July 13, 2006

SPIN Magazine: Who The F**k is Ryan Adams?

It’s been, what, a month since I posted any Ryan Adams?
Long enough. Round two (ding!)

I read something today purportedly written this morning by Ryan which sounds molto interessante:
“First record is getting mixed and mastered while we are on the road. Its the first of three. Its solo. Its called “Blackhole“. Johnny on drums, me on everythinbg else. lots of raw guitar and kinda sexy/ damaged tunes. My favorite easily.”

Sexy + damaged + Ryan Adams = some of my favorite songs in the world (Exhibit A: Love Is Hell album, tracks like “Hotel Chelsea Nights” & “My Blue Manhattan”). I can’t wait for this Blackhole business.

Anyway, here is a great old interview from SPIN with Ryan (if you’ve never gotten into him). It is a fascinating, layered, textured look at a complicated musician during his Love is Hell / Rock N Roll era. For those who stick to it until the end, there is a related bonus song goodie.
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Who The F**k Is Ryan Adams?
By Marc Spitz
SPIN Magazine: November 24, 2003

Outside it’s a Tom Waits world. Leaving our faded, yellow hotel — a former livery stable with hanging gardens, a goldfish pond, and circling bugs the size of small birds — we head down Marigny Street into “the Quarter,” New Orleans’ combination tourist trap/alcohol-fortified tar pit full of “one-legged fucking pirates and shamans and con artists,” as our guide, Ryan Adams, describes it. This can be a dangerous place, but especially so for a rock star at a personal and creative crossroads. Too many distractions.

At the moment, the distractions are benign: eggs and salmon. Breakfast. Adams pulls up the collar of his peacoat to ward off the early-April chill. His unruly black hair is hidden under a porkpie hat. We stride through the streets toward a cafe he spied the night before. “Look at the sky — it’s calico,” he muses. It’s easy to see why poet Ryan (one of his several personalities) is here, bunking in a cheap room on the outskirts of town. He’s always been this way. Put him in any major city and he’ll scout the perfect black-and-white postcard location inside an hour.

“When I’m in New York, I just want to walk down the street and feel this thing, like I’m in a movie,” he explains. In Los Angeles, he stays at the old, Montgomery Clift-haunted Roosevelt Hotel, instead of the more star-friendly Chateau Marmont or Sunset Marquis. Self-conscious as it may be, this fidelity to mythic Americana is part of Adams’ charm. It’s evident in his best songs, with their street-corner detail and bad-luck, sad-eyed ladies. It’s also part of his cliche.

Serious-musician Ryan (personality two, equally versed in Hank Williams, the Smiths, and Black Flag) has reason to be here as well. He’s trying to record a great album, the follow-up to 2001′s breakthrough, Gold, which sold 400,000 copies and made Adams a semi-celebrity. With the single “New York, New York” (and bittersweet video, shot across the river from the World Trade Center just days before September 11), the album elevated him from alt-country cult hero to bold-faced tabloid name (linked with Winona Ryder, among others). Then, before the former punk stoner kid from Jacksonville, North Carolina, could adjust to his fame, the backlash hit. Fans of his volatile country-rock band, Whiskeytown, and his earnest solo debut, Heartbreaker, cried “Judas” over Gold’s lustrous pop production (Starbucks soundtrack queens The Corrs later covered “When the Stars Go Blue”). The album’s classic-rock reverence warmed the Rolling Stones, who asked Adams to open shows on their Forty Licks tour.

Famous Ryan (personality number three, a childlike sketch of how an overnight rock star should act) was born. This Ryan was a smart kid who parodied celebrity superficiality a little too skillfully. Fun at parties. Can’t look you in the eye. Not the kind of guy who would make another Heartbreaker.

“On Heartbreaker,” he says, “I had to sing those songs. I drank the way I did those songs. I ate the way I did those songs. I communicated the way I did those songs. With Gold, I was trying to prove something to myself. I wanted to invent a modern classic.” On the strength of Gold, his 2002 compilation of demos (titled Demolition) went Top 30, a success that gave famous Ryan further license to ill. Soon, he was known less for his music than for his antics (covering The Strokes‘ Is This It in its entirety, trying to bounce people from his shows for requesting Bryan Adams, feuding with Jack White, whom he called a “little girl,” and babbling on his website about smoking Moroccan hash). “I used to be so excited when I saw my name in print,” he confesses. “I wanted to be a rock personality so fucking bad. But then I was looking at people like Patti Smith — people who had a purpose. I said to myself, ‘I should have a purpose, too.’ And what I figured out was that I don’t have one. I’m a goofball. I’m always changing my mind. I’m breaking my promises all over the place.”

