow though we get some great plucking work from him, with Logic once again following Wood’s lead by moving from the haunting sounds to dropping a beat. Chris moves to electric around 4min and this just plunks along real smooth-like. Chris digs deeper as the beat wears on – this is an incredible solo from him over Logic’s sounds! PHAT!
The session comes to a quick pause before Cyro Baptista jumps into the fray. Things begin like the sound of outdoor bugs, then Cyro starts whooping/chanting, Logic drops a beat, and things take on a very tribal-like feel. Logic plays with some vocal samples a bit too in reaction to Cyro’s vocals, there’s just some wild crazy sounds at times, all driven by this beat from Logic and the whoops/chants from Cyro. This peters out to silence …
A twinkle of keys, bassline drops in with some cymbal work along with Cyro/Logic colouring, and BOOM! Sugar Craft, a Logic sit-in staple, is off and running – oooh yeah! Cyro’s hand drum work in that space at the top is PERFECT! The 5 of them work this old MMW classic up, around and over. There’s a wonderful mid-tune percussion/DJ breakdown, and when the head of the tune returns it feels so good. It’s a short version of the tune, which leads out in a trippy way – Cyro adds so much fun to the MMW flavour!
The Sugar dissolves into a murky organ-led Improv, lasting only a minute or two but with contributions from everyone on stage, creating some more Halloween soundscapes. This works as almost a bridge or lead into the next Improvisation, where Chris kicks in a groovy bassline and everyone jumps on to ride this for a few minutes before it falls apart into an Open Improv of sorts, driven mostly by the Drums/Percussion, but lasting only momentarily before we enter …
The Church Of Logic – oh, I REALLY dig this groove! This version sounds like a bit of a spazzed-out take, choppy, anxious and jittery. The ’98-’99 takes on this tune were considerably smoother … but this is a VERY rare tune for the band to pull out and a treat to hear. Their treatment of many older tunes during 2011 sounded a little odd, unfamiliar to the band, making for fresh or odd takes on some of these older tunes. So this is a bit of a frantic prayer session in the Church of Logic before we head into another hyper-version of an older tune, but with a twist …
Hey-Hee-Hi-Ho Improv pushes out away from the tune proper, just using it to frame the improvisation that drives and pulses forward into another Improvisation that almost uses what sounds like the Down The Tubes bassline from the MSMW Out Louder release, but not quite. Nevertheless, that bass gets this next section really moving before it mellows down a bit after a couple of minutes into something from a reggae dream … drifting off …
The organ Back & Forth begins, and this tune is like a circus event jammed into a few musical minutes – the song sounds carnival-esque. Billy jumps in on snare and a bass drum pulse under John’s organ; Cyro starts some wacky chanting with Logic adding some sounds; then Chris kicks in with that KILLER bassline for this tune, soloing over this mess of sound … a brief lull of sorts, Chris jams back in on top of it all – this is nasty! – and then another lull before the tune proper finally kicks in. I love this track, which showed up in ’06 and hung around for a bit until the Radiolarian tunes obliterated its set presence, but 2011 saw the band basically abandoning Radiolarians as they played mostly requests and improvisations throughout the year, which in turn coloured song selection at shows not following those “rules” they had on the spring and fall tours. There’s a pause when the tune finishes, and Billy talks about how they donated the tune to Patagonia to raise money for the environment. Not sure if you can still order the album or the track, but here’s a link with more info.
No Ke Ano Ahiahi is up next, and is nice and soothing after some of the hard groove and chaos we’ve heard thus far – this tune is ALWAYS welcome in a set, at least to my ears, and generally has excellent placement no matter where it’s found. It always feels right.
Partido Alto starts hopping, VERY playful opening – this tune is PERFECT for the 5 guys on stage to mess around with. Lots of space and they all are so familiar with the tune. Good, good fun.
Another small break and then, at the request of DJ Logic, they send us out with the groove to end all grooves: BUBBLEHOUSE! ‘Nuff said … a pleasantly groovy Friday Afternoon In The Universe at the Whitney Museum …
enjoy the grooves,
dug
THE SHACK STREAM
LISTEN/DOWNLOAD ANOTHER SHOW!
