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LESLIE KNAUER, JONNEINE ZAPATA, RUBY FRIEDMAN, KIZZY KIRK

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•originally published in Paraphilia Magazine, 12.10.12•
 (several newly available photos have been added since initial publication)
  
FOUR FABULOUS FEMALES OF LOS ANGELES WHO ARE WORLD-CLASS ROCK SINGER/SONGWRITERS
by Heather Harris
 Photos © Heather Harris











 















 Larry Carr's Four Fabulous Faces book, a 1970 pictorial evolution of the personal style of Greta Garbo, Marlene Dietrich, Gloria Swanson and Joan Crawford immediately embedded itself into the zeitgeist of pop culture visual artists everywhere. It demonstrated to all crystal clear how these actresses made themselves over into the legends they became (and to me became a primer textbook on effective studio lighting.) Why didn't their contemporaries notice the ongoing metamorphoses of greatness? 

Ofttimes it's because guidance is needed to any unusual destination, and stellar achievement of this magnitude in the arts remains unusual indeed. Here then is a guide to four world-class rock singer/songwriters, all beauties as well, who happen to hail from my native Los Angeles for eminent observation of their careers: (photo above, clockwise from upper left) Leslie Knauer, Jonneine Zapata, Kizzy Kirk and Ruby Friedman.

 LESLIE KNAUER























This radiantly smiling countenance belongs to Leslie Knauer, singer/songwriter/guitarist of Naked Hand Dance and Diamond Star Halo plus vocalist with one famously (more later) set of pipes. N.H. Dance, including a male rhythm section sporting frocks and fishnets (but manly frocks and fishnets) perform Leslie's songs exclusively with perhaps a stray cover that only other world-class sets of pipes even would dare attempt, like, say, "River Deep, Mountain High" by Tina Turner of Ike&.

Some British music magazine in the '90s whose name escapes the leaking brain cell sieve listed Leslie Knauer as the thirty-eighth best rock singer ever, male or female, of all time, out of one hundred choices. Ever! Out of everyone, male or female! Of all time! Really! Shout it out! 


 Leslie in Precious Metal, some time in the 1980s; Leslie in one-time Precious Metal charity benefit reunion, 2014


I first photographed her in the '80s band Precious Metal, formidable players who warranted three major label releases (see my Glam pic above, Leslie standing confidently as Liza in Vegas but in a shagmetal haircut.) Oozing idiosyncratic style Leslie's vocals evinced comparisons to Terry Reid or Noddy Holder, were they of the XX chromosome persuasion and sang about two octaves higher. She's sufficiently proficient in powerhouse vocal talent to sing anything she sets her mind to, so the only challenge is to send that voice hither and yon, full throttle or wistful, operatic warble or quasi-rap spoken word, contemplative personal/confessional or all out bliss incarnate. 

My friends Mary and Tony, rhythm section of The Dogs once joined up for double duty in Kanary (a pun on the Germanic pronunciation of her last name,) Leslie's band for twelve years of the 21st century with her talents as singer/songwriter/guitarist. There were few gigs I more looked forward to photographing than theirs. Leslie with her beautiful looks belying her kooky Pippi Longstocking all-grown-up image onstage (and off) is Ms. Extrovert Supreme, with a cheery take on life underscored by her infectious, ever present laughter that causes all men as well as all audiences instanteously to fall in love with her the second she's encountered in person.   

Kanary's left field power trio truly rocked hard, fast, and always joyously whether in its complexity or simplicity. I'd be lying if I didn't admit to missing Kanary. But then again the entire Australian continent seems to miss Promises, her teen band with her brothers that yielded an international chart hit like "Baby It's You!" or two. This antipodean contingent remains rapidly vociferous online to this day. 

Kanary: Leslie Knauer, Mary Kay, Tony Matteucci (latter two of THE DOGS)

Once fuschia/red/pink/black/cerulian/eggplant/polychrome-haired, Leslie has settled on being legally blonde/white for now. Like travelers seeing the wonders of the world, you must catch Leslie Knauer live singing her amazing compositions. She currently performs acoustic or electric as Naked Hand Dance or Diamond Star Halo with husband and fellow Burning Man enthusiast Al TeMan.  

Al TeMan proposes onstage to Leslie during Precious Metal reunion 2014 while the band and Mickey Dolenz of the Monkees approve. She immediately shrieked "Yes!"
 

A prolific writer, Leslie Knauer retains a folio of decades worth of superior material, so it's hard to pin her down in concert to perform one's personal favorites like "Two Steps" about her daughter, Hollywood's own BoyCrazy video-blogger and legitimate actress Alexi Wasser, whom Leslie insists still calls me "Feather," or that subdued ballad with its astonishing metaphor of "We are every little girl who lifts her skirt to hide her face..."
 



 














 info: leslie.knauer.79@facebook.com
songs: http://www.reverbnation.com/leslieknauer






JONNEINE ZAPATA







 
Quiet intensity doesn't always translate to bulging neck veins while internalizing. In the arts it can signify mesmerizing subtlety.

In 1988 Brian Eno made an art installation for the Santa Monica Museum of Art that appeared to be white geometric shapes with Christmas tree-colored lights on them amidst a few very large white cubes, all in a darkened room. If that was all you took in at first gaze, that's all you saw. Most visitors left after a perplexed and befuddled minute or two. However, fans of Eno's music and creative wit could predict there might be more to it. Pal Elaine Drake and I looked around and then sat right down on the large art cubes, post-punks that we both were. Over time, all of the lights slowly changed colors and intensities on the various white cardboard shapes. Many of the subtle light changes turned out to be slow-motion projections from inconspicuous monitors. It was both a serene and stimulating art experience simultaneously which took its sweet time.

