the issue in PDF format
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the issue in PDF format
FOUNDER Leo J. McGovern III magazine.com PUBLISHER & EDITOR IN CHIEF Dan Fox magazine.com [email protected] SENIOR EDITOR barryfest.com Erin Hall PUBLISHER [email protected] Leo McGovern [email protected] PHOTO EDITOR Adrienne EDITOR Battistella IN CHIEF [email protected] Dan Fox [email protected] COMICS EDITOR Caesar Meadows ASSOCIATE EDITOR [email protected] Erin Hall [email protected] ASSOCIATE EDITOR Sara Pic EDITORS COMICS [email protected] Leo McGovern & Caesar Meadows [email protected] ASSOCIATE EDITOR [email protected] Beck Levy [email protected] ART DIRECTOR Kevin Barrios ASSOCIATE EDITOR [email protected] David Jamison [email protected] ADVERTISING Jennifer Attaway ASSOCIATE EDITOR [email protected] Andru Okun [email protected] DISTRIBUTION Tiffiny Wallace WEB [email protected] D. Weaver [email protected] CONTRIBUTING WRITERS Jennifer Attaway ADVERTISING [email protected] Jennifer Attaway Leigh Checkman [email protected] [email protected] Kevin Comarda CONTRIBUTING WRITERS [email protected] Jules Bentley Anton Falcone [email protected] [email protected] Michael GrahamBateman Greenleaf [email protected] [email protected] Leigh Checkman Rev. Daniel Jackson [email protected] [email protected] Breonne Derek DeDecker [email protected] [email protected] Yvette Rio Emily Del McWilliams [email protected] [email protected] Noelle Deltfuo Sara Pic [email protected] [email protected] Holly Devon Eric Pierson [email protected] [email protected] Carl MikeElvers Rodgers [email protected] [email protected] Christina Michael Igoe Patrick Welch [email protected] [email protected] Joey Laura joeylaura4yahoo.com CONTRIBUTING Morgan Lawrence PHOTOGRAPHERS [email protected] Adrienne Battistella Kelly McClure [email protected] [email protected] Joshua Brasted Dan McCoy [email protected] [email protected] Gary LoVerde Alex Taylor [email protected] [email protected] Nathan Tucker LISTINGS [email protected] [email protected] SNAIL MAIL REVIEWS P.O. Box 2215 [email protected] Gretna, LA 70054 SNAIL MAIL cover by Erin K. Wilson 4916illustration Freret Street photo page LA of 70115 New this Orleans, Charlie Mae Hayes, born Dec. 25, 2015 by Adrienne Battistella Cover Photo by Dan Fox “THAT CONTROL THAT PEOPLE ARE LOOKING FOR, THAT’S JUST A WAY OF NOT FACING THE TRUTH. WE ARE ALL GOING TO DIE, AND I’D LIKE TO GO OUT FEELING LIKE I DID A GOOD JOB” PG. 26 Amidst all the frantic holiday activities, I found myself holding an hours-old baby on Christmas night. No, not my own, ya freaks! It was, in fact, the freshly-minted human spawn of my life-bro and Mr. Lovey Dovey himself, James Hayes, and his very brave wife Kara (who endured the entire labor with only a couple of Tylenol). It’s a hellish responsibility holding such a fragile being for even a moment, to say nothing of a lifetime. The whole ordeal made me want to revisit one of my all-time favorite movies, Raising Arizona, for the umpteenth time. If you’re not familiar with the film, it’s an early Coen Brothers production, circa 1987, when Barry Sonnenfeld (who would go on to direct classics himself like Get Shorty and The Addams Family) was their cinematographer, and the Brothers’ prolific catalogue was still in its own infancy. The plot revolves around a young Nicolas Cage and Holly Hunter as a newly married couple—H.I. and Edwina—living out their salad days in the Arizona desert, wanting only to share the beauty of the world with a child of their own. But H.I.’s past as a two-bit convenience store thief and Ed’s barren insides conspire to leave them childless. So they steal a baby, one of a sextet from an outlandish well-to-do family, and attempt to jumpstart their own American dream. The film takes off as a modern day fairy tale, each character (including New Orleans’ own adopted son John Goodman) scrambling for the baby in an attempt to steal affection in a disaffected world. The score, haunting and soothing in equal measures, is part Beethoven’s 9th, part folk classic “Down in the Willow Garden.” It’s a true cinema tour-de-force, and as with any Coen Brothers film, has quotable lines galore. The one that rings out for me especially is when H.I., looking out at a foreboding sunrise after a long and sleepless night, mutters, “Sometimes it’s a hard world for little things.” A simple truth, and yet one we grapple with every day. Every minute is fragile and vulnerable, but there’s something about a new year especially that makes it feel all the more so for me. Maybe it didn’t help that on the eve of this new year, I was staring down at a little redfaced munchkin, who peeked back up through eyes that had barely seen anything yet. For little Charlie Mae, and the overall state of our shared human condition, I echo H.I.’s sentiment, and so do the subjects of this month’s issue. January’s theme—and really every issue’s theme and all things in this life—is about growing up against the odds. Aimée Argote talks about shedding her hard-partying tour life for something more sustainable; a Living Soundtrack survives neardeath to return to New Orleans and regain their roots (a newborn in their midst as well); and the Orleans Parish Public Defenders office fights for its life and the lives of its clients. I’m sure the shine of 2016 will wear off soon enough, but hopefully there’s still enough time to daydream a little about a better year for all of us. Happy 2016. —Dan Fox [email protected] FACEBOOK.COM/ANTIGRAVITYMAG @ANTIGRAVITYMAG / #ANTIGRAVITYMAG Star Hustler by CHRISTINA IGOE illustrations HAPPY BURBECK OUR BEST SELVES [Editor’s Note: As with any oracle cursed with such magnificent predestination, we must bid our former astrologer, Mistress Anthropy, adieu as she takes a sabbatical from the monthly slog to recharge and reset. However, AG won’t leave you hanging in the cosmos, so we welcome our new astrologer, Christina, to interpret the heavens for you. We will miss our Mistress deeply but look forward to Christina’s own brand of wisdom and command of the seasons.] 2016 begins with a feeling of being shot out of a cannon and cartwheeling down to earth. Everything is possible; chaos was so completely a part of our everyday lives in 2015 that we have nearly accepted being in a constant state of shock. We have acknowledged, both in quiet solitude and by screaming at anyone who will listen, that we have no control over anything. The beginning of January is like the quiet after a several months-long storm. Our immediate response to the beginning of this new year is to want to build something. The sun working its way through Capricorn loves a steady build—to stand back at the end of a day and recognize the small victories that make us want to come back to the project tomorrow, and the things we could have done better to make us want to come back forever. I challenge you to acknowledge your project. On the 6th of January, Mercury will station retrograde in Capricorn. Mercury rules communication and contracts, and with the “backward” motion of the planet, we see all the disruption it can possibly unleash in these aspects of our daily lives, until it stations direct on January 26th. It does lend itself well to getting to a more trusting place with our intuition, which will be absolutely pivotal in easing into Jupiter stationing retrograde in Virgo on January 8th. Jupiter—the planet of expansion, adventure, and luck—will be in a retrograde phase until May, asking us to understand ourselves more thoroughly emotionally. Virgo, the sign of work and health, has a tendency at times to be hard on itself. This is a time for healing and seeing ourselves at our best. If you feel yourself losing track of that, do something physical. Above all, be kind to yourself. Venus, the ruler of love, starts this month in Sagittarius (the sign of adventure and wildness). It is all about lightness with Sag, so have fun with your partner, your crush, or yourself. When Venus enters down-to-earth Capricorn on January 24th, it’s time to get real—who do you want to spend your time with? Are the people you are surrounded by now people you will want to be surrounded by in a year? 4 * ANTIGRAVITY * JANUARY 2016 ARIES I want to remind you that you have the energy to maintain your sanity in terms of what the planets have been doling out to you, Aries. 2016 starts with your ruling planet of Mars in opposition to your Sun. Until the fourth of the month, you could feel like every action you take is harder—like you are running through quicksand psychically or physically. Coming off of 2015, where chaotic Uranus was shaking up every aspect of your life, it could spark anger or frustration to begin this year spinning your wheels. Be patient. Be careful and aware of your physical self. A trine from Venus will bring about positive growth in your romantic life this month, and with the retrograde motion of Jupiter and Mercury, you will have much more energy to devote to making sense of how much everything has shifted over the last few months. TAURUS You are a cautious being, and with Mars—the planet of action and war—challenging your experience starting on the 4th, there could be a feeling of being pushed a little harder than you may want. Take this opportunity to fight for what you want and get outside of your comfort zone. With the planets of luck, love, and life in positive relationship to your experience, you have a solar system on your side. While it is difficult to get moving, you are safe in your actions this month and will be an unstoppable force once you get rolling. With all of this radiating positive energy swirling, it is reasonable that you could feel a bit overwhelmed by all of the potential. Your moon in Taurus on January 18th and 19th can be a perfect time to recharge for you. Build a fort in your space where you binge watch a TV show. GEMINI Venus is in opposition to your sun until January 24th, which will feel like a few weeks-long hug. You have so much beautiful magnetic energy in this time that you could feel like you are the most beloved person to ever walk the Earth. You may laugh at the idea of being the most loved, but allow yourself a re-charge of compassion, indulge your crushes, be celebrated— it will feel nicer than ever. With Jupiter having squared your sun since August of 2015, you could use the positive affirmation and light that Venus brings. Saturn continues to challenge you to define your most healthy self, especially in your relationships. You cannot talk your way out of this one, and the more you avoid dealing with the things that make you feel unhealthy, the harder they become. With a heightened ability to understand what you need to be your best emotional self, it is a good time to start getting rid of the relationships, work, and ideas that don’t serve you well. CANCER As 2016 gets moving, I want you to truly consider what caring for yourself looks like, Cancer. You have a tendency to care for many, create space that holds you together, and mother. There are some challenging aspects coming your way this month, and a very empowering way to get through it is to lean on the community that you have so carefully crafted and nurtured. Mars is in trine to your sun sign starting on the 4th of this month, and it lends so much ability and access to what actions we need to take to live our best lives. The rest of the world will be carefully sorting through their emotional selves this month, which happens to be your experience at all times. Find your guide in this time: the person or people who allow for the level of expertise you have in navigating the emotional self, but also accept you for losing your shit at videos of puppies. We are at the beginning of a huge cycle of feelings and internal processing, and you can reach new levels of personal understanding if you find a balance between being held and holding others. LEO 2016 starts just the way you would love, Leo. Everybody wants you and you know exactly what you need. With the planet of love in a positive trine and the planet of action in a magical sextile to your sun, you move through the world with praise and assurance. The focus of this month should be to acknowledge what systems and situations you want to master. If you are feeling confused or indifferent about an aspect of your life, it is a good time to look at it with fresh eyes and clear problemsolving skills. The retrograde phase of Jupiter may bring some unusual feelings of deep self reflection, but understanding your deepest parts of self this month will help to better inform all of the budding opportunity in your workings. VIRGO This month is bringing a lot of fresh new energy into your life. A positive influence of the sun and Mercury bring new ideas about the way you present yourself to the world around you, and an unusual train of ideas about how you want to be heard. You are hyper-aware of how you could be perceived, and now is a time to put your best foot forward without the usual anxiety that may surround big moves. This is an incredible, important month for your love life. You can achieve the balance of fun and health (that is so important to the Virgo life) in your existing or new relationships. Pay very close attention to how you are feeling and who you are meeting between the dates of January 22nd and the 25th. LIBRA 2015 was a difficult year to recognize your own sense of balance. It was as if the universe was throwing you IT’S TIME TO GET REAL—WHO DO YOU WANT TO SPEND YOUR TIME WITH? ARE THE PEOPLE YOU ARE SURROUNDED BY NOW PEOPLE YOU WILL WANT TO BE SURROUNDED BY IN A YEAR? a curve ball every time you thought you had figured it all out. While 2016 will be a year that provides a constant stream of inspiration and challenge, the challenges are much less complex. You will start the year with an incredible ability to navigate your world with more confidence and ease. As we are all in a phase of self-reflection this month, Libras will benefit greatly from reflecting on what form of therapy best serves you creatively. Make things, sing, and find balance through creating beauty. Acknowledge and honor your own beauty, which may have been lost in the turmoil of 2015. If you are unable to make a choice right now, access your personal truth in solitude, doing something you love on the 29th and 30th of this month. SCORPIO Mars, the planet of war and passion, will enter your sign on the 4th. Now is the time to tackle the things that you have been putting off physically or emotionally. As a naturally selfreflective sign, you know the things that you need to do to live your best life, and with Mars working in your favor, you can make very big moves this month. The passion that exists in your life will get a magical push when, on the same day, the moon enters Scorpio and aligns your feelings with your passion, bringing a very well-rounded decision your way. When the Sun makes a square to Scorpio on the 21st, it will challenge your dedication and confidence in the moves you are making. But when you face your vulnerability head-on this month, the outcome has the potential to be very profound. SAGITTARIUS When Venus is in the same sign as our sun sign, love can feel like it is the only true goal we have. With the wild heart of Sagittarius being met by the giant defining heart of Venus, we find ourselves in love with life, wanting to do as much as possible, meet as many people as possible, find the adventure and the weirdness in as many situations as we can and get EVERYTHING. The chaotic energy of Uranus in Aries also brings these feelings. The reality is, Sagittarius, sometimes you have to do tasks that just come up every day, like going to work. Or eating. January encourages redefining your experience so that everything is an adventure. You are very magnetic in this time, and it’s a good time to keep your eyes and heart open to everything being possible. CAPRICORN The sun brings light to your knowledge of self through the 20th of the month, and with all of the self-reflective energy of positively-aspected Jupiter, it’s an incredible time to see how hard work pays off. Reflect on what you have accomplished, and how you want the world around you to perceive you, because everybody is paying attention now. On the 24th of this month, Venus enters your sign, making you very magnetic and attractive to most people you encounter through the end of the month. Take this opportunity to engage in a new relationship or business venture, as you have everything to gain this month. AQUARIUS There are a lot of things happening below the surface this month, Aquarius. When you think about exploring the unknown or the darkness in your mind, what are the obvious paths to take? The challenge this month is to connect to your spiritual self. Become obsessed with it, follow and worship your dream life. On the 20th, the sun enters your sign, bringing a lot of truth to the surface. Are you hung up on someone that you are refusing to acknowledge because of the complexity of your feelings? Peace comes from facing the things that you need to take action in this month. Dig deep. PISCES Your imagination is in full swing this month, and it is a perfect time to follow through with some of the beginnings of your dreams. The sun and moon are in positive aspects to your sign on the 13th, bringing together the emotional tides and reality of light in all your dreamy goals. When you are quietly daydreaming, what is at the center of your ideas? Share your ideas with the closest women in your life and allow space for daydreams to become tangible realities this month. The retrograde motion of Jupiter will lend a hand in clarity regarding an inner emotional working that the past year may have been too chaotic for you to access. Where do your wounds lie, Pisces? This is a profound time for healing your heart, your body, and your spirit. JANUARY 2016 * ANTIGRAVITY * 5 6 * ANTIGRAVITY * JANUARY 2016 Reality Bites by YVETTE DEL RIO illustration BEN CLAASSEN III NEW YEAR, NEW EATS in it, and you’ve got a meal that’s got to be better than the one I had from the Big Cheezy. I guess if you work at the Criminal District Courthouse, or you’re serving jury duty, you may as well go here, but otherwise don’t bother. 