Monday, September 23, 2013

Home From Tour

We're home now from tour.

I was driving to the Felsen HQ in west oakland this morning.  I hadn't driven my car for about 2.5 weeks and I turned on the car stereo and in the CD player was a demo of our tune Rock and Roll's Not Dead that I recorded around Xmas of last year--just me and an acoustic guitar.  On January 1st of this year we had exactly one song written and a rather vague plan to record a new album and then do a national tour soon thereafter.  I sent out a batch of rather awful sounding demos to Art, Cris and Dylan around that time.   Most of the demos were just little song embryos, some were more completed, all needed a lot of TLC.  And then there was the fact that we had no label (got dropped a year earlier--shame on you, you know who you are) and no money, no studio, etc...just a plan and a bunch of demos.  Cris came forward and offered to record and mix the whole thing at his home in San Lorenzo.  Wow.  OK. We began to workshop the tunes.  We would rehearse a few songs, get it sounding good and then go to Cris's house and record basics. Repeat the process another 3-4 times until we had a whole album of songs.  I spent a lot of time with Dylan fine tuning the songwriting, chords, lyrics, etc...over lunch or coffee we had tons of great conversations about being bay area artists,  trying to keep our sanity & humanity while floating precariously on a cracker, keeping the art of rock and roll alive. The songs were shaping up and starting to tell a story.  There was an underlying theme now, a sense of purpose: Art wins, humanity prevails. All 4 of us were feeling it and deeply invested in the concept.  Rock and Roll's Not Dead. Around March Cris had to make a tough decision about his family and future and after 17 years of living in the US decided that it was time to move back home to Mexico to be with family and start a business.  He made a grand bargain with the family to honorably finish our record and do the big tour and then to move on.  Art and Trish got married in May.  This was basically the dead line: get all the basics for the album done before the wedding and then we'd finish up all the overdubs and Cris would mix for the rest of the month before leaving for Mexico.  Dylan and I made a bunch of visits to Cris's house in April and May to finish the album.  I spent a lot of late nights recording and re-recording vocals, guitar, keyboards, percussion, vibraphone, gong, samples and sound effects.  Throughout the summer, Cris would commute a few times back from Mexico to the east bay.  We decided to launch an Indie Go Go campaign later in the summer to help cover the costs of PR, printing and tour expenses.  After Art got home from his honeymoon, he got out the big map on his desk at work and started to block out dates and a route.  Much negotiation began with our families and jobs and eventually the four of use were able to carefully carve out 17 days in our all ready hectic lives for a tour in early September.  Art worked really hard booking the tour, sending out over 1000 emails.  Seriously.  You ever booked a DIY tour for an unsigned indie rock band?  No fun.  Dude never complained though.  Meanwhile, I worked with 4 graphic designers who voluntarily formed a tag team to get the artwork for the CD together.  I also hunted down a PR firm to help promote the album, designed posters and Tshirts, got the Indie Go Go thing together and launched,  did interviews (called in a lot of favors from writers, podcasters etc), recorded a string section--again called in some big favors from all of those talented people and our pal Adam Rossi for hosting that incredible day of recording at his fancy SF studio.  The record was skillfully mastered by Ruairi O'Flaherty in LA.  Again, called in a big favor. A corporate gig fell into our laps and that payed for the mastering and the first PR payment.  We had the CDs printed and in hand around mid July. I put 225 CDs in the mail a week later.  Good reviews started to come in soon thereafter (and are still rolling in).  Around Aug 1st we completed the Indie Go Go campaign, raising a bunch of money to make the tour possible.  Cris arrived home a few days before the tour started for a few rehearsals and we left for tour on Friday Sept 6,  arriving safely home yesterday.  I think I can speak for everyone that we're all really tired, but satisfied in the fact that we truly gave it all we had to give.  Some gigs were amazing, some less than amazing.  The band always played at it's peak.   I know all of us are extremely grateful to the many people who gave to the Indie Go Go Fund, housed us on tour, fed us, came out to the shows, helped to promote the tour, shared our tweets and messages, forming a grass roots impromptu cyber street team, booked our band, helped with the artwork and technical stuff, played on the album, partied with us and drank the moonshine...the list is long. That was a 10 month effort for us.  Thank you America, Felsen loves you.

