Hudson Wisconsin Nightlife

December, 2014Archive for

Tuesday, December 30th, 2014

It’s soon to be a new year. That means new ways to party. And we’re not blowing smoke.
– They’ll be Smokin’ on New Year’s Rockin’ Eve at the Willow River Saloon in Burkhardt, when Smokin’ Whiskey plays their “prime cuts” from ’70s bands that members of the quintet say they love.
Their song list is heavy with deep tracks from some bands that when combined with their popular standards are on the list eight or nine times. Other examples are Don’t Believe a Word being among five Thin Lizzy tunes, and The Ocean set in the midst of three from Led Zeppelin. The Jimi Hendrix pick is Little Wing and there even are a trio from Robin Trower.
They say their mission statement, which steers far from the usual corporate version, is “to rock your socks off … and whatever else comes with it.”
– Two postings on the Agave sign give the long and the short of it involving New Year’s Eve hours in downtown Hudson. One a few days before said: “Open all night NYE, Dick’s, Ellie’s, Moose, Agave.” It was followed by this somewhat cheesy one: “Holy cow. Moose to have 6 DJs. We only have Kevin.”
– Speaking of the Smilin’ Moose, various staff members were on hand after midnight early Wednesday, blowing up hundreds of balloons in back by the area that bands play. They actually did it the old fashioned way, using their lungs rather than a machine. “That’s why there are so many people here,” said bartender Carla.

– The moose will not be the only hoofed animal with fun afoot. At Season’s Tavern in North Hudson, the longtime band Thirsty Camel, a trio led by drummer and owner Brad, will make another encore appearance before the ball drops. They have been playing around the area for literally decades, and have hit some of the real hot spots in the metro area with their brand of vintage rock. For the early part of the evening, starting at 9 p.m., the band will be situated upstairs to entertain diners with somewhat lighter tunes, (There also will be an arrangement of candles for ambiance, courtesy of Brad’s wife, that will fit in well with some of the band’s favorite songs, including those by the likes of Pink Floyd).

– Various places are going retro and dropping things such as balloons at midnight, and Pudge’s at that time will again even have a ball drop outside on their patio, running fully down the side of their building. And that’s also the time when, at Guv’s Place in Houlton, there will be sign-up for a dart tournament that will start at 1 a.m. and go into the wee hours. Even all the way through those early hours, there will be appetizers from the new menu at Ellie’s on Main, for those who need some sustenance. And for those in need of a ride, no matter how late, the Village Inn in North Hudson has made available a specialized ride service offered for tips, and also planned is using an 11-person motor home belonging to owner Leigh Halvorsen for that purpose.

From Garth’s 11 gigs to Gwar, they go the Cities to gawk (but don’t Blink)

Monday, December 29th, 2014

Every year or so there is a concert in the Cities that attracts attention from numerous local bar patrons, as they share stories over a beer from such past concerts and look forward to adding more. But few artists have induced the sheer number of comments that lingered on for more than a week, from those looking forward to his show(s), while socializing at many different venues in and around Hudson, as the recent Garth Brooks foray. Many of those people couldn’t wait to again see his groundbreaking form of country music and showmanship, and the fact that he slated 11 different shows likely fueled the fire. These local fans were of all ages and genders, despite the fact that this was called an “unretirement” party for Brooks, age 52, by the AARP magazine. (Yes I receive it, hence my taste for classic rock).
– Also recently, a Dick’s Bar and Grill employee said he and some of his co-workers scored tickets for a luxury suite at the much-anticipated Black Keys show in the Cities. They were only one such box away from being right next to the stage.
– This whole occasional mega-concert theme had first played out, as my memory serves me, when an old friend Danyiel had dressed up as the actress on a Blink 182 album cover at Halloween, which was followed up by going to a concert of the same ilk as Blink with a whole crew of co-workers from Dick’s.
– Bartender Matt at Dick’s told me his parents didn’t care for the fact that he listened to the likes of Slayer, in concert and out, while growing up. But then he found, as Cheap Trick would sing about, his parents’ old records and put them on. In the stash was an original Black Sabbath vinyl, and added that the album cover was so vintage that Ozzy had his name signed as he was previously known, Ossie.
– Matt and others also have invoked the band Gwar as the best they’ve seen in the Cities, in some cases gaining that status than one time. Even in the upper balcony, they were reached out and touched by the fake (I think) blood that was spewed by the band, to the point that plastic sheets were needed to deflect it by those closer to the stage. And here I thought I was being hip, knowing all about metal music and even the dinosaur-like costumes worn by Gwar, but I really wasn’t sure if their blood was as real as that broadcast by, say, Gene Simmons of KISS. The guy who enlightened me most about Gwar, which was back in the Twin Cities late last fall, looked like another of their contemporaries, Scotty Ian of Anthrax, but with a better beard. A close second as far as information, was the aformentioned Matt, who said Gwar can play their loud guitar while in those bulky costumes because they are constructed largely of glorified, football-like shoulder pads. He and some of his family know this much because, for example, Matt’s sister once dressed up for a costume party as a Gwar-woman.
– And lastly on this theme, a friend said he’d seen Twisted Sister perform in a show along the riverfront in St. Paul, where frontman Dee Snyder chastized those watching for free from a nearby bluffline while not buying a ticket. That from Dee, imagine! You’d not get a similar beef from the late Ronnie James Dio, the friend said about a different metal concert, which also differed in that he was in the front row, close enough to see that Dio’s feet were as small as his stature.