2/10 Flying Dutchmen Compère Lapin (535 Tchoupitoulas St.) Compère Lapin is gorgeous inside. It manages to look both modern and rustic, and yet it still feels like you’re in New Orleans. I went there for an impromptu brunch one Sunday morning, and I’m so happy I did. The table ordered the avocado toast as a starter and I got the biscuits and gravy. The avocado toast was off the chain! It’s just a chunky avocado spread with pickled which looked fine. The chicken tasted like chicken and nothing else. They seem to have good drink specials and a happy hour though, so maybe if you and your coworkers want to go have margaritas and eat bland guacamole, this could be the place for you. Don’t even think about bringing a date here. 1/10 Dirty Tacos Avery’s (2510 Tulane Ave.) Okay, Avery’s has been around for a couple years now, but they just started doing dinner a couple months ago, so I was finally able to make it over there (and in the New Orleans landscape of 150+ year old restaurants, a couple years is still new, right?). This is not a cute spot by any definition of the word, but the food was on point. I went a little WE’VE ALL BEEN THERE, TRYING TO DECIDE WHERE TO GO ON A TUESDAY NIGHT; AND YOU JUST END UP GOING TO THE SAME OLD PLACE YOU ALWAYS GO. Even though there’s roughly a zillion restaurants in New Orleans, it’s easy to get stuck in the same old food rut. We’ve all been there, trying to decide where to go on a Tuesday night; and you just end up going to the same old place you always go. There’s a comfort, of course, in the familiarity of it all, but sometimes you just want something different. For January, I decided to eat at some (relatively) new spots. After all, what’s a better New Year’s resolution than to try new things? The thrill is real. Tallulah’s (inside St. Roch Tavern, 1200 St. Roch Ave.) Over the past few months, I’ve had so many different people ask me if I’d tried the burger at Tallulah’s. And y’all, I don’t know why it took me so long to get down there to try it. I finally made my way over one Friday night, accidentally stumbling into the Maniacs of Metal show (which calls to mind the time I went to Siberia/Kukhnya with a deep craving for a Russki Reuben and ended up inadvertently seeing Eyehategod— my only regret being that I didn’t buy a t-shirt). I was not dressed for a metal show, seeing as I’d just left my office job, but I decided to hang out and try the food anyway. Man, am I glad I did. This burger is good, like really good. The bun is very buttered, which is one of those things that restaurants think to do but I never seem to remember when I’m making burgers at home. The meat was well seasoned without going overboard. They have a nice selection of burger topping offerings; I chose provolone and bacon. The bacon was crispy without tasting burnt and the cheese was perfectly melted. No complaints except that the service was pretty slow. 9.5/10 Maniacs of Metal The Big Cheezy (422 1/2 S. Broad St.) My dining companion described The Big Cheezy as frat boy food, and that’s probably the most accurate description of this spot. Do you have a panini press? Or maybe just a skillet? Okay, then you can make yourself a grilled cheese sandwich that’s about as exciting as either of the two that I tried here (Flying Dutchman, which was gouda, turkey, and overly soft bacon; and the Mac N Cheezy, which is totally bland macaroni and cheese and soggy bacon bits squished between two pieces of white bread). Do you love tomato soup? Great, open up a can of Amy’s soup from the grocery store, dump a bunch of salt vegetables on a nice crusty bread, but it was so good. The other dishes at the table were the chicken and smoked mushroom hash and the coconut French toast with pecan rum sauce. I totally ordered the wrong thing because both of the other meals were delicious and mine was kind of boring by comparison. I only had a bite of the chicken and smoked mushroom hash but it was enough for me to know that I’d made the wrong choice. The coconut French toast was sweet without being cloying and the pecan rum sauce was just boozy enough without totally overpowering everything else. If you go for brunch, just avoid the biscuits and gravy. They weren’t horrible, but you can get better elsewhere, and Compère Lapin obviously has better options. I can’t wait to go back for dinner! 9/10 Better Options Mizado (5080 Pontchartrain Blvd.) Mizado is located in the weird spot where Semolina’s used to be, under the overpass by all the cemeteries in Old Metairie. You know where I’m talking about, right? But I’m open-minded, so despite the weird locale, I bravely trudged in. It looks like a chain restaurant, even though apparently, it isn’t. I figured I had to order the guacamole, just to see what $10 guacamole was about. They make it tableside, but don’t seem to put anything in it but smushed up avocadoes. I love avocados, but come on, y’all. What’s going on here? I also got the smoked pork belly tacos. How could something made from pork belly be so boring? The sauce tasted weirdly dirty (as in, it tasted like it had dirt in it). I couldn’t even eat it. My aunt ordered the chicken salad, wild with ordering: I got the fried pickles, the sandbag poboy (roast beef debris with fried pickles, gravy, and provolone—hooo boy), and the honey biscuits. My dining companion ordered the Buffalo shrimp poboy, which is a fried shrimp poboy dressed with buffalo sauce and blue cheese (I tried it and it was pretty good, even though blue cheese is not my thing). The pickles were perfectly fried and had a nice, light, tempurastyle batter. Also, Avery’s has a vegan poboy option that isn’t just random vegetables thrown on some French bread. I can’t personally vouch for it, but this could be a fun option if you’re a vegetarian or if you have vegetarian friends who want New Orleans food without having to eat just sides. 9.5/10 Sandbags Boulevard (4241 Veterans Memorial Blvd. Metairie) Do you love Houston’s? Were you super bummed when the Houston’s on Veterans inexplicably became another restaurant? Well, go eat at Houston’s on St. Charles, because while Boulevard has basically the same menu, and the interior is exactly the same as it always was, there’s something off here. The only reason you may want to go to Boulevard is that they have deviled eggs. However, those eggs are no better or worse than the ones they sell in party platter form at Rouse’s. If you’re shopping at that Roller Derby store or something, and you just have to eat in this particular strip mall, try Phoenicia instead. Or Shyan, which is literally across the street. Boulevard is kind of pointless. 5/10 Redundancies JANUARY 2016 * ANTIGRAVITY * 7 8 * ANTIGRAVITY * JANUARY 2016 JANUARY 2016 * ANTIGRAVITY * 9 Hidden Louisiana by BREONNE DeDECKER illustrations MATTHEW CHANDELIER IT’S BRITNEY, BITCH underwear, collapsing drunk in a club on New Year’s Eve. Then it became worrisome, with Britney lashing out at paparazzi, driving around Los Angeles without shoes on, or running in and out of gas stations for Red Bulls. She let her new puppy shit on a $6,800 dress during a photoshoot, and left the shoot wearing $14,000 worth of clothes that were not hers. Every stage of her descent into crisis was documented by a camera flash: Britney shaving her head, scared of being drug tested by the courts and having her children taken away. Britney sporting a bright pink wig and blue contact lenses, speaking in a strange English accent. Britney wielding an umbrella, bashing at the cars filled with paparazzi that followed her constantly. Britney’s hot white spiral became dangerous—to her kids, dropped out of high chairs, held unsecured in her lap while she drove at breakneck speed through the L.A. hills; and to herself, taken out of her mansion strapped on a gurney, bound for a psychiatric hospital. The woman behind the desk tells me that the museum is free, but it will cost three dollars to pose with a set of angel wings that Britney wore onstage. She steered me towards the darkened half of the house dedicated to the singer. “Let me get the lights.” Fluorescent lights buzz on, illuminating a room filled with image after image of Britney’s flawless face and body. Britney debuted on the scene with the single “(Hit Me) ...Baby One More Time” in 1998. She was marketed as a classic American sexual trope: a good-girl pushing the envelopes of morality, inviting the public to explore her body with her. Britney was a Baptist school girl from Anywhere, USA, even though she delivered her interview answers in a charming Southern accent, while smacking on pink bubblegum. Her debut album (titled after the single) sold 10 million copies in the first year, and her second album, Oops!... I Did It Again sold 1.3 million copies in a single day. The media praised her as she began to take more control of her music and her image, moving away from sexy-girl-next-door to femme fatale. Although many young stars have difficulties navigating this transition, Britney’s troubles, both in their scope and how the media and public reacted to them, were unique. Most of the items in the museum are from the late ‘90s and early ‘00s, when Britney dominated the pop charts. This makes sense, given where the objects in the museum largely came from: Britney’s rabidly loyal fanbase and Britney’s family. Both camps are interested in primarily showcasing her talent and beauty while downplaying her intense personal struggles. I came to the museum wondering how a town would choose to memorialize someone who climbed to the top of celebrity, then publicly crashed and burned for nearly three straight years. In 2006, Britney veered off script and subsequently careened through 2007 and 2008, a pop star imploding into a supernova threatening the world with immolation. Her spiral was somewhat triumphant at first, full of humor. Her marriage to back-up dancer Kevin Federline, the bridal party wearing Juicy Couture tracksuits reading “Pimps” and “Maids,” seemed playful. Shortly after, we saw Britney, braless, wearing a trucker hat barely covering an unraveling weave, chainsmoking like a middle schooler playing mean; followed by Britney out on the town with Paris Hilton and Lindsay Lohan, none of them wearing “Are you here to see Kentwood’s World War II collection, or Britney Spears?” The elderly woman behind the desk at the Kentwood Museum already knew the answer. I was there to see Britney Spears, or rather, the mishmash of Britney memorabilia that comprises most of the museum’s content, stowed in a small house in Spears’ hometown of Kentwood, Louisiana. A poster of the pop star hangs in the window. Everyone knows what the draw is. 10 * ANTIGRAVITY * JANUARY 2016 The public discourse surrounding Britney changed as she did. Britney’s body was communal property, and she was vandalizing it. She had reigned as a pubescent fertility goddess for nearly a decade, her form contorted into a thousand provocative photos omnipresent across the media landscape. But as Britney’s actual physical embodiment separated from her photographic one, she drifted into a grotesquerie. She wore panties stained with menstrual blood, her increasingly fleshy body spilled out of her dancing costumes, and pimples sprouted on her chin. Britney devolved from a sex icon into something else. She became white trash. “White trash” is a slur that has difficult borders to define. It has to do with race and class and, very often, geography. White trash usually refers to poor whites who live on the margins of society, largely divorced from accessing political or economic power. There’s often a perceived element of criminality, either due to a willful refusal to abide by the laws of society, or stemming from an ingrained stupidity that makes compliance with society’s rules and norms impossible. The phrase is also primarily linked to place of origin: white trash folks are primarily rural and Southern. Prior to her descent, Britney’s family and hometown were relegated to roles of wholesome background props. Her mother, Lynne, was mostly described as a loving second grade teacher; her father, Jamie, a hardworking contractor. But as Britney’s public image shifted, so did how the media portrayed her background. The 2008 Rolling Stone cover story “The Tragedy of Britney Spears” quotes an anonymous former manager as saying, “She is the product of some very, very bad genetics.” Trailer parks began being featured in her origin story. Depictions of Lynne now cast her as a depressed “momager” and Jamie as an abusive alcoholic who gambled. The family went bankrupt and were often too poor to buy groceries. Britney’s uncles were accused of eating roadkill. Her grandmother had committed suicide, shooting herself on the grave of a child who had died in infancy. The media insinuated that mental illness was in every branch of her warped family tree. While all of these things may be true, none of them were overwhelmingly present in the public discourse until she began exhibiting signs of extreme stress, probable drug abuse, and a palpable mental health crisis. And as the jeers grew louder, she welcomed them, famously snarling at a fan asking for an autograph, “I don’t know who you think I am, bitch, but I am not that person.” Britney herself would say that she was white trash, using the label as a Calvinist explanation to her struggles—white trash as a predestined role, something that can be subverted for a time but never escaped. The frenzy surrounding her became a form of collective punishment for her inborn defects right up to when the spectacle became truly tragic and she was hospitalized. Another Rolling Stone quote, this one from 2003, opines on Britney’s sexual exploits: “Perhaps the low point came when Fred Durst appeared on the Howard Stern Show to share an extremely graphic kiss-and-tell, including descriptions of Spears’ pubic hair. The mental image of the balding, goateed Limp Bizkit singer getting it on with America’s jailbait sweetheart was, with the possible exception of those death photos of Uday and Qusay Hussein, easily the year’s most disturbing.” Comparing the image of Britney Spears’ body being enjoyed by another proud member of the white trash tribe to the bullet-ridden corpses of sociopathic war criminals is an extreme example of the dissonance between how the public wanted to see Britney Spears and who she actually was. It is not shocking in the least that this pressure, combined with our culture’s toxic and judgemental views of mental health crises, formed a crucible inside of which she burned. The first room in the Britney section of the Kentwood Museum is primarily composed of calendars, posters, and DVDs—not particularly remarkable items, considering that they were all mass produced for sale. This collection was donated by the family of Keith Collins, who passed away of a brain tumor several years ago. His family wanted his treasured items to find a safe home where they could be appreciated and cared for the way Keith would have liked. Another item has a similarly touching backstory. A fan spent the