By spring 2003, everyone was pretty sick of the goofball — the goofball included. Which is what brings us to New Orleans. Scores of artists have turned to this city for musical inspiration, from Duke Ellington to Nine Inch Nails. The ashes of country-rock saint Gram Parsons (one of Adams’ many idols) reside here as well. There’s music in the air. Train whistles, horse-hoof clip-clops, police sirens. “I wanted to go to an actual, real, American city,” says Adams. “Full of nameless bars. I didn’t want to work in New York or L.A. I just wanted to get away from that.”

And yet, as night stretches on into morning, it’s difficult to identify what 28-year-old regular-guy Ryan (personality four, a gifted, humble fellow who can do anything but commits to almost nothing) is getting out of this perfectly beat environment. It’s clear that talent, ambition, and art direction aren’t enough to produce a classic album. Ryan Adams — all of them — needs some inspiration.

It’s 3 a.m. We’ve eaten two large, time-consuming meals since breakfast. Browsed through junk shops, bought old albums and Look magazines. Attempted to track down a notorious caster of spells. Adams, a gifted mimic, has done his adenoidal Metallica-fan impression more than once. Anything, it seems, to avoid the problem at hand. The sign on the door of Piety Street Recording Studio, you see, reads: Do Not Disturb: Career-Ending Recording Session in Progress.

John Porter, a graying Brit with kind eyes, calmly listens to the playback. Some studio musicians wait around. A few of them, like former Small Faces keyboardist Ian MacLagan and drummer Rikki Fataar (beloved by Monty Python fans as the Rutles’ “Stig O’Hara”), are somewhat legendary. Porter made his name producing records by Roxy Music and the Smiths. Adams initially wanted Smiths guitarist Johnny Marr to produce some songs he’d written in New York, a collection of pain-streaked barstool ballads dubbed Love Is Hell. Tired of emulating mid-period Stones and on Marr’s recommendation, he enlisted Porter to wrap his white-boy blues in some authentic Mancunian raincoat rock. This should be an interesting hybrid, but some element is missing. The songs he plays for me over the studio speakers — like “Hotel Chelsea Nights,” with its melancholy keyboards, and an almost unrecognizable version of Oasis’ “Wonderwall” — are excellent. But Adams feels the tracks are adrift. He plays a guitar part to a new song, “This House Is Not for Sale,” over and over. “It doesn’t sound art faggy enough!” he frets. “It’s too Goo Goo Dolls! Too fucking Melissa Etheridge! I should be wearing a muscle T-shirt.”

A studio hand is dispatched to a local bar. He returns with a vintage, royal-blue Pepsi crate of Guinness pints, but even after getting loaded, the band is just too good. “There was no way to explain [that I wanted them] to validate these almost high school poems with some wrong notes,” Adams remembers later in New York. “[There was] no way to grease it up a little and make it interesting. I’d take this piano player and put him on drums and, like, goddamn, he’s really good at drums, too.”

When Adams and Porter finally packed up for L.A. to mix the sessions, they were no closer to the end. “Love Is Hell started splitting in two,” Adams says. “It was like I was recording the gravy and I already had the turkey. So we just started stripping it back. By the end of it all, I was so tired of recording. I was fried. I’d overdone it.”

“It was a big departure,” says Luke Lewis, president of Adams’ label, Lost Highway. The album wasn’t rejected, but the label didn’t rush to schedule it, either. “I told him I thought he could do better,” admits Lewis, “but I tell him that all the time. On a business level, I could’ve done fine with Love Is Hell. But we both knew…he was suffering from overhype. I said, ‘Are you sure this is gonna be the statement you wanna make?’… His young ass was hanging out there. If [the record] wasn’t good, he was gonna get whacked by a lot of people.” Lost Highway is releasing selections from Love Is Hell as a pair of EPs.

Back in New York, Adams went underground. Literally. Nobody saw him, but he would post Mariah Carey-like ramblings on his official website. He was quitting the music business. He was going to play guitar in someone else’s band. He was reuniting Whiskeytown. “I just shut everybody down,” he says now. “My biggest word in the last eight months was no. And I used the shit out of that word.” Adams broke up with his longtime girlfriend, singer/songwriter Leona Naess (who then sold My X is a Wanker baby Ts on her website). In New Orleans, he’d rhapsodized about their relationship: “My lifestyle changed when this wonderful person came into my life. I couldn’t sleep for years. All of a sudden, I don’t know why or how, but I slept.”

Now, it’s fair to say, he wasn’t sleeping much. Or writing much. He was hanging out all night at East Village bars Niagara and Black and White. One of rock’s most prolific songwriters seemed officially burned out. Then two things happened. First, friend and current drummer Johnny T (who co-owns the aforementioned bars) invited Adams to Motherfucker, a rock’n'roll dance party. “I remember going by myself,” says Adams. “[It] was one crazy music fest. They would play Sonic Youth and New Order, and I was thinking to myself, ‘I know how to play that stuff. Why am I not playing that stuff?’ Someone put on [the Smiths'] ‘How Soon Is Now?’ and I remember saying to myself, ‘Don’t get so caught up.’ I had boxed myself into a little place.”