The above is analogous to taking in singer/songwriter JONNEINE ZAPATA. The Southern California bred (but much traveled) artist offers performances of seemingly quiet intensity with her band or unplugged with a single guitarist. Both feature pauses to underscore the set's strong emotions, just as in real life conversations about disturbing personal problems. 


Zapata's smooth and soulful soprano with its almost catch-in-the-throat might ring reminiscent of some of the modern country artists on the charts if they ever had even an iota of non-manufactured emotionalism.  She's been compared to PJ Harvey for equaling her on the catharsis barometer, but if forced I'd hold out more for Martha Davis of The Motels, she of an equally beautiful albeit quite different voice.  Like  Jonneine's admitted influence Nick Cave, there's always some uncomfortably dark truths beneath the outside beauty in both Davis and Zapata, puissant polish masking the interior voltage. Like the Eno art, serene but exciting. Delivery and lyrics? Simple but suggestive/aggressive...


You don’t need to love me                                         Got nowhere to go, nothing to do,
I know my place with you                                           I’m good looking, you're good looking,
And you don’t need to promise things                        What are we gonna do ?
I’m only passing through  (No Big Deal)                      (Good Looking)    


Jonneine and band have toured with and opened for Jack White's Raconteurs and Mark Lanegan's Soulsavers. There's also a wondrous 2009 release by her entititled Cast The Demons Out which includes many of the songs in her current live sets.  Known for her unblinking thousand yard stare but aimed up close, personal and laser-like, Jonneine becomes so utterly engrossed in her emotions onstage that audiences fall into the same zone like lost but compliantly pleased zombies. One fan admitted some fright at first to be the object of her unswerving visual focus for the whole five minutes of a song. All audiences remain transfixed and transfigured by this solo voice and minimalist band wailing songs of love & dread never heard before by most. As another pal Evita Corby put it, "Jonneineowns the stage."

Asked some time before by writer Caleb Ruddin in WebCuts about her music fantasies, she replied, "Dick Cheney singing Imagine on his death bed. Making a Christmas album with Iggy Pop.  I’m not trying to be cute…"

Even if her intriguing mystique weren't perpetually at arm's length to most media even as her star rises, a decision was made not to engage with this artist. I don't engage with wild swans in flight or the graceful giraffes gliding across the savannah either as they catch our eyes afar in their almost mystical glory, I just photograph them so that others may enjoy and marvel at their grace in public as well.


 
website: http://www.myspace.com/jonneinezapata

 


RUBY FRIEDMAN

Ruby Friedman of eponymous The Ruby Friedman Orchestra performs as out-there a full-on, torchy-emotional singer as one can be and still remain under the aegis of rock and roll, ably abetted by the Orchestra which indeed includes a full time trombonist. A supernova redhead, she always dresses for any occasion, shall we say, "unusually" (but flatteringly and interestingly) replete with 6" platform or stiletto high heels. Way back when, the Pointer Sisters stood out from a passel of talented but interchangeable African-American female singing groups in our music biz when they cobbled together an image funky-but-chic vintage clothing. Ruby dresses to insure that the whole universe, God, any remaining Pointer Sisters and Ru Paul remembers her immortality.

Her band has been profiled before by countless others (even Paraphilia #10) but RFO's salient points remain: original songs you actually can remember on the way home from the gig and beyond, and the full-throated Ruby warbler herself on resplendent, emotional vocals, riveting being an understatement. She occasionally can be witnessed punking out for maximum impact as with odd covers like AC DC's "It's A Long Way To The Top (If You Want To Rock And Roll.)"

But RFO music is the real deal, rattling the rafters of every venue ever stormed. From hoedown stompers to power ballads with real emotion, their original repertoire remains heartily and lustily all over the map. They've already earned nationwide aural recognition for their song "Shooting Stars," the theme for tv's America's Got Talent.  Upon a single hearing, another RFO song already immortalized on cable tv's Sons of Anarchy, the beautiful "Drowned" keeps looping in my brain for the next day/week/month.  Its resolute chorus "I will go further out than where you drowned," remains to me a metaphor of ambition in our treacherous music business as much as a tally of relationship wreckage and/or suicide.

 


And her online presence remains a hoot what with her Facebook bon mots ("a homeless guy just called me 'Firecrotch!'") and RFO blog's surreal philosophizing. She just might be a closet intellectual. Sometimes that might be what's necessary for mashups of art, the heart and pure adrenaline. From her blog, a salty recounting of waiting in line someplace with fire fighters: "One of them points to my shirt and says, 'Is that your band?'

Eeeek. Embarrassment. And he wants details. The shirt says, 'Kick Out The Jams, Motherfuckers' in bright yellow across the chest. What am I wearing?  Oh fuck my life . . .I must feel guilty about something. People talk a lot when they’re GUILTY. . . But notice how I try to introduce the fact of boyfriendhood simultaneously as some exculpation, 'No. This band is an old band. I don’t think they play any more. It’s my boyfriend’s shirt. He gets a lot of free things. He’s a music critic. Oh. I have a couple of projects. One of them is called Ruby Friedman Orchestra. My name is Ruby Friedman.'  What the fuck did I have to say that for? Why couldn’t I just make something up?

'No way,' says the fireman at the end of the group. 'I’ve seen your band with the Trashcan Sinatras. You’re awesome!'”


As they indeed are. We all should be glad there's a Ruby Friedman performing for firefighters and our own benefit in this generation.


