Filed under: Emma, Uncategorized | Tags: "Idiot Heart", "Last Day of Magic", "Your Little Hoodrat Friend", almost famous, band love, band-aids, Cameron Crowe, Sunset Rubdown, the hold steady, the kills
“Can you believe these new girls? None of them use birth control, and they eat all the steak! I mean, they don’t even know what it is to be a fan. You know, to truly love some silly little piece of music, or some band… so much that it hurts.”
-The immortal words of “Almost Famous”
I blame Cameron Crowe for making me believe that if I wanted to be a music journalist like his young wide-eyed protagonist William Miller, I too could find myself on tour with a ”mid-level band struggling with their own limitations in the harsh face of stardom,” writing 1,000 word cover stories for Rolling Stone (and getting paid for it) and conveniently picking up Lester Bangs as a willing mentor. Myths! All myths. Especially because Lester Bangs is dead. But there is an aspect to “Almost Famous” that still rings true: The struggle to separate one’s undying love for a band from the need to take yourself seriously as a journalist. (No matter how many professors tell you A&E isn’t real journalism.)
As Ms. Penny Lane once said, “If you ever get lonely, just go to the record store and visit your friends…” Well, today, your iTunes store, but whatever. Work with me here.
The “relationships” I’ve built with my favorite bands have lasted longer than most of the romantic relationships I’ve had. (Is that sad?) I’ve turned to the wisdom of Craig Finn from the Hold Steady in times of trouble, and he always provides me with some damn good advice. When I feel like things couldn’t be worse than they are right now, “Your Little Hoodrat Friend,” reminds me that while, “It burns to be broke and hurts to be heartbroken, always being both must be a drag,” and as I yell along furiously, I feel better. I mean, jeez, at least I don’t etch things like “Jesus lived and died for all your sins” into my neck. (Though I have at times considered tattooing “Damn right I’ll rise again” into my lower back, but the urge is usually gone by dawn).
“Your Little Hoodrat Friend” by The Hold Steady on Separation Sunday
Or when I can’t imagine another day of the mortal melodramatic turmoil that is my current situation, I turn to Mr. John Darnielle, the Mountain Goat, and listen to him scream, “I am gonna make it through this year if it kills me!” Because, goddammit, I will.
(This video of Craig Finn joining Darnielle on stage at a recent Mountain Goats show in New York. Witness Finn in his Happy Baby Potato-head glory)
There are more nuggets of immensely comforting wisdom to be found: When my legs feel restless, I listen to “Idiot Heart” by Sunset Rubdown. Spencer Krug will rightfully tell me to “stay away from open windows and put the telephone down” as I move my idiot body around. Recently, The Kills, who are admittedly less prolific than the above three artists, have been my best friends. In moments of rage and madness, or simply room cleaning, I can scream out of tune with Alison Mosshart about how “There’s only so much you can lose before we both collide.” And obviously, when she’s singing about her “little tornado, her little hurricane,” she’s singing about me.
“Idiot Heart” by Sunset Rubdown on Dragonslayer
I will defend almost anything the bands with whom I have a distinguished relationship do, often blindly. When the newest Hold Steady album Heaven is Whenever came out to only mediocre reviews, I mulled it over for a while, then decided it didn’t matter because “The Weekenders” had the line, “The theme of the party was the industrial age, and you came in dressed like a trainwreck.” And now that the new Kills album Blood Pressures isn’t getting as rave reviews as their previous (incredible) Midnight Boom or No Wow, I refuse to write it off. (“Satellite,” “Heart Is A Beating Drum” and “DNA” are good. Don’t mess with me.)
“DNA” by The Kills on Blood Pressures
My point is, “Almost Famous” may have instilled some absurd expectations of what being a music writer would be like, but it also makes a vital point that music journalists should keep in mind: Loving music “so much that it hurts” is an affliction that both leads us to being able to write about music passionately and often, but also makes it hard to write anything bad about the bands you love most. And this is dangerous.
As I’ve learned in my trade school (journalism school, that is), there are often topics that journalists just won’t touch because they cannot approach them with an objective eye. I think music journalists have to approach things that way too. Although neither The Hold Steady or The Kills new albums in question are that bad, even if they were, I fear it would be hard for me to say so. Much like in “Almost Famous,” a music journalist must dance the line between indulging their passion for music and not praising bands as gods. (If you’ve seen the movie as many times as I have, you look for the true lessons there – young William gets in trouble with both the band and Rolling Stone; the band thinking he sold them down the river as Jason Lee screams, “I SOUND LIKE A DICK!”; the magazine thinking he wrote the article as a fan, not a critic.)
This means in the future, when I hopefully actually employed and getting paid to rant about music, I will try to not write about the bands I hold nearest to my heart. I make this statement now, and though I will want to go back on them in the mythical world of payment for words, I will not do it.