better part of a year painstakingly building a scale model of the set of her 2001 “Dream Within a Dream” tour. The model has 600 blinking Christmas lights, and onstage is a small Britney doll. The architect, Randy Head, submitted text to explain his creation: “I have seen a lot of drawings and paintings of Britney that have been done by other fans and I wanted to do something creative and special… the project took six months to complete, working on it an average of four hours a day… I really had fun making it and having little Britney Spears concerts.” The strangest room of the museum is the only one you cannot enter. At the very rear of the house, behind a pane of glass, is Britney Spears’ teenage bedroom. It is a painfully recreated illusion, down to photos of Britney as a teenager goofing off with noncelebrity friends, a stuffed teddy bear wearing an NSYNC t-shirt, and her collection of porcelain dolls from childhood. A photo from a Rolling Stone shoot is taped to the glass, showing Britney reclining in her bra and panties against the dresser, her high heels pressed against the same blue carpet. It’s a habitat for an exotic animal at a zoo, only the attraction has escaped. It is also a physical embodiment of the cage of nostalgia. “You can’t go back home to your family, back home to your childhood… to singing just for singing’s sake... back home to places in the country… back home to someone who can help you, save you, ease the burden for you, back home to the old forms and systems of things which once seemed everlasting but which are changing all the time,” wrote Thomas Wolfe in You Can’t Go Home Again, one of the quintessential Southern novels of the 20th century. Home is a constantly shifting illusion, and for most of us, time eventually erases the monuments and spaces of our origins. The innocent teen queen who once slept on that bed cannot reenter this diorama. I CAME TO THE MUSEUM WONDERING HOW A TOWN WOULD CHOOSE TO MEMORIALIZE SOMEONE WHO CLIMBED TO THE TOP OF CELEBRITY, THEN PUBLICLY CRASHED AND BURNED FOR NEARLY THREE STRAIGHT YEARS. slur was a way to empower herself as she was being continually denigrated and judged. Deciding to avoid this period in Britney’s life must have been difficult for the museum. There’s a popular saying in the South: “We don’t hide crazy. We put it on the front porch and give it a cocktail.” This is true for Britney herself: she cannot always hide who she is. But the public demands that much of her backstory, and her behaviors, remain hidden. Only when she is able to successfully perform the role expected of her— that of sexualized pop princess—is she absolved of the sins of her origin. After umpteen starts and stops, comeback album after comeback album, she has regained her throne. For the past two years, she’s been in residency at Planet Hollywood in Las Vegas. Night after night she performs a retrospective of her career, shapeshifting again from a young ingenue into a femme fatale, a fantasy woman dancing for millions in a fantasy city. Gone are the negative comments about her background, her body, her choices. Gone are the questions of drug abuse or mental health issues. A December 2015 post to her Instagram account has her mugging for the camera, her crop top reading “Mean People Suck,” displaying her incredibly toned form. The internet rejoiced, with dozens of articles from entertainment websites declaring that once again, Britney was back. Her re-ascendance necessitates shedding the distasteful baggage of having poor white Southern roots. The cultural icon’s compliance with the static narrative of who a pop star is—smiling, sexual, and non-threatening—renders her as two-dimensional as the pin-ups lining the walls of the Kentwood Museum. Britney is easier to digest as a photograph or a piece of memorabilia than she is as a person: irrevocably Southern and profoundly complicated by fame. The Kentwood Historical & Cultural Museum is located at 204 Avenue E, Kentwood, LA 70444. Open Tuesday through Saturday, 9:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. For more info, check out kentwoodmuseum.tripod.com But the complicated Britney of the late 2000s does not exist within this museum. The relentless positivity of the collection, the childhood dance shoes and teddy bears, hides facets of her identity that are truly fascinating: what it means to be white trash, an elastic phrase that passes judgement on appearance, intelligence, family, sexuality, and political meaning; what it means for white Southernness when times of crises, deviant behavior, and self-destruction are cast as immutable traits or inescapable flaws; how someone like Britney becomes, and un-becomes, white trash. What makes Britney able to transcend being white trash are the same things that leave her vulnerable to its deployment against her: her fame, her money, and her desirability. Britney’s willingness to embrace the JANUARY 2016 * ANTIGRAVITY * 11 defenders. It’s not an easy job. I’m not just making that claim because I’ve spent years working as one. As stated earlier, there are 13 sections of Orleans Parish Criminal District Court. On any given day, a public defender might have a separate case in four different sections, all being called at the same time. A public defender has to divide themselves and their abilities to give individuals what they deserve: competent and strong representation. In fairness, clients feel cheated all the time. They are unsatisfied all the time. They should be. There should be enough public defenders to go around so that lawyers aren’t exhausted by the time their case is called. OPD has talked about the injustice of having to raise its own funds, but I think my biggest plea, even more important than money, is for humanity. No lawyer should have to represent hundreds of people in a clearly broken system. No one should have to wait over a month to see their lawyer. NOTES FROM A CLIENT ADVOCATE by NOELLE DELTUFO illustration RYAN BLACKWOOD WITHOUT AN ADEQUATELYFUNDED PUBLIC DEFENDER’S OFFICE, THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM STANDING BETWEEN THE ACCUSED AND THEIR FREEDOM WILL HAVE NO ACCOUNTABILITY. I worked at Orleans Public Defenders (OPD) for the past four and a half years as a client advocate. I helped people while they were in jail. On good days, I helped people get out of jail. OPD’s office is perpetually overburdened, both historically and presently. Public defenders are not just lawyers, they’re also investigators, social workers, advocates, and court support, among other titles. Right now, OPD’s budget deficit, currently around $600,000, jeopardizes the city’s most vulnerable population— those who rely on the office to serve as a last line of defense from a draconian criminal justice system. An average of 40 lawyers handle upwards of 150 cases each, drastically limiting the services OPD are able to offer their clients. Gideon vs. Wainwright, the landmark case that demanded the Constitution provide representation for the indigent, 12 * ANTIGRAVITY * JANUARY 2016 happened over 50 years ago. Still, we are having to plan fundraisers to keep OPD’s office doors open. No one should feel comfortable with leaving people to sit in their city jail, marginalized and defenseless. Crime in New Orleans is high, but so is poverty and injustice. When the epicenter of the city is a 13 section courthouse with a jail holding over 1,500 people at a time, we need to consider how that impacts people, especially those lacking in the power and privilege granted to the city’s more wealthy population. To give an example of work the OPD does, I’ll tell you about working with a client I feel very close to, Mr. Charles Burbanks. I met him in March of 2014. He was frail and tired on our first encounter in Orleans Parish Prison. He was facing 20-to-life under Louisiana’s multiple offender law. He hadn’t seen his lawyer in a month. In that span of time, he’d been hospitalized multiple times and was diagnosed with stage 3 liver cancer. Despite the serious diagnosis, he wasn’t receiving adequate treatment. After the visit, I contacted my colleague, a public defender by the name of Omavi Harshaw, so we could work to get him out. We put together a case and asked the judge if he would find mercy for Mr. Burbanks. I arranged all the medical documents, went to LSU and got doctors’ notes, asked the medical director at the jail to testify that he couldn’t provide adequate care for Mr. Burbanks, found a nursing home that would take an indigent parolee, and pleaded with his parole officer to lift the hold on him so he could go to a nursing home. Finally, I arranged for his niece to come from Houston to pay a reduced bond of $100. 67-years-old and terminally ill, Mr. Burbanks was likely going to die in Orleans Parish Prison, stuck behind bars on a nonviolent charge. Yet, Mr. Burbanks did not die in jail. I say this because if OPD continues to not get the funding it needs to operate, people will die in jail waiting for a court date. People will continue to be incarcerated on fines and fees and non-violent charges. Without an adequatelyfunded public defender’s office, the criminal justice system standing between the accused and their freedom will have no accountability. New Orleans needs public Funding OPD means fighting racism. 85% of all arrested people in New Orleans are represented by public defenders. A disproportionate amount of that 85% are poor people of color. They are shackled, dressed in orange, and arranged in front of a court, where their bonds are set and allegations read in public. Is this a grim scene reminiscent of the American South’s shameful past? Yes. Part of fighting racism is ending racial profiling by police. Until that happens, people of color need to be represented fairly and competently. OPD is aware of the injustices and racism that exists not just here but in all communities of poor people of color. A public defender’s caseload is more often than not made up entirely of marginalized people, including underserved mentally ill people and stigmatized individuals struggling with addiction. Oftentimes, public defenders represent people that have nowhere else to turn for help. Without adequate funding, this help is very difficult to provide. I hope these words are enough for people to learn more and get involved. Talk about it with your family and your friends. Talk about it with your neighbors and your coworkers. Please don’t ignore what’s happening to the state of public defense in New Orleans. For more information or to find out how you can help, visit www.opdla.org JANUARY 2016 * ANTIGRAVITY * 13 long been a crucial stop on their second line routes. After Katrina, it was one of the first bars on St. Bernard to open, as Gary Thomas, who was born and raised in the Seventh Ward, remembers: “I got back into Sidney’s before I got back into my house.” Initially bought and renovated after the storm by Kermit Ruffins, Sidney’s has now passed into the hands of Robert Clark and Tara Weberg, who earned their stripes at Molly’s at the Market before setting up shop on St. Bernard. The once plain interior now features mounted deer heads and yellowed Victorian portraits set in vintage frames, and after sundown candlelight flickers in the windows. For months after it opened under the new ownership, I would pass by on my bike, harboring suspicions. Since moving to the city, I have loved going to the Black bars on that strip of St. Bernard, and with Seventh Ward rents on the rise— and talk of gentrification on everyone’s lips—it was hard not to see Sidney’s hip new clientele as a sign of invasion. One night when I was up the street at the Other Place, a man came up to my friend and me (the only other white person in the bar) and asked over the booming music if we weren’t looking for Sidney’s Saloon. “Why, because we’re white?” I asked, and he smiled sheepishly. “I like the crowd better here,” I said, and he laughed and bought us drinks to prove us right. A TRANSPLANT’S GUIDE TO BRINGING UP GENTRIFICATION AT HAPPY HOUR by HOLLY DEVON photos ADRIENNE BATTISTELLA It’s four o’clock on a Wednesday at Sidney’s Saloon, and happy hour is in full swing. Like most afternoons, a loyal band of regulars has gathered to drink and unwind. They range from recent arrivals to old timers like sweet Miss Lula, the Seventh Ward native whose warmth and good cooking makes her a borderline celebrity at Sidney’s, and the dapper Rooster the Bluesman. The Bluesman has been coming to Sidney’s since “rent for the place was only $200 a month,” and attended both the opening of the bar decades earlier and the funeral of original owner Bernell Washington. Almost everyone seated at the bar lives in the neighborhood, and the conversation tends to include just about everyone in the room. Between them there is the gin joint 14 * ANTIGRAVITY * JANUARY 2016 comradery which proliferates in the city’s dive bars and local watering holes, and newcomers are quickly brought into the fold, as I discovered as soon as I sat down. Situated near the corner of Rampart and St. Bernard, Sidney’s has long been a Seventh Ward mainstay. According to Fernell Washington, grandson of Bernell Washington, the bar was always meant to be a meeting place for the community: “My grandfather was the people’s person. That’s why he started the bar.” As a thriving community hub for more than half a century, the bar has stood as a source of stability amidst the neighborhood’s shifting fortunes. For social aid and pleasure clubs like the Dumaine Street Gang, Original Big 7, and Money Wasters, Sidney’s has Of course, what I said wasn’t entirely true at the time, because I hadn’t yet stepped foot in the new Sidney’s. I’m not sure exactly what I was expecting when I finally walked into the bar— certainly something far more insidious than what I found. The happy hour dynamic reminded me of everything which first impressed me about New Orleans bars when I moved here in 2011. The drinks are only $2.50 a pop, red beans and rice abound, and the atmosphere is more like a living room than a cocktail bar. I watched Northern Louisiana native Ben Brock leave his beer at the bar to help Miss Lula carry her groceries home. Brock, a regular who has lived in the Seventh Ward for the past two years, has watched the bar serve as an important multiracial meeting ground where newcomers are folded into the life of the community: “It was met with some suspicion when it opened, but they really embraced the neighborhood, and the neighborhood is embracing them back. I’ll sit here and talk with old timers and hear their stories. It’s clear that we care. I think there’s room for all of us to educate ourselves on the traditions and get involved.” Nor is he the only one quick to come to the bar’s defense. It seems that the city’s longtime residents who drink there have reached a strong consensus—whatever changes may be coming to the neighborhood, Sidney’s is one of the good guys. As Micah McKee, a New Orleans native whose band Little Maker held their CD release party at Sidney’s this past October, puts it, “The prices are virtually the same as they’ve ever been, the bar is locally owned and run, and they’ve opened their doors to social justice organizations such as the Innocence Project, sending a message that not only is everyone welcome, but everyone is invited.” Looking for a way to fight gentrification often feels like tilting at windmills. The villains are elusive, and the playing field is full of landmines. In my experience, a conversation on the subject more often than not resembles nuclear-style mutually assured destruction than a political discussion—people immediately turn defensive, and accusations fly across the room. Simply bringing it up can feel like a punishment. For me, however, living in the Ninth Ward on the lake side of St. Claude, where I watch my neighbors get stopped by police officers and families lose their homes to rising rents, the issue feels too urgent to avoid. I bring it up at parties, at bars, over coffee, but the conversation rarely goes anywhere. “Who are you to talk about gentrification?” I am frequently asked. “Aren’t you a white woman living in a Black neighborhood? Doesn’t your very presence change real estate values? How are you not a part of the problem?” I try to explain what it means to me to become part of the fabric of the community, to tie your fate to your neighbors, and how it may not be enough, but it’s a start. These conversations play like a newsreel in my mind as I talk to Robert Clark about his bar. I am asking him about real estate values on St. Bernard, and the language of aesthetics, referencing without