FAITU#20+#21
FRIDAY AFTERNOON IN THE UNIVERSE
(FAITU#20 & #21)
1998-04-23
1998-04-24
![]() |
|
|||
![]() |
||||
![]() |
||||
![]() |
||||
![]() |
||||
![]() |
||||
| Trouble playing tunes? | ||||
![]() |
|
|||
![]() |
||||
![]() |
||||
![]() |
||||
![]() |
||||
![]() |
||||
| Trouble playing tunes? | ||||
~ 1998-04-23 ~
Source info:
1998-04-23.akg460b.30374.t-flac16
– SET I (tracks 1-6) –
– DJ LOGIC SET BREAK (tracks 7-10) –
– SET II (tracks 11-18) –
– SHACK THOUGHTS – The Shack Project celebrates MMW @25 years!
FRIDAY AFTERNOON IN THE UNIVERSE (FAITU#21)
My first 2 MMW live shows. Life changed forever. I’d been listening to the band for a few years by this point, had maybe 15-20 cassettes of live gigs and was digging it and knew I had to see them live. The shows I had were all from ’95-’96, nothing from ’97, so when I went to these April ’98 gigs it was like encountering a *completely* different band. What? A DJ? Huh? What are these songs? Lots of new music … unknown sounds … and I was hooked!
The band was really working the tunes that would be released in the fall of ’98 on the album Combustication. But, most of these songs were debuted in the spring of ’97 and played throughout the year, so not having access to any ’97 recordings (mid’90s in Atlantic Canada = slow acquisition of live shows) basically meant I’d no idea what the band sounded like now … but the next 2 days would open my ears to that and beyond …
**Thursday, April 23, 1998**
– SET I –
I can recall a small Canadian contingent that all came from my home area (Saint John, NB), and we were all gathered centre on the floor, against the railing that divided this middle section of the floor from the step-lower front section of the floor. None of us had seen MMW live, but we’d all heard them either peripherally or with some degree of focus (that would be me and one of my buddies). The tech guys (Kenny?) are flittering around the stage, and some guy comes out and grabs the stand-up bass and starts plunking away — I’m thinking he’s soundchecking the thing, but it sounds cool (I’ve been fooled by tinkering soundchecks before in altered states of consciousness though, so I wasn’t buying this one … yet). Then the dude starts whacking the main body of the bass — I’m like, what’s he doing?! Then back into the groove. Then 2 other guys come out from each side, one sits at the keys, the other at the drum kit, and we move from an opening Bass Solo > Basso Profondo, and we’re off! At this time I’d never seen a picture of the band — well, maybe one in the back of Relix, in the up-and-coming section or something, but I really had no idea what the band looked like so when Chris came out, and the lights didn’t change, we didn’t realize the show had even quite begun until we were already swept away into it. Nice. No idea how special that was at the time, but it grabbed me right into what MMW were doing onstage — I was hooked. I’m not sure I can even think of *any* other gig that opens with a bass solo, and Basso Profondo, it turned out, was a new tune to the band’s repertoire — I think it’s their own tune? — but was never really played much. A handful of times ever, so nice to have caught a performance — and especially nice that performance was captured by a kind-hearted taper who shared his efforts. Thanks, Brian!
Back to the show … Lifeblood pulses out the end of Basso Profondo, and this was a tune I recognized — at the time I’m sure I was thinking it was Lifeblood or Henduck — HA! Used to confuse those two a fair bit … similar in structure … and so we enjoyed this familiar Shack-man groove, and it was the only tune I knew for this short but sweet set. Lifeblood flows into the warm groove of Gonzo, unknown to me at the time, always welcome to my ears now. The song found more of a home in the live show as an encore or closing number, sometimes with an acoustic outro post-’99, but at this point it’s new and floating around more and here it was in the middle of the set, leading us to what was for me one of the most beautiful moments I’ve had at a show: hearing No Ke Ano Ahiahi for the *very first time*, not knowing what it was, but just soaking it in. Sooooo lovely. If my wife and I ever actually had a wedding, I always imagined this as the song we’d use for our first dance, and I’m pretty sure she’d concur. We were together seeing MMW for this first time, and hearing this song for the first time together always made it special to me with her. I just love it and could hear it any time. We’ve heard some great versions together, one happening the very next night …
Then the fun of Roland Kirk’s Hip Chops closes this 49min 1st set, a new song for the live shows as of ’97, and another tune that was never overplayed with this being its only performance on this tour, and ’97-’98 seeing the bulk of its performances, a few in ’99 and only a couple scattered since. Check out Kirk’s recording here from his Gifts & Messages album:
… and check out Roland Kirk more if you haven’t — the guy can lock a groove!
