Tuesday, June 5, 2012

Hopeless Jack, His Handsome Devil, and one Hopeful Heart

Hopeless Jack. "What's with the name?" I ask. Of course he gives me a sheepish grin, the one that always precedes sly charm.  "A friend called me that after I had a string of bad luck with women." I perse my lips the way I always do when I'm around him.  Jack Biesel has a way. I was about to write "a way with women" but he just has a way.  I can't quite describe it.  People either love him or hate him and the reason people hate him is because there is something about him they want and wish they had.  I think Jack likes being interviewed.  As his friends listen in on our conversation in a dimly lit, Americana-esque decorated music recording studio, I feel nervous but suddenly special that I have the attention of his audience as they intently listen to every question, carefully taking mental note of every carefully worded response.  Revolver Studios is unlike no other.  It is a spacious hardwood warehouse room with more depth than I have ever felt in one space.  It has years of energy embedded in its walls, heavily sprinkled with vintage equipment and one-of-a-kind memorabilia, some from bands recorded in years past, some recent - small local bands worth a damn. 


I ask Jack about influence.  He gives me a blank sort of look and says he knows very little about what's out there.  He says for someone who loves music and sure loves to perform, he is influenced by a small handful of people.  "Johnny Cash probably being the main one".  Johnny Cash.  Now I get it.  Watching Jack on stage as the man in black is something else. With his long rockabilly hair and his tattooed fingers on the frets of his black guitar, you read "h-o-p-e l-e-s-s" and realize at some point, you ended up fortunate enough to view the insides of a starving soul.  "So how did you and Pete meet each other?" Jack chuckles and says they met at a gay bar.  I find this funny because for the short time that we have known each other, I have always referred to Pete as his lover, his bromance partner, or some affectionate term for the endearing couple touring together in a van for weeks at a time.  Jack agrees to all terms, insisting that we all understand that they both happen to be beautiful straight men and that they happen to meet at a gay bar, being of course the only straight men working there.  When I ask Jack about his first impression of Pete, he says that it was instant, that their smoke breaks became times of reflection, hopeful daydreams about their futures, what they like to do in their spare time, what music they like, and then the proposition to play together, jam on their instruments some time soon.  As Jack recalls the next morning, as if they had stayed up all night eager to see what "jamming" together might feel like, he plays with his hat, adjusts himself into his seat, gets wide-eyed and tells me every minute detail of this happenstance from arriving with two coffees through the progression of their sessions to their current state basically stumbling into what is now known as "Hopeless Jack and the Handsome Devil".



Jack's heart and soul is written in every line of every ballad, some heartbreaking and some playful, and then there's Pete, the ever-present counterpart banging away like a flathead V8 with lake pipes at 7,000 revolutions per minute.  Jack's bourbon-soaked vocals and sultry tracks draws you in, makes you want to hear what else he might want to share with us, what window we will be allowed to see into.  You see the sweat, the excitement, the handkerchief dangling from his back pocket, you think he must have had practice - a long time to perfect this craft.  But when I ask Jack how long he's been at it, he gives me his devilish grin and says "not long darlin', only a year and a half-ish".  I am shocked. You are recording your second studio album? This guy won't stop. He lives for this shit. As well he should. The two piece band is a spectacle, a performance to be taken on the road, a band you could book for your rock festivals, weddings, and even retirement parties. "We do well in small towns and especially to older crowds but what's cool is you have parents come in with their kids and everyone loves it but the parents are really loving it."  "I could've guessed that. I'm thinking about how much my dad would love Jack. 



Promotion and marketing - the two weaknesses for the band.  I ask him why he thinks he has a poor turnout for big city shows.  "The [metropolitan] cities are heavily saturated with rock and roll".  I wonder if it might be that his version of blues is a bit older than what his generation is listening to or if the poppy songs are played out in variations of a lot of other tunes.  I can't help but wonder what I could possibly suggest to "Hopeless Jack and the Handsome Devil" to get them to stand out above the rest, get the notoriety they so deserve.  This band works harder than almost any other band I know.  They sweat, bleed, and cry it out in every performance, taking it on the road most of the time seriously underpaid and starving through it all just to have people come and dance for a night, where new girls can have the chance to get on stage with the kind-eyed tattooed stranger.



It's not all sex. Don't feel like Shallow Hearts – Shallow Graves is a one-dimensional album; it's quite the opposite. This album, their debut record, gives us a unique insight into the heart and soul of this two-piece outfit. It plays like a teenage love story - full of pitfalls, emotional battles with raging hormones, love lost, excitement, fear, anger and soulful sex. It is a raw, reverb-laden quintessential rock & roll recording filled with contemplative lyrics, dipping hard into the complexities of love, anger, loss, and playful relationships.