much subtlety the decor which clearly announces itself as a white bar. Isn’t it true that Sidney’s makes St. Bernard look “up-andcoming” to prospective developers? When he responds, I recognize the weariness in his voice. “I know the bar changes people’s notions of what the neighborhood is like, and what that means for real estate. Then again, by keeping prices as low as they are, I’m hardly making a profit. I don’t own the building, I have a lease. A rise in real estate costs will affect me too. I understand the idea of visual impact and visual language, but I’m not Black. I don’t know how to create a bar which looks racially neutral. I’m just trying to provide a place in the community where everyone is welcome.” He tells me that he is worn out from constantly defending himself, as he tries to both run a business and look out for the neighborhood where he lives and works. “It’s emotionally exhausting to be told constantly that I’m gentrifying the neighborhood when I pour everything I have into making everyone feel included. I’m from the backwoods of North Louisiana, and have seen my fair share of racism, but ever since I could think for myself I’ve been trying to address it and do the right thing.” One reason Sidney’s has provoked such a fierce reaction is that it is caught up in the tangled dynamics of the long and politically charged history of real estate in the Seventh Ward. Up until the end of the 1960s, the Seventh Ward was one of the most prosperous Black business districts in the country. The section of St. Bernard between Rampart and Claiborne boasted a variety of Black-owned businesses, and it served as both a social and financial hub for the community. During the “WHO ARE YOU TO TALK ABOUT GENTRIFICATION?” I AM FREQUENTLY ASKED. “AREN’T YOU A WHITE WOMAN LIVING IN A BLACK NEIGHBORHOOD? DOESN’T YOUR VERY PRESENCE CHANGE REAL ESTATE VALUES? HOW ARE YOU NOT A PART OF THE PROBLEM?” Civil Rights movement, Seventh Ward intellectuals, lawyers, and community organizers made the neighborhood a center for activism. In 1968, however, the oak-lined Claiborne Avenue was torn up to make way for the new stretch of interstate, irreparably gouging the Claiborne Business District. Property values on both sides of the interstate plummeted. Many of the most prosperous Seventh Ward residents relocated, employment opportunities disappeared, and the community found itself saddled with unprecedented unemployment and rising crime. While the community suffered from declining property values, the low overhead meant that businesses like neighborhood bars could still survive. Sidney’s was only one of a number of Black-owned bars on St. Bernard, many of which are still on the Avenue. For the moment, longstanding Black-owned businesses like the Circle Foods Store and more recent additions can coexist. However, if rents and property taxes get too high for businesses to keep costs low, and residents get priced out, then the current balance between the old and new will be disrupted, in favor of those businesses whose tastes match those of the new clientele. According to Daniel Grey, a photographer and member of the artists’ collective that now operates the United Bakery Gallery a few blocks from Sidney’s, having deep family ties to the Seventh Ward is more of an exception than the rule on St. Bernard: “My father used to tell me how St. Bernard was where his family and friends would shop, party, and make groceries. It was an important part of everyday New Orleanian life. We are a culture built heavily on community, or at least we were. Now it seems like a local is rarer than an albino alligator, especially in the once historically black Treme. I love the idea of progressing, but not at the loss of identity.” In Robert Clark’s view, the best way to protect the Seventh Ward from the onslaught is to hold on to the culture and stay involved in neighborhood politics, which at Sidney’s they try to do actively. He says the first week they were open they featured Guitar Lightnin’ Lee and other New Orleans musicians, and they welcome social aid and pleasure clubs during second lines. He also makes sure to keep a close eye on real estate interests in the neighborhood. “I spent hours the other day researching ‘for sale’ signs, and traced a whole network of properties back to a developer who bought a ton of real estate in the Treme,” he tells me, and wonders why I have fixated on Sidney’s while outside the public eye these wealthy developers buy, sell, and determine the fate of the city amongst themselves. I think he has a point, but then the public discourse has always revolved around outward symbols of political malaise. If nothing else, Sidney’s and its customers represent the complexity of the gentrification question in New Orleans. At the same time as manifesting a fierce commitment to community values, the bar takes up space on contested ground. How, then, do we reconcile those realities, without either demonizing business owners who hold themselves to a higher ethical standard than many of their counterparts, or disregarding those in vulnerable neighborhoods who are forced further into the margins each year? There is no easy answer to those questions. Provided we can lay down our arms in favor of a wider view, the best way to find one may be to head to a bar like Sidney’s. I learned this for myself when I asked the happy hour crowd whether or not the younger generation of Black Seventh Ward residents could relate to the bar’s new style and clientele, which had tempers flaring in no time. Thanks to the generosity of Rooster the Bluesman and the bartender, I was slightly tipsier than I had intended to be when the conversation got heated, and I soon found myself vociferously admonished by the bartender for bringing up a topic which was inappropriate for happy hour, with Miss Lula firmly in agreement. “If not at happy hour, then when?” I wanted to know, but from there on out questions were only met with further escalation. Above the din, a call came from a peace-loving regular for a round of shots, but fortunately I thought better of it and went outside. I was followed by a few others, among them Ben Brock, who brought me some crawfish pasta from the ever-present Sidney’s crockpot as consolation. They assured me that those questions were, in fact, welcome, and that they themselves talked about the same things. While I had no intention of disrupting the happy hour comradery, I did wonder, if oldtimers and newcomers—white and Black alike—had managed to come together and drink, why should it be so hard to talk about our collective fate? What good is common ground unless we use it to establish shared values and community strategies for development on our own terms? In New Orleans, culture is often political, and in a city which likes to mix its business with pleasure, bars like Sidney’s have the opportunity to be at the forefront of a vital conversation. PHOTO: AVERY LEIGH WHITE Unfortunately, the fragile ecosystem on the Avenue will soon be in the crosshairs of real estate developers. As everyone attempting to navigate a vehicle around downtown New Orleans is quickly made aware, the construction for the Rampart/St. Claude streetcar is well underway, and that means the tourists will be expanding their territory, as the city states explicitly on the RTA website: “The expansion of our streetcar network is not just good for our riders. It’s also good for the city of New Orleans. Streetcar lines bring significant economic development to the neighborhoods they pass through… New streetcar lines tend to bring increased pedestrian traffic to neighborhoods, new retail shops and other businesses, and new housing units.” And the streetcar is only the beginning. In 2013, Mayor Landrieu and Governor Jindal worked together to secure a deal with Viking River Cruises, an international company which, according to the press release issued in February 2014, has chosen New Orleans as its “homeport for the company’s first North American river cruise itineraries.” There will then be literally boatloads of new tourists eager, as always, to spend money on an idea of New Orleans which in no way corresponds with reality. JANUARY 2016 * ANTIGRAVITY * 15 THERE’S NO PLACE LIKE HOME FOR A LIVING SOUNDTRACK by ROBERT LANDRY PHOTO: ADRIENNE BATTISTELLA Between 2007 and 2011, the scene in New Orleans got a new kind of weird. Before the days of every show seemingly featuring a popular Loyola indie band, the Dragon’s Den, Banks Street Bar, and new venues like them were harboring a different kind of talent: instrumental math rock. Some might remember the staples such as Man Plus Building ( from Baton Rouge), Smiley With A Knife, or I, Octopus. Some are still trudging through today, such as Metronome The City and High In One Eye. One band that seemed so different and destined for success was A Living Soundtrack. They weren’t so much a math rock band, though they played shows with mostly those types of bands. ALS had more of a Tortoise vibe; their layers of samples and loops created harmonies that a vocalist would only get in the way of. The band had four members in its inception: Nick Lauve on bass, who initially programmed a lot of samples for the band but left shortly after their first EP release; Marshall Flaig on drums and MIDI percussion; Jenn Aguiluz on keyboards; and Matt Aguiluz on keyboards and trumpet. In 2011, they released How To Grow A City, which should’ve put them in the spotlight. It contained fresh sounds and unique concepts, blending minimal and angular compositions alike. Using Ableton Live, they were able to also sync more melodic samples with their compositions, as well as sync visual projections to the actual flow of their sets. The band easily became a crowd favorite. However, as soon as ALS released their record, they vanished. It’s oddly cerebral—almost dreamlike—when I think about that night at The Blue Nile upstairs in June 2011. I remember seeing so many people there from old bands and shows. It was dark, save for the colors from the projector flashing around all night, creating a visual lullaby. But soon after the album’s release, spouses Matt and Jenn moved to Japan to teach English. It was an awkward move to say the least. They were gone for almost five years, and the band’s momentum disappeared with them. About eight months ago, I heard through the grapevine that they had returned. I was surprised and relieved, but the only thing I could think about was when the next ALS show would be (soon, it turns out). Matt and I had a chance to chat recently and we discussed leaving New Orleans, his and Jenn’s journeys and trials abroad, and plans for the future. How To Grow A City was one of the best records of 2011. I know that there was a lot of hard work behind it. Explain the process of the album and what the goals were behind it. Matt Aguiluz: First of all, thank you for saying that and for being interested in this five years later. 16 * ANTIGRAVITY * JANUARY 2016 That record was kind of an uphill battle—as most records are—but in the end we feel good about it. Of course, there are always things you want to go back and tweak endlessly, and after five years away from it and a lot more experience in audio production, composing, etc., we hope that we can take those lessons into making the next one. So total, I think it took us about two years or so to finish. We did preproduction at our practice space, stemming out all of the backing tracks for reference, then tracking at the Living Room Studio with Chris George and Daniel Majorie. After that, we re-sequenced all of the electronics and added layering at Nick Lauve’s house, and got the mixes about halfway there. Then I brought the rest to Rick G. Nelson (now my co-worker and owner of Marigny Recording Studio), and we finished mixing and a few last minute overdubs at his studio. It was a grind and very difficult to keep a realistic perspective when a record takes that long to make, but it was a huge learning experience for everyone involved. As far as goals are concerned, we just wanted to finish and document what we were doing before we left for Japan. There were no commercial or professional aspirations behind the making of the record. As we get older, we’re sort of changing our tune on that and the idea is that this next paradigm of the band will be more aligned with getting out there and making a name for ourselves. Was it always part of the plan to move to Japan after the record? We kind of knew that in the grand scheme of the life of the band, it didn’t really make sense for us to put out a record and then leave town, but Jenn and I always knew we would live somewhere in Asia for an extended time. At some point when you start looking at raising a family and settling down, the clock starts ticking and your window for doing something like that gets smaller and smaller. So in short, it was kind of the only time we could do it at that point in our lives with everything else we had planned. We had told Nick and Marshall about it maybe two years in advance, so it was always kind of looming over all of the decisions we made as a band. What did the other band members have to say about the decision? Were they part of it? The decision definitely made things tricky for us as a band. I think at that point, Nick was having doubts about going on hiatus for a few years and then jumping back in, so he decided that he would start to phase himself out in the best way possible. It was tough for all of us as friends, because the band had been extremely democratic up until that point, and we all knew that the decision that Jenn and I made was first and foremost a decision about our relationship as a couple. I don’t want to speak for Marshall and Nick, but at that point, as much as we wanted it to be, things couldn’t be democratic in that situation. So we played for a while and made AS FOR NEW ORLEANS, IT WAS ACTUALLY GOOD FOR US TO LEAVE AT THE TIME. I GREW UP HERE AND JENN’S BEEN HERE FOR 15 YEARS NOW. WE REALLY LOVE IT HERE AND IT FEELS RIGHT TO BE BACK SETTING DOWN ROOTS. BUT FOR US, IT WAS REALLY IMPORTANT TO SEE OTHER PARTS OF THE WORLD AND HOW THINGS ARE DONE IN OTHER PLACES. to take it for granted if you don’t get some distance from it. And this was exactly what the two of us needed and we feel better off for doing it. Without ALS around, how did Nick and Marshall spend the hiatus? When we were in Japan, Nick and Marshall ended up keeping the practice space and playing with a few different friends at the time. Through a couple different lineups, Marshall eventually ended up playing with our good friend Max Binet of Raspy Meow. Definitely check them out if you haven’t yet. Very tight stuff. And they now perform as a duo around town. When ALS is ready for shows again, we want to try to further develop a scene with Max and a few others out there, including Anthony Cuccia’s amazing set as the Night Janitor. What are some things that stuck out about the experience overseas? What did you do? Well, we lived in Osaka for two years, which is very similar to New Orleans in terms of people and mindset: lots of drinking and food and entertainment. The people there are pretty awesome and old school in ways that are very different from the rest of Japan. That region of Japan (the Kansai region) is surrounded by culture and nature, with Kyoto and Kobe about 45 minutes away by train, and Koyasan—the oldest/biggest Zen Buddhist cemetery in Japan, set in the mountains within a cedar forest—nearby. If you google that area, there is so much to see and do that you can’t experience anywhere else in the world. I could go on and on about it. Was it hard to leave the band and New Orleans? It was definitely tough to leave the band. These were our best friends who we made music with. It’s akin to leaving a church that you’ve been in for years and years with your friends, who’ve become your extended family. We’re not religious in the traditional sense, so making music is our spiritual outlet. When you share that with some of your closest people, it’s really tough to go away from that even for a short while. As for New Orleans, it was actually good for us to leave at the time. I grew up here and Jenn’s been here for 15 years now. We really love it here and it feels right to be back setting down roots. But for us, it was really important to see other parts of the world and how things are done in other places. As beautiful and cathartic as living in New Orleans can be, you can start After your teaching, you did some traveling elsewhere. What did those experiences bring you as you returned home? After leaving Japan, we had planned a