Friday, September 5, 2025

Explanation

 By Don Allred

These Music Calendars were in Columbus OH's 614 Magazine, posted here from the most recent to earliest (2009?). Warning: there might be more that I haven't found yet, which may be posted out of chronological order,

Monday, September 1, 2025

MusiCal (January 2013 pitches, February 2013 complete)

 By Don Allred

January pitches:

 Parquet Courts

 Children of the Clintonverse with 90s alt-rock appetites find ways through youth-reforming boot camp to fluid, laid-back melodies over compulsively precise beats, with lyrics shifting from deep brewing to streetwise, straight-ahead views.

01/07 @ Cafe Bourbon St.

Pat Dailey/Reese Dailey Band

Ex-cop, ex-Marine, and eternally migrating snowbird, Singer/songwriter Pat Dailey is the Bard of Put-in-Bay OH; also, a hearty, very musical bratwurst fart in the direction of auto-comparisons to Jimmy Buffet, which are not uncommon. Zestier Buffet fans may indeed go for the gusto of Dailey, who somewhat wryly relishes charting the chartering of fellow romantics, while they all sail over and way under the rainbow. His son Reese Dailey’s own vocals, original songs, and slide guitar lead RSD through focal points shaped in part by Southern Rock, as well and folk and pop.

01/12 @ The LC, 405 Neil Ave., 7 p.m.

Hawthorne Heights/JT Woodruff/Mark Rose

Dayton’s emo-screamo vets continue their indie EP series with Hope, which also seasons the emotional and musical range of resources, incl combination of apparently experience-shaded lyrics and pop’s pleasure principle. HH lead singer JT does a solo set of new material and re-versions; Mark Rose opens with R&B-flavored folk-pop.

01/17 @ The Rumba, 1151 N. High St., 8 p.m.

February complete:

Nick D. and Believers/Matt Munhall Trio/Joey Hebdo/DJ Jon Elliott

Vocalist/keyboard player Nick D., whose Believers include members of Bella Ruse, Them Labs, and The Floorwalkers, unveils tonight-only set designs by Columbus’ Kaity Hoard, framing a new music video and vividly convivial new tunes, including “We Grew Up Wild.” Singer/pianist Matt Munhall’s trio will spin us through elegantly moody originals, judiciously juiced with Dylan, Newman, and perhaps The Beatles. Joey Hebdo, of tasty Prosciutto fame, can be quite the one-man-band.  DJ Jon Elliott (AKA The Floorwalkers’ lead singer) pumps up classic and rare groove soul, funk, r&b, plus several schools of rap.

02/07 @ Ace of Cups, 2619 N. High St., 8 p.m.

Walk The Moon/Pacific Air

Cincy-based Walk The Moon took their name from “Walking on the Moon,” a space-reggae album track by the Police, which became a concert favorite, and an inspiration for WTM’s own performance-enhanced, studio-smart, contemporary art-pop. Artful touches include those of paint, which Walk The Moon like to wear onstage, and share with their audience. San Diego’s equally atmospheric Pacific Air are basically brothers Ryan and Taylor Lawhon’s voices and keyboards. With a guitarist, bassist, and drummer added for shows, Pacific Air’s sky-brushed textures and implied destinations should para-glide by more invitingly than ever.

02/07 @ LC Pavilion, 405 Neil Ave., 7 p.m.

A Short History of Jazz

The Columbus Jazz Orchestra and Columbus Youth Orchestra’s excursions through blues, ragtime, swing, bop and beyond are accompanied by saxophonist Tia Fuller, who’s played with jazz/blues singer Nancy Wilson and Beyonce, plus drummer Lewis Nash, an accomplished accompanist for formidably individualistic improvisers, such as Betty Carter and Branford Marsalis. CJO Artistic Director Byron Stripling, who played first trumpet in the Count Basie Orchestra and also performed with the Dizzy Gillespie Orchestra, places Basie and Gillespie on a flight map with Scott Joplin, Benny Goodman, Duke Ellington, Miles Davis, and others.

02/07 @ Southern Theater, 21 E. Main St., 7:30 p.m. 02/08-10, 8:00 p.m.

Rascal Flatts/Band Perry/Kristen Kelly

Tonight’s established and rising country stars thrive on pop appeal. Rascal Flatts deliver signature ballads and toe-tappers, via the three-part harmonies of Columbus-raised cousins, lead vocalist Gary Levox and multi-instrumentalist Jay DeMarcus, along with lead guitarist Joe Don Rooney. LeVox’s carefully modulated, mountain-high sound is discreetly compatible with the Appalachian folk-pop of spooky, sparky young siblings (two guys and a galvanizing gal), The Band Perry. Kristen Kelly cheerfully kisses her “Ex-Old Man” (“and my ex-best friend”) goodbye, while dancing with a cheeky, chirpy guitar hook, resembling the springy offspring of OMC’s “How Bizarre.” OMG, y’all!

02/09 @ Nationwide Arena, 200 W. Nationwide Blvd., 7:30 p.m.

Punch Brothers/Anais Mitchell

Featuring ex-Nickel Creek mandolin virtuoso/vocalist Chris Thile, Punch Brothers’ musical medicine show mixes acoustic adaptations of Radiohead with elements of classical, Americana, and distinctively original material. They’re even better live: driving Thile’s wry, passionate, divorce-sourced suite, “The Blind Leaving the Blind,” for instance. Our answer to Mumford & Sons? USA! USA! Equally ambitious singer/songwriter Anais Mitchell, creator of the Broadway musical and concept album Hadestown, deftly guides the struggling, roots-fueled hero of 2012’s acclaimed Young Man In America: "My mother gave a mighty shout/Opened her legs and let me out/ Hungry as a prairie dog/Young man in America."

02/12 @ Southern Theater, 21 E. Main St., 8 P.m.

Umphrey’s McGee/Mike Dillon Band

Both bands on tonight’s bill lead with the variety and agility of their jams, at the heart of which are strong songs, demanding to be heard in fresh ways. Umphrey’s McGee write searching, yet intensely committed relationship updates---challenges channeled into crisp, sometimes dazzling progtronic workouts and expeditions. Vibraphonist/percussionist/vocalist/composer Mike Dillon cites John Coltrane’s free jazz breakthrough “Giant Steps” and Iggy & The Stooges’ proto-punk classic "I Wanna Be Your Dog” as crucial, still shakin' inspirations. Dillon’s current quartet includes Carly Meyers on trombone and (say it loud) Moog Taurus pedals.

02/15 @ LC Pavilion, 405 Neil Ave., 7 p.m.

Sirens

When Kay Parker and Molly Pauken aren’t wailing Sirens---alongside guitarist/bassist/singer Pete Cary and drummer Jeff Peters---they’re studio session mainstays, and frequently on stage with other groups. Especially Ohio country rockers, including McGuffey Lane, The John Schwab Band, and Jonalee White & The Late Nite Drivers. Multi-instrumentalist Pauken, who tours with Nashville sage Rodney Crowell, has Celtic connections with Columbus’s Ladies of Longford; also various jazzy experiences (ditto Parker, who’s sung with the Columbus Jazz Arts Group). This adventurous way of life suffuses their original material, along with folk, funk, blues, and intense self-expression.

02/20 @ Natalie’s Coal Fired Pizza, 5001 N. High St., 9 p.m.

Cash Only

This Johhny Cash tribute benefits Andymanathon’s fund for disadvantaged children. Smoking Guns and Apple Bottom Gang will play “Folsom Prison Blues” and “Ring of Fire” respectively; Third Degree Sideburn gallop through JC’s rockabilly years; Jinxed spotlight Johnny’s duets with June Carter Cash and others. Joshua P. James and the Paper Planes fly from “Egg-Sucking Dog” to Cash’s vision of Nine Inch Nails’ “Hurt,” while Unit 1 unleash “The Beast In Me” and “You Are My Sunshine.”  Also: Outlaw Deluxe, Boondogglers, Brothers, and The Song Bird Band---with over 60 Cash covers in all (no repeats allowed).

02/23 @ Shrunken Head, 251 W. 5th Ave., 6 p.m.

Ra Ra Riot/Pacific Air

Long known for counter-balancing brainy alt-rock with soulful strings, Ra Ra Riot have lost the cello, kept the violin, and nurtured the poptronic valentines of 2013’s Beta Love. The title track is an eerie serenade: “In this city of robot hearts, ours were meant to be...” Be what? Or is it “beat”? That comes to seem enough, as RRR’s catchy sincerity gets reassuring----although “When I Dream” ‘s Caribbean-tinged electro-romance might make cosmic crooner Miguel sweat the competition. As they did for Walk The Moon on the 7th, ambient pop combo Pacific Air opens.

02/28 @ A&R Music Bar, 391 Neil Ave., 7 p.m.





MusiCal (January 2012)

 By Don Allred

Bass Jam! Featuring Freekbass/Jahman Brahman/Skeetones

Livetronica is the watchword tonight, exemplified by keyboard army Skeetones, who promise “Remixes on the fly--no loops or backing tracks.” They confidently moonwalk surreal boulevards with “General Sherman.” Skeetones’ Cincinnati colleagues Freekbass and DJ Tobotius ignite steel-belted radial grooves and sardonic samples; no wonder they’ve played so often with galactic funk guru Bootsy Collins. Former Columbus jam-rock journeymen Jahman Brahman now restlessly reflect their North Carolina mountain greenery home, with sure-footed funk as well. Also currently scheduled: local stalwarts Carma, Magua and Burgler, plus Newark, OH’s own luminescent live painter/dubstep DJ Heady Ruxpin.

1/6 @ Skully’s Music Diner, 1151 N High St., 9 p.m.

