Nov. 27 - Dec. 3
This Week in Milwaukee
Friday, Nov. 28
Shelby Lynne @ Turner Hall Ballroom, 8 p.m.
A
duet with George Jones on his 1988 hit “If I Could Bottle This Up”
introduced Shelby Lynne to the country establishment, but they had no
idea what to do with her. For years, Lynne was shoehorned into all
styles of contemporary country music, usually with awkward results. The
tables turned, though, with 2000’s declaration of independence, I Am
Shelby Lynne, a self-assured roots-rock album that refashioned the
singer as a fierier, more-rustic Sheryl Crow. Subsequent albums have
continued down the same independent path, giving Lynne ample space to
do whatever she wants, as on her most recent release, Just a Little
Lovin’, where she sings nine torchy songs popularized by Dusty
Springfield as though she’d written them herself.
A Christmas Carol @ The Pabst Theater, 2 and 7:30 p.m.
Getting
an early start on December’s all-things-Christmas theater season, this
weekend the Milwaukee Repertory Theater opens its annual take on A
Christmas Carol, one of the most lavish and intricately staged
productions in the city. As usual, the Rep keeps the production fresh
with bold cast changes. Overly familiar as it is, this year the story
might ring with particular poignancy, given the country’s newly
Dickensian economic position.
Saturday, Nov. 29
Yes @ Riverside Theater, 8 p.m.
Though
this tour bills the band as Yes—often in screaming capital letters—the
fine print tells you that the performers are technically “Steve Howe,
Chris Squire and Alan White of Yes.” Yes has actually been on hiatus
since 2004, choosing not to record after the bleak sales of 2001’s
Magnification, and though a reunion
tour was planned for the symphonic prog-rock band’s 40th anniversary
this year, it was scrapped when frontman Jon Anderson suffered an acute
respiratory failure. Filling his place is—you really can’t make this
up—Benoit David, a singer from a Canadian Yes cover band. (Keyboardist
Rick Wakeman is also absent, though he’s replaced by his son, Oliver.)
Think Floyd USA @ Shank Hall, 8 p.m.
Not to be confused with the British Pink Floyd tribute band of the same name, America’s nine-piece Think Floyd USA
aims to recreate not only the sound but the experience of a classic
Pink Floyd concert, so they make ample use of lasers and light shows.
Their shows can clock in at nearly three hours, and unlike similarly
themed cover bands, they keep their set lists a mystery—sometimes they
cover entire albums, sometimes they stick to rarities.
Will Durst w/ Richard Halasz and Art Kumbalek @ Paulo’s Pizza, 8:30 p.m.
The
real winners in the 2008 presidential campaign—aside from, you know,
the Democrats—were political comedians, who in the age of YouTube and
the must-fill 24-hour news cycle were nearly as visible as traditional
journalists. Milwaukee’s own Will Durst got in on the action, of
course, releasing a book at the start of the season—The All-American
Sport of Bipartisan Bashing—and filming his own lyrical play-by-plays
of the campaign for YouTube. As the dust from the campaign settles, the
sad economy alone should provide Durst with more than enough material.
In one typically perceptive rant, Durst points out that “when everybody
in America
knows the name of the secretary of the treasury, that’s not good.”
Fresh from his failed candidacy for higher office, the Shepherd’s own
Art Kumbalek hosts tonight’s bill.
Will Durst
Monday, Dec. 1
Mudvayne w/ 10 Years and Snot @ Eagles Ballroom, 7 p.m.
Like
pretty much every alt-metal band with an affinity for make-up, Mudvayne
doesn’t get too much love from the critical establishment. They’ve
never cracked the “50” threshold on Metacritic, and most recently
Rolling Stone cut into their newest album, The New Game, chastising the
group for “churning out poor-me songs that build from a whine to a
godforsaken yowl.” But Mudvayne is a sharper, hookier metal band than
critics credit them for and, if nothing else, they know how to treat
their loyal followers, even letting fans pick the track list for 2007’s
odds-and-sods collection, By the People, For the People. Like Sarah
Palin, Mudvayne has a little news flash for all those reporters and
commentators: They’re not seeking your good opinion; they’re serving
the people of this great country.
Tuesday, Dec. 2
Jeremy Enigk @ Shank Hall, 8 p.m.
Jeremy Enigk was the shy, mysterious frontman for Sunny Day Real Estate, arguably the most important of the ’90s emo bands. That group’s tenure was a rocky one, and the group never found the success they seemed destined for, though years later an army of followers inspired by Enigk’s passionate, swooning vocals would conquer modern-rock radio. Enigk and two former band mates reunited as The Fire Theft in 2002, but for his solo albums Enigk strays substantially further from his comfort zone. His 1996 debut was recorded with a full orchestra, but even more surprising was his 2006 follow-up, World Waits, a conventional, “mature” rock album that consciously distances itself from Sunny Day’s dramatic sound.
Death Cab For Cutie w/ Jack’s Mannequin and The Ting Tings @ Eagles Ballroom, 7 p.m.
Death
Cab For Cutie’s 1998 studio debut, Something About Airplanes,
conveniently reissued this fall for its 10th anniversary, introduced
yet another charming little Pacific Northwest band infinitely indebted
to Built to Spill’s wobbly, heartsick guitar-pop. With its nasally
cries, clumsy guitars and careening cello, the album seldom deviated
from There’s Nothing Wrong with Love’s reliable playbook, but on future
releases this once-modest band would begin to distinguish themselves
from their regional peers, crafting a tightly woven, achingly romantic
indie-rock sound that’s all their own, more bookish than their visceral
peers, but no less affecting. The band tops FM 102.1’s Big Snow Show
tonight, supported by Jack’s Mannequin and The Ting Tings.
Death Cab For Cutie
Glen Phillips and Jonatha Brooke @ Turner Hall Ballroom, 8 p.m.
Fronting
the easygoing alternative rock band Toad the Wet Sprocket, Glen
Phillips penned his share of moderate hits in the ’90s, including “All
I Want” and “Walk on the Ocean,” but since that band’s breakup he’s
traversed a more rootsy, folkier path, collaborating with Nickel Creek,
recording for Lost Highway Records and vying for respect in songwriting
circles. He takes second billing tonight to Jonatha Brooke, a veteran
folk singer who embraced big Top 40 sounds on her 2007 disc, Careful
What You Wish For, a glossy affair where she sneered like Ani DiFranco
and Alanis Morissette at their most self-satisfied. She returned to
more tempered sounds for this year’s The Works, for which she wrote new
music to accompany unused lyrics from Woody Guthrie’s apparently
cavernous archives.



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