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Discover Salt Lake magazine’s music section. Here you’ll find previews and reviews of upcoming local concerts and performances in Salt Lake City, along the Wasatch Front and Back, and around Utah to help you discover great live music and events.

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Interview: Pixies Reflect on Their Alt-Rock Legacy Ahead of Kilby Block Party

By Kilby Block Party, Music

There’s no mistaking the blunt force melody of the Pixies, as singular a sound as ever committed in seven decades of rock n’ roll. Formed in Boston by college pals in the waning ‘80s, the band, originally consisting of Black Francis aka Frank Black (pseudonyms of singer/guitarist Charles Thompson), guitarist Joey Santiago, bassist/vocalist Kim Deal, and drummer David Lovering, the foursome hooked anti-pop idiosyncrasy around limber reverb and distortion to escape teeth first from a cultural big bang that would spit out fresh worlds of alternative rock, hip hop, metal, No Depression country music, and electronica. 

Maybe the Pixies didn’t reinvent fire, but they certainly found new ways to burn across four exceptional full-lengths (no strings being pulled on the vanguard “Come On Pilgrim” EP) that inspired a subsequent legion of artists. Sadly, the center couldn’t hold, and the band broke up in 1993 with members fending off calls for a reunion amid other pursuits.

David Lovering, who post-Pixies continued to drum off and on with Frank Black and Santiago (in The Martinis) as well as for Cracker and various others, found a second life in the realm of magic and illusion, reinventing himself as a scientific phenomenalist who combined a background in electrical engineering with performance art and comedy. 

“With the Pixies, I’m behind a drum set and I’m behind three people, and I’ve never had a problem with that,” Lovering said in a mid-April interview. “My first magic show was just myself and 10 people– and I could’ve wrung my t-shirt out and filled a Dixie cup with the sweat because it was nerve-wracking! But magic has been wonderful because it builds confidence. The years that I’ve done it, you’re dealing one on one with people and it just changes you. I could do public speaking now at a whim, it’s just the easiest thing in the world and it’s all because of magic. I’m very grateful to it.”

In 2004, the Pixies announced their return with a tour culminating in a 20-song set at the Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival in Indio, California that mined cuts from the four seminal albums “Surfer Rosa” (1988), “Doolittle” (1989), “Bossanova” (1990) and “Trompe Le Monde” (1991).

“I think when we got back together then in 2004, there was a lot of discussion of the way this was going to be for one tour, this and that, and it kept going—and it kept going. We had just been going on our old laurels,” said Lovering, 19 years after the Pixies reformed. “We’d been playing the old material for seven years, and it got us thinking. I think the epiphany in 2011 was, “Wow, we can’t do this anymore. We have to do something new. And that’s how “Indie Cindy” came about.”

Initially released as a series of EPs, “Indie Cindy” resurrected the Pixies as creators, this time without Deal, to prove themselves amid an alt-rock landscape they’d pioneered in another century.

“People talk of pressure and I think that we had some internal pressure just thinking about it, you’re thinking, ‘Oh, jeez, this album’s gotta be as good as the last one we did!’ So there was that,” Lovering said. “But there was no formulation. I’m not saying we didn’t put our best forward, but there wasn’t anything to upstage it. There wasn’t a conscious effort to make it better than what we had or to go back and top that. It was just what we were doing at that point.”

The band recalibrated in 2016 with the album “Head Carrier” (so named for decapitated martyr St. Denis), adding soon-to-be-permanent bassist Paz Lenchantin (A Perfect Circle, Silver Jews, Jenny Lewis) as well as producer Tom Dalgety into the mix.

 “Paz is a fantastic player, she’s a great musician, just a great person overall– wonderful to be around,” Lovering said. “She’s so good, she makes me step up my game and play better because I don’t want to be embarrassed. It was a nice breath of something new, and I think we were jokingly calling it “Pixies Version 2.0” or something like that, but it’s been fantastic. She’s definitely given everyone—because she is younger—a spark.

 “Beneath The Eyrie” followed in 2019, along with what was supposed to be a globe-spanning tour. But COVID-19 and the ensuing pandemic sent the Pixies home, grounded but not necessarily uncertain. For Lovering, the unexpected break provided an opportunity for carpal tunnel surgery on both hands, which in addition to rejuvenating his drumming also provided enhanced dexterity for the magician’s ever-improving card tricks and sleight of hand.

 “Doggerel,” the Pixies’ latest effort, could be their strongest post-reunion album to date. Realized through a combination of quarantine tracking and sessions at Vermont’s Guilford Sound, “Doggerel” is this incarnation at their most mature and fluid. Santiago has called the record “Doolittle Senior,” though tracks like “Nomatterday”, “Vault of Heaven”, “Haunted House,” and the Leonard Cohen-dipped title track evoke classic Pixies mythology without recycling. This isn’t nostalgia; it’s experience.

