MOONEY SUZUKI
+ MAZARIN
+ LAZY COWGIRLS
+ DATSUNS
@ Club Clearview, Dallas
March 16 2002


A coupla random observations to start: 1) As no less an authority than Ross the Boss of the Dictators pointed out a coupla weeks ago when the Dics did Dallas, "Girls LIKE rock'n'roll now!" It's not like it was a coupla years ago anymore, when a show like this woulda drawn a house full of middle-aged guys in black T-shirts trying to look 15 years younger than they really are (sorry, Geoff), in addition to the slumming yups. Au contraire, nowadays, sisters are doin' it for THEMSELVES; to wit, showing up in goodly numbers (with or without guys) to dig the Rawk. I saw several of 'em pushing other audience members around and adding to the beer bottle-smashing quotient (a Texas thang, I'm told), not to mention the one who came up to me and started grinding her ass into my pelvis as I was communing with the sensitive, poetic spirit of the Lazy Cowgirls' front guy Pat Todd. All in all, a good trend, I think. 2) Absent distinctive songs, all the energy and excitement under the Sun can wind up being boring. Not that that applies to anyone on this bill in particular.

What To Do Instead of Going to SXSW, Round Two: take in some of the "Southwest Sampler" at Club Clearview in Dallas' Deep Ellum. I hadn't seen the Mooney Suzuki in a couple of rhythm sections, and the pairing of the storming Jersey kings of high-energy garage/Mod jams with the Lazy Cowgirls, distinguished ELDER STATESMEN of rootsy punk rock'n'roll noise was just too much for me to pass up. Before I go any further, a minor gripe: Why in the fuck were the Cowgirls playing before Mazarin from Philadelphia, a competent enough prog-cum-Velvet Underground derivation in somewhat the same manner as, uh, Macha (an SXSW mistake of mine from a coupla years back), who were, in the words of the drummer from the opening Datsuns from Hamilton, New Zealand, "good at what they do, but it just doesn't FIT." For that matter, what were the Datsuns, on their first trip Stateside from Antipodea, doing at the bottom of the bill? One would think that an unknown band from the other side of the planet would rank higher than an unknown band from a coupla thousand miles away. I know, I know..."no justice in rock'n'roll." But still...

For their part, the Kiwi kids (their name is pronounced "DAT-suns," not "DAHT-suns" as Americans insist on mispronouncing it), who might have weighed 400 pounds between four of 'em, purveyed an energetic brand of MC5-influenced, dual guitar-driven excitement familiar to fans of innumerable bands of Aussie cousins and like-minded Scandis like the Hellacopters. The classic sound of Gibson guitars and Fender amps (or Music Man, which Leo designed, after all) sliced through the air (I saw the lead guitarist of a higher-billed band making "rock'n'roll earplugs" out of a ripped up matchbook) and their bassplayer/frontman worked the fairly sizable crowd of apathetic shufflers with admirably aplomb. An auspicious start to the evening.

Talking to Pat Todd at the merch counter before the Lazy Cowgirls hit (their website is down for maintenance but should be back soon), it was surprising to hear him express doubt that anyone in Dallas would care much about his band. An elfin presence on this, the day before St. Paddy's Day (whom a friend described to me as "looking like George Ivan Morrison but about 50 pounds lighter"), Pat helpfully held the flashlight for punters who wanted to sign up for the Cowgirls' e-mail list before taking the stage to briefly soundcheck. I'll admit to having missed out on a lot of the Cowgirls' masterwork (although I have great fondness for their "Tapping the Source" album), but I've been catching up of late...their recent Earle Mankey-produced "Here and Now (Live!)" has been a staple in my car for the past coupla weeks. While their Clearview set didn't include any fully acoustic numbers the way that album did, Pat did don an acoustic guitar for a coupla numbers from the Cowgirls' 2000 "Somewhere Down the Line" album, from which they drew heavily on this night. Hopefully Pat was pleased with the positive audience response, which included some of the female shenanigans I alluded to earlier.

Lately I've been thinking about how it is that the MAJORITY of people dig "Exile On Main St." (a cultural signifier if ever there was one; is there a rock album that cuts across more demographic and subcultural lines in terms of influence and respect?) more than they do the MC5. I'm thinking it has a lot to do with the fact that most folks experience the Rawk (okay, call it MUSIC, then) through the medium of records (CDs, tapes, MP3s, whatever...call it RECORDED MEDIA) than they do through live performance.. Is it any wonder, then, that they want a music that isn't reliant on the memory of a live performance to evoke emotions or experience? (Christ, I'm starting to sound like Paul Williams here.) The Stones' fictive American South seems to be particularly evocative. Recently I've heard echoes of it in records I dig as diverse as Wilco's "Being There," the Yayhoos' "Fear Not the Obvious" (although the sloppy-drunk Faces seem to be as big of a signifier for Messrs. Baird, Ambel and Co. as Mick and the boys), and the Hydromatics' "Powerglide." The Cowgirls, meanwhile, are TAPPING into the same original American root SOURCE music, Caucasian strain (that'd be COUNTRY to y'all) that the Stones were via their associations with Gram Parsons and Ry Cooder. ("Here and Now" includes covers of songs by Bill Monroe and Billy Joe Shaver, and do ya remember their version of Jim Reeves' "Heartache?") Fertile ground, that, and the beauty of the Cowgirls' approach to it is that they claim it in exactly the same way as they claim their punk forebears like the Ramones and the Saints.