Then, he staggered into a basement and rediscovered punk rock. Johnny T had rented a rehearsal space under Hi-Fi, a bar on Avenue A, and he and Adams started playing there after hours. “Any time, we could say, ‘Let’s go jam!’” remembers Johnny T. “It wasn’t work. It was like [Ryan] hadn’t played music for fun in a long time.” An initial recording, dubbed The War on Drugs, wasn’t promising. “God forbid this tape ever leaks out,” Adams laughs. “It’s some absurd shit.” (Adams is also rumored to be part of the piss-take punk band The Finger, with singer/songwriter/bar owner Jesse Malin; their 2002 indie release, We Are Fuck You, crams ten Germs rip-offs into 15 minutes. “I love that band,” says Adams, with a wink. “Those crazy kids from uptown.”)

Regardless, the liberation process had begun. Says Green Day’s Billie Joe Armstrong, who stopped by to jam: “I imagined Ryan was your ‘perfect mess’ singer/songwriter guy, but he was dropping names of Green Day songs I’d not heard since I was 16. We were fucked up the entire time. [Rock photographer] Bob Gruen was down there in a Santa Claus costume.” Adams laughs as he elaborates. “Nobody knew what the hell I was up to,” he says. “The [record company] was like, ‘He’s in a basement?’ ‘Yeah.’ ‘Should we worry?’ ‘Do you always?’ ‘Yeah.’ ‘Well, then worry.’”

Adams moved more sound equipment into the eight-by-twelve-foot room and began writing songs. By midsummer, he and Johnny T were jamming sober, during the day. Adams informed Lost Highway that he wanted to find a producer for his loud, fast, fun, new songs. Enter James Barber, veteran A&R man-turned-producer, who is best known as Courtney Love‘s boyfriend (he also produced five tracks on her yet-to-be-released solo debut, America’s Sweetheart). Barber was a fan of Adams’ capricious talent, if not what he’d done with it. “I’d known about Ryan,” says Barber. “[When Whiskeytown were signed to Geffen], I’d hear about him in marketing meetings. ‘Ryan did this. Ryan did that.’ He was the most flamboyant kid on the roster, but the records weren’t as exciting to me. Whiskeytown were an excellent band, but they were never as exciting as the energy the band created around them. Heartbreaker is a masterpiece, and Gold is beautiful, but they never seemed to be rock records. And in every interview you read with Ryan, he talks about growing up on hardcore and Black Flag and punk rock. It’s like, ‘Where’s that in your music?’”

The first thing Barber did was address the issue of the multiple Ryans. “I said to him before we started, ‘Who are you? If you had to make a record that defined you as an artist, what would it sound like?’” In Stratosphere Sound — where Adams and Johnny T, with help from Armstrong and former Hole and Smashing Pumpkins bassist Melissa Auf Der Maur, recorded the songs — Barber put up a Sam Phillips quote: If you aren’t doing something different, you aren’t doing anything. Adams didn’t resist. “In New Orleans,” he says, “I would come into sessions at 6 p.m., and I’d leave with enough time to go out and get mighty damaged. This was different. I was eager to be in there and eager to stay as late as possible. We were able to make 11 songs in three days. They weren’t all classics, but they fucking all sounded great.”

The album, titled Rock N Roll, is punk like The Replacements or Oasis — in its attitude and energy. Tracks like “1974,” “Boys,” and “This Is It” (he insists it’s not a response to the Strokes) are hard-rocking stomps. Guitars mixed way up. Vocals screamed. But hooks are everywhere. There are only two downbeat tracks — the title song (with its homage to the Replacements’ “Answering Machine”) and the ballad “Anybody Wanna Take Me Home.” In this context, they simply provide some emotional texture. “There’s two ways to hear that song,” Barber says of the latter track. “One is the ‘I’m really lonely and devastated, and I don’t know how to communicate with women,’ and the other is that this is the best damn pickup line in the world. It works both ways. I love that about Ryan.”

Ultimately, insincerity is part of Adams’ sincerity, and embracing that with the help of some evil guitar riffs may restore his charm. Ryan Adams is a romantic poet. A gifted musician. A celebrity asshole. And a really nice guy. At the moment, all of his personalities are coexisting happily on record and inside his East Village apartment, where he drinks tea, smokes cigarettes, and prepares to reenter the pop-music world.

When he plays me the new song “So Alive,” with its gorgeous, soaring, falsetto chorus, famous Ryan laughs at serious-musician Ryan’s abilities, because regular-guy Ryan is a little bashful. For the time being, his mental house is in order; the parts are functioning together. He has a steady girlfriend, actress Parker Posey, whom he won’t talk about much, which is also a change. “Let’s just say I’m inspired,” he says. “She’s very special. I respect her greatly. She’s a good singer, too.” Posey appears on two of the album’s tracks.