“We all played very, very well on [“Doggerel”]. I think that’s Joey’s comment, why it was like ‘Doolittle.’ And I think that the song content that Charles came up with is exceptional. I think that “Doggerel” stands out (as) different than all the albums from after the reformation,” said Lovering. “We’re getting older. Not all music that we’re going to do is going to be heralded back to what we’ve done in the past, but it’s where we are in our lives. We’re better musicians, and I think that showed, especially with a producer [Tom Dalgety], who now is working with us for a third album, who knows us.”

As the Pixies prepare for their latest tour, Lovering is excited to share “Doggerel,” but equally energized by the challenge of playing no set list shows that will pull from every pocket of the band’s catalog.

“I think we’ve perfected it,” said Lovering of the no set list approach. “We call it our schtick because we know what the first song is and our soundman knows what the first song is and our lighting director knows what the first song is. After that, it’s all just by Charles and us with hand signals or him talking to a microphone that we only hear. We’re able to coordinate the show and work it and go through songs, and I must admit it’s fun. You don’t know when the set’s going to end!”

But Lovering’s true joy comes from seeing the band’s unfolding legacy reflected in the new (and growing) generation of Pixies fans.

“Back in 2004 when we played Coachella, it was a sea of kids that weren’t even born, probably, when we were originally a band—but they knew all the words,” Lovering said with a laugh. “When I look at our audience before the doors open, it’s a sea of kids that are 15, 16, 17, 18, and going up from there. And they’re waiting to get in for general admission to get in that front row! To see a whole front row with kids in there, that know all the words to the new material—and people my age are in the back waiting for all the old stuff, it’s something else to see. That’s our audience now, and I feel very fortunate as a band to have it. I feel like we’re the Grateful Dead of alternative rock.”


The Pixies are coming to Salt Lake for the Kilby Block Party May 12-14, see the full lineup here.

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Review: The Shook Twins & Daniel Rodriguez–Bloom Tour Spring 2023 

By Arts & Culture, Music

Nothing says spring quite like a golden egg and an elephant’s revival. That was the scene at The State Room on Friday night. The Shook Twins, sporting their signature eggs, mesmerized the crowd with their hypnotic, siren vocals. Co-headliner, and former front man of Elephant Revival, Daniel Rodriguez warmed our hearts with transcendental folk ballads. He opened the show with “Through The Static,” a new song off his recently released album Vast Nothing. His 11-song set included deeper cuts from his growing catalog of post-Elephant Revival music. 

Rodriguez finds his muse in many places. For example,“Delores” is a love song about a river, not a woman. He shared a story about traveling through Southwest Colorado one summer, in an old Mitsubishi with a broken A/C. The river – Delores – beckoned. Instead of stopping and refreshing himself in her cool water, he wrote her a song. “Delores I come to you broken and bruised/ it’s in your embrace I soak and I soothe/ to heal and mend these wounds.”  With “Johnny” he took us to the borderlands and featured fine drum, bass, and trumpet solos from his backing band. The crowd sang along to his final two numbers, an unexpected cover of Springsteen’s “Atlantic City,” and “Sing to the Mountain” from his Elephant Revival catalog.

Photo credit Sam Crump

The Shook Twins began their full, 17-song set on stage alongside their signature, large golden eggs. The twins, Katelyn on guitar and vocals, and Laurie on banjo and vocals, were backed by Niko Slice on guitar, Aber Miller on bass and keyboards, and Alex Radakovich on drums. They opened with the slow-building, trippy cadence and alluring twin-harmonies featured in “No Choice” from their 2019 album Some Good Lives. 

The State Room audience were treated to a sneak-peak of the twins’ newest music. They are using their aptly named Bloom Tour to beta-test new material before retreating into the studio later this year. In all, they played 4 soon-to-be recorded songs and a reworked, older tune, “Time to Swim,” mixing rap with ethereal, siren-like vocals. The Shook Twins are evolving as they experiment with vocal syncopation and other sonic textures like telephone mic distortion. Their early acoustic guitar and banjo folk sound has morphed into indie-pop-folk with electronica overtones. 

The crowd joined into an impromptu singalong when The Shook Twins covered Whitney Houston’s pop-anthem “I Wanna Dance With Somebody.” Their perfectly balanced harmonies gave the ‘80s hit a rootsy restoration. They followed that anthem with a cover of an obscure Elephant Revival song “In Love and Rage” (which I hope they plan to record with Daniel Rodriguez).  

Photo credit Sam Crump

Entering the homestretch, the entire ensemble took the stage for “Safe.” Rodriguez took lead vocals on his Elephant Revival song “Grace of a Woman” followed by the twins taking over for a few verses of 4 Non Blondes’ “What’s Up?” For an encore, The Shook Twins serenaded us with their post-apocalyptic song “Shake,” a song that would provide a perfect soundtrack for an episode of The Last of Us.

Rodriguez and The Shook Twins were in full Bloom playing familiar favorites alongside some new music and a few well-selected covers. It truly was a Good Friday.

