Showing posts with label Matthew Sweet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Matthew Sweet. Show all posts

February 10, 2014

Concert #282 - Brian Wilson & Friends at UCLA's Royce Hall (October 6, 2002)


Announced as "Brian Wilson & Friends", this was the fifth annual Carl Wilson Foundation benefit concert, organized at UCLA's Royce Hall. From the moment I saw the concert announcement I knew that a few notable "friends" would show up, and they did.

Over the years, I have had relatively good luck getting decent seats at UCLA. For this concert I sat about seven or eight rows back from the stage, dead center. Not bad.

The most notable friend turned out to be Eric Clapton. He was featured extensively in the second half of the show. First, accompanied by Brian Wilson's band, Eric played  "Stormy Monday" and "Layla", then a bit later he took the stage during Brian's headlining set and once again for the encore.

Brian Wilson (left) & Eric Clapton at UCLA (photo by Adrees Latif)

Led by Mark McGrath, Sugar Ray, the band, delivered a short set that included "Every Morning" and "Fly", their catchy radio hit. They ended the set with "Do It Again", the old Beach Boys song, performed with the participation of Carnie and Wendy Wilson (Brian's daughters and two-thirds of the successful trio appropriately named Wilson Phillips).

Earlier in the evening, In Bloom, a three-piece band that included Justyn Wilson and Carl B. Wilson, the sons of Carl and Dennis Wilson, respectively, delivered a short set that wasn't bad, but did not stand out either. They were followed by their cousins Carnie and Wendy Wilson, who sang "Til I Die" and "This Whole World", but they weren't done - they came back after the intermission to provide back-up vocals for Brian and some of the guest stars.

Brian Wilson's band consisted of the Wondermints, an LA-based power-pop band, reinforced with a few musicians among whom the talented Jeff Foskett stood out. Jeff played the guitar and sang lead as well as back-up vocals on a number of Beach Boys covers. Jeff's singing, especially his falsetto voice, was remarkably good. The band did a great job recreating the many different sounds of the Beach Boys.

Brian's headlining set benefited from the participation of a number of guests: Eric Clapton helped out on "Good Vibrations" and "Warmth Of The Sun", while daughters Carnie and Wendy provided harmony vocals on "God Only Knows". Matthew Sweet and Billy Hinsche sang the lead vocals on "Sail On Sailor", with Brian singing back-up and I was quite impressed with Matthew's singing. The three members of In Bloom came back to sing lead on "Time To Get Alone" and "Forever", the latter being Dennis Wilson's best-known song. Brian's set also included "Help Me, Rhonda", "Wonderful" and "Heroes And Villains".

Other contributors included Van Dyke Parks, who, together with Matthew Sweet, performed "Ride", a tune written by the Wondermints, the accompanying band. Van Dyke also performed a couple of songs from "Orange Crate Art", an album released jointly by Brian and Van Dyke in 1995.

The encore brought together all of the earlier performers, plus Bill Medley, Jackson Browne and America's Gerry Beckley and Dewey Bunnell, who apparently couldn't just sit idle and watch. Seeing these legendary artists on stage alongside Eric Clapton, Brian Wilson and all the others gave me a massive thrill. Together, they played "Barbara Ann", "Surfin' USA" and "Fun, Fun, Fun", with Eric looking the happiest of them all.

After all the guests left the stage, Brian and Jeff Foskett played Carl Wilson's "Heaven" in what turned out to be the final song of an evening that was both unforgettable and exhausting.

Concert T-shirt
 Brian Wilson's band 
Jeff Foskett (guitar, vocals)
Darian Sahanaja (keyboard, vibraphone, vocals)
Nick "Nicky Wonder" Waluska (guitar, vocals)
Probyn Gregory (guitar, French horn, trumpet, vocals)
Scott Bennett (keyboards, vibes, percussion, vocals)
Paul Mertens (saxophone, flutes, harmonicas)
Mike D'Amico (percussion)
Taylor Mills (vocals)
Bob Lizik (bass)
Jim Hines (drums)


The following photos are taken from:
(copyright holders: M. Dowdle Head and Rene Diaz)
If requested, I will remove all photos without delay.
Brian Wilson with daughters Wendy (left) and Carnie at UCLA
Carnie Wilson (left) and Wendy Wilson at UCLA
Eric Clapton (left) & Jeff Foskett at UCLA
In Bloom at UCLA
Sugar Ray's Mark McGrath at UCLA
Darian Sahanaja of the Wondermints at UCLA
Matthew Sweet (left) and Billy Hinsche at UCLA
Van Dyke Parks at UCLA
 

