6 May: Atlanta

6 May – Eddie’s Attic
w/ Pat Walsh, weaklazyliar, Sue Witty

I let this write-up sit for far too long, swamped with other responsibilities. But this was Sue Witty’s CD release party and it went well. She had a good sized crowd of her fans out. In the interest of public disclosure I will mention that I sing backing vocals on two of the songs on her new CD, which she recorded at Rob Gal’s studio. The CD is very different from Sue’s solo show, with the songs in their full band form. Linda Bolley (Gentle Readers, Michelle Malone) played drums and Ryan Taylor (weaklazyliar) played some keys. I got up during her first set to reprise my vocals but I don’t think they went very well.

I know I’ve said it all before so I’ll try to be brief, but to me CD release shows are a big deal and whenever I’m part of someone else’s I always try to do whatever I can to help it be special. So I kept egging the crowd on during my set for Sue, since they seemed to be a little disinterested for a bit. I played Janis Ian’s “Seventeen” during my set, just because I’ve always loved that song and also to be able to make a joke about Rob calling me his favorite female voice in Atlanta. It was a good choice, though, since I had a few people come up to say they couldn’t believe I had pulled it off.

That’s all I can remember, except to mention that I thought weaklazyliar’s stripped down set (just Gerlinda on guitar and Ryan on keyboards) sounded surprisingly amazing. Also, that Pat Walsh is still one of my favorites in this town, and I wish he had a little more exposure. I would think the notlame.com types would eat his stuff up… very literate and erudite pop.

25-27 Apr: Atlanta

25 April – Floataway Open House (Atlanta, GA)
w/ weaklazyliar

This wasn’t really a public show, it was an open house for a complex of businesses in Atlanta. They do this every year, with food, drinks and live music. The first show I ever officially did post-Radiant City was playing this, back in 1999. It caused a lot of drama at the time because, though I had booked it as a solo show before the blow-up, the band saw it as proof that I had intended to quit all along. That night I played with weaklazyliar and the Young Antiques.

weaklazyliar sounds great with their new drummer Travis. He seems to me to be a combination of Joe and Mitch in all the right ways. Ryan also was playing his new Moog, making lots of little Fantastic Planet noises. I can’t say enough that I want them to keep making music. They could be so much more confident if they could be touring. They could be indie darlings in a way I don’t think I ever could.

We did the show as an acoustic three-piece since Lee was out of town. We… well, *I* was sloppy. And in pain. My hand was cramping, reminding me why I don’t like to play the acoustic. I broke a string on the second song (which Gerlinda fixed while I was playing her guitar). But overall it went okay. I had a few people tell me they liked the treatment we gave the songs and the changes we had made. Though, I’m not really aware of any changes that we made deliberately, so I assume they were mostly the subconscious ones. Watching dynamics and that sort of thing. they wanted one more song once we were done and we really hadn’t worked up anything else, not to mention I couldn’t imagine playing guitar any longer, so instead we did a version of Squeeze’s “Tempted” with Lyle playing bass and Chris playing a little percussion that went surprisingly well.

26 April 2003 – 10 High (Atlanta, GA)
on stage with chain poets

Now the secret can be told. For two weeks I went and rehearsed with chain poets to get ready for this show.

“Mr. Blue Sky”

That’s what we did. I’m sorry, not just “Mr. Blue Sky,” but virtually every tiny bit of “Mr. Blue Sky” short of the ‘clang-clang-clang’ sound which we couldn’t reproduce. But YES to lots of harmonies falling all over the place, YES to string sounds, YES to the vocoder, and even YES to the operatic ending. I did not nail the solo and would kill for another chance at it, but it still sounded great. Curtis, who normally runs sound, wasn’t going to be at the show but heard us run through it for soundcheck and swapped with another soundman for the night to make sure he was the one running sound.

Damn right.

And it was a fucking blast, too. Happy late birthday to me.

We also did “No Matter What,” but we’ve done that before. The thing I learn from being on stage with them, though, is that I do have that lingering urge to RAWK, to front a loud seventies rock band. But I find, in the end, that I don’t want it consistently enough to be in a band like that full time. Anyway, I don’t think I pull off the image.

On a side note, they’ve got a new song that kills me and I wish I had written it.

27 April 2003 – Borders (Atlanta, GA)

This was something that was set up about a month or so ago. An in-store in conjunction with EarthShare and Earth Day. Unfortunately, the person at Daemon who set it up with Borders was gone by April, and the promotion that had been promised at the time never materialized. So I really half expected no one would be there for it. Actually, I half-expected that the store wouldn’t even have a clue that I was supposed to be there. Thankfully, though, that idea was wrong, and they had the little area set up before I even got there. Still, I played to about 10 people, but having expected that it wasn’t such a big deal. I sold a couple of CDs, even, had a few people sign up. Even more unexpectedly I felt really good about how it sounded and how I played. Which goes to show you can never predict these things.

With the lull I’m in musically right now I find myself in sort of a pit. I feel a little short-tempered and impatient, and the whole enterprise seems terribly pointless at the moment. Nevertheless I keep going through the motions. I don’t really know when I developed this sort of ability to ignore myself and keep doing things musically while I wait out my depression. But thank whoever that I did.

I just need movement again. The problem is that I don’t know how soon that will come. A lot has happened in the past 6 months, most of it I would never have believed. But on the other side of it, taking the long view, it’s hard to feel that I’ve made much headway.

12 Apr: Atlanta

12 April – Dogwood Festival (Atlanta, GA)

It was a great day, really. I haven’t played the Dogwood Festival since I was in Radiant City, which would be… 1997, I think? That seems right. The weather was great, we loaded the van and made the long, long drive to Piedmont Park. Well, really it’s only about 20 minutes away, but we hit traffic at the exit ramp and it took another 30 minutes or more to cover the last 2 miles. Somehow I managed to squeeze the behemoth into the parking area and we loaded the gear into the golf carts for the trek to the stage. We were in a tent which I hadn’t expected. I think it was actually a little warmer in the tent than it was outside but it wasn’t a big deal.

It turned out Sugarland, the band that played after us, had canceled, so they were extending everyone’s sets. We went on a little later and added some songs we hadn’t really been prepared to play to the set. Still, they all came off well, I thought. Plus, the crowd stayed after the announcement that Sugarland wasn’t appearing, and continued to stay after we started playing. There were also a lot of people I recognized there, local musicians I know plus friends, fans, and even the family members who had tried to make it to the Cleveland show. Rob Gal magically appeared in the front row near the end of the set and I pulled him up to play on “Hitchcock Blonde,” which I thought went well. After the set I went over to the merch tent and talked with some people, which I am really trying to do every time. My very own part-time stalker gave me a mix CD, which I mention so that any other potential stalkers will know how far they’re lagging behind. Then it was back on the golf carts to the van.

It was nice to do a van trip that didn’t last a week.