Month: July 2008

  • Paddy Costello & Lori Barbero Play the Hits!

    NIGHTCLUBS

    Triple Double



    This new(ish) weekly party
    is a far cry from the Triple Rock Tuesdays of years past. If you’ve
    ever been to the Trip’s long-running 2-4-1 night, you surely have heard
    N.W.A.’s "F$#k tha Police" played on the jukebox one (or a hundred) too many times. No more! The boys from Burlesque of North America,
    along with pals from Familia Skateshop, Head to Toe, Modern Radio
    Records, and Fifth Element are throwing super-fresh dance parties with
    some of the cities hottest DJs every week. T-Rock purists, don’t be
    alarmed – aside from a few neon bandanas, the crowd is virtually the
    same – scruffy punks, indie rockers, and hipsters all looking for strong drinks.
    Tonight’s line up features a slew of local legends – Paddy Costello (of
    Dillinger 4), Lori Barbero (of Babes in Toyland) and DJ Anton. Through
    the month of July, Triple Double will feature other rad DJs such as Last Word, Mike the 2600 King, and Michael Cina. Too good to be true!



    9pm, Triple Rock Social Club, 629 Cedar Ave., West Bank Minneapolis, Free




    Want to meet singles (and have 2-4-1’s) in a slightly classier environment? Try Silver + Gold every Tuesday at Clubhouse Jager!

    ART

    Together in the Darkness



    I’ve been really impressed by the cooler-than-cool exhibits at the American Swedish Institute lately. As if Fit for a Queen: Nobel Gowns of H.M. Queen Silvia of Sweden isn’t a reason to go in itself, the folks at ASI double up on cool with Together in the Darkness, a
    rockin’ photography exhibit in the lower level gallery space. This
    exhibit features a black and white documentary study of Sweden’s rock
    n’ roll culture by Stefan Peterson. Winner of the 2006 Lilly Lorénzen
    Scholarship, Peterson was able to study photography at Sigtuna
    Folkhögskola, north of Stockholm, where he began his obsession of
    capturing the underground Swedish music scene. But make no mistake,
    Peterson is no stranger to rock photography – this local up-and-comer
    has not only been a staff photographer for many publications, but he’s
    also published his own book of live music photography. Top that!



    Runs through August 3rd, noon to 4pm today, American Swedish Institute, 2700 Park Avenue, Minneapolis, $6


    MUSIC
    Bootsy Collins: A Tribute to James Brown



    Get down! The legendary Bootsy Collins
    and friends rock the Minnesota Zoo tonight, honoring the epic career
    and talent of the late James Brown – who ironically gave Collins his
    first big break in the music biz back in 1970. As part of Brown’s
    backup band, The J.B.’s, who played on some of Brown’s most famous
    albums on unforgettable tunes such as "Get Up (I Feel Like Being a) Sex Machine", "Super Bad", and "Soul Power",
    no one can question Collin’s qualifications! This eccentric funk
    pioneer will definitely school you on soul and dazzle you with his
    amazing stage presence. Not to mention, the Minnesota Zoo is an awesome
    place to listen to live music, and if you get there early enough there
    just might be a few cute animals lounging around too.



    7:30pm, Minnesota Zoo Ampitheater, 13000 Zoo Blvd, Apple Valley, $37

  • A Lesson in Futility

    At the end of July, I will be trekking to Montana to write a story about a man who lives on top of a mountain in the most remote corner of Glacier National Park.

    Since this dude literally lives on top of a mountain, I have to hike up hill for six straight miles (with an elevation gain of 3,000 feet) through grizzly bear infested wilderness just to talk to him. I’ve hired a professional Twin Cities photographer named John McCambridge to shoot the story.

    As our journey draws closer, I recently fretted to McCambridge about how in fact are two bumbling idiots like us going to make it up a god damn mountain?

    "The only thing I’m carrying up there is a camera and my will to live,” McCambridge jokingly replied. Easy for him to say. He’s built like one of those wild Scotsmen from the movie “Braveheart.”

    Me on the other hand, well, I just kind of…suck. In an attempt to not die on the mountain, I started exercising to get ready for the journey.

