Wednesday, November 18, 2009
Mammoth Lakes Mammoth Mountains
Sunday, November 15, 2009
Sac-Town
We have a GPS system in the ol’ Weinlander that sometimes leads us astray to not-so-good parts of some cities. Her name is Gwendolyn and she speaks with a British accent. She is highly educated in cartography and vocabulary. But she lacks serious street smarts. Because we rolled into Sacramento and thought we were going to Luigi’s Fun Garden to play a show with Loch Lommand but instead we ended up at a dead end by the railroad tracks. There was not a soul in sight. I gave Gwendolyn a stern warning and she piped up to take a left then a right go straight for a while then u-turn. She is so temperamental. Geez. So…when we finally arrived to Luigi’s Fun Garden or in my mind Luigi’s Pizza Garden we were greeted by our good friends Loch Lommand. It was really exciting to see familiar faces after three weeks on the road. They are great people and fantastic musicians. It’s been a while since I’ve seen them live and they sounded absolutely amazing. I just love their instrumentation and jaw dropping harmonies. Sonically they fit the room perfectly and played to a very appreciative audience. The crowd was one of the best that we played to in a week or so. All age crowds are fun and very attentive because they are not all sloppy drunk and distracted by a two dollars and fifty cent shots of Evan Williams or stepping outside to chain smoke. They sat and stood to take in the music. A dream for a traveling musician. I had fun and hope to be back at Luigi’s soon.
Tucson to A Goose Egg in L.A.
Prickly pear cacti and deep troughs of sagebrush nestled up against sand banks littered the refuge lanes on Highway 8. Traveling east from Tucson we passed awfully close to Mexico. I could literally see the George W. Bush border fence to the south as we passed through not one, not two, but three customs and border checks. The sand dunes and tall cacti mixed with the impromptu inspections made me feel like a foreigner in my home country. It also created a whole lot of tension in the van because we were running way behind schedule and knew the Hollywood Freeway in LA was going to be locked up with impatient, cell phone texting drivers during the tail end of rush hour. And it was.
Luckily, Rantz was behind the wheel and manhandled that freeway till the bitter end. Finally,
The Dessert
Sunshine in November is not a common comfort for a Portland guy. I am usually wrapped up in a raincoat and hiding my head from the incessant “liquid sunshine” while wiping the rain droplets from my glasses. It’s a factor of life that we north westerners are complacent to because the summers are so good. That’s why I’m falling in the love with the dessert in November. It’s like summer in Portland. And when you pair up sunshine with rock n’ roll and some serious Mexican food, life is good.
Prescott
The Raven Café is like a little oasis in the high dessert of Prescott. Amazing beer on tap (like Portland in a way) and a slaw dog that rivals the best Hebrew National on the planet. Plus they have a sweet roof top bar and a generous bar tab for musicians. It doesn’t get much better when I get a meal and a few beers on the house. Our show went well on the smallish stage to a smallish crowd. Our set was enjoyable but ended quite abruptly after only half an hour. The sound guy cut us off mid sentence when we still had two songs left to play. I didn’t and still don’t quite understand why. The band that was about to play after us witnessed the whole event. They didn’t get it either. We were all confused. Come On! We travel half way around the country to play music and you cut us off early! We sacrifice a lot to play to every crowd. Let us play! It’s what we do. So in retaliation, we packed up the van and headed to a house party. We met some very nice college goers at the show and they asked if we would like to play at their house and of course we said yes. Little did we know that we were onTucson.
After the satisfaction of barbacoa and mole we all rolled down the street to KXCI for a little radio promo for the show at Plush. We all squeezed into a small recording room, set up as minimal as possible and played a couple songs for the people of Tucson. They were listening too, because a handful of people we met at the show heard us on the radio. The best part was the next morning at Poca Cosa when we ran into someone who heard us talk about how much we loved Poca Cosa on the air and that we were going to eat there the next morning. He managed to be there at the same time we were and bought a c.d.! Sandra, the cook, told us that there were multiple people who stopped by that morning and said that they heard some gringos talking on the radio about how much they love Poca Cosa so they had to try it themselves. Poca Cosa and Weinland = BFF.
