Hudson Wisconsin Nightlife

May, 2013Archive for

Sunday, May 26th, 2013

 

Memorial Day and summer is now here, so there are many more entertainment offerings locally than what you would find in cold weather.
– As of mid-May, Dick’s Bar and Grill is back with its weekly Wednesday night music, and on tap on May 29 is soloist Darren Caster, with guitar and vocals. Darren is well known from his days playing with the band Deviant Distraction, which also did some open-mic night hosting a few years ago. I first met him on one of those nights, and teamed with him for a duet version of one of his favorite songs, Rebel Yell by Billy Idol, which Deviant bassist Tall Paul, all 6-foot-8 of him, said was simply killer. Prior to his Wednesday gig, you might catch Darren going a cameo with Jeff Loven, the One Man Band, on a Sunday night gig that with the Monday holiday is sure to be rockin’ and packed. It will likely feature cameos by musicians who only drop in infrequently.
– P.D. Pappy’s is now open for the summer, and on most Sunday afternoons again this year has featured the Kurt Jorgensen band, with its scores of musicians ala the Doobie Brothers and varied instrumentation. This Sunday is no exception with a “Kurt Jorgensen marathon” from 5 p.m. to 1 a.m. All this reminds me of an old friend, Jacque, who with about a dozen of her friends has followed the band all over the world to take in its gigs. (Okay, actually as far as Iowa, but she says that was quite a road trip). Jacque also was known, a few years back, for being the first female engineer in her category in the history of Andersen Windows, but I have not seen her since proposing that as a business story to various editors. As Jeff Loven is so well known to say, “hey, let’s get the band back together!”

Wacky ways weighed-in-on from western Wisconsin and to the west

Sunday, May 26th, 2013

This is slightly embellished entertainment news of the weird from western Wisconsin and beyond, if you choose to believe it:
– Noticed that those pesky yellow pedestrian-crossing placards are back, looking like big bumble bees, at the midpoint of intersections in downtown Hudson and elsewhere? And have you noticed that they are covered with smudge marks from being struck by car bumpers? Well as far as that goes, local, state, federal, international, interplanetary and intergallactic law enforcement agencies have teamed together to mark the signs’ return by awarding the thousandth motorist to hit one with an honorary plaque that it should be noted is much smaller than the placards themselves.
– Now that same-sex marriage is legal in Minnesota, and that more and more pro athletes are coming out as being gay, I wonder if there will be far fewer athletes who are Vikings, Twins or Timberwolves making the same choice as quarterback Christian Ponder and running to the (Wisconsin) border and across to get married? And after all, isn’t that practice much the same as eloping, and does that count?
– The Zebra Mussels band was slated to play at Guv’s Place in Houlton, but even though they had to cancel, I was told there was a last-minute fill-in, sort of. Here’s how the story goes: You’ve heard that the exotic mussels were found on the barges that were to be part of construction of the new Stillwater bridge? Well they moved from the St. Croix River’s bottom muck and got into the Houlton water supply, then made their way a bit to the east — just far enough to clog the water pipes in the basement at Guv’s Place!
– Minnesota officials have moved their target of stepped-up holiday OWI patrolling from the highway to the St. Croix River, with the idea being to remove so many boaters from the waters that there would be no need to raise the lift bridge at frequent intervals and stall holiday (auto) traffic. That and so many of the temporarily stalled motorists were taking a desperate pee into the ever-pristine river that water quality was being eroded.
– Minnesota is considering a significant hike in its tax on wine, liquor and beer. That means that if you are a Hudsonite and want to patronize someplace like Woody’s in Bayport, you might end up paying a fair amount more. (When I was over there and asked to sign a form letter to Minnesota legislators, and give my city and state address, it was automatically assumed for me and had the letters “MN” typed in. Does this mean my vote would still count? Also, this measure would give Minnesotans yet another reason to run across the Wisconsin border to drink. That and the recent legislative proposal to allow off-sale of liquor in Minnesota on Sundays would change people’s patterns, and between the two considerations, Gopher State lawmakers say they are planning to take advantage by building a tax-free, liquor superstore right at the Lakeland exit.
– Speaking of superstores, one for outdoor and sporting goods is planned for Rogers, just north of the Twin Cities. The media over there has a history of mixing up and accidentally interchanging Rogers and Roberts, which of course is in Wisconsin. As big into the outdoors as people are in this area, it made big news, and of course they got the town where it is being built wrong again. So much so that construction was begun and all the footings laid before anyone caught the mistake!

Saturday, May 18th, 2013

(Editor’s note: The recommended events in the “Pick’s of the Week” department were given a new listing on Thursday night, May 16, and also Saturday morning).