trip starting in North Vietnam, taking trains through the country until we got to Saigon in the south, then bussing it over to Angkor Wat in Cambodia, and on to Thailand for a total of three months. We got to about a month and a half, when on the way to Thailand from Siem Reap we got into a terrible bus accident and were in the hospital for about a month and a half in Bangkok. It was definitely the worst and most profound experience we’d ever had. Two people in our bus died, and a few others were in comas by the time we left. I had to have PHOTO: DAN FOX the best of it, with a few expected bumps along the way. We’re all just grateful now that we got through it and still all remain good friends. emergency surgery for a ruptured intestine, and Jenn fractured one of her vertebrae. By the end, being able to walk away from it was something we never expected and try to remember every day how lucky we are. I don’t want to lay it on too thick, but that’s the short of it. Overall, we had an overwhelmingly positive experience (even through the last bit) and still recommend seeing that part of the world if you ever get the opportunity. Now that you are home, is the band back together? What are some plans for the future? Well, the plan is now for Marshall and I to start playing as a duo. We’ve been reformatting our live set for that and are making everything more sample-oriented. We’ve been working with Sarah Quintana on some tracks and will hopefully have options for vocal accompaniment in the future. She is super awesome at what she does and we’ve been friends for years, so it just seemed like a great fit. Lots of moving parts, but they’re all coming together slowly. We’re pretty psyched about everything. We have almost an entirely new set as well. translated into your musical endeavor? [Laughs] Man, I’m still trying to figure that out. It’s impossible for it not to be connected to music, for sure. Most of the clichés we’ve heard about having a kid are true. When I have time to write, it’s definitely got a different feel to it, though. It’s tough to explain without sounding like an idiot. But little Felix is pretty great to have around. It’s so lame now to be the guy who shows everyone pictures of him, regardless of whether or not they want to see. But what can you do? A Living Soundtrack will be at Siberia on Saturday, January 23rd opening for Caddywhompus. For more info, check out alivingsoundtrack.wordpress.com I hear the ALS family has a new addition. Congratulations on fatherhood! Is there anything you’d like to share about your experience and how it has JANUARY 2016 * ANTIGRAVITY * 17 18 * ANTIGRAVITY * JANUARY 2016 Usher at Amnesty International’s Art for Rights Pop-Up at Studio Be (photo by Joshua Brasted) The Deslondes at Tipitina’s (photo by Brandt Vicknair) JANUARY 2016 * ANTIGRAVITY * 19 A Winter Celebration: Welcoming Syrian Refugees to NOLA Rally (photos: Amy K. Nelson) 22 * ANTIGRAVITY * JANUARY 2016 JANUARY 2016 * ANTIGRAVITY * 23 WAKING UP EARLY with Aimée Argote of DES ARK by HOLLY DEVON illustrations ERIN K. WILSON photos ERIC MARTINEZ If you call up D.I.Y. punk veteran Aimée Argote on the telephone to ask about her music, it’s likely you’ll find yourself an hour in without having touched the subject. As a conversationalist, she’s light on her feet, and it’s all you can do to keep up as she weaves between gender, art, and modern living. Ask her how she “gets her sound” though, and she might lose interest. This may be surprising to those familiar with the formidable musical rap sheet accumulated in her 20 years as a queer, punk musician. Alternating between understated acoustics and balls-out noise rock for the better part of a decade, she’s been moving her sound through this spectrum of extremes as the leader of Des Ark, her loose collective of musical collaborators, culminating in Des Ark’s latest album, Everything Dies (out on Graveface Records). But she sees the songs as products of a larger process, and she’d rather talk inspiration than technique. Born in Arkansas and raised in North Carolina (after a family stint in France), Aimée’s roots are in the South, though her life has been given to vagabonding since she came of age touring the punk scene. Still, she credits her family with having more influence on her music than any band. If you’re looking to understand the music, Aimée will tell you it’s something you just have to feel for. If you want to know about the experiences which shaped it, then all you have to do is ask. How old were you when you got your start? Aimée Argote: I went on my first tour when I was 15, with an all-woman queer band, and we were plugged into pretty much every queer hub in the country. I hadn’t really left the state before for music. I remember my father being so worried about three teenage girls driving in an old van around the U.S., but I showed him that I had maps—before Google of course—and contact information for every stop. When he saw I had taken care of the logistics, he was like, “all right, it’s possible she won’t die on this tour.” What is your least favorite question to be asked in an interview? Ha! Great question. I’d say it’s: do you write the lyrics or the music first? I am always shocked how many people ask that question, like it’s in a what-to-ask-the-musician playbook. In reality the process is never so clear-cut. 24 * ANTIGRAVITY * JANUARY 2016 What kinds of questions do you wish people asked more of ? I wish people asked me more about safety on the road: the safety of being a queer person or a woman. I think when interviewers are familiar with the band, they touch on that. But most of the questions people ask about being a woman in a band are like sexism 101, which gets very boring. So what does it mean to you to be safe on the road as a queer woman? As a musician, so much time is spent on tour that being safe on the road is the only way you can really keep doing it. That’s as much a part of the music as writing the album. Safety is made up of a few different components. One of them is how you choose your bandmates. There have been anywhere from 30 to 40 people involved in the Des Ark live performances, and I have been really the only common thread throughout its changes. I came from the punk D.I.Y. scene, where there’s a strong consensus-oriented ethos. After a lot of trial and error, though, I ended up having to think about what I needed to keep making the music. I decided I needed band members who could stay sober, and at that point I realized I had to take control of the band. I have partied a lot in my life, but when I decided I had to reel in the alcohol intake on tour, that was a conversation I had to have with people when they joined us. You never know who you’ll be interacting with, what kind of sketchball will be hanging around the merch table. And to feel safe I have to have at least one person who is going to be sober every night. That was really hard for me to ask for, and I had to get rid of the consensus in order to bring that up. It’s really important that people feel taken care of, but it doesn’t mean that you have to open up the floor for whoever talks the loudest to get their way. Do you feel like prioritizing your safety separates you from the punk D.I.Y. ethic? Not really. In the end, I think the most essential part of the punk D.I.Y. ethos is to get as close to the source as you can, and do it as well as you can, with the least amount of bullshit in between. I only feel closer to that as time goes on. How has being sober on the road affected your experience of touring? That is something I grapple with. What does being sober mean for how much fun I’m having on tour? It means I wake up earlier than everyone by at least two hours, and go on a run to see the town. I think I’m seeing more of America by not nursing a hangover from some dark club, all of which look the same after a while. It’s important to me to be checking in with nature while I’m on the road: I feel like I’m trading the partying for something more meaningful. I’ve toured the U.S. 300 times. I don’t need to see the inside of every bar, filled with people I’ll never see again. But this country has unlimited natural beauty to be a part of. I also don’t come home from tour and have to sleep for three weeks—I can get right back to work. I think on a larger scale what I’m doing is training myself to not burn out. As someone who is so constantly on the move, how would you say place impacts your music? I grew up in North Carolina, but my family is all from New Orleans, and it feels really important to me to root myself in the South. People give the South all this shit, but when I leave this place, I’m not doing the work anymore. At one point I moved to Philadelphia, which was big on the punk flight map, like the kind you see on the Southwest airline in-flight pamphlets, with the arrows criss-crossing the country towards these central hubs. I moved to Philly because I wanted to be around punks—I didn’t want it to be such a big deal anymore that I go on tour, which is really unusual where I live. But I didn’t write a single song in those years. The things I saw in Philadelphia were truly heartbreaking, but they weren’t what I grew up with, so I didn’t know if I really had a right to write those songs. I realized that the things I write about concern the South, and I need that community. It’s just what I understand. It felt so important to come back to the South, and keep plugging away at it. I think when you grow up in a place, and are aware of its roots, it’s good to take up some space there. How do you think these roots have impacted the way you play? I grew up listening to New Orleans music, which I feel transcends music. In New Orleans you learn to feel the music, not listen to it, and that changed the way I relate to influences—I’m not listening to what people are saying, I’m feeling it. That’s another question I really hate, by the way: what are your influences? Like, why is your sound like this, is it because you listen to Björk? Every time I answer I feel like I’m disappointing the interviewer. SO MUCH TIME IS SPENT ON TOUR THAT BEING SAFE ON THE ROAD IS THE ONLY WAY YOU CAN REALLY KEEP DOING IT. THAT’S AS MUCH A PART OF THE MUSIC AS WRITING THE ALBUM. Does it feel disruptive to be rooted in your community on one hand, and be traveling so much on the other? It’s so hard to negotiate your contributions to your community, which I feel the need to stay in touch with, emotionally and politically. My day-to-day life is not in the punk scene. I have always been more interested in farming, food, and nature. I get my inspiration from being outside and talking to my family. But then it’s also about sharing my voice, to use the band as a loudspeaker for what’s going on. I just have to believe there is a way to balance it all out. Let’s talk about your new album, Everything Dies. You definitely seem to be moving towards a different sound than your previous records, where your fans could expect an almost jarring mix of noise rock and hushed acoustics. How would you describe the new creative territory? The basic gist of the record is that we’ve always sort of been on either side of volume extremes. Live, we’ve either been balls-to-thewall amps on 15, or it’s been me by JANUARY 2016 * ANTIGRAVITY * 25 I’M SEEING PEOPLE DROPPING LIKE FLIES TO DESK JOBS. I CAN UNDERSTAND IT. I WOULD LIKE TO FEEL SAFE, I WOULD LIKE TO BE ABLE TO AFFORD HEALTH CARE. MOSTLY, THOUGH, I WANT TO KNOW I SAW WHAT I WANTED TO SEE AND DID WHAT I NEEDED TO DO. myself playing a broken half-strung acoustic guitar. For this record I wanted to do something harder, which would be to meet in the middle. For so long, playing live and loud didn’t make me practice. I didn’t have to be good, I just had to be a good performer. And when it was really quiet, it was the same— seeing someone on stage playing so quietly and sad made it easy to connect to. So my scariest place as a musician is in the middle: I feel the most vulnerable there, where the listener could really pay attention to how the music and the words connect to each other, and whether it is making sense. At what point did you decide you wanted to push yourself to try something new? You know that moment in Groundhog Day when Bill Murray keeps trying to kill himself but always wakes up to the same day, until he finally says “fuck it,” I 26 * ANTIGRAVITY * JANUARY 2016 may as well just do this day right? That’s what this album represents to me. Music has fucked up my life so many times in so many ways, and I’ve tried to get rid of it, but I keep coming back. I have nothing to lose, because I can’t quit. So to keep myself engaged I had to do the scariest and most exciting thing I could think of. If you had to sum it up, what would you say is the single biggest contributing factor to the sound of the album? Definitely the piecemeal way it was made. I left my label halfway through the recording process and so I didn’t really have a budget. A friend of mine had a roommate with a bunch of recording equipment in his bedroom, and they said just come here! So most of it was done in that tiny room with some of the people I knew from New Orleans who would come over to help. The bedroom was so small that we didn’t have enough room to set up a drum set, so we did one drum at a time. We kept a lot of that on the album, although eventually I did have to find someone with the entire set. To do the vocals, I traded a house-sitting job in the middle of the woods in exchange for their studio equipment. I was supposed to be looking after their dog while they were out of town, and it was all going great until one morning the dog had a stroke on the porch and died. The album had so many moments like those where I’d think, “Aimée, you just have to get your shit together and get it done.” And then I wake up in the morning and there’s a dead dog. I work well like that, though. I don’t think we’ve ever gone into a studio and knocked out a record. When you’re poor and a small-time artist, you have to have a lot of friends who are willing to take a chance on you. It’s kind of insane to record an album on favors. But without the money you just have to find a way to build something from pieces... With this album it was like okay, I want to make a good record, I admit it. I wanted success in the sense that I wanted to connect with people over what I was going through and writing about, and I started to understand that what’s radical is to talk about that, and to make the decision to do a good job. After all that trial and error, it must be a relief to see the album getting rave reviews. Definitely. I’m not someone who gives a shit about, let’s just say, media response. I just can’t spend time worrying about it. But in the case of this album, which I can’t listen to without hearing a thousand pieces, I was pretty nervous, and it’s been nice to see how it’s been received... This record was so hard to make because I was so terrified of failure, but that’s exactly why I went there. The artists I admire are not the ones that make consistently good work, it’s those that make consistently challenging work... Success in punk is tricky. At some point I had to step back and ask why I was always sabotaging myself, and I think in the punk community that was really encouraged. You get a scarlet letter on you if you’re successful. That was confusing to me, and is confusing to a lot of artists. For example, it’s not cool to talk about money. After a show everyone will shuffle around not wanting to seem greedy, but then there’s always the one fucking dude who takes care of himself, and he’s the one who walks away with the money. Has it been hard to push yourself forward after so many years making music? How to live a long time and make art, and make time for art, that’s a real question that people face, and it’s why everyone’s favorite bands have broken up. And I don’t want to break up because my band is just me. It’s a constant conversation and it’s getting a lot louder as I get older. The support systems for being a broke-ass 21-year-old are stronger because there are a lot more of them. After that it only gets harder and more complicated, and I’m seeing people dropping like flies to desk jobs. I can understand it. I would like to feel safe, I would like to be able to afford health care. Mostly, though, I want to know I saw what I wanted to see and did what I needed to do. When it comes down to it, I can’t control shit. As much as I can expand on that balancing wire, I’m going to do it. That control that people are looking for, that’s just a way of not facing the truth. We are all going to