 It's only a matter of nanoseconds then before America correlates the faces of this hearty ensemble with their songs. It's way fun to photograph, see and hear nascent talent like the Ruby Friedman Orchestra on the rise before it explodes. I felt the same twinges 40 years ago seeing another explosive young redhead in a small club, one Bette Midler, when she began her own worldwide conquest.

  website: http://rubyfriedman.com




KIZZY KIRK
 


They were recommended by no less than Ruby of the Ruby Friedman Orchestra. When a spectacular singer like Ruby calls another singer great, that's high recommend indeed. So, off on a 60 mile trek to Fullerton, California to see the tail end of a residency by this band Feral Kizzy at the Continental Room.

My reaction? To quote Uma Thurman in Pulp Fiction, "I say goddamn!" as it was that much of a mind-blow-blast, but without Mia Wallace's fateful repercussions.
So much there to compliment!  Singer Kizzy Kirk is fearless. Peripatetically spending over half the set out amongst the audience, she flopped on strangers to carry her aloft, shanghaied pals to sing along on the dance floor, then swung precariously from the stage curtains, all while mini-skirted, hanging off the stage, draped on other band members. None of the hardcore crowd's forced dives here, her antics remain friendly, natural and unrehearsed but decidedly in your face. 'Theatrical" as a word almost gets there: "Olympian" might be scurrying closer, but with a punk rock twist.

















Indeed, she came to singing after a stint in acting, seeking more hegemony over her own version of an art. "It was all too controlled," she admitted during our photo session,"Very little need for all I can really do or my input.  And I don’t like being controlled. I love ‘em, but ... uh, family issues.  Singing is more me."  
  
She's been compared overall to Patti Smith, P.J. Harvey or Courtney Love which is balderdash. Her performing style is sui generis, emotive vocally as well as physically, inventive, sexy, athletic but strangely graceful. And thatinsistent yet sultry voice harkens back to young British punkers of the 1970s like Ari Up of The Slits or Poly Styrene of XRaySpex (in a slightly lower register.) To great effect, it's a modern, girlish voice atop that womanly physique.



Their quirky songwriting's sound is hard alt-rock with snaking guitar and Yamaha keyboard while the words remain narrative like some junior Randy Newman, wherein desperate spendthrifts ("She loved the money but the money RAN from her!") always leap from bridges to their deaths, and ladies' men incessantly charm. They're constructed with odd lyrics scanning choices which I quite like, as in " ...the ERRor was TWOfold when we discovered that fighting and YELLing are two DIFFerent things..."  

Startled audience eyes may be on Kizzy, but the whole band's contributions make it all congeal. They are: Kizzy Kirk: vocals; Johnny Lim: guitar; Brenda Carsey: keyboards, vocals;  Hannah Smith-Keller: bass; Mike Meza: drums.


Great things surely must unfurl for this band Feral Kizzy, who've already been banned from playing on the Sunset Strip in Hollywood, an oldskool badge of honor to yours truly (my better half Mr. Twister was the first singer to be banned from West Hollywood's influential club The Troubadour in 1970 solely on the basis of his wildman performance in Christopher Milk. See Paraphilia issue #13.) I'll give modern singing great Ruby Friedman the last word: when informed I finally caught Feral Kizzy live, she rallied "Woohooo! 'Told ya they rawked and rolled! Now you've been 'experienced' too!" 

website: http://www.feralkizzy.com

THE DOGS to gig on OSCAR SUNDAY and BEYOND

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For those who missed out on tickets to see THE DOGS live this Oscar Sunday at the sold out Echoplex Theatre gig with Drive Like Jehu, there are second chances! The DOGS co-billed with the always fabulously rockin'Dr. Boogie play next weekend, Sat. Mar. 5 at the Redwood, DT L.A., info here: LINK . For San Diegans, try Mar. 12, info: LINKand even in their native Michigan, April 8th with Jenna Talia and Glitter Trash, info: LINK. Many chances at audience bliss! Preview of forthcoming EP with video below shot Chez Mr. Twister and Fastfilm herself, plus at Bluebag Records:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sKpcWGshXdo

BEFORE THE RAIN: MR. TWISTER, GIA, SARABELLE and A BALL

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Mr. Twister, Gia, Sarabelle, and A Ball...


THE ART OF ELYSE WYMAN, 2016

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February art exhibit "Sign Language," mixed media and objets trouve`by ELYSE WYMAN, seen below with my mother and assorted grim art patrons at the show's opening night at Bergamot Galleries, Santa Monica, Calif. Elyse was my roommate at UCLA art school and never stopped her fine art endeavors, to much acclaim over time.

My better half Mr. Twister pictured with my mother and 
Karin Spritzler, another fine artist friend from back in the day.

 Below, George and Crickette Oswald, yet more arty friends
 from back in the day...

Guest photographer © 2016 Kurt Ingham: Karin, yours truly
 and my mother gape in awe at Elyse's art...

KING'S X LIVE at the WHISKY A GoGo 3.1.16: the magnificent three in a club setting...

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(Oblique headline reference: Seven Samurai → The Magnificent Seven → the magnificent three from Texas)

March 1, 2016 proved a stone killer treat to see arena habitues, the greatKING'S X within the audience-friendly confines of a packed Whisky A Gogo, while playing a virtual "best of" set. (Above photos, bassist/vocalist Doug Pinnick, drummer Jerry Gaskill and guitarist Ty Tabor, grinning because it's great to be king!) This was huge!

Also huge-- It took me over a quarter of a century to photographKing's X, one of my alltime favorite bands ever. Why was that? 