Friday, May 17th, 2013

This the Season for many types of music, and many Woody’s girlfriends, and that’s the Skinny:
– I met Dave Snyder, who will perform at Season’s Tavern in North Hudson on Saturday night, May 18, and some of his loyal listeners at a recent local gig, and it was clear from talking to them that Dave really walks the walk more than most when having a play list of over 500 songs and growing all the time — and giving them an individualized treatment. As a solo act, he does not only the usual classic country, Americana and acoustic rock, but also “Oklahoma Red Dirt” and titles that have influences from jazz to blues. What’s best is he encourages fans to review his play list, even in advance, and he’ll follow through with the request. He has cover songs available as recordings, and they also show diversity, and include Up On Cripple Creek, Heart of Gold and Soulshine. If you want to boil this all down to a sound you will recognize, think The Mavericks.
– Starting mid-afternoon Saturday is a benefit and celebration for Zach Sobiech, who is in the late stages of fighting an aggressive cancer, osteosarcoma. His father is a longtime local rock band member, and there will be live music by bands including The New Skinny. The rock music-based event is at the bandshell in Hudson’s Lakefront Park and $5 entry wristbands can be purchased at local retailers. (It should be noted that the Hudson-based members of The New Skinny are really keeping busy and balancing family and musical life, as well as their day jobs, while adding to their eclectic playlist of various varieties of rock. They are packing up their gear on Saturday and going right to another gig that night, at the Willow River Saloon in Burkhardt. The many loyal members of their fan base who follow them will be in tow, so it should make for a couple of really happening and well-attended events).

– Woody’s in Bayport on Friday is again celebrating its birthday — with the themed help of several young staffers known as the “Woody’s girlfriends,” who come very well recommended. There will be a radio personality from K102 at Woody’s from 3-7 p.m., Miller Lite’s on sale for a mere $1.02 in the early afternoon, other drink specials, and the Miller Lite girls from 5-7 p.m. WE Fest tickets will be given away — and you might ask James Huston of Hudson who once auditioned, as part of a prominent multi-state contest, to do karaoke there how fun that can be. There also is a deejay at 9:30 p.m.

You won’t want to miss this missive about bassists with local links

Saturday, May 11th, 2013

Two women with strong local ties have a pair of friends who are prominent rock stars, are in their late-20s, moved to California when they were about 20 and at times have hung out in downtown Hudson nightclubs.
Allison is friends with Flea, the accomplished bassist for the Red Hot Chili Peppers, and got to know him through her even stronger friendship with the bassist for the group Fishbone.
When I first talked to Allison about this, Flea was in the news when he lost an expensive mansion to raging wildfires that hit California. He has also made headlines as the Chili Peppers were up for induction in the rock ‘n roll hall of fame. When the group performed in the Twin Cities earlier this year, the reviewer noted that it was Flea’s bass grooves that were the highlight of the show.
Allison says that she has had conversations with Flea and has “hung out” with him many times, but that she knows the other bassist much better. I have known Allison well for several years, and have always wanted to ask her if a line from the song Dani California might refer to her. (I know she would demurely deny it). The Chili Peppers — who again are from L.A. — in their lyrics are known for name-dropping, of states not people, and in Dani they sing about regret about not being able to make a planned road trip to the Twin Cities area.
The other focus of this story — and I at one time tried to no avail to get the two women together for a photo — is Taega. She is tight with multi-platinum artists such as Jermaine Jackson, former of the Jackson 5, and also Serge Tankian, Serbian frontman for the acclaimed heavy metal group System of a Down. Ironically, Taege knows prominent people who lost their homes in the aforementioned fire such as Flea, and even dated one of them some time ago. Still, Taege says she would rather talk about Jackson’s work with orphans in Iraq — which was prompted in part by a relationship with Helena who is Iranian — than about his fame. “He’s just Jermaine,” she also says demurely.
How Taega got to know these people, and that was some time ago before she got her college degree and moved on to bigger and better things, was working her way through school at Starbucks in Las Virgenes, a suburb of L.A. at the mouth of the Malibu Canyon.
“Jermaine is a really interesting guy; his girlfriend is amazing. In talking with him one afternoon at the store, we all ended up reminiscing on our favorite winters in the Midwest,” Taega said. “The most interesting part was that it took his girlfriend mentioning Wisconsin or (Upper) Michigan about six times before he realized what we were talking about. As soon as he did, he went into a story about someone in his childhood on a snowmobile.”
Also prominent regulars were Tito Jackson and Ernie Hudson.
“I used to see Jermaine, Tito and their girlfriends all the time, all over the city. I find it hilarious. Over the course of a weekend last summer, I saw Helena at The Rack shopping and Tito at Kerry’s Deli for dinner,” Taege said in an earlier interview.
“Aside from the Jacksons, I try not to really bother them — they’re just people too,” Taega said. “But honestly, each celebrity I have met throughout those six years has been remarkably kind. Serge has such a surprisingly quiet and mellow voice, considering his musical style. He seems to be a very, very, very kind and down-to-earth man.”
“I’ve been told that Britney Spears and boyfriend Kevin used to come in,” Taega said. “She would order for the two of them and make him drive around the parking lot, so as to prevent too many paparazzi photos.” This quote came from the height of her popularity.
“The celebrities who I actually missed and was disappointed that I did, were Gavin Rossdale and his baby son Kingston,” Taega said of the frontman for the rock group Bush and squeeze Gwen Stefani of No Doubt. “I never worked Friday nights, so of course, that would be the night he comes in. That was a seriously disappointing miss.”
“To be honest, most of the celebrities who were regulars at my store, or even just stopped in, often went unnoticed. One who didn’t really ‘act like a regular guy’ was Bruce Willis,” Taega said. ‘He walked through the store one day, just to use the restroom, waving and smiling at everyone in the lobby. No one cared. Why would we?”
And oh, there is one more local woman with a bassist friend, that being the one for the Smashing Pumpkins. Heidi, formerly a bartender at Dibbo’s, has known the other woman for years and says she would love getting on stage with her. I recall making a road trip to Milwaukee and seeing this very tall and leggy member of the Pumpkins in a prominent photograph in the arts and entertainment section of the Journal-Sentinel, right next to legendary singer Billy Corgin. The accompanying article made special note of the solo she had played the previous night.

