TUESDAY: RYAN TRASTER BAND | CHRIS PUREKA
Ryan Traster is a Minneapolis-bred singer/songwriter currently residing in Portland, but the restless troubadour has spent the better part of the decade traveling the world making music on stages and in studios. He has had the privilege of recording or performing with members of The Jayhawks, Golden Smog, and Jonathan Wilson. He was also a key member of Small Towns Burn A Little Slower, a Minneapolis buzzband that made a mark on the emo/post punk scene in the mid 2000’s. Chris Pureka has been touring the US for the last 10 years and Europe the last three, performing unadorned, country-inflected folk music at cozy clubs and grand theaters, grassroots festivals and urban block parties. She had criss-crossed the states sharing the stage with such artists as the Lumineers, Sera Cahoone, and Y La Bamba. Pureka’s latest release, Chimera II, is an expression of transition, collecting seven tracks old and new, borrowed and original. Like its predecessor, it’s both a coda and prelude, an assortment of songs that are vital and revealing and yet don’t quite fit within the focus of her full-length albums.
Sounds like: Girlyman, Small Towns Burn A Little Slower
WEDNESDAY: ACTUAL WOLF “Tape Release Show”
“Eric Pollard is a Grand Rapids, Minnesota, boy better known by the name he shares with his stage persona, band and ethos: Actual Wolf. A few years back, he emerged from behind the drum kit to become a front man and accomplished songwriter. Listening to him was to hear to a wolf trying on sound; a vocal chameleon who could effortlessly channel Roy Orbison, Neil Young, Bob Dylan or a nameless country music singer drifting in on an AM signal. There wasn’t any doubt this guy could sing, write or play — you just didn’t know where it was going to go. Last year, Pollard left the Minnesota scene where he had just begun to make a mark to go to Nashville. On his way south he told folks he was going to make an album called Itasca, named for the county where he grew up — a land of 1,000 of Minnesota’s “10,000 Lakes,” tall pines, scrub brush and red dirt on the edge of town. Actual Wolf went all the way to the Country Music Capital of the USA to make an album that is required listening for a lonely late night drive up Highway 38 to Bigfork. […] Itasca is country rock, but not the kind of country you usual hear on the radio. It’s wintery, with pine needles and skates. And while Actual Wolf is promising another album this year, attempting to keep up the Bob Dylan 1965 pace, this man and his band have given us something to keep us cool all summer.” [MN Brown]
Opening up Wednesday’s show will be Turf Club favorites, The Cactus Blossoms.
THURSDAY: SICK OF SARAH
“It’s all better on the other side,” guitarist and lead singer Abisha Uhl cries on Anthem, the new EP by Twin Cities rockers Sick of Sarah. Evidence of the band’s cohesiveness, born out of ten years playing music together, is all over the album. In Sick of Sarah, everyone sings, keeping Uhl’s clear melodies afloat on a sea of “whoa’s” and “ahh’s.” Meanwhile, Forsythe moves her drums from thundering to stuttering, Uhl and Murphy and Farmer keep their guitars set to “blistering,” peppering in rhythms that adds subtle sense of structure and urgency. The band’s Place Your Bets Tour makes its Twin Cities stop this Thursday at the Turf, with tour-mates George Morris and local trio Strange Relations filling out the three band bill.
Sounds Like: Hunter Valentine, An Horse, The Cliks, Rachael Cantu
FRIDAY: An Evening With BOBBY BARE JR.
Bobby Bare, Jr. could’ve phoned in a career. He could’ve exploited the fact that he’s the son of iconic Country Music Hall of Famer Bobby Bare, was born into Nashville’s Music Row elite, and counted artists like Shel Silverstein as close family friends and George Jones and Tammy Wynette as next door neighbors. Instead, Bobby blazed a path of unique songwriting craftsmanship with a voice that blows through you like an unyielding wind on the desolate prairie. Undefeated is BBJ’s first release since 2010 and what he calls his “break-up record,” but the whole of it is much more involved: this isn’t escapism; it’s an emotional survival guide. Undefeated is ten songs of reality checks, clever wordplay, and daring arrangements, the aural companion to that buddy who pulls up a bar stool next to yours to help soak away your sorrows.
Sounds Like: Robbie Fulks, Lee Bains III, Old 97s, Golden Smog
SATURDAY: BIRTHDAY SUITS Record Release & 10 Year Anniversary
“Birthday Suits play breakneck garage rock punctuated by a combustible live show that focuses on substance over flash. They exert more energy in their 30-minute sets than most other bands who play double that time. Witnessing them perform exemplifies the power of music in all its sweaty and cathartic glory.” [Gimme Noise]
Since their debut in 2005, the Minneapolis-based duo of Matthew Kazama and Hideo Takahashi has excelled at tossing elements of late-’90s mathcore and classic Reagan-era punk against the wall with disarming power and impressively fresh results. This Saturday at the Turf, the band will be celebrating the release of their latest record, Spin the Bottle : Adult Party (now available on Bandcamp and iTunes), and their 10 years of existence together as Birthday Suits.
Sounds Like: Future of the Left, No Means No, STNNNG, The Blind Shake
SUNDAY: MOVIES. MUSIC. MAY with ACTUAL WOLF & Friends
Following Wednesday’s tape release show with The Cactus Blossoms, Eric Pollard will relocate downstairs to kick off a Sundays in May residency in the Clown Lounge. Doors for the shows open at 8pm and will feature a solo Actual Wolf set, along with a set from a different special guest each week. To coincide with these Clown Lounge shows, there will be a free movie screening each week upstairs on the main floor (movies will start at 7pm). Pollard hand-picked the slate of films that will be shown, starting this week with the 1994 John Waters dark comedy, Serial Mom. This Sunday’s special guest in the Clown Lounge is expected to be announced at the Wednesday Actual Wolf show.
MONDAY: DAIKAIJU
“Daikaiju make for a good mystery. The four-piece surf-rock outfit from Huntsville, Ala., take many of their song names from Japanese monster movies. The members go by the names Blast-man, Pulse-man, Rock-man and Secret-man. All four of them perform with Kabuki masks on. Their real identities are a secret. But like their clandestine surf-rock brethren Man or Astro-man?, Daikaiju make the fictional shtick seem appropriate by packaging it with otherworldly musical chops. Their skills take the form of rubbery guitar wailing and muscular riffing. And without any vocals to bother with, Daikaiju are freed up to call upon ancient powers when creating a furiously sweaty live show.” [Isthmus]
Daikaiju (die-kie-joo) Who is the Daikaiju??? Premium action heroes deliver most high rocket music! Special reverb skill combo for full impact! Loud sonic boom for earful pleasure! Beautiful radiation of hyper-dimensional springy sound creates divine psychic wind for your special protection. Worship Psycho-surf band Daikaiju daily for good luck and health!
Sounds Like: Los Straitjackets, The Aqua Velvets, The Bomboras, The Mermen
Blog by Kevin Clancy