Sunday, September 22, 2013

Updates #'s 10-11. September 2013 US Tour


Update #10.  (Wednesday)  We are currently blazing across North Dakota on yet another 10 hour drive, this time heading to Missoula, Montana.  Yesterday was another long drive day.  This tour has been pretty intense with a lot of hours in the van.  We're all feeling it now.  Four more shows to go and a lot more miles yet to drive. We woke up in a motel in Sioux Falls, SD and had a leisurely late check out, catching up on well needed rest.   We played at a really neat little venue last night in Aberdeen, SD.  This tour has been pretty intense with a lot of hours in the van.  We're all feeling it now.  We played last night at the Red Rooster Coffee House, a really neat little music venue in Aberdeen, SD.  It's also a book store with a great kitchen--some of the best, healthiest food we've had on tour.  The opening act was a US constitution quiz for any willing audience volunteers.  Books, music, great healthy food and civilized political discussion all in this small shop in Aberdeen, SD.  Go figure.  There was just a small crowd gathered in this little place on a tuesday night.  They were a bit on the reserved side, not like some of the more raucous crowds we've performed to on this tour.  Oh yeah, they don't serve alcohol at the Red Rooster, that explains it.  This was more of a listening audience.  One fan at a time we keep reminding ourselves.  We played really well and dynamically.  Always play the room and this room couldn't take a lot of volume.  Art did a great job of keeping the sound tucked in.  I attempted Shenanigans, we sold merch and quickly packed up and drove into the night, arriving at our motel in Hettinger, ND four hours later.   There was the most intense heat lightning bursting out orange-blue-white bolts of light over the plains last night.    The storm seemed to last for hours, all the while we were listening to Johnny Cash.  It was kinda spooky and apocalyptic.  Nostradamus would have been weirded out.  It's lonely and desolate out here in the Dakotas, but beautiful in it's own way.  I miss home.  I miss my family.  Pushing forward towards Missoula, 565 miles left!


Update #11.  Watching TV now at a motel in Bellingham, WA.  Today is the last day of the tour.  Tomorrow is a drive day home to Oakland/SF.  It kinda feels like the last day of summer camp.  Kinda sad, kinda happy.  We've had an incredible experience, met so many great people and thoroughly enjoyed making music and spreading our left wing Bay Area musical agenda.  

