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SOUNDTRACK: hiatus

[READ: May 5, 2023] The Art of Sushi

This beautiful hardbound book is a translation of Alarcon’s L’Art du Sishi.  It is a full on graphic novel style documentary about the process of making sushi–as well as fishing, making sake and growing rice and wasabi.  The book is almost entirely black and white with splashes of color on the sushi itself.

Alarcon has a minimalist style that works perfectly to show off a room that allows you to focus on details as well.

Alarcon starts the book with himself in France making sushi.  He’s proud of it but acknowledges it’s not award-winner.  A friend of his says she can put him in touch with Hachiro Mizutani, master sushi chef with three Michelin stars.

After a brief history lesson into how fish were prepared in Japan over the centuries, there’s a page that shows nine varieties of sushi.

Then it’s on to Hachiro Mizutani’s place, which is, in fact a small room in the upper floor of a building–not a large sushiya at all.  I got a kick out of reading that it’s okay to use your hands, that you should never let your sushi fall apart and (for Hachiro Mizutani at least) no photos!

Hachiro Mizutani gives them a chef’s menu.  16 individual pieces in a very specific order, including a dessert sushi made of shrimp paste and egg.  He prepares it right on front of them.  The next day Hachiro Mizutani takes them to the fish market where he discusses how he picks out fish and why so many foreign chefs (French, in particular since the author is from France) wait  too long to pick the perfect fish.  There’s pictures of men cutting up fish (and even using a sword to cut tuna.

The sword discussion leads to a diversion about the greatest knife makers in Japan–a family who have been making swords and blades for generations.  The Oroshi bocho is used to cut tuna.  The blade can be up to 5 feet long and it is forbidden to take it out of is the fish market.  (Although Yakuza do have them).

Hachiro Mizutani tells them about cutting fish and how his apprentices do most of the work but he always prepares the rice to get it just right.  When he was an apprentcice he slept in the restaurant and for the first four years he did nothing but clean the building–never touched a fish or rice.

They tale a 3:30 AM trip on a boat to watch the Japanese fishermen hauling in their catch, some of which they bring to their next stop.  Okada, a modern sushi chef.  He is not afraid to change things up.

This leads to a trip to rice paddies to learn just how many different types of rice there are in Japan alone.

Okada pairs his sushi with sake.  And the sake comes in specially made ceramic cups.  We meet the ceramicist and his brick oven (it’s pretty cool).  Okada, brings out the heads of the fish they are going to eat as well as the sword from the swordfish.

The next day they are off to a sake factory.  Who knew how much went into making sake and how different the various styles can taste.  There’s even a soy ice cream (which is actually really sweet not salty).

Then it’s off to someone’s house while we watch her make eel sushi.  As well as some artist friends who do a fun homemade spread.  There’s a discussion of how seaweed (nori) is processed and what to look for in the best quality.  And finally Alarcon gets to make another sushi–his is laughable (although it looks fine to me).

The last trip involves them going to a Kaiten Sushi–the affordable alternative where the sushi travels on a conveyor belt.  The food is good and somehow affordable (they pay $10, each, I feel like that’s unlikely in the U.S.)/  Although some things are pretty weird even for them=–grilled salmon with melted cheese?

After a quick run through a store of essential sushi items (it is a massive store), the two non-Japanese speakers head to a restaurant to try to order on their own.  But one of the pieces smells fishy and seems off–they shouldn’t eat it.

The epilogue is back in France and shows how things are necessarily different in France.  How more humane fishing practices are being used but also how chefs, even Japanese chefs have differences to contend with,  Like the kind of fish that is available to them.  Takuya Watanabe is a Japanese chef working in France who has earned a Michelin star.  He tells them about actual wasabi (not the horseradish paste most of us are used to), where it grows and why it is so infrequently used.

Finally, it’s off to Yannick Alléno and his L’Abysse, a large restaurant dedicated to sushi.  His main chef is Yasunari Okazaki has been training for years and is not afraid to make traditional sushi as well as contemporary French version of sushi.  Like Tuna tartare with sliced hazelnuts grilled with a blowtorch, or even Strawberries with a sugar crust and nori (there are no desserts at sushiya in Japan).

The book ends with some recipes.  Which are all pretty cool looking but which I’ll never try.

[ATTENDED: May 18, 2023] Acid Mothers Temple

I have seen Acid Mothers Temple twice and both times were mind blowing.

The pandemic kept them from coming here for about three years so I was pretty excited to get to see them again.

They came out and Jyonson Tsu found out that his guitar was broken (it was supposed to have been repaired), so he had to borrow a guitar from ST 37.  Then they had trouble at the soundcheck.  Jyonson couldn’t hear anything in his monitor and Higashi Hiroshi’s synthesizer was quiet.