    I thought I’d start with a bike ride around the Chain of Lakes in Minneapolis. The last time I rode a bike in earnest was when I looked like Duane Allman and played hacky sack in the oval of the University of Montana. This is to say it was a lifetime ago. I hooked up the kid carriage on the back of my bike, loaded up my son and his cousin Elliot, and off we went.

    Within two blocks of my house, the wind was so violent it was as if I were pedaling in soup. Then the two kids started chirping.
    “Where are we going? Do you like elephants? Who’s Darth Maul? Can we have treats at wherever you are taking us? Why are you going so slowly? Why is your skin purple?” It felt like I was carrying those two old crumudginey bastards from the Muppet Show on my back. The biking was a bad call. Hated the bike.

    So I started jogging. The next day, I put my son in the stroller and we headed down to Lake Harriet. I began the jog with a little trot. But after only a few feet, I realized that pushing a forty pound kid and trying to run really, really blows. In a miracle from God, I made it to the concession stand where I quickly bought my son a box of the famous Lake Harriet popcorn (which is basically buttered flavored crack rock) to shut him up. As I started jogging again, several packs of beautiful people sprinted past me. These little clicks of runners –all dressed in their fancy sweat wicking shirts and flowing shorts– were so annoying I wanted to hockey fight them right in the path. They passed me at full speed and gobbled up miles like Pac-Man eating up dots. The worst part was that they were casually talking the entire time they ran. I, on the other hand, looked like Chris Farley choking on a pork chop.

    Near the beach, I ran into my dad. Big Smitty was doing the half running/half walking thing where the person moves with an odd tightness, not quite sure if they should run slower or walk faster. In my dad’s case, he just looked like a man trying to hold a poop in. When he saw me jogging towards him, a look of bewilderment came across his face.

    “What the hell are you doing?” he asked.

    “I’m jogging. Trying to get in shape for my Montana trip,” I said.

    “You gonna need more than that,” he said. The iPod that I bought him two weeks ago dangled off his pocket. I preloaded the thing with 200 of his favorite songs so that he could rock out as he exercised. It was nice to see him using it. He fiddled with the iPod and said, “Hey, how do I get this thingy to play a different song. All it plays is Mustang Sally.”

    I took a look at the iPod and realized that somehow my dad had screwed the menu up so badly that he’d been listening to Otis Redding’s “Mustang Sally” on repeat for two straight weeks. I clicked a few options on the menu and got it working. He trotted off, his butt turtling a poo, singing some sunny Beach Boys song. The whole scene made me chuckle and it got me through the last grueling mile. I guarantee that Big Smitty, at least once, had gotten so frustrated by his new iPod and its lame ability to only play one song that he turned the thing upside down and smacked it like Fonzi trying to fix something.

    I asked some twenty year olds at my work to make me some music mixes to run to. On one mix it was all whiny British guys and the other featured growling white chicks. I was really grooving to this one mix (titled “Two Forty Gordy,” a sly reference to fat people) when all of a sudden the up tempo rock music went off and there were five straight songs of slow folk music. This would be fine if you were sitting in a coffee shop, but I was sweating my ass off trying to make it up the Newton Avenue hill. I asked the kid who made it why on earth would he slow down the music on an exercise mix?

    “It was for your cool down period, bro,” he told me. “Like the circuit training at Lifetime Fitness.” Cool down? What the hell is a cool down? I was going old school on this exercise shit. I simply was going to run until I fell over. I don’t think Rocky was listening to the soft melodies of “Teghan and Sarah” when he was in Russia carrying logs in the deep snow.

    After a few weeks, I was feeling good. Although my frantic Alaskan sled dog running style led many of my neighbors to believe that I was being chased by something, things started to pick up. I could jog for longer stretches without feeling like my lungs were going to explode.

    On a recent afternoon jog, I ran past the Milo’s sandwich shop in Linden Hills and saw McCambridge the photographer completely going to town on a sub the size of a muffler. His cheeks were stuffed full and he could hardly talk. Then I realized something: I don’t have to be in shape at all for our journey up the mountain. I will just let the big guy go first up the hill and let him be the pace car, nice and steady. And if we do see a grizzly bear, all I have to do is be faster than McCambridge.

    I think I’m going to make it up that mountain after all. Just maybe not in one piece.