So...to get you up to speed.  Wednesday was a long 10 hour drive to Missoula, MT.  We kinda hit a low on the drive.  Everyone was really pretty bummed out and tired and feeling really trapped inside the van.  We had a stop in Billings for lunch.  The proprietor made us feel like stars when she asked us to autograph the menus.  We'll be right up there next to Carrot Top.  Montana is a big state, really beautiful, but really big and Missoula is pretty far on the western side.  That's a lot of Montana to travel through.  Missoula has changed a lot since i was last there 20 years ago.  It's much more downtown Palo Alto than it was in 1991.  Much dumpier back then.  We played at a really beautiful, big, killer music venue, The Top Hat.  Great PA, lights, backstage, food, local beers....all the ingredients for a great show on a Wed night, except a big crowd.  Our pal Don Zimmer at Floating Records in Mill Valley, called ahead to the Top Hat and pre paid for a bunch of food and booze.  Don you are an angel.  The staff apologized numerous times for the lack of people and promised to have us back on a weekend with some local/national acts and put Felsen in front of a crowd.    The streets were pretty much empty that night. No one was out and about.  One fan at a time.  We spent the night at Stu's house (Art's old friend).  Thank you Stu of the Stu Jackson School of Music.  Thurs was a 6 hour drive to Leavenworth, WA.  The drive was amazing.  Art and I have been doing this Felsen touring thing for 2.5 years now and we both felt that was the most beautiful drive we've done.  Leavenworth is a mountain town, fully decked out in faux Bavarian Alpine kitsch, but oddly endearing.  Love it there.  We played at the outdoor beer garden, Der Hinterhof.  Small but really, fun, young and drunken audience.  It felt really good after the bummer in Missoula.  We needed that one.  AND we really needed the late night of drinking and dancing post gig shenanigans that some of our new fans rewarded us with.  I never go out dancing.  Why?  Totally fun.  Thank you Leavenworth.  We had a lot of band funk mid-tour malaise mind fuck that needed to be worked out.   Friday was a three hour drive to Bellingham, WA for a show at Tubb's Whiskey Bar.  It was kinda a divey, vibey college bar.  Really good crowd.  This was the first show all week where there were other bands on the bill.  Nice to hear some other musicians doing their thing.  There was a singer songwriter girl who started the show out.  She brought pretty much her entire extended family and all of her girlfriends, etc..  The room was pretty much at capacity.  And then as soon as she finished her set, they all left.  Nice.  No shout out to the other bands.  Bad form kid.  "Hey everyone please stick around to hear the other bands".  Trust me Ashley, if you're ever on the road, you will learn this etiquette.  Oh and she borrowed my amp and cable.  Nice.  Her hot mom held up the lyrics to Leonard Cohen's "Hallelujah".  You gotta learn those lyrics  AND PLAY THE DIMINISHED CHORD.  C'mon kid.  Those chords and words are SACRED.  They can't be improved upon--trust me on this one.  She probably knows it via Jeff Buckley or maybe Rufus Wainright's beautiful version in the cartoon Shrek.  We love Jeff Buckley, deeply.  Dude personally changed my musical DNA.  We were just listening to his Live at the Cabaret Metro and it was a deeply, personal moment for all of us traveling somewhere across the Dakotas.   All of us loudmouths in the van just listened and were reminded why were out there, thousands of miles from our homes and families, jeopardizing our jobs, sacrificing much to help keep the art form alive, and possibly push it forward a little bit in our own way too.  After her set, she promptly split, taking her posse with her, blowing off both the bands after her and then magically arriving back just when it was pay time at the end of the night.  Bad form kid.  You're gonna need those dudes in the other bands to sit politely through your set, when you're thousands of miles from home and your family and friends aren't there anymore.  Oh well, I'm sure I did way worse when i was just getting going though.    Felsen did our thing.  We had to get all up in people's grills to work it out.  I'm a button pusher, we had to work really hard to win them over.  They were all new to us, no family and friends there to support us.  It took some major shenanigans (and all those rehearsals at our late night hurt locker in West Oakland) to gather the crowd.  I reminded them to come to the band.  We had a herd of people right in front of us.  People were pumped.  I got on top of the pool table at one point (bad form kid).  That was about as punk rock as Felsen gets.  Total punk rock show in fact.  There was no stage,  We were on the floor with the crowd huddled around us, lots of fists pumping.  There was a very high tattoo ratio in there.  One drunk got so moved by the rock that he crashed into Dylans mic, knocked it over.  Classic punk rock.  They screamed for encore.  We declined because it was time to get the other band on stage (good form kid).   We stayed through their set, drank with the boss and booker (True Believers! Thank you gents).  And had a great time dancing and getting into the other band.  Their drummer broke one of his two drunk sticks, Art gave him a new set of sticks (good form kid).  The booker declined his pay for the night to give to us--clearly he knows what it means to be a touring musician.  Fun night.  We got pulled over on the way back to the hotel.  34 in a 25 zone.  I was behind the wheel.  I immediately kicked back into very respectful Yes Sirs just like they taught me at Culver Military Academy when i was a kid.  Turns out the cop (who was about 25) is a guitar player, owns a Les Paul and is currently redesigning his pedal board.  We had a lot in common.  He let us off with a warning.  I think he just friended us on FB too.  Thank god he didn't look in that van.  Jesus we got lucky.  Go figure.  Onwards to Cottage Grove, OR

Update from the Road # 9 September 2013 US Tour

Update #9.  Today is a long 10 hour drive day.   We've played our eastern most show and are now on the long trek back west, barreling across Minnesota tonight heading for a hotel in Sioux Falls, SD.  We played in Chicago on Saturday. It was a return engagement at Goose Island, where we performed on our summer 2012 tour.  Not one of my fav gigs on the tour, sadly, as we all really love Chicago.  It's kind of a neat bar, but the sound was really, really distractingly bad for us.  They herd bands in and out pretty quick with 4 bands playing 40 minute slots.  Bad sound, not much time to get into our mojo, some technical equipment malfunctions and we were really feeling the tiredness at that point.  My voice was kinda shot at times.  Shit happens. We played through pretty uneventfully,  sold our merch, said good night to the handful of friends and family, packed up and headed down to Valparaiso, Indiana, vowing to upgrade venues for the next Chicago gig, whenever that may be.  