Wale

Rapper Wale’s freestyle whirlwind of imagery found improbable poise atop the creative and commercial peaks of his often brilliantly produced breakthrough album, Attention Deficit. The followup is bluntly titled Ambition, and it’s all about growing up and falling apart simultaneously. Some of us have been there, but rarely with Wale’s wealth of defensiveness, self-awareness, and other compulsions. Meanwhile, the elegant, sometimes eerie music is always as patiently seductive as fate. As guest Ne-Yo murmurs, speaking for all of the sounds surrounding Wale, “You got time.” Wale’s earned that much, for sure.

1/7 @ Newport Music Hall, 7 p.m.

Dead Indians/The Lindsay/Outer Spacist

Dead Indians are Ojibwe rappers from Winnipeg. Their 2005 debut album, Indian Affairs, exudes a smoothly chilling serenade of Old Milwaukee, soon followed by, “This is the last beer, I swear,” as the party rolls way on through another smoky night. Newer tracks sample pop radio hooks for sweetly bouncing beatdowns of faces, forces, and farces. Their live exuberance is compatible with the garage-morphing Mormon masks of Outer Spacist, also OS’s Columbus neighbors The Lindsay’s latest set of shiny indie incisors, Deep in the Queue.

1/13 @ Rumba Café, 2507 Summit St., 10 p.m.

Sewing Machine War

The Sewing Machine War is an adventurously focused band from Akron and Warren, Ohio. These wizards and weathermen aim to “invent an experience.” They also mean to tap “veins of history, truth, and turmoil.” So, living history--in songs such as “Jerico,” which is not quite the Biblical spelling, but they’re testing vast walls with good vibrations, not too sweetly. The guitar screams somewhere in a winter dream, though far from a nightmare. Is earthy progtronica a contradiction? It’s also these guys’ rock and roll.

1/15 @ Kobo, 2590 N High St., 9 p.m.

Griffin House

On 2007’s Flying Upside Down, singer/songwriter Griffin House listens and learns from all kinds of relationships in the verses, then steps or wheels out into the choruses. He never forgets the value of a challenge, while musically melding with his heroes from Tom Petty’s Heartbreakers, and declaring, “She’s outta my league/That’s the kinda girl I need.” On 2010’s The Learner, House is at his best when celebrating and kidding his propensity to push romantic and musical luck, especially with “She Loves Girls.” Gee, so does he! He actually tells her that.

1/15 @ The Basement, 391 Neil Ave., 8 p.m.

Rascal Flatts

Rascal Flatts, two thirds of whom are from Columbus, have always been ideally suited for country crossover success. Especially in the way lead singer Gary LeVox guides his high lonesome mountain sound though vulnerable pop appeal. Unpretentiously tuneful, they’ve outlasted many a man band, with a thriving audience of young adults. They maintain their mellowness onstage, but aren’t shy of special effects. Also performing this evening: tabloid headline survivor Sara Evans, boldly wailing all over her comeback trail, and 20-year-old singer/songwriter/ multi-instrumentalist Hunter Hayes.

1/21 @ Nationwide Arena, 200 W Nationwide Blvd., 7:30 p.m.

Machine Head

Machine Head entered thrash metal’s festive fray in 1991, when Seattle’s alternative barbarians were about to sweep all metal from the throne. Yet in subsequent dark ages, Machine Head kept the faith, until straying into big-selling, though somewhat trend-dependent albums. Scorched by such pyrrhic victories, they returned unto the path, via Through the Ashes of Empires and The Blackening. 2011’s Unto the Locust finds them leading all true believers, even an arsonist, into trials by harvests of necessary fire: “Come young and old, suffer unto the locust!” As always, it’s an epic metal family affair.

1/24 @ Newport Music Hall, 1722 N High St., 6 p.m.

Los Campesinos!

Los Campesinos! are a wryly excitable art-pop troupe from Wales, launching pad of Dylan Thomas. Richard Burton, John Cale, Young Marble Giants, and other prestigious individualists. It’s also the UK’s picturesque backside, inspiring/requiring LC! to rattle the more desperate (and contagious) pretensions of their solemn peers, maybe including those in the mirrors: “Can’t tell/Is the singer’s keyboard a crutch/Or a synthesizer?” 2011’s Hello Sadness is a break-up album, but at least they finally found a love worth losing. Sweet! As long as they feel like giving popular culture and themselves a hard enough, energizing time.  

1/25 @ Skully’s Music Diner, 1151 N High St., 9 p.m.

Trio Showcase with Karate Coyote and Dirty Girls

The men and women of Columbus sextet Karate Coyote raise voices and instruments into a complex clarity of melody, harmony, plot twists, and inescapable zingers. New tracks, unreleased but stage-ready, resolve to make even deeper impressions on walls, doors, die-hard habits, face-scraping carpets, and bone-filling rhythms (KC are making a list). Dirty Girls are guys, mostly graduates of Stucco Jones’s pool hall night school, plus former disco-pop-metal boogie knights of Chelsea Automatic. Preview track “Overblown” suggests 12-string guitars as spokes and tires of a scruffy mountain bike, blithely navigating the traffic of chugging bass.

1/27 @ Circus, 1127 N High St., 9 p.m.

Mieka Pauley

Submitted, as Rod Serling does in The Twilight Zone, for your approval: one Mary Dominica Pauley, born in Boston, raised in Ohio and other states, who earned a Harvard degree in biological anthropology, then forswore the Catholic schoolgirl associations of her birth name for the crisper tag of Mieka. Pauley, winner of songwriting competitions and creator of fan-funded albums, is now a seeking siren of scientific passion and enterprising visions. She applies overdrive to the quest for sexual justice, while sweeping headlights across channeled clues, exploded views, and detours.

1/29 @ Rumba Café, 2507 Summit St., 7 p.m.




MusiCal (February 2012)

 By Don Allred


Ease The Medic/Winter Makes Sailors/Bigshot

On their self-titled new album, Ease The Medic’s uphill battles take an escalator, gliding and swaying as bits of emo, punk, smashed ballads and other still-searing memories bombard guitars and cymbals. ETM’s cover of Columbus colleagues Winter Makes Sailors’ voice mail autopsy “Eleven” fits perfectly. Supple new preview tracks from WMS wickedly suggest just how twisted Ohio’s melodic vagabonds can get, while opening insatiable hearts and minds to Brian Wilson’s California sunshine. With his band’s usual bulls-eye bluntness, Justin Perkins states Bigshot’s complete bio: "Loud, moody, broken Clinton-era alt rock." Good times!

02/04@ Kobo Live, 2590 N High St.

9 p.m.

Ladysmith Black Mambazo

 The gentle intensity of gospel-based South African a cappella choir Ladysmith Black Mambazo has pop appeal too: 2011’s Songs from a Zulu Farm even playfully transforms “Old McDonald.” 2012’s Ladysmith Black Mambazo and Friends includes “Diamonds On the Soles of Her Shoes.” co-written and performed again with Paul Simon, whose 1986 “Graceland” featured LBM. The new album also ranges from “Knockin’ On Heaven’s Door,” with Dolly Parton, to “Hello My Baby,” with the jaunty harmonies of Zap Mama, plus DJ mixes. Yet live, especially, they don’t require assistance to levitate and dance with us.

02/08 @ The Southern Theater, 21 E Main St.

8 p.m.

Craig Finn

“Dude with the long fingernails, I know he’ll be good to you/I seen him shave up at the library/And sleep behind the caribou.” On his solo debut, Clear Heart Full Eyes, The Hold Steady’s Craig Finn temporarily trades his main band's ornate neo-classic rock chariot for his Austin session group’s alone-together groove, a bracing backroom echo of THS tourmates Drive-By Truckers. Finn’s currently traveling quartet includes the new album’s incisive, evocative, regular-and-steel guitarist, Ricky Ray Jackson. Attentive, sportive bassist Alex Livingstone previously played Columbus with Tim Easton’s Freelan Barons.

02/09 @ The Basement, 405 Neil Ave

7 p.m.

Broken Hearts/Broken Strings

Headliners Earwig are a song-centered power trio, whose fans recently voted for “Dinosaur Song” to top tonight’s four-album spanning set list: ”We were dinosaurs/With little arms/Long tails and big, big scales/You were trying to hold my hand/I dream sweet monster dreams.” With Busk League All-Stars’ Jesse Faller on keyboards, Earwig will also conduct a “Love Note Reading (comedy/art bit).” They host catchy, combustible alt rockers Yellow Light Maybe and The Slang, also Teen Fiction’s one-man electronic dance pop mythology, Cleveland’s irrepressible Mind Fish, Sex Kitten Purrlesque, and other burlesque artists.

02/10 @ Outland Live, 95 Liberty St.

7 p.m.

The DewDroppers Sweetheart Dance

The Columbus-based DewDroppers label their sparkling ballroom wizard’s brew as swang music. Ingredients: ”1920s-to-‘50s, with a contemporary tweak.” This release party’s new songs are included in a comfortably roomy set, presented by Adam Nedrow (AKA Raggedy Dandy) on drums and vibraphone, Counterfeit “Mama” Madison’s keys, guitarist Lonesome Joe Gilliland, and bassist Michael Kohn (now full-time, but too new for a nickname). Party favors and flavors will appear. So will area trio Way Yes, whose own newly released tunes conspire with older, equally fun ones, to lure moody lyrics through tropical-tronic soundscapes and guitar mischief.

02/10 @ 400, 400 W Rich St.

9 p.m.

Bloody Valentine Night: A Darker Side of Love

With the ideal of each band performing only one classic cover, Love Culture have summoned fellow seekers of new allure in shoegaze, and other talismanic traces of true romance. The Receiver’s re-contextualized, stellar prog and The Loyal Divide’s morphing, party-mask electronica will encounter Bloody Knives and Dead Leaf Echo, channeling industrial bass and ethereal harmonies respectively. Dark pop’s Wolf Ram Heart aim “beyond self-imposed structures of bottomless aspirational economy.” Amen! In celebration of love’s deep heart, attendees will receive black flowers (real ones). DJs Scott Niemet, Lydia Beatz and Walleye will re-mix appropriate potions.

