Thursday, June 29, 2023

Neil Young - Mirror Ball

 


Another random pull from our CD library that I noticed hadn't been included on this blog. For this one, though, I assume that it's because it is not one of Young's strongest efforts. For this one, Neil is backed by Pearl Jam, of all bands, after he performed with them at an abortion-rights benefit. Just days later he took them (minus singer Vedder) into the studio with some songs written ahead of time and some written in the studio to record live for this release.

Unfortunately, PJ is nothing special as a backing band - frankly, they could be almost anyone here, as no one stands out - and Young doesn't even really let loose with his patented wild'n'wooley lead guitar for the most part. Even the songs are fairly pedestrian for Neil - as much as I love him, this was his 21st (!!) studio album (back in 1995! Damn, how many has he done by now?!) and even he can't write that many classic songs! That said, "Downtown" is a fun mid-tempo rocker, even if not iconic, and "Peace and Love" has a neat pump organ intro and a bit more of Neil's guitar, as does "Throw Your Hatred Down" while "Scenery" is a D-tuned bit of swampy grunge before it concludes with "Fallen Angel", a sweet, short piece with Neil simply accompanied by the pump organ.

Of course, it's Neil so it's not bad, but it is also not Neil at anywhere near his best. Lots of others that you should buy before this one!

recommended gigs

 Friday 6-30-23 - Thee Swank Bastards at Mabel's

Saturday 7-1-23 - The Unwieldies with Big Like Texas at the Huntridge Tavern

Saturday 7-1-23 - the New Waves at the Golden Tiki

Wednesday 7-5-23 - Franks'n'Deans Weenie Roast at the Double Down

Friday 7-7-23 - San Diego legends the Nashville Ramblers with Trevor and the Jones at Red Dwarf

Friday 7-7-23 - Thee Swank Bastards at Mabel's

Tuesday 7-11-23 - The Psyatics with the Pine Hill Haints and Invisible Teardrops at Red Dwarf

Friday 7-14-23 - The Psyatics, The Shakewells, the Implosions and more at Founders Club

Friday 7-21-23 - The Unwieldies at Red Dwarf

Friday 7-28-23 - Shanda and the Howlers at the Gambit

Saturday 8-5-23 - The Psyatics with the Wolfhounds and Fur Dixon at the. Double Down

Saturday 8-12-23 - Suburban Resistance, With Liberty, Jet Jaguar, Lean 13 at Founder's Club

Saturday 8-12-23 - Franks'n'Deans, Jerk!, Sloth Fist at the Double Down

Thursday 8-17-23 - Art Gray Noize Quintet with the Psyatics at the Dive Bar

Wednesday 9-20-23 - It's OK, Suburban Resistance, Crom. Fallon and the P200 at the Dive Bar

Bob Dylan - New Morning

 


I randomly pulled out this CD from our collection to take to work with me this morning and didn't realize that I hadn't written about it for some reason, which is certainly odd as I definitely picked it up well after I started this blog, on one of my Dylan binges. In any case...

While this is not one of his most iconic offerings, it certainly is a solid one, with plenty of incredible talent from the likes of David Bromberg, Al Kooper, Charlie Daniels and many more and it does include his terrific "If Not For You", as well as other numbers that predicted some of his future work.

"If Not For You" is certainly one of Bob's lovelier numbers, with a fine melody and excellent backing here (and George Harrison did an incredible take on All Things Must Pass), "Day of the Locusts" was, oddly, inspired by receiving an honorary degree, and has a resemblance to some of his tunes on Desire, while "Time Passes Slowly" is a piano-driven ballad that is not overly memorable and tho "Went To See the Gypsy" is a little bouncier'n'stronger, it is also not one of his best, although certainly not bad. "Winterlude" is certainly a silly throwaway with a waltz beat, but "If Dogs Run Free" has a terrific jazz backing (excellent piano by Al Kooper and scat singing from Maeretha Stewart with some jazz guitar vamping) with Bob's satirical Beat "poetry" spoken over it.