Who: The Shook Twins and Daniel Rodriguez

What: Bloom Tour

Where: The State Room

When: April 7, 2023


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Preview: The Shook Twins & Daniel Rodriguez–Bloom Tour Spring 2023 

By Arts & Culture, Music

In Greek mythology, Sirens use their hypnotic songs to lure sailors to their death on rocky shores. Like those mythic sisters, the Shook Twins captivate audiences with their harmonies. But instead of suffering the sea goers’ fate, they are nourished with life-affirming songs, ethereal vocals, and other-worldly rhythms. The Shook Twins will drop-ship Friday, April 7, 2023 at The State Room.

Originally from Sandpoint, Idaho, identical twins, Katelyn and Laurie Shook, blend folk and bluegrass with pop overtones to create a trippy, intermountain newgrass sound. It’s where the Rocky Mountain high meets the West Coast chill. One of their latest tunes, “Stay Wild,” blends an herbal mellowness with a smooth, retro disco groove. The song makes you want to stay wild without venturing too close to the edge. In “Safe,” their voices blend perfectly with a soothing strum of an acoustic guitar, punctuated with banjo inflections to create a hypnotically-induced safe space. It’s like musical therapy. 

Katelyn, on guitar and vocals, and Laurie, on banjo and vocals (aka the Shook Twins), occasionally tour as a duo, but for the upcoming tour, they’ve added multi-instrumentalist and co-collaborator Niko (Slice) Daousiss and others to the mix. Joining them on stage is a magical golden egg (which also serves as a percussion instrument) that symbolizes their music and serves as a metaphor for their identical-twins-one-eggness.

Co-headlining the show is Daniel Rodriguez, former founding member and singer/songwriter of the transcendental folk band Elephant Revival. Rodriguez wrote and performed lead vocals for such classics as “Birds and Stars” and “Sing to the Mountain.” When the band took a hiatus in 2018 (a gentle way of saying they broke up), Rodriguez launched his solo career. Transitioning from the orchestral sound of Elephant Revival to a more stripped-down acoustic resonance was a tall order, but with his 2020 single “Colorado,” he didn’t drift too far from his musical roots. I can still hear the rumble of the elephant in his work.

In his second, recently-released, full-length album, Vast Nothing, Rodriguez offers us a full dose of lyrically beautiful folk that conjures up simple, romantic gestures. He cuts “Through the Static” with lyrics like “love letters under a magnet on the fridge.”  On “Mixtape” he tries to “keep the music playing like a mixtape/ keep the vibe rolling down the freeway/ keep the morals high.”

Seeing the Shook Twins and Daniel Rodriguez co-headline on The State Room stage on April 7, 2023 will be your chance to channel your inner hippy for a few hours and indulge in some soul-soothing musical meditation. I’m going to the pre-show at The Bayou and pair this mountain newgrass with an In The Pines hazy IPA from Level Crossing.

Fans of Elephant Revival, Rising Appalachia, Tegan and Sara, Lucius, John Craigie, Lumineers, First Aid Kit, and Gregory Alan Isakov won’t want to miss this show.

Who: The Shook Twins and Daniel Rodriguez

What: Bloom Tour

Where: The State Room

When: April 7, 2023

Tickets and info:https://thestateroompresents.com/state-room-presents/shook-twins-daniel-rodriguez


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Preview: Fort Desolation Fest–Music + Adventure Travel Festival

By Music

The third annual Fort Desolation Fest is back June 8-10, 2023 offering attendees three days to explore the Capitol Reef National Park area and three nights to enjoy a great lineup of music in the red rocks of Cougar Ridge Resort in Torrey, Utah. 

This is a small festival with world-class performers. The event is limited in capacity, so festivalgoers may enjoy the music in a more intimate setting.

This year’s lineup is an eclectic mix of American roots music including:

  • Ben Harper & The Innocent Criminals
  • Shakey Graves
  • The White Buffalo
  • Morgan Wade
  • Houndmouth
  • Jamestown Revival
  • Madison Cunningham
  • The Brothers Comatose
  • Parker Millsap
  • Pixie & The Partygrass Boys.

This is why we suffer through winter (except those of you who are ski enthusiasts). In the summer we get to enjoy evenings like this, watching the sun set over the red rocks while Jamestown Revival fills the night air with their beautiful harmonies. Of course rocking out to Houndmouth is pretty amazing too or dancing to the newgrass sound of The Brothers Comatose and local favorite Pixie and The Party Grass Boys. 

I missed seeing Morgan Wade when she sold out The Commonwealth Room recently and both Parker Millsap and The White Buffalo have been on my “must see” radar for awhile now. I’m just discovering Madison Cunningham. Of course,  Shakey Graves and Ben Harper have permeated my playlists for years. I love the festival’s balance of rock, folk, country, bluegrass, blues, and funk. 