02/11 @ Ace Of Cups, 2619 N High St.

7 p.m.

Sharon Van Etten/Shearwater

As the spotlight heats up, singer/songwriter Sharon Van Detten extends her balancing act of thrills, chills and skills, via new Tramp ‘s luminous psych-pop-folk production by The National’s Aaron Desser. Van Etten also savors and shares discreetly juicy details and ever-budding, hard-earned wisdom. With her touring band, now including chamber-rocking singer/multi-instrumentalist Heather Woods Broderick, Van Etten’s live adventures continue. Ditto opening act Shearwater, as the dynamic art rockers sail through the strata of their completed Island Arc trilogy, to the vivid velocity of 2012’s truthfully titled Animal Joy.”

02/14 @ Wexner Center Performance Space, 1871 N High St.

9 p.m.

Mojoflo/Jared Mahone/DJ Drastic

Columbus convenes a bon voyage party for festive septet Mojoflo, who begin their tour in New Orleans, just in time for Mardi Gras. Vocalist Amber Knicole holds forth with tingling-to-scorching orchestrations inspired by James Brown, Motown, hip-hop, and reggae. Compatibly flexible inflections are filtered through Jared Mahone’s crossover demos, currently sparking a Mayer Hawthorne-to-yacht rock feel. Mahone and crew are working on a “crowd-focused” album, with input from fans demanding JM’s trademark live energy. DJ Drastic cuts things up with observant choices, a monster record collection, and 20 years of experience.

02/17 @ Skully’s, 1151 N High St.

9 p.m.

Tim Easton/You’re So Bossy

Columbus-launched, globetrotting singer/songwriter Tim Easton’s nomadic confidence infuses the gritty currents of his tuneful speculations. You may not recognize where “Nobody Plays Piano in Athens, GA” is taking you, but you’ll know when you get there. The instrumentally versatile Easton is accompanied tonight by drummer Sam Brown. The uncommon denominator of Columbus legends Gaunt, New Bomb Turks, and The Sun, Brown also drives power-pop openers You’re So Bossy. YSB tends to include the likes of bassist Phil Park, who was one of the Haynes Boys, as was Easton. The family tree’s still smoking.

02/18 @ The Rumba Cafe, 2507 Summit St

10 p.m.

The Klezmatics

The Klezmatics personalize and extend klezmer's soulfully rowdy, improvisational experience. Their voices, strings, brass, reeds, keyboards, and percussion also roll out the polka, ska, and other dances. 2006’s Grammy-winning Wonder Wheel provides revelatory music for previously unheard Woody Guthrie lyrics. On 2011’s Live at Town Hall, they’re equally powerful in the “kosher gospel” of African American Jewish guest singer Joshua Nelson, and while steadily raising the roof with, “I ain't afraid/Of your Bible/Of your Torah/Of your Quran/I’m afraid of what you do in the name of your God.”

02/23 @ The Lincoln Theatre, 769 E Long St.

8 p.m.












Saturday, August 30, 2025

MusiCal (March 2012)

By Don Allred

Bone Thugs N-Harmony featuring Krayzie Bone & Wish Bone/Dizzy/Dilemma

On this tour, Cleveland’s Bone Thugs N Harmony are represented by central BTNH figure Krayzie Bone and trusty sidekick Wish Bone, both of whom have voiced low-key assurances/hopes of reunion, echoed by other quintet members, despite furor following the duo’s departure last spring. Fittingly, this fluctuating flow of family affairs recalls the impulsive balancing act of BTNH’s definitive “Crossroads,” where bursts of rapping and singing blend and ride through tumultuous traffic. Between studio experiments, Krayzie and Wish expertly emphasize BTNH classics onstage. Canadian rappers Dizzy and Dilemma bring youthful energy and experience.

03/04 @ Newport Music Hall, 1722 N High St.

 Doors Open: 7 p.m.

Valient Thorr/Cadaver Dogs

Vailent Thorr’s early metal battle axes chop through sweet Earth’s crazy problems, while drummer Lucian Thorr keeps the pleasure principle swinging. Lead throat Valient Himself is a spiritually/socially struggling Everyman, whose searing sonic seed might well be Motorhead’s “Eat The Rich.” The bent metal boogie of Columbus’ Cadaver Dogs seems spawned by the cathartic sandpaper blast of Motorhead’s “Ace of Spades.” Drummer/howler Lex Vegas channels the dream: “We want to be the perfect balance of lust and aggression, like really good hate sex or the most awesome time you ever got beat up.”

03/04 @ KOBO, 2590 N High St.

8 p.m.

Jazz on the Avenue: A Soulful Night Of Keys

A Soulful Night of Keys showcases three generations of jazz. Lonnie Liston Smith filtered avant-jazz showmanship into potent smoothness, via ‘70s hits such as the much-sampled “Expansions,” showcased tonight. Also expect Gil Scott-Heron’s trenchant “The Bottle,” featuring the voice, flute, and vintage synthesizer of Brian Jackson, collaborator with late, barely pre-hip hop novelist-poet-singer-songwriter GSH. Young Mark Adams, whose colleagues have included soul jazz vibraphonist Roy Ayers, promises a “unique” rendition of Ayers’ “Everybody Loves The Sunshine.”  Veteran guitar, bass and drums further fortify the three keyboard artists’ funky reveries and revelry. 

03/10 @ King Arts Complex, 867 Mt. Vernon Ave.

7 p.m.

Lionel the Jailbird/Glow Merchants/Forest And the Evergreens/Pet Lions

Columbus-based Lionel The Jailbird’s vocalist/violinist Dominique De Biasio steers tough-love-is-the-drug ruminations through overcast folk-rock and bluesy waves of psych-garage undertow, singing “Bon Voyage” like an unusually tuneful pirate. Equally fearlessly, Glow Merchants travel “Basked In Fire” ‘s modal whirlpool  into wailing Mideast/Midwest serenades. Forest And The Evergreens can wail through their own “Spaceghost” like the  Zombies overtaken by the Police, with pole-vaulting cymbals. In recent songs such as “Trinidad,” Chicago’s Pet Lions dig up new/fresh nuances in retro electro-pop.

03/16 @ KOBO, 2590 N High St.

9 p.m.

roeVy/Blatta & Inesha

In Columbus DJ/VJ team roeVy’s perfect world, twin red eye-dots always shine: under a rug lifted by a sexy maid, on a watering can, in the Oval Office, and riding laser beams from the peaked hoods of two figures, working and playing together onstage. Their lavishly layered sound and vision add up to roeVystep, and you probably won’t want to escape (how fortunate). Italian DJs Blatta & Inesha ride and guide techno nouveau’s  espresso express, via "Pet Massage,” “Pigeon Flu,” “Get F*$@ed Up,” “Basso Grasso.” and turntable shout-outs to playmates Mustard Pimp.

03/17 @ Skully's, 1151 N. High St.

9 p.m.

Andrew Bird/Eugene Mirman

“Enjoy yourselves/It’s later than you think,” Andrew Bird characteristically sang along with his colleagues in Squirrel Nut Zippers, while swinging toward the Millennium, or somewhere/nowhere. Bird's new Break It Yourself bounces and curves through basically live-in-the-studio explorations of sardonic vitality and oblique-stroke imagery. AB’s voice, violin, guitar, glockenspiel, great whistling, and live looping will join his intrepid band in an enchanted forest of morphing melodies. Genial spoken-word artist Eugene Mirman’s reputation was prophesied by 60s acid-pop-folk minstrel Donovan: “He’ll be so very kind/As to /Blow your mind.”

03/20 @ Southern Theatre, 21 E Main St.

8 p.m.

Drew Holcomb and the Neighbors/Nathan Angelo

Drew Holcomb and the Neighbors mix country, folk, pop, and rock into songs of compassionate candor. Holcomb’s attentive Americana even evokes the wry testimonials of equally faith-based Canadian bard Bruce Cockburn, when he belts out, “I played the religion card,” and describes how such grandstanding set back his own spirituality. Wife Ellie Bannister Holcomb’s crucial vocal and compositional reinforcements keep the pilgrims pertinent and moving. Singer/songwriter/pianist Nathan Angelo’s rippling emotional range  is also truthfully, fervently fluid: “Pour me a glass of that fine whining about/ Someway, somehow, getting out!”

03/26 @ A&R Music Bar, 391 Neil Ave.

Doors Open: 7 p.m.

Night Beats

The Night Beats are taking (and taking over) strobe-light-illuminated night classes, while learning how not to turn the mid-60s sounds of teen punk rebellion into hairy hidebound high school cool-rules. “She told me somethin’/I can’t explain”: now you’re getting it, wild boy. Danny Lee Blackwell’s voice orbits the rubbery twang bar of his guitar, which twists the shadows of bass and drums, stomping and strutting toward earthy elegance. The Night Beats function at the junction of good, bad, occasionally evil, and just enough ugly to keep it real. 

03/29 @ Ace of Cups, 2619 N High St.

Doors Open: 9 p.m  

The Great Flood/Bill Frisell Quartet

Bill Morrison is a filmmaker increasingly known for working with found reels and live musicians. He participated in cellist/photographer Erik Friedlander’s 2009 Wexner-co-commissioned multimedia show, Block Ice & Tackle. Wexner also co-commissioned The Great Flood,  Morrison’s documentary collaboration with jazz-Americana guitarist Bill Frisell.  Performing the soundtrack onstage, Frisell glides eerily over the steadily converging evidence of 1927’s historic disaster, as HD processing captures nitrate newsreel stock’s random decay, which sometimes dances like jazzy flames around the Mississippi, also strivers and survivors, including those seen talking in a bus station on silent footage. 