April 29, 2012

Concert #634 - Susanna Hoffs at McCabe's Guitar Shop (April 28, 2012)


At the grandmotherly age of fifty-three, Susanna Hoffs looked and sounded last night at McCabe's as un-grandmotherly as it gets. Wearing a short dress, lots of smiles and no extra pounds, she delivered a pleasant set that included new songs, old Bangles gems, as well as a few well-chosen covers. The whole affair was quite casual, one might say exceedingly casual, which prompted my friend Bill to describe the show as a "paid rehearsal", a statement I suspect he made half in jest, half serious. I had no problem with the loose format of the evening, something that is not at all uncommon when a larger group of musicians assemble with little notice before a one-off event.

Susanna's band included guitarist-extraordinaire Val McCallum on acoustic and electric guitars, bassist Derrick Anderson, drummer Jim Laspesa, percussionist John Calacci and guitarist Andrew Brassell, her new Nashville-based musical collaborator. Guitarist Dennis Taylor joined the band toward the end of the show, he sounded great and so did everyone else.



I liked most of Susanna's new songs, which I believe will be on her soon-to-be-released third solo album titled "Someday". Mitchell Froom, the album producer, was also present last night, but did not take the stage.

Age has done little to change Susanna's vocal abilities. Her still-Banglesque voice was the unmistakable star of the evening and so was her cheerfulness and charm. Exceptionally good was her song selection, too. Unlike other artists, Susanna did not deliver her new songs all at once. Instead, she combined them with well-known oldies and old Bangles tunes - this added color to her show and kept everyone sprinting along. Here's one of the two set lists that were left on the stage floor after the show:


Note the presence of "All I've Got To Do" and "Rain", two Lennon-McCartney songs, the former sounding the best. I also liked the Velvet Underground's "Sunday Morning", Rockpile's catchy "Teacher, Teacher" and "All I Want", the semi-hit of the Lightning Seeds.

Susanna Hoffs at McCabe's
Susanna Hoffs & Andrew Brassell at McCabe's
Susanna Hoffs, with Derrick Anderson and Jim Laspesa

Quite predictably, longtime collaborator Matthew Sweet took the stage at the end of the show to lend his voice to the singing of "Rain" and Neil Young's "Cinnamon Girl".

Matthew Sweet
 Here's the other set list I was able to photograph after the show:

An alternate set list left on stage after the show

The show was opened by Englishman John Wicks, formerly of the Records. Surprisingly, he did not sing "Starry Eyes", the song that brought the Records their only hit. John's five-song set was just right in terms of length. The song that I liked the best was the set-closing "Chasing Angels".

John Wicks at McCabe's

Autographed Susanna Hoffs posters ($25 each)
Hiroshi and Paul, frequent McCabe's concert goers
People lining up for Susanna's second show (10 PM)

February 20, 2011

Concert #566 - Matthew Sweet at McCabe's Guitar Shop (August 28, 2010)


I went to the show with expectations that were left mostly unfulfilled. Matthew had impressed me quite a bit a few years earlier, when I first saw him at UCLA, but this time he was rather disappointing. He lacked the power and the energy one would expect from a rocker, possibly the result of the extra pounds he had added since the UCLA show. It's true, I was unfamiliar with his new material (my fault) but none of his new songs caught my ear (his fault, possibly).

I'd been hoping to see Susanna Hoffs as Matthew's guest, after all they had recorded and performed together more than once, but it wasn't to be. Instead, Matthew brought out Vicki Peterson, Susanna's fellow Bangle, but her performance was totally low-key.

Matthew Sweet & Vicki Peterson

Set list
Divine Intervention
Byrdgirl
Time Capsule
We're the Same
Feel Fear
Ugly Truth
You Don't Love Me
Time Machine
Girlfriend
If Time Permits
Someone to Pull the Trigger
Sick of Myself
I've Been Waiting (with John Wicks & Vicki Peterson)

Encore (with Vicki Peterson)
Cinnamon Girl
Hello, It's Me
(What's So Funny 'Bout) Peace, Love & Understanding

British artist John Wicks opened the show. His set was decent, but not truly memorable. "Starry Eyes", his hit from his days with the Records, happened to also be the best song of his set.