The on-site campground is just a short walk from the stage, but camping spots sell out fast. So don’t wait too long to book your spot (or tickets). For indoorsy folk like me there’s also plenty of lodging in and around Torrey. But then you might miss the most anticipated moment of the festival, the surprise appearance by one of the festival performers on the after hour stage. Who will it be this year? 

Here’s a Spotify Playlist to get you ready to rock. 

What: Fort Desolation Fest

Where: Cougar Ridge Resort in Torrey, UT

When: June 8-10, 2023

Tickets and info: https://fortdesolation.com/fest


Festival season is right around the corner! Check out the lineup for 2023 Twilight Concert Series here.

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Review: Chappell Roan–Naked In North America tour

By Arts & Culture, Music

Chappell Roan created a buzz in the Beehive State when concert goers, dressed in their jammies and pink cowboy hats, queued up for blocks, in freezing temperatures, waiting for the doors to open at Soundwell on Thursday night. 

Fans packed the venue for her all-ages, pajama party pop show. In whacky Utah form, the venue corralled wristbanded patrons, who desired an adult beverage, into a makeshift bar area at the rear of the concert space—a special place I like to think of as “Spirit Prison” (and spirits weren’t even on sale. Beer and cider only, though they did have an acceptable beer selection.) Forgive the rant, but inconsistent, unreasonable laws make me crazy. For example, I recently attended an all-ages show at The Union Event Center—a venue that sports full bar(s) and no Spirit Prison. After two decades in Utah, I still bristle against the intrusive and incoherent big-government liquor laws. Okay, breathe! The banishment didn’t disrupt my sight lines in this small, intimate venue.

Roan transformed the Soundwell into the Pink Pony Club, a good natured, energetic space where people gathered to celebrate campy burlesque. A drag queen trio, Veronika DaVil, Sally Cone Slopes, and Jenna Talia, opened the show lip-syncing and prancing to popular tunes like Lady Gaga’s “Bad Romance.” The three queens dealt a winning hand as the pajama clad crowd danced along and celebrated an evening of freedom of expression and inclusion. Toto, I’ve a feeling we’re not in St. George anymore.

Roan is a “Femininomenon.” Recently dropped by Atlantic Records, the 24-year old Missourian found her voice as an independent artist promoting her songs and videos on sites like TikTok and YouTube. Roan’s use of music streaming platforms like Spotify, coupled with video sharing outlets like TikTok, has earned her legions of fans. She worked with producer and songwriter Dan Nigro to record a string of playful yet gritty songs, most of which went viral. As her fan base grew, she worked out her stage show opening for Olivia Rodrigo and Fletcher in 2022. Then, with only an EP and a handful of singles to her musical credit, she boldly hit the road as a headliner. Most bands tour to promote their release of a new album. Roan’s Naked in North America tour has sold-out across the country on the strength of several recently released singles. Nevertheless, on Thursday night, she played a full 13-song set that featured many unreleased tunes. But, her fans already knew her music. When she opened with her internet hit, “Naked in Manhattan,” the 600+ crowd sang along to every word. 

Her art resonates with young adults today, much like those who came of age in the mid 1990s listening to Alanis Morissette sing her hell-hath-no-fury anthems. So, given my late-boomer status, I was stoked when Roan covered Morissette’s “You Oughta Know.” Her version exploded with all the angst and intensity of the original. It felt like the torch had passed. Considering Roan was born three years after Morissette released it, “You Oughta Know” is a song with staying power. Wronged lovers are still “here to remind you.” Roan’s three-piece band nailed it. They provided a wall of sound all night with only a drum, bass and guitar. 

The audience sang along, reaching a crescendo when Roan played her recent hits, “Casual” and “My Kink is Karma.” In cheerleader fashion, she taught the crowd moves to her yet to be released song, “Hot To Go.” Think Village People’s “YMCA” – but in this case, the audience spelled out “H-O-T-T-O-G-O.” A video of her performance (from a show two weeks ago) is already on YouTube and the song hasn’t even been officially released. 

For her encore she came out wearing her signature pink cowboy hat and sang “California” before ending the show with,“Pink Pony Club.” She said the song was about a club in West Hollywood, but Thursday, it was in Salt Lake City. Roan, her band, and the audience sounded great, thanks to the club’s acoustics. The venue lived up to its name, Soundwell. 

Roan is a self-described thrift store pop star, a Do-It-Yourself Taylor Swift, but more dark and edgy –a thrifty Swifty (If I dare coin the term.) She’ll be selling out bigger venues soon enough (but probably not crashing Ticketmaster quite yet). She’s an artist on the rise. Her sold-out performances, a growing, adoring fan base, drag queen openers, and her social media skills spell success for Chappell Roan. I’m glad I saw her in a smaller, intimate space even if I had to do time in Utah’s Spirit Prison while I was there. Unfortunately, I was overdressed for the occasion. But, if I wore MY sleepwear to the Naked in North America show, I’d probably end up in actual prison.