die, and I’d like to go out feeling like I did a good job. Doing a good job doesn’t feel like having a lot of money for me, it means finding that joy. So what’s the next challenge for the music? Part of what’s so fun about this record is that it’s impossible to play live, so the immediate question is how do we take up the space of this record on stage? That’s been fun and challenging to work on. I really have to practice. It’s wild! I think more than any other time in my life I’m excited about not quitting, not drowning in between steps. Right now my next challenge is the piano. I’ve been learning to play the Charlie Brown theme song. Being interested in a new instrument is scary because you wonder if you can learn new things when you get older. I try not to look too much into the future—for right now I’m just excited to go on the road. I realized that these songs mean a lot to me, but they don’t really get me until they get somebody else. I think there isn’t a point to writing songs that other people aren’t going to connect with. A lot them are about feeling alone, and so connecting with people over them refuels me. I don’t get what people feel when they’re alone with the record, but I get that live. I’m looking forward to what that back-and-forth makes me feel in public. Des Ark will be at Gasa Gasa Wednesday, January 20th, with Saintseneca and New Holland. For more info, check out desark.org JANUARY 2016 * ANTIGRAVITY * 27 ADELE 25 (XL) Look, I get it. I’m being played. I’m being pandered to. I am fully aware of it. But I also don’t give a shit. I’m all in on this one: Adele is a magical unicorn. Her vocals are achingly smooth and bitingly bitter—the hot toddy I needed to make it through winter. I feel like she must sit down before each new album and make a checklist of points to hit. “Song about trying to reconnect with an ex” (check). “Song wishing your ex’s new woman good luck with that deadbeat” (check). “Song where you admit that you’re kind of a callous bitch but you’re leaving anyway” (check). “Song where you call out your current partner for being emotionally dead inside” (check). I could play bingo with this thing. It’s formulaic and in many ways there isn’t a single song that really comes as a surprise. But that doesn’t mean it’s not a killer record. From front to back, 25 is everything you could want in a pop album. The first single, “Hello,” has already taken the free world by storm, inspiring parodies and SNL skits and some of the most passionate car sing-a-longs of all time (admit it; you’ve indulged). It has broad, cresting vocals and simple but impactful lyrics. It’s inherently relatable and thusly, it’s gold. “I Miss You” is a smoky slow burn that taps into some of her earlier R&B influences. Its steady heartbeat drums build to a powerful epicenter. It should’ve been the second single, but that honor went instead to “When We Were Young,” a track that feels just a bit too on-the-nose for me. The live cuts I’ve heard trump the album version, so maybe the mixing was just too sterile. Admittedly though, what 30-something doesn’t feel a twinge hearing Adele sing that youth is “like a movie” and “like a song” (or when hearing the line “I’m so mad I’m getting old / It makes me reckless”)? That same set of embittered guys and gals is likely to gravitate to “River Lea,” a track that finds an almost trance-like groove in its meditation. The gist? She’s broken and she will ruin this. So let her apologize in advance for mucking it all up. Raise your hand if you also have two dozen friends who approach all relationships with such fatality. I’m not immune to Adele’s powers, though. “Million Years 28 * ANTIGRAVITY * JANUARY 2016 Ago” was written directly at me. Its plaintive Spanish guitar provides a still and quiet background from which to emotionally unmoor you: “I know I’m not the only one / Who regrets the things they’ve done / Sometimes I just feel it’s only me / Who never became who they thought they’d be.” Tissues, please. While this record will inevitably make you want to light a piano on fire and throw a vase at the wall and look longingly out of a frosted window while wearing an oversized sweater with elbow patches, it ends on a pure and beautiful note. “Sweetest Devotion” is a song that—it’s clear within seconds— was written about a child. Adele has admitted to penning this closing track for her three year-old son, Angelo. For a woman known the world over for her passionate, fickle love affairs, it seems only fair that the tiniest heart should be her undoing. From “there is something in your loving that tears down all my walls” to “you will only be eternally the one that I belong to,” it’s clear that despite all the hand-wringing, garmentrending, tear-stained moments, Adele has finally found her match. —Erin Hall BANTAM FOXES …LOSER/”I’M TOO BROKE FOR CHRISTMAS” (SELF-RELEASE) In the short, packed life of the trio known as Bantam Foxes, brothers Sam and Collin McCabe trade and blend vocals, guitars, and bass while Jared Marcell holds down the drums. They’ve been intent on spreading their indieinspired rock, having been anything but idle since the 2013 release of their only full-length album to date, the heavyhitting Triumph. The years since have seen a fairly steady run of recordings released via the Foxes’ Bandcamp site (hurrah for the internet); and while they aren’t large in quantity, EPs such as Give Us A Raise and the band’s latest, …Loser, serve as snapshots of a young band getting simultaneously tighter and looser in rhythm and in lyrics. The guitar riffs are repetitive and hypnotic, the drums get harder when needed, especially on in-your-face gems like “Secondhand Smoke,” and the virtuosity the brothers McCabe have developed in their vocal interplay only seems to expand with each track. And even though it’s after the holiday, the single release of “I’m Too Broke For Christmas” is definitely worth many listens, turning holiday blues upsidedown and highlighting the band’s songwriting chops in a fun, bombastic way, reminiscent of New Orleans’ other indie rock brothers-in-arms The Breton Sound. —Leigh Checkman CAGE THE ELEPHANT TELL ME I’M PRETTY (RCA) Cage The Elephant’s 2011 song “Always Something” appropriately captured Gang Of Four’s disco-punk, but only in essence, without having to imitate “I Love A Man in Uniform.” But producer Dan Auerbach takes what his group The Black Keys have learned after being produced by Danger Mouse for multiple albums (that all sound the same) and oppresses Cage The Elephant’s new record with the most shrill rip-off psych-blues since Jack White’s obnoxious Lazaretto. There’s no understanding of Captain Beefheart’s Safe As Milk, Them’s “Gloria,” or Fleetwood Mac’s “Jewel Eyed Judy.” The riffs on Tell Me I’m Pretty are admittedly catchy, but the lyrics are beyond vacuous: they’re stitched-together blues archetypes without any of the emotional insight (What’s worse: “Trouble on my left, trouble on my right” or “Sweetie Little Jean where did you go?/Everyone’s been searching high and low”). Track six, “Trouble,” comes the closest to arousing any type of emotional interest, but much like track three, “Sweetie Little Jean,” it ultimately surrenders to a poor attempt to replicate ho-dunk authenticity (which just comes off as trite and condescending). Cage The Elephant would be better off aiming to replicate “Zig Zag Wanderer” rather than “Lonely Boy.” —Joey Laura CONDITION ACTUAL HELL (IRON LUNG RECORDS) Iron Lung Records’ mission statement is blunt and unapologetic: they know what they like, and perhaps more importantly, what they don’t like. With that said, L.A.’s howling d-beat, misanthropic powerhouse Condition is another weapon in the burgeoning label’s arsenal. Just when I thought that American blown-out, raw d-beat punk was in its last gasps of life, Condition proves with ugly virtue that the raw punk scene is still robustly festering in some dank corners, alongside other stalwart L.A. bands such as Blazing Eye (who shares members with Condition), Stupid Life, and Drapetomania. Actual Hell spirals in and out of Burning Spirits-style hardcore, distorted mid-tempo stompers, and disgusting Ildjarn-stylized hardcore. Matt, the singer fighting for his voice to be heard, genuinely sounds like he is singing for his life. I caught this band in Portland twice within the span of a few months in 2013, and they are without a doubt one of the loudest punk bands that I have ever seen. I hope they eventually make it down here to decimate scores of helpless eardrums. —Dan McCoy DASH RIP ROCK WRONGHEADED (DRAG SNAKE) It used to be that supercharged countrymetal engines in rock‘n’roll were considered to be better off burning out in white-hot blazes of glory. Such thinking neglects the very unpredictability of such fires, and of those who stoke them. It’s for this reason alone that seasoned practitioners of this misunderstood art are sorely needed. It’s largely criminally unsung bands like Dash Rip Rock that are taking the music to new, and surprisingly subtler, places without losing the fuck it, let’s rock mentality that makes it so infectious in the first place. The latter tendency is always in evidence on Wrongheaded, be it in the swine-overrun New Orleans pocket epic “Swamp Pigs,” the short-but-sweet “Loser,” or the inner juvenile crying out in love in “Awesome.” What really stands out on this latest are songs like “Country Stories,” an ode to oral storytelling Southern-style, and “Songreader,” some musings on life as a musician so far. Far from being nostalgic bits surrounded by amped-up guitars and hard-hitting drums, they are looks at the unsteadiness of life choices and life’s lessons wrapped in the give-‘em-hell licks Bill Davis and company know so well. But hey, if all that’s needed is a great time, Dash still kicks ass. —Leigh Checkman DIGGS DUKE CIVIL CIRCUS (FOLLOWING IS LEADING) When Steely Dan released their first record Can’t Buy A Thrill in 1972, there weren’t many who wanted to build on Donald Fagen and Walter Becker’s unique brand of jazz-rock. More than 40 years later, Diggs Duke tries an even more eclectic version, fusing funk and hip-hop elements into the style. Duke uses genre like a rubber band, stretching it in all different directions to see how far he can go without it breaking. “Ambition Addiction” features a wicked, anxious looped beat that clashes—pleasantly so—with a melody line that sounds like it came from Pretzel Logic. On “Stoplight Lessons,” he marries his musical dexterity with cleverly fashioned lyrics: “Old enough to crawl/But speech evades your grasp/ You rely on eyes to tell you so much” are lines that weep with human experience. And “Postcard” has a melody that flirts with Stevie Wonder’s “Too High,” more context for his formal experimentation. His tapestry of public street life is a remarkable mosaic of unique people and everyday experiences (depicted beautifully with Chris-Ware-by-way-of-Cubism artwork) that leads toward the social message of his final track, “We Don’t Need Love (But Understanding).” Civil Circus is an immensely well orchestrated and—most importantly— humane work. —Joey Laura EVIL ARMY VIOLENCE AND WAR (HELL’S HEADBANGERS) The long-awaited follow-up to Evil Army’s 2013 EP I, Commander has finally arrived, and Violence and War remains true to the old-school thrash style that Evil Army is revered for. The lyrics conjure images of war and tell tales of destruction. All the battle-tested themes of rage and death have been carried over to this five-song, 45 RPM 12”. Bassist Tyrant has been playing live with Evil Army for roughly two years now, but Violence and War is his first recording with the band. The Memphisbased three piece flies through the songs, breaking the sound barrier and taking no prisoners along the way. The record gets off to a galloping start with “Army of Doom” and transitions seamlessly into “The Assault,” a brutal ripper of a song. “My Rage Unleashed,” however, features more hardcore punk/crossover than the usual fare, and it is a welcome variance. “Deathbreath” plods along for the first few seconds, then brings the listener back to the ultra-fast tempo they crave. The album is wrapped up nicely by the title track, “Violence and War.” Fans will have to decide whether Violence and War is worth the arduous wait they endured, but for any fan of thrash or early metal, I highly recommend giving this EP a listen. —Jenn Attaway GRAVE RITUAL MORBID THRONE (DARK DESCENT RECORDS) Grave Ritual are taking the reins of death metal from the altars of the old school and creating their own kingdom to rule. Morbid Throne is like stepping into a timewarp of death metal glory. So much modern metal is compartmentalized into sub-sub genres, to the degree that it’s obnoxious. Morbid Throne keeps it simple: old school death metal. From the opening track, “Baleful Aversion,” there’s a swinging melody reminiscent of Incantation. What I find exciting about this album is how the vocal work by Ryan Evans almost acts like a percussion instrument and I think it gives the other instruments equal, if not more focus. Grave Ritual is riff worshipping with Morbid Throne. “Tyrant’s Hammer” has a simple groove, but it’s nasty and memorable. Jeremy Berry’s drum work is solid throughout the album. His style resonates heavily in how he accents the guitars: in “Lewd Perversities” Berry emphasizes guitarist Matt Bokor’s dissonant licks. This album may not be genre defying, but that doesn’t make it any less heavy or important. Grave Ritual’s style defines death metal unwaveringly, and Morbid Throne is a further proclamation of death metal’s rule in the underground. —Nathan Tucker ONE DIRECTION MADE IN THE A.M. (COLUMBIA/SYCO) This season’s Halloween episode of the consistently insightful cartoon Bob’s Burgers features a music video JANUARY 2016 * ANTIGRAVITY * 29 for fictional band Boyz 4 Now, and it’s a perfect send-up of the inanity behind the ‘90s boy-band movement. But with their new record Made in the A.M., One Direction shows that they’re above “Larger Than Life” facile compliments. They don’t just emulate the best boy bands of the ‘50s and ‘60s, but the girl groups too, which lends them a level of sensitivity that compliments the sexual tension in their lyrics. Like the Four Seasons and the Everly Brothers before them, the guys in One Direction know how to give a lyric poignant weight. The album opener conjures up an emotional powerhouse (“Hey Angel/ Oh, I wish I could be more like you/Do you wish you could be more like me?”), and the doo-wop harmonies behind “Never Enough” capture the same energy behind the wall-of-sound footstomping on The Supremes’ “Where Did Our Love Go.” Their sexual taunts are also more mature than anything the flaccid Backstreet Boys attempted (on “Perfect,” they suggest, “When I first saw you, from across the room/I could tell that you were curious”). This is the kind of verbal flirting that Justin Timberlake aced once he left ‘N Sync, and now it’s One Direction’s turn to bring sexy back. —Joey Laura such as Shakey Graves, J. Roddy Walston and the Business, Caroline Rose, and even New Orleans’ own Preservation Hall Jazz Band. Covers include everything from Lou Reed’s “Perfect Day” to Guns N’ Roses’ “Patience.” An ambitious project no doubt, and one with the immaculate production we’ve come to expect from Michael Trent, but I’m not sure this album goes beyond grand novelty or one-off. A healthy chunk of the S&R charm is the energy created between these two people, who share just a guitar, a simple drum set, and a small synth to create a mountain of sound and emotion between them. Everyone sounds good for sure, and Busted Jukebox is also a document of some of the relationships S&R have fostered from their brutal tour regiment: in dissecting the album, Cary Ann tells NPR, “The road is long, but it is narrow, so if you’re out there working, you’re gonna bump into the same people quite a bit.” Still, the extra layers only dispel the hypnotic hold of a “solo” S&R tune, save for the “Patience” track, performed with the Milk Carton Kids. S&R and the Kids really do a magical job of rescuing this song from macho ‘80s rock purgatory and turn it into something precious and timeless. It’s also fun to think Cary Ann is revealing the touch of Axle Rose already embedded in her persona. The last track, “Leaving Louisiana in The Broad Daylight,” is the real gem of this album and a return to true Shovels and Rope form. It’s just Cary Ann and Michael covering Emmylou Harris, the song busting at the seams in all directions. If you’re a fellow devotee, of course this album goes with the collection. But if you need an