Saturday, November 7, 2009

A Night at the Roxy: 11-4-09

My first solo expedition into LA, to a club with no little mythology of it's own thanks to the fame of the Sunset Strip. The Viper Room, the Wiskey A Go-Go, the House of Blues, and the Roxy. I wasn't sure really what to expect. What does fame bring a place, really?

Apparently it brings it a section of V.I.P tables so precious that the bouncers won't even let you lean against the half-height wall that surrounds them. There's definitely a percentage of people who patronize this place for reasons other then an interest in music.

You could see them, hovering around the bar, talking, looking important, and completely ignoring whatever poor guy happened to be making noise on the stage at that moment. They were sitting at the tables like that older gentleman, engrossed in conversation with his two playboy-bunny lady friends sporting boobs that could double as emergency life-rafts. There was one short older lady accompanied by two younger guys who stood really close to the stage and looked stony all night. There was one tall thin girl off stage left who looked like she smelled something foul. There was the drunk dude with all the yakuza tattoos who wanted me to know all about his metal podcast that he does with some guy from New York. He was trying to pick me up, but not in a threatening way: I think he was just drunk and lonely. Those are just the ones I remember off the top of my head. The Roxy is definitely prime ground for people-watching.

It's also definitely built with the live show in mind. The ceiling was high, the stage was low, the bar (technically two bars and a cocktail waitress) was in the back, the merch area has it's own alcove and bright neon sign. The men's room also had a neon sign. The ladies room did not. I call discrimination. Lady's room was also at the entirely other end of the venue, just off the lounge-type area by the entrance where I guess you could wait for your friend/date/agent/escort to show amid red light-bulbs, smokey mirrors, and a giant poster for a Bruce Springsteen show. At the Roxy. From the "Born to Run" tour. That's the kind of place this is.

Anyway, the first band up was Putnam Hall, a power trio with a long, lean, Asian front-man with a reedy, barking voice and a little slab of a guitar, an aloof drummer who gives off a sort of "adult supervision" kind of vibe, and a bass player who really impressed me by wielding his large, heavy instrument like he was born with it in his hand. You don't often see BASS PLAYERS who are showmen, yet all four bands that night had charismatic bassists. I'm not familiar with Putnum hall's music, and it didn't make that strong an impression on me, but they were enjoyable. They have a striped-down indy rock kind of vibe. They are also apparently good friends with Resident Hero, who's front-man was spotted in the audience and honored with a rousing, tone-deaf cover of his hit "Happy Without Me." It was endearing.

The next band Media Orphan had a sax player. That just about sums it up. And it seemed like the snazzy-hatted-bassist was the band leader. Also a short, stocky guitarist as proud as a peacock with a full tail of feathers, and an even MORE aloofly amused drummer. They also had a dedicated singer with a barrel build and a voice to match. I wish they'd given the sax more solo time: that instrument gave the band a kind of film-noir flavor that could really have been taken farther. How cool might a jazz-age rock band be?

But Resident Hero was who I came to see. Ever since I encountered their live-video special and got "Happy Without Me" stuck irrevocably in my head for two days, the more I learned about this group, from the raw honesty of their sound to the fact that Ryan White (the frontman/songwriter/band leader) still waits tables and can't seem to land a record deal, the more I liked them. I got their White EP and wore it out. Then I got their album and am still in the process of wearing that out too. Their brand of music is melodic rock with teeth, both beautiful and intense, and I was determined to catch them live when I could.

They didn't disappoint. They are one of those groups that walks onstage and explodes. Ryan White, who has a round, boyish face completely dominated by a pair of huge blue eyes, is kind of the most non-threatening-looking guy to ever transform into a shrieking, heart-sick demon when he gets onstage. He's the kind of performer who can do knee-slides and thrash his instrument without the slightest hint of cheese, because the emotions just run that high.

The broad-shouldered bass player is like a superhero, playing from a stance so wide he's basically doing the splits, with a five-stringed instrument and a sizable board of effects peddles. I wish to hell I could remember what Ryan White asked him for, something to the effect of "Play me something dirty and magnificent" but the result was a roaring intro to one of my favorite songs, "Life in Hell," which brought the house down.

And I was surprised by the drummer: lean, sharp-edged and long-haired, he's got the kind of dramatic flare you don't normally see this side of Brian Viglione* hollering the words without a microphone, pulling his hair, rocking back and forth, shooting himself in the head with a drumstick... it's like the music is all in his head and it's ripping him apart. He's the face of the story. Together this power trio crammed more passion and more fire into their seven-song set then some hour-long shows I've seen in my life. It was so worth the hour-and-a-half I spent in the car.

Lukas Rossi was the headliner. I'd run into his eye-lined self outside the venue when I first arrived to hear Resident Hero sound-checking, which made me happy, but the box-office closed, which made me less happy. He came out of the front door, and since no one else was around, I asked him when the box-office would be open, and he told me eight and I was relieved. That was kind of as deep as our conversation got, but he did laugh at a lame joke I made about his glittery hat giving him the power to fly, so I was kind of obligated to at least check out his set. His very professional street-team leader also cornered me after Resident Hero, saying she thought she recognized me but giving me a wrist-band and telling me she would want to know what I thought of Lukas after the show. I said I'd stick around.

I lied to them. It was almost midnight. I had an hour-and-a-half drive ahead of me to get home. Watching Lukas, immediately after Resident Hero was an interesting study in contrasts. Resident Hero are not virtuosos, but they set the stage on fire. This Lukas clearly IS a virtuoso. He's got a voice that can shift effortlessly between Thom-Yorke style eerie balladeering, punk-rock-barking, metal screaming and everything else. His band were slick and professional, and he had some vaguely amusing banter with his alcoholic bass player. He was deft on his guitar and just oozed style. He was the only one to actually have a small crowd standing exactly at the edge of the stage, gagging to see him. But he could not wake them up. Looking around I saw polite head nodding and toe tapping. That was as much enthusiasm as people could muster for the evening's headliner, and he'd been playing for forty minutes already.

I bailed. Sorry Lukas, sorry street-team lady, but if you're gonna play last, you better be worth the wait and you just weren't.

Anyway, Dear God, make Resident Hero super-stars already please. And while you're at it, world peace would be nice too. Alright? Thanks!


*if you don't know who Brian Viglione is, he was the drummer of the theater-geeks-turned-rock-star Dresden Dolls. Check out his theatrical magnificence here.