The title piece is actually a mid-tempo Dylan almost-rocker, again similar to his Desire-era with some clever chord changes and melodies, "Sign on the Window" is another piano-based ballad, but "One More Weekend" is a nice, basic blues number in the vein of "It Takes a Lot To Laugh" (kinda/sorta) with some tasty slide guitar. "The Man in Me" is another simple, fairly unremarkable but pleasant track, "Three Angels" has Bob reciting the words over a organ/gospel-tinged backing and the closer, Father of Night" is even more religious as an interpretation of a Jewish prayer.

Nothing especially unlistenable or anything here, but other than "If Not For You", nothing especially great either. I guess even Dylan wasn't on 100% of the time! 

Sunday, June 25, 2023

Jimi Hendrix - Electric Gypsy - Harry Shapiro and Caesar Glebbeek

 


I've owned this book probably since it came out and read it at the time (I took it on a Tommyknockers/ Embryonics tour and pretty much everyone in the van read it, despite it being over 500 pages long! We had some long drives then!) but I don't think that I've revisited it since so since I've caught up on everything new that I've bought, I thought I'd check it out again and give it a review, since it was way before this blog that I last viewed it.

Extensively researched, with interviews with almost everyone in Jimi's life - with the two huge exceptions of Eddie Kramer and Billy Cox, unfortunately, although their words from other sources are used - including Jimi's little brother, Leon, who has himself written a book relatively recently. Family, friends and musicians all add to the tale.

Growing up in the Pacific Northwest with a complicated family life - the parents split and reunited several times with multiple siblings and step-siblings and no one is 100% sure of everyone's paternity - and in near poverty, Jimi's love for music (and science fiction/fantasy) came early (although he was interested in sports, as well) and was encouraged. He joined the armed services in order to get out of town, basically, and when he was released, he started working full time as a musician and was discovered by Chas Chandler in NYC, and brought to England to become a superstar. Obviously, everyone knows the basic story, but the details are what is fascinating in this book.

Billy Cox and Larry Lee (later to play with Jimi at Woodstock) were early friends once Jimi left the military and based himself in Nashville for a while but when he left for NYC, he left on his own. It was a tough slog at first but his luck with women served him well and Fay Pridgeon took him in. He managed to hook up with various musicians and along with some short-term gigs, went on the road with the likes of the Isley Brothers and Little Richard, but Jimi was not very good at merely being a backing musician.

Once Chas "discovered" him and brought him to England, he was an immediate smash sensation with hit singles within a couple of months. There are lots of great photos of these early days, along with reviews and listings of the shows throughout Europe - what an exciting time! Things move extremely fast from then on - 3 albums (including a double LP) in just over a year, innumerable gigs and, of course, internal tension between the band members and the group and their management. Everything takes its toll on Jimi and the authors are fairly ruthless about sub-par gigs and recordings.

Of course, his tragic and untimely death has been discussed endlessly and even here, there are many different versions of what happened the night before and the morning of his demise. At the time of this book even the people who were there (supposedly) had varied accounts but it seems that it was simply a terrible accident and that he wasn't properly treated in time to revive him.

After his death there was still an immense amount of drama, with the numerous contracts, managers, semi-legal banking, and much more. Shapiro does his best to navigate this, but there are plenty of unanswered questions, which probably remain to this day, not the least due to Jimi's last manager dying in a crash not long after Jimi's death!

There is a large portion of the book dedicated to the appendixes, which includes an extensive discography (which has only grown since this publication), a listing of all of his known gigs, a list of his equipment and much more! Shapiro certainly did his best to be thorough! Funnily enough, I noticed in a section on Jimi's techniques that there were some errors, so there may be some other technical issues with some of the equipment sections - I am not a technician but some of the other items sounded a little wonky to me, as well. But, what an undertaking to even try all of this!

In any case, even if there are some errors here'n'there, overall, this is a pretty amazingly researched tome that is still highly readable and enjoyable. Certainly recommended!

