this monday at the hideout

About once a year I do a wordplay-generated mashup at my Monday residency. This Monday it's "Graham and Charlie Parker." I seem to recall, during previous mashup preparation bouts, which, by the way, are always extensive and call on a broad swath of the cerebrum, that subtle and surprising common threads have come to light. This time, not so much. The reason you can find an element here and there in, for instance, a Monk head, that can be made to correspond with something in, for example, oh, a Monkees melody, is that the world of harmony is finite. Narrowed down further yet by the subcategories "American" and "midcentury" (broadly speaking, of course) and "popular" (jazz used to be popular music, believe it or not), the project starts looking much less lunatic, and a Monk-Monkees or two-Parker set of music can come to be something other than an otiose comic exercise.

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freedy &c.

I dish on his new record at Talkhouse:

http://thetalkhouse.com/music/talks/robbie-fulks-talks-freedy-johnstons/

I just took on another outdoor summer band show, Square Roots in Chicago, where I'll be sharing top-dog status and burdens with my old friends the Mekons and Urge Overkill:

http://www.squareroots.org/music/ 

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the latest

Tonight at 7P I'm kicking off the historic opening of Chicago's elevated park and trail system, called the 606, with a set of rocking summer music that I'm going to do with a 6-piece group. Co-fronting the band with me will be Tawny Newsome, former shining star of Second City and current hotshot of greater Los Angeles. In the band will be Scott Ligon of NRBQ, and several others not in NRBQ, so you really don't need either to like or dislike NRBQ to enjoy this show. Canny marketing!

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bluegrass situation

You can see a well-recorded clip from a trio performance of "Georgia Hard" from last year's Pickathon festival in Oregon on the Bluegrass Situation website:

http://www.thebluegrasssituation.com/read/live-lucky-barn-robbie-fulks-georgia-hard

In the copy accompanying the footage I'm called "venerable" (which is probably worse than anything I've called Ryan Adams) and in the still shot, the three of us, Don Stiernberg and Chris Scruggs and I, look like some of the most unsavory life forms imaginable. I look like a transgendered copy of my mom. Don looks like he's orgasming. Chris is looking grimly into space. You shoulda been there!

this monday at the hideout

If you like a crowded stage emitting many decibels, this is for you. This Monday I'll ring in the summer with a bunch of summer-themed pop covers (Sheryl Crow, hello! Coconut Records, high five! Astrud Gilberto, 'sup? Marvin Gaye, duck!) accompanied by Scott Stevenson, Scott Ligon, Alex Hall, and Liam Davis. They'll all be singing, I'll be singing, and singing more than probably anyone will be the high priestess of modern-day Second City, the divine Tawny Newsome. Come drink and dance with all of us.

st. paul, rockford, beyond

I just posted a slew of dates, from Friday into late June, on the tour page. I'll be in St. Paul this weekend with Don Stiernberg, then on to Rockford, and there are tickets available for each of those. The first several of my summer shows with Redd Volkaert are also listed; and you can see some upcoming Hideout programming.

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this monday at the hideout

I'm back at my old haunt on Monday, with Cathy Fink, who I met once in Washington, and Marcy Marxer, who I will have met an hour or two before showtime. The duo of Cathy and Marcy is one ("the duo is one," wow, get Schrodinger on the phone) of the top children's acts in the U.S. They're also fantastic old-time country musicians. Guess which guise you'll see them in at the Hideout.

15 tunes, 5 days

That pace is, on paper anyway, comfortable by my standards of tracking. I've done some records a bit faster than that, 6 or maybe 7 songs cut in one long day, but that is pretty tough, unless you're Ray Price or Bud Powell and it's 1962. On Monday, Robbie Gjersoe and I showed up at Electrical Audio in Chicago and started the week with two quiet, mournful duets. On Friday, Shad Cobb joined Robbie and me for two faster trios. In between, we were joined by Fats Kaplin, Jenny Scheinman, Todd Phillips, Wayne Horvitz, and Alex Hall. Fats, who is the ultimate utility player in this solar system, played pedal steel, mandolin, violin, and accordion.

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