 

Saturday, May 11th, 2013

Of playing songs by the Stones and for Shannon …

– Owner Brad will grace the stage of his own establishment, Seasons Tavern in North Hudson, with his longtime band Thirsty Camel, which he says plays cover songs the way they were meant to be played. The gig is Saturday night, May 11. Thirsty Camel has been together for 20 years and has used that experience to hone covers of songs by Led Zeppelin, Pink Floyd and Rush, and more recently has included Neil Diamond, Rolling Stones, Johnny Cash and Bob Segar, to name a few. Thirsty Camel started playing at Peppercorns, the Iron Horse and even Dibbo’s back when they were known as Myth — yes, like the  Maplewood club — and then even scored gigs at the Cabooze and Fine Line Music Cafe. The members of Thirsty Camel consider music to be “a co-pilot” and pride themselves on covering it the way the artists performed it.

But as much as they love them, Thirsty Camel is not just covers. They wrote an album and recorded the CD at Oarfin Records in Minneapolis with the help of James Walsh (Gypsy), and then forged on with that for two years before deciding that cover tunes was where the market was heading for them.

– There is a benefit for the medical and financial expenses of Shannon O’Brien on Saturday from 1-7 p.m. at the Village Inn, and on Friday night right before bar close, owner Leigh Halvorsen could still be seen tending to the pig roasting machine. The event has many other draws, including kids games and an old car display. Sixties music from Thunderman is on the docket, and also performing are fittingly, the O’Brien’s from Hudson with their vocal harmonies. (On the other end of the scale, there is also karaoke). Flyers for the event are up all over town, as virtually everyone knows Shannon, and they tout the benefits of driving safely using seat belts.

Sunday, May 5th, 2013

What a way to go, Cinco …
– In case you haven’t noticed, several area establishments have elaborate Bloody Mary’s that are heavily accented with multiple pieces of many different vegetables and the like, but with that said, it all starts with the mix. And that’s where you come in. Dick’s Bar and Grill is asking their customers, and who would know better, to judge who has the best and most downright perfect Bloody Mary mix. Dick’s after all is known for its boating crowd who come in off the river and have a Bloody or two to celebrate the start of their day. The contest judging starts at 2 p.m. Sunday.
You too can celebrate Mexican Freedom with drink specials in various places on such standards as Corona, and also less publicized South of the Border brews.
– Coach’s in River Falls is one of several area venues that each week are offering partly online trivia nights with drink and prize giveaways. On a recent Wednesday night a deejay was emceeing a contest between two competing teams that had a Family Fued theme, and the activity was chaotic, fun and nonstop high energy. On other nights it’s more cerebral, with Jeopardy being mimicked. One of the individual winners received a Packer sweatshirt, but she considered declining acceptance, saying it featured the team from the wrong side of the river.
Also holding Wednesday night online trivia is Hefty’s Roadhouse in Bayport. On Sunday night at Emma’s in River Falls is 90-minute, four-team-member, 25-question “live” trivia offering with a “quizmaster.” Also, the Corner Saloon in River Falls formerly had trivia on Thursdays. Contact the bars for more scheduling details.
– Sure to be having return engagements at Dick’s is singer-songwriter Marcus Lere, who filled the Wednesday bill and brought down the crowd late in April. He did justice to the complex vocals of some songs that aren’t often performed, such as What Is and What Should Never Be by Led Zeppelin, and Power of Love by Heuy Lewis and the News.