We stayed at our good friend Amy's farm in Valparaiso.  This is my hometown and I've known Amy since junior high.  It's hard to describe how beautiful it is there and how peaceful, quiet and relaxing this was for us.  We slept, ate really well and most importantly, did our laundry.  (You can only use so much fabreeze.)  We played a house concert in Valparaiso to about 50 people.  This was, for me, the funnest gig of the tour so far.  There were lots of old friends there, some of whom I've known since I was in grade school.  The hosts of the party, Cathy and Mike are professional-grade party givers and total true believers in rock and roll.  They've converted their basement into a really cool small performance space, complete with a stage, lighting and PA system.  How cool is that?   We played two sets in the afternoon and early evening.  We eased in during the first set.  I played Mike's beautiful Gibson acoustic guitar.  We played a few tunes we haven't played much on tour:  Temporary Diamond, Secret Life of Guns, Water Fit For Babies.  People were with us from the very first note.  Alcohol was flowing.  The energy, volume and vibe of the music was starting to pick up.  It was Mexican Independence Day, and seeing as Felsen is 25% Mexican and 75% Californian, we had much to celebrate.   The second set was really incredible. More people arrived and more alcohol consumed.  We focused on a bunch of tunes from the new album:  Rock and Roll's Not Dead, All You Gotta Do is Smile, I Don't Know How to Talk Anymore, Gimme Shelter for the Devil, Tokyo Electric Power.  The crowd was pressed right up on top of us.  There were a bunch of teenage kids there really getting into the Felsen spirit for the first time and that felt really great knowing that our music wasn't totally irrelevant to them.  There was even a 75 y.o grandma who also got bit by the Felsen bug. I made a toast to the Valparaiso slum lord who, on Christmas Eve, evicted my father, mother and their 6 kids.  Nice guy! I felt I vindicated my family.  Revenge of the Nerds:  Art wins, humanity prevails.   The stage was surrounded by Mike and Cathy's record collection.  At one point while Dylan was bending both time and space during one of his, epic, spiritually transformative guitar solos, I noticed all the records and realized we'd been invited into their music sanctuary.  I saw a copy of The Concert For Bangladesh and that brought back a flood of memories of living in an apartment at 1419 Laporte Ave in Valparaiso when i was 20 and hearing that album for the first time: Ravi Shankar, Dylan, Leon Russell, Billy Preston, Ringo and George.  We ended the concert as we've been doing often on this tour, with an acoustic version of Take Me Back.  We went out into the audience and asked the crowd to huddle up around us.  You could have heard a pin drop.  All that energy in the whole room focused just on that one thing for 4 minutes was really, powerful, spiritual and deep.   

We played Waterfall yesterday.  Singing the lyric "I Come from the country, went to city, seeking refuge" felt especially confessional yesterday, singing it to all these people I grew up with in a little Indiana country town where my father was the town doctor. 


Updates from the Road #'s 6-8 September 2013 US Tour

Update #6.  We kinda hit the wall yesterday from exhaustion in Sioux City, IA.  This was our second time performing at the Chesterfield.  We played there on our summer 2012 tour.  Really great venue.  Pro sound, lights the whole shabang.  The gig was sparsely attended.  We gave it all we had and reminded ourselves it's one fan at a time.  We had one hardcore fan who drove a couple of hours from Omaha to see us for the first time.  How cool is that?  22 year old college kid:  proof positive that felsen's music isn't entirely for the moms and dads of America.  Don't get me wrong, I love the mom and dads, seriously I do and i'm extremely grateful, but y'all are hard to get out to a gig on a weeknight.  It would make these Tues night gigs a little easier say if we had a few more friendlies in the room.  One thing that I love about Felsen is that for the most part the low attendance gigs don't flap our feathers.  I think we leave the stage generally feeling like we delivered.  We held up our end of the bargain.  And that's real satisfying.  For the handful of music nerds there last night, they got a great show.  Oddly we sold a gang of merch for such small numbers.  (I'm a former used car salesman.) I keep pestering our audiences and reminding them that are all potential noble patrons of the arts helping us keep this thing alive a little longer.  Saving rock and roll is serious business--some fool's got to try and do it and I'm your sacrificial lamb.  In the immortal words of Geroge W. Bush "You're either with us or against us!"  America, form a line at the merch table, Arthur is hungry for Huevos Rancheros and we've got a long way to drive.  

Update #7.  Last night's show in Columbia, MO was an epic showdown at the OK Computer corral.  Felsen prevailed.  We played at the Bridge, a really, beautiful and unique venue in the downtown area. The Bridge is a music school offering private lessons and they also have a totally pro small music venue/performance space.  Wes and Kara, the proprietors, are rock and roll true believers, obviously.  They're educating the kids in their community, helping keep rock and roll alive a little longer.  Our backstage area was right next to a practice room where a 10 year old rocker was fine tuning the drum parts to Roxanne and Come Together.  A place like this keeps a bunch of local musicians employed , allowing them in turn to hone their art and make a decent wage.  Dylan, Art and I are all music instructors; we felt a personal kinship to Wes and Kara. We'd probably be employees if we lived in Columbia.  We thanked them from the stage for serving their community, educating the kids, and offering employment to local musicians.  Keep it weird. Keep it local.  Stick it to the man. 

