Heavy Dates
BOSTON/PROVIDENCE
Of all the blues explosions
detonated by Jon Spencer, my favorite comes on Boss Hog's homonymous
mid-'90s album for Geffen, when he and his wife, Hog frontwoman Cristina
Martinez, trade the volleys once bandied by Ike and Tina Turner on the latter's
"I Idolize You." One of the most overused clichés describing the
interpersonal dynamic of rock bands is that it's akin to an unconsummated
marriage; on "I Idolize You" you get a taste of a utopian scenario in which
people in rock bands suddenly jump into bed together, right there, on the wax.
None of my other favorite modern-day rock couples -- Sonic Youth, Yo La Tengo
-- has come up with so convincing and sassily sweet an ode to commitment, and
certainly none has made monogamy sound so sexy. The joy of listening to Boss
Hog comes from watching Spencer's carefully calibrated semiotic deconstruction
come unwound, or rewound, in his wife's presence until he's actually playing
what he'd merely enclosed in quotes his whole career. The latest Boss Hog
album, a soft-focus funkathon called White Out (In the Red), is even
sweeter: it sounds as if Spencer actually wanted to make his wife a star,
especially on "Get It While You Wait," in which she is draped in the luxurious
baubles of a Tore Johansson production of the type previously worn to Top 40
galas by the Cardigans. Get a glimpse when Boss Hog hit the Middle East (617)
864-3278, in Cambridge, on March 30 and the Met Café (401) 861-2142, in
Providence, on March 31.
Hank Rollins finally gave up the jazzcore fusion of his long-running Rollins
Band and simply anointed a new version for his new Get Some, Go
Again (DreamWorks), which in all but its most excruciatingly dumb moments
comes off as a trifle. But oh, what dumb moments: matching his meathead lunk of
a voice to his young new band's straightforward but excitable take on an old
Thin Lizzy number, or trying his hand at Motörheaded asshole rock, Rollins
finally seems to have found his true calling. And though there's a paucity of
good material on the new album, the fresh blood bodes well if reinvigorated
oldies make their way into the set list. The Rollins Band hits Lupo's
Heartbreak Hotel (401) 272-5876, in Providence, on April 4 and Avalon (617)
423-6398, in Boston, on April 5.
Elsewhere, the most influential heavy-metal band of the decade, Korn,
march into Worcester for two shows at the Centrum (508) 931-2000 on March 30
(sold out) and 31 (damn near). Summer break is still a month away, but
14-year-old blues phenom Shannon Curfman -- who by the nature of her
songs swings closer to Sheryl Crow than to Johnny Lang -- is on a tour that
brings her to the Karma Club (617) 423-6398, in Boston, on March 31 and to
Lupo's on April 1. Elsewhere on April Fool's Day, Eric Bogosian brings
his latest caffeinated monologue, Wake Up And Smell the Coffee, to the
Calvin Theatre (413) 586-8686, in Northampton; and the sublime close-harmony
indie-folk group Ida -- who were, last time we checked, signed to
Capitol but have yet to release an album for the label -- are at the Middle
East.
-- Carly Carioli
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