– SET II –
Once again, I recognize very little in this set which is both exciting and, well, at that time I liked having more of a handle on what I was going to see live so it was a little confusing too — while the 1st set was mostly new music, it was the trio and I was loving it. The 2nd set with DJ Logic would prove to just confuse me on top of all the new music as I had a hard time picking out Logic’s sounds at various times, while other times it was obvious. I’m not a fan of DJs, I just don’t really get it, but I can appreciate something about it — and I trust MMW wholeheartedly, so if they wanted to get down with a DJ, then I was game to hear it. The opening improvisation set the spacey tone for what the keys and Logic could do together — hmmm, this could be interesting — which slams into Sugar Craft and showcases Logic as a percussive DJ perfectly. He has real purpose in that tune, which would become a tune they would play with him just about any time he would return to sit in over the next decade and beyond.
After the Open Improv, with some degree of groove about halfway in, moving > Sugar Craft, which showed us what the new w/DJ sound was like, the band explores some more open space coloured by Mr. Logic, and then we drift into a VERY welcoming groove with Is There Anybody Here That Love My Jesus. ITAHTLMJ is probably the earliest MMW melody I remember, specifically solidified in my memory from the moment my buddy threw on this new MMW disc his brother had purchased – his older brother was *always* buying new music, so we had access to lots of sounds as a result. We’d heard MMW before that, but that’s the moment where they really *clicked* for me, I guess, since it stands out so much. That swirling keyboard that starts the studio version on the Shack-man album had me hooked – never heard anything like it before! For this performance, it’s the bassline that gets us going while John and Logic sprinkle some sounds until John brings in that key sound as just a long sustained note, then the groove is in and we’re boppin’ our heads – and dancing! That’s what I remember at these first shows is dancing!
Next up was a brand new song to me and it’s a great boogie. Coconut Boogaloo brightens up the set at this point – it’s a nice cheery groove – but that busts apart as the tune comes to an end and then, what at the time I’m sure was just chaotic madness, out comes COMBUSTICATION itself! The namesake tune, buried on the album as a hidden track that surfaces minutes after the closing track, Hypnotized, wraps up, and this crazy groove REALLY rocks you to the core. It’s hilariously HEAVY!
Just Like I Pictured It was one of my favourite titles to later discover, but on this night it was a brand new song that soothed our souls after we were Combusticated! I remember loving the way the beat kind of lilts along … feels good …
What follows is about my favourite sequence of the gig. After Billy introduces everyone, a little groove starts building, mostly Logic and illyB at first, but then John and Chris jump in and after 1.5min or so a groove begins that has eluded me for lo these 18 years: This looks to be the very first known performance of what would become Toy Dancing only 2 shows later – they mess around with it loosely again the next night in Boston, but by Philly’s performance on 4/25 it’s pretty much Toy Dancing as we know it – well, the song, just like the rest of them, goes through mutations and variations of sorts, but at this time it is in its infancy and VERY cool to hear. Then suddenly the pace is picking up as the groove morphs and we are in a full-on BUBBLEHOUSE! Nice, another tune I recognized! There’s a reason everyone calls out for this song, and it’s not just because it’s one of the only titles folks know (even if they don’t know what song it might apply to), but it’s because this is one FREAKIN’ KILLER groove! John moves to the piano for part of this performance and things spin into a jazzy area, but still just pumping – illyB is locked in tight. The band keeps driving it until the end builds tension between Medeski and Logic, and boom, we’re done. Billy intros the band again, Logic swirls some sounds, and it’s goodnight.
