Heavy Dates
by John O'Neill and Carly Carioli
WORCESTER: Friday, October
31 (that's Halloween to you and me, dress accordingly), finds not-so-old pals
the Westies at the Espresso Bar. They'll be lettin' it hang out with
7/10 Split, Edison, and Bullyrag. Ralph's opens the door to the
Blue Moon Saloon for Downchild and a '70s costume party. Laurie
Sargent plays the Blue Buffalo, in Framingham, while Jillian's Billiard
Cafe hosts the first in what should be many thrilling installments of the
Worcester Phoenix Fall Music Series. Boston's Sameasyou kick that
deal off. The Above Club also hosts a costume bash with the Cartridge
Family. Saturday, November 1, finds musical iconoclast Bob Jordan at
the Eco Village Tea Room, while Godsmack get heavy at Sir Morgan's Cove
with Rawhead Rex, Every Second, and Maladdiction -- make that
real heavy. The Space holds a benefit for Food Not Bombs with Piebald,
Frodus, Fat Day, and Battle of the Network Stars, while
Boston's kingpins of rockabilly, the Crank-Tones, tear it up at Dinny's
with the Fearless Leaders. Sunday, November 2, is round three in the
Palladium's Rock Fight with Groove Works, Cream Team, Shortfuse,
and Low Interval Unit vying for supremacy under the big disco ball,
while Monday the 3rd brings Lollapalooza alumni Fishbone to our sleepy
hamlet. They'll be at Sir Morgan's Cove with Chillum and Super Creb
Star Dynomax. Chick Corea and Gary Burton kick off the Mass Jazz Festival
at Mechanics Hall on Wednesday, November 5. Finally, on Thursday the 6th,
Feces Pieces play Sir Moran's Cove. We know nothing about them, but the
name alone made it a must-mention. Beyond that, caveat emptor.
BOSTON/PROVIDENCE: We're Solids (Suicide Squeeze/Up!), the new
seven-song EP by the Seattle guitar-drums duo 764-HERO, offers lots of
great smashed-relationship, dulled-heart detritus like "I can get ya up but I
won't bother/Anyway, you wonder if you'll get to the point where no one's worth
having around." John Atkins (the guitar/vox half) plays the tortured
ex-boyfriend guy as emocore-boy trying really hard not to scream, and he's got
the melodically depressoid, angst-damaged, indie-scrawl anti-chops to back it
up. ("Slint out-mope the Cure" is a felonious overgeneralization, but you get
the idea.) One-upping Bob Mould on Hüsker Dü's "Hardly Getting Over
It" is Atkins on the final, acoustic "Stutter Steps": "Getting over it is
overrated." The Heroes are on a tour with labelmates Modest Mouse -- who
play guitar in the zithery manner of sparkplugs exploding -- that brings them
to the Middle East (617-864-3278), in Cambridge, with Wicked Farleys and
the Puddle Jumpers tonight (October 30), and the Met Café
(401-861-2142), in Providence, on November 3.
The Jesus Lizard's second album for Capitol (produced by Gang of
Four's
Andy Gill) is in the can and will hit stores next spring; in the meantime,
they're doing a string of dates with new labelmates Verbena that stops
at the Middle East in Cambridge on November 1 with Quintaine Americana and
November 4 at the Met Café. Stereolab bring the German duo Mouse on
Mars -- who produced a couple of tracks on Stereolab's Dots and
Loops (Elektra) and have used that group's Laetitia Sadier and Mary Hansen
on vocals in the past -- for several dates, including an all-ages show at
Lupo's Heartbreak Hotel (401-331-2211), in Providence, on November 6 and the
Paradise (617-562-8800), in Boston, on November 7.
You can take a field trip to check out one of Olympia's most talked-about
bands, the Need, an electro-punk tag team with a new debut --
Need -- out on Chainsaw. They'll play an all-ages matinee this Sunday
afternoon, November 2, at the Smith College Field House, then haul ass to make
it to Ryles (617-876-9300) by nightfall.
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