In one of its many heydays, I remember these working the Heavy Metal festivals with 5ft. plank walls around their immediate stages, no stairs nor ladders, with the only access being security guards literally hauling the pro photographer(s) over the wall to shoot, then grabbing and depositing you back over the wall after an allotted time.  I do recall a few security guys/Metal fanboys getting appreciably into the Goth/death/speed/satanic or whatever mood by growling "Are you ready for .... Slayer?!?" to us or some such nonsuch which added to the overall sense of the absurd in this highly organized mayhem.

And long, tall Texans (by way of Illinois and currently California) King's X was (and is) a top flight act that only could be seen in these precarious arena and festival caliber circumstances. No more scaling sheer walls for yours truly post-numerous car crashes and physical setbacks (although 'am grateful to still be able to ride my horse, jog or hike with the dogs.) Without mega-special personal considerations, those days and nights of photographing metal fetes are behind me, I who photographed Buffalo Springfield live back in the day, age-wise.




King's Xremain knownfor their power trio rapidfire tightness, total instrumentalprowess, fascinating (read: never ever boring despite Prog accusations) melodic excursions, and one of the best American singers ever in Pinnick.










 This major gig celebrated the return of drummer Gaskill after the acknowledged setback of his two serious heart attacks. In fact half the space between songs brought forth crowd cheers of "Jerry! Jerry!" in encouragement of his only recent recovery. The audience's gratitude was so much in force that the encore of "Goldilox" from the band's much beloved debut album Out of the Silent Planet prompted the crowd to sing the entire song before singer Pinnick could even begin. Instead, he sat on the stage edge in awe...

 
                                                                                         
           
Official Set List
with Groove Machine added somewhere in there:

 The World Around Me / Pillow / Flies And Blue Skies/
Vegetable/(Thinking And Wondering) What I'm Gonna Do / Everybody Knows A Little Bit Of Something /
A Box / Over My Head / Over And Over /  Pleiades/
   We Were Born To Be Loved / Go Tell Somebody / Dogman / (encore:) Goldilox
        


 Openers
The Hard Way, an eclectic ensemble wailing its brand of metal.









Middle-slotted act Kings of Spade accomplished what many contend cannot be done: totally win over an audience impatient for the headliner. Much of this hinged on the powerhouse vocals of consummate punk-looking Kasi Nunes (below,) the solid beats of friendly drummer Matt Kato (at bottom) and the band's bold and willing interaction with the crowd. The (normally malevolent provincial L.A. gang challenge) query of "where are you from" was met with the cheery rejoinder of "We're from Hawaii!"
 

CELEBRATING ST. PATRICK'S DAY IN LOS ANGELES

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For St. Patrick's Day.Our celebrations used to include consuming green bagels fresh from Western Bagel Bakery and my drawing St. Patrick and assorted snakes for my better half's elementary school classes, whereupon he'd have the kids make papal mitre headgear out of newspapers and drive the "snakes" out of the classroom. (For Scottish celebrations, he had the little kids toss cardboard mailing tubes that substituted for Scottish cabers. Very humorous to have all Latino kids in assorted Highland Games.) But he's now retired, so... behold below, a review of Darby O'Gill and the Little People by an actual Irish lad who, albeit cheekily, agrees with me that this is the scariest film ever made...imagine, a wailing personification of Death appearing at your door to take your loved ones away forever...scared the crap out of me when I was young:


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lzX2h2npCXk

CHEETAH CHROME and The STREET WALKIN' CHEETAHS rock Post-Gallery Show

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Cheetah Chrome and the Street Walkin'
Cheetahs at the Monty Bar,
(plus Evita Corbyin the
background) and the mortal
remains of an American Bison
(supplying convenient devil horns
for Bruce Duff,below with
fellow Cheetah Frank Meyer.)


Whoo hoo! Cheetah Chrome blasting his solo and Dead Boys material with The Street Walkin' Cheetahs at Monty Bar downtown L.A. in conjunction with Lethal Amount Gallery's photography exhibit of Dead Boys pics next door, 2.2.16. Ames Flames sang "Sonic Reducer," John Tyree did sound, and the show closed with Iggy and The Stooges'"Search And Destroy," referential to Cheetah's (and the S. W. Cheetahs and Tyree's) appearance a year ago at James Williamson's Re-Licked live show. The onslaught continues, and Cheetah and Co. put on a great punk show for the masses these days...
 



 PHOTO OPS:
Backstage: Evita Corby with Ames Flames, Bobby Richey and Mark Lee of The Humpers


 At the Lethal Amount photo exhibition: Evita Corby with Bobby Richey; Evita with Anna Badua and Michael D'Amico
 Evita Corby, Cheetah Chrome at Lethal Amount photo exhibit

 Frank Infante (Blondie), Evita Corby, Cheetah Chrome backstage at Monty Bar
 Above, Evita, Cheetah.
 Multi-instrumentalist John Tyree (pictured below with Street Walkin' Cheetahs' set list) mixed the sound, while the McDonald brothers of Redd Kross DJ-ed.
 In the audience: this couple were an entire movie of emotions...

DOUBLE DOG DARE! THE DOGS rock important 2016 gigs, with DR. BOOGIE and DRIVE LIKE JEHU

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In preparation for their spring 2016 Mid-West Tour, singer/guitarist Loren Molinare, bassist Mary Kay and drummer Tony Matteucci a.k.a. THE DOGS played two important gigs in the L.A. vicinity. First came opening for Drive Like Jehu at the Echoplex, 2.28.1, then a power-packed gig with Dr. Boogie at The Redwood, 3.5.16.
At the former, this characteristically hardest rockin' band provided an energetic preamble to the reunion of noisemeisters Jehu, seen below at their sound check.
      The Dogs' set list:

PHOTO OPS:
The Dogs find a familiar appellation on a local storefront...
 Leslie Knauer of Diamond Star Halo, Naked Hand Dance an Precious Metal poses with Mary Dog who played bass in their past band together Kanary.