There was a great band that went on right before us, Mathien.  Also on a 17 day tour, hailing from Chicago.   It was nice to cross paths with another of our ilk.  They were kinda pop R&B-ish, Maroon 5/Bruno Mars meets Cameo.   Really dialed in, great players and put on a real polished, tight show. Gotta admit, we were a little intimidated back stage, not sure how to follow them.   Felsen has been through a lot in the past week alone, not to mention the previous 4 years.  We're always up for a challenge. Right now we're playing at our peak and putting out a ton of energy with each show.  The gigs are becoming like athletic events.  Really physical.  The tunes are becoming really powerful and deep.  There was a decent small crowd there last night who obliged us and came right to the foot of the stage and stayed there til the end.  They sang along with the chorus of Gunfighting, which was really powerful and cathartic. 

We stayed well past last call, hanging out with the staff and the other band.  The owners bought us many rounds of drinks.  Shenanigans ensued. Kara told me, we're her new favorite band.  HIgh praise.  Swoon. We took a whole crew of people out to the van at load out time and finished off our signature low grade corn liquor in the alley behind the club.  We're not good people. Felsen's gonna save you some moonshine. Time to restock. 

Update #8.  "I hate you, daddy hates you, and the horsies hate you."  The joys of balancing home life and touring.  Oh look we got a bounced check.  My student loan is late and i forgot to pay my studio rent.  And the horsies hate Cristian's wife.  My kid got hit in the face with the soccer ball 2X yesterday. "Mommy i want sushi."  That's my boy. Nothing makes a 6 year old bay area kid feel better about getting hit in the face than some really good Unagi.   He's a smart little guy.  He came up with a term to describe what daddy does on stage:  Irritain.  (one part irritate, one part entertain.)  Yup, that's me in a nutshell.  He knows me best and I miss him so much right now.  

We played last night in St. Paul, MN.  Fun gig.  This was the 2nd time we've played at Wild Tymes.  We were joined by a few local Twin City bands:  The Jeffries, Shakin Babies and Trainwreck. Nice gig.  Good crowd.  Sold a goodly bit of merch. The show was presented by DEMO which is an organization started by Steve Mclellan, a local MNPLS booker/promoter type.  Clearly a true believer.  According to his calculations, he has presented over 9000 bands in the Twin Cities over the past 30 years.  Wow.  What an institution!  He loves Felsen.  Knowing this, we felt a special obligation to throw down.  I gave a special shout out to some of the greats from MNPLS: The Replacements, Husker Du, Trip Shakespeare, Mint Condition, Prince, The Time, The Jayhawks...I guess these are all bands that we (a bunch of ancient rock and roll dinosaurs) grew up with.  Not sure if the kids in the audience knew any of these bands. There were some blank stares.  One Indie/Punk rock girl, flipped me off while i was giving my shout out. Indie?  Do you not know the Replacements?  Shame on you!  They're from your home town and they CHANGED MY LIFE!  According to Steve (the promoter), times are tough in the MNPLS music scene.  He's having a harder and harder time getting people out to the gigs, which makes me sad.  I guess I have this fantasy of what it must have been like to live in a city where there were soooo many amazing bands.   In my head, it's like rock and roll mecca.  Or it was.  Things change.  Still makes me sad though.  One of my old bandmates, a native Minnesotan, was there last night.  Haven't hung out with him since Copenhagen in 2005.  He introduced me to Trip Shakespeare a long, long time ago.  We became like the cult of Trip Shakespeare way back.  I saw them a bunch of times in Chicago back in the day.  Looking out at my old pal last night, thinking about Trip Shakespeare, i realized that about 75% of my playbook came from those guys--at least the onstage, crowd interaction irritainment.  Do your homework kids. Gotta get in to get out.   Onwards to Chicago, Muddy Waters adopted hometown.  







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updates from the road #'s 1-5. September 2013 US Tour.