Thursday, June 22, 2023

recommended gigs

 Saturday 6-24-23 - Big Like Texas at the Goldmine Tavern

Saturday 6-24-23 - the Negative Nancys, Va Voom and War Peggy at Red Dwarf

Saturday 6-24-23 - the Dirty Hooks and Ted Sablay at Soulbelly

Saturday 6-24-23 - Bear Supply at the Double Down

Sunday 6-25-23 -  *CANCELLED*The Psyatics with Bob Log III and the Fat Dukes of Fuck at the Dive Bar

Monday 6-26-23 - Thee Swank Bastards at the Golden Tiki

Friday 6-30-23 - Thee Swank Bastards at Mabel's

Saturday 7-1-23 - The Unwieldies with Big Like Texas at the Huntridge Tavern

Saturday 7-1-23 - the New Waves at the Golden Tiki

Friday 7-7-23 - San Diego legends the Nashville Ramblers with Trevor and the Jones at Red Dwarf

Friday 7-7-23 - Thee Swank Bastards at Mabel's

Tuesday 7-11-23 - The Psyatics with the Pine Hill Haints and Invisible Teardrops at Red Dwarf

Friday 7-14-23 - The Psyatics, The Shakewells, the Implosions and more at Founders Club

Friday 7-21-23 - The Unwieldies at Red Dwarf

Saturday 8-5-23 - The Psyatics with the Wolfhounds and Fur Dixon at the. Double Down

Saturday 8-12-23 - Suburban Resistance, With Liberty, Jet Jaguar, Lean 13 at Founder's Club

Saturday 8-12-23 - Franks'n'Deans, Jerk!, Sloth Fist at the Double Down

Thursday 8-17-23 - Art Gray Noize Quintet with the Psyatics at the Dive Bar

Wednesday 9-20-23 - It's OK, Suburban Resistance, Crom. Fallon and the P200 at the Dive Bar

Sunday, June 18, 2023

Elvis Costello and the Imposters with Nick Lowe - Pearl Theater at the Palms, Saturday 6-17-23

 Since my lovely wife had never had the chance to see Nick Lowe in concert (I was lucky enough to see Rockpile back in the day, which was fantastic, of course), when she saw that he would be touring with Costello and actually playing in Vegas, she picked up tickets immediately!

We had seen Costello at the Pearl a few years back with Blondie and thought that the venue was pretty good - not overly huge with decent sound - although I do think the sound was better this time out than last time. And last time I was absolutely frozen by the a/c running full blast over my head so I was prepared this time and instead it was completely comfortable, so they wither fixed the issue or it was just a matter of where you are sitting.

Nick Lowe started exactly at the advertised 7:30 pm time with Los Straightjackets backing him up. I know that he has used them as a backing band for a number of years now, and while they are perfectly competent and their sound complimented the songs, they are certainly nothing special (I can think of many instrumental bands that I prefer right off the top of my head, both song-wise and playing-wise) and I have no idea why he uses them specifically, especially considering the top-notch musicians Lowe has played with in the past. Nick had a very short set - about 30 minutes - and let the Straightjackets play two of their own songs during that time - nice of him, but we would certainly have preferred a full set of Lowe songs, particularly since he had such a abbreviated time to play as it was. 

Opening with "So It Goes", Nick was in fine voice, playing acoustic guitar to the 'Jackets accompaniment - they also added backing vocals here'n'there - and ran through numbers like "Raging Eyes", "Without Love", "Tokyo Bay" (a nice, Rockpile-ish number), "When I Write the Book" and, of course, "Cruel to Be Kind". There's an infinite number of other songs we would have loved to hear, but alas, it was over far too quickly.

As at the Elvis/Blondie gig, there was a long change-over to allow people a break - I joked that with the older crowd like this, everyone uses the break to go to the bathroom rather than the bar - before Elvis came out with the Imposters - Steve Nieve and Pete Thomas from the Attractions along with bassist Davey Faragher augmented by Charlie Sexton on 2nd guitar. Costello was draped in a gold lame-ish jacket ala Presley and busted out "Mystery Dance" and "Radio Radio" for a powerful opening before going into a long, dull electronic/reggae  number and then Steve accompanied Elvis alone on acoustic piano for "Accidents Will Happen". Elvis picked up an acoustic guitar for "Allison" (Sexton performing the original leads that Elvis admitted he could never master) and went through a number of songs that I did not recognize and that were stretched out far too long - what happened to the angry young man new waver with the short songs?! But we got a strong ending to the set with "Watching the Detectives", "I Don't Want to Go to Chelsea" and "Pump It Up". The encore was - natch - "(What's So Funny About) Peace Love and Understanding", but Nick Lowe - the songwriter - did not join him, which I believe that everyone there must have assumed that he would and was as disappointed as we were, before ending with the gospel-tinged "Blood and Hot Sauce".