Wednesday, December 24th, 2014

For a preview of holiday prep, see “Notes from the beat” and “Picks of the week.”

Wednesday, December 24th, 2014

Wind down or pick it up over Christmas and afterwards, with these holiday-season offerings:
– If you’re not wound up after all the Christmas excitement, you will be after you hear the Armadillo Jump band play their cranked up, rockin’ blues at the Willow River Saloon in Burkhardt on Friday, the evening after the holiday. The joint will be jumpin’ with Texas-style attitude, their web site says. The five-piece band that is a mix of men and women even features a sax player.
– There are various opened and closed kitchens and bars, and differing hours of operation, over the Christmas holiday, but one change that stands out is at Kozy Korner in North Hudson on Christmas Day. While the kitchen will be closed, and there is no pizza, there will be plenty of meat and sauce available because of the free sloppy joes that will be offered.
– Also, breakfast will still be available at Dick’s Bar and Grill on the 25th, starting early around 8 a.m. and featuring some great specials on Bloody Mary’s and champagne-OJ drinks.

Wednesday, December 24th, 2014

Lots going on to get in the spirit, as the Christmas holiday cometh:
– This is not your mom and dad’s Christmas caroling. On three weeknights in December, groups of people gathered at the Village Inn in North Hudson to board a mobile home and go caroling around town — mostly in the vicinity of nightspots, not Nativities. They started early, about 6:30 p.m., and by the time bartenders started changing their shifts to serve the late-night crowd, the remaining remnant of the wine, women and song event — all three will keep you warm — was a North Hudson stalwart with a long, telltale scarf folded several times around his neck.
– A busload of ugly sweater party participants arrived at Dick’s Bar and Grill from Minneapolis shortly before the holiday, joining locals who just can’t get enough of this kind of dress, and sported it at organized parties at more than three local nightspots in mid-December. As I told one guy, ugly sweater parties are the universal language. He responded: “I’m not sure they are ugly, just annoying.” Like the guy in the gold foil pants? If you are that hard core, the place you wanted to be on the Saturday before Christmas was Woody’s in Bayport, where their ugly sweater contest featured the added amenity of a photo booth with props. This was perhaps the one time of year where you could get away with what I said to Ginger the bartender: “You look really ugly, but it a good way.” Then there’s the input of another ugly sweater veteran. The music was loud and I couldn’t quite hear what she was saying, but it had something to do with something a supermodel would wear — with the addition of dozens of thick threads woven in.
– After days, if not weeks, a signalized stoplight is back on duty at Eleventh and Crestview, after it had been apparently plowed down at night in an earlier ice storm by a driver who lost control. Fixing this one up was almost like the guardrail off an Interstate 94 exit ramp heading north into town, after drivers stop traveling westward. Last winter, that guardrail seemingly was struck at least once because the exit is sharp and steep, and again seemed to be a latenight situation. It also took a while to repair the big dents. And don’t even get me started about the frequent power outages on the hill, usually at night — so no late happy hour due to business closures — but once in the late afternoon, which meant my bank off of Hanley Street was shut down and I couldn’t deposit one of those sporadic small checks freelance writers get. Traffic had been rerouted all over the place, so I ended up being so late it probably wouldn’t have mattered anyway. So instead, might as well hit the afternoon specials at Green Mill or Buffalo Wild Wings, but wait, I don’t think they were able to be open either. I talked to a friend at BWW about all this the other evening, and she concurred, then added, we could sell our mitigation services as consultants.
– Speaking of B-Dubs, the foyer leading into the place is now equipped with sound effects, a kind of spooky roaring noise that kicks in when you open the outer door. Or is that just from a big heater? In any case, it’s fitting that accompanying this noise is a big piece of art on the wall displaying the trademark flame-imagery that looks like the wings shown on the buffalo logo. Or is this simply meant to symbolize the heat generated by the hottest of their buffalo wings?
– The silly signs at St. Croix Scuba have gotten into the spirit of the season, first by saying, “keep your friends close and your anemones closer,” then truly so with “Who delivers gifts to sharks? Santa Jaws.”