Who: Chappell Roan

What: Naked In North America tour

Where: Soundwell

When: Thursday, March 9, 2023


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Review: Paul Cauthen Country Coming Down Tour 

By Arts & Culture, Music

Paul Cauthen greeted a packed house at The Union Event Center on Friday night by flipping-off his critics who doubted he’d make any money with his “uptown country” style. He started his show with “F*** You Money” which reminded skeptic that “Now my show sellin’ out on tour.” That settled, he delighted the crowd with his genre-fluid music. Indeed it was “Country as F***.”  He wailed, “You ain’t country enough. Make my own definition, bent the system, ‘bout to start a new religion. Call it country–country as F***.” 

He celebrated his success in his larger-than-life style with “Champagne and a Limo.” In Beverly Hillbillies fashion, he poked fun at someone like him joining an exclusive country club with “Country Clubbin’.” He crooned, “Champagne, shuffleboard rednecks on the tennis court.” Given his cocaine and whiskey approach to life and his frequent use of the F-bomb (it’s embedded in several of his songs) I found it odd that this was an all-ages show–especially in Utah!

He down-shifted a bit to play a few serious songs about the dangers of a hard-partying lifestyle in “Slow Down” and “Prayed For Rain.” His deep “Big Velvet” voice is tailor-made for outlaw country, but he can also knock out a soulful ballad. Cauthen gave us a sneak peak of some new material when he played a song he just recorded at Muscle Shoals Studio. 

He played a solid 16-song set covering a good array of his growing catalog of great material. He ended with his singalong signature hit “Cocaine Country Dancing.” Uncharacteristically, the show ended without an encore. He played a full-set, though I still hoped for more when the lights came up and signaled it was time to go.

Cauthen fashions his country music with elements of other musical styles like disco. With “Freaks” he gave us a little bit of country-funk (if you can imagine it.) He and his full band took the stage to hip-hop music reflecting his willingness to cross the musical and cultural divide. The late-announced local opener, Lapdog, played a five-song set of cool, ‘70s jazzy yacht rock with extended trippy jams. That wasn’t exactly what you’d expect for a country headliner show. I’m sure some of the cul-de-sac cowboys in the audience didn’t quite get it. Nevertheless, I really enjoyed the whole experience. Cauthen isn’t afraid to cross-pollinate all that is great about American music: country, jazz, blues, rock, funk, and hip hop. Friday night it all worked to perfection.

Who: Paul Cauthen

What: The State Room and Postfontaine Presents: Paul Cauthen’s Country Coming Down Tour

Where: The Union Event Center

When: Friday, March 3, 2023


Chappell Roan, a self-described thrift store pop star, is performing at Soundwell on Thursday, March 9, 2023 in support of her sold-out Naked In North America tour. Read John’s show preview here!

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Preview: Chappell Roan–Naked In North America tour

By Arts & Culture, Music

Chappell Roan, a self-described thrift store pop star, will transform Soundwell into her “Pink Pony Club” on Thursday, March 9, 2023 in support of her sold-out Naked In North America tour. Tickets may still be available on the secondary ticket market. 

Roan skyrocketed to success in 2022 with a series of hit singles. Her first release, “Naked in Manhattan,” channels Katy Perry’s “I Kissed A Girl,” and adds an early 80s new-wave disco-pop beat. On “My Kink is Karma” she delights in the malicious joy of watching an ex-lover struggle post-breakup. She sings “People say I’m jealous, but my kink is watching you crashing your car, you breaking your heart, you thinking I care. People think I’m jealous, but my kink is karma.”

She teed up her latest single, “Casual,” on TikTok ahead of the song’s release to create a viral buzz. It worked. Her song about the pitfalls of a “situationship” made Billboard’s list of top 100 songs of 2022. With a sold-out tour, four well-received singles, and a full-length debut album due out sometime in the spring, Roan is riding a wave of success she’s been carefully building over the past few years. 

“Die Young,” an original composition she posted on YouTube when she was 17, went viral and landed her a recording contract with Atlantic Records. Then she left her rural Missouri home for Los Angeles to pursue a pop music career. Despite her powerful vocals, the melancholy ballads on her 2017 EP School Nights just didn’t find her audience and in 2020, Atlantic Records ended their affiliation with her just as she started to fine-tune her sound with “Pink Pony Club,” a catchy number with all the camp you’d expect from a song about a go-go dancer at a gay West-Hollywood cabaret. 

Cut loose from Atlantic Records, Roan found herself adrift just as the global pandemic took hold. Without the moorings of a major record label team to guide her, Roan needed to figure out how to proceed as a Do-It-Yourself, independent artist. She found herself back where she started as a teenager–on the Internet–trying to gain a following on TikTok and other platforms. The Atlantic Records experience brought talented people into her orbit like Grammy-winning songwriter and record producer Dan Nigro. Writing songs with Nigro helped Roan build on the success of “Pink Pony Club” and find her independent voice. 