When I hear Shallow Hearts – Shallow Graves I am reminded of the reasons I loved hearing “The White Stripes” first few albums, where I fell in love with the old guitar rock all over again, the joy I felt hearing bands rekindle that garage-style element that has been lost in pop culture today.  The rawness percolates through the record even down to the last track, where Jack offers a heavy mesmerizing, drowsy ballad only someone who has felt for another could really relate to.

The two of them offer a muscular, almost brutish sound throughout but yet the recording is handled with such finesse that you embrace the foreboding emotional undertones that startle the audience with a sort of eclecticism. Shallow Hearts – Shallow Graves is a well-executed debut that most certainly falls under the rock & roll umbrella with such vigor that only a hard-working breakthrough band can offer. Buy it and you won’t be sorry.








Thursday, February 9, 2012

The Lost Sound of Soul and The Dark Corners of a Sunlit One

Song of the day is..."Sunday Kind of Love" by the beloved Miss Etta James.




The Queen of Soul has died.  Born Jamesetta Hawkins on a cold January night while the world was struggling to comprehend the beginning of what would inevitably be one of the worst wars this world has seen.  The persecution of the Jewish peoples in Europe was taking place and Los Angeles was flooded.  The world was welcoming the new diva with open arms in the harsh winter of 1938. 

Growing up, James was raised by multiple caregivers after being born to a 14-year-old girl she later referred to as "The Mystery Lady" and never knew of her Caucasian father who left before she was even born.  Upon entering adolescence, Jamesetta discovered doo-wop and formed her first all-girl band "The Creolettes" named for the girls' light-skinned complexions, and took on her new title as Etta James, her given name reversed.  With a string of boyfriends including B.B. King, she was discovered by men twice her age who promised to make her a star.  Unfortunately for Etta, all she could show from this was a serious drug addiction that inevitably killed her career and pushed her illness along which resulted in her death January 20th of 2012. 


With a career blossoming in the 1950's with a surge of rhythm and blues and a high demand for soulful vocals, Etta James found her niche.  She met the right people and climbed her way to #1 with her ever famous "At Last" topping the charts in 1960 and "Sunday Kind of Love" soon to follow as a Billboard topper.  Unfortunately for James, her star burned out and her career took a hard hit in 1965.  The world waited in anticipation for James' return but was nowhere to be found...until the 1980's where she made a strange comeback, not releasing any hits but touring as if her life depended on it.  And it did.


I would say something like "we will miss you, Miss Etta James 'Queen of Soul', 'Princess of Pop'" but I can't because it was not my time.  She was here and now gone leaving behind a legacy of doo-wop all grown up.  I was fortunate to have seen her perform in her older years and feel grateful for the experience but my journey with her was led by movie soundtracks and car commercials.  But nonetheless, she has given me plenty of hits I have sung my heart out to in the shower all through my 20's. 

Goodbye, Etta James.


IN OTHER NEWS:  My waiter just told me to check out "Black Lips". He said they are a drug. Sounds worth checking out. I could use a high.  I just read that they are a self-proclaimed "flower punk" band from Georgia.  And that they are "the raddest band right now" according to Matthew, my Doug Fir hipster musical guru.

Time to freak out! Memorial Day weekend might have one of the best concert date lineups I've heard in a long time. The Shins are headlining for both The Head and the Heart with Blind Pilot at the Les Schwab ampitheatre.  Super stoked.

If you're a Pitchfork follower, such as I am, you will see some of the best headlines in music right now.  Check it out and get inspired.

Discovered The Middle East last weekend at the beach for my birthday and have been pretty stoked on this for a few days now: 



I know it has been a while since I have written. God bless you dedicated readers who hound me incessantly for an updated post but I have been busy living and balancing and celebrating and juggling and gaining and losing and everything in between.  I'm trying to write a book people! I moved to a wonderful area of town, had to get settled, struggling with the loss of regular Internet usage, gaining a new job as a company co-owner and director, making my way through the ever difficult court reporter course schedule and have now discovered how giddy I can be flirting my way with someone special into my 30's.  I celebrated the big day last week with a group of amazing women, surprise treat sharing collective awesomeness and beautiful first kisses on bridges atop the city at midnight. Couldn't have been better. And so I thank you patient readers, for hanging in there with me and feeding the dark corners of this sunlit soul of mine.




xxx.