~~Meanwhile at the Redwood on 3.5.16~~
Tony Matteucci of THE DOGS and Luis Herrera of Dr. Boogie both attain Drum Nirvana...
The Dogs provoke their usual hardest rock/punk redux Detroit-style mayhem...












Left, guest photographer 
Donna Balancia captures 
your humble photojournalist
trying to clap for THE DOGS 
without damaging three cameras 
around her neck. Right, set list.




Dr. Boogie work up a sweat in both band and audience with singer Chris P. wailing their Stonesy/Faces/New Barbarians but sui generis hard rock. They highlighted some of the many cool tracks of their new release "Got To Get Back To New York City" and premiered new material to boot. They should be off on their East Coast tour by the time you read this.

 Left, glam-ish Gypsy Roller from San Jose; and Richmond Sluts'drummer, multi-instrumentalist John Tyree's newest in his panoply of fascinating groups Cheap Tissue opened, making for an all cool bands' lineup.

 PHOTO OPS:
Jeremy White, lead singer of The Blessings with Mary Dog; Mary Dog and Loren Dog with Jimmy Robinson, producer of The Dogs' 1978 material. Since his move to New York and other parts unknown, they hadn't seen him since that time.
 




 Below, Tony Dog photobombs first shot with Mary and Jimmy

Above, Editor of California Rocker Donna Balancia, Vince Conrad, singer/producer Richard Duquay who has produced the recent Dogs' releases, Tony Dog.
Loren Dog and Tony Dog flank their merchandise person March Cachon.

BIRTHDAY BOY IGGY PRE-POST-POP DEPRESSION

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Happy Birthday Iggy Pop, survivor, icon, originator


REST IN PEACE PRINCE

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Rest in peace Prince who passed away today at age 57. I won't quote the obvious Shakespeare line, just express regret that another innovator has gone.

He appears in my photo with a custom microphone that resembled a handgun. His security that particular evening was exceptionally unkind to valid, credentialed press photographers like yours truly. Visual artists who want musical artists to be remembered in the best way possible are not damage control...

GLAM SKANKS and the BROTHERS COLLECTIVE LIVE at the EchoBox/Mime Club 4.16.16

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Echo Box at The Mime Theatre in Echo Park presented a new showcase for bands with the ideal audience lures: free admission plus free beer and wine. Seeing the void for up and coming L.A. bands to attain bigger audience exposure, civic leader and a director of Formula 1 Racing Nolan Jamora's Echo Box Music and musician/producer extraordinaire Bruce Witkin's Unison Music concocted the venue. The bands booked are high caliber, and crowd's monies could be spent on their merchandise rather than club entry.

The inaugural show featured The Glam Skanks, a 3-femmes/1-guy concoction of rousing hard rock in the, yes, glam vein. Their confident proficiency belies such a flirtatious mien: guitarist V is daughter to a studio session ace and no doubt has been playing since infancy while vocalist Ali Cat is the assertive coquette par excellence with looks and vocal licks to spare. Hot pants complete the retro look. And yes, real glitter played a part in their theatrics.  See LINK and LINK for the Glam Skanks FAQs.

The Brothers Collective are indeed genuine siblings and presented a united front of power trio hard rock with real songs; i.e., real verses and choruses that one later can recall. The "BC3" as they sometimes abbreviate are Eugene, Ryan and Jacob Rice. Visit LINK for more details.

Both The Glam Skanks and The Brothers Collective are attractive and raucous bands on the rise so check 'em out in clubs while you can. The Echo Box is there to help...


DOG PLAYDATES 2016 THUS FAR

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Dog playdates 2016 starring Gia the one and a half year old Scottish Deerhound, Sarabelle the wise old Golden Retriever, Diego the 2 year old Borzoi, Quinn the fast-growing Borzoi puppy plus humans Ian, Sherry, Mr. Twister and yours truly.
                        



Baby
Quinn 
becomes 
closer 
friends with 
Mr. Twister




 
                             



Above, Baby Quinn outgrowing his puppy harness, and Gia
Below, Diego in all his Russian Wolfhound glory...
Gia in all her goofy Deerhound puppy glory...



 ♥
Left, Mr.
Twister
right, 
guest
photo-
grapher
© Kurt 
Ingham, 
yours truly,
Sarabelle

 









Letting the 
young 'uns 
romp and race,
 Sarabelle 
prefers to retire 
to her study.
And what does
she study?
According to
Mr. Twister,
Sarabelle
studies 
seashells
by the sea 
shore... 
 

THE JIGSAW SEEN, THE BLESSINGS, THE TIGHTY WHITEYS, LIVE for those in the know

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 THE JIGSAW SEEN
THE BLESSINGS
THE TIGHTY WHITEYS

To know about them is to love them, these three bands with so very many avid fans. They seem to perform or record so very infrequently that it further stokes claims of "best kept secrets" in our music biz universe. Los Angeles nonetheless hosted the rare-ish events of all three in the third month of the new year of Our Lord, with The Jigsaw Seenat the Silverlake Lounge on 3.12.16, The Blessings gigging at The Roar Room 3.26.16, and The Tighty Whiteys hitting the Cafe Escobar stage on 3.19.16.
 The Jigsaw Seen, one of those cellectives where one's first reflex is to omit the article, as in long ago colleagues The Cream and The Buffalo Springfield, actually reminded me of Kaleidoscope (who wisely deleted "the" in the course of their career of four albums betwixt 1966 and 1970) insofar as their genuine eclecticism of sounds was matched by great proficiency in playing them all.
 
