Powered By Blogger

Tuesday, February 14, 2012

J.W. Americana


J.W. Americana 

Written by: Harold Schelling
5:24 p.m. CST, May 11, 2005
 

Last weekend, at a prominent bar in Houston called Rudyards I saw a rockabilly/ punk-band that completely blew my mind in terms song originality and stage presence. The band is called J.W. Americana, and they are not a political organization trying to democratize some Central American country of human rights violations, but a Texas rock trio who have been on the Houston music scene for quite some time.

I was particularly impressed how tight this band was, especially considering that "punk rock" has had predominate influence in both their music and way of life; the band is every bit as serious about their performance as Leonard Bernstein was with the New York Philharmonic Orchestra.

J.W. Americana is about the music. They have a devout following of loyal fans that are as colorful in every way as the band members themselves and who apparently seem to know the lyrics verbatim.

If the group "Social Distortion", met with "Public Enemy", "Johnny Cash", "Tom Waits", "NSYNC", and "New Edition" and if they joined together to form a large musical ensemble and said "Let's start from scratch and see what we come up with?" It might be something like that of J.W. Americana.

Rodney Elliot, the bands "new world guitar hero", jammed on his Gibson Les Paul like Kamikaze pilot, playing as if this night were the end of time itself like he was playing for his own life support in which the only means to power his heart and liver was to relentlessly jam on his guitar. I never saw anything like it. I never witnessed such fanatical devotion to an instrument combined with such a masterful control of musical technique.

The group romped about the stage in an audacious manner and into the audience goading the fans to cheer and experience the music, and it took very little out right encouragement to get the audience going--the music told them what to do. It was a rockabilly "shin-dig". Americana were reminiscent of the "rock'n roll" super-group "The Police" each band member fighting for supremacy of the stage and at the same time playing as a one unit, as a band, complimenting each other musically while at the same time, stressing their individuality as musicians.

Americana's song "Tony the pony" is a terrific piece of musical craftsmanship. The bass and the lyrics are "All the rage". The song starts off with Doug revving into bass solo and then ripping right into rockabilly like vocals. Doug let's out a fierce, banshee-like shriek in the middle of the song and the club shakes, and the audience goes wild as they feel the raw power of the band. The song is spectacular, filled with rock& roll rhythms that make your heartbeat double skip and it also shuts down most all artificial mechanical cardiovascular mechanisms.

J.W. Americana has been able to generate a unique, sensational, sound through their diverse background of musical influence. Their rigorous experimentation with modern and sometimes unorthodox forms of music is pervasive in all of their songs.

The band members themselves are just ordinary--more than regular people, who could blend in with nearly any crowd they walk into. They enjoy a good conversation with just about anybody who is willing to give them the "time of day". In fact, the members of J.W. Americana are so friendly that you could take these guys to the zoo with you, or you could easily imagine these band members wrestling around in your living room floor with your Golden Retriever—good people who enjoy life's simple pleasures like watching football, cooking barbeques, or extracting the venom from the teeth of a ten foot Egyptian King cobra snake on rugged terrains near the worlds edge.

L.L. Dupree (A.K.A. Doug Kosmo) is the bands legendary bassist. His contribution to the world of music is that of epic proportions; like that of Geezer Butler, Jon Paul Jones, and Aaron Carter combined and looks like one of those Conan paintings that you would see on Molly Hatchet Album covers or barbarian murals on the side of vans from the 70s of some muscle-bound dude holding an ax with his girlfriend (in a thong) by his side while he fights a dragon and simultaneously manning a Harley Chopper. Doug is the barbarian bassist and he has a style all his own. The man digs deep into the "soul-searching" phenomena, exploring "what make people tick" and how to remain true to "ones self" without taking "one self" too seriously. He is a pragmatic man of principal.
At the concert, Kosmo ripped into several bass solos with their songs "Pizza" and "We're going to Fight" bringing the crowd to almost frenzy in both acclamation and fanatical cheering. 

Kosmo easily has the presence of a prominent cult leader as he has a huge fan base in Houston, Thailand, and five eastern bloc countries. 

The bands song, "We're Gonna Fight" is an anthem that has many different takes on life, it resonates of a rallying song, awakening the people and challenging them to understand that there is more to life than the 9 to 5, and that our individuality still exists, and if there is still one part of ourselves that hasn't been taken, than we can fight to keep that organ or artery and say "That this day was our most magnificent moment in time!" That we still kept part of ourselves through all of life's soul-deadening experiences.
At the concert you can meet people from all walks of life: former deadheads, gangster rappers, ravers, polka yodeling four H club members, classical music aficionados, promise keepers, and "fire-eating" mariachi players. It's a melting pot of musicians, artists, bankers, public works employees, and diplomats. A good time had by all and they all get down at a "J.W." show.

In the audience, deep in the heart of this Texas crowd, is a fun group of people jumping and dancing around—this is "the heart of the maelstrom". Bodies float across the crowd like driftwood of an old shipwreck, the flotsam and jetsam of the of the "party-harders" surfing across the unknown and suddenly plunging down towards the depths of the concert hall hardwood floor as if some saloon dwelling shark yanked him below the surface of hands.

Sometimes you see a person thrown across this wave of hands like saltwater marlin performing oceanic gymnastics only to knock over more cups of beer creating a sea-like spray of Miller Light and Bud Ice all over everybodies shirts. The song Pizza is playing and the crowd roars and you think that this audience has just received orders to begin paramilitary operations from the band, "Storm City Hall then onto Austin and then catch Dallas in a pincers movement spearheading towards Cowboy Stadium then the state is ours. Yeah! Pizza!"