If it is indeed only rock’n'roll that has provided Adams with all this career-saving discipline and lifesaving inspiration, then he’s in good company. Everybody from the Beatles to U2 has gotten back to where they once belonged the same way. He also knows that the ones who didn’t are in the ground, which may explain the title of one of Rock N Roll’s most powerful songs: “Note to Self (Don’t Die).”

MUSIC: Black Clouds (unreleased) – Ryan Adams
Piety Street Studios, New Orleans

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June 24, 2006

Can’t sleep when the bedsheet fights


Here are some live Whiskeytown tracks (Ryan Adams’ superb alt-country combo, prior to goin’ it solo) from NPR’s World Cafe in Philadelphia from 1997. I’ve also got some extra bonus tracks that I had to add. You’ll be glad I did — soundtrack for a warm summer evening.

August 1997
16 Days (I love this song)
Somebody Remembers The Rose
Too Drunk To Dream
Excuse Me While I Break My Own Heart Tonight (just noticed it’s incomplete, so a bonus one below from 1999)
Dreams (Fleetwood Mac cover)

April 1998
Sittin’ Around
Houses On The Hill

August 1999
Excuse Me While I Break My Own Heart Tonight

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May 25, 2006

Ryan Adams Bedhead, Volumes 4 & 5

I know that I promised the rest of these live Ryan Adams Bedhead compilation recordings a long time ago, and posted Disc One, Disc Two, and Disc Three, but then fell off the wagon. I kind of figured that after the ginormous orgy of Ryan Adams posts following the San Francisco concert that I would just give it a rest for a few weeks.

But now I’m recovered and am going to go ahead and post up these last two batches, there is some really fantastic live stuff on them from the 2005 tour. Check out the scorching, bluesy rendition of “I See Monsters,” the stunning piano of “Nightbirds,” and darned if you can’t help but laugh at the “Summer of ’69″ (BRYAN Adams cover). That’s the spirit, sport.

Also, I was reminded of this vastly entertaining interview with Ryan Adams via Pitchfork last year. Worth a read (or re-read). It’s like listening in on a phone conversation or something, very fly-on-the-wall.

Disc IV (Volume 18)
01. Love Is Hell 6/4/05
02. When Will You Come Back Home 5/21/05
03. Dear John 5/4/05
04. Sweet Illusions 5/3/05
05. Dance All Night 6/4/05
06. Madeline (unreleased) 8/9/05
07. Just Like A Whore (unreleased) 6/7/05
08. Why Do They Leave 5/21/05
09. Long Black Veil (orig. by D. Dill & M. Wilkin) 7/26/05
10. 16 Days (Whiskeytown) 6/10/05
11. Dear Chicago 6/17/05
12. Harder Now That It’s Over 6/3/05
13. Faithless Street (Whiskeytown) 6/8/05
14. Prison Letter (unreleased) 7/27/05
15. I See Monsters 6/11/05
16. I Still Miss Someone (Johnny Cash cover) 5/9/05

DOWNLOAD DISC 4 AS A ZIP FILE HERE

Disc V (Volume 19)
01. The End 5/16/05
02. Call Me On Your Way Back Home 6/10/05
03. Magnolia Mountain 11/18/05
04. Pa 5/3/05
05. Peaceful Valley 5/14/05
06. Nightbirds 6/3/05
07. September 5/16/05
08. My Heart Is Broken (Whiskeytown) 6/8/05
09. Houses On The Hill (Whiskeytown) 6/8/05
10. Willow Jane (Neal Casal cover) 11/18/05
11. Summer of ’69 (loose Bryan Adams cover) 7/26/05
12. Sylvia Plath 5/14/05
13. Jacksonville Skyline (Whiskeytown) 5/4/05
14. Now That You’re Gone 11/18/05
15. Rescue Blues 6/3/05
16. I Will Learn To Love 5/11/05

DOWNLOAD DISC 5 AS A ZIP FILE HERE

*series fin*

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April 29, 2006

“Ryan Adams: No Quality Control and Can’t Edit Himself, Part 18″


So I made the journey to San Francisco and back and my head is still spinning. In town for less than 24 hours, I spent twice as much time seeing Ryan than I did sleeping. What a lucky gal.

Thursday night I got to see Ryan Adams for the first time and it was different, perhaps, than I expected – a lot more “free form?” – but pretty dang phenomenal. The Palace of Fine Arts was a fantastic place to see a show, I’d never been there before. It was an intimate venue and Ryan was in chatty form. I hear that Wednesday night was variable quality (as Ryan said Thursday, “Look, it’s no secret that I’m, like, doing that great tightrope walk between suck and maybe good…”). I thought Thursday was rambling but good.