Elvis' timing was a bit off during the night - either his monitors were slightly delayed or he was having some issues himself which was a bit distracting and kept the set from being as enjoyable as it could have been. Sexton played some fine lead guitar, but wasn't a necessary addition, although Elvis seems to like to change things up, since he had backing singers last time instead of a lead guitar. This time there were backing vocals on tape, apparently, and on one tune, Costello was able to trigger a looper or something similar so that he could trade vocals with himself. The stage was barren this time out, as well - no screens like the last gig, although the Pearl does have a screen off to either side of the stage to zoom in on the action (although they were not on for Lowe). 

Of course, I wasn't expecting either to be as amazing as they were when I saw them in the 70's (jeez - 50 years ago!) but both were good, although Nick needed some extra time (we'd love to see him headline his own show) and Elvis could have cut his set a little shorter (the extended numbers were extraneous). It was a fun night out, regardless, and good to see them both still doing it after all these years!

Thursday, June 15, 2023

recommended gigs

 Friday 6-16-23 - the Double Whammys at the Golden Tiki

Saturday 6-17-23 - Stagnetti's Cock. Fuck Face All Stars, Trivial Menace at Founders Club

Saturday 6-17-23 - Cromm Fallon and the P200, Nico Bones and Gob Patrol at Red Dwarf 

Monday 6-19-23 - Thee Swank Bastards at the Golden Tiki

Saturday 6-24-23 - Big Like Texas at the Goldmine Tavern

Saturday 6-24-23 - the Negative Nancys, Va Voom and War Peggy at Red Dwarf

Saturday 6-24-23 - the Dirty Hooks and Ted Sablay at Soulbelly

Saturday 6-24-23 - Bear Supply at the Double Down

Sunday 6-25-23 - The Psyatics with Bob Log III and the Fat Dukes of Fuck at the Dive Bar

Monday 6-26-23 - Thee Swank Bastards at the Golden Tiki

Friday 6-30-23 - Thee Swank Bastards at Mabel's

Saturday 7-1-23 - The Unwieldies with Big Like Texas at the Huntridge Tavern

Friday 7-7-23 - San Diego legends the Nashville Ramblers with Trevor and the Jones at Red Dwarf

Friday 7-7-23 - Thee Swank Bastards at Mabel's

Tuesday 7-11-23 - The Psyatics with the Pine Hill Haints and Invisible Teardrops at Red Dwarf

Friday 7-14-23 - The Psyatics, The Shakewells, the Implosions and more at Founders Club

Friday 7-21-23 - The Unwieldies at Red Dwarf

Saturday 8-5-23 - The Psyatics with the Wolfhounds and Fur Dixon at the. Double Down

Saturday 8-12-23 - Suburban Resistance, With Liberty, Jet Jaguar, Lean 13 at Founder's Club

Thursday 8-17-23 - Art Gray Noize Quintet with the Psyatics at the Dive Bar

Wednesday 9-20-23 - It's OK, Suburban Resistance, Crom. Fallon and the P200 at the Dive Bar

Wednesday, June 14, 2023

RIP John Romita Sr

John Romita Sr., Legendary Marvel Artist, Dies at 93 
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His artwork for Marvel comprised a big portion of my youth - sad to hear of his demise, although he certainly lived a life.

RIP Lonnie Hammargren

Lonnie Hammargren dies, was Nevada’s former lieutenant governor 
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Lonnie was much more than that, he was a Vegas institution. Sad to hear of his passing.

Sunday, June 11, 2023

John Dies at the End - David Wong

 


This is the last of the books that I picked up at the Founder's Club Book Fair earlier this year (thanks Christy!) and it was another impulse buy. I'm sure that I had heard the title from the film that was made although I knew nothing about the storyline but was intrigued, regardless. 

It turns out that it is a very surreal sci-fi/horror tale that involves a (possibly alien) drug called "soy sauce" that basically allows the user to time travel, but also experience extremely terrifying and disorienting situations that are almost indescribable, but David Wong (not his real name, actually) does his best to describe anyway.

As the story unfolds, there are more'n'more surreal episodes, with reality'n'fantasy blurring, and hallucinations being as "real" as anything else, with fantastical creatures, alternative dimensions, time lapses, beings dying'n'returning (no matter how gruesome the death), and all the while John and David (the narrator uses the nom de plume of the author) do their best to keep the world from being overrun by....something that they're never quite sure of....