03/31 @ Thurber Theatre, Drake Center

1849 Cannon Drive, OSU

8 p.m.





MusiCal (April 2012)

 APRIL

By Don Allred


Lost In The Trees/Poor Moon

 Lost In The Trees have no problem finding an eerie, rhythmically distinctive pathway through inevitable sonic associations with Bon Iver, among other leading chamber rock ensembles. Guitarist Ari Picker’s vocal ventures veer through those of multi-instrumentalist Emma Nadeau and violinist Jenavieve Varaga, while LITT’s cinematic reveries get refreshingly edited by memory. Poor Moon officially converges two Fleet Foxes, Christian Wargo and Casey Wescott, with their long-time off-duty musical associates, Ian and Peter Murray. Illusion, PM’s debut EP, wryly weds idealistically translucent harmonies to frankly sketchy real-life complications.

04/04 @ The Wexner Center, 1871 N. High St.

8 p.m.

Lovedrug/Receiver/Big Sweet

Suave yet excitable veterans Lovedrug sometimes recall the Golden State sweep of Lindsay Buckingham’s vintage vantage points. The telescopically melodic progressive rock of Columbus quartet The Receiver is even more vivid with Winter Makes Sailors’ Sean Gardner added on guitar and keyboards. Lovedrug’s Canton neighbors The Big Sweet are still in high school, but they’ve already released two albums, in between breezing into clubs for another show (keep those IDs handy, lads). They deliver a fresh crop of jangle-pop originals sporting mid-60s style, thus already experiencing psychedelic twinges.

04/07 @ The Rumba, 2507 Summit St.

8 p.m.

Van Hunt

Like Prince, singer/songwriter/multi-instrumentalist/bandleader Van Hunt knows the price and the rewards of holding out and keeping his mercurial vision in focus, even on seemingly burned bridges, as domineering labels collapse and quirky keepers of the funk-rock flame stay on the road. Live At The Troubadour 2011 churns, marches and flows through electric valentines to his picky muse, and Lady Luck as well. Hunt’s romantic quest keeps even the speedy “Watching You Go Crazy Is Driving Me Insane” sustained, like a hummingbird in spring.

04/09 @The Basement, 391 Neil Ave.

Doors Open: 7 p.m.

Zakir Hussain & Masters of Percussion

Bouncing, sliding and rattling Indian classical and folk rhythms through adapted influences and inflections, Zakir Hussain’s tabla hand drums maintained the ricocheting rigor and vigor of John McLaughlin’s pioneering world music groups, Shakti and Remember Shakti.  Hussain’s also played with Pharoah Sanders, George Harrison, Van Morrison, Mickey Hart, Bela Fleck, Edgar Meyer, and Yo Yo Ma. Equally adept as soloists and accompanists, Hussain’s Masters of Percussion include trans-Asian players of strings and reeds, along with members of Meitei Pung Cholom Performing Troupe, who combine dancing, drumming and martial arts.

04/10 @ The Southern Theatre, 21 E. Main St.

8 p.m. 

Patrick Sweany/Shivering Timbers

Like a good pork chop, singer/songwriter Patrick Sweany’s folk-blues-rock is pleasingly greasy, never cheesy. He picks electric and acoustic guitars, the latter with resonating metal cones. For this solo show, he pledges to continue his practice of “sportsmanlike unpredictability.” Electric-acoustic male-female alt-folk duo Shivering Timbers, plus drummer Brad Thorla, present some new material from their album in progress. It includes: “a few ‘kid’ songs not actually for kids, love songs, a murder ballad, a couple gospel songs, a Neil Diamond cover, and an original with D.H Lawrence's poetry.”

04/14 @ The Rumba, 1151 N. High St.

9 p.m.

Boombox/Alpha Data/The Loyal Divide

DJ/musician Zion Godchaux is the son of Keith and Donna Godchaux, former members of the Grateful Dead and related bands. Godchaux, along with Russ Randolph, distills his jam-rich heritage into the livetronica of Boombox. Laptop programming meets spontaneous mixing and many instruments, with no song-list. Alpha Data keeps his tuneful bass grooves and listeners on their toes, via glitch-hop tweaks. Columbus-born, Chicago-based The Loyal Divide have slimmed their line-up from five to four and tightened up their moon-rocking atmospherics. Live At The Bishop offers the latest taste from TLD’s levitating punchbowl.

04/20 @ The Newport, 1722 N. High St.

Doors Open: 8 p.m.

GWAR/Kylesa/Ghoul/Legacy of Disorder

Majestic malcontents GWAR return, metallic armpits laden with ripe Kylesa, Ghoul and Legacy of Disorder, plus a very special message from lead thing Oderus Urungus:

"GWAR gunk actually helps to hold the Newport together. But get rid of that horrible spiral staircase to the stage! Last time, my armored war suit got ‘corkscrewed,’ and they had to call a pipe cutter! Of course, I could have just flexed my pinky and destroyed the whole joint, but the Newport will always hold a special place in my heart, if I had such a thing!"

04/22 @ The Newport, 1722 N. High St.

Doors Open: 6:30 p.m.

Overkill/Belphegor

Crate-digging collectors sometimes mistake perennial thrash metal pioneers Overkill for the long-gone headbangers of the same name who once recorded for punk-owned label SST. Appropriately so: our surviving Overkill built on the kinetic, frenetic crossover potential which SST’s punk prophets glimpsed. 2012’s The Electric Age soon evokes the historic, histrionic skull-butting of buzzcuts and mullets, while deftly alternating speedy onslaughts with looming interludes. Austria’s diabolically defiant Belphegor, notorious for flaunting knowledge of Goethe, de Sade, and more, in German, English, and Latin lyrics, take a studio break for another assault on the States.

04/23 @ Screamin’ Willies, 1921 Channingway Center Dr

6:30 p.m.

Mr. Gnome/Town Monster

Mr. Gnome’s cute ‘n’ spooky name easily advertises their sound, but also challenges it: will they play it safe? No. Often enough, singer/guitarist Nicole Barille and drummer Sam Meister use such cool, shady charms to conjure new kaleidoscopes, tumultuously tunneling from the mighty indie heritage of their sweet sweatshirt home, Cleveland. The Town Monster still consider Columbus a lily pad worth launching their own animated ambitions, following an epic series of EPs with bold psych-funky propositions, “Forget” and “Burn My Heart.” Invitations to “dance your freak out” are more about exercise than exorcism (maybe).

04/28 @ Skully’s, 1151 N. High St.

9 p.m.



MusiCal (May 2012)

 By Don Allred

Wussy/Fort Shame

Cincinnati’s Chuck Cleaver made serious comedy with Ass Ponys’ trailer child anthem, “Little Bastard.” Now he boldly rolls with the rocking relationship trips of Wussy, co-led by Cleaver’s alluringly dour paramour, Lisa Walker. “Love is stronger than dirt,” they proclaim, somewhat sarcastically, yet even the unwed can get pulled into their booming, radio-ready washing machine. Indelible as a laundry marker, the tough-minded tunes of Sue Harshe once shaped her pioneering Columbus indie band Scrawl. Harshe and lead guitarist/songwriter Todd May currently light up quartz-sharp quartet Fort Shame's dirge-y urges with enough streetlight electricity for intriguingly elusive, gritty glamour.

05/04 @ Ace of Cups, 2619 N. High St., 10 p.m.

Kyle Sowashes/Cabdrivers/Safeties/Harlem Airshaft

Even as a download, Columbus combo The Kyle Sowashes’ new Somebody sports the expansive drive and warmth often claimed as exclusive properties of vintage vinyl.  Fearless leader K. Sowash comments, ”It represents how we are live.” This compatibly caffeinated  release party includes the rare return of TKS touring bassist Brett Helling’s Cabdrivers, performing vivid favorites “Box of Finger Paintings, “Bleeding Archaic,” “Dirty Blanket,” and “Troubled Teen Mantra.” Plus, TKS’s Lonn Schubert summons the scorched sugar blast of his earlier band Harlem Airshaft, whose Cleveland peers Machine Go Boom’s Mikey Machine unveils his Safeties.

05/05 @ Tree Bar, 887 Chambers Rd., 10 p.m.

Kobo Live Second Anniversary

Kobo’s five-night spree of Central Ohio bands starts with a pinata mix, from Alert New London’s power pop trajectories to The Lost Revival’s acoustic set, which distills theatrics into restless hobo drama. Then we’re offered a more consistently mellow evening, although one including Saintseneca’s guaranteed “laconic sing-alongs, speed-strummed mountain dulcimers, and tambourine-filled trash cans.” The rest is solid rock, including Cadaver Dogs’ rabid dedication, She Bears’ ravenous contemplation, fried ice cream slabs from the George Elliot Underground, Ease The Medic’s careening balladry, and stylishly scruffy Bicentennial Bear. 23 groups in all, at current count.

05/08-12 @ Kobo Live, 2590 N High St., 8 p.m.

St Vincent/Shearwater

“Your skin is so fair, it’s not fair,” the wide-eyed, willowy lady sings, over and over, whole swaying over a little bridge of crystalline keyboard arpeggios. Eventually, with perfect timing, she comes to the line, ”You remind me,” and art-rocker Annie Clark, AKA St. Vincent, once again makes her guitar shake up several dimensions simultaneously. The people in her songs are true romantics, zoning out and zooming in--to “that hole in your tee-shirt,” for instance, so be prepared. With equally stage-wise ambition, Shearwater’s current touring line-up emphasizes the brainy appetite of 2012’s Animal Joy

 05/08 @  The Newport, 1722 N High St., 7 p.m.