I loved the solo acoustic interpretations, and a fine, fine setlist. And, yes, it was mostly true what my new pal Nathan said, “You’ll probably find all the chatter endearing.” The overall feel was a mix of sitting in Ryan’s living room and listening to some sort of stream-of-consciousness interview.

Interesting comment from someone over on the Ryan Adams Archive site, which the more I read over, the more I think is a valid point: “The upside, if you were in the mood for it, was a very personal / intimate hangin’ out with Ryan thing where we (the audience) were both therapist and entertainer for him – as well as being entertained by him. The downside was that we got too few songs and very few sung without interruptions of patter or joking that somewhat broke or (imho) belittled the emotional intensity & spell of the piece. Came away wanting to worship him and slap him upside the head at the same time. You are probably thinking ‘what else is new?’. I know most of our heroes have feet of clay – the artistic cauldron – inspired madness and all that – I just wish he would respect his own gifts more and honor this amazing music that comes through him.”

I was able to record the Palace of Fine Arts show, so you can hear it too. I was pretty impressed at how the sound quality turned out for just being recorded on a little $60 digital voice recorder thingie. (Maybe I am impressed because my audio-technology-knowhow falls somewhere on the scale between that of a box of dirt and pet gerbil). Hence it is far from perfect quality, but for those of you that were there, you can relive the set, and for those that weren’t, you can hear all the chatter and two new songs (and the occasional guffaw that I let out, even though I tried to keep my mouth shut. I have a hard time with that. Just ignore me and my friends’ chatter. Sincere apologies.)

Oh, so we’ll call this “Set One:”

PALACE OF FINE ARTS SET (Zip file link at end of setlist)
Brown Sugar & Why Do They Leave? (forgot to break this into two tracks)
Sweet Lil Gal (23rd and 1st)
Banter 1 & 2
Strawberry Wine
Banter 3 & 4 & 5 & 6 (I kept starting recording, thinking a song was coming. But nope.)
Don’t Get Sentimental On Me (new)
Blue Hotel (new)
I Want It That Way” (Ryan is fixin to join the Backstreet Boys if this whole solo thing doesn’t work out)
Please Do Not Let Me Go
Banter 7
*break*
New York, New York
Come Pick Me Up
Rescue Blues
Banter 8
Magnolia Mountain
Banter 9 & 10
(teaser) Oh My Sweet Carolina? In My Time Of Need?
Solitaire (w/ Jesse Malin)
Peaceful Valley

DOWNLOAD THE ZIP FILE OF RYAN ADAMS, PALACE OF FINE ARTS

Following the Palace of Fine Arts show, my friend Julia and I jetted on over to 12 Galaxies club. After stashing our cars in an alley by her apartment, we walked hastily to the club, nervous and excited because Ryan was playing a “Set Two” with Phil Lesh from the Grateful Dead. A mere $5 cover, all going to charity (supporting the cause of organ donation – they can have mine, not sure if they want my liver).

I hear everyone (who was over 21) who was waiting outside got in, which was great because there was a massive line and I wasn’t sure if all the cool kids in the back made it in for an incredible show.

I was maybe the 15th person in the door, and headed right to the front. I was literally about 5 feet from Ryan when he came on stage. It was an absolutely amazing vantage point, to see every scowl and chord and smile and interaction on stage.

Ryan seemed like a completely different person for Set Two – engaged, on fire, sharp, musically adventurous, and basically just enjoying himself – and loving the music. He and Phil even kissed once, ain’t that sweet.

I am far from being a Dead fan, but of all the times I wish I had known a lyric, this was it: Ryan blanks on a verse to one of the Dead songs and leans down front to me and asks “Do you know it?” holding out his hand to me. Uhhhhhhhhhhhh . . . nope. Damn. But later on when he forgot one of his own lyrics, he asked again, and this time my fabulous cohorts jumped up to the plate with the needed memory jog, and he carried on with the verse. So fun what can happen in such an intimate little place.

The version of “Cold Roses” was INSANELY jamming, I was mesmerized by the opening riff and how intricate the guitar fingerwork was. And by “Shakedown on 9th Street,” we were all pretty much hoarse from yelling along. “Luuucy, lucy my gal….” “What Sin” was so stretched out into these mega-jams that I almost didn’t recognize it. And “I Still Miss Someone” was jammy, electric and rockin like I have never heard it before; I think Johnny Cash would have just shook his head, but probably appreciated the passion behind it.