Up front by the stage, there are a group of attractive girls who have seemed to have grasped the concept of "getting down" with great music and they are not too shy about being rock'n rollers who embrace the true spirit of the music while they do their thing with some very tight shirts and very tight jeans. "Lord have mercy" I yelled out, but nobody could hear me, in fact I couldn't even hear me but I could hear the band playing their nostalgic piece, "NRA". The song seems as if were created in the spirit of an old Irish folk song with people waving their hands above their head singing along with the song with a pint of ale in their hand.

At the songs finale, a melee of Winchester and Remington shotguns went off in tribute to the ongoing spirit of the song, a dismembered finger blew past my face, and the smell of heated sulfur filled the room. A husky man holding up a shot javelina by it's feet, raised it above his head and the crowd gives another accolade of approval—"anything goes here" said a guy next to me, like I didn't understand that already. Moments later I could smell the sweet smell of a Texas Mesquite Barbeque mixed with the aroma of Milwaukee's Best, and burning gunpowder.
This was a fun concert to say the least. The more I listened to the music and absorbed the atmosphere, the more I respected cavemen. I jealously thought how much fun they must have had after killing and roasting a saber tooth tiger and frying it over an open fire. Why hadn't I come to one of these shows sooner? I glanced across the crowd and I saw that it is difficult to determine who is having more fun at the show, the band or the audience, I think the janitor was, I saw him go into the men's bathroom accompanied by two hot looking girls wearing dominatrix gear, a lama, and a mop, but there was more than a festival atmosphere in the bar.

Within the crowd, somebody just started a pit bull fight in the crowd and security is taking bets or is this "again" my imagination playing tricks on me?
"Who brought in the wolverine?" a guard says. "It's against dog fighting regulations not to match a pit bull against a wolverine?"

"So man", says a black gentleman wearing an all black leather outfit, " I guess what your saying is that your pit bull just isn't up for the task against Muffer my wolverine?" A momentary pause by the security guard occurs, and then the animals are released and the fight begins, but can't seem to see how the fight is going, I think the animals turned on their master's, I saw a hairpiece fly off security guards head and into the crowd and somebody is passing a disgruntled pit bull across the crowd it's barking and biting in mid air and another wave of Bud light rolls across the audience, well come to think of it, that was Milwaukee's Best. 

At this point I can't stand up, and all beer tastes the same to me at this stage of this spiritual musical event. I feel the power and positive aspects of numbness of the mind and I relax and listen to Rodney Elliott's guitar rifts as he moves across the stage like a golden glove middleweight prizefighter.

L.C. Dupree (Shane Lauder) is drumming up a storm. His only sense of timing seems to be on the drums which supposedly had been measured to perfection by Scientologists at M.I.T. who desired to perform this research in the field of percussion harmonics for purely scientific purposes, but that is entirely a different story, one of which I might explore in some later write-up.

L.C. Dupree plays his drum-set like some artistically talented Viking ship galley foreman, enforcing a large group of forced labor oarsmen to row to the beat, but it sounds far better, in fact I would say that Dupree could keep up with the best drummers of "rock'n roll" history. He may very well have a black velvet self-portrait of himself hanging in Cleveland at the "rock'n roll" hall of fame someday.

An old lady get's up on a table, it's my neighbors grandma, and she is dancing on it to the song "Tony the pony" which really sounds "Out of this world great" I rush to the grandma, and I am overcome with joy and I put twenty dollars in her panties, and everybody cheers." "Go! Go! Go!" "I'm gonna call! Call! Call! Call that pony Tony!" I had more than my cheap thrill for tonight. This is more than a concert; it's more like a combination Ringling Bros circus, Maxim Swimsuit expose, and a jailbreak all rolled into one "organized riot". Tonight is a night to remember and it's not even halftime yet.

J.C. Dupree also known as Arthur Moreno, American's saxophone player, plays his horn section trio in fine "rock'n roll" fashion. It's a rockabilly jamboree.
The song "Big Black Cadillac" is being played and at random moments, bodies are still being passed across the crowd from one end of the club to the other like a disjointed conveyor belt--a couple of them didn't appear to be moving and the band plays on. I believe that this to be a normal occurrence and that thousands people die every years in concerts. I briefly imagined the next day's headlines, "Death at J.W. Americana concert" on this victim's tombstone it could possibly read, "Danny loved to stage dive at Americana concerts". He understood the risks and said it was worth the price for hearing great music at a decent club of a band with questionable judgment—well maybe that's a bit extreme.

J.W. captures the essence of Punk Rock in its purest form, they suck it out and absorb the power, and share its revitalizing qualities like that of a premium organic shampoo. They are like the fresh scent of herbs and spices. The feeling one get's from one of their shows is that "I am still alive!" and that this is sensational music I am listening to, and that there are some things that the corporate world cannot suck out of me, like my liver!

It looks as if there is a strong independent music movement is taking shape in this country and J.W. American is leading the way. 
A major record contract seems to be within they're grasp and until they are granted that magic legal document saying, "you made it to the big time and you can live off your royalties"--"They're gonna fight!"


Written by Harold Schelling.

Harold Schelling is a freelance writer and works for a major record company which specializes in putting together "boy-bands" and "teen chic idols" for major radio networks so they may Lip Sync less than mediocre music to the general population. He is scared of J.W. Americana because he believes that they will re-institute quality music to the mainstream public.

Top photo created by Rodney Elliott.
Concert photos taken by Harold Schelling.
To learn more about J.W. Americana and their music click here http://www.wearejw.com/.


Copyright © 2005 by Harold Schelling