The Surprise of Brett Dennen


Brett Dennen performs in Birmingham, Alabama, on Oct. 20th, 2011. Photo by Therra C. Gwyn

By TherraCat

Brett Dennen can be deceiving. At first listen the singer/songwriter with the vivid red hair, charmingly reedy voice and sing-along tunes comes across as an exceedingly pleasant talent in a modern music world airbrushed and autotuned to perfection and populated by incessant competitive posturing. He’s refreshing, is Brett Dennen, and his newest album, Loverboy, is easy on the ears and addictive in its sweet complexity. It’s been number one on my playlist for the last few months and with every listen I find more to like about it. So, naturally, I couldn’t wait to see him and his band perform live.

I figured it would be, you know, refreshing.

The Loverboy tour stopped last week at Workplay in Birmingham, Alabama so I jumped into a surf blue PT Cruiser and hurled myself westward to “The ‘Ham” as locals sometimes call the city. Workplay is a great venue in which to see live music so I was pleased. It had been a long week.  I was ready to be refreshed.

Brett took the stage among cheers from a loyal and loving crowd of about 200 people and without greeting or fanfare the 5-piece band launched into the first few songs. Not surprisingly, he was good. Really good. I was happy.

Then, somewhere in the middle of the fourth song Brett Dennen turned into a black woman jazz singer.

The gawkily graceful Dennen, who, as one friend once told me, “is, like, 7 feet tall” (he’s not, but trust me, the dude is tall) showed off his considerable vocal chops as he scatted and sang his way through the number and with eyes closed he displayed an intensity that drew me in.  He did more than just perform the song. He channeled it. I went from refreshed to fascinated in about five seconds. As a singer and songwriter Dennen has been compared in the press to the legendary Van Morrison but I can just about guarantee that Morrison, for all his immense ability, has never transformed into a black female jazz singer in the middle of a song.

This is what I meant by saying Brett Dennen can be deceiving. A casual Californian in every way, Dennen appears to border on being a throwback to a hippie-er time. In reality he possesses a timeless quality that not only infuses his softer offerings (“Frozen In Slow Motion”) but also his rocker side (the superbly engaging “Queen Of The West Side”). He seems to morph from song to song - at different times seeming very young, then old, accessible, remote, shy, then sensual. In all forms he seems prepossessed and completely comfortable with himself. He’s compelling and fun to watch. Where some performers burst onto a stage and throw their charm like a cloak around the audience, Dennen makes you come to him. He draws you in with his sweet songs and small smile and then hits you over the head with his considerable vocal and musical capabilities. His band is no slouch either and together they make for  a really great musicial evening.

Brett in Birmingham. Photo by Therra C. Gwyn

For my friends of all ages who do nothing but complain about the Britney Spears, Kanye Wests and Ke$has of the world I have your antidote and his name is Brett Dennen.

Brett Dennen in Birmingham, Alabama. Photo by Therra C. Gwyn

Brett Dennen. Photo by Therra C. Gwyn

Brett Dennen. Photo by Therra C. Gwyn

Brett Dennen. Photo by Therra C. Gwyn

SEE/HEAR Brett Dennen sing “Darling Do Not Fear” from the Birmingham show here.

I’m A Believer. After reading Eric Lefcowitz’s “Monkee Business”, you may be too.


posted by Therracat

As anyone who geeks out for a TV series, artist, band, book or genre can attest, you can take a lot of abuse from “non-believers” who don’t share or understand your passion. Fans of the Monkees have certainly gotten their share of slagging over the decades, both from the media and from those who fancy themselves rock and roll purists.

 The popular ’60s show has been named by TIME as one of the 100 Best TV Shows of All Time and the Monkees reunion tours have been bankable successes. The lads, now all lads over 60, still draw crowds (and teenagers) to their solo shows, so, for the sake of argument,  lets assume they at least have had staying power, shall we?

 Oh. Do I have an attitude? Is it showing? When people who obviously didn’t get it would, over the years, question my mad Monkee love I always wanted to snap back, “Shut up. They weren’t made for you. They were made for me.” In truth, the Monkees were likely “made” for girls older than me, those with bras and bumped-up hair, but when they exploded onto the scene I was 6 or 7 and I had a very real sense of what I liked, music-wise. And I liked the Monkees. I put them next to my Hollies and Bee Gees and Rolling Stones albums and plotted grade school ways to get to from England to California, ways that didn’t involve me getting in trouble with my parents or missing too much school. For I was sure that was where I would find them, in sunny SoCal, in that bitchin’ beach house, driving that badass GTO.  I was young and to me, ”The Monkees” was a reality show.  I’d never been to the United States. It looked and sounded like the promised land to me.