The band comes out for a classic encore of Chubb Sub, another welcome and familiar tune to my ears. Billy apologies that they’ve run out of time, and only have until 11pm, but that they’re gonna play it out – great news, but I was honestly a little miffed because the band came on *almost* an hour late – huh? Never heard why or anything, and I was totally satisfied with the breadth and depth of music played, and hopefully the late start was beyond their control … I just pictured them drinking wine backstage or something … HA! Anyway, an incredible introduction to the live MMW experience – and I was so stoked to head to Boston the next day for more grooves!
**Friday, April 24, 1998** >>> 1998-04-24
That 2 night stand changed my life, with MMW’s music taking more and more of a hold on me, until over the next few years I’m addicted beyond control … and The Shack Project is born …
enjoy the grooves,
dug
~ 1998-04-24 ~
Source info:
1998-04-24.akg391.29340.t-flac16
– SET I (tracks 1-7) –
– SET II (tracks 8-21) –
– SHACK THOUGHTS – The Shack Project celebrates MMW @25 years!
FRIDAY AFTERNOON IN THE UNIVERSE (FAITU#21)
My first 2 MMW live shows. Life changed forever. I’d been listening to the band for a few years by this point, had maybe 15-20 cassettes of live gigs and was digging it and knew I had to see them live. The shows I had were all from ’95-’96, nothing from ’97, so when I went to these April ’98 gigs it was like encountering a *completely* different band. What? A DJ? Huh? What are these songs? Lots of new music … unknown sounds … and I was hooked!
The band was really working the tunes that would be released in the fall of ’98 on the album Combustication. But, most of these songs were debuted in the spring of ’97 and played throughout the year, so not having access to any ’97 recordings (mid’90s in Atlantic Canada = slow acquisition of live shows) basically meant I’d no idea what the band sounded like now … but the next 2 days would open my ears to that and beyond …
**Thursday, April 23, 1998** >>> 1998-04-23
**Friday, April 24, 1998**
– SET I –
A quick little Drum Intro gets us rolling into Coltrane’s epic classic Africa — new to MMW’s repertoire as of this spring ’98 tour, and the band is just tearing this piece apart over the tour with this night’s performance being no exception. Each performance the band gets more confident with the song, and again it’s a shame this is yet another tune lost to the ages without surfacing again much, if at all, after ’98. Thank goodness for the TAPERS! And then Africa hooks onto a tune/groove that’s been labeled “Chris & Tam” — I think this is like a groove MMW developed out of what they were doing with Africa. The two pieces seem to live in the same world, and were almost always played together during their time in the live shows. Brilliant work from illyB on the TAMbourine!
Next up is a tune that we heard the night before in Portland, but during the 2nd set — Coconut Boogaloo was an instant success in getting our asses moving. The song boils down to this cool little bluesy swirl of sound at the end of the track, which is basically a tiny intro to Just Like I Pictured It – another instant classic. That loping bassline groove is so soothing … and the title is one of my favourites – HA!
Then *SOMETHING* is played – it lasts 1min 37secs and is fantastic. Does anyone recognize this? I’ve been hearing it for almost 20 years while listening to this show so my perspective is skewed … it just sounds so familiar … but it trickles over to the start of Latin Shuffle – clever title, eh? illyB begins the Latin shuffle, John trickles in on the ivories, and Chris drops in on his acoustic – this is a nice tune and the guys rock it from the time they debuted it a year prior. The band shuffles into a short Bass Solo to finish up. Then the 3rd performance ever of Tubby, which is a super fun tune that goes through a number of phases over the years. On this night it ends the set with a feeling of positivity … and we take a break …
– SET II –
I remember the guys walking on and each banging woodblocks to start. You can hear Logic creep in under the percussive beat then gradually John and Chris move to their respective instruments and, well, chaos ensues for a wee bit. Then the sounds get a little spacey and creepy – you can hear him approaching – this ensues for wee bit until the bass drops and Dracula has arrived. He plods along for a while, until illyB kicks it in, we get some “woos” from the crowd at the breaks during this ramped up “chorus” section of the tune, and then it drops back down into its gentle approach, back and forth – and I knew this tune too, unlike the entirety of the first set, so latching onto that was welcome …
At this point, I recall looking around the theatre and noticing nobody was *not* paying attention – everyone seemed focus on the band, the music, and getting down. I always recall this set as a very warm feeling from a crowd that was completely into the moment.