Kawabata Makoto started jamming out a solo and the band kicked into high gear while poor Higashi sat there making no sounds at all.  Finally, Kawabata grabbed the mic and yelled a few things and soon enough, there was synth and we all cheered and they started with “Blue Velvet Blues.”

I will admit that I don’t know many of the song names and most of their songs sound the same to me–a blur of (wild and frenetic) guitar soloing and then a slow middle section (or vice versa).  Although these songs all have “parts” and “Blue Velvet” has a slow moody middle section which slows down and in which Jyonson sings a mournful melody.

They jumped into “Dark Star Blues” in which Jyonson plays a gourd-shaped mandolin (A very cool sound) and sings before the band kicks in.

Back on the drums, Satoshima Nani is so much fun to watch.  When the songs really pick up steam, he is a blur of limbs–smacking the crap out of everything in sight.  But he can also slow things down and keep that really slow pace (like in “Blue Velvet Blues”).  He must be a sweaty mess by the end of the shows.

The last two times I saw them, on bass was Wolf.  Wolf left to do his own thing (I wonder how that’s going) and for this show he was replaced by Ron Anderson (the first non-Japanese player I’ve seen play with them).  I didn’t know who he was but Wikipedia tells me that he is known for collaborations with many famous musicians, and has a large catalog of releases and compositions.

He was great too.  Playing some really cool jazzy basslines that seemed to accentuate the wildness that Kawabata was laying down.  He was especially notable on their cover of Gong’s “Flying Teapot” which has a very cool bass line.

They played roughly seven songs, but who can say where the songs began and ended.  “Blue Velvet” ran over 15 minutes.   Their cover of Pink Floyd’s “Interstellar Overdrive” was a uge surprise to me.  The riff is so recognizable.  Their version is pretty close to the original with the main riff and a massive freak out in the middle.

This was the first show I’ve seen by them where they didn’t play any of “Pink Lady Lemonade.”  And that’s fine, although I’m somewhat surprised that they’ve ended with “Cometary Orbital Drive” each time.  It’s a great set ender.  A slow riff that builds and build and builds growing faster and faster and which can be stretched out as long as Kawabata wants.

As the song came to its noisy ending, he held his guitar out into the audience and I got to brush the strings, which was pretty cool as I usually don’t get perks like that.

And then, like all shows, he held his guitar aloft and gentle slammed it on top of his amps to signify the end.

Every show is different.  But every show is also the same.  And you feel transported every time.

Here’s a few words (Google translated) from Makoto about the show (his blog is great).

A 90-minute set will be shown tonight. On the North American tour, we usually start the performance only with the line check just before the performance, unless we do a sound check. In other words, when the start time was pushed, I started playing without hesitation, but the sound engineer interrupted the performance because he did not start monitoring Azuma’s synthesizer. Then, when Azuma-kun’s monitor finally functioned, the audience applauded loudly, and the performance resumed. However, if I suddenly break the tremolo arm, I have no choice but to play the whole song at speed tonight, and even if I’m on the verge of being shipwrecked in a black hole instead of drifting in space, a furious wave of dismantling and rebuilding goes wild. After that, after a new ritual called Guitar Crowd Surfing, the curtain finally reached the finale.

Here’s a video from RhymanTube of the opening jam/soundcheck problem

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=77EFNwTi3Lw

2023 Johnny Brenda’s 2019 The Saint 2018 Underground Arts
Jam (while soundcheck was finishing up) La Novia Dark Star Blues
Blue Velvet Blues Sycamore Trees Blue Velvet Blues
Dark Star Blues From Planet Orb With Love > Disco Pink Lady Lemonade >
Interstellar Overdrop (Pink Floyd cover) > Good-Bye Mrs. Uranus La Le Lo > 
Flying Teapot (Gong cover) Hello Good Child > In C
From Planet Orb With Love § > Disco Pink Lady Lemonade > Untitled > 
Good-Bye Mrs. Uranus § In E > Nanique Another Dimension > 
Cometary Orbital Drive Pink Lady Lemonade coda Pink Lady Lemonade coda > 
Cometary Orbital Drive Cometary Orbital Drive

It’s unclear to me what records these songs first appeared on (as they have 1,000 records out), although Setlist does a pretty good job, I think.