Unfortunately, the Cowgirls' set is marred by your typical Clearview opening band shitty sound mix, with Todd's vocals buried underneath the roar of Michael Leigh's guitar. This is remedied only somewhat during the course of the performance. A pity, that, as the Cowgirls are one band where songcraft makes all the difference. Pat's an engaging performer, projecting lotsa personality even when he's nearly inaudible. He leans into the audience like a man facing a typhoon (occasionally heading back to the drum riser to pour honey down his throat from one of those little plastic bear things, something I'd never seen before), and his energy infects the band; bassist Leonard Keringer's marvelously awkward Townshend-jumps are a joy to behold. Pat dominates the stage even when guit-slinger Leigh takes a vocal on the Flamin' Groovies' "Second Cousin" (and it's either indicative of my encroaching senility or what a classic the Groovies have become that when I first heard this cover on "Here and Now," I had to struggle to remember what ancient '50s rock'n'roll movie Jerry Lee Lewis had sung this song in, when of course it only dates back as far as the Groovies' classic '70 "Flamingo" album). And the drummer (sorry, I didn't catch his name) fits in fine in spite of this only being his seventh gig with the Cowgirls (he's just helping out for the tour, he explains).

The Cowgirls' set was, if anything, too short (I copped a setlist afterwards and saw that Pat had to excise two songs to stay on schedule). Here's hoping next time they hit Big D the promoter has the decency to put 'em at the top of the bill, where they belong. (And give 'em more than a cursory sound check.)
In fairness to Mazarin, I'll admit that I didn't catch their entire set. On the contrary, I was preoccupied with trying to consume as much beer as possible before the price for a bottle of Shiner went up from $2.25 to $4.00 at 11 o'clock, and after that, with finding a place to get rid of some of the surplus. Club Clearview is part of a complex that also includes the Art Bar and a coupla dance clubs (disco and, uh, HOUSE, I think, but I wouldn't swear to it; not up on my dance music genres, I'm afraid), which makes every visit to the latrine a SOCIOLOGICAL EXPERIENCE. Like the aforementioned Macha and Bedhead, another allegedly VU-influenced band I once saw perform in the mid-nineties, Mazarin plays a valid form of rock music; it just happens to be one I don't like (too arty, too sterile). They have their own kind of excitement; it just isn't one that I respond to at all.

Finally, the Mooney Suzuki. I've been raving about these guys since catching their act at SXSW two years ago, and since then they've only increased their assurance and professionalism, in spite of a few personnel changes in the rhythm section. True to form, they've already experienced vehicular difficulties in Texas (two years ago they had to cancel a Dallas appearance when their van broke down enroute from Austin; last year their tour ended in nearby Denton due to another breakdown; this year they hit a deer in Austin and ruined their radiator). In spite of Mazarin having lost probably a quarter of the audience, frontman Sammy James, Jr. and guitarist Graham Tyler quickly galvanize the crowd into what passes in Dallas for an ecstatic frenzy. It's not too hard to figure out why, either: four young, good-looking guys going apeshit onstage. The gals are clustered up at the front, and one of 'em blows up a condom to attach to Sam's mic stand before he takes the stage. Subtle? HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA! Sam's hip to it, too. "The men don't know, but the little girls understand," Howlin' Wolf said. Sam's take on it: "In a young man's mind, it's a simple world/There's a little room for music and the rest is girls."

These guys stay in frenetic, almost cartoon-like motion throughout the set. I worry about Tyler in 20 years, like a punch-drunk fighter, his brain come unstuck from shaking his head so hard, so constantly. When he's not doing MC5-style backbends onstage, he's climbing on top of tables or riding audience members' shoulders. Sam's mastered the Townshend windmill in addition to his other James Brown-derived stage business, and his climactic guitar duel with Tyler at the end of the set is every bit as riveting as the one between Wayne Kramer and Fred Smith at the end of "Rocket Reducer No. 62." The Mooneys' new Jim Diamond-produced shiny silver disc "Electric Sweat" (on Gammon, due in stores April 9th) is the best studio representation yet of their live fury, with strong songs to boot, but live, the tunes are just vehicles for the Mooneys to pitch their mojo.

Besides the album's title track and the aforementioned "In a Young Man's Mind," "Oh Sweet Susanna" is the champ among the current tunes, but for my money, the ace songs in the set are all from 2000's "People Get Ready": "A Song About Today," "Make My Way," "Yeah You Can." When their old set-opener "And Begin" materializes like an old friend in the middle of the set, it serves both to re-energize the proceedings and evoke memories: remember the good old days at Emo's back in 2K?
- Ken Shimamoto

1/2

BACK TO THE LIVE PORTAL

BACK TO THE BAR