Heavy Dates
BOSTON/PROVIDENCE
The songs remain the same, but
the lyrics get a Latin overhaul on Christina Aguilera's new
Spanish-language disc, Mi reflejo. The Pittsburgh native and former
Mouseketeer delivers hits including "Genie in a Bottle" ("Genio atrapado") and
the unexpectedly-difficult-to-translate "What a Girl Wants" (which gets watered
down to "Una mujer" -- what was wrong with "Lo que quiera una mujer"?)
alongside a handful of new tunes geared to the burgeoning Ricky Martin market.
Still, it's a risky move: unlike fellow teen queen Britney Spears, Aguilera
didn't immediately sell out her current headlining tour (her first), and
tickets remain for her show at the Tweeter Center, (617) 931-2000, in
Mansfield, on Saturday, even though the outstanding (if unstable) neo-R&B
girl group Destiny's Child are on the opening bill. After Aguilera's
concert, the Tweeter's summer season winds to an end with two sold-out shows by
jam-band kings Phish; if you don't have tickets, there's a concert film,
Bittersweet Motel, due this fall.
The punk label Vagrant is the latest beneficiary of Napster, with the embattled
file-sharing software company ponying up to sponsor two "Vagrant Across
America" tours -- the first of which makes its way here this week as part of
the Worcester Palladium's "Skate 2000" fest, a kind of mini-Warped date. On
Sunday, the Palladium, (508) 797-9696), augments the Vagrant bill -- Face to
Face, Saves the Day, the Alkaline Trio, and A New Found
Glory -- with local punkabillies the Amazing Crowns, Weston,
Reach the Sky, Shai Halud, Shut Down, One King Down, Right Brigade, Sinners
& Saints (a new band comprising members of the Ducky Boys and Blood for
Blood), Stryder and a bunch of participatory skate ramps. (The second
Napster-sponsored Vagrant tour, featuring the Get Up Kids, the Anniversary, and
Koufax, will hit the Palladium in October). You can also catch the Crowns and
Sinners & Saints at Bill's Bar, (617) 421-9678, in Boston, on Friday.
Local mod-pop stars the Pills hit the Green Room, (401) 351-7665, in
Providence, on Friday, then move on the next night to Lilli's, (617) 591-1661,
in Somerville, where they headline the 19th-anniversary party of the
Noise, the unofficial bible of Boston rock, along with femme
punks Heidi and the Sugar Twins.
In guitar-hero land, former Allman Brothers ax man Dickey Betts brings a
solo band to Pearl Street, (413) 584-0610, in Northampton on Tuesday and to
Avalon, (617) 423-6398, in Boston, next Friday, September 15. Mick
Taylor, the Rolling Stones' secret rhythm-guitar weapon on Let It
Bleed and other albums from that era, is at the House of Blues, (617)
491-2583, in Cambridge, on Saturday, as well as at the Stone Coast Brewery,
(207) 773-2337, in Portland, Maine, on Sunday. And latter-day King Crimson
guitarist Trey Gunn (whose eight-string guitar was made by a guy named
Mark Warr -- a little militant, no?) brings a solo band to the Iron Horse,
(413) 584-0610, in Northampton on Tuesday and to the House of Blues a week from
Monday, September 18.
-- Carly Carioli
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