Roadtrips
There just isn't much room on modern rock-radio these days for the kind of
earnest, inventive, vaguely emoish power pop that's been Boston's most abundant
natural resource for the better part of three decades. Which means that even if
you're really good at it -- let's imagine for a minute you're the Sheila
Divine -- you can pack 'em in for two nights straight at a marquee venue --
say, tonight (March 29) and Friday at the Paradise (617-423-NEXT) -- while
going wholly unnoticed everywhere else. Okay, maybe the Sheila Divine aren't
the best example, since after the big home-town sendoff for their new Where
Have My Countrymen Gone (Co-Op Pop), they make a pit stop at the Lucky Dog
Music Hall (508-363-1888) on Saturday and then join a big national tour in the
company of Our Lady Peace starting Tuesday in Orlando. But you get the point,
right?
On the other hand, some genres are just timeless. Like the juvenile
sub-License To Ill shenanigans of Smut Peddlers, avatars of an
emerging porn-rap underground (Boston's own Porn Theatre Ushers travel similar
bridges and tunnels), who are on a tour with M.O.P. that brings 'em to
the Higher Ground (802-654-8888) in Winooski, Vermont, on Tuesday; to Lupo's
Heartbreak Hotel (401-272-5876) in Providence on Wednesday; to Pearl Street
(413-584-0610) in Northampton next Thursday; and to the Middle East
(617-864-EAST) in Cambridge next Friday. Or, say, sleaze-grinder glam punk, the
current darlings of which include Hollywood brats the Black Halos. Those
guys show up at the Middle East on Wednesday and at the Skinny (207-871-8983)
in Portland, Maine, next Thursday. Or even shitkicker Southern rock, in the
form of Honky (notable mainly for the presence of a former Butthole
Surfer), who hit the Skinny on Monday and the Middle East on Tuesday. A
slightly different take on the images of the redneck South shows up in the form
of Cowboy Mouth and psychobilly vets Southern Culture on the
Skids, who appear at Pearl Street on Sunday, at the Higher Ground on
Wednesday, and at Avalon (617-423-NEXT) in Boston next Thursday.
In suburban goings-on, Bryan Adams hits the Lowell Memorial Auditorium
(617-931-2000) tonight (March 29). WAAF's Indoor Summer Beach Party on Friday
at Tsongas Arena in Lowell -- free tickets available only through the station
-- includes Disturbed, Mudvayne, Nonpoint, and revived
grunge-era Tool/Everclear wanna-bes the Toadies. Local rap-metal
trendsetters Nullset -- whose debut EP for Grand Royal is due out soon
-- are scheduled to play a couple of high-profile industry gigs during the
upcoming NEMO weekend, including a performance at the Boston Music Awards. But
this Saturday they play to the faithful on an all-ages bill with 7th Rail
Crew, Controlled Aggression, T-House of the Almighty, and
Void at the 1000-capacity Nevins Hall (508-628-1393) in Framingham.
-- Carly Carioli