This Week in Milwaukee
Thursday, Jan. 6
Straight to Hell @ Times Cinema, 7 p.m.
Idiosyncratic
even by director Alex Cox’s standards, the 1987 absurdist spaghetti
Western Straight to Hell was scripted and filmed quickly—when a planned
Nicaraguan concert tour with Joe Strummer, Elvis Costello and The Pogues
was scrapped, Cox cast the musicians as cowboys, bank robbers and the
like in this over-the-top, comedic homage to Sergio Leone’s epics.
Unsurprisingly, critics loathed the film, but with its punk-rock
mentality, ramshackle plot seemingly pieced together from bits and
pieces of Clash lyrics, and lunatic performances from counterculture
heroes like Dennis Hopper and a pre-fame Courtney Love, the movie
quickly found the cult audience for which it was always intended. The
Times Cinema screens a remastered version of the movie through Saturday.
Friday, Jan. 7
Kip Winger @ Smokin’ Joes, 8 p.m.
Among
the hair-metal bands whose commercial heyday was cut short by the
early-’90s alternative-nation rise was Winger, the glossy, hardsexing
group that scored pre-Nirvana hits with songs like “Headed for a
Heartbreak” and “Can’t Get Enuff.” Frontman Kip Winger, a one-time
member of Alice Cooper’s band, reunited his eponymous band in the middle
of the 2000s, picking up where they left off with albums like 2009’s
Karma, but he’s also branched off in some unlikely directions, scoring a
30-minute piece for the San Francisco Ballet. Expect him to stick to
more traditional fare when he performs solo acoustic for this show.
Ian & the Dream w/ The Color Truth and Revision Text @ Shank Hall, 8 p.m.
Milwaukee
trio Ian & The Dream, who cut their teeth at local talent searches
and battle of the bands competitions before leaping into the local club
circuit, plays brisk, summer-day poprock with ample nods to The Beatles,
as well as ’90s alt-pop staples like Weezer and Third Eye Blind. They
share tonight’s bill with The Color Truth, whose brand of pop-rock draws
from heartstring-tuggers like the Goo Goo Dolls and Semisonic, and the
West Allis guitar-pop band Revision Text.
Saturday, Jan. 8
Brewcity Bruisers @ U.S. Cellular Arena, 8 p.m.
For
its fifth season, Milwaukee’s all-women roller derby league Brewcity
Bruisers has set a fairly ambitious goal: to have the most attendees
ever at a U.S. roller-derby bout. They’re well on their way: After
consistently selling out the Milwaukee County Sports Complex last
season, this year the girls have moved their bouts to the U.S. Cellular
Arena. This season-opener pits the Rushin’ Rollettes against the Shevil
Knevils, and the Crazy 8s against Maiden Milwaukee.
Margaret Leng Tan @ Turner Hall Ballroom, 7:30 p.m.
Singapore-born,
Juilliard-trained classical pianist Margaret Leng Tan spent more than a
decade collaborating with experimental composer John Cage, working
closely with him until his 1992 death.
Shortly after, Tan found a new muse: toy pianos, an instrument that Cage had also been fond of.
Last
year Tan followed her 1997 album The Art of the Toy Piano with She
Herself Alone: The Art of the Toy Piano 2. Tonight she’ll be performing a
different piece, Ge Gan-ru’s Wrong, Wrong, Wrong!, joined by a 17-piece
toy orchestra.
Sunday, Jan. 9
The Bad Plus @ The Marcus Center, 7 p.m.
The
acoustic New York jazz trio The Bad Plus earned crossover attention for
their deconstructed covers of unlikely rock songs, most famously
Nirvana’s “Smells Like Teen Spirit,” but that attention has too often
overshadowed their reputation as genuine jazz virtuosos, players with a
knack for blurring the line between composition and improvisation. It’s
probably for the best, then, that The Bad Plus eschewed covers
altogether on their latest album, last fall’s Never Stop, opting instead
for clever pianobased originals. This is great jazz music without the
novelty factor.
The Bad Plus | Photo by Cameron Wittig



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