Jacob Fred Jazz Odyssey

 Oklahoma’s Jacob Fred Jazz Odyssey are sometimes dazzling and always sharp-eyed.  2011’s The Race Riot Suite presents an original 12-part composition based on the 1921 obliteration of Tulsa’s Greenwood District, an unacceptably prosperous community of African-Americans. From the witty ballroom celebration of “Black Wall Street” to ongoing conflicts and resolutions, listeners get an illuminating ride on history’s wheel. In tonight’s performance of The Race Riot Suite, JFJO’s piano, lap steel guitar, upright bass, and drums encounter a horn section, including robustly imaginative tenor saxophonist Mark Southerland and ace OSU musicians.

05/12 @ The Wexner Center, 1871 N. High St., 8 p.m.

Rock On The Range

Armor up, as ROTR 2012 fills the skies with flying squadrons of all kindsa rockers. Columbus pop metal specialists Attack Attack!, sinful Cincy glamsters Foxy Shazam and Woodshock champions Bobaflex will be in a position to figuratively dive-bomb delicious dinosaurs Megadeth, brainiac upstarts Mastodon, and infective insomniac Rob Zombie. Elder statesman-of-the-durty-plates Slash might well point toward navigation through the still-smoking membrane of Cypress Hill, the re-applied mascara of Marilyn Manson, the irrepressible social commentary of Five Finger Death Punch, the siren songs of Lacuna Coil, and the working-girl dominatrix romance of Halestorm.

05/18-20 @  Crew Stadium, One Black & Gold Blvd., Fri., 6 p.m., Sat.-Sun., 11:30 a.m.

AraabMuzik/NastyNasty

“Columbus to ‘natti...If you know like I know/You should lie low, killa/I used to get it in Ohio.” Cam’ron’s “Get It In Ohio” was distinctively produced by AraabMuzik, an equally strong DJ. AM's urban atmospherics swirl through a regenerative core of sampled soul music and the foreboding undertones of anonymous sources, all of which get chopped and channeled via MPC electropercussion, especially live. Why bother with laptop mapping, when you can hit the pads like that? Neo-bass guy NastyNasty also mixes beats and vocal bites on the fly.

05/19 @ Skully’s, 1151 N. High St., 8 p.m.

Primus/Gogol Bordello

How did a San Francisco-based power trio of Rush fans come to cultivate and flaunt their images as high-res, high-IQ, high-tech and just plain high rednecks? What the heck, Primus impresario/pit-crew boss Les Claypool always declares, “I come from a long line of garage mechanics,” and 2011’s Green Naugahyde stays in the spin with notorious off-road classics like “Jerry Was A Racecar Driver.” Meanwhile, the globe-rolling mustache and eloquent rasp of Eugene Hutz keep Gogol Bordello’s Ukrainian/Brooklynian/Brazilian/ gypsy/Jewish/folk/punk roots fragrant, in a gnarly blender of tuneful tumult. 

05/23 @ The LC, 405 Neil Ave., 7 p.m.

Larry Keel & Natural Bridge/Cowboy Hillbilly Hippy Folk

Guitarist Larry Keel’s prize-winning flat-picking cuts across old and new traditions of Americana, while his wfe Jenny plays bass and sings tenor. With Natural Bridge, they keep the barbecue smoking and the barns dancing. Columbus-based Cowboy Hillbilly Hippy Folk's Paul Painter reports, “We are exploring the outer space reaches of what we call Electric Appalachian. We never play things the same way twice, it is all about listening to each other...Good Vibes is where we come from!”

05/31 @ Woodlands Tavern, 1200 W Third Ave., 8 p.m.


MusiCal (June 2012)

 By Don Allred


Lukas Nelson & Promise of the Real/Molly Winters

Wasted keeps Lukas Nelson & Promise of the Real swaying on a rope bridge of good times, good luck and good faith. Likewise onstage: amid the rhythm section’s percussive investigations, Nelson squeezes an occasional scream from his deep-toned, skybound, Allmanesque guitar, parting the strata just enough to confide, "I can hear the wind/Whisper like a kid/’I treat you like I want to be treated.” Columbus balladeer Molly Winters is a compatible keeper of the flame and midnight oil, as a gracefully diligent, candidly romantic, expert observer of herself and others. 

06/05 @ Woodlands Tavern, 1200 W Third Ave., 8 p.m.

Battles

Battles guitarist/bassist Dave Konopka draws on the sleek complexity of Lynx, drummer John Stanier is shrapnel from metal-math-mosh vets Helmet, while Ian Williams, who tends to play keyboards and guitar simultaneously, is a party particle from artcore’s Don Caballero. Battles’ collective legacy of meta-mutant fun took more leaps after frontman Tyondai Braxton split: they gene-spliced guest vocalists into 2011’s exhilarating Gloss Drop, now magically mirrored by Dross Glop’s mixologists. Live, Battles’ inventiveness gets suspenseful: will they melt down, or pull more neon-eyed chocolate rabbits out of their hats? Both, if we’re lucky!

06/05 @ Outland Live, 95 Liberty St., 7 p.m.

Vanity Theft/Enemies!

On The Right Amount of Distance, Springboro-launched Vanity Theft’s goth-pop sonic armor becomes ever more telling in the graveyard of wimpy boyfriends, as VT briskly confess/command, “My Eee, Gee, Oh,/Is not ready to let you go/Make me/Work with you.” For Desolation Dreams, ex- OSU staff brat/new Enemies! ringleader Aaron Lee Tasjan would  “watch the warehouse across the street get robbed, write a song, and wait for the cops. For once, they weren’t there because of something I did.” Uncaught and catchy, Enemies! seize each fresh excuse to party.

06/06 @ Kobo Live, 2590 N High St., 8 p.m.

Girl Talk/G-Side/Expensive Sh*t

Punk, crunk, bubblegum, bounce; hotel, motel, your Mama’s Top 10: all are catnip for the mashups of DJ Girl Talk. Rap duo G-Side’s live-from-Sweden “Stay-cation” beguilingly preaches that you too can have a home away from home while still at home, given the right vibe. They’re traveling with singers Joi Turner and PH, plus DJ CP of Block Beataz. Club monks Expensive Sh*t eternally renew rowdy vows:”In the name of the phasor, the drum, and the 808...while you ride the wall and try to figure out the deep signal chains.” Amen!

06/08 @ The LC, 405 Neil Ave., 7 p.m.

Dancehall Queen

For this event, Jamaica-born MC/DJ Abba Blade, whose theme song is “Path to Success,”  hereby summons courageous dancehall contestants and other music lovers from “all over the world.” Blade’s co-hosts, the irrepressible Fudgie Springer and Breezy Banton, no doubt second that commotion. Blade’s Columbus colleagues, Roots High Power Sound System, whose recent cookout on The Everton Blender Spring Reggae Mix was quite tantalizing, will pump the bass culture galaxies. Ditto Cleveland’s New Horizons and Lady Dynamq, who specializes in spinning reggae, dancehall, soca, and calypso, seasoned with hip-hop, r&b, and zouk.

06/09 @ Alrosa Villa, 5055 Sinclair Rd, 9 p.m

Lindsey Buckingham

Vocalist/composer/guitar virtuoso Lindsey Buckingham’s gifts can be matched by sheer flash, as ingeniously seasoned popcraft and reflection spin off into jangle and wail---no wonder he and Stevie Nicks vaulted venerable voyagers Fleetwood Mac over the mega-platinum moon. Relationship drama compulsively risked group implosion, but also compressed into crystalline Mac tracks and Buckingham’s solo hits, such as “Trouble” and “Go Insane.” On this unaccompanied acoustic tour, determined to “express more with less,” the still excitable ol’ boy brings selections from his new Seeds We Sew, previous LB album highlights, and deftly adapted Mac classics.

06/16 @ The Southern Theatre, 21 E. Main St., 8 p.m.

Tony Monaco Trio

The Tony Monaco Trio is something of a Columbus-to-the-world jazz supergroup, delivered via the magnetic crossroads of Hammond B3 organist Monaco, guitarist/multi-instrumentalist Derek DiCenzo, and drummer Reggie Jackson. They’re solid, mobile citizens, converging and diverging, yet commonly ruling clubs, classrooms, and concert halls. Their sound is effervescent and potent, whiskey and soda, with funky grooves swirling and surging around and over the chilly rocks of bop-based modernist constellations. There’s no need to park your brains or your carcass too far from the dance floor, or wherever you find your most congenial scenes.

06/22 @ Comfest, Goodale Park, 120 West Goodale St,10 p.m.

Santigold/Theophilus London

“If we can’t fly, we’ll run,” kaleidoscopic art-pop diva Santigold murmurs with bluesy resolution, maybe even resignation: she knows she’ll never sit still. On her recent Master Of My Make-Believe, commitment and freedom keep Santigold darting and hovering in the twilight valley of electro, hip-hop, alt rock, and world music. Rapper/singer Theophilus London feels and builds on a similar tension in songs from his forthcoming Rose Island, as faithfully elusive angel “Lisa” and “Big Spender” ‘s sample-rich, regally whimsical siren keep him reeling out and in.

06/28 @ Newport, 1722 N. High St., 7 p.m.

Paleface/Matthew Sullivan & Black River Gypsies/Cowboy Hillbilly Hippy Folk/Hocking River String Band

Singer/songwriter/picker/painter Paleface is truly indie, yet empathetic enough to work with obsessive visionary Daniel Johnston and mellow fellows the Avett Brothers. He promises a “high energy” folk-rock trio, with drumming songbird Mo Samalot and guitarist/harmonist Grey Revell. Columbus-based Matthew Sullivan & Black River Gypsies, formerly Tin Hearts, now seek greater variety, while tracks in progress retain characteristically tuneful electricity. Cowboy Hillbilly Hippy Folk’s sociable adventures also suit their Ohio neighbors Hocking River String Band, whose covers and originals roll with traditional and contemporary Americana, periodically boosted by “Scruggs-style banjo riffs and turnarounds.”