Despite a certain amount of teasing and eye-rolling over the years by people who liked to rib me about my devotion to the Monks I still had enough knowledge and music cred in my arsenal to take on any purists in a duel. If I didn’t win, at least I dented the argument that the Monkees didn’t matter.  No more worries on that.  If people give me a problem about my hot Monkee love  I now can just hand them Eric Lefcowitz’s new book

 Author Eric Lefcowitz  (“Rhino History of Rock and Roll: The ‘70s”, “Buy American: Buy This Book”, “Tomorrow Never Knows: The Beatles’ Last Concert”, and more) has taken on the history, making, un-making and re-making of the group once before, in his book “The Monkees Tale”.  So much has happened in Monkee-ville since that book was released fourteen years ago that he’s added some new thoughts directly from Michael Nesmith, brought us up-to-date on the drama (and make no mistake, there IS drama) and added photos and new news to the history of the made for TV band that many refer to as the “pre-fab four” (pre-fab as in “built to order” not pre-Beatles era). “Monkee Business, The Revolutionary Made For TV Band” is a perfect book for those who love the Monkees and/or  those who love the messy, magical, musical 1960s. Jimi Hendrix, The Beatles, Stephen Stills, Janis Joplin, Neil Diamond,  Frank Zappa, Carole King, they’re all in the book and play a part in the history of  the Monkees, or vice-versa. It’s well–researched glimpse into a true show business phenomenon complete with fabulous photos by legendary photog Henry Diltz .

Eric was kind enough to answer a few questions about the band and his new book and in the process, gave me even more info to lob at non-believers.

Therra C. Gwyn: Like a lot of writers I know, you are fluent in several genres. You’ve written about popular music and you have an extensive knowledge of the subject.  What, to you, is the importance of chronicling the life and times of the Monkees, over another band from that time period? Why the Monkees?

Eric Lefcowitz: Not to get too cosmic about it all but I feel the Monkees, in a way, represent all of us. There’s a human element to their story that transcends all the trappings of their fame. They were four eager young guys who happily signed on for the ride and then found out the destination was not quite what they were anticipating. For me, their rebellion is what clinched the deal (in terms of my fascination with the group). It would have been so much easier to just go with the flow. Their effort to express themselves within the confines of their “gilded cage” was an extraordinary development. That DIY-spirit that informs “Headquarters” is so honest and pure. Artistically that album may be miles away from “Sgt. Peppers” but as a statement of purpose I think it’s still quite valid. Both albums were released at the same time and of course the Beatles got the lion’s share of the credit but if you gave me a choice I’d rather listen to “Headquarters.” Within its own context, I think it holds up better. Yes, I said it. The other part of their legacy that sealed the deal for me was “Head.” There is something so wonderfully weird about that movie. It almost dares you to hate it (especially the first few scenes) but the more you watch it the more you begin to detect its genius. The fact that it was totally ignored by the public doesn’t matter now and I’d rather watch “Head” than “Let it Be” any day. Now I’m hardly trying to stoke an argument about which band (Beatles/Monkees) is better–that would be foolhardy. I love them both. But in terms of cultural relevance today, I think the Monkees–the brand and the band–tower over many of the so-called hipster bands of their day. And the reason for that makes for a fascinating story.

Therra: You outline in the book the many talented people who contributed material to the Monkees success (Carole King, et al). How important do you think famed songwriting duo Boyce and Hart were to their hit-making machine at that time?

Eric: Boyce and Hart were really the unsung heroes of the Monkees. Let’s face it; if the Monkees’ first records stunk they would just be a curio today. But those early Boyce and Hart tracks were amazing. They were absolutely the right guys at the right time. The theme song is a nifty bit of craft work, an instant identifiable ear worm (even little kids know it today) but also ever-so-slightly subversive. The same thing goes for “Last Train to Clarksville.” I heard Bob Dylan talking about that song on his radio show and he said something to the effect that the best way to be subversive was to not let anybody know you’re being subversive. I had no idea that there was an anti-war message built into “Clarksville” when I first heard it but there was something desperate in Micky’s delivery that hinted at it. It’s a classic, as are “Steppin Stone,” “She,” etc, etc. There isn’t a duff track that Boyce and Hart did with the Monkees and it’s a shame they didn’t do more (in my opinion). Also I’ve been lucky enough to meet and talk to Bobby Hart a few times and I have to say he is probably the nicest guy I’ve ever met in show business. Plus, if I recall correctly, he had a swimming pool shaped like a guitar at his house. How cool is that? 