The show at Plush was our best performance of our fall tour so far. We rocked out to the max for two hours in the lobby to a bellied up bar crowd. The band was tight and dynamic. Adam’s vocals on God Here I Come were something special and a definite highlight to a great performance. Weinland…you can pat your self on the back. We even met some guys that drove down from Phoenix to see us play.
Monday, November 9, 2009
TEXAS TEXAS TEXAS!!!
Weinland world has been pretty quite for the past week with a mix of driving and recording. We hung out with our friends in Fort Collins during a dry spell in the tour and recorded some top forty hits soon to be released in the spring. We thawed out after the snow storm during our drive down to Texas. It took a while to thaw…about 15 hours to be exact. The drive was an all day affair mixed with subway sandwiches, radio surfing for the world series game, and bare Texas landscape.
Austin - Hole In The Wall
The Rolling Stones, Hendrix, Neil Young, Elvis Costello, The Band, Stevie Wonder, The Beach Boys. The hits were being spun by two vivaciously drunk, ass grabbing lesbians. They were putting on a show for all to see. They danced in front of the juke box with a fearless display of affection. It was pretty funny to see some dudes get up and try out their moves. Rejection at its finest. It set the tone for the evening at the Hole In The Wall. A college bar full of drinkers, two stages
The show at the Hole In The Wall was our first show in a week. A little offsetting and strange but it did not get in the way of us shaking the ground at the Hole In The Wall. We rocked pretty loud and loose to a smallish and appreciative crowd that held their beers up to the sky after every song. After our set we got kicked out of the bar because it was closing time. They rock out late night in Austin and little was I to know that they rock out late in Fort Worth too.
Fort Worth, TX The Moon
The Moon is a great venue in the TCU area of Fort Worth. Small and sweet with the best bar employees ever. Last time we played at The Moon every employee bought some article of merchandise from us. Even the door guy bought a c.d. The same people were working there on Friday night which was awesome and they even remembered who we were. We’re doing something right!!! The night started off with Pictures Of Then, a seriously serious rock band from Minneapolis. They played a polished and energetic set of songs that featured a great bass player and lead guitarist. I also learned a few business tricks from them during a post-show chat. Great people and great musicians. The second band that graced the stage was a two piece, guitar and drums, from Oklahoma called Hosty Duo. And Holy Shit! could the lead singer shred on his hybrid strat-tele. He was pulling out no-look licks and flawlessly playing a bass pedal board at the same time. The best guitar player that I have ever seen live. And he brought the banter. Hosty Duo are the total package.
Dallas, TX
Saturday, October 31, 2009
Stella Artois Presents
The show at the Lion's Lair last night could go down as one of the best Weinland shows of all time. We were all on the same page some how. We didn't speak about it before hand and didn't need to. It didn't matter how many people were there or how good the sound was. It didn't matter that I was exhausted or that I lacked a seriously good costume. We were loose and sonically tight at the same time. We started songs with sweet jam sessions and expanded the energy on Autumn's Blood so much that I thought the stage was going to explode. I woke up this morning and asked myself what happened last night? Was it the fantastic pairing of rock and facial hair on Rantzy's head (see below)? Was it the free beer (probably didn't hurt)? Was it the raucous local crowd of zombies and lions(also, see below)? It doesn't make much sense logically because this show was booked three days ago from the road in a desperate attempt to make up for our canceled show in Denver on Thursday. There was no press and no money on a night where everyone is dressed up like their favorite fantasy character and wanting to go to a costume competition dance off with deejays and spiked punch. The cards were definitely staked against us. But these last minute additions is exactly why playing music and traveling on the road is so addictive. Granted it IS hard, tiring, and I am so poor that I might as well shack up in the nearest shantytown. But you never know what you are going to get or what's going to happen. It's the unexpected expectations. The moxie. The unspeakably good performances. Everything and anything. It's what keeps you going when you wake up in the morning with a splitting headache after four hours of sleep and you're sleeping next to another dude on a bed that's really made for one and he is trying to spoon with you because he's dreaming about Cindy Crawford. Oh the sacrifices...
The rest is all pics. Take it all in. Last night was a good one.
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