06/29 @ Woodlands Tavern, 1200 W. Third Ave.,  5 p.m


Friday, August 29, 2025

MusiCal (July 2012)

 By Don Allred

Joe Walsh

Convivial singer/songwriter/lead guitarist Joe Walsh spent much of his childhood in Columbus, then ascended from Kent State with the radio-ready, festival-relishing James Gang. Walsh leavened 70s rock star heaven with wry lines, squeaking past the dramatic intro of his solo hit, “Life’s Been Good”: “My Maserati does 185/I lost my license, now I don’t drive.” Nevertheless, his lifestyle went habitually wild, especially while flying with the Eagles. The catchy candor of 2012’s Analog Man will meet and greet Walsh’s career-spanning audience favorites with sobriety’s star-spangled sonic tonic, on Independence Day.


07/04 @ Dublin Coffman High School Stadium, 6780 Coffman Rd, 5 p.m.


No Coast Fest

Reggae and rock shake a musical family tree tonight, especially when Brooklyn’s Folkadelics spark Jamaican traces of hip-hop’s roots. They’d “rather be a lover than a fighter--start the commotion!” “Folsom Prison Blues” morphs into a mighty chain-gang ripple, while fresh inflections rouse the careful cool of “Norwegian Wood.” Equally organic Columbus hybrids Devil’s Lettuce and Shrub (whose studio projects currently ingest the massive cred of rock producer Sylvia Massey and Ohio beat transformer Blueprint) also provide cogent smoke signals over the rugged rainbow. Ditto Minneapolis trio Jon Wayne and the Pain, who promise “reggaetronic dub.”

07/07 @ Woodlands Tavern, 1200 W Third Ave., 8 p.m.


Margot & The Nuclear So And So’s/Winter Makes Sailors

Margot & The Nuclear So And So’s’ Rot Gut, Domestic tilts through fractured stained glass love hangovers and breeze-blessed “Prozac Rock.” Margot multi-instrumentalist Erik Kang will sit in with Columbus neighbors Winter Makes Sailors “for a couple of numbers. He’s all over the new record,” says WMS’s Sean Gardner. This show includes some forthcoming songs, like "Swearing at Motorists,” which Gardner describes as ”a tribute to the band, also a true story of pure road rage turned melodic anthem.” As with Margot, we’ll hear just what can sound so good about feeling bad.

07/13 @ The Basement, 391 Neil Ave., 7 p.m.


All Good Festival

Along with the Grateful Dead’s living legacy of Phil Lesh & Friends, the Mickey Hart Band, and Bob Weir with Bruce Hornsby and Branford Marsalis (yet no typically overlapping festival sets), AGF includes The Flaming Lips’ psych-pop hijinks, Lotus’s rocktronica, Yonder Mountain String Band’s joy-riding Americana, and Michael Franti’s funky crossroads commentaries. Charities and the arts groove together; various local legends launch the Late Late Night series of dubstep, house, and other electric dreams. 

07/19-22 @ Legend Valley Concert Venue And Campground, Thornville, noon


Columbus Rocks The Cure

Columbus Rocks The Cure’s charitable events are helmed by Amee BellWanzo of Black Eyed Betty, whose resourceful practicality also applies to musical self-expression. They’re classic punks; nevertheless, “Slipped Away” matches undulating verses with abrasive breaks, like the Pretenders meeting Motorhead. The Girls! slyly apply booze to romantic wounds, versatile Millur Boyette specialize in stress-testing TV themes, Post Coma Network channel plush dance rhythms, and Fresh Wreckage rock some funky, juicy positivity. All proceeds purchase gas cards and wigs for local cancer survivors, via American Cancer Society Patient Navigator and Columbus’s Hair Theatre Fund.

07/20 @ Skully’s, 1151 N. High St., 9 p.m.


Indigo Girls/Shadowboxers

“Now when the springtime comes around/I’m gonna lay it down/Gonna give ‘em a smile/And just a little doubt.” No doubt about that vow from the Indigo Girls, who, like many a good-hearted, well-meaning woman, “just can’t keep from makin’ promises.” Although the folk-rocking indie role models have maintained their mindful momentum for nearly thirty years, Amy Ray and Emily Saliers show no complacency. On Saliers’ birthday, the Indigo Girls greet us with full-band support from the robust vocal and instrumental harmonies of Atlanta’s Shadowboxers, who also get their own opening set.

07/22 @ The LC Pavilion, 405 Neil. Ave, 7 p.m.


Best Coast/Those Darlins

On Best Coast’s second album, The Only Place, Beverly Cosentino stares down a break-up, though sharp edges curve back into shades of reflected gray, so she rides an emotional undertow, balancing increasingly rich melodies and succinct strength, sometimes with a tough East Coast-associated Italian-American accent, Cosentino and her multi-instrumental Merlin, Bobb Bruno, currently cruising with their shimmering garage-pop quartet, are supported by twangy janglers Those Darlins: three sharper-than-rhinestone gals and their drumming pal Linwood, often armed with another smart answer to bad love, and even the mirror.

07/23 @ Newport Music Hall, 1722 High St., 7 p.m.


Shockwave Metal Festival 2012

With its three surviving founders back on board, times guitarist Daniel “Chewy” Mongrain, thrash-prog visionary quartet Voivod provides strenuous inspiration for Shockwave 2012. Matt DeVries, veteran of Cleveland’s Chimaira, now extends his guitar smarts into bass tentacles, shadowing Fear Factory lead guitarist Dino Cazares’ seven- and eight-string probes. Fear Factory’s The Industrialist projects the progress of a Frankensteinian pilgrim. Cattle Decapitation’s Monolith of Inhumanity, though more pessimistic, reaches ravenously for new infusions of melodic mayhem. Shockwave’s dark, hearty catharsis also blood harvests Revocation, served with the viciously nutritious stew of Havok, Dirge Within, Vildhjarta, The Browning, and Forged In Flame. 

07/27 @ Alrosa Villa, 5055 Sinclair Rd., 2 p.m.


New Riders of the Purple Sage

Jerry Garcia and singer/picker David Nelson’s pre-Dead country adventures morphed into New Riders Of The Purple Sage. Nelson, with Garcia’s steel guitar successor, Buddy Cage (participant in Dylan’s Blood On The Tracks), reformed New Riders in 2005, recruiting Hot Tuna guitarist Michael Falzarano, plus two from self-stamped “swamp groove“ unit Stir Fry, bassist Ronnie Penque and drummer Johnny Markowski. NRPS roll deft jams and tight tunes, many (from 2009’s Where I Come From and 2012’s 17 Pine Avenue) written with Garcia lyricist Robert Hunter, who keeps Riders swirling around a “Barracuda Moon,” and curtly invokes the “difference between a bad loan/And a debt.” Nelson’s subtly Dylanesque delivery underscores such lines with dry wit. Expect their aromatic hit, “Panama Red.”

07/27 @ Woodlands Tavern, 1200 W Third Ave. ,8 p.m.


Hoodoo Soul Band

Audience-wise, the eleven-man, umpteen-instrument, almost eighteen-year-old Hoodoo Soul Band’s Boomers and Gen Xers get regenerated, while twenty-somethings learn to burn through “Sex Machine,” “What Is Hip?,” “Ring of Fire,” and a customization of the Black Crowes’ version of Otis Redding’s “Hard To Handle.”  Plus: Parliament-Funkadelic, Average White Band, Marvin Gaye--not to mention Columbus cowboy Dwight Yoakam’ s “Guitars, Cadillacs.” Paul Simon’s “Late In The Evening” and “You Can Call Me Al” provide percussive trade-offs. Also offering voices, horns, guitars, keyboards, and a harmonica, everybody is a star, ‘cause opportunity’s always knocking.

07/29 @ Rumba Cafe, 2507 Summit St., 10 p.m.



MusiCal (August 2012)

By Don Allred


The Band Perry/Dustin Lynch

The Band Perry’s mostly self-written country-pop hits never get trapped in country-traditional fatalism. True, “If I Die Young” is a tad morbid, but Kimberly Perry is luxuriously stretching her wings, knowing she’ll make a good-looking angel. She also learns selling out doesn’t pay: “I never liked the taste of crow/But Baby, I ate it,” she tells her guy in “You Lie,” or would, if he ever showed up. Like the resourceful Perry siblings, young Dustin Lynch is fascinated by love’s drama, without getting (too) hung up: “I guess God kinda likes/Cowboys and angels.”

08/02 Ohio State Fair, Celeste Center, 717 E. 17th Ave., 7p.m.

The-Dream/Miguel

The-Dream and Miguel are steadily rising stars, easing and squeezing contemporary r&b between hip-hop, rock, funk, live bands, electronica--whatever it takes to score each man’s own hits, and ones in collaboration with other artists. The-Dream sometimes includes hip-hop staccato in his singing, where rap-associated boasts can encounter vulnerable moods. Miguel’s vulnerability is a given: he carefully applies melodic solace, while floating over anxious beats, and even when requesting a “Quickie.” Both artists are commonly compared to Prince, with whom they share a classically quirky approach to uncommon delights.

08/03 @ Ohio State Fair, Celeste Center, 717 E. 17th Ave., 7 p.m.

Dublin Irish Festival

The Dublin Irish Festival delivers a variety of active and relaxed enjoyment. You can take singing lessons with unpretentiously cosmic folkie Niamh Parsons, and fiddle with the masterfully classy Eileen Ivers. Or just groove with the Tannahill Weavers’ freshly traditional dances and ballads, a range honored by the folk-punk of Mahones and Black 47.  Gaelic Storm’s Celtic-global atmospherics include barroom weather advisories like “Chucky Timm,” named for their formidable drinking buddy, also Dayton’s 1968 Olympic bobsledder. Area artists include singer/storyteller Bob Ford and his band Ragamuffins, plus the stout-hearted General Guinness Band.

