
Thursday, March 20
Stephen Malkmus & The Jicks w/ John Vanderslice @ The Pabst Theater, 8 p.m.

Last
time Stephen Malkmus stopped in Milwaukee, he gave a completely
unexpected, one-off set of 18 Pavement songs played in chronological
order, while his new band, The Jicks, struggled to keep up with him.
Fans can almost certainly expect a very different kind of show this
time around. Malkmus’ newest album, Real Emotional Trash, is
the least Pavement-like album he’s ever recorded, a collection of
warped guitar jams that frequently stretch past the sixminute mark.
Much of the Jicks’ newfound heaviness is the result of their new,
celebrity drummer. Malkmus swapped fellow Portlander John Moen, now a
Decemberist, for fellow Portlander Janet Weiss, formerly a
Sleater-Kinney. The big question for tonight’s show is how Malkmus will
balance his ever-increasing interest in jamming with longtime fans’
desires to hear simpler, shorter pop songs—or if he’ll even attempt to.
Opener John Vanderslice writes melodically rich folk songs, fleshed out
with Neutral Milk Hotel arrangements and Spoon-esque sonic quirks.
Though his music is breezy and light, his subject matter as of late has
not been. His last two albums are steeped in Iraq-war angst.
Glorytellers @ Cactus Club, 9:30 p.m.
After
spending more than a decade fronting Karate, a frequently stunning but
seldom recognized indie-rock band whose great contribution to the genre
was seamlessly integrating complex, jazzy guitar chords, Geoff Farina
has returned with a new band, Glorytellers, and like his last one, this
group looks to early American music for inspiration. Befitting the
group’s name, Glorytellers’ major muse is early folk and country
ballads. On their just-released self-titled debut, Farina draws from
these dramatic, unsentimental stories about war and death, calmly
singing them and strumming along unobtrusively, resisting the
temptation to turn up the amp or do anything else that might break his
yarns’ hypnotic spell.

Friday, March 21
Les Claypool @ The Rave, 8:30 p.m.
Since
Primus went dark, save for the occasional tour and retrospective
release, madman bassist Claypool has had a difficult time committing
himself to one steady new band, and has instead played with several
short-lived lineups and side projects, most notably Oysterhead with
Phish’s Trey Anastasio and The Police’s Stewart Copeland. Tonight he’ll
be backed by his own drums/vibraphone/saxophone trio.
Claypool
first endeared himself to metalheads in the late- ’80s, then
alternative-rock kids in the ’90s, but he’s since found a particular
well of support in the current jam-music scene, where he fits right in
with his extended, genre-defying songs and acid-fried lyrics. Claypool
has become so swept up in jam culture that he even directed a loving
mockumentary about it, Electric Apricot: Quest For Festeroo.
Saturday, March 22
O’Death w/ Langhorne Slim and Clementine @ Mad Planet, 9 p.m.
The name says it all. This New York
quintet plays rustic, old-timey American music along the lines of the
traditional funeral song they’re named for, but with a darker, punky
edge. Old-time revival is quickly becoming the swing revival of the
2000s, but with their sinister fiddle and snappy songs, O’Death is
better than most, and they draw as much from The Pixies as they do Tom
Waits and Screamin’ JayHawkins.
Singer Greg Jamie howls, yowls and yelps like a young Frank Black, and
the group has even been known to slip a screamy cover of “Nimrod’s Son”
into its sets.
Bob Weir and Ratdog @ The Riverside Theater, 8 p.m.
Perhaps
more than any other Grateful Dead offshoot band, Bob Weir and Ratdog
closely guard the Dead’s legacy. With a rotating cast of touring
musicians, Weir makes sure to include some choice Dead songs in each
set list, and peppers the rest of his sets with can’t-miss covers
(often of the very, very familiar variety) to ensure he wins over the
crowd each night.
This kind of unabashed fan service has made
them one of the most successful touring acts on the jam circuit, a
reliable draw at any city they play.
The Starting Line w/ Bayside @ The Rave, 7 p.m.
The
Starting Line are among the poppiest and most agreeable of the current
crop of often indistinguishable emopunk bands, and their latest album, Direction, is
so studio-polished and wholesome that it could easily be mistaken for a
Jonas Brothers release. Openers Bayside are much edgier, although
they’ve softened with age, toning down their morose lyrics. In 2005,
the group’s drummer was killed in a freak tour van accident, so it was
a welcome relief when the band returned in 2007 with The Walking Wounded, an unexpectedly optimistic album that suggested the band was making amends with the tragedy.
The Starting Line w/ Bayside
Monday, March 24
Stuart Davis @ Shank Hall, 8 p.m.
Like Moby, power-pop singer-songwriter StuartDavis
has a prominent bald dome and a propensity to share his philosophical
and religious musings with anyone who will listen. Go to his MySpace
page and you’ll find curious videos of him debating himself. “I don’t
observe Christmas, I’m a Buddhist,” he tells himself in a video titled
“Zen and the Zen of Zen.” “Dude, being Buddhist doesn’t preclude
participation in common social ritual,” he responds. The video
continues for another 11 minutes. A one-man Waking Life, Davis
requires a certain amount of open-mindedness (and patience) to
appreciate, and the fact that he’s working on inventing his own
language called “IS” won’t make him any more popular with the masses
who just want to have a beer and hear some music.
Wednesday, March 26
Two Loons for Tea @ Shank Hall, 8 p.m.
For
their latest tour, the chanteusefronted Seattle trip-hop duo Two Loons
for Tea has recruited some regional Wisconsin players as their rhythm
section: bassist William Kopecky and Far Corner drummer Craig Walkner.
These area prog-rockers promise to add an interesting, extra edge to
the jazzy songs from Two Loons for Tea’s latest album, 2007’s Nine Lucid Dreams.
Pink Razors @ The Borg Ward Collective, 5 p.m.
The
early ’90s were a glorious time for pop-punk, an era when the only
thing pop-punk bands needed to record an album was enough cash for a
few hours in a budget studio. By the end of the decade, however,
pop-punk had given way to expensive, overproduced and mostly reviled
mallpunk, and even the small bands that still recorded on the cheap
abandoned the increasingly stigmatized genre. With their up-tempo,
bratty hooks and short-but-sweet songs, Richmond,
Va.’s delightful Pink Razors nod to the ’90s glory days of
non-commercialized pop punk. They’re the type of band Lookout Records
would snatch up in a heartbeat, if Lookout Records were still scouting
new talent (and could still afford to pay its bands). Tonight they’ll
play as part of a crowded bill including, among others, Chinese
Telephones, Lefty Loosie, Tenement and Shang-A-Lang.
Pink Razors
AP - The chief executive officer of failed insurance conglomerate AIG acknowledged Wednesday that the company's multimillion-dollar bonuses were "distasteful" to many and had provoked a firestorm of wrath. "I share that anger," Edward Liddy, chairman and CEO of the American International Group Inc., said in testimony prepared for Congress.

AP - The chief executive officer of failed insurance conglomerate AIG acknowledged Wednesday that the company's multimillion-dollar bonuses were "distasteful" to many and had provoked a firestorm of wrath. "I share that anger," Edward Liddy, chairman and CEO of the American International Group Inc., said in testimony prepared for Congress.


