Wednesday, October 30, 2013

CAPTAIN IVORY

It’s always somewhat gratifying to hear about a young band heading into what is always the most exciting phase of any group’s early years. “This Friday we’re hitting the studio, we’re hoping to have something out by Christmas”, reports Robbie Bolog – guitarist of Detroit band Captain Ivory. “We’re pretty excited.”

Based on the band’s two available singles and a floor-shaking performance at Indy’s Radio Radio back in August, the prospect of a full Captain Ivory album is pretty exciting. With individual influences like AC/DC, Elton John, Miles Davis and The Clash, Captain Ivory arrived at its collective bar-room blues stomp quite organically. “Both me and (lead vocalist) Jayson (Traver) had a pretty strong blues and classic rock background. Justin (Leiter, drums) is a little more punk-rock influences but he gelled with us on those influences.”

So, it started, like so many soon-to-be great bands started, with the blues. They even dress like “blues-guys.” But they defy the “if it walks like a duck” adage by incorporating both classic and modern rock into their sound, and steer clear of the white-boy blues stereotypes. “There’s some Radiohead in there, some Zeppelin, some White Stripes,” says Bolog, “we’re all over the place.”

Together only fourteen months, Captain Ivory has spent a majority of that time cutting its road teeth. Fifty shows in and they’ve moved beyond “driving four cars to a show, we finally have a van and a trailer.” And they have more than enough material for the album they are about to start recording.

The band’s current points of reference should be serious contenders for inclusion. “False Remedy” is a slithering blues with a radio-filtered vocal and a Steve Zwilling organ line that recalls those great old Animals singles. There is a two-part dissonant harmony guitar solo near the end of the song that would make bass player Alex Patten’s hero Miles Davis stand at attention.  “Six Minutes to Midnight” is a 70’s boogie workout punctuated by a Bolog slide-guitar seminar and an enticing gospel finish. Jayson Traver’s vocals call to mind Robert Plant, but don’t feel like an attempted imitation. Justin Leiter’s drums and Patten’s bass are out front, a blues-jazz boot of fusion that kicks every measure forward. The songs are peppered with riffs that in less learned hands would be punishing frat-house cocktails, but served by Captain Ivory they go down like the smoothest whiskey.

Captain Ivory, especially at this stage in their development, finds itself facing the challenge of so many of their Mid-western contemporaries. “This is what we’re going to do for a living, and everybody’s on board for that”, says Bolog. But in their home-base of Detroit "...it can sometimes be difficult to find bands we gel with well musically, (and) we play a lot elsewhere”.

This week, “elsewhere” equates to Indianapolis. Captain Ivory will be on the bill Friday November 1 at Radio Radio with Hero Jr. and The Hawkeyes. Doors at 8, $10 in advance/12 at the door.


R.I.P and F.U.
“It’s about to get real”, Cheetah Chrome (Jan. 2013)

I was probably nine or ten years old the first time I heard “Walk on the Wild Side”. It was the mid-70s. I had two teen-aged brothers and we lived in New York City, so there was always a radio tuned to WNEW, 102.7 on the FM dial. I remember it being a summer weekday morning. I was free of school and too young to have a job. We lived on Coney Island, steps from the Atlantic Ocean and the famous Boardwalk. Even from the high-rise windows of our apartment it felt like you could reach out and touch the hot sand. You certainly could taste the salt water in the air. I didn’t yet understand the graphic sexual language of the “Walk on the Wild Side”, so I honed in on its music. It’s stand-up bass line synched with the rhythm of the early morning tide, their short waves rising and crashing to the shore.  Those bone-chilling violins were like the Atlantic wind whistling through the girders of the Cyclone roller coaster. The gyrating “doo-do-doos” of the Thunderthighs, well, it would still be a few years before I could analogize those. “Walk…” was among the first rock and roll songs to stick in my head for the long run. A few years later, mired deeply in a predictable KISS fixation, I never pretended that they lived in anything but a world of sexual fantasy. But “Walk on the Wild Side”, that was a piece of New York City street reality. That was the New York I wanted to observe as I got older. It didn’t sound romantic or enticing but it sounded so….real.  And kids need reality because this is a fucked up and cruel world that sometimes seems to be aligned against them in unimaginable ways.

I’m not into hero worship. My dad was my only hero. But I have been inspired and enlightened by many authors, artists, and musicians. So when Lou Reed passed away this weekend, quietly and with dignity, I briefly reflected on that moment almost four decades ago when I first heard his voice.  And then I was reminded by the other voice I heard come out of the radio that day. That voice inspired me in other ways. It sparked my interest in radio. I would hear that voice over the years, interviewing some of the most brilliant musicians of my generation and introducing the songs that would become part of the soundtrack of our lives.  It was the voice that told me John Lennon was dead. And this weekend, he died as well. But his death, sadly, is merely a symbolic one – and most undignified. And his entire legacy is now but a mere footnote to his long-held dark secret. 

I’m not into hero worship because heroes can let you down. I’ll always have “Walk on the Wild Side”.  And thank goodness for that, because adults need reality, too. 

Originally published by DoitIndy

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