Love Hertz

music, musicians, independents, music reviews

Monday, May 29, 2006

Dutch Henry Revisited

I posted about DH in the peonies, frogs, and wine blog before. At that point I hadn't gone out to see them.

Well........... I've seen them several times since, and..... they are so very talented and professional and passionate and creative. Without sounding like a sales pitch, I'll stop there.

Dutch Henry has what I see as a Blue Rodeo, Allman Brothers, and unique sound. The uniqueness is no little thang with the zillions of musical groups out there.

I've heard word that a demo CD exists but I wasn't lucky enough to be around when it came out. DH is working on a full-length CD however, so soon I'll be able to crank it when I'm 'cruisin along in my automobile'.

The latest time seeing the band was Thursday night, at a local blues plus venue, with a group called 500 Miles to Memphis (see previous posting). Our town is known for music festivals of all sorts during the summer. There's a Summer Celebration, which is 10 days of mostly old-but-gold or been-off-the-charts-for-some-period-of-time groups. There's a Christian Music Festival. There's an Irish Music Festival (YES!) http://www.michiganirish.org/

I say why not have a festival of original country, rockabilly, alternative musicians?? Heritage Landing is an excellent place to do it. They're setting up a campground nearby, which would be perfect. We could call it Altapalooza or some such thing...

Back to DH. They are playing in a nearby town this Friday night. Funk the homework. I'm there.

Saturday, May 27, 2006

500 Miles to Memphis

A friend and I went to see 500 Miles to Memphis this past Thursday night. From Cincinnati, their performing here was facilitated in large part by Dutch Henry, http://www.dutchhenry.net , my favorite local band. We had heard that 500 Miles... was playing a double bill at a nearby blues plus venue. We didn't know what to expect, other than DH loves them and that having Memphis in their name probably had some element of twang to their music.

The first thing I noticed as they were setting up was the cowboy hat and red boots of the steel guitar player.

Let me tell you, if you get a chance to see these guys perform, doit. The lead singer has a pure voice. It's a horrible shame that the sound system -- or the person in charge of the sound system -- was unsuccessful in making the lyrics clear enough to know what the words were. The bass player is energetic, talented, and cute as hell. The drummer, I found out later, was a fill-in who plays in at least one other group in Cinci with the bass player. He is also talented. The standout musician in the group for me is the "lap guitar"/keyboardist! Holy Moly.

I bought a CD after the show and have listened to part of it. It's amazingly better when you can hear the words! And the lead singer's voice absolutely grows on you.

The music....... what genre....... real hard to pin down. It's an interesting combination of twang, punk, and pop. On the CD you'll also hear fiddling. There is no way you can make music with a steel guitar and fiddle and not have a twang designation. The punk part is a component as well, but punk in a milder sense. The lead and the bass player have a more grunge look about them, and the sit-in drummer looks more punkish. The popness comes from their youth and their hooks. The lyrics are twang.


Click on the title and it will take you to 500 Miles to Memphis' website. They are better than anything you will hear on the suckass radio stations that dominate the airwaves.

Click on this link to listen at myspace: http://profile.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=user.viewprofile&friendID=13477955

Tuesday, May 16, 2006

Dirt Nasty

parental advisory: do not listen to this music around anyone younger than around 18. they will be corrupted!

do, however, listen if you want to get a chuckle from the lyrics, while at the same time get into the groove of DirtNasty.

hot stuff. The lyrics would be bleeped too much on the radio, but dayum it is DAMNED good.