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Cap’n Jazz wows sold-out crowd at Chicago’s Bottom Lounge



Cap’n Jazz at Bottom Lounge, Chicago, IL
From July 18, 2010
By: Derek Walker

It’s been a long time coming for fans of the Kinsellas’ late-80s super group, Cap’n Jazz. Those who weren’t lucky enough to catch the band’s unannounced 20-minute reunion gig in January were treated to not one but two shows at Chicago’s Bottom Lounge, located a convenient block or two away from the Pitchfork Festival grounds in Union Park.

Both shows sold out minutes after they went on sale, which left many hopefuls to turn to E-Bay and Craigslist to acquire a ticket for either of the life-changing shows. Or both. I unfortunately missed the Saturday show, but tried my luck Sunday by hovering around the venue before doors opened, skipping the entirety of Pavement’s set down the street in the process.

4810454352 46926f7fcc z Capn Jazz wows sold out crowd at Chicagos Bottom Lounge

I heard from friends who attended the night before the insanity a Cap’n Jazz reunion set provides. I’ve been in crazy, livid crowds before – as recently as Friday night when I caught Modest Mouse – so I sort of knew what to expect. Those expectations were far surpassed when the band tore into its first of 17 songs, “The Sands’ve Turned Purple.” Almost instantaneously, I was thrust frontward into the stage, then pulled back, then – well, you know how a mosh pit works.

The sheer lunacy provided by the guys who make up the band, each of whom is now in the mid-to-late 30s, was unreal. Tim Kinsella, frontman, occasional tambourine slammer and French horn blower, was especially animated. Even for him. Anybody who has attended a show for the defunct/on hiatus Make Believe knows how berserk the guy could be without a guitar in his hands, and Sunday was no different. No microphone stand or fan in the first 10 rows was safe from his constant flailing and many stage dives. One fan got nailed in the teeth with the microphone during “Yes, I Am Talking to You” – which she took like a pro, as she continued to scream her head off.

4810460384 9f964f1f78 z Capn Jazz wows sold out crowd at Chicagos Bottom Lounge

Midway through the energetic set, Tim tore his shirt off at the behest of the fans, his furry, sweaty chest acting as a Blarney Stone of sorts. Fans young and old, male and female all reached for Kinsella, hoping to touch history in the making. While guitarists Sam Zurick and Victor Villarreal, and bassist Davey von Bohlen were spot-on the entire performance, Mike Kinsella deserves special recognition for his drum work. Rarely, if ever, missing a beat, the ex-American Football and current Owen frontman seemed more at ease behind the kit than he does with the spotlight directly on him.

There was a lot of moshing, as is to be expected at shows like this, and a few overzealous fans leapt up to the stage and started dancing beside Tim Kinsella and playing air guitar next to Villarreal before security pushed them back into the crowd. This didn’t deter the band from strumming through the songs, though. If anything, it only encouraged them to try harder, play louder and give in to their emotions.

Tongues opened the set with a rather disturbing stage act, though not everybody might consider a topless, tattooed girl in a clown mask rolling around on the floor “disturbing.” If you’re reading this and you fall into that lot, rent “It.” Tim Curry stars, it’s pretty great. Tongues played a tight half-hour set which was fairly enjoyable, minus the freaky clown lady – that was just unnecessary. Plague Bringer performed second, and while their sound wasn’t my style, the individual members were thrilled to be there, opening for Cap’n Jazz.

4810462700 80851354b8 z Capn Jazz wows sold out crowd at Chicagos Bottom Lounge

It was a wild night and a great capper on a hectic Pitchfork Festival weekend. While I ended up sacrificing the opportunity to see Pavement, I lucked out and found a spot at Cap’n Jazz’s last show this size in Chicago perhaps ever. The band will be back at Wicker Park Fest later this month, and they will play the Pygmalion Festival in Champaign/Urbana come September. And after that, who knows? Mike is working on his sixth Owen LP, with a tentative release date of spring 2011. Davey is hard at work on the next Maritime record for new label Dangerbird Records, and he hopes to have it out by the beginning of 2011. Victor continues to work on his second solo record, and will be releasing a split 7-inch with math rock band Loose Lips Sink Ships. Tim looks to head back to Joan of Arc, alongside bassist Bobby Burg and drummer Theo Katsauonis. The three are billing themselves the “Joan of Arc Power Trio,” and have plans to release a new full-length in the upcoming months. And Sam is, well, Sam.

Whether or not these next handful of shows are the end of Cap’n Jazz remains to be seen. The reaction from fans, however, has been beyond anything I ever have witnessed, and that alone may lend itself to future reunions or one-off gigs. But then, maybe it will not.