 I indeed saw Kaleidoscope live in 1968, as I booked them for my senior prom (yes, really, see LINK) whose songs veered from morbid country classic "O Death" to proto-world music mash-ups of Mid-Eastern sounds with Indian ragas effected with guitars. Kaleidoscopic  proficiency came via multi-instrumentalist David Lindley (see aforementioned link,) Chris Darrow and host of misfit L.A. expert instrumental practitioners. 

The Jigsaw Seen live is a similar noisy rock and roll celebration with each song sounding vaguely different for reasons one knows not beyond the oddness of the material lyrics-wise. Their most popular release Bananas Foster (whose package includes cooking recipes and scratch'n'sniff banana scent) sports "Cave Canem" (latin for "beware of the dog" as excavated from a Pompeii watchdog mosiac, and not on the Silverlake lounge set list) whose lyrics trace incredibly obscure, extinct dog breeds and why they went extinct. Its melody is just as sad as its content, but then again, what highly listenable pop bands write songs about the Alaunt and Molossus these days?

In that latter respect they somewhat reminded me of my better half's band of 40+ years ago cult-ness, Christopher Milk which always featured weird topics for pop songs, penned with exquisite attention to the right multi-syllabic mots justes or equally strange forms of rhyme, internal and otherwise. Clever, in other words, and successfully updated by Jigsaw Seen. Example of Jigsaw song titles are seen on set list below, with personal favorite for its Stooge-iness "Where The Action Isn't" and (not played) "Choreography Killed The Cat."
The Jigsaw Seen play so seldom that most of their fans consider them a studio band, belied by their fun and expert live set at the Silverlake Lounge. Thank goodness a friend alerted us! Canny Jigsaw-ists spotted half the band at the Holy Holy gig, original Spider From Mars Woody Woodmansey and producer Tony Visconti's live tribute to David Bowie at the Wiltern Theatre 4.26.16 (sadly, while I was photographing Little Caesar and Dee Snider at the Whisky a GoGo.)

The band is:
Dennis Davison- vocals, percussion; Jonathan Lea- guitar; Tom Currier-bass; Teddy Freese- drums. Jonathan and Tom are part of Kink Dave Davies' current solo touring band.
 











PHOTO OPS:


Above,my better half Mr. Twister, fabulous singer Leslie Knauer, and Betsy Rosenthal, aforementioned friend who alerted us. Betsy and writer Terry Moreland Henderson flanking Jonathan Lea. Guest photographer © 2016 Kurt Ingham for photo on the left. 
Below, Betsy with singer Dennis Davison, Twister on the job in the background...


Meanwhile across town at the Roar Room...
They write great songs that one can remember on the way home, and arrange their sound like the early 1970s Rolling Stones with unobtrusive but essential keyboards, two guitars, harmonica and female Gospel-incubated background vocals. In fact their audio dynamic sort of sounds like 'Exile on Main St." outtakes with entirely different vocals.Furthermore they look good doing it... It's THE BLESSINGS 3.26.16 at the Roar Room, Glendale/La Crescenta area of N.E. San Fernando Valley, L.A.

When folks say rock is dead because newer and/or younger bands don't know how to do it  anymore, I point to Dr. Boogie (LINK) andThe Blessings as immediate contradiction. Perhaps our American blues underpinning has helped keep this genre vital for a lot of domestic musicians to try out because our unconscious familiarity with same makes it rather doable. (Whereas virtually all youngest Brit and Euro bands one sees on Palladia, the MTVs etc. doing their mid-tempo mush, um, rather suck at it. They think because they're using guitars and drums that it's rock. They so err...)



The Blessings
are: Jeremy White, vocals, guitar, harmonica;
Mike Gavigan, guitar; Jason Upright, drums; Jeffrey Howell,keyboards; Lavone Seetal, backing vocals, percussion; filling in for Duffy Snowhill on bass, Lights Out Levine.

The second desperado with a chapeau, the one to the right in these shots was Tobin Dale, jamming a farewell to L.A. with his Blessings friends. The very next day he moved to Nashville Tenn.
not
lot
of
room
onstage 
to kick up 
one's heels

 

PHOTO OPS:
Sultry redhead Irene LeConto does the lounge thing at the Roar Room. She's a promoter, music events planner, manager, publicist and hottie.


Meanwhile back to the beach at Malibu...
What can one say about a band that sounds like the Wrecking Crew and/or Funk Brothers fronted by one the premiere American vocalists and survivor of Geffen Records' Metal 1980s? One would say go see The Tighty Whiteys wherever they may be. 

Malibu's Cafe Escobar is lucky to book these topflight musicians of studio and stage who love to do the funk, soul, r&b and Motown thangs on the same level as their Memphis and Detroit colleagues. A crumpled up 1/2 of a set list gives a clue to their repertoire.The band's sense of fun and superb musicianship serve these great songs so well.

The Tighty Whiteys remain: Ron Young, vocals; 
Joey Malone, guitar; 
Bruce Witkin, bass;
 Kevin Laurence, keyboards;
 Rob Klonel, drums.