08/03/04/05 @ Coffman Park, 5600 Post Rd, Dublin, first shows:4:15 p.m./11:15 a.m./10:45 a.m.

Dethklok/Lamb of God/Gojira

Cartoon Network’s metal stars Dethklok boldly bestride both sides of the ever-thinning line between flesh and fantasy. Vast images of Dethklok’s virtual virtuosos rule the screen above the stage, where a live soundtrack is channeled by Gene Hoglan, whose drums drove both Dethklok albums, bassist Bryan "Liberty" Beller, who materialized on Dethalbum II, and Mike Keneally, successor of Steve Freakin' Vai as Frank Zappa’s designated “stunt guitarist.” Keneally was born for Dethklok’s deftly deadpan humor, and the brawny harmonic agility of “Black Fire Upon Us.”  Virginia’s Lamb of God revel in their righteously woolly Resolution, and France’s Gojira unveil L’Enfant Sauvage.

08/10 @ The LC, 405 Neil Ave., 6 p.m.

A Tribute To Queen

Columbus Queen tribute band Mr. Fahrenheit And The Lover Boys began in the 2006 brainstorm of Phil Cogley and Jacob Wooten, colleagues in the Weezer tribute band Pinkertones. Rising above indie irony, Queen’s electric rainbow is a challenge and a release, especially for Cogley, whose other self-challenge, the valiantly live-mixing one-man-band Saturday Giant, finds no time for glamtastic glory. Members of sludge metal’s ravenous White Wolves, tempestuously progressive Sleepers Awake, funktronic Shemale Fiesta, and OU’s Math Department also meld with chamber-rocking combos Ghost Shirt and Milano for two hours of Queen classics, plus some curveballs.

08/10 @ Kobo Live, 2590 N. High St., 8 p.m.

Wino & Conny Ochs

Inspired by classic death-of-the-60s early metal (the kind with a psychedelic afterglow), singer-guitarist Wino Weinrich has always demonstrated how just electrically the positive and negative can connect. While keeping several bands on his speed-dial, Wino also brings the dark and light to stripped-down folk-metal sets. Heavy Kingdom, with poetically inclined picker Conny Ochs, finds the power duo mixing it up like Beowulf and Grendel, down at the old mead hall. They’re energetically ready to “Take it all the way around/As the wheels are spinning off/Don’t let it bring you down/Too fast!”

08/19 @ Ace of Cups, 2619 N. High St., 10 p.m.

Black Swans

Long known for their thinking-out-loud, freebird approach, Columbus’s folk-rocking Black Swans were hatched by singer-guitarist Jerry DeCicca and violinist Noel Sayre, playing together since 1995. When Sayre drowned in 2008, the band set aside their album in progress, Don’t Blame The Stars. 2010’s wryly exploratory Words Are Stupid sported Sayre’s recently discovered tracks. 2011’s completed Don’t Blame... included Sayre at his peak, while the new Occasion For Song candidly deals with his tenacious influence, via the Swans’ steady-rolling rhythms, searchlight guitars, and other immediately engaging sounds, centered by DeCicca’s all-weather reveries.

08/24 @ Rumba Cafe, 2507 Summit St., 10 p.m.

Skitzo Show

The multi-media Skitzo Show is the living dream of Electro Cult Circus, conceptual artists dedicated to giving all senses and audiences a tune-up, long before morphing into an actual band. They namecheck Beck as a cheeky inspiration for the paisley-beat core of their own mischief. Music is the springboard for live and video apparitions, including much comedy. ECC’s Madlab colleague Stephen Woolsey predicts “interviews with Columbus pseudo-celebrities.” All in all, Electro Cult Circus’s ringmasters welcome us to a “hot bath of enlightenment and laughter for the pineal gland to open and devour with joy.”

08/28 @ Kobo Live, 2590 N. High St., 9 p.m.


MusiCal (September 2012)

By Don Allred

Giuda

Italy’s Giuda take us back to to the early 70s, when real men wore satin and had lots of big glam hits.  Faces’ cage-rattling “Borstal Boys” is the only cover frequently performed, but Giuda’s own songs, including “Get It Over,” “Racey Roller,” “Here Comes Saturday Night,” and “Tartan Pants” channel classic soccer stadium-rocking sounds. Expect echoes of T. Rex’s “Bang A Gong (Get It On),” Gary Glitter’s pep rally essential “Rock And Roll Part 2,” and Slade, originators of later hair metal chart-toppers like “Mama Weer All Crazee Now.” And how!

09/05 @ Ace of Cups, 2619 N. High St., 9 p.m.

Whiskey Daredevils/Righteous Buck and the Skull Scorchers

Cincy’s Whiskey Daredevils guitarist Gary Siperko recently toured with Cleveland’s resurrected garage astronauts Rocket From The Tombs. Such experiences give the WD brand of country punkabilly punch a little more spice, which is always nice. No matter what happens, the tireless Daredevils live to refuel: “There ain’t no champagne in this bottle/There ain’t no diamond in this ring/That man there ain’t no doctor/But he has/ Just the thing!” C-bus movers Righteous Buck and the Skull Scorchers thrive on what they specify as Olentangy Delta blues, electrifying atmospheric originals and traditional murder ballads too.

09/07 Ace of Cups,  2619 N. High St., 9 p.m

Nobunny/Bad Sports/Dead Girlfriends/Pink Reason

Nobunny can only offer you his fuzzy bunny head, undies, and garage-pop combo. That’s enough, especially when his anthem, “Nobunny Loves You,” based on Youngstown’s Human Beinz hit “Nobody But Me,” transforms a thousand “no”s into an Easter egg hailstorm of shiny affirmations. Nobunny knows that a lot of people, places and things can only be reconciled in songs. His funny-to-spooky solutions are emulated by sparky, high-octane Texas refugees Bad Sports, shadowy yet sociable Dead Girlfriends, plus Columbus cases Pink Reason, who currently mix rising guitar lines and descending vocal melodies into classy catastrophes.

09/10 @ Ace of Cups, 2619 N. High St., 8 p.m.

Sleepers Awake

Sleepers Awake share their name with Bach’s cantata concerning Judgement Day, and they were always ready for that. On 2009’s Priests of The Fire, they responded to “The Summoning,” not by getting in line, but by “dancing beneath a shattered moon,” then undertaking an epic, prog-metal journey toward Judgement. They’re still paying their toll with red-hot notes. “Playing it live is like getting mauled by a beast,” SA happily report about “Burdened,” on Transcension, officially unleashed September 29. Tonight’s pre-release listening party also includes an unplugged, probably un-mellow set of older and newer tunes.

09/13 @ Kobo Live, 2590 N. High St., 8 p.m.


Rush

As more bands blend progressive rock and metal, while more US politicians invoke laissez-faire polemicist/novelist Ayn Rand, well-preserved Canadian libertarian power trio Rush seems ahead of the curve. They’ve long since learned to test their early notions with the tension of adventurous urges and complex results. On Rush’s recent Clockwork Angels, a questing youth struggles to sort out imposed and rebellious ideals. Drummer/composer Neil Peart dynamically battles the controlling “Watchmaker,” aided by Geddy Lee Roth’s Yoda-like vocals and maze of bass, in sizzling synch with Alex Lifeson’s six- and twelve-string guitars. Their shows know about visual appeal and Spinal Tap too.

09/20 @ Nationwide Arena, 200 W. Nationwide Blvd., 7:30 p.m.

Werk Out Music & Arts Festival

Werk Out is curated by The Werks, Dayton and Columbus’s proudly proclaimed “psychedelic dance rockers,” whose enterprising energy is imaginatively extended in this year’s line-up. Electro-rockers Lotus, EOTO, and punk guitarist/rapper/DJ Solo encounter Central Ohio’s live painter/DJ Heady Ruxpin, DJ Mangua, and Carma/Attak, all co-founders of Bass Jam. Hookahville Festival’s parents, ekoostik hookah, bring rootsy jams, ditto Under The Sun, who launched Columbus’s charitable Music For Peace Festival. Also: funk, reggae, fusion, bluegrass, world music, and the Everyone Orchestra.

09/20-23 @ Legend Valley Concert Venue And Campground, 7583 Kindle Rd, Thornville, gates open: noon 09/20-23

Phillip Fox Band/George Elliot Underground/Slim White & The Averys

The Phillip Fox Band combines rock, country, and a little Latin in the rippling drive of  adaptable musical vehicles, as Fox’s watchful, rough-edged warmth draws from Mellencamp's and Seger’s heydays. Motor City Blood, out tonight, tracks the migratory roots of long-married couples still putting on “dancin’ boots,” and long-distance lovers confiding, “Sometimes the open road/Helps us to really know ourselves.” Fox’s folks ride an all-weather learning curve, ditto rowdy travelers in The George Elliot Underground’s self-described “swampternative” hybrid machines, while Slim White & The Averys promise the classic country crossroads of “suffering, redemption, and full-on honky tonking. “
09/21 @ Kobo Live, 2590 N. High St., 8 p.m.

Sister Sparrow and the Dirty Birds/Hollis Brown

When you hear Sister Sparrow give instructions to “Shake your thing/Make it rain,” you’ll know the garden will grow. Husky-voiced and articulate, sometimes speedy but never hasty, Sparrow also veers through bluesy, restless contemplation, with the eight-man Dirty Birds’ brass, reeds, bass, drums, guitar, and guitar-like harmonica appropriately supporting her every mood and point. Equally bold young New York City indie roots rockers Hollis Brown took their name from one of Bob Dylan’s most elemental songs, and they recently covered Willie Dixon’s classic “Spoonful” with Deer Tick’s formidably intense John McCauley.