 Therra: Pretty cool. And now I want one. Okay, In “Monkee Business” you touch on the big debate about whether the Monkees should be inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall Of Fame. Do you think they deserve to be there?

 Eric: That they deserve to be there is without question but I feel even discussing the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame (which has left out many, many other worthy bands) plays right into Jann Wenner’s trap. It’s all about the canonization of a certain Baby Boomer mentality that just turns my stomach and Wenner is the epitome of that bullsh*t (if I can say bullsh*t in print)! We should all move on because it isn’t going to happen, at least not while Wenner walks the Earth. I do think all Monkees fans could work to see that Boyce and Hart are inducted into the Songwriting Hall of Fame, however. That is much more likely to happen and they truly deserve the honor.

 Therra: Finally, if you had to use one word to describe Davy, Micky, Mike and Peter, individually, what would that one-word-per-Monkee be?

 Eric: Davy: Showbiz. Micky: Natural. Peter: Heartfelt. Mike: Seeker

‘Scuse Me While I Read This Book


Posted by therracat 

 I’m not the kind of person (but have nothing against those who are, mind you) who gets the image of an idol tattooed on my body. I don’t have tat of Jesus, or Buddha, or MLK or Lennon or Che or (in one extreme case I saw on television recently) Weird Al Yankovic. But if I did have a forever drawing of someone on my person, that person, without a doubt, would be Jimi Hendrix. 

 Ah, Jimi. Beautiful, electric Jimi. We hardly knew ye. But with the release of a new book by Steve Roby and Brad Schreiber there’s another delicious chance for devotees or the merely curious to delve into the life of the guitar legend. The book, now out on Da Capo Press/Perseus Books is “BECOMING JIMI HENDRIX: From Southern Crossroads to Psychedelic London, the Untold Story of a Musical Genius.”  I wondered, is there really anything  left “untold” about Jimi Hendrix at this point?  Surprisingly, there is.  Roby and Schreiber take us back into the early days of Hendrix’s troubled and short-lived military career. They give the reader the opportunity to follow him as he learned his craft while traveling and recording on the South’s well known and well worn “Chitlin Circuit”, all the way to the verdant 1960s  Greenwich Village scene where his musical identity was furthered with the help of Keith Richard’s then girlfriend. There’s also much ado about his time in Nashville, which influenced Jimi far more than many of us realized.  We all know where Jimi finally ended up – on the radio, on the stage, in the history books, in our hearts. What many don’t know is how he got there. “Becoming Jimi Hendrix” can help you with that. 

 Rolling Stone liked it and so do I. They gave it 3.5 out of 4 stars. 

 I often prefer to let writers talk about their books rather than talk about them myself. By the time a book is researched, written, re-written, edited and released authors are so intimate with the subject matter it’s as much a part of their DNA as hair and eye colour. I slightly know co-author Brad Schreiber.  Among the many things this tireless author/journalist/career multi-tasker does is sponsor The Mona Schreiber Prize for Humorous Fiction and Non-Fiction, a yearly literary award given in memory and honor of his mother. In 2008 I entered the literary contest, my first, and won 3rd place for Humorous Non Fiction. I was thrilled to place in any capacity and Brad was so nice, encouraging and in the single conversation we had I recognized him as a generous and energetic spirit. I was really jazzed to be in touch again to ask him about this new work chronicling a man and talent the likes of we’ll not see again anytime soon. We get to see Halley’s comet, with its  75-79 year trek around the sun more often than we see than a talent like Hendrix. 


 
Therra C. Gwyn: You have a varied catalog of books you’ve written and I could talk about those all day, but I’m especially interested right now in why you decided to write a book about guitar great (some say god) Jimi Hendrix. He’s been written about fairly exhaustively, although he is still a mystery to many. What can you and co-author Roby add to what is already out there? 

Brad Schreiber: For starters, we learned that Jimi and fellow band member Billy Cox were arrested at a lunch counter civil rights demonstration in Nashville. There is a strong strand on Jimi’s racial identity that has never been fully explored in other work. Also, we have many great stories about his life on the road and his split identity between Harlem and Greenwich Village in New York City. 

Therra:  Why do you think it took England to recognize Jimi’s genius? Why didn’t America catch on faster? 

 Brad: Jimi had not fully realized his singing and songwriting potential until he got to England. Also, the English newspapers reached more readers than a New York Times of 1966. And manager Chas Chandler knew that England would love both his technique and his blues acumen. 
 