update 1. friday afternoon picked up and packed rental van for the first time--always stressful.  Why is your back pack so huge? What do you got in there?  Extra shoes? dude you're the Imelda Marcos of indie rock.  we decided to just stuff it all in the van, crammed like 4 giant sardines driving frantically across California I 80 to  Gardenrville, NV (reno/tahoe area).  arrived at venue 30 mins late, informed that there was no opening band, people were sitting there waiting for us.  loaded in, sound checked in front of the audience.  kitchen was closed, played 2 set gig on very empty stomaches.  A Lovely fan brought us 2 dozen homemade cupcakes (god bless our fans--you know who you are).  top notch sound man took mercy on us and bought us a pizza for the set break.  small, but very appreciative audience.  every single person bought merch.   one dude paid in nickels and dimes.  band bank account officially no longer overdrawn--thank you!  we ended the gig busking in the audience--with the whole crowd gathered around us in front of the stage.  Dylan on banjo, AG armed with the thankfully not jettisoned acoustic guitar, Art and Cris shaking various tambourines etc..packed the van after the gig with amazing focused team effort, utilizing every nook and cranny.  proud of ourselves that we worked it out like adults.  ate more cupcakes, drank moonshine.  drove 90 minutes to motel.  2.15 am woke up very sleepy disoriented motel clerk.  stuffed 4 guys and 6 guitars into one room for 5 hours sleep.  breakfast and then drove until stopping for class C fireworks and iced lattes and now currently driving through Nevada moonscape eating beef jerky, listening to air supply, bad brains, bob mould, neutral milk hotel, the Kinks and the hobbit soundtrack. mentally preparing for our assault on salt lake city.  

Update 2.  really fun gig last night in SLC at Burt's Tiki Lounge.  (Touring bands take note: killer rock and roll venue.)  We were 3rd of 4 bands.  all the other bands were really great and totally original: Andy Lynner, Swinging Lights and The Watches--all local SLC bands.  What a pleasure.  The crowd obliged us and came forward when asked, sang along and then bought a bunch of merch.  So far merch sales have been really good, thank god.  Everybody seems to really dig the bastardized Pan Am logo Tshirt. We stayed with old friends of the band.  Much liquor was consumed in the kitchen of our very lovely hostess unto the wee hours of the morning.  AG slept in an old airstream trailer in the driveway, rain shower drumming on the trailer's roof. woke up early sunday.  Cristian travels with his own French press, coffee grinder and beans.  so good.  drove about 9 hours to Denver.  Really amazing drive across Utah, Wyoming and Colorado passing through tremendous thunder and lightning.  Looking forward to the show tonight at Quixote's True Blue for lots of old friends and some newly minted Felsen fans. 

Update 3.  Greeting's from the van, driving across the vast open fields of Kansas. We just saw our buddy Wheat Jesus again on a truck stop billboard.   We've seen him now 2 years in a row. What would wheat jesus do?   Thinking now about the fun gig last night at Quixote's True Blue--the official home of Denver's Grateful Dead Hippie Jam Band Scene. Not being much of a jam band, we didn't know what to expect from this one.  It was a really cool venue though with great sound, nice staff.  There were two stages.  Felsen on the smaller of the two, Shakedown Street, a Grateful Dead cover band, on the other, larger stage.  The powers that be gave us about 2 hours for our set.  We've got so much material now that it's a bummer to only get the usual 40-45 minutes typically allotted.   We eased into the first set, not too raucous at first, saving the louder more dramatic stuff for later in the evening.  Some old friends were in the audience, always nice to have a few friendlies there for support.  More people started to wander in during the set.  volume and intensity creeping upwards.  Art's wife flew out from SF and brought in a posse of friends.  people were now on their feet, fists were pumping.  AG climbing from the stage on top of the bar bringing rock and roll to the people.  In the second set we played with a lot of intensity and volume. people seemed to want it.  locals were hanging out and getting into the felsen spirit.  Rock and Roll's not Dead, All You Gotta do is Smile, I Don't Know how to Talk Anymore, Gimme Shelter for the Devil, Tokyo Electric Power, BFF OMG.  People were really into it and amped up!  We finished with the slam dunk of  Don't Turn Your Back on Me Today.  People were screaming for an encore for about 3 minutes.  The powers that be shut us down right on schedule, just in time to get another hippie jam band to take the stage to play covers of Joe Cocker, James Taylor and Phish. We sold a bunch of the new shirts and  CDs--thank you noble patrons of the arts for helping keep the good ship rock afloat to sail another day.  Much sleep was had by the band (thank you Lorazepam), a great breakfast at our fav Denver breakfast spot, Snooze. Making a plan for a return to the mountains next spring for an extended tour in Colorado.  Now driving frantically to get to Wichita.  We'll probably arrive around 9.30 to make our 10.30 set time at Kirby's Beer Store--great tiny venue we played last summer.  You like Mickey's Big Mouth Beer?   Wheat Jesus is watching over us.  So is Vishnu.  