12 Galaxies Setlist (“Set Two”)
Not Fade Away
Dark Star
Help On The Way
Magnolia Mountain
He’s Gone
Stella Blue
What Sin Replaces Love
Wharf Rat > Not Fade Away

Encore:
Dire Wolf
A Kiss Before I Go
Dire Wolf (cut off)
China Cat (instrumental, cut off)
Cold Roses
Shakedown on 9th Street
Not Fade Away
Eyes
I Still Miss Someone
Cold Roses

I don’t have anything from the second set, I was dancing too much to record (and fending off weird Deadheads who kept sweating on me).

Video clips from the 12 Galaxies set:
Video 1
Video 2
Video 3

We were discussing amongst ourselves in the audience who the kickass drummer was, sporting the Nirvana t-shirt, watching the guys for cues of where they were going in the jam. The story of how local San Franciscan drummer Chad Tasky got the gig with these two is a fan’s dream come true:

“i was at the ryan adams solo shows this past wednesday and thursday at the palace of fine arts in san francisco. my buddy robie and i are hanging out backstage when ryan shows up and says that he needs a drum kit so that his producer jamie can sit in on drums during the encore along with phil lesh - who is also scheduled to play during the encore. i graciously offer to rent them a set of my drums for the show, then race down to pick them up. ryan played… then ryan, phil, and jamie played the encore… then i went home.

upon arriving the next evening to watch the show then pick up my drums – i’m informed there’s been a secret benefit show scheduled for after the show at a small club in the mission district called 12 galaxies, and that i’ve been chosen to play drums. having the imaginary courage that i needed, i proceeded to play to a sold-out crowd with ryan, phil and a guitar-tech named harry for over two hours. the setlist was filled with dead songs ands ryan’s songs – which i did my best to pretend to know. what a crazy night. check out video and photos from the show.”

Man alive.

The whole night was so sweaty and rocking and mindblowingly fun that I felt like I needed to roll over and have a cigarette afterwards. And I don’t even smoke.

But it was that satisfying.

Thanks to Sherry for some of the pics (and loaning me her camera so I could take a few of these) and Sharif, who rocks. Also, check out this savage set of pictures on Flickr (and if you look at the one below, that is SO my arm on the left side of the shot. I am a geek, I know).

April 26, 2006

Ryan Adams Bedhead, Volume 3


Well, on that congenial note . . . here’s the third installment of Bedhead. A reader reminded me that I need to keep putting these up as promised. A whole lot of life has ambushed me in these last few days, getting a bit behind.

Related Ryan Adams content: Something he posted to the RyanAdams.org message board back in February. Interesting, if a bit incoherent, ramble:

Author: RYAN ADAMS HERE ALIVE IN THE U.K.
2/12/2006 6:56:18 PM
Subject: HI. ITS RYAN. FROM HOTEL IN LONDON. (RAINY ASS DAY) (click link)

Onto the music . . .

Disc III (Volume 17)
1. A Kiss Before I Go 5/17/05
2. My Winding Wheel 5/6/05
3. Games 5/16/05
4. Mockingbird Song 5/14/05
5. This Is It 5/6/05
6. Come Pick Me Up 5/4/05
7. The Hardest Part 5/17/05
8. Strawberry Wine 5/16/05
9. Hard Way To Fall 7/26/05
10. Tennessee Sucks 5/7/05
11. Oh My Sweet Carolina 6/16/05
12. La Cienega Just Smiled 5/7/05
13. Brown Sugar 6/7/05
14. Expressway To Your Skull 8/7/05

DOWNLOAD DISC 3 AS A ZIP FILE HERE

It is worth noting that #9 Hard Way To Fall contains one of my favorite lyrics in the history of lyrics: “I could find her in a thunderstorm by the way that the rain would fall.” I love that.

And tomorrow, tomorrow is the day that I fly to California to accomplish some work & personal related things, but also to see Ryan Adams for the first time! Hey, if you are one of my SF-area readers going to the show, you should stop by the Final/Final bar on Baker & Lombard beforehand to grab a beer with me & a few others of us who are meeting up. It is a sports bar, or so I hear, so be prepared to compete with a wall of TVs, but it has the distinction of being the closest bar to the Palace of Fine Arts that we could locate. It’d be fun.

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April 18, 2006

Ryan Adams Bedhead, Volume 2

As promised, here is the second disc of the 5th volume (What Will Happen Next) of the Ryan Adams Bedhead live series. Three more to come following this one. If you missed the first one, it’s here.

I’ve received some interesting feedback from y’all on the topic of seeing Ryan Adams live. Several of you have either commented or emailed to say how horrible he was when you saw him live, and how very disappointed you were. Others concede that when he does have a good show, it is really, really good (when all the celestial elements align for that perfect evening). My friend Chris in the UK made me laugh when he wrote that his wife will not go with him to see Ryan Adams ever again, that she thinks, “her summation – beautiful voice, depressing bastard in dire need of a good wash.” He also continues with “As the man says himself, ‘The sign on the door should read: variable quality – buyer beware.’