From a period of darkness and uncertainty, Roan emerged with what she calls “slumber party pop.” She blends color, campiness, and pageantry into her infectious disco-pop sound. I plan to catch this rising star when she brings her Naked In North America tour to Soundwell on March 9, 2023. I’m looking forward to the glitter and glam. 

Who: Chappell Roan

What: Naked In North America tour

Where: Soundwell

When: Thursday, March 9, 2023

Tickets and info: https://soundwellslc.com, www.postfontaine.com


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Album Review: Dawes’ ‘Misadventures of Doomscroller’

By Arts & Culture, Music

If you want to know how the current Dawes album, “Misadventures of Doomscroller,’ is different from the band’s previous seven albums, think about comparing Frank Zappa to the Rolling Stones or R.E.M.

“I think so much, especially with our kind of music, our scene, there’s all this talk of restraint and there’s all this talk of economy,” Dawes singer/guitarist and main songwriter Taylor Goldsmith observed in a recent phone interview. “Sometimes you’ll hear these records by these monster guitar players or monster musicians and there’s no evidence of that. While I really applaud that when the song calls for that because I think that’s the height of taste, I also think when you can, cut loose, I want to hear it.”

Dawes doesn’t sound like the Rolling Stones or R.E.M. – and no one has ever sounded quite like Zappa. But especially like R.E.M. (a band Goldsmith considers a major influence), Dawes on album has kept songs concise and saved the soloing and improvisation for their live shows.

But when the pandemic hit, Goldsmith and his bandmates, drummer and brother Griffin Goldsmith, bassist Wylie Gelber and keyboardist Lee Pardini, decided for “Misadventures of Doomscroller” to throw out their rule book and take musical liberties they had always eschewed on earlier albums.

“I think a big part of it was just the pandemic shutting everything down and us feeling like who knows if tours will ever come back. If that’s the case, let’s make sure to make the music on our terms,” Goldsmith said. “So we felt we should start embracing this part of us that we maybe felt like we weren’t allowed to express (on studio albums).”

Then there was also the Zappa factor.

 “I think a big discovery for me right before we recorded this album was Frank Zappa, and that, I think was a big catalyst for making this possible in my own brain,” Goldsmith said. “I felt like I was given permission…In listening to Zappa, oh, he’s doing everything he wants and everything he can and he’s really exploring the instrument and experimenting himself and it’s so fun. He’s taking excellence to the extent that he’s capable.

“Now it’s like instead of doing the least amount possible to see if it works, let’s do the most amount possible and see if it still works,” he said.

The seven songs on “Misadventures of Doomscroller” work well indeed. The album opens emphatically with the near-10-minute opus “Someone Else’s Café/Doomscroller Tries To Relax.” Greeting the listener with a snazzy chiming guitar hook, the song features an instrumental segment that moves from jazz-tinged edginess into a fluid guitar solo that introduces the downright pretty second half of the track. Far from feeling jammy, every note of “Someone Else’s Café/Doomscroller Tries To Relax” feels intentional and integral to a song that earns its generous length. The same can be said of other lengthy songs: “Everything Is Permanent,” “Ghost in the Machine” and “The Sound That No One Made/Doomscroller Sunrise.”  

Dawes certainly had built up enough experience playing together and exploring various sonic directions to make good on the ambitious plans for “Misadventures of Doomscroller,” which has recently gotten the deluxe reissue treatment with a full live performance of the album.

Dawes grew out of the post-punk-leaning band Simon Dawes after the 2007 departure of Goldsmith’s songwriting partner Blake Mills. As Dawes, the group pivoted to their familiar folk-rock sound with their 2009 debut album “North Hills.”

The band continued to develop their sound over the next three albums, before taking an adventurous sonic turn on the 2016 album “We’re All Gonna Die.” With Mills producing, the band incorporated a variety of synthesizers and other synthetic elements into the songs, bringing more of an edgy pop-rock accent to their songs without losing their signature folk-pop sound. The 2018 album “Passwords,” continued in a similar vein before the band returned to a more organic sound on the 2020 album “Good Luck With Whatever.” 

Dawes certainly had built up enough experience playing together and exploring various sonic directions to make good on the ambitious plans for “Misadventures of Doomscroller,” which has recently gotten the deluxe reissue treatment with the original album supplemented by a full live performance of the album.

“We’ll definitely go deep into our catalog,” he said. “Not that we’re some big famous band with a bunch of hits, but if we were to play lead singles from all of those albums, we wouldn’t have time for anything else. Inevitably, we would just be playing more or less the very same show from night to night. And we have fans that travel. We have the kind of fans that will come to one or two or three shows in a row. I feel like the only way to help cultivate that and also to help us to stay thrilled on stage is to kind of bounce all over the place. And obviously, we want to play songs that are familiar, and we always do. But instead of playing all five of the most popular songs, we’ll play one or two a night and make sure we’re getting into some songs that we never play for anyone else so that each city feels like we had a moment.”