Set list:
1. The Sands’ve Turned Purple
2. Ooh Do I Love You
3. Planet Shh
4. We Are Scientists!
5. Olerud
6. Forget Who We Are
7. Basil’s Kite
8. Little League
9. Oh Messy Life
10. Sergio Valente
11. Tokyo
12. In The Clear
13. Yes, I Am Talking To You
14. Que Suerte!
15. Precious (encore)
16. Take On Me (encore)
17. Puddle Splashers (encore)

4835819244 98e1dc7ec5 z Capn Jazz wows sold out crowd at Chicagos Bottom Lounge

Remaining shows for Cap’n Jazz:
July 31, 2010 – Chicago, IL at Wicker Park Fest
August 27, 2010 – San Francisco, CA at Bimbo’s 365
August 28, 2010 – Los Angeles, CA at Echoplex
September 25, 2010 – Urbana, IL at Canopy Club

VISIT CAP’N JAZZ

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Owen Live Videos @ Lincoln Hall


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Videos filmed by Derek Walker
@Lincoln Hall, Chicago IL

Songs filmed: Note To Self, New Song Untitled #1, New Song Untitled #2, Metallica Song #2

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Rumor: Cap’n Jazz, Owls to reunite?


capnjazz Rumor: Capn Jazz, Owls to reunite?

With Pavement’s reunion plans all but finalized, it was only a matter of time before other defunct acts added their name to the list. The latest: Chicago’s Cap’n Jazz. Read the full story

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Owen "New Leaves" | Album Review


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61W595C2DvL. SL500 AA240  Owen "New Leaves" | Album Review76/100
Written by: Derek Walker

It’s been three years, one marriage, one childbirth and a hell of a lot of shows since Mike Kinsella’s last album under the Owen label, meaning there is no excuse for this to not be good. Or at least different. And his fifth record, \’93New Leaves,\’94 is effective in satisfying both those criteria \’96 but to an extent.

There’s no real backstory needed on Kinsella, his ideologies or his influences. In interviews he is humble, kind and jokey. On stage he is more or less the same. But somewhere, sometime, somehow, between 2006′s \’93At Home With Owen\’94 and now, something jibed with him, be it the wife, the kid, the long nights or the early mornings with each, or with neither. His attitude has changed, certainly, as it should with age. But was anyone honestly expecting the scrawny 20something from American Football to finally, well, grow up? As \’93New Leaves\’94 shows, growing up is hard to do, especially when that entails seemingly growing out of what you once enjoyed doing.
Gone are the days of longing for \’93Katie\’94 or \’93Sarah\’94 \’96 sort of. Replacing the feelings of longing for lost lovers are the feelings of guilt, shame, worry and apathy unavoidable after a certain age. Individually, on a conceptual level, the songs click, but also lack the flow of the previous records. This is an unfortunate trend eating away at each subsequent Owen release. As time passes, as do Kinsella’s moods and mind-sets \’96 but what about his ability to string together a handful of continuity-minded songs? Nobody expected the new record to maintain the tight, at times ridiculous consistency of his 2001 self-titled debut, but there is something off about these 10 songs. Even \’93At Home,\’94 which itself felt disjointed at times, gelled better. And that’s the enjoyable part of anything Kinsella produces, not just under the Owen moniker: how well the songs work with one another. Often, the songs on \’93New Leaves\’94 almost go out of their way to work against one another instead of with, which becomes a distraction through the first few listens.\’a0

Lyrically, he’s still got it, even with hard-to-stomach lines like \’93I’m shitting blood, I’m puking piss/ I’m sweating bile and awkwardness/It’s a young man’s game/And about time I quit.\’94 As amusing as it is to imagine a grown man exiting stomach gunk from his pores, the weight of his words are neither lost nor found this time around. Take \’93Brown Hair in a Bird’s Nest\’94 as a foremost example. Here, he waxes on the importance of his mother’s cooking. Or something to that effect. \’93I swear on my mother’s gravy that I didn’t lie to you/I just didn’t tell the truth.\’94 It’s a cute line and a nice tip of the cap to Donna Kinsella \’96 whose home Mike used to record most of his earlier records \’96 but it feels childish and out of place. Or maybe I am just growing old myself. That seems to be the theme this time around.\’a0

\’93Curtain Call,\’94 the album’s closer, on the other hand, hits especially hard as it does its best to render the Owen brand useless. Citing lethargy and a bemused wonderment toward live performance, Kinsella seems to call himself out, asking the question his faithful have been asking for years: Does anybody even care anymore?\’a0

Conceptually, \’93New Leaves\’94 marks new territory for Kinsella, who seems torn between writing the sweet, if nostalgic love song he’s written a hundred times before, and calling out his critic. And as the listener would eventually find out, the worst critic is one’s self. Understandably defiant, this is a different Owen than the \’93idiots in the back\’94 have come to expect \’96 ripe as ever, but different, thematically. Different doesn’t always mean better, but that’s not to say the effort isn’t appreciated or accepted.

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owen - new leavesScore: 7/10
Written by: Derek Walker

It’s been three years, one marriage, one childbirth and a hell of a lot of shows since Mike Kinsella’s last album under the Owen label, meaning there is no excuse for this to not be good. Or at least different. And his fifth record, “New Leaves,” is effective in satisfying both those criteria – but to an extent. Read the full story

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