LESLIE KNAUER AND AL TEMAN LIVE 4.23.16, Maui Sugar Mill Bar

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Leslie Knauer, (left) vocalist, songwriter (past groups Precious Metal and Kanary, seeLINK andLINK
 with her soulmate Al TeMan (right) of their current bands Naked Hand Dance and Diamond Star Halo played a rare gig at Maui Sugar Mill Bar, Reseda, in the Valley sector of L.A. 4.23.16.

Leslie is a world class singer, so even their opener of a wacky Roger Miller cover sounded more polished than it deserved to. But the set really takes flight with selections from Leslie's vast repertoire of amazing, original songs which better showcase her soaring vocals. The room filled immediately with the stragglers waylaid outside. Percussionist Scott Breadman rounded out the trio.

 Left, Leslie's typically ebullient stage manner; right, also on the bill, a Greek singer from band appropriately named Electra.


 
PHOTO OPS:

 Above, Al, Leslie and Len Fagen, legendary booker the much missed Coconut Teaszer Club in Hollywood, an Alternative oasis in 1980s/90s Hollywood which was the first U.S. club to give a residency to British songstress P.J. Harvey (essentially breaking her for this country) and so very many other acts I photographed from Bo Diddley to Ron Asheton.

 Below, Leslie with Donna Balancia, Editor of California Rocker and West Coast Rocker.
 
Leslie, Al and two of Leslie's many friends and wellwishers.

SUSAN HYATT's PERFECT PARTY MUSIC, PINUPS & TRUMPETS

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Susan Hyatt is a now Nashville-based singer with a clear, clean soprano she can twist into sultry contortions, and a pop music historian's P.O.V. for inspiration. For instance, my above left photograph documents Susan performing 1967's "How Does It Feel To Feel" by The Creation in 2014! The formula worked profoundly with her band Stimulator's 2010 original cut "Lovelier In Black," a celebratory morbid ditty that should have been right up there with Nine Inch Nails'"Head Like A Hole" for altGoth anthems.

Her newest effort PinUps & Trumpets, to be released 5.23.16 on Orchard Records, is perfect party music for any fun but slightly unsettling occasion as rather pretty offerings that challenge. An effective career-oriented musician, Susan and her past musics have been heard on all manner of mainstream television broadcasts, so there's no reason to doubt this offering will as well.

The official press release as follows: 
Susan Hyatt’s new record “Pin­Ups & Trumpets” is an all covers album celebrating her favorite rock songs growing up. Recorded in Nashville, the album was co­-produced with trumpet player Zack Leffew.

The record marks a new musical direction for Susan, who thus far was known as a rock chick fronting bands Pillbox and Stimulator. This record melds indie rock with prominent jazzy flavors and sultry female vocals  on cuts by Motley Crue, Alice Cooper, Marilyn Manson, Depeche Mode, David Bowie, Judas Priest, Roxy Music, The Eagles and The Cars.

 Left, Susan Hyatt, center, in the 21st Century Pandoras (see LINK); right, promoting a book proposal with her own guided, free Pilates/gym workout for the press and others!


DEE SNIDER, LITTLE CAESAR & PRINCE TRIBUTE ROCK THE WHISKY A GOGO's ULTIMATE JAM NIGHT 4.26.16

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Ultimate Jam Night at the Whisky A Gogo, Hollyood CA hosts brilliant ideas to pack Tuesday nights, a traditionally slow one for clubs: #1, it's all ages and free!No cover!Zilch! and #2, since our locale is home to so many musicians of all calibers of talent and fame, why not invite whichever locals who aren't on tour rock the Whisky in whatever configurations they wish?

And rock they did, quite massively and with metal edge, on 4.26.16 in a bisected evening of hard rock and a full scale tribute to Prince, who had sadly passed away the week before (LINK.) The evening's compere was Jesse Blaze Snider, oldest spawn of Twisted Sister's Dee Snider, with Dad joining in the jams unannounced to belt out "We're Not Going To Take It" (of course) and AC/DC's "Highway To Hell" with his son. Wowza! It proved a warm family moment as well as exciting music.

Granted, the presence of broadcast network newsmobiles out front should have been a tip off, but all one could spot were their interviews with Gilby Clarke, longtime guitarist of Guns N'Roses post-Izzy Stradlin's departure. The Who's "Won't Get Fooled Again" and AC/DC's "Whole Lotta Rosie" were his solo offerings.
 

 One of the major draws of the evening, Little Caesar performed what was as close to a set as the jamsallowed, with three cool songs including their chart hit back in the Geffen daze, a cover of "Chain Of Fools"joined by theamazing Prince Tribute singers.

  Little Caesar are Ron Young, vocals; Loren Molinare, guitar; Tom Morris, drums, Paharoah Barrett bass and debuting guitarist Alex Kane, formerly of the Richie Ramone Band. This gig served as warmup for the European tour they embarked on within days.




 
Intermission entr'acte was the exotic dance stylings of Suzie Malone.

Ultimate Jam Night's Tribute to Prince may have been the best moments that UJN ever will serve up. Amazing singers normally found backing top names in music like Elton John, Rod Stewart, Madonna or Shakira were giving their all to do right by Prince. Note the sincere emotions evinced in so many of these performers. 
Kudison Kai began the second half of the evening  with her cover of "Nothing Compares 2 U" that overpowered Sinead O'Connor's version with strong as well as vulnerable vocals.

"Nothing compares..."            "...nothing compares..."                         ...to you." 
   
 

Militia Vox, normally found fronting Judas Priestess performed a properly salacious "Let's Go Crazy" replete with emulation of going down on the guitar.
                     
 Right, Eric Dover (Slash's Snake Pit, Jellyfish) teased the  crowd through his "Little Red Corvette."