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Interview: Andy Frasco grows up for his liver

By Arts & Culture, Music

Could it be that Andy Frasco is maturing? He’s returning to touring this winter, and fans can expect Andy Frasco & The U.N. to still bring the party on stage (or somewhere in front of the stage when Frasco is crowd surfing). But the singer/keyboardist is toning down the partying and other shenanigans that typically happened on and off stage on past tours. Andy Frasco & The U.N. are coming to the Commonwealth Room on March 3, 2023, and he sat down with Salt Lake magazine’s Allan Scully to talk about his new direction and the upcoming album Wash, Rinse, Repeat.

“I’m doing it for my liver,” Frasco said when he phoned in for a recent interview. “I’m turning 35 this year, I’m 34 (now). I’m all about the party, but I want people to know that I’m a songwriter, too. So I’m just really dialing in my songwriting, really dialing in my musicianship, so I know I can’t blame my partying for my sh***y songs…I love partying and I love giving the people their entertainment, but I also want to give them something to think about.”

The fact is, by the time the pandemic hit in the spring of 2020, Frasco was not in a great place. He’d been drinking too much and doing cocaine and finding his life-of-the-party behavior had left him wondering who his friends were and battling some genuine bouts of depression. 

No one wanted the pandemic, but being forced off of the road gave Frasco the much-needed opportunity to take a hard look at himself, figure out how to get his life in a better place and decide if he still truly loved writing music and going on tour.

“I was just very selfish,” Frasco said, citing one of the contributing factors to his emotional issues. “I was like doing things and not thinking about others. All of a sudden people wouldn’t start calling me back. I was realizing maybe it is me. I always blamed everyone else that I am on an island. But maybe I’m putting myself on an island. So I had to like figure out the (situation) and realize what was making me sad. 

“Before the pandemic, I didn’t want to be there. And I was faking a smile because I was just too depleted,” he said. “I had to look at myself in the mirror, like what are you doing this for if you’re not going to wake up? You preach happiness and you’re not even happy, so why do you keep (doing) it?” 

One significant change was to kick his cocaine habit. He also cut back on drinking, although he admits he still enjoys his beverages. But the supply of Jameson liquor is lasting longer these days, as he and his band have moderated their intake onstage these days.

“There’s still drinking. I’m not going to lie to you there,” Frasco said. “But it’s definitely more toned down. We’re drinking half a bottle of Jameson a night, not the full bottle.”

The changes in behavior won’t surprise those who’ve been paying attention. Especially on the 2020 albums Keep On Keeping On and Wash, Rinse, Repeat., the album that arrived last April, it was clear Frasco wasn’t just offering escapism in his music.

That was a main theme for Frasco after he founded Andy Frasco & the U.N. in 2007, began touring and released the first of eight studio albums in 2010. 

One look at song titles like “Mature As F***,” “Blame It on the P***y” (from 2016’s Happy Bastards) or “Smokin’ Dope n Rock n Roll” and “Commitment Deficit Disorder” (from 2014’s Half a Man) and it was obvious that Frasco and company were bringing the party with funny, sometimes bawdy lyrics, a disregard for rules, decorum (and sobriety), and a rowdy sound that mixed rock, funk, blues, soul and pop.

The approach generated a good bit of popularity, as Frasco and the U.N. began what became a consistent routine of playing roughly 250 shows a year—a pace that continues to this day. Along the way, the band especially caught on in the jam band scene and festival circuit.

But especially with Keep On Keeping On, Frasco started to shift the narrative of his songs to more thoughtful subject matter, a direction that continued on Wash, Rinse, Repeat. Frasco still kept the tone of the lyrics light, while the music on these two most recent albums stayed buoyant and catchy as ever. But Frasco’s lyrics now wrestled with topics like getting older, maintaining his mental health, finding happiness, being considerate and appreciating life as it happens.  

Keep On Keeping On arrived shortly after the pandemic hit, and with touring halted, Frasco didn’t worry about taking the next musical step for quite a while.

Instead, he took to social media. He hosted a video “I Wanna Dance With Somebody” Dance Party and started an irreverent variety show podcast series he called Andy Frasco’s World Saving S***Show. But much of his podcasting work was devoted to a series he calls Andy Frasco’s World Saving Podcast. It features interviews—some of which get downright deep—with musicians and other celebrities, commentary and comedic bits. The series has gained considerable traction and Frasco, who is frequently joined by co-host Nick Gerlach, will continue doing these podcasts even as he returns to a full schedule of touring, songwriting and recording.

With all of this activity, it wasn’t until about six weeks before he was due to return touring in 2021 that Frasco realized he wanted to have new music for the upcoming shows and charged into making Wash, Rinse, Repeat.

He traveled to several cities—Nashville, Charleston, S.C., Los Angeles and Denver—to write and record with other songwriters, a process that helped him sharpen his songwriting chops as the album took shape.