Here’s to hoping that all the stars are in alignment next week for the SF shows, that the variable quality is high, and that I get some gems like this:

Disc II (Volume 15)
01. Cold Roses –> New York, New York 5/7/05
02. Stella Blue 7/26/05
03. Already Gone 6/11/05
04. Wonderwall 6/17/05
05. Easy Plateau 5/14/05
06. Meadowlake Street 5/1/05
07. Wharf Rat –> Bird Song 6/16/05
08. You Will Always Be The Same 6/7/05
09. Beachfront Town 4/29/05

DOWNLOAD DISC 2 AS A ZIP FILE HERE

Oh, and happy birthday to my brother Brian, somehow he is 24 already and I still picture him as being about 5, pronouncing his “r”s as “w”s. Go see the San Diego ocean for me and enjoy the California sunshine, lil brother! Love you.

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April 15, 2006

Ryan Adams Bedhead for the flac-less

I do believe that Ryan Adams has some of the most dedicated fans in the music community. The folks over at the RyanAdamsArchive.com site have religiously compiled a bunch of live tracks from various tours and “released” them (for lack of a better word) as the Bedhead Series.

All are fabulous and available in torrent format at the archive site. But I was admittedly (and probably lamely) baffled because they came in flac format, and I listen in mp3. If you too are in my boat, I am happy to now have the fifth volume in mp3 format, called What Will Happen Next, which are songs from last year’s spring/summer shows for the most part. I’ll put up a new one every couple of days here, and you can get all 5 discs of live goodness with persistence and stick-to-it-ness.

This’ll be in honor of, and to get us pumped for, the solo acoustic shows coming up in just a few short days/weeks. And do head over to the RyanAdamsArchive.com site and show them a little love for this great collection.

What Will Happen Next is the 5th in the Bedhead Series which comprises: Bedhead (Volumes 1-3), Live Is Hell (Volumes 4-7), Live Rock’nRoll (Volumes 8-10), After The Fall (Volumes 11-14), and now What Will Happen Next (Volumes 15-19).

Knock yourself out.

Disc I (Volume 15)
01. Trains 5/4/05
02. Don’t Fail Me Now 7/27/05
03. Elizabeth You Were Born To Play The Part 5/1/05
04. To Be Young 5/21/05
05. Shakedown On 9th Street 5/16/05
06. When The Stars Go Blue 5/7/05
07. Let It Ride 5/4/05 (slow & sublime)
08. Blossom 5/1/05
09. What Sin Replaces Love->Beautiful Sorta 5/11/05
10. Please Do Not Let Me Go 6/3/05
11. Rosebud 6/5/05
12. Sweet Lil’ Gal 5/4/05

DOWNLOAD DISC 1 AS A ZIP FILE HERE

So, if I go to jail for 11 years (where all the evil Ryan Adams music posters go), will you write me? Send me mix CDs? (or do you think they just have cassette tape players in there?). Sigh.

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April 11, 2006

Third time’s a charm?


An open request to Ryan Adams: Let’s both of us please show up this time, eh? Looking forward to it immensely. Thanks for trying again.

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April 1, 2006

Splashing around in the Live Music Archive

Ahhh, it is so much fun (and so time-consuming!) to just browse around and see what kind of good stuff there is for the listening in the Live Music Archive. It really is a phenomenal resource for music lovers. Late one night recently I spent some time immersed in the archives and I wanted to share with you what I sauntered away with, happily. Oh, and this is just the tip of the iceberg. It’s like the Smithsonian, which I once got lost in during the class trip to Washington D.C. in junior high. It’s easy to wander off.

COLLECTIONS:
All kinds of great KFOG in-studio sessions (Matt Nathanson, Jack Johnson, Cracker, Cowboy Junkies, etc)

Lots of KCRW stuff (Ben Lee, David Gray, My Morning Jacket)

A bunch of Amoeba Records in-stores (Rogue Wave, Michael Franti & Spearhead, etc.)

NEIL HALSTEAD of MOJAVE 3
10/10/04, Moonshine Festival in Laguna Beach
See You On Rooftops
(and note that the cringe-inducing hissing at the beginning stops shortly after the song starts)
**He was also featured on the surf-movie soundtrack Sprout that I posted about a while back

MIKE DOUGHTY
(formerly of Soul Coughing)
June 22, 2002 at the Aladdin Theatre, Portland OR
Grey Ghost (partly because it is a good song, and also because it is written about Jeff Buckley)


ELLIOTT SMITH
Recently added: February 26, 2000, The Empty Bottle in Chicago
Angeles


MATT NATHANSON
Bent > Anna Begins
(one of his great original songs segueing into -!!!- a Counting Crows cover. Really lovely.)
(From his 10/29/04 show at the 9:30 Club, Washington DC).