Therra: You write in your book about Jimi’s early days touring in the South. How do you think this shaped the performer he was to become in a few short years? 

 Brad: Jimi said himself that playing in Nashville really improved his technique because the competition was so fierce. Touring with DJ Gorgeous George also taught Jimi how to deliver an engaging stage show while playing guitar. 

Therra: Tell me a little about your sources for this book. 

Brad:  Steve Roby interviewed over 100 people as sources. I came in on the last dozen or so but loved talking to Richie Havens and Jimi’s younger brother Leon, who lives here in LA. Most importantly, Steve has exclusive info from Lithofayne Pridgon, Jimi’s girlfriend when he lived in Harlem. Much of what she told us has never been published before. 

  Therra: Are you aware of the book by James Wright (former roadie for Hendrix) that makes the claim that Michael Jeffery, Jimi’s manager, murdered the star? He claims that Jeffery confessed this to him in a drunken moment a year after Jimi’s death. Any thoughts on this? 

Brad:  I’m not a conspiracy theorist. I’m a conspiracy scientist. There is strong forensic evidence he was murdered, as his lungs were filled with red wine, something he could not have accomplished by himself. I believe Jeffery and others forced the wine and sedatives down his throat because Jeffery knew Jimi wanted to end their association. The presiding doctor in London who first examined Jimi’s body confirmed the lungs were filled with wine and also suggested foul play. 
 

Therra: When is ”Becoming Jimi Hendrix” going to be released and how can fans get a copy? 

Brad: It’s available from Amazon.com and Amazon.co.uk right now and in stores the first week of September (2010). I have tour schedule, videos, informational posts and pictures at:www.redroom.com/author/brad-schreiber 

 Therra: Thanks much, Brad! 

 Brad: Many thanks, Therra, for letting me spout off about a great musician/composer and compassionate man who was taken from us too soon.

Shooting Star – The Too Soon Death of Jay Bennett


Jay Bennett at the Iota Club, 2003. Photo by Therra Cathryn Gwyn.

My phone rang during the week after Memorial Day 2009 and I didn’t get to it in time, but I immediately listened to the voicemail and heard my friend Sherri’s voice break.
“Tee…?” she said softly, “Jay Bennett died.”

I sat the phone down and stared at the wall. Surely this couldn’t be.

The first time I laid eyes on Jay Bennett I was taken slightly aback. He walked in the door of the Iota Club in Arlington, Va, outside Washington DC, and my friend Sherri nudged me. “There he is,” she said. There he was, indeed. He resembled no one so much as Phillip Seymour Hoffman as Affable Rockslob as he rolled into the room but had a presence that extended far beyond his physicality and a talent that did the same. I was intrigued immediately and I don’t think my reaction was unusual. Jay Bennett was most compelling, even before you knew his resume or capabilities. Now he’s gone, dead at 45, and along with a plethora of fans and loving friends and his devoted family, I’m wondering why he had to go so soon.

For those who don’t know the name Jay Bennett, go to Google News and type in his name. In May/June of 2009 you would have gotten some 1300 hits on the news of his untimely death, including Entertainment Weekly, The Washington Times, Rolling Stone,  Spin magazine, MTV and Associated Press. He was an accomplished musician/singer/songwriter/producer from the Chicago area, once upon a time was in a band called Titanic Love Affair and later released one of my favourite CDs ever with his friend and sometimes collaborator, Edward Burch. As Bennett and Burch they released the wonderful and intoxicating (Rolling Stone magazine called it “sunny”) “Palace At 4 a.m ( Part 1)”. However, it’s usually Jay’s well documented and much-argued-about past of fuss and fame with Jeff Tweedy, as part of  Wilco, that you will read about. This union brought forth some good music and on film, some good drama: Jay was fired from Wilco in 2001, and most unluckily for both he and Tweedy, in my opinion, the deed was done as they were being filmed for a documentary about the making of the band’s ”Yankee Hotel Foxtrot”. This resulted in Jay’s departure being featured in the movie, “I Am Trying To Break Your Heart”.  As anyone who has been involved in any kind of break-up knows, be it business, personal or artistic, you’re never going to get the full story in a few frames. Even now, some 9 years or so later, bloggers and fans and friends and die-hards will argue whether Jeff Tweedy is the alt-devil in disguise and the cruel engine of Jay’s fate or whether it was simply time for Jay to leave the band, that his season of Wilco had passed. I notice for many the Wilco with Jay Bennett is their Wilco of choice. They sure did some great work together and it will stand.