Update #4.  Our van has just been thoroughly Fabreezed.  "What did you do with YOUR life?"    "I invented Fabreeze."  "Table for two?  OK, that'll be a 45 minute wait. Oh, what, you invented Fabreeze?  Well right this way sir."  We're all starting to really feel it now.  We've been drinking too much every night and not sleeping enough. We've slept on the floor a few times each now.  it's catching up.  Being a west coast touring band is tough as everything is so spread out.  It's a totally different game for Northeast bands where everything is so close.  So far getting east has been 8-9 hour drives per day and then you play your set and THEN you want to, or feel you need to, or deserve to drink to just blow off some steam.  I love my bandmates, seriously I do, but I'm a loner primarily and this van is starting to become a cage.  Careful what you wish for kids.  Keep practicing your instruments and showing up on Saturday mornings for your weekly drum lesson and you too will someday get to drive around crammed into a rented minivan with 3 other dudes soaking in Fabreeze. Many are called, most are smart enough to quickly hang up on that desperate late night prank caller.  I took the phone call (remember this was before caller ID).  I drank the Kool Aid. I got hooked and now i'm in the van and I just sprayed Fabreeze in my shoes and I'm contemplating spraying some in my mouth.   Anyhoo... wichita. yeah that was...well a monday night in wichita.  we played the smallest venue in the history of smallest venues to an audience of maybe 8 people.  Highlights:  well I'm stretching here but...ahh... I stood on the bar (right next to the ceiling air conditioning vent)?  We played 2 shorter sets and actually sounded really good.  (Monday night is rehearsal night anyway right?) The owner was there and watched every note, tipped heavily and bought lots of merch.  He's a true believer.  He kept telling us about all the great up and coming bands that played at Kirbys over the years:  Superchunk and Yo La Tengo to name just a few. I think he was trying to console us for the lack of audience and let us know that we're right there with those bands.  There's only one BIG difference: there's a lot fewer crumbs to fight over now in the indie rock biz than there were in the 90's when those now legendary bands were up and comers.  Oh well it was fun and crazy and we got to drink from Mickey's Big Mouth.  Onwards and upwards to Fayetteville Arkansas.  I've never been to Arkansas; for me it's a pilgrimage to Levon Helm's home state. Pilgrims crawl on their knees in Mexico to venerate the saints and the Virgin of Guadalupe.  God bless you Levon, today I'm crawling on my knees.  Rock and Roll's not dead. Thank you Fabreeze. That is all.  

Update #5.  Obviously I've got a lot of time on my hands driving around in the van.  There's been a lot of really long drives on this tour so far.  Yesterday was the first day in about 4 days when we had enough time to eat a second meal.  Yeah, you read that right.  Not three meals, a bunch of these days have been just one meal.  There's no time.  We snack.  I just haven't been eating much in general and not sleeping much either and drinking too much.  Not today.  We need to start behaving so we can make it through this marathon.  

Yesterday was a pretty fun day in Fayetteville, AR.  It's a really neat town.  We played an instore performance at Sound Warehouse. Well, actually an outstore performance as we played on the sidewalk in front of the shop.  When we first walked into the store they were playing our CD.  That felt cool.  All You Gotta Do is Smile.  Sound Warehouse is a really cool store.  You really feel the deep love these guys have for rock and roll music.  God bless them.  Us true believers stick together.  We can sense each other.  We're like the last of the dinosaurs still holding on after the big meteor hit.  It was really fun playing on the street.  The boss's 9 year old daughter was standing right up front for the whole show and she's now our newest, biggest #1 fan in all of Arkansas.  We're starting to take ownership of some of the new tunes:  Tokyo Electric Power, Gunfighting at Dawn and Lorazepam are sounding really good.  We're past the stage where you're thinking about the notes, the chords, the lyrics and just riding the wave where it takes you.  All three of those tunes I've had some real doubts about.  Not sure if they were in fact good live tunes, but they're proving themselves as really solid and compelling live.  Gunfighting can get really deep and angry.  It's about Katrina and the great flood and all those people stranded on the bridge. Shame on us for failing those people. I'm still pissed and it's an easy one to play aggressively. There's a real easy sing along part of the chorus that can get kinda cathartic for people. It's an outlet.  I'd like to think it feels good for the audience to sing that.  Maybe they're still pissed too.  We've really hit our stride musically.  i love that about being on tour.  Obviously playing as much as we have in the past week, but also the collective hangout time has a unifying effect on a band.  Ideally.  You gotta just keep it cool, get along, look out for each other but give each other space, have fun, get stupid but not too stupid and get safely from point A to point B. (That's also good advice for newly weds.)