09/21 @ The Basement, 391 Neil Ave., 7 p.m.

São Paulo Underground 

Brazil’s São Paulo is one of the world’s biggest cities, and its somewhat surreal, rough-edged industrial vitality seemed an intriguingly compatible challenge for composer/performer Rob Mazurek, veteran of the pioneering collective Chicago Underground. São Paulo Underground, comprised of Mazurek and three versatile Brazilian instrumentalists, also reflects his time with UK synth-pop combo Stereolab and Chicago’s jazz-influenced post-rockers Tortoise. Most typically, SPU evokes the spirit of Miles Davis’s shape-shifting melodic grooves, as Marzurek’s cornet makes a rich, sometimes darkly smoldering impact on the urban earth of 21st Century Brazilian  acoustic/electric/electronic soundscapes.

09/23 @ Wexner Center Performance Space, 1871 N. High St., 7 p.m.

Dane Terry

Columbus-to-Brooklyn singer/songwriter/sci-fi fan Dane Terry’s cabaret space odyssey began as he discovered secret connections between little ditties about, for instance, “Earth predators in space, and a fun day out with my uncles.” With influences including Cole Porter and country classics, Terry’s always relished musical narrative, further developed via well-timed improvisation, as he sharpens his piano and acting skills.  Tonight’s show, The Parring Estate, explores the legacy of a strange and marvelous inventor. This concert, CityMusic Columbus’s annual fundraiser, will be in a residential area; you’ll know it by CMC’s signs and balloons.

09/27 @ CityMusic Columbus, 4272 Dublin Rd. 6:30 p.m. 

Karate Coyote/The Receiver/Indigo Wild/Charles Erickson

Tonight’s bands ride and guide potentially mellow melodies and harmonies into urgent mergers. “Undulate and oscillate/I can’t change what I am,” Karate Coyote’s male and female voices confess on their brand new self-titled second full-length album, where art-pop acrobatics play off straight-ahead drive, as concise notes (to selves and significant others) get nailed to KC’s songswept drama. Meanwhile, The Receiver’s space station perspective melds with the translucent blue views of Indigo Wild’s forthcoming “Highpoint” and “Pacific,” spinning around an imperiled world. It’s all good; Clampdown Party DJ Charles Erickson’s got everybody’s back.

09/28 @ Skully’s, 1151 N. High St.. 9 p.m.

Zac Brown Band

“Dixie Fried,” the Zac Brown Band’s biggest hit so far, got them tagged as country, and ZBB has no problem with that. Nor a problem with bluegrass, folk, reggae, Southern rock, jams, and even yacht rock, if you include their collaboration with Jimmy Buffett. They’ve also performed with Alan Jackson, Trombone Shorty, the Dave Matthews Band, and Gregg Allman. 2010’s live Pass The Jar is a good place to start; 2012’s Uncaged extends their studio approach. The Latin and r&b background of recently added percussionist Daniel de los Reyes doesn’t hurt either.

09/28 @ Crew Stadium, 1 Black & Gold Blvd.,7 p.m. 


Thursday, August 28, 2025

MusiCal (October 2012)

 By Don Allred


Ryan Smith

“I think I’ve had too much/’Cause I’ve stopped telling lies.” Equipped with urgently concise vocal delivery, elegantly economical keyboard sounds, and probably a long-page legal pad, Columbus singer/songwriter Ryan Smith works out the strategies and stages of a relationship. On Waiting, he persuasively pictures the present and several steps ahead, while life runs a longer game (maybe). Smith’s show, especially recommended to Tim Easton fans, is in the free weekly Local Brews and Burgers series. Tables and chairs will be set up on the Rich Street side of the Commons, near the Carousel.

10/04 @ Columbus Commons, Main Garage: 55 E. Rich St., 5:30 p.m.


Shovels & Rope

Shovels & Rope are Americana singer/songwriter/multi-instrumentalists Cary Ann Hearst and Michael Trent, a committed couple who never settle down, or settle for less than true love and cheap (or at least no-frills) thrills. 2012’s O Be Joyful tracks risky ramblers teaming up, learning the mixing and measuring of pleasures. Thrills-wise, when Hearst later calls, “Come down here and make some sense of it all,” she’s affectionately addressing someone known as Wrecking Ball. Appropriately so: after all, Hearst sent “Hell’s Bells” prowling through True Blood’s third season, and S&R’s sly, Southern Gothic beauty travels many a moonlit mile.

10/06 @ Rumba Cafe, 2507 Summit St., 9 p.m.

Fiona Apple

“I just want to feel everything” is singer/songwriter Fiona Apple’s musical motto, and though she evidently has limited choice in the matter, she’s determined to make the creative most of it. Apple’s 2012 album, The Idler Wheel..., traces the way pain “fits me like a second skeleton,” leading her to try out deft leaps of logic and fair-minded balancing acts, especially inspired by suitably complicated romantic relationships. Hard-won maturity gets tested on stage, as Apple also relives the drama of earlier songs, while her band recharges her rich voice, piano, percussion, and globe-spinning dance moves.

10/07 @ Palace Theatre, 34 W. Broad St., 8 p.m.

Tiesto/Dada Life

Tiesto was one of the first DJs to perform epic solo stadium sets, drawing his audience from dance club voyagers and pop-rock living room listeners. “Silence,” Tiesto’s 2000 remix featuring Sarah McLachlan, was a crossover landmark, and he’s always had a knack for mixing ethereal voices with bold beats. 2012’s Club Life Volume Two: Miami even gets Coldplay’s “Paradise” and Goyte’s “Someone That I Used To Know” chasing zebra heatwaves. Also featuring several shades of house, traces of trance, and newer infusions of dubstep, Tiesto’s five-hour all ages show opens with mischievous DJ duo Dada Life.

10/10 @ Nationwide Arena, 200 W. Nationwide Blvd., 7 p.m.

Cadaver Dogs

Offspring of ska combo Sofapunch and Famecast-winning pop-punks Look Afraid, Cadaver Dogs shred most of their pop component like the Sunday paper, although the punk-metal-boogie trio does flaunt its rabidly catchy, Mad Max-worthy turns, while scarring the partylyptic desert highway of song in cracked mirrorshades. This Rover's night out will include some enchanted peeings from their December-aimed release, Superloose. Also pumped by touring, C. Dogs advise, “We'll be ready to rock our hometown fans harder than ever. Bring a poncho.” Other bands will appear; names are still to be announced at presstime.

10/13 @ Kobo Live, 2590 N. High St., 8 p.m.

CHHF Fest

Exploratory roots crew CHHF’s roundup lassos local heroes and twang-stars from afar. We foresee song stylizer-deviser Molly Winters watchfully sailing by the Rumpke Mountain Boys’ trenchant trenchmouth “trashgrass”(their own tag), while the John Turck Trio and Matthew Sullivan’s Black Water Gypsies pursue cosmic cowgirl muses. Dynamic duos include the Paranormals and Crushed Out (formerly Boom Chick). Pigeons Playing Ping-Pong live up to their name. The Ramshacklers are most of the versatile Spikedrivers, in the mood for rock. Rusticated renaissance man Pete Anderson stirred up Dwight Yoakam’s best records. Prize-winning acoustic flat-picker Larry Keel’s Natural Bridge spans trans-genre goodness.

10/18-19 @ Woodlands Tavern, 1200 W. 3rd Ave., 6 p.m.

Tinariwen

Tinariwen are members of Africa’s stubbornly independent Turareg collective, who are often restless, sometimes rebellious, necessarily adaptable, and, in Tinariwen’s case, ready to rock. They started playing together about 35 years ago, around desert refugee campfires, where Tinariwen’s eerie, bluesy, Mali-based sounds also channeled late-night radio and bootleg cassette influences: psychedelia, reggae, Latin rock, and folk-rock. Tinariwen returned to less-amplified or acoustic atmospherics on much of 2011’s Tassili, but their shows build around such moments, in metamorphic, truly electric grooves, as vocal harmonies rise through guitars, bass, wooden flutes, handclaps, and other handmade percussion.

10/24 @ Wexner Center, 1871  N High St., 8 p.m.

Ekoostik Hookah/Under The Sun

Ekoostik Hookah keep their signature mix of psych-rock, jazzy urges, funky blues, and mountain sounds spinning out of Central Ohio, dedicated to finding fresh connections between time-tested routes. They invite comparison to other strong performers at a number of festivals, including their own Hookahville. Without seeming anxiously responsive to the currently surging trend of jamtronica, EH also aren’t too Dead-centric. Recent covers have ranged from the Beach Boys’ expansively mellow “Sail On Sailor” to the Doors’ sardonic sing-along, “Alabama Song (Whiskey Bar).” Under The Sun plug into the same spirit, regenerating more specifically electric juice.

10/27 @ Newport Music Hall, 1722 N. High St., 8 p.m.

Halloween Glow Bash 2012

Party rapper Meechie Nelson is The Fresh Prince of Columbus: self-crowned, but he’s earned it. The promising athlete jumped to music, inspired by lacrosse’ lifestyle--playing to win, winning to play. That’s the all-sporty art of it, from 2010’s fearless Therapy Session to 2011’s frathouse-levitating Hot Chicks and Lacrosse Sticks, to his latest, “Urban Nation/Ohio State Anthem.” Nelson’s “official DJ,” veteran studio/dancefloor wizard Corrupt, spins hip-hop, house, electro, whatever ingredient’s expedient. Gifted Minded Entertainment’s leader, Jet Pack JJ, further fuels enlightening opportunities to achieve lift-off and get your glow in gear.

10/30 @ Skully’s, 1151 N. High St.,  9 p.m.







Explanation

 By Don Allred These Music Calendars were in Columbus OH's 614 Magazine, posted here from the most recent to earliest (2009?). Warning: ...