‰ Does the Cosmic Shepherd Dream of Electric Tapirs? (2004)
≅ Electric Dream Ecstasy (2018)
⊗ Pataphisical Freak Out MU!! (1999)
§ Sacred and Inviolable Phase Shift (2018)
⇔ Cometary Orbital Drive (2008)

 

[DID NOT ATTEND: May 19, 2023] Kevin Devine / The New Amsterdams featuring Matt Pryor / Brother Bird

I’ve been a fan of Kevin Devine for a few years.  I feel like I’ve seen him a bunch because he so often plays around here.  And yet I have only seen him three time (twice solo and once with his Goddamn Band).  I would love to see him again especially with his band.

This show was intriguing–he was playing his album Make the Clocks Move (recently re-released) plus more.  The posters made it unclear whether he would be playing with the New Amsterdams or not.

From what I can gather, Kevin was solo, with an occasional guest.

But this show was the First Unitarian Church, a venue that I will not go to again.  So I missed out on this night.  This night was also my son’s prom night so I didn’t make any other plans.

I had never heard of The New Amsterdams.  They are a project of Matt Pryor, the lead singer of The Get Up Kids.  This is his more folkie/mellow side.  But as soon as he started singing, I recognized his voice right away.

The New Amsterdams were Matt Pryor and (according to Country Standard Time) “a few backing musicians.”  He/they were playing the album Worse for the Wear (plus more).

Opening for them was Brother Bird (Caroline Swon, who was a The Voice Season 4 contender).  She played solo acoustic.  She has a very pleasant voice, although the above review says “the songs ended up being a bit too similar … more variety would have suited Brother Bird.”

The review also noted that Brother Bird was a utility player throughout the night, showing up during the sets of both Devine and The New Amsterdams.

Here’s a Kevin Devine song from Country Standard Time filmed at Brighton Music Hall with a hilarious introduction about Boise Bob, Elliot Smith, Kurt Cobain and COVID.

[DID NOT ATTEND: May 18, 2023] Kevin Devine / The New Amsterdams featuring Matt Pryor / Brother Bird

I’ve been a fan of Kevin Devine for a few years.  I feel like I’ve seen him a bunch because he so often plays around here.  And yet I have only seen him three time (twice solo and once with his Goddamn Band).  I would love to see him again especially with his band.

This show was intriguing–he was playing his album Make the Clocks Move (recently re-released) plus more.  The posters made it unclear whether he would be playing with the New Amsterdams or not.

From what I can gather, Kevin was solo, with an occasional guest.

But once again, Kevin Devine has scheduled a local show on the same night as three other shows I wanted to see.  This happened in April of last year as well–three other shows that I had wanted to go to. Tonight’s were The New Pornographers, Richard Thompson and Acid Mothers Temple (who won out).  This show was in Garwood, a local(ish) town that I hope to see more shows at. I’m bummed I couldn’t make this one as it sounds like a great night.

I had never heard of The New Amsterdams.  They are a project of Matt Pryor, the lead singer of The Get Up Kids.  This is his more folkie/mellow side.  But as soon as he started singing, I recognized his voice right away.

The New Amsterdams were Matt Pryor and (according to Country Standard Time) “a few backing musicians.”  He/they were playing the album Worse for the Wear (plus more).

Opening for them was Brother Bird (Caroline Swon, who was a The Voice Season 4 contender).  She played solo acoustic.  She has a very pleasant voice, although the above review says “the songs ended up being a bit too similar … more variety would have suited Brother Bird.”

The review also noted that Brother Bird was a utility player throughout the night, showing up during the sets of both Devine and The New Amsterdams.

Here’s The New Amsterdams (clip from Country Standard Time) filmed at Brighton Music Hall.

[DID NOT ATTEND: May 18, 2023] Richard Thompson

I’ve seen Richard Thompson more than almost anyone else.

I had wanted to move him to my 2nd place list with one more show.

I love seeing him at McCarter, which is a great venue and has a lot of long time fans.  I’ve seen him there more than anywhere else.

But this show was on May 18, a night that I’d already had tickets for The New Pornographers and Acid Mothers Temple had announced a show for the same night.  And so did Kevin Devine.

So Richard would have to wait.  And since he lives in Montclair, I’m sure he’ll be playing again nearby soon.

[ATTENDED: May 18, 2023] ST 37

I had never heard of ST 37 until they were scheduled to tour with Acid Mothers Temple back in 2020.  That tour was postponed and then cancelled, but here it is three years later and they are still touring together.

What does ST 37 mean?  Well, when I searched for the band, what came up first was:

ST 37 ANTISEPTIC SOLUTION kills common pathogenic bacteria quickly on contact. Laboratory tests have established S.T.37 antiseptic solution as a general antiseptic for household use.

So maybe they are a tribute to the antiseptic.  Actually, an interview from 2021 sets it straights:

Carlton Crutcher named us that after the song by the great San Francisco band Chrome, from their album ‘Alien Soundtracks’. It was not until later that we discovered it was the name of a throat antiseptic product!