Because I’m a grown up. And I have self-control. And amble space to doodle the names of rock stars in my notebook, where no one can see.

Filed under: Emma, Uncategorized | Tags: allston, boston music scene, bowery boston, central square, great scott, harper's ferry, hornets! hornets!, independent venues, large music corporations, new york times, the hold steady, the middle east, the royale, tt the bear's
As briefly mentioned in our Rocktober calendar, Harper’s Ferry in Allston Rock City is closing (after 40 years! THAT’S A LONG TIME) at the end of this month. Now, Harper’s was never my favorite Boston venue, and I know their closing was actually a long time coming. It has to do with the enormity of their space, the high rent on Brighton Ave (especially so close to Harvard Ave), some booking technicalities and of course… dun dun dun… THE ECONOMY. Still, the announcement that this checkerboard-floored dive bar with all those pool tables and pin ball machines in the back is closing its doors was met with a twang of sadness.
During these past three years of college fun and games, I’ve become particularly fond of the small(ish) venues in Boston. The Middle East, TT the Bear’s and Great Scott, to name some favorites, are impressively independent and have a flavor all their own. Admittedly, House of Blues and the Paradise often bring some excellent bills to this city, and thus I attend, pay too much for drinks and scoff at the ridiculous “non-denominational” decorations inside (HOB, I’m looking at you). But I resent them. That’s why I was confused when while compiling the Rocktober calendar, something became clear… ALL THE GOOD SHOWS ARE AT THE ROYALE. And this year, as the mammoth success story that is the Bowery Presents has extended it’s reach from New York City to the upper Northeast, instead of gravitating towards the muraled intersection of Mass Ave and Brookline Street in Cambridge every weekend, I keep ending up in the fucking theater district.
Now, to back track, I can’t hate too hard on the Bowery Presents. They started out as pretty serious underdogs, and in 2007 the New York Times wrote this article about the Bowery Presents expanding from the depths of Lower Manhattan and Brooklyn all the way up to Radio City Music Hall and the historic Beacon Theater, kicking the far worse Live Nation’s ass out of the way of their uptown arch. They waged their takeover honestly, with a love for live music, and that’s really all you can ask for in a huge expansion project.
The worst part is – the dudes at the Royale are doing a good job. As far as big-ish, commercialized venues go, the Royale ain’t too bad: the stage is wide, the lighting is good, the room is swanky and the sound is pretty fantastic. It’s easy to go to their box office, the prices aren’t too bad (usually), and the shows are starting on time and are executed quite well.
Still, I have to remain indignant. For the majority of the ’00s, ever since that damn internet phase never phased out, record labels glared at music lovers who downloaded music illegally, traded songs over the internet among friends, and even streamed music from Last.fm. They went cross eyed from looking over their spectacles trying to figure out how they could continue to make money off those damn kids, who, for the most part, just wanted to listen to and spread the word about good music because it was what they loved, not because they wanted to rip off the bands. All the lawsuits, the impositions of higher fees on iTunes, Rhapsody, etc… it was all, in a sense, a panic that continues to sweep over every industry affected by the internet. And that’s a whole lot of industries.
Alas, fear not, corporation-mongers, sleep tight, swill merchants. Bands discovered that touring became the only way to make money these days, which led to the rise of concerts at affordable prices, and music lovers happily forking over cash to see shows. Therefore, it was only a matter of time before independent venues had to start competing with the booking power and money of something like Bowery Presents. Not so suprisingly, the Middle East, TT’s, Great Scott and all the other little guys seem to be feeling the damage. It’s sad, really, because everyone I know who goes to shows in Boston would much rather spend their money at the bars in Central Square and Allston than in the club-infested downtown area. The shows at the Royale are over by 10 p.m. on weekends, and when all the concert-goers walk out, the Pauly D blowouts and skintight mini dresses/too-high heels walk in. Who wants to see that? Not me.
So what will happen? I don’t think these small venues are really in grave danger yet, but there is a striking difference between where I’m seeing shows this fall versus last. There are still full bills at the independent venues almost every night, but bands like Menomena, Suckers and Real Estate (who would have been shoo-ins to play The Middle East a year ago) are going straight to the Royale.
Unfortunately, we only have so much time and money to spend on shows, and priority usually goes to the band we want to see, regardless of where they’re playing (unless they’re playing the Orpheum, because really? Fuck that shit). But at the same time, it’s important to keep supporting these independent venues, so if there is a show I want to see in good ol’ Central Sq. I’ll be there with bells on.
Oh and I’m ending this with a video of Hornets! Hornets! by the Hold Steady, because I just saw them at the Royale and it was awesome. And the title of this post is from the song. And the rest of the multimedia in this is just photos of clubs… and because I want to.