Back to the Iota Club. Jay and Edward were touring behind “Palace at 4 a.m.” and Sherri and I drove up from Georgia to see them. She’d already met both Edward and Jay, after seeing them open for Kim Richey. She recruited me by connecting Jay to something I loved: the “Mermaid Ave” albums of unpublished Woody Guthrie lyrics that Billy Bragg and Wilco so brilliantly set to music. “California Stars” had become one of my all-time favourite tunes and Jay was credited with writing the music. I hadn’t seen Jay or Ed perform before but introduced myself that night, mentioning that we had a common friend in the Chicago music scene, beautiful songstress Kelly Hogan, who I had known and worked with in Atlanta. I liked the pair. I found Ed Burch to be upbeat, witty, intelligent and, what we call in the South with no irony, “a nice boy”. I was delighted to meet the musician whose high, clear singing so well complimented Jay’s breathy/smokey growl on my new favorite CD. Jay was sweet and immediately familiar. “Can I have hug?” he asked me. “Um. Sure” I said. Why not? He was also upbeat, funny, friendly and, his opening act informed me, cleaner and better smelling than he’d been in weeks. I laughed at the banter between them. Jay and I somehow almost immediately got onto to the subjects of  Leonard Cohen (we were both big fans), the Bee Gees early music (also both big fans, but I didn’t like “Cucumber Castle”, he did) and the fact that both our marriages were in disintegration stage. I used the words “inactively married” to describe my relationship’s spiral at that point and an hour or so later, during their show, Jay turned to the audience and asked me, “What was that phrase you used, again?” I looked around to see if he meant someone else.

“You,” he said to me, “What was that phrase you used to describe your marriage?”

“Oh,” I said, as if people engaged me from the stage of the Iota Club all the time in front of an audience of strangers about my personal life. “INACTIVELY MARRIED!” I repeated, loud enough so everyone in the club could hear, because, God knows, I didn’t want to repeat it. Somehow shouting it out in front of others made it both funnier and more gruesome, and it fit the state of my dying relationship. I had to smile despite it all. You either tiptoe over a dying relationship or you stomp that sucker flat.

“Yeah.” Jay said, and then continued with the performance. Even later in the show he decided to exit the club and venture outside in the cold, snow from an earlier storm still banking the curbs. Edward, on keyboard, stayed onstage – steady, keeping the flow, smoke from his cigarette curling around his head. Jay sang from the street outside. We followed him down the road as far as his mic cord would take him. He tried to get Sherri to sing the last verse of “It Hurts”, offering her the microphone. She demurred. When I talked to her the other day she says now she wishes she would have done it. Let that be a lesson to us all: if you have a chance to sing in the snow with a genius, do it.

At that point I was hooked on Jay and Edward’s dynamic duo-ism and went to Chicago a few times to see them and hang out. The street fair performance I saw in June of 2003 was the last time they performed together for a long while, due to personal factors and other projects. Sher and I waited for yet another chance to see them again. It didn’t seem to be in the cards and a few years passed, too uneventfully, on the Bennett and Burch front. But we didn’t think it was over. We just thought it was fallow, like a field that’s getting ready to spring forth at any moment with the bounty of a lifetime. In the meantime, I got Jay’s solo CDs, kept in touch with the smooth singing Edward and often would put “Palace” (both the studio and later limited edition acoustic version) on my CD player, leaving it there for hours.

Now, with the news of Jay’s death, I think about him and his artistic significance, his musical intelligence, the comparisons in the press to Brian Wilson, to Brian Jones. I think of his loyal friends, the people he rubbed the wrong way, his bond with Edward, the fine work he produced for others, his sweet and complex nature. I think of how some people dubbed him adorable, and some, arrogant. To me he just seemed…well, big. He lived big, he thought big, he played big. He left a wake like an ocean liner crossing a lake. That kind of big. And when that kind of big leaves suddenly, it leaves a hole. A big one.

Bennett and Burch on tour 2003

                    Bennett and Burch, 2003. Photo by Therra C. Gwyn.                            

 This blogpost originally appeared at www.iliveinacaravan.blogspot.com in June 2009.  On May 24th, 2010, Jay’s family launched The Jay Bennett Foundation. Please go to www.jaybennett.org and support the legacy of this talented artist. His latest album, “Kicking At The Perfumed Air” (what a great title, Jay!) will be available for free download (donations encouraged) and CD purchase starting July 10th, with a portion of proceeds going to the foundation and to benefit a partner charity.