introduction, start with just Cary Ann and Michael, and meet their friends later. —Dan Fox SHOVELS AND ROPE BUSTED JUKEBOX VOLUME 1 (DUALTONE) YOUR FRIEND GUMPTION (DOMINO) Longtime readers know that Shovels and Rope make me and a good part of the AG staff pretty googlyeyed, so this album of covers and collaborations came as a great surprise at the end of 2015. For the uninitiated, Shovels and Rope are comprised of husband-and-wife team Cary Ann Hearst and Michael Trent—soulmates on every plane— who musically fuck and fight their way through stripped down countryspiced ballads and rock burners alike. This collection of covers opens up the fences of S&R Manor to a host of fellow Americana-classified artists, Taryn Miller, the voice of Your Friend, couldn’t have chosen a better name for her debut album. The word “Gumption” is defined as: “shrewd or spirited initiative and resourcefulness,” and this is surely it, seeing as how she packs a box set’s worth of thoughts and feelings into just eight songs. To approach this album with the preconceived notions of what a debut should sound like would do both it, and yourself, a huge disservice. What Miller has made here is a flawless collection of songs, right out of the gate, all of which put you in the same headspace as a late night swim in a natural body of water. There’s 30 * ANTIGRAVITY * JANUARY 2016 a peculiar pressure in your inner ear, and the majority of your senses are dulled (aside from sound) which seems amplified in a way both disorienting and beautiful. “Heathering,” the first single off the album, rushes into an upbeat tone and then lets you drown in emotion. “I Turned In” makes you want to cry before she even starts singing. And closer “Who Will I Be In The Morning” could be an anthem for the independent recluse who, for whatever reason, wakes up one morning the sole occupant of a secluded island and thinks “good.” —Kelly McClure ZALHIETZLI & PROUD/FATHER S/T (SELF-RELEASE CASSETTE) In the art of noise, the canvas is wide open. Whether chaotic or controlled, it is a necessary, freerange study in sound expression. On this self-released cassette split, noise aficionados Zalhietzli (Angers, France) and Proud/Father (New Orleans, LA) have struck a healthy balance between sound and structure (or lack thereof ). Where Zalhietzli is at times creepy and claustrophobic, Proud/Father counters with serene breathability. Clever layers of tape loops, static noise, whole tones, samples, and distant conversations are woven into subtle worlds. In their own unique approaches, both artists are able to achieve a nearly cinematicsized space and depth. Proud/ Father even introduces a driving percussion near the very end, just before ripping it out from under us. It’s those nuanced details that suggest a more controlled universe than what could easily be perceived as random noise in early listenings. While there are plenty of brilliant abstractions here to outweigh the structure, I still like knowing that someone is pulling the strings. —Kevin Comarda THE HATEFUL EIGHT QUENTIN TARANTINO (WEINSTEIN COMPANY) Tarantino’s eighth film is being projected on 70mm film in a Special Roadshow engagement. The director hosts a celebration of violence, featuring many of his favorite faces, stuck in a wild, Western-style, Wyoming cabin during a blizzard. The screenplay was first performed as a staged reading in Los Angeles, intended as a standalone event. The overwhelming response inspired Tarantino to film his play in the cold Colorado mountains using antique lenses, further enriching the tale with a score by Ennio Morricone. The playlike nature of the story, a set-up that harkens all the way back to Reservoir Dogs, seems an odd choice for a super widescreen form, but the close-ups are as beautiful as the snowy vistas, and it’s hard to find fault in the man for being an overachiever. Tarantino is having fun doing what he loves, and if you love what it is that he does, I reckon you’ll have some fun with it too. —Alex Taylor JANUARY 2016 * ANTIGRAVITY * 31 32 * ANTIGRAVITY * JANUARY 2016 Friday: 1/1 Hi-Ho: Vice is Right, 9pm House of Blues: Sample - Grooves That Inspired Hip Hop, 8pm; Requiem, 10pm; HOB On Sundays, 11pm ($21) Maison: Luneta Jazz Band, 1pm; Melanie Gardner, 4pm; Too Darn Hot, 7pm; Zena Moses + Rue Fiya, 10pm Maple Leaf: Joe Krown Trio, 10pm Siberia: THE NUDE PARTY, Dead Marshes, DRUIDS, 10pm ($6) Sisters in Christ: Sallow / Watcher / The World is a Vampire, 7pm ($5) Tipitina’s: Sunday Youth Music Workshop Featuring Johnny V Trio, 1pm Banks St: Unite The Vibe, Music @ Arts Festival! feat. Sweet Jones, Jimmy Wayne Garrett, Kalia, Lyric Baron, Elon Hornsby, Nate Hancock & DJ Ahalo, 7:30pm Checkpoint Charlie: Firewall, 4pm; Brother Stone & the Prophets of Blue, 7pm; Jerk Officers, 11pm Circle Bar: Crud Night with dj MB & Guests, 10pm d.b.a.: Hot Club of New Orleans, 6pm; Big Sam’s Funky Nation, 11pm ($10) Hi-Ho: Crooked Vines, 8pm; Debauche + Slow Burn Burlesque, 9pm; DJ Q, 10pm House of Blues: Flirt Fridays, 9pm Maison: New Orleans Swinging Gypsies, 1pm; Roamin’ Jasmine, 4pm; Shotgun Jazz Band, 7pm; New Years Eve featuring The New Orleans Suspects + Hot 8 Brass Band + Fat Ballerina, 10pm; The Essentials + Soul Company, 10pm Siberia: Joey Molinaro, Mzda Otrok, Three Brained Robot, Fri(g)id, Wrong Apology, Wild Torus, Spreaders (THE HANG ON / DROP OUT), 9pm ($7) Sugarbear, 7:30pm Checkpoint Charlie: East & Stone, 4pm; Minato Trio, 7pm; Ubaka Brothers, 11pm Circle Bar: miss wallace + jean eric + dj portion control, 10pm d.b.a.: Soul Brass Band, 7pm; Dirty Dozen Brass Band, 11pm ($20) Gasa Gasa: The Bowery Presents: Surfer Blood + Bayonne, 9pm ($10.00) Hi-Ho: Close Me Out, 7pm House of Blues: Jon Cleary & the Absolute Monster Gentlemen, 8pm ($18); Double Dose presented by ActionActionReaction, 9pm Maison: Chance Bushman & The Ibervillianaires, 1pm; Royal Street Winding Boys, 4pm; Smoking Time Jazz Club, 7pm; Big Easy Brawlers + Street Legends Brass Band, 10pm One Eyed Jacks: Little Maker presents: A Tribute to The Last Waltz, 9pm ($15) Siberia: KIA CAVALLARO, TASCHE de la ROCHA, MAEDEA, 6pm; Little Freddie King, 10pm ($7) Tipitina’s: #Awayteam presents: “Lagniappe” featuring DJ RQ Away + The Rahim Glaspy Experience, 10pm Saturday: 1/2 Sunday: 1/3 Tuesday: 1/5 Banks St Bar: Unite The Vibe, Music @ Arts Festival! feat Jimmy Wayne Garrett, Ryan Gregory Floyd, The Quickening, Plum Magnetic, Fifth Men, Nate Hancock, All for One Brass Band, Banks St Bar: Spaghetti Western Sunday w/ The Kenny Triche Band, 7pm Circle Bar: country night with dj pasta d.b.a.: The Palmetto Bug Stompers, 6pm; Corey Henry’s Treme Funktet, 10pm ($10) Banks St Bar: Ladies Night w/ Somerton Suitcase, 9pm Checkpoint Charlie: Jamie Lynn Vessels, 7pm; Yeah You Rite, 11pm Circle Bar: Tyler Weiss with Debelles Monday: 1/4 Banks St Bar: Red Beans & Rice Piano Night w/ Lauren Sturm & Friends, 7pm; Tyler Kinchen & THe Right Pieces, 9pm Circle Bar: all the colors of the dark presents The Poppy Field, 10pm d.b.a.: Luke Winslow King, 7pm; Glen David Andrews, 10pm ($5) Gasa Gasa: Flightlife: Spraypaint huffing party with Live mural art, 9pm Hi-Ho: Bluegrass Pickin’ Party, 8pm; Instant Opus Improvised Series, 10pm Maison: Chicken & Waffles, 5pm; Aurora Nealand & the Royal Roses, 7pm; The Mutiny Squad, 10pm Maple Leaf: Jon Cleary & the Absolute Monster Gentlemen, 9pm Mudlark: Bitchin’ Bajas / Circuit des Yeux / 404notfound / Dick Wolf / Proud/Father, 8pm ($5) plus Ryan Gregory Floyd plus Dreaming Dingo, 10pm Gasa Gasa: Burris and Water Seed, 9pm ($8.00) Hi-Ho: The Spaghetti Western Show, 7pm; Free Spirit Brass Band, 10pm House of Blues: Art and Soul NOLA Vinyl, 6pm; Black & White Krewe, 9pm Maison: New Orleans Swinging Gypsies, 4pm; Gregory Agid Quartet, 6:30pm; TK Groove, 9:30pm Maple Leaf: Rebirth Brass Band, 10pm Siberia: The Rotten Cores, Yes Ma’am, Fish Gutzz and the Ignorant Band, 10pm ($6) Wednesday: 1/6 Banks St Bar: Free BLT’s & Major Bacon, 10pm Checkpoint Charlie: T Bone Stone & the Happy Monsters, 7pm; 1 Last Chance, 11pm Circle Bar: carl leblanc d.b.a.: Tin Men, 7pm; Walter Wolfman Washignton & the Roadmasters, 10pm ($5) Gasa Gasa: Echo Courts with The Painted Hands and Drone Baby, 9pm ($8) Hi-Ho: Teacher Appreciation Night, 5pm; We Love Vinyl, 6pm; Shamarr Allen + DJ Chicken, 9pm Maison: The Organettes, 4pm; The New Orleans Jazz Vipers, 6:30pm; Willfunk, 9:30pm One Eyed Jacks: One Eyed Jacks and The New Movement present Micheal Che, 8pm ($16 advance / $20 day of show) Siberia: Desecrator, Mueco, Mocoso, Allergy, Torture Garden, 10pm ($6) Thursday: 1/7 Banks St Bar: ABC Americana Night JANUARY 2016 * ANTIGRAVITY * 33 with Laura Mae Socks, 9pm Checkpoint Charlie: John Hatchet Band, 7pm; Baby Whiskey, 11pm Circle Bar: Jukebox night, 9pm d.b.a.: Jon Cleary, 7pm; Funk Monkey, 10pm ($5) Hi-Ho: Jetbaby + Crazy Whisky + Mike Desmond’s Dead Horse, 7pm House of Blues: SABOTAGE: NOLA Tribute to The Beastie Boys, 7:30pm ($15) Old Marquer Theater: Late, A Cowboy Song, 8pm Maison: Jon Roniger, 4pm; Sweet Substitute Jazz Band, 7pm; Dysfunktional Bone, 10pm Maple Leaf: The Trio featuring Johnny Vidacovich & Special Guests, 10:30pm Siberia: Loafers, Teenage Sexx, Loudness War, PEGS, 10pm ($6) / The Halfways / Fast Oranj, 10pm Siberia: DJ SPIDER STACY (the pogues), DJ YOUR COUSIN DIMITRI (wwoz), 6pm; GRISTNAM, I Ain’t, Capsizer, A Hanging, 10pm ($7) Tipitina’s: Rebirth Brass Band , 10pm Friday: 1/8 Monday: 1/11 Banks St Bar: Chris Zonada, 7pm; The Dapper Dandies, 10pm Checkpoint Charlie: Nate Hancock, 4pm; Kenny Claiborne, 7pm; House of Cards, 11pm Circle Bar: KUWAISIANA, 10pm d.b.a.: Brother Dege, 2am ($5); Linnzi Zaorski, 6pm; Pine Leaf Boys, 10pm ($5) Gasa Gasa: CHARM /// the woo as f*** Interactive Installation, 10pm Hi-Ho: Gaslight Girls Burlesque, 8pm House of Blues: Strangelove - The Ultimate Tribute to Depeche Mode, 8pm ($12); John Doe Live Band Show featuring Crescent Citizen, 9:30pm ($10) Maison: Eight Dice Cloth, 1pm; Ramblin’ Letters, 4pm; Shotgun Jazz Band, 7pm; Soul Project + more TBA, 10pm Old Marquer Theater: Late, A Cowboy Song, 8pm Siberia: Chicken Snake, The O’Pines, Lonely Lonely Knights, 10pm ($6) Sisters in Christ: Ratboys / The Island of Misfit Toys / Woozy / Pope, 7pm ($5) Tipitina’s: The Revealers 20th Anniversary Celebration with Special Guests The Shepherd Band, Claude Bryant & The All-Stars, DJ Ray & M.C. Eric B, 10pm Banks St Bar: Red Beans & Rice Piano Night w/ Lauren Sturm & Friends, 7pm; South Jones, 10pm Checkpoint Charlie: Mike True, 7pm Circle Bar: cal folger day with romantic animal plus benjamin shepherd ($7) d.b.a.: Luke Winslow King, 7pm; Glen David Andrews, 10pm ($5) Hi-Ho: Bluegrass Pickin’ Party, 8pm; Instant Opus Improvised Series, 10pm House of Blues: Friends of Music presents Brooklyn Rider, 6:15pm Maison: Chicken & Waffles, 5pm; Aurora Nealand & the Royal Roses, 7pm; Stoop Kids, 10pm Maple Leaf: George Porter Jr. Trio, 10pm Saturday: 1/9 Banks St Bar: The Bills, Blood Bird, 10pm Checkpoint Charlie: Good Children, 4pm; Kenny Triche, 7pm; Selma Street Chemical Company, 11pm Circle Bar: Eva LoVullo with The Fifth Men, 10pm d.b.a.: Little Freddie King, 11pm ($10) Gasa Gasa: Oak House with Through the Sparks and Yard Dogs, 10pm ($10.00) Hi-Ho: Brown Improv, 8pm House of Blues: Tooloji - A Tribute to Tool plus Poetry and Prose, aTribute to Primus, 8pm ($12); Bad Girls Of Burlesque - In The Parish At House Of Blues, 8pm ($20); Double Dose presented by ActionActionReaction, 9pm Maison: Chance Bushman & The Ibervillianaires, 1pm; Loose Marbles, 4pm; Smoking Time Jazz Club, 7pm; Kumasi + Ashton Hines and the Big Easy Brawlers, 10pm Mudlark: Fire with Fire, 7pm Old Marquer Theater: Late, A Cowboy Song, 8pm One Eyed Jacks: Stereo Fire Empire Record Release Show with Dead Machine Theory plus House of Goats, 9pm ($8) Saturn Bar: Scarecrow Sonic Boombox 34 * ANTIGRAVITY * JANUARY 2016 Sunday: 1/10 Banks St Bar: Spaghetti Western Sunday w/ Johnny Angel & Helldorado, 7pm Circle Bar: country night with dj pasta d.b.a.: The Palmetto Bug Stompers, 6pm; Davis Coen, 10pm ($5) Maison: Royal Street Winding Boys, 1pm; Loose Marbles, 4pm; Leah Rucker, 7pm Maple Leaf: Joe Krown Trio, 10pm Mudlark: Fire with Fire, 7pm Siberia: CRUEL HAND, Drug Church, Culture Abuse, Ossacrux, 10pm ($8) Tuesday: 1/12 Banks St Bar: Ladies Night w/ Simple Sound Retreat, 9pm Checkpoint Charlie: Jamie Lynn Vessels, 7pm; Buddha’s Universe, 11pm Circle Bar: valerie sassyfras, 10pm Hi-Ho: The Spaghetti Western Show, 7pm; Free Spirit Brass Band, 10pm House of Blues: Art and Soul NOLA Vinyl, 6pm; Black & White Krewe, 9pm Maison: New Orleans Swinging Gypsies, 4pm; Gregory Agid Quartet, 6:30pm; TK Groove, 9:30pm Maple Leaf: Rebirth Brass Band, 10pm Siberia: Cauche Mer (Debut Show!!), Los Ninos Molestos, Bathroom Grime, TBA, 10pm ($5) Wednesday: 1/13 Banks St Bar: Free BLT’s & Major Bacon, 10pm Checkpoint Charlie: T Bone Stone & the Happy Monsters, 7pm; Daly News, 11pm Circle Bar: black beach plus the midriffs, 10pm d.b.a.: Tin Men, 7pm; Walter Wolfman Washignton & the Roadmasters, 10pm ($5) Hi-Ho: Teacher Appreciation Night, 5pm; We Love Vinyl, 6pm; Shamarr Allen + DJ Chicken, 9pm House of Blues: MIGGS, 8pm Maison: Bayou Saints, 4pm; The New Orleans Jazz Vipers, 6:30pm; Mutiny Squad, 9:30pm Maple Leaf: Big Sam Trio, 9pm Siberia: Frankie Boots and the County Line, Johnny Hatchett Band, Camille Weatherford, 10pm ($7) Thursday: 1/14 Banks St Bar: Joun Hatchet Band, 9pm Checkpoint Charlie: King Snakes, 7pm; Shamaniacs, 11pm Circle Bar: dreamboat, 10pm d.b.a.: The Iguanas, 10pm ($5) Gasa Gasa: The Electronic Sound of New Orleans, 9pm ($10.00) Hi-Ho: Simple Sound Retreat + 2nd String Jazz Team, 9pm House of Blues: Retrospect - A Throwback Dance Party, 9pm Maison: Jon Roniger, 4pm; Emily Estrella and the Faux Barrio Billionaires, 7pm; Dysfunktional Bone, 10pm Maple Leaf: The Trio featuring Johnny Vidacovich & Special Guests, 10:30pm Old Marquer Theater: Late, A Cowboy Song, 8pm Siberia: DiNOLA, Brother Hawk, The HWY 78’s, 10pm Tipitina’s: The Radiators Anniversary Show, 9pm Friday: 1/15 Banks St Bar: Stella! & Violett, 9pm Checkpoint Charlie: Reason to Rebel + Jonathan Brown Band, 11pm Circle Bar: Royal & Toulouse, 10pm ($10) d.b.a.: Mason Ruffner, 2am ($5); Meschiya Lake & the Little Big Horns, 6pm; Cedryl Ballou & the Zydeco Trendsetters, 10pm ($10) Gasa Gasa: Jordan Anderson Band plus Baby Bee with Bantam Foxes, 10pm ($10.00) Hi-Ho: The Fixers + Painted Hands + Ghost Boxing Champion, 9pm House of Blues: Eliades Ochoa and Babarito Torres en Concierto, 8pm ($40); A Live One - Phish Tribute, 8pm ($8); Flirt , 9pm Maison: Dinosaurchestra, 1pm; Luneta Jazz Band, 4pm; Shotgun Jazz Band, 7pm; Zena Moses & Rue Fiya + Big Easy Brawlers, 10pm Old Marquer Theater: Late, A Cowboy Song, 8pm Siberia: Legendary Shack Shakers, The Yawpers, Dirty Rotten Snake In The Grass, 10pm ($12) Tipitina’s: The Radiators Anniversary Show, 9pm Saturday: 1/16 Banks St Bar: Deadly Fists of Kung Fu, Retro Electro, The Burl, 10pm Checkpoint Charlie: Isla Nola, 7pm; J Monque’D Blues Band, 11pm Circle Bar: Egg Yolk Jubilee, 10pm d.b.a.: New Orleans Jazz Vipers, 7pm; Hot 8 Brass Band, 11pm ($10) Gasa Gasa: Mariine with Future Elevators and IZE, 10:30pm ($8.00) Hi-Ho: Drunktoons, 7pm House of Blues: Bustout Burlesque, 7:30pm & 10pm ($22); Young Hustle Tour: T-Wayne + Rich the Kid + Tate Kobang and more, 8pm ($15); Double Dose presented by ActionActionReaction, 9pm Maison: Chance Bushman & The Ibervillianaires, 1pm; Leah Rucker, 4pm; Smoking Time Jazz Club, 7pm; + Musical Expression, 10pm Old Marquer Theater: Late, A Cowboy Song, 8pm One Eyed Jacks: Fleur de Tease ($15 General Admisssion / $25 VIP Reserved Seating) Siberia: ALEX McMURRAY, 6pm; SIX PACK / CLASSHOLE CD Release Show with GRAVE RITUAL and TBA, 10pm ($6) Sisters in Christ: Tammaron / Dry Spell/ Yuppie Teeth / The Dents, 7pm ($5) Tipitina’s: The Radiators Anniversary Show, 9pm Sunday: 1/17 Banks St Bar: Spaghetti Western Sunday w/ The Kenny Triche Family, 7pm Circle Bar: Flower with Yard Dogs, 10pm d.b.a.: The Palmetto Bug Stompers, 6pm House of Blues: Chippendales: The 2016 Break The Rules Tour, 6:30pm ($30); HOB On Sundays hosted by CARDI B of “Love and Hip Hop”, 11pm ($21) Maison: Hokum High Rollers, 1pm; Nyce, 4pm; New Orleans Swinging Gypsies, 7pm; Soul Project, 10pm Maple Leaf: Joe Krown Trio, 10pm Siberia: X_____X (Cleveland, OH Members of Electric Eels!!), OBNOX, Trampoline Team, Trance Farmers, 10pm ($8) Tipitina’s: Sunday Youth Music Workshop Featuring Good Enough for Good Times, 1pm Monday: 1/18 Banks St Bar: Red Beans & Rice Piano Night w/ Lauren Sturm & Friends, 7pm; South Jones, 9pm; South Jones, 