The book is long - well over 400 pages - and numerous times you think that the tale has to be ending but then there will be a new twist and off we go! There are definitely plenty of surprises and unexpected tangents and somehow, apparently, there is a sequel, but I'm not sure if I'm ready to go there just yet. Besides being a bit disturbing and disorienting, much of the story is quite depressing (although there is plenty of humor, often juvenile, as well) and there is much awkwardness in the characters that is all too relatable as is the "I remember this thing/person/event although it now has no evidence of it ever occurring" (at least I relate to that). 

So definitely offbeat - to say the least - but captivating in its surreal way. Not sure whether to recommend it or not....

Thursday, June 08, 2023

recommended gigs

 Friday 6-9-23 - The Psyatics with the Bitters and the Way Outs at the Double Down Saloon

Monday 6-12-23 - Thee Swank Bastards at the Golden Tiki

Friday 6-16-23 - the Double Whammys at the Golden Tiki

Saturday 6-17-23 - Stagnetti's Cock. Fuck Face All Stars, Trivial Menace at Founders Club

Saturday 6-17-23 - Cromm Fallon and the P200, Nico Bones and Gob Patrol at Red Dwarf 

Monday 6-19-23 - Thee Swank Bastards at the Golden Tiki

Saturday 6-24-23 - Big Like Texas at the Goldmine Tavern

Saturday 6-24-23 - the Negative Nancys, Va Voom and War Peggy at Red Dwarf

Sunday 6-25-23 - The Psyatics with Bob Log III and the Fat Dukes of Fuck at the Dive Bar

Monday 6-26-23 - Thee Swank Bastards at the Golden Tiki

Saturday 7-1-23 - The Unwieldies with Big Like Texas at the Huntridge Tavern

Friday 7-7-23 - San Diego legends the Nashville Ramblers with Trevor and the Jones at Red Dwarf

Tuesday 7-11-23 - The Psyatics with the Pine Hill Haints and Invisible Teardrops at Red Dwarf

Friday 7-14-23 - The Psyatics, The Shakewells, the Implosions and more at Founders Club

Friday 7-21-23 - The Unwieldies at Red Dwarf

Saturday 8-5-23 - The Psyatics with the Wolfhounds and Fur Dixon at the. Double Down

Saturday 8-12-23 - Suburban Resistance, With Liberty, Jet Jaguar, Lean 13 at Founder's Club

Thursday 8-17-23 - Art Gray Noize Quintet with the Psyatics at the Dive Bar

Neverland Ranch Davidians


 I really loved the live set I saw of Tex Mosley's NRD a few months ago and have been looking forward to picking up some recorded music ever since and this finally became available. I've seen Tex play for years, ever since he created some of the truly iconic riffs for the Hangmen back in their beginning days, and have always dug his style and here he alternates licks with a second guitarist (no bassist), Will Bentley, and drummer (Max Hagen) while also - quite ably - singing lead. The various influences - pure rock'n'roll, garage, blues, soul, and noize - all shine through while creating a sound that is familiar to rockers but still all their own.

Opening with their simplistic theme song, "The Gospel", they bring in waves of sustained feedback for this Stooges/Bo Diddley-beat driven bit of Suicide-esque, moody. dirgey, swampy, instrumental rock'n'roll. From there they pick up the beat and add Tex's vocals for "Rat Patrol", a kinda garage-punk-soul cat call (rat call?) complete with backing "oooohs", then change up to a James Chance-ish, syncopated no-wave/funk/jazz/garage of "Fat Back" with more cool backing vocals and a hip, fuzzed-out coda, followed by another trek through the swamp with waves of feedback and heavy riffs and a stompin' mid-section for "Aqua Velveteen" and then a high-energy riff-rocker in "Liquor Store" before side one ends with an almost Hangmen-like piece of riffin' swagger in "Solid Monkey Blues".