Friday, December 19th, 2014

It’s not folly to have a holly, jolly Christmas in atypical ways, such as these:
– Is there a theme here? Car racing fans might think so. Diesel Drive plays Maverick’s Corner Saloon in downtown River Falls on Saturday night, Dec. 20. Another largely country and aptly named group, Mitch Gordon and the Unleaded Band, took the stage at Maverick’s last Saturday. And to continue this naming trend, in a reverse way, the group High Octane has also played recently, at the Willow River Saloon in Burkhardt.
– Also, don’t get sidetracked from some of the holiday revelry that’s more traditional. There will be the annual horse drawn wagon rides from 5-7 p.m. on Saturday, starting from the Sidetrack Saloon and Grill in downtown Roberts. The pickup and drop off will start there at 5 p.m., and allow patrons to view the local holiday lights. You can also rock around the Christmas tree while at Sidetrack, with the open jukebox from 8 p.m. to midnight. Also on tap are hot drinks, snacks and even stuff for the kids.
– Here’s another way to celebrate, with food that will stick to your ribs more than Christmas cookies, and can be had even earlier than the start of the main holiday. Season’s Tavern in North Hudson is taking what the staff concurs is the unusual step for a grill and bar of offering breakfast on Christmas Eve day, Dec. 24. This atypical feast begins early, at 9 a.m., and runs through brunchtime and lunchtime, with the hearty fare continuing to be offered until 1 p.m.
– Garrett, who works at the Smilin’ Moose, has stood in musically with the eight-piece Bad Habits Brass that played the Moose a few weeks ago. He also has set up a chair, played and sang at Dick’s Bar and Grill on Sunday nights while Jeff Loven went on break, showing his creative side with wide-ranging vocals that careen up, down and around.
– A new bar-based sport played on a rink is coming to the area soon, and its fans hope it will spread and go viral, if not global. Its called body ball, and flyers promoting it show two competitors with their torsos covered in puffed up, plastic balloons, making them look like jellyfish. The flyer said that — unlike soccer — this new sport is hilarious, but added the promoters still have to figure out most of the rules and regulations. No word yet on exactly how the game is played, or for signup purposes, how many people need to be on a team.

Drop Tailgate brings extensive resume, pink sparkle guitar to the Willow

Saturday, December 13th, 2014

When you start playing music at an early age, and continue it through your adult life, it means you can open for acts such as Shenandoah, David Allen Coe, Kentucky Headhunters, 38 Special, Nickleback, Ratt, Warrant, Little Big Town and Badfinger, to name a few. Wow, that’s quite a resume, but its one that’s had by Drop Tailgate, a mostly country band that will play at the Willow River Saloon on Saturday night, Dec. 13. However, it’s April Daisy that’s the biggest draw of the group, playing her pink sparkle Taylor guitar as she cranks out lead vocals. She is formerly of Daisy and the Dukes, and has performed with Save By Zero and opened for Neal McCoy and GB Leighton. She has written more than a dozen songs and was selected to perform “Wild Woman Tonight” on the television show “Strictly Original,” which has been showcased in Nashville, in ways that include internet radio.
But this time of year, the Willow is more than just music, it’s the perfect place to watch the playoff-bound Packers. The venue has a range of Sunday specials for game day, including a $10 all-you-can-eat broasted chicken dinner that runs during the course of pro football contests played at any time Sundays, day or night, from 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. There is also a drawing held every night “our favorite green and gold team plays,” for a trip to Vegas that spans three days and two nights for two people. You must be present to win, but with the way the Packers have been playing and all the other amenities that are present, why would you not want to be at the Willow?
– Although not exactly rock music, three other local events were among the most well-anticipated in their genre, and by all accounts lived up to their billing, and look for them to be back again. The large group that is the Steele Family, a band of singers of soul music and other types, performed at Bethel Lutheran Church on Nov. 28 but also have secular connections, having shared the stage with the likes of Donald Fagen and many other rockers and well-known pop musicians. They started making name for themselves in the Minneapolis scene at the same time as Prince and Soul Asylum and their CDs are available in the Cities.
An internationally acclaimed opera soprano who is getting some Grammy buzz and hails from Hudson, and is fresh off the New York Metropolitan Opera’s fall run of Giuseppe Verdi’s “Aidi,” performed an hour-long set of high-ranging holiday music at the University of Wisconsin River Falls. The coffee concert by Margaret Jane Wray was in the intimate setting of the William Abbott Concert Hall. She has done other shows locally, including one with the celebrated Hudsonite and 40-year St. Paul Chamber Orchestra pianist Layton “Skip” James, and says that she intends to be back here soon. Until then, check out her music at www.metopera.org.
Also, a Beatles tribute band played largely acoustic sets at the River Falls Public Library last Tuesday, and a main focus was the music of the late John Lennon. But such tributes can also amp it up, as was made clear by a deejay announcement on 93X that I heard while driving through River Falls: None other than Ozzy Osbourne, who was said to love Beatles music, has made his latest cover song among the many he has done a rendition of a tune Lennon performed called How. Just considering the odd bedfellows, you might want to check out this single.