“It was basically like going to songwriting school,” Frasco said. “Like I wrote with 20 different songwriters and I wrote with like 15 different songwriters in Nashville, and I wrote with a couple of guys in Charleston and a couple of guys in L.A., and instead of like the mental state of ‘I know everything,’ I went in there with my mental state of ‘I don’t know anything.’ It kind of helped me grow into the next phase of my career.”

Feeling he was in a creative space, Frasco spent a chunk of last year making a new album that’s now finished and is targeted for release before this summer. The new album reflects a new development in Frasco’s life.

“I think it’s a love album. I finally committed to someone and I’ve been writing about her,” Frasco said. 

The songs, though, aren’t all about romantic bliss.

“It’s scary as hell. I’ve never had a relationship,” Frasco revealed. “I don’t even know what the f*** I’m doing. That’s what I’m writing about. Like is this OK?”

Some of the songs from the next album are popping up in set lists on Frasco’s current tour with his band, along with material from Keep On Keeping On, Wash, Rinse, Repeat. and older fan-favorite songs. 

“We’re testing out the new songs we just wrote to see how they fit with our live show,” Frasco said. “I have two different philosophies when I write songs. Sometimes I write songs for the record and sometimes I write songs for the (live) set. And these new songs, I was really focusing on trying to write it for both. It’s been really nice. It’s given me confidence that I can write songs for both the (album) and for the live show.”

  • Who: The Motet with Andy Frasco & The U.N.
  • When: Mar 3, 2023
  • Where: The Commonwealth Room
  • Tickets and Information: thestateroompresents.com

See more music coverage from Salt Lake magazine.

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Preview: Paul Cauthen Country Coming Down Tour 

By Arts & Culture, Music

“I was driving tractors before it got sexy. Real cowboys don’t rock to Kenny Chesney,” according to Paul Cauthen, a musician who is bringing his Country Coming Down tour to The Union Event Center on Friday, March 3, 2023.

Paul Cauthen is blazing a Zappa-like trail with his creative, tongue-in-cheek parody of today’s country music ethos. He offers us a bigger-than-life version of Outlaw Country, and like Zappa, he doesn’t always color within the musical lines of his genre. He is affectionately known as “Big Velvet” because his deep baritone voice channels the vocal spirit of Johnny Cash, Waylon Jennings, and Elvis Presley (if you can imagine such a throuple.) He plays country, but will veer off into disco or funk mid-song to build a new concoction that resonates with traditional fans and those looking for something more experimental and avant-garde.

On “Cocaine Country Dancing,” for example, Big Velvet creates a giddy-up, country disco when he adds his Elvis/Cash/Jennings vocals to a seedy strip-joint dance beat. It’s something akin to The Who’s song, “Eminence Front” with outlaw-styled lyrics to which you can either line dance or do the hustle. Choose your poison. 

Cauthen’s journey started with the Austin-based Americana vocal duo Sons of Fathers, but he left to pursue a solo career. He released his debut record, My Gospel in 2016. The dark and introspective record featured a throwback sound blending outlaw and gospel country without tipping the scales either way. The record’s opening track “Still Drivin” moves along a retro Jennings-esque trail, but then Cauthen takes you down an Elvis-styled gospel path. 

On his 2017 seven-song EP Have Mercy, he started to find his satirical Big Velvet voice with catchy songs like “Everybody Walkin’ This Land” where he sings (in Johnny Cash fashion) “You racists, fascists, nihilists, and bigots we’re prayin’ for you my friend.”

With his 2019 full-length release Room 41 Cauthen makes peace with his hell-raising lifestyle with songs like “Prayed For Rain.” He sings, “The well’s runnin’ dry. Hell, so am I” and “The rain turned to hail cold, dark, and pale. It beat me as I fell. Lord, I fell.” On the song “Big Velvet,” he confessed “The train wrecked, but I walked away.” With “Cocaine Country Dancing,” his inner demon-slaying ballads give way to a sardonic acceptance of life’s occasional derailment, and the need to celebrate his wild side.

On his latest release, Country Coming Down, Cauthen fully commits to his unorthodox country sound. He offers us a Zappa-like parody of the Nashville gatekeepers who think he’s not “country” enough. On “Country as F***” he sings “I’m a shade tree mechanic, got a one-ton truck. I drink a 30-pack a day ‘cause I’m country as f***.” He adds an organic Elvis vocal shudder when he sings “Hot dog, holly golly, dagnabit I was two years old when I shot my first rabbit.” Cauthen seems at peace with his Big Velvet moniker and accepts he won’t fit in anyone’s box. He’s having a hell of a good time cultivating a larger-than-life and sometimes campy showmanship. I’m bringing both my cowboy boots and my platform shoes to the show, just in case. 

Who: Paul Cauthen

What: The State Room and Postfontaine Presents: Paul Cauthen’s Country Coming Down Tour

Where: The Union Event Center

When: Friday, March 3, 2023

Tickets and info: thestateroompresents.com, theunioneventscenter.com