club D

I'm a 38-year-old gal, living in the Washington, DC area, who loves going to concerts of all kinds. My blog tracks most shows I attend. Hope you enjoy, and feel free to comment!

Thursday, November 30, 2006

Four Good Men Bring Their Retro Sound to JJ

Jammin' Java, Vienna, Virginia, Nov. 28

Recommended beverage to go with this show:
In the absence of McEwan’s, any wee heavy ale will do

Photo: Keyboardist Mick MacNeill and I hang after the show.

A bunch of Scottish musician friends recently got together to form a band called Four Good Men. Not only will their sound transport you back to the ’80s, but these guys were in some of those earlier bands that helped create this sound. Four Good Men are: Keyboardist Mick MacNeill and bassist Derek Forbes, both founding members of Simple Minds; guitarist Bruce Watson from the band Big Country, and vocalist Ian Donaldson of H20, who’d hit it big in Europe.

To start their set, a woman took the stage playing bagpipes, which set the Celtic mood, and soon the first two good men appeared, one in a kilt and the other in a white and red silk suit. Then, the others took the stage and there were….five men. Later, I asked Donaldson who didn’t make the good man category and he said that would be Smiley, the drummer, who came on board last. He said, “Fook it, we’d already chosen the name and we didn’t want to change it.” Smiley is another veteran musician, having toured with the late great Joe Strummer of the Clash as well as Robbie Williams.

While Four Good Men would lean on some of their best-loved old hits, including Simple Minds songs “Alive and Kicking” and “Don’t You Forget About Me” and Big Country’s “In a Big Country,” the new songs sounded as though they could’ve been tracks on those earlier hit albums. Donaldson’s voice is deep and velvety, reminiscent of OMD, another UK new wave band from that earlier era. Four Good Men’s new songs recreated that infectious 80s new wave sound and their musicianship and camaraderie resonated throughout the room.
Four Good Men singer Ian Donaldson hangs with me after the show.

Although currently unsigned, the band was promoting a mostly original cd of four live tracks recorded in the UK and four demos, the only cover being a fantastic live version of Simple Minds’ “Someone, Somewhere in the Summertime.” Despite Jammin’ Java’s publicity efforts, the crowd was sparse but that didn’t stop the band from playing their hearts out.

Opening the show, the local band Soft Complex provided the perfect complement to the headliner. A tight band with a lead singer who crooned like Morrissey, they fit right in with the new wave, alternative genre.
ClubD would like to thank the ever-humble Ian and Mick for graciously hanging out with fans after the show. They are, indeed, the nicest blokes, though I wouldn’t expect any less from the Scottish.
Thanks to Christina for the above pix!

Tuesday, November 21, 2006

Ready, Set...OK Go

November 19 at the 9:30 Club
Recommended Beverage to go with this show:
a hoppy pale ale

I’ve had a musical epiphany, and I’m a bit behind on the curve on this one. Honestly, I’d never heard of this band until my buddy made me a mix cd and the song “A Million Ways” came on toward the end of the disc. It was the one song that made me nearly swerve off the road as I fumbled for the song list to discover it was by a band called OK Go. That’s all I knew of them when I went to see them at the 9:30 Club on Sunday night. I hadn’t even yet seen the now famous You Tube video for “Here it Goes Again” in which the band does a choreographed routine on a series of treadmills.

Arriving with no expectations, though a bit jetlagged having just stepped off a plane from California, I was happily surprised to find a colorful stage and an animated, talented bunch of musicians. OK Go is offbeat and their punk-inspired rock is solid, though they seem to have developed somewhat of a cult following not based on the music itself but from their stage antics and even more so from their silly dance routines circulating on the net. Live, they’re pure fun—from tossing tambourines and socks into the crowd to ending with a Devo-style dance routine in front of a huge video screen backdrop of singer Damian Kulash’s backyard, as his dogs roamed on and off screen.

The set featured songs from their two albums, a few from their 2002 self-titled debut and the bulk from their 2005 release Oh No, and a couple of covers, most notably one they dug up by the Electric Light Orchestra. Midway through the show, Damian with bassist Tim Nordwind and guitarist Andy Ross on a portable xylophone headed toward the back and performed a two-song acoustic set on a makeshift little stage, giving us folks in the back a prime view.
If you missed the show, NPR aired it and you can listen to the archived concert
SETLIST
The House Wins
Television, Television
Don’t Ask Me
No Sign of Life
A Good Idea at the Time
Here It Goes Again
You’re So Damned Hot
The Damned (cover)

[acoustic set]
A Million Ways
What to Do

It’s a Disaster
Oh No
Invincible
Don’t Bring Me Down (ELO cover)
Get Over It
Return
Do What You Want
Dance: A Million Ways [recorded version]

Sunday, November 05, 2006

Barenaked Bliss

The Barenaked Ladies rocked GMU's Patriot Center on November 4.




Photos by ClubD