10pm Circle Bar: jp dufour, 10pm d.b.a.: Luke Winslow King, 7pm; Glen David Andrews, 10pm ($5) Hi-Ho: Bluegrass Pickin’ Party, 8pm; Instant Opus Improvised Series, 10pm House of Blues: City and Colour plus Greyhounds, 7pm ($35) Maison: Chicken & Waffles, 5pm; Aurora Nealand & the Royal Roses, 7pm; Ainsley Matich and the Broken Blues, 10pm Maple Leaf: George Porter Jr. Trio, 10pm Siberia: The Resonant Rogues, Fever Dreams, 10pm ($6) Tuesday: 1/19 Banks St Bar: Ladies Night Dance Party w/ NYCE!, 9pm Checkpoint Charlie: Jamie Lynn Vessels, 7pm; Kenny Claiborne, 11pm Circle Bar: circle of the tyrants metal night with dj penetrol & guests, 10pm Gasa Gasa: Dominic Minix Quartet with HONEY SAVAGE and Maggie Belle Band, 9pm ($7.00) Hi-Ho: The Spaghetti Western Show, 7pm; Free Spirit Brass Band, 10pm House of Blues: Black & White Krewe, 9pm Maison: Gregory Agid Quartet, 6:30pm; TK Groove, 9:30pm Maple Leaf: Rebirth Brass Band, 10pm Siberia: New Berlin, Bad Misters, DRUIDS, Quitman, 10pm ($6) Wednesday: 1/20 Banks St Bar: Free BLT’s & Major Bacon, 10pm Checkpoint Charlie: T Bone Stone & the Happy Monsters, 7pm; Brother Stone & the Prophets of Blue, 11pm Circle Bar: Ben de la Cour with katie lott, 10pm d.b.a.: Tin Men, 7pm; Walter Wolfman Washignton & the Roadmasters, 10pm ($5) Gasa Gasa: The Bowery Presents: Saintseneca + Des Ark + New Holland, 9pm ($10.00) Hi-Ho: Teacher Appreciation Night, 5pm; We Love Vinyl, 6pm; Shamarr Allen + DJ Chicken, 9pm Maison: The New Orleans Jazz Vipers, 6:30pm; The Crooked Vines, 9:30pm Maple Leaf: Big Sam Trio, 9pm Siberia: Scott H. Biram, Strahan & the Good Neighbors, Meschiya Lake (Band), 10pm ($10) Thursday: 1/21 Banks St Bar: Americana Night w/ Renshaw Davies, 9pm Checkpoint Charlie: Totally Abandoned, 7pm; Shock Patina, 11pm Circle Bar: esqueleto + toonces, 10pm d.b.a.: Shannon McNally, 10pm ($10) Gasa Gasa: Simple Play presents Royal Teeth, 9pm ($12.00) Hi-Ho: Cirque d’Liscious, 8pm House of Blues: Reel Big Fish plus Suburban Legends plus The Maxies, 7pm ($20); Retrospect - A Throwback Dance Party, 9pm Maison: Jon Roniger, 4pm; Kristina Morales and the Bayou Shufflers, 7pm; Dysfunktional Bone, 10pm Maple Leaf: The Trio featuring Johnny Vidacovich & Special Guests, 10:30pm Old Marquer Theater: Late, A Cowboy Song, 8pm Siberia: SLANGSTON HUGHES + TBA, 10pm ($6) Friday: 1/22 Banks St Bar: Crescent Guns, 10pm Checkpoint Charlie: Swamp Motel, 7pm; George Sartin & Imaginary Friends, 11pm Circle Bar: Death of Kings with Shards of Humanity ($7) d.b.a.: Tuba Skinny, 6pm; Soul Rebels, 10pm ($15) Gasa Gasa: The Bowery Presents: Blair Crimmins & the Hookers, 10pm ($10.00) Hi-Ho: Sidewalk Chalk + Stoop Kids + More TBA, 9pm House of Blues: Breaking Benjamin - “Unplugged”, 8pm ($35); WHERE Y’ACHT, 8:30pm ($10); Flirt , 9pm Maison: Rhythm Wizards, 1pm; Dinosaurchestra, 4pm; Shotgun Jazz Band, 7pm; Musical Expression + Street Legends Brass Band, 10pm Old Marquer Theater: Late, A Cowboy Song, 8pm Saturn Bar: Gland / Helta Skelta / Swampass / Gloryholes, 10pm Siberia: PAT McLAUGHLIN, ALEX McMURRAY, 10pm ($17) Tipitina’s: An Evening With Todd Rundgren featuring John Ferenzik, Jesse Gress,Prairie Prince, & Kasim Sulton, 9pm Saturday: 1/23 Banks St Bar: King Mulhacen Indie Showcase!, 10pm Checkpoint Charlie: Good Children, 4pm; The Rotten Cores, 10pm Circle Bar: Seth Walker, 10pm ($10) d.b.a.: Cha Wa (cd release) with Big Chief Monk Boudreaux, Big Sam & Colin Lake, 11pm ($10) Gasa Gasa: A Tribute to the 90’s with Close Enough, 10pm Hi-Ho: The Rip Off Show, 7pm House of Blues: Biz Markie-Gras: 80s vs 90s Mashup feat The Breton Sound + Werewolf, 9pm ($15); Double Dose presented by ActionActionReaction, 9pm Maison: Chance Bushman & The Ibervillianaires, 1pm; Nyce, 4pm; New Orleans Swinging Gypsies, 7pm; Debauche + The Big Easy Brawlers, 10pm; Krewe du Vieux Dance Party JANUARY 2016 * ANTIGRAVITY * 35 with DJ Nick Sosa (Penthouse), 10pm One Eyed Jacks: Bearracuda, 9pm ($8) Siberia: THE GERANIUMS, 6pm; KREWE du VIEUX Afterparty with CADDYWHOMPUS, A Living Soundtrack, Sexy Dex & The Fresh, The Due Diligence, Donovan Wolfington, 9:30pm Tipitina’s: The Soul Rebels , 10pm Thursday: 1/28 Banks St Bar: Spaghetti Western Sunday w/ Ron Hotstream & The MidCity Drifters, 7pm Circle Bar: country night with dj pasta d.b.a.: The Palmetto Bug Stompers, 6pm Gasa Gasa: Marrow with Sima Cunningham, 9pm ($8.00) Maison: Royal Street Winding Boys, 1pm; Luneta Jazz Band, 4pm; Dinosaurchestra, 7pm; Soul Company, 10pm Maple Leaf: Joe Krown Trio, 10pm Siberia: MESCHIYA LAKE, special guests, 6pm; Warhead, Brain Dead, Destroyer of Light, Donkeypuncher, 10pm ($7) Banks St Bar: Americana Marday Pawday Gras! w. Cactus Thief & Zach Mares, 9pm Checkpoint Charlie: Hubcap Kings, 7pm; Yeah You Rite, 11pm Circle Bar: the candy shack with dj lingerie & suzy q, 10pm d.b.a.: Paul Sanchez w/Alex Mcmurray, 7pm; Little Freddie King, 10pm ($5) Gasa Gasa: Megafauna with 35 PSI and Stereo Fire Empire, 9pm ($8.00) Hi-Ho: Writers Block, 9pm House of Blues: Retrospect - A Throwback Dance Party, 9pm; NEW ORLEANS MOST WANTED (NOMW), 9:30pm ($10) Maison: Jon Roniger, 4pm; Roamin’ Jasmine, 7pm; Dysfunktional Bone, 10pm Maple Leaf: The Trio featuring Johnny Vidacovich & Special Guests, 10:30pm Siberia: Doombalaya, Laelume, 10am Monday: 1/25 Friday: 1/29 Banks St Bar: Red Beans & Rice Piano Night w/ Lauren Sturm & Friends, 7pm; South Jones, 9pm; South Jones, 10pm Checkpoint Charlie: Mike True, 7pm Circle Bar: mikayla, 10pm Civic Theatre: Stuff You Should Know, 7pm d.b.a.: Luke Winslow King, 7pm; Glen David Andrews, 10pm ($5) Hi-Ho: Bluegrass Pickin’ Party, 8pm; Instant Opus Improvised Series, 10pm Maison: Chicken & Waffles, 5pm; Aurora Nealand & the Royal Roses, 7pm; Ainsley Matich and the Broken Blues, 10pm Maple Leaf: George Porter Jr. Trio, 10pm Banks St Bar: Scarecrow Sonic Boombox, Norco Lapalco, 10pm Checkpoint Charlie: The Budz, 7pm; Dirty Mouth, 11pm d.b.a.: Tuba Skinny, 6pm; Feufollet w/ Miss Tess & the Talkbacks, 10pm ($10) Gasa Gasa: Good Foot Ball pres by the Krewe of King James:Super Bad Sex Machine Strollers, 10pm ($15.00) House of Blues: The HillBenders present The Who’s TOMMY: A Bluegrass Opry, 8pm ($12); Rumours - Fleetwood Mac Tribute, 8pm ($12); Flirt , 9pm Maison: Rhythm Wizards, 1pm; Nyce, 4pm; Shotgun Jazz Band, 7pm; The Business + more TBA, 10pm Siberia: One Love Brass Band, Panorama Brass Band, 10pm Sunday: 1/24 Tuesday: 1/26 Banks St Bar: Ladies Night w/ Simple Sound Retreat!, 9pm Checkpoint Charlie: Jamie Lynn Vessels, 7pm Circle Bar: kia cavallaro & friends, 9pm Hi-Ho: The Spaghetti Western Show, 7pm; Free Spirit Brass Band, 10pm House of Blues: Art and Soul NOLA Vinyl, 6pm; Colin Hay plus Heather Maloney, 7pm ($25); Black & White Krewe, 9pm Maison: New Orleans Swinging Gypsies, 4pm; Gregory Agid Quartet, 6:30pm; TK Groove, 9:30pm Siberia: The Heavy Friends, The Fifth Men, Arm Candy, 10pm ($6) Wednesday: 1/27 Banks St Bar: Free BLT’s & Major Bacon, 10pm Checkpoint Charlie: T Bone Stone & the Happy Monsters, 7pm; Juan Reyes Trio, 11pm Circle Bar: all the colors of the dark presents Beyond the Darkness d.b.a.: Tin Men, 7pm; Walter Wolfman Washignton & the Roadmasters, 10pm ($5) Gasa Gasa: An Evening with The Asylum Chorus, 9pm ($8.00) Hi-Ho: Teacher Appreciation Night, 5pm; We Love Vinyl, 6pm; Shamarr Allen + DJ Chicken, 9pm Maison: Rhythm Wizards, 4pm; The New Orleans Jazz Vipers, 6:30pm; Mutiny Squad, 9:30pm 36 * ANTIGRAVITY * JANUARY 2016 Maple Leaf: Big Sam Trio, 9pm Siberia: Friendshrimp, Drone Baby, Frail, TBA, 10pm ($6) Saturday: 1/30 Banks St Bar: Somerton Suitcase, 10pm Checkpoint Charlie: The Parishioners, 11pm Circle Bar: Mod Dance party with dj matty, 10pm d.b.a.: Meschiya Lake & the Little Big Horns, 6pm; Vapors of Morphine w/ Alien Knife Fight, 11pm ($10) House of Blues: Uniquity Music Pres. Slangston Hughes & Fo On The Flo Plus Baron Amato, 8pm ($10); Robert Earl Keen, 8pm ($27); Double Dose presented by ActionActionReaction, 9pm Maison: Chance Bushman & The Ibervillianaires, 1pm; Leah Rucker, 4pm; Smoking Time Jazz Club, 7pm; Cakewalk + Big Easy Brawlers, 10pm Siberia: ESTHER ROSE, MAX BIENKHAN, 6pm; BATEBUNDA + TBA, 10pm ($8) Sunday: 1/31 Banks St Bar: Spaghetti Western Sunday w/ Ron Hotstream & The MidCity Drifters, 7pm Circle Bar: thee legendary dj slick leo with mr. quiet storm, 10pm d.b.a.: The Palmetto Bug Stompers, 6pm; Jeremy Lyons & the Deltabilly Boys, 10pm ($5) Maison: Rhythm Wizards, 1pm; Bayou Saints, 4pm; Brad Walker, 7pm; Soul Company, 10pm Maple Leaf: Joe Krown Trio, 10pm Siberia: SHADOW GALLERY presents “We’re All Mad Here” - Goth/Industrial DJ Night, 10pm Sisters in Christ: Black Abba/ Gland, 7pm ($5) WEEKLY EVENTS MONDAYS Allways Lounge: Redbeans & Rupaul Mondays, 7pm Banks St. Bar: South Jones & Free Red Beans & Rice, 9pm d.b.a.: Glen David Andrews, 10pm, $5 Dragon’s Den: Service Industry Nights with DJ Pr_ck Hi-Ho Lounge: Bluegrass Pickin’ Party, 8pm Spotted Cat: Sarah McCoy, 4pm; Dominick Grillo and the Frenchmen St. All-Stars, 6pm; Kristina Morales & the Bayou Shufflers, 10pm [1st & 3rd Mondays]/The Jazz Vipers, 10pm [2nd, 4th & 5th Mondays] TUESDAYS Banks St. Bar: NOLA County, 8pm Carrollton Station: Acoustic Open Mic, 9pm Café Negril: John Lisi and Delta Funk, 7pm d.b.a.: Treme Brass Band, 9pm, $5 Dragon’s Den: Punk Night Gasa Gasa: The Progression Series, 9pm Howlin’ Wolf: LIVE IN THE DEN: Comedy Beast Maple Leaf: Rebirth Brass Band Preservation Hall: The Preservation Hall-Stars featuring Shannon Powell The Saint: Tikioke, 9pm, FREE Siberia: Trivia Night, 8pm Spotted Cat: Andy Forest, 4pm; Meschiya Lake & the Little Big Horns, 6pm; Aurora & the Royal Roses, 10pm THURSDAYS Allways Lounge: Bingo! w/ Vinsantos, 6pm Dragon’s Den: Adventures of the Interstellar Bboyz: Ghetto Funk, Breaks, Bass, Hip Hop, Funk and more, 10pm Howlin’ Wolf: Comedy Gumbeaux, 8pm (Live in the Den) Maple Leaf: Johnny V. Trio & Special Guests One Eyed Jacks: Fast Times ’80s Dance Night, 10pm FRIDAYS La Nuit Comedy Theater: Open Mic Stand-Up , 10:30pm SATURDAYS Hi Ho: DJ Soul Sister presents HUSTLE, 11pm La Nuit Comedy Theater: ComedySportz, 8pm Playhouse NOLA: The Magna Carta Comedy Show, 8:30pm SUNDAYS Allways Lounge: Swingin’ Sundays (Free Dance Lessons, 8pm; Live Band 9pm-12am) Checkpoint Charlie: Acoustic Open Mic Night w/ Jim Smith, 8pm Dragon’s Den: Church: Dubstep for the Masses, 10pm (Upstairs) Hi Ho: NOLA Comedy Hour hosted by The New Movement, 8pm House of Blues: The Sunday Gospel Brunch, 10am Howlin’ Wolf: Brass Band Sundays with Hot 8 Brass Band, 10pm (in the Den) Maple Leaf: Joe Krown Trio Tipitina’s: Cajun Fais do do featuring Bruce Daigrepont, 5:30pm WEDNESDAYS Allways Lounge: Bustin’ Out (A Music Series), 10pm Banks St. Bar: Major Bacon & Free BLTs, 10pm Carrollton Station: Standup Comedy Open Mic, 9pm d.b.a.: Tin Men, 7pm; Walter “Wolfman” Washington & The Roadmasters, 10pm ($5) Dragon’s Den: DJ T-Roy Presents: Dancehall Classics, 10pm, $5 Hi Ho: Teacher Appreciation Night, 6pm House of Blues: Jet Lounge, 11pm DISCOUNT VALIDATED PARKING AT CANAL PLACE JANUARY 2016 * ANTIGRAVITY * 37 REMEMBERING GOD words and illustration by BILL HEINTZ It always seemed like it would be a cold day in hell when Lemmy died. The man was indestructible. I caught a whiff of the unfortunate future when Motörhead was forced to cancel a show in Houston this past September after Lemmy fell ill. His exhausted condition had forced him to walk off stage in Austin after struggling through three songs, announcing, “I can’t do it.” He recovered later that month in time for the second annual Motörboat cruise, the “Loudest Boat In The World,” featuring Lemmy as captain among an insane lineup of metal heavyweights. When he reached his 70th birthday this past year on Christmas Eve, fans around the world celebrated this milestone, unaware of what was right around the corner. Just two days after his birthday, Lemmy learned that he had an extremely aggressive cancer, in addition to previous health conditions he had been battling. Then, on Monday December 28, 2015, Ian Fraser “Lemmy” Kilmister passed away at his Los Angeles home (that was very hard to type and honestly, I did start to tear up). With the sad part out of the way, I’d like to focus on the many things that we have to celebrate, like the plethora of achievements during Lemmy’s longer-than-expected life. And let’s face it, when a person’s daily habits consist of sex, cigarettes, whiskey, speed, and extreme rock’n’roll, you don’t expect such longevity. Lemmy’s 38 * ANTIGRAVITY * JANUARY 2016 humble story begins in North Wales, where a rocky childhood eventually led him to pick up a guitar and subsequent short stints with a couple of local bands. Often stating later in life that he remembered a time before rock’n’roll, his early musical influences were the most energetic and rebellious rock’n’roll pioneers, such as Chuck Berry, Little Richard, The Beatles, and Elvis. In the ‘60s he relocated to Stockport, England and wet his feet in the garage rock scene with a few bands, most notably The Rockin’ Vickers. By the late ‘60s, he moved to London to seek out a more successful music career and eventually became a roadie for Jimi Hendrix, whom he adored. Around that time he had a few short-lived runs with psychedelic bands, which led to him picking up the bass guitar to join space rockers Hawkwind. This is when the signature “Lemmy sound” we all know and love began to develop, as he strummed his bass like a rhythm guitar and his distinct vocals started coming into play. His taste for amphetamines rivaled that of the psychedelic preference of his bandmates, but he was eventually booted after an arrest for possessing speed in Canada. At that point, he went on to form a band that he could not be fired from. Lemmy’s new band, Bastard, was no-holds-barred rock’n’roll with an aggressive side that had yet to be revealed in the music world. The mid ‘70s were a strange time for rock’n’roll, where the late ‘60s sound gave way to overindulgent, overproduced jammy solos and washed-up rock’n’snooze epic journeys. Kilmister was fed up with beating around the bush and decided to keep things straight up for this new project. He brought in a couple of blokes that kept a beat, but they were soon replaced by what was to be the classic lineup for a band that changed the face of rock’n’roll forever. Under the manager’s recommendations, Lemmy came up with a better, more marketable name for the band: Motörhead, based off of the slang term for a speed addict and Lemmy’s last writing effort for Hawkwind. With Phil “Philthy Animal” Taylor beating the skins and “Fast” Eddie Clark sleazing up the high end, the band created a new type of music that brought a certain angst to the surface—pure energy with uncensored cynicism. Artist Joe Petagno designed the selftitled record sleeve for what was to become an influential work of art to thousands of musicians world wide; he also created the infamous logo that followed the band through its entire career. Motörhead got more popular with each new album, and once the essential Ace Of Spades record hit in 1980, they had basically become a main contender in the world of rock, something many people didn’t think was possible, given their raw and simple approach. Lemmy’s formula of outcast indulgence mixed with fast-paced living came across in the sound and the people loved it. Punks and metalheads bound together to appreciate a sound that brought it back to the roots of rock, with an intensity that was unmatched. Album after album, the band delivered a driven force that was clearly the real deal. If Motörhead was one thing, they were consistent. With infinite touring and over 20 studio albums that eventually featured an evolving cast of guitarists and drummers, Lemmy kept things just like he started it: fast, loud, and true. With over 40 years of making people like me smile with his sharp, to-thepoint, realistic executions on record and an existence that personifies the rock’n’roll lifestyle, Lemmy has single-handedly given us a light at the end of the tunnel. Even in death he confirms that sticking to your personal beliefs and toughing out the hard times brings a life you can reflect on with pride. Though his lyrics were often angry and spiteful, the man himself was held in the highest regard by almost everyone that met him. Honesty goes a long way and people respect him for that. He always stated that he expected to be dead by his 30s and would change very little about his life if he had the chance. So with that in mind, we should celebrate his life with the fondest of memories, like he would have wanted. If you pour one out for Lemmy, make sure it’s down your throat!!!