Sleepytime Gorilla Museum, Middle East Downstairs, June 3, 2007
By JIM SULLIVAN | June 4, 2007
SLEEPYTIME GORILLA MUSEUM: Rocking against rock with lyrics from Finnegans Wake. |
Sleepytime Gorilla Museum, five persons wearing raggedy beige tunics and garish eye make-up, filed from the rear of the Middle East downstairs to the stage Sunday night while playing mutant Dixieland music. Once on stage, the Oakland-based outfit launched into a much-ado-about-everything set — a collision of prog-rock, thrash metal, free jazz, punk, off-kilter funk, and more. Not that SGM were trained for this. Oh no. All the players have classical, conservatory backgrounds. They rebelled against that world, started playing rock, and then began a “rock against rock” campaign. Or as drummer Matthias Bossi said post-set, “We hate what it’s become. Everything is corporate.”
One song was introduced as being about “biologically significant copulation”; another described “the intersection of the animal kingdom and the plant kingdom.” “The Widening Eye,” with violinist Carla Kihlstedt moaning orgasms or death throes, was introduced by singer/guitarist Nils Frykdahl as “a little bit worse than the last one. I want to apologize in advance.”
Formed in 1999, SGM are touring in support of their just-released In Glorious Times (The End). They registered a metallic KO with the crescendo-laden “Helpless Corpses Enactment,” a song with lyrics borrowed from James Joyce’s Finnegans Wake. At the end, three white-robed figures in blackface appeared and tossed kazoos to the crowd so everyone could offer a “Happy Birthday” salute to Bossi and bassist Dan Rathbun, who share a June 3 birthdate, 13 years apart.
A Frank Zappa/Les Claypool sense of wit and a fondness for complex time signatures are essential components of the SGM experience. Then there’s the over-the-top GWAR-ness. Electric violin is just as important as electric guitar; tribal percussion is integral. There are homemade instruments that complement the more traditional stuff. Lucidity is apparent, yet the illusion of lunacy is always lurking.
Related:
Vusi Mahlasela, Don’t shoot the piano players, Going on sale: October 10, 2008, More
- Vusi Mahlasela
Mahlasela is among Africa’s best singer-songwriters, and here he delivers 16 largely acoustic-based tunes that span kwela, reggae, swing jazz, mbaqanga, and rock.
- Don’t shoot the piano players
Twenty years ago, Fred Hersch was known as a talented young jazz pianist and teacher at New England Conservatory.
- Going on sale: October 10, 2008
Caithlin De Marrais, Darker My Love, Wayne Shorter and others
- Unsettling business
Kevin Frenette’s playing is warm yet cerebral, and his music lies in the middleground between avant jazz and free improvisation.
- Tours of duty
Clifford and Bang will celebrate Memorial Day weekend together at Highland Kitchen in Somerville this Sunday in a program called "Basic Training: An Evening of Art, Music, and Poetry."
- No new age
Yes, this Boston jazz trio incorporates the sounds of seals, tree frogs, and crickets. Yes, one of them is a working ecologist. Here's why you shouldn't hold that against them.
- Seven up
Because Sly-Chi are so versatile, and can adopt any number of danceable skins, there can be a tendency to read their individual songs in great chunks, like sentences we've read a hundred times.
- Music for the love of it
Whether driving his Men of Great Courage on a tune about a spooky midnight stroll, or gently declaring a deep camaraderie with “We Shall Always Remain Friends,” Cutler’s concocting a soundtrack to the feelings in the room.
- John Abercrombie
Twenty years ago, you might have associated guitarist John Abercrombie with the fancy firebreathing of jazz-rock fusion.
- Erin McKeown: Lafayette
Give some of the credit to her crack back-up band, who move effortlessly between head-nodding hip-hop grooves and hopped-up big-band shuffles.
- Anat, Elvis, and Jenny
In the wake of a single solo album on her own label in 2005, Anat Cohen is suddenly everywhere.
- Less
Topics:
Live Reviews
, Entertainment, Music, Jazz and Blues, More
, Entertainment, Music, Jazz and Blues, Frank Zappa, James Joyce, Les Claypool, Sleepytime Gorilla Museum, Matthias Bossi, Carla Kihlstedt, Less