After the afternoon show, we had time for dinner, checked into our hotel and chilled out a bit.  The tired factor is really starting to kick in.  We played last night at a big club in Fayetteville on a tues night.  Out of town band, first time in town, with no local bands as support. What's up with that you talent buyers? 3x so far on this tour--Do your jobs!!!.  The attendance was pretty grim.  We self medicated pretty heavily on the set break.  Southern hospitality!  The second set was really fun though.  We successfully straddled that fine line between really loose and really tight.  That's rock and roll in a nutshell kids. Mick and Keith, Paul Westerberg and the ghost of Jay Bennet would be proud.  They'd tell us we need a better booking agent though.  We put the handful of people in the audience on the stage with us for about the last 30 minutes of the show.  It felt really great having that extra energy right there with us.  We rocked really hard. It was special.  Playing Ghost of the American Experience in the deep south (tune about Oscar Grant) was pretty interesting.   Onwards to Sioux City.  We'll be driving through Arkansas, Missiouri, Kansas and Iowa.

Thursday, September 12, 2013

punk rock food music lifestyle culture is taking over (take that Starbucks!) by Dylan Brock

When I first started to tour it was 1997. This was the beginning of the loss of Main Street and the opening up of corporate super stores or as I like to call it “The WalMarting of America.” I remember going into small towns and seeing local shops closing down with signs that said “Going out of business.” Often you would also see on the outskirts of town a packed WalMart and next to it would ALWAYS be a Barnes and Noble. As a broke touring indie van band we would sit in those Barnes and Nobles killing time, reading magazines or books waiting for load in.  By 1999/2000 I was pretty burned out on touring, sleeping in our van, begging to do in-stores and sleeping on peoples floors and couches.
I didn’t go out on tour again until 2006. By then everyone had cell phones, GPS, and the band I was out with had some radio success so we actually had hotel rooms, did radio, and signed autographs. It was a lot of fun. I toured with them off and on for about 5 or so years.  
            This leads me up to the Felsen tour that I’m currently on.  The highways haven’t changed much but so far I’m seeing a really interesting trend happening in the towns that we played. Local businesses are opening up again.  People are selling medical marijuana left and right.  Tattoo parlors have a wait list for up to 6 months  and locally owned drip coffee shops are EVERYWHERE (take that Starbucks).  There are still plenty of ApplebeeDennyChilisTGIF’s around but I’m also seeing great restaurants that sell free-range meat, organic fruit and veggies and taking chances with their cuisine like Barbeque Beef Egg Benedict. Over breakfast you can see the new nuclear family: tattooed, pierced couples with a new infant sharing Egg Pot Pie for breakfast.  Bands are even selling vinyl at shows again and record stores are actually opening up! It’s like a punk rock food music lifestyle culture is taking over. Maybe this is the beginning of the revolution that we’ve been waiting for…
 
Love,
 
Dylan Brock
 

Tuesday, September 10, 2013

shut my mouth!

i feel like i've been adrift.  feeling really old, irrelevant, out-dated.  loosing my mojo--maybe i never had much in the first place.  am i past my expiration date like christmas cake and it's the 26th.  i've put myself out in front of a band.  i'm the one the audience interfaces with initially.  i gotta get the party started--that's my job.  i have doubts.  it's easier for beautiful people.  it's a cruel reality of nature.  magnetism.   in my normal offstage day to day life i'm mainly invisible (which i kinda like).  i irritain people.  I bug them, pester them into having fun.  that's my shtick i guess. At least that's the character i've created. However, today i'm feeling ready to create a new character: Ziggy Starbucks and the Slippers from Macys.

i kinda blew my voice out on night 1 of the 17 day tour.  brilliant.  night 2 in SLC was kinda ruff for me vocally.  I felt bad for my bandmates having to hear that shit.  The day after they intervened with hot tea.  They told me to hydrate, rest and keep my mouth shut.  i think this is an elaborate ruse to get the front guy to just shut up in the van. "Save your voice kid".  I've been a sideman for about 30 years.  W'e're always talking about what a pain in the ass the front guy is. i'm really aware of this division of labor.  you feel it.  it's them and me.  i'm a necessary cog in the wheel. The wheel keeps on spinning around and somehow we stay precariously on a path.  not sure if it's the right path though.  not sure what the fuck i'm doing out here traveling across the wheat fields, windfarms and religious and/or triple X superstore billboards of kansas.  

I can be a pro at keeping my mouth shut.  By way of example, my dad taught me well.  If I were a superhero, my super power would be keeping my mouth shut. In fact, I wrote a whole song about this special gift I have been given.

In an exponential way
I get more expert every day that I'm alive, that I'm alive
when all I gotta do 
is keep it chambered up inside
and shut my mouth
for a little while
and learn to smile



enjoy.