And what do they sound like?  Their bandcamp says

Quite simply, we rule. And we have been ruling for over 30 years. So there.

They play a noisy experimental kind of rock and have nine people listed in their “past members” category.  Wikipedia gives these two quotes about them: mind-altering space-punk whose live shows are drowning in a haze of guitar and reverb that can drift through cosmically shifting layers of aggressive punk riffs, fuzzed noise, and scalding jams.

And that’s all pretty accurate.  As they started, I was standing right in front of bassist/singer, ever present member S.L. Telles.  The bass was WAAAAAY too loud for the rest of the band, so I had to back away.  I think it was fixed later because it seemed to settle down okay.  Of course, the bass is the only constant through the set. Continue Reading »

[DID NOT ATTEND: May 18, 2023] The New Pornographers / Wild Pink

I saw New Pornographers’ back in 2019 (I didn’t realize it was quite so long ago).  I enjoyed the show quite a lot.  And almost wondered if I didn’t need to see them again since they played pretty much everything I wanted to see.

But when they announced this show (in the same place), I immediately grabbed a ticket.

But then May 18 proved to be a hugely popular night for shows.  There was Richard Thompson, Kevin Devine and, most importantly, Acid Mothers Temple.

I have seen AMT more than New Pornographers, but it’s such a fun treat for AMT to come to the States (they had several shows cancelled because of the pandemic), that I couldn’t pass it up.

So even though I heard  the New Pornographers show was great (by all accounts), I was pretty pleased with the AMT show.

Wild Pink plays pleasant but kind of dull music.  I listened to a few songs and kind of forgot that they were on.  So it felt like a push towards Acid Mothers Temple.

[DID NOT ATTEND: May 17, 2023] Richard Thompson

I wanted to see Richard Thompson, although we had seen him fairly recently.  Actually, I’d really like to see him with his band rather than solo.  But I’m not sure if he’ll be bringing a band with him on tour much anymore–maybe is he releases a full band record again?

When his first local show was announced at McCarter, I was pretty excited about it.  But it turned out to be the one night that I had other shows lined up.

Then he announced this show at Musikfest Cafe.  It’s a great venue and I would have loved to have seen him there.  But I had a few things going on this week and it just wasn’t going to happen.

I’m sure he’ll be playing nearby again soon–maybe even with his band.

[DID NOT ATTEND: May 13, 2023] Shame / Been Stellar

I hadn’t heard of Shame before this show, although apparently they are quite legendary for their live shows.  When this show was announced there was much hype.  And for a change, I didn’t buy into it.

So I didn’t get tickets, but I have heard some great things about the show.

Indeed, according to Brooklyn Vegan, their show the day before at Irving Plaza

frontman Charlie Steen in typical give-it-all performance mode, much of it spent in — and on top of — the audience. For final song “Gold Hole,” Steen climbed atop the crowd, up to the second floor balcony rail, and plunged again into the teeming mass who carried him back to the stage.

I don’t see any reviews of this Union Transfer show, but I imagine it was similarly wild.

They seem suitably energetic and fun without being unpleasantly noisy and crazy.

Been Stellar (name inspired by Ben Stiller) is a New York band that (according to Fader) plays “timeless alt-rock sound–a mix of anthemic choruses and nonchalant guitars that combine to create something both deeply considered and effortlessly cool.”  I’ve listened to a couple of songs and I really like them.

[DID NOT ATTEND: May 13 & 14, 2023] Frank Turner and the Sleeping Souls / The Interrupters / Bedouin Soundclash

I am reposting exactly what I wrote last year:

I had been wanting to see him for a long time because I’d heard his live shows were amazing.  I saw him last year in a solo (more or less) performance.  And it was great.  So next, I wanted to see him with his band because I’ve heard the band version is even wilder with a more punk aesthetic and I do love a fun punk show.

I grabbed a ticket to this immediately, not realizing that it was Father’s Day Mother’s Day.  It’s not a very Fatherly nice way to spend Mother’s Day by being away from your family for hours.  So I didn’t go.

COME ON FRANK.  Last year on father’s Day.  This year on Mother’s Day?  WTF.

I prefer the Fillmore to the Summer Stage, but by the time I realized that my tickets were for Mother’s Day, we had already made plans for the Saturday so I couldn’t grab tickets in Asbury Park anyway.

The Interrupters opened for the Hella-Mega tour.  We caught their ska set and it was fun as anything. I definitely want to se them again, so this bill was killer for me.

Bedouin Soundclash is from Canada.  Their music is like a combination of reggae and rock with ska elements.  Although everything I listened to on Spotify was far more mellow than I would have expected for this tour.