Sunday, April 21, 2013

Mid West Music Fest Day 3



Finally shaking the cobwebs off this evening, so I can try to wrap up my epic experience of Mid West Music Fest. Saturday was quite a finale - both day and evening activities.
Started off the day at the Acoustic Café listening and dialoguing with Craig Grossman and David Priebe of Green Room Music Source – a booking and artist management business in the Twin Cities. It was a small crowd, but there was some fantastic info exchanged. Some of my notes include:
• everyone knows that artists are not making money off recordings anymore, but you need to have a professional recording. It is part of the package that any serious musician needs. Product at shows is going to be purchased by people that like your music and want to support you as an artist and it is going to increase your bottom line.
• get out there and play as much as you can – take gigs wherever you can find them in the beginning. It is really about putting in the hours performing live in front of people. There is no comparison between someone who has 20 or 30 shows under their belt and several hundred.
• approaching labels or booking agents is all about building relationships. Do whatever you can to establish this relationship – in place of just sending music or a cookie cutter email that you are sending to a bunch of other places. Check out the artists they represent to see if there is anyone there you identify with – try to make a connection with that musician to get some advice, establish some communication that will make your first connection with the label or agent more original and meaningful.
• don’t spend the money sending physical copies of your music and press materials. It is the 21st century, it’s expensive, and it isn’t worth risking your probably already small budget for this kind of thing.
• mentioned Indie on the Move as a resource for artists, it is a music venue database - http://www.indieonthemove.com/
Earth Day was just perfect at Levee Park on the river. I have been to Earth Day here on the WSU campus and at Unity Park on the lake, but down at the levee with the mighty spring Mississippi rolling by was the recipe. Great to see so many people out and to catch Jack Norton and the Zinghoppers. My daughter Tula had the best time jumping and dancing around – she loved the big possum figure, though she continues to call it the bunny (“I want to go see the bunny again daddy.”). It was also great to check out the new Boathouse restaurant that Ed Hoffman, Tom Fassbender, and Lyon Smith have put together. Looking to be a vast improvement on the old ice cream shop, plus tasty looking menu and sure to be delicious beer.
Spent the late afternoon in La Crosse with family. Unfortunately, was not able to catch my brother-in-laws Old School Variety Show (with Mike Munson) because of conflicts with Mid West Music Fest and family schedules. I hear it was excellent!
I didn’t get out again until the last part of Jack Norton’s solo set at the Masonic Temple Theater. Jack, a formal local, pre-dates my time in Winona, so this was my first time seeing him. Such a fun entertainer with a seeming river rat in his blood; humorous, self-deprecating, lyrical and it was great to see him including some locals on stage toward the end of his set – dubbing them the Mullet River Boys (though there were a couple women in the band). Really good to see that this guy is making it with his EMMY award wining PBS show The Zinghoppers. We need to all request that they put it on MN Public Television.

Next it was off to Broken World Records to catch Freedy Johnston. He wasn’t on the schedule, but was brought in by Green Room Music Source to cover for Lisa Germano. I was glad that I was at their talk early in the day because I was listening to Freedy Johnston long ago, back in the days when I worked at Deaf Ear Records in the early 1990’s. I always thought Freedy had a cool voice and wrote catchy lyrics. Green Room mentioned that he was part of a new group of musicians that they were representing, artists who had some fame and success in the early part of their careers, but have not successfully translated into the new era of music when making money off your recordings isn’t part of a solid business plan. Freedy is out on the road a lot more now and a handful of us were fortunate to catch him. Also got to see a bit of Eli Glor in the front room before Freedy – nice to see him out playing again.
Pretty much spent the rest of the night at Dibs Café and their Cloud 9 Union Theater. It was the battle of the high school bands and the two bands that I saw put no doubt in the listener’s minds that they belonged in the festival. Neon, of La Crosse, was just a rollicking rock-n-roll, shoe gaze, power pop pleasure. I guess these guys have been playing together for a long time and their stage banter was truly entertaining, sparring the whole time with different friends in the crowd. Talked with them afterward and it looks like they are all off to college and hope to keep playing together on breaks – sure hope someone gets these talented young musicians up this way again. I hear the Current blogger called it her favorite act of the fest.
After deciding that I was heading south after two late nights, downed a delicious chai tea at Dibs and headed down to the Wild Boar for the Ultrasounds. I was impressed by the fact that they had people walking around the night before handing out little Alice and Wonderland themed fliers for their show – respect for that DIY marketing. These folks are a local girl band – save local musician Todd Hanson, web guru for MWMF and Noisy Neighbor. The girls rock in a Deal sisters (the Breeders) kind of way. So cool to see a girl drummer pounding the skins, seems like such a rare thing. Also funny, at one point in between songs a guy yells out, “the bass player is so hot”. I don’t think he was talking about her playing, which was good – but she smiled and started playing again.
Trucked it back down to catch Bomba De Luz, another high school band that’s from St. Paul. Whoa, these people are polished, if you weren’t close enough to see their faces I don’t think anyone would mistake them for being in high school. Front woman Lydia Hogland is pure sugar and sass, with a stage presence that many people twice her age can envy. They ripped through their set, solos, spontaneous vocalizing – drawing their buddy, a dredded-out rapper on stage who soulfully crooned behind Lydia. Man, I can’t say enough about these young folks, just a total class act. They held off playing “Howl At the Moon”, the single getting air play on 89.3 Current, until the last song. Lydia taught the crowd the refrain and drew everyone in to singing along with her. I sure hope a big crowd assembles for their show this summer as part of the Shakespeare On the Green concert series.
I was definitely ready to hit the sheets after Bomba De Luz, but Auralee, who owns Dibs and Cloud 9 with her partner Gerty, had one recommendation for the weekend – Southside Desire. Auralee used to own Hymie’s record shop up in the Twin Cities and she knows good music, so I stuck around. Sure glad that I did. Pretty sure there was nothing like this band at the festival. Woman lead singer with three back up singers. Really cool how the band sets up too, band (bass, guitar, drums) in the back and the four women spread across the stage in front. A soulful Andrews Sisters (of some older era that I can’t claim) with a gutsy vivacious lead singer who kept up some fun quipping with the audience through the set. I can’t put my finger on the sound of the band – lounge, surf, blues on top of the Andrew’s sisters backing the vivacious crooner. Probably sounds odd, but man it works. Somebody please bring this band back to Winona.
What more can I say Mid West Music Fest 2013 - I love you.

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