"Goddess!" exclaimed Little Caesar's Alex Kane when describing Debby Holiday, who presented the combo of fabulous vocals and stunning looks for her take on the famously licentious"Darling Nikki."
Debby singing with Jason Joseph of SuperSoul Monday who also soloed "Beautiful Ones"






 American Idol cutie Hunter Taran Larsen had the moxie to follow these performers with her sassy take on "Kiss."
 

Of course the show's closer was "Purple Rain" with everyone back onstage!

THE DOGS and STREET WALKIN' CHEETAHS LIVE at CAFE NELA 4.29.16

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There were brilliant promotional graphics (designer unknown) befitting a brilliant show that paired two great acts known as much for exciting onstage delivery as their punk pedigrees, THE DOGS and THE STREET WALKIN' CHEETAHS.

Cafe Nela hosted this notable double bill on 4.29.16. THE DOGS--Loren Molinare, vocals, guitar; Mary Kay, bass, vocals; Tony Matteucci, drums, vocals--in action, Detroit-style hardest rock at its finest:
R.e. the set list: THE DOGS'"Ain't Goin' Nowhere" has been broadcast repeatedly on Rodney Bingenheimer's Rodney On The ROQ radio show in the major media market of Hollywood.

↨That night's Street Walkin'Cheetahs' antics:  
Above, Frank Meyer eating a beer can while strolling through the crowd and...
...handing his guitar to an audience member to play, who did a far better job than when a guitarist at a Malibu Colony private home jam foisted his axe on me during "Jumpin' Jack Flash" and blithely instructed "It's in 'A'..." while he left the building entirely. No, I don't play guitar in the slightest.

The Street Walkin' Cheetahs remain: Frank Meyer, guitar, vocals; Bruce Duff, guitar; Dino Everett, bass; Mike Sessa, drums.

PHOTO OPS: 
1134 Films co-founders/directors Chris and Jeff Speed note Mary Dog's close personal interaction with fans backstage.

Donna Balancia, Editor of California Rocker and Loren Dog

 Above, Krista Wood and Mary Dog outside the club,
...and lastly, self-appointed Todd Somers turned into the superhero Merchandise Marketing Man, adding The Dogs' profits enormously.

JAMES WILLIAMSON and LISA KEKAULA Reprise with "I LOVE MY TUTU" b/w "NEVER FAR FROM WHERE THE WILD THINGS ARE"

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 Wanna hear something wonderful and brand spankin' new via music by James Williamson, guitarist of Iggy and The Stooges, and Lisa Kekaula, volcanic vocalist of The BellRays? Go to LINK. 

Better still purchase the single, with its photo by Anne Tek and graphic design by Joel Pelletier and me when it's released come July 17, 2016, on 45 single vinyl. All proceeds from this record will benefit Project Hawai'i which helps homeless children in Hawaii. 

Kekaula previously sang for Williamson's Re-Licked soloalbum and live onstage performance (see LINK and LINK, both amazing!) Both sides of this 45 are so strong in such different ways--gentle A side, balls out rocker B side-- hence our differentiation of art themes. Below, Lisa and James in the studio recording Re-Lickedmusic.

BRITISH CAR SHOW 2016 !

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2016's British Car Show in Woodley Park in Balboa Park, San Fernando Valley, L.A. capped a fun-filled weekend with  show by The Motels and The Hailers (LINK to come) on 5.20.16, my better half Mr. Twister's birthday on 5.21.16 and the BritCars on 5.22.16. Top pic, a Jaguar, left hood ornament, a Daimler; right, a pewter grey Triumph Stag, a great personal favorite for its impeccable styling.                             See pic below, guest photographer © 2016 Kurt Ingham.
 Below, the enormously long 1982 Aston Martin Lagonda, beloved of some Jame Bonds...

Above, canine BritCar enthusiasts, and a B-17 visitor from nearby airshow.

 








Carroll Shelby invades Britain or at least an air filter...



Below, encountering friends: top pic, Rico Cardinale, Cricket Oswald, Mr. Twister, George Oswald; bottom pic, Mr. Twister, Ian O'Connor, Sherry O'Connor

All on a beautiful Spring morning to enjoy (Mr. Twister's garden below)...
(before Hell's inferno of climate changed 100F+ degrees for 5 months descends)

FRANCE DEEMS LEGENDARY PHOTOGRAPHER UNORIGINAL in its court of law

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Disgusting!!! An out and out rights grab!  The country of France has ruled that legendary music photographer Gered Mankowitz (The Rolling Stones, Jimi Hendrix, everybody) did not do "original" photography work in the 1960s r.e. his Hendrix portraiture.

Note that thisLINK* refers to Mankowitz' wholly justified lawsuit to stop unauthorized reproduction and actual changing the image of his Hendrix photo by strangers to suit a commercial advertisement.

The one frame, a solo shot not seen in this fair use proof sheet above from the same session, according to the country of France and its © laws, is not original, with their "explanation": the Court held that the framing, background, and the choice of black and white were fairly common for this type of portrait. 

The photographer then explained the choices he made in relation to the posture of the subject, his costume and general attitude. The Court then found that, since the photographer failed to give sufficient explanations about these choices, he failed to establish that his photograph was original. One presumes the Louvre must now deem DaVinci's Mona Lisa portrait as unoriginal, since it was done for a client and reflects the client's visual wishes rather than the creative skill of the artist who just places Lisa del Giocondoin front of a landscape. These are hard times for Francophiles nowadays...


*http://www.jdsupra.com/legalnews/jimi-hendrix-portrait-denied-copyright-18692/
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