Link Wray's "Butts in My Beer" (was that really the title? It certainly sounds like a take on "The Swag" or something) is given an appropriately trashy NRD's take, "Boys Don't Cry" (definitely not the Cure song!) is a mid-tempo, lick-filled garager, "Hen House" is another syncopated, no-wave/funk number, but with their own heavy treatment, natch, "Stigmata" is one of their best - a gloomy/doomy/heavy riff, reminiscent of something that I can't put my finger on, with hip lyrics and a fantastically noisy solo section - pretty terrific! They create a punk-blues for the powerful, racially-charged "Knee on My Neck" (I wonder how many similar situations Tex went through as a black man in the LA punk scene, which was already a target for the LAPD?) before ending it all with a fine, soulful take on Ray Charles' "I Believe To My Soul" that could well be giving a nod to the MC5's version.

Really great and highly original rock'n'roll with all the right influences from throughout the ages! See them live if you can, as they truly do shine in that experience, but definitely pick this up, as well! 

Wednesday, June 07, 2023

RIP Jack Lee

The Nerves’ Jack Lee, Who Penned “Hanging on the Telephone,” Dies at 71
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I was just listening to the Nerves a couple of days ago - great band!

Saturday, June 03, 2023

Q65 - Pim Scheelings


 Of course, the Q65 was the monster Dutch garage band that influenced practically every 80's garage combo around the world with their fantastic songs and performances. I distinctly remember that Mike Stax (who collaborated/published on this book) introduced the band to those of us in the LA garage scene (his Tell Tale Hearts were probably the first band to cover them) and soon every band - the Unclaimed, Thee Fourgiven, Untold Fables, etc. etc - were doing at least one of their songs. The band is legitimately legendary but I know next to nothing about them, so I was more than intrigued when I saw that this book existed and picked it up as soon as I could!

Based on interviews with the guitarists Joop and Frank, they tell the story of their meteoric rise to stardom in their home country, with immediate hit singles, crazed shows, groupies, booze'n'drugs and life in the 60's as long haired rock'n'rollers. There are tons of amazing photos of uninhibited live shows as well as recording sessions, all with the lads looking like berserk brothers of the Pretty Things!

Pim also interviews past and future members of the band along with various associates such as the engineer and producer of their hits, who actually created his own compressor/limiter - against the record company rules - and used it to give Q65 their massive sound!

There is a little awkwardness with some of the translations, and there are some grammatical errors (in English, that is), but nothing that takes away from the gist of the meanings and nothing that keeps you from understanding what they are talking about.

Overall, a pretty amazing undertaking and I can't imagine ever believing that I would be reading a book about this obscure band 40 years after first hearing them! Huge kudos to Scheelings and to the Staxes for publishing this fun tome!

Thursday, June 01, 2023

recommended gigs

 Friday 6-2-23 - the Unwieldies at the Boulder Dam Brewery

Friday 6-2-23 - Benefit for Sean LaBelle at the Double Downb with Soldiers of Destruction, Fuck Face All Stars, Open Fist, Illegal Aliens and lots more!

Saturday 6-3-23 - the Negative Nancy’s, Love Bonbs, Va Voom and 2Gen at the Huntridge Tavern 

Sunday 6-4-23 - Thee Swank Bastards at Red Dwarf Sunday Brunch 

Wednesday 6-7-23 - Franks'n'Deans Weenie Roast at the Double Down

Friday 6-9-23 - The Psyatics with the Bitters and the Way Outs at the Double Down Saloon

Saturday 6-17-23 - Stagnetti's Cock. Fuck Face All Stars, Trivial Menace at Founders Club

Saturday 6-24-23 - Big Like Texas at the Goldmine Tavern

Saturday 6-24-23 - the Negative Nancys, Va Voom and War Peggy at Red Dwarf

Sunday 6-25-23 - The Psyatics with Bob Log III and the Fat Dukes of Fuck at the Dive Bar

Saturday 7-1-23 - The Unwieldies at the Huntridge Tavern

Friday 7-7-23 - San Diego legends the Nashville Ramblers with Trevor and the Jones at Red Dwarf

Tuesday 7-11-23 - The Psyatics with the Pine Hill Haints and Invisible Teardrops at Red Dwarf

Friday 7-14-23 - The Shakewells, the Implosions and more at Founders Club

Friday 7-21-23 - The Unwieldies at Red Dwarf

Saturday 8-5-23 - The Psyatics with special guests TBA at the. Double Down

Thursday 8-17-23 - Art Gray Noize Quintet at the Dive Bar