All different kinds of entertainment brought all different kinds of people (and plenty of them)

Sunday, May 5th, 2013

What follows is the promised post mortem of very well-attended recent “outings.” They included the electricity calling it a night, and various events packed into a couple of weeks, with all forms of entertainment (and what would a “post-mortem” be without a report on a slew of metal bands).
– This is the third time now, in the last decade or two, that the power went out at a heavy bar rush time. The Village Inn in North Hudson was full to the brim when holding bingo, and needed to go across the main drag to Mama Maria’s to get a bunch of candles to keep calling. I guess the players, even though many are somewhat elderly, must have good eyesight. The past two times the electricity cut out at an inopportune time was on a weekend in downtown Hudson, and people then also coped nicely. Flaming rum drinks were made to create a brief moment of light. Bands at Dibbo’s went acoustic. A woman came back into Pudge’s after going to her car and asked, tongue-in-cheek, if anyone had “seen” her coat. And at a couple of other places, the clocks were stopped for a couple of hours at a time starting a ways before midnight before they and the power came on again, leaving people to wonder just exactly when bar close was to occur.
– My friend Abby and some of her friends and family celebrated a recent holiday at Woody’s in Bayport with some bowling — in tutu skirts. Abby said she was unaware of this dress requirement, or who even planned it, when she showed up, but her cohorts had her covered, as they’d brought an extra for her. Abby did say that the way the thing flared out around her hips made it difficult to bowl, just like it had been one time when she tried the sport while eight months pregnant. In both cases she was able to overcome, and post a respectable score.
The last time tutus got this much attention was when they were a theme for the Hot Air Affair ballooning event, and Dick’s Bar and Grill held a preview activity where everyone dressed accordingly. That included the bartenders, some of whom were otherwise manly guys. They consented to a photo, after I had told them — sincerely — that my editor wanted it for a deep-inside-the-newspaper special section. In other words, buried. Turns out my editor liked the photo so much that he put it on the front page! My sincere and ongoing apologies to the guys in one-time-only tights. And thank you for not cutting me off.
– All the night spots were filled on a weekend when a prestigious international tournament for youth hockey hit town, with bar culture meeting culture from the world over, as people mingled. It was noteworthy that the customer traffic that started early included a dearth of people on the dance floor, anywhere. One of my main bartender sources put it this way — we were hammered early, then things slowed for a while, followed by a “pop” in business along the rail, then steady for the rest of the night.
– Virtually the entire city of River Falls got into a weekend series of concerts in April that were folkish in style. While there were many venues and bars hosting, the one that stands out most was the one at the West Wind supper club, since it was the only Sunday night offering and still packed the place.
– Things got diverse when a fundraiser was held at Ellie’s on Main for a local humane society, with a lot of sponsorship from the Ugly Sister boutique next door. Those sisters must like to rock, because the offerings were a day of hardcore heavy metal bands, with diverse twists on their lineups, that set-up in a space where the dance floor — mosh pit? — once was. The event was organized by Alice, a longtime fan of such music going back to Decibel days at Dibbo’s. She got going with this by doing some intriguing on-the-spot video interviews to be put on the web site of band members she knew.
– Things were really hopping at Hefty’s in Bayport one recent weekday when Andersen Windows held their employee appreciation party. All hands were already on deck at 5 p.m. and the place was already getting full. It only got busier, in waves, as the night went on, as patrons were treated to a musical duo that included something you don’t often see, a woman on a violin.
– Early Saturday brought the start of the main fishing season, but there was another event that was unusually well attended, and I for one call taking in my aluminum cans for cash a legitimate event! The County Market parking lot saw so many people coming in to do so, that their oversize 10-foot-tall bin was full to the brim. What does this have to do with a nightlife web site? My unscientific poll, conducted merely by looking through the mesh, revealed that there were a lot more cans for beer than anything else like soda. On Wisconsin, for both recycling and tipping a brew!
– I was going to make a point of it to mention to Jeff, the one man band guy, and bartender and one of his cameo singers Amanda, the goings on of the last Earth Day. They both wore signature green shoes, an unplanned bit of matching I’m sure, to go with the green beer that was being offered for the day. I’m assured that it was not left over from St. Patrick’s Day, as that limited-time-only discount had long since gone the way of the snakes in Ireland.

 

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