
Take a look at all the good
stuff going on around town in our Pub Crawl and calendar listings! It’s
a dare to the senses to try and experience all the happenings. So
instead of diving into all that, we are veering off to investigate some
open mics and stages this week.
For
all the bad raps these events sometimes get (performers play for free
and often aren’t very good; hosts are sometimes over controlling; just
to name a few oftnamed complaints), I think open mics are necessary for
revitalizing and strengthening a music scene. Open stages are a great
way to build interplay between musicians and artists, creating
opportunities to make new friends, construct performance alliances and
try out new material. Through the years, I’ve certainly noticed a real
correlation between the increase in open mics and creative music
happenings.
We have
several long-running open stages going on, but for whatever reason, it
seems the downtown area kicked up some newcomers recently to up the
ante. At Bar None, the Torch Tuesday hip hop night continues an amazing
run of several years, combining nationally and regionally known acts
with local performers for a liveshow feeling. Bar None follows that with
the also long-running Wide Open Mic on Wednesdays, starting at 9 p.m.,
taking on any and all comers. For the new kids on the block (literally,
they are all within a few blocks of each other), let’s start with Dan
Rohde hosting Lt. Dan’s Open Jam on the Brewhaus stage. Every Tuesday at
8 p.m., Dan sets up a PA plus a small drum kit with brushes while
extending a call for all “musicians, comedians, poets, jugglers,
magicians, etc.” to show off talents available in all forms possible.
On Wednesdays, I help herd the “Open Mic without a Mic” at Abe’s Old Hat Antiques and Country Store
from 5 to 9-ish with all acoustic players, songwriters and musicians
welcome. We rather stumbled into our setup and it just keeps going as an
open “Pic” without electricity involved, in the rather odd location of
an antique store’s front window. The latest entry into the fray is a new
bar and restaurant called 411, on Washington between Fourth and Fifth,
home to several other clubs going back decades into local bar history.
They’ve brought back Frank Parker’s famed Jambalaya Jam on Wednesday
nights, featuring a slew of jazz and blues artists welcomed to sit in
plus honest-togoodness real jambalaya, along with a full menu for
evenings at a bar downtown with live music.
Seriously,
when you have this many events at the staggered times in different
nearby venues, if you play your cards right, an intrepid soul could fit
in a good run of performances (usually you need to sign up at the venue
and only play three or four songs) throughout the evening and get along
famously. If on a Tuesday evening you started playing at Sam and
Kortney’s Open Mic at the Curve Inn (6:30 to 9:30), cruised on down
Sixth to John and Geoff’s Jam at George Ranks (7 to 10) and ended up at
the Brewhaus with Dan (8 to close), that’s a regular outing of
spectacular proportions. On Wednesday you can do it all over again in
another formula, staying downtown or cruising out to the weekly
get-together jam at Trails End in Curran. This sounds to me like a fun
way to get out the jams and invigorate the scene from within.
Remember
to check out the many other events happening, forgive me if I didn’t
mention all the open mics, and then go to one or more.
Contact Tom Irwin at [email protected].