Heavy Dates
WORCESTER
Heavy dates
More than a few people think John Brown Body's This Day
(Shanachie) is one of the best non-Jamaican-produced reggae albums ever. The
band will be joined by Hubinger Street on Thursday at the Tammany Club.
On Friday, Señor Happy bring their moody melodic repertoire to
the Lucky Dog Music Hall, where they share the stage with Seven Hill
Psychos, Allagash 4, and Ho Ka Ha. The same night, the Palladium
continues mixing the crowds with Little Feat and Jiggle (formerly
Jiggle the Handle) sharing the building with Boston punksters the Ducky
Boys, Boston Rock and Roll Rumble winners Darkbuster, the River
City Rebels, Kicked in the Head, and the A-Team. Also on Friday, the
New York Punk Rock Appreciation Society convenes with Triple XXX, the
Ballbusters, Mad Haleene, and Cocktailica at the Above Club,
where on Saturday, you can dance all night to the ambient music of Hawks and
Doves. Valerie and Walter Crockett celebrate the release of
Emily's Angel this Saturday at the Green Rooster Coffeehouse, while two
great songwriters and guitar players -- Jim Henry and Maria
Sangiolo -- share the stage at the Steeple Coffeehouse in Southborough.
Also on Saturday, Vibrotica celebrate the release of Neverbend at
the Lucky Dog with help from Boston's Miss Fortune, whose self-titled
debut on What Kinda Records belongs in every pop-music fan's collection, while
the Free Radicals return to Ralph's. Martin Sexton wrote most of
his new CD, Wonder Bar at the Shrewsbury Street eatery. He'll probably
devour one of the Dagnellos' legendary pizzas before going over to the WPI
Coffeehouse for a show on Tuesday night..
BOSTON/PROVIDENCE
Yes, fronting Extreme was a big
deal. And yes, you could argue that fronting Van Halen was an even bigger deal.
But the VH gig had to have come as at least a little bit of a letdown when you
consider Gary Cherone's interim gig -- the one where he got to play the
lead in the Boston Rock Opera's production of Jesus Christ
Superstar. A few years later, we began to wonder whether he hadn't
taken the role too seriously. There was that weird, elliptical "open letter" to
Eddie Vedder, in which he took the Pearl Jam frontman to task for espousing
pro-choice views. Worse, his comments were published on a anti-abortion Web
site that appeared to be a front for some unsavory radical-conservative groups.
This year, as the Boston Rock Opera revives Superstar, Cherone's back in
the cast -- this time forsaking his Lord for the role of Judas. Goth-pop hottie
Valerie Forgione, of Mistle Thrush, steps in as Mary Magdalene, the role
played previously by Letters to Cleo's Kay Hanley; Chris Mascara, of
Mascara, has the title role. Jesus Christ Superstar runs November 9
through 18 at Mass College of Art's Tower Auditorium, (617) 423-6398, in
Boston. Meanwhile, Cherone's old buddy Nuno Bettencourt, the cute and talented
guitar-playing one, has a band with the woefully sad moniker Mourning Widows
(what, no umlaut?!) who've been steering clear of Boston in favor of
suburban hair-metal pockets like West Warwick, Rhode Island and releasing
records only in places where people might appreciate them, like Japan. On
Wednesday, though, Mourning Widows are at Axis, (617) 423-6398, in Boston.
Rarely has stoner rock been quite so obvious as that made by Sea of Green
-- three bearded quasi-neo-wasteoid types with one hand up Fu Manchu's ass
and another stoking the bong. They're formulaic, generic, utterly disposable,
fifth-or sixth-rate Sabbath -- of course, we're totally there anyway, because
we're pigs for this stuff. On November 2, Sea of Green hit the Linwood
Grill, (617) 267-8644, in Boston. Slightly higher on the tokin' totem pole sit
Nebula, an offshoot of the original Fu Manchu line-up. Nebula began as
an even better Kyuss ripoff than their old band, and they've progressed over
several albums and EPs to become an even better Mudhoney ripoff than Mudhoney
these days. On November 3, they're at the Middle East, (617) 864-3278, in
Cambridge, with Roadsaw, the local warhorses who helped kick off the
Sabbath revival and are huge in Europe, and Warhorse, a local group
who're beginning to be touted as stoner rock's next big thing. Having
transcended the stoner universe for wider appreciation, former Kyuss leader
Josh Homme's Queens of the Stone Age are back opening for Dave Grohl's
Foo Fighters at the Palladium, (508) 797-9696, in Worcester on
Wednesday.
Just back from a couple of shows at NYC's CMJ Music Marathon, where they once
again busted out an epic, noggin-shearing cover of "Dazed and Confused,"
Cave In resume contact with ground control at Lilli's, (617) 591-1661,
in Somerville on Wednesday with the Cancer Conspiracy, a menacing and
measured instrumental outfit who are the latest space-metal oddity to emerge
from the Cave In-Isis-Converge axis. Cave In are also on the Palladium's
day-long "Rockstock" bill with the Sheila Divine, Six Going On
Seven, the Quicksand offshoot Rival Schools United by Fate, and a
half-dozen others on Sunday. And the best punk band to call Boston home, the
Explosion, have yet another new release -- this time an EP on Revelation
-- and a couple of Boston gigs, November 2 at the School of the Museum of Fine
Arts, (617) 267-9300, with the Lot Six, and next Thursday at Bill's Bar,
(617) 421-9678, with Sinners & Saints and Le Shok
-- Carly Carioli
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