The Improv that busts out the end of Dracula – because the guys play right through with a wonderful flow to the set for over 50 minutes, culminating in a piece of musical beauty, but we’ll get to that – this next Improv is just so good! Is it something? Sounds like it must be, but damn, these cats can pull this stuff from the ether … and this moves smooth and nicely into the 2nd ever appearance of the Toy Dancing melody, noted as an Improv based off the tune but it’s not quite the tune just yet – that will solidify more the next night in Philadelphia.
Sugar Craft jumps into the flow next – hmmm sounds familiar to me at the time? From last night, right? COOL! More impressive work from Logic in here. The music moves us to Golden Lady, which I have thought was just a wacked version of the Stevie Wonder tune all these years, but I really don’t know. I have hard time singing along with MMW’s take – HA! Check out Stevie’s Golden Lady here:
… I think the bass might be the key between them, but can’t say for sure … Regardless, this is the song’s first appearance and it gets some attention through ’98, but not much after, which is too bad because it’s hauntingly intriguing. I think that’s the Mellotron John is using on this track, which interacts nicely off Logic’s work. Chris and Billy hold us steady as the lady moves along … until it’s time to Start/Stop – a very apt title. Loving this groove with Logic working well here too, he and John playing off each other. I love how this song pushes out into space, further and further, so the groove Stops, but then it Starts again and we’re dancing along. Over the years the guys will really push out that space between the groove sections, sometimes where you forget they’re even playing that song until the head comes back around.
We’re coming up to the 50min mark, and as Start/Stop fizzles out the sounds crossover into something exquisitely beautiful, starting to sound familiar from the night before again, oh yeah: No Ke Ano Ahiahi. Loved this song/melody from the first moment it took me away … the placement here is perfect at the end of 50 solidly grooving and wild minutes. Just so nice …
Then we have a 30min sequence that finishes up the set with the music getting even weirder, maybe …
Improv > My Little Suede Shoes, a Charlie Parker tune – these 2 pieces make for an interesting 10min, folks. The Improv starts out very dark, and creeping, with Chris bowing a quick riff, percussive fills all over from Billy, while John and Logic soundscape the atmosphere. This seems to grow, building more tension along the way, with spaz fills from Billy on the kit now, wild sounds from everyone else – it’s getting noisy in here! This building up gives way to a skittery shuffle from Billy, space sounds from John, but then the coolest little melody surfaces that’s sure to make you shine – or, at least make My Little Suede Shoes shine! Check out Charlie’s original:
… interestingly, MMW only ever played this melody like 3 times, with this being the 2nd. Heard again late in ’98, but not since. The next Improv comes out darkly, moving along in this dark groovy space. Again, so good it should/could be a tune, but improvisation seems just as likely. There’s this cool shift between an organ pulse and the groove, then at around 3.5min in this track the Spy Kiss bassline comes out STRONG for like 30secs, then the music veers away and begins to disintegrate … suddenly it’s just Logic and illyB in this weird techno-tribal beat, things getting kind of subdued until BANG!
Combustication combusticates all over our ears! DAMN! That’s wild! Don’t think this one sounded “familiar” to me from the previous night’s chaos – just wrapping my head around the live MMW experience was crazy enough! But this madness gives way to the closing tune, which couldn’t have been better:
NIGHT MARCHERS lead us out, and it is so raunchy and groovin’! LOVE IT!
Another unknown for me in the encore with Gonzo, but recognized from the night before in Portland, a James Booker tune you may as well check out in addition to the other covers:
… Gonzo was new on this April ’98 tour, but has stuck around in the band’s live shows since with varying consistency, used mostly as a closing tune or encore, and eventually being one of the tunes the band would bless with the acoustic outro treatment. On this night, it’s straight up electric groove and sent us out into the night smiling …
That 2 night stand changed my life, with MMW’s music taking more and more of a hold on me, until over the next few years I’m addicted beyond control … and The Shack Project is born …
enjoy the grooves,
dug
THE SHACK STREAM
LISTEN/DOWNLOAD ANOTHER SHOW!






























