In case you were wondering, Elvis Presley is still dead and it hasn't hurt his
career a whit. He had another #1 pop single in Great Britain earlier this year,
thanks to a remix commissioned for a Nike ad. And as we celebrate the 25th
anniversary of his passing this week, there's no lack of Kingly activity. When
he perished on the pot at Graceland on August 16, 1977, Elvis was less than 24
hours away from a scheduled gig at the Cumberland County Civic Center
(207-775-3458) in Portland, Maine. This Saturday, Florida-based Elvis
impersonator Jack Smink returns to the CCCC during his one-date
"Unfinished Business Tour" to perform the concert that never took place.
Proceeds benefit Camp Sunshine for children with terminal cancer. Meanwhile,
the Coolidge Corner Theatre (617-734-2500) in Brookline opens the
Elvis-impersonator documentary Almost Elvis on death day -- this
Friday, August 16.
Back among the living: the immortal LL Cool J has bounced back from the
lackluster Greatest of All Time with "Luv U Better"; the new,
Neptunes-produced single from his forthcoming X (Def Jam), it serves as
a reminder of why ladies love cool James. Tonight (Thursday, August 15), he's
at Avalon (617-423-NEXT) in Boston before heading to Lupo's Heartbreak Hotel
(401-272-5876) in Providence on Friday; Hampton Beach Casino Ballroom
(603-929-4100) in New Hampshire on Sunday; and Foxwoods Casino (800-200-2882)
in Mashantucket, Connecticut, on Tuesday. Meanwhile, J-Live -- an
elementary schoolteacher and renowned MC who's the Robert Pollard of indie
hip-hop -- leads a New-York-to-LA hip-hop underground tour with crate-digging
pluralists the People Under the Stairs plus El Da Sensei. All
three hit the Big Easy (866-468-7619) in Boston tonight; Higher Ground
(802-654-8888) in Winooski, Vermont, on Saturday; and the Met Café
(401-861-2142) in Providence on Sunday.
If you didn't get tickets to Friday night's sold-out gig at the FleetCenter
(617-931-2000) by Tool and Mike Patton's power-sludge supergroup
Fantomas, don't despair: seats remain for their gigs on Saturday at the
Dunkin' Donuts Civic Center (401-331-6700) in Providence and on Sunday at the
Verizon Wireless Center (603-644-5000) in Manchester. Meanwhile, Slayer
bring Soulfly and In Flames to the Palladium (800-477-6849) in
Worcester on Saturday.
You most likely know English second-wave punks the Anti-Nowhere League
from Metallica's version of their fabulously explicit gross-out novelty single
"So What?", in which a man called Animal proclaims that he buggers goats and
orally pleasures old men and then dares you to take issue. Animal and company
are at the Met Café next Thursday, August 22, with Toxic
Narcotic, Mung, and Tommy and the Terrors. Finnish punks
Manifesto Jukebox are at Flywheel (413-527-9800) in Easthampton tonight
and at the Berwick Research Institute (www.berwickinstitute.org) in Roxbury on
Tuesday. And the LA synth-punk girl group Radio Vago hit Flywheel on
Saturday with Ted Leo before advancing to the Middle East (617-864-EAST)
in Cambridge on Monday for a gig with the Cancer Conspiracy.
Issue Date: August 16 - 22, 2002
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