MY MORNING JACKET
FM Broadcast (= great quality) of the show at The Palace Theater in Louisville on November 23, 2005.
Off The Record

ROGER CLYNE AND THE PEACEMAKERS
My favorite show of theirs to listen to from the Live Music Archive is still the August 19 show at the Gothic Theatre last year: It was my birthday, and my first inauguration to the sweaty, rockin’ goodness that is a Roger Clyne show. Plus, Clyne kissed my hand after the show for a birthday present. The whole show is top notch, and I love how it captures all the audience participation as well.
Banditos

ANIMAL LIBERATION ORCHESTRA (ALO)
Loving Cup (Rolling Stones cover)
From their New Year’s Eve 2005 show, Mountain House, Santa Barbara

SPOON
A great show from last month: 2/2/06, La Zona Rosa, Austin, TX
I Turn My Camera On

RYAN ADAMS
Recent show: February 15, 2006 at the Carling Academy in Glasgow
(excellent setlist & show quality!):
Dear Chicago, an absolutely heartwrenching version of Please Do Not Let Me Go, and Ryan’s banter about receiving text messages from his mom.

G. LOVE AND SPECIAL SAUCE
Some goodness from his January 18, 2006 show at the Belly-Up Tavern in Solana Beach, CA:
Cold Beverage > Gold Digger (Cold Beverage is a guilty pleasure of mine. Hidden talent: I can rap ALL the lyrics, stemming from the same SPIN Magazine cassette sampler in 1994 that introduced me to Jeff Buckley, oddly enough)
The Times They Are A Changin’ (yes, a Bob Dylan cover, since Garrett knows how to play the harmonica)
– And, why not: a little Booty Call action

JACK JOHNSON
Sitting, Waiting, Wishing (with a little Just What I Needed thrown in) From August 5, 2005, Dodge Theatre, Phoenix

Soon Forget (Pearl Jam ukulele song)
From June 11, 2005 at the Bonnaroo Festival in Manchester, TN

Free (with Donovan Frankenreiter)
From May 10, 2005, Palladium, Cologne, Germany

Three Is A Magic Number/3 Rs (a little Schoolhouse Rock love)
From the August 10, 2005 show at the Santa Barbara County Bowl
(Tip: don’t make drunken concertgoers chant counting answers!
Jack: “And the eighteenth letter of the alphabet is . . . “
(no response – crickets from the crowd) -
“Well, that’s kind of a hard one, it’s actually hard…”)

Plus, they have the whole Jack Johnson show at Santa Clara University (my alma mater) from Feb 10, 2002. I thought that was pretty cool, an excellent sound-quality recording.

It’s in the .shn format (like a lot of the stuff on the Live Music Archive), but there are some free converters that you can use to change it into .wav, then mp3 (I use FreeRip).

That should keep you well-stocked for the weekend, muchachos, wherever it takes you! Be good.

March 23, 2006

“I wrote this today. It probably sucks.”

We can all admit that there’s just something exciting and memorable about The First Time.

Here is an mp3 of the first performance of “Come Pick Me Up” by Ryan Adams on Valentine’s Day 2000 (how appropriate) in Seattle. Thanks to Jon for posting it.

This initial unveiling is acoustic & emotional, pre-harmonica, and with different lyrics throughout.

Missing are the lyrics:
When you’re walking downtown
Do you wish I was there?
Do you wish it was me?

With the windows clear
And the mannequins’ eyes
Do they all look like mine?

Glad he added those later because they are crystalline and scathing in their imagery, a few of my favorites (in a long line).

Come Pick Me Up (acoustic/first performance) – Ryan Adams

And another BONUS for you dear reader, since we are on topic: A tune called “The Battle” written by Ryan Adams and Whiskeytown co-conspirator Caitlin Cary for her album While You Weren’t Looking (2002).

This was featured on a limited-issue bonus disc. Man, they harmonize in a such a sublime way together, don’t they? Thanks to Tongue-Tied Lightning for the track.

The Battle – Caitlin Cary and Ryan Adams

Word.

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Bio Pic Name: Heather Browne
Location: Colorado, originally by way of California
Giving context to the torrent since 2005.

"I love the relationship that anyone has with music: because there's something in us that is beyond the reach of words, something that eludes and defies our best attempts to spit it out. It's the best part of us, probably, the richest and strangest part..."
—Nick Hornby, Songbook
"Music has always been a matter of energy to me, a question of Fuel. Sentimental people call it Inspiration, but what they really mean is Fuel."
—Hunter S. Thompson

Mp3s are for sampling purposes, kinda like when they give you the cheese cube at Costco, knowing that you'll often go home with having bought the whole 7 lb. spiced Brie log. They are left up for a limited time. If you LIKE the music, go and support these artists, buy their schwag, go to their concerts, purchase their CDs/records and tell all your friends. Rock on.

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