Saturday, December 6th, 2014

Last weekend, when you combine Thanksgiving with well-celebrated football games between the Badgers and Gophers, and Packers and Patriots, and throw in an amped up Black Friday, it was becoming more and more likely that the drag-out partying four-day span would be followed by a Blue Monday, not a Cyber Monday. (Although, for some of those games, there were full parking lots, but in a few places a few empty tables. An exception was Buffalo Wild Wings, where both the bar counter and big bar table-seating area were so full they weren’t able to seat latecomers).
– A lighted sign outside Historic Casanova Liquors over the Thanksgiving holiday thanked people for supporting their local liquor store. Does that stipulation also apply to all the people who come over here from Minnesota on Sundays? An aside about THEIR local beverage stores, there now is an app via which Twin Citians can order booze for quick delivery. Finally, the Minnesotans have bested Wisconsin. However, they did call a Hudson liquor store — and not even one just off the freeway — 500 times on Thanksgiving to see if they were open, the manager said. (Okay, not ALL those calls came from across the river, but I’m guessing about 98.6 percent). The manager said they should have changed their answering machine message to have it say they are indeed open, and just let it take all the calls. He also said that on one day recently, a Twin Cities broadcast personality came in and ordered hundreds of dollars of high quality liquor and had it loaded into the back of his van.
– Jess at Guv’s Place in Houlton used international shipping to send soccer balls to another place, on another continent, where her daughter has been serving in the military and there was a shortage of such basic equipment — and even a field that isn’t full of holes — that they could use for exercise. Enough balls were shipped to outfit the whole team.
– Also at Guv’s, and also at a place far afield, a patron said he once got an exotic dance from someone who is closely related to a longtime host of a national TV children’s show. (And no, it’s not Peewee Herman).
– Others also live on the edge. Customers at a local establishment said they’ve been told the place is considered a meeting area for cheating husbands or wives coming from the Cities. The bartender said, jokingly, that she wanted names. The patrons replied, fittingly, that they couldn’t do names but could remember some faces.
– But people, especially the bartender, at the Village Inn in North Hudson earlier in fall did remember both the blood moon, and the moon’s eclipse. Problem was that there were wideranging TV accounts — if it was not set for Sports Center — of just at which hour these events would take place. So in both cases the viewing choices ranged from pulling away from one of your busiest serving times to stand outside the door, catching the displays when you were at bar close cleanup time, or staying up until dawn and then being exhausted the rest of the day. The choices were not good, but they were well discussed.
– In watching a sports bar college football game between the Oregon Ducks and their unranked rivals, Oregon State, one of the Ducks pulled up lame and the announcer said “there is an injured Duck.” Could he have said, “wounded Duck?”
– Also seen at the sports bar over the past few months were some interesting last names. The championship pitcher named Bumgartner showed that he ain’t no bum, but I’m not so sure about the player by the unfortunate name Duda, which harkens back to a very old folk song about “walking down the quay,” not the Hudson Dike Road. Lastly, someone who just may have partied a bit much and ended up in the Hudson paper’s police report goes by Moe Oo. That’s right. A few too many vowels.
– According to a flyer at Guv’s, a dog named Rocky who is friendly to other dogs and people — apparently especially so to those in hard hats — has been missing for weeks, last seen in the vicinity of the new Stillwater bridge construction a couple of miles to the south. His has obviously been a rocky road, pardon the pun, as cold weather he faced has also made it cumbersome to do some types of construction work on a new interchange. Bartenders at Guv’s hope that the frigid weather brings some of those workers their way, as happened at least once during the summer when a downpour chased them from the construction site.
– This late night shopping excerpt from my file of being called the Frugal German. After visiting some of the haunts on The Hill, I decided to use one of those great Kwik Trip coupons for a free pound of potatoes (which only cost 38 cents a pound everyday anyway, a shameless plug for one of my favorite inexpensive places to shop), and make some late night munchie fries. I decided to buy only one great big potato, and in a best case scenario push the overall price to 39 cents. However, the clerk said the potato was too green, so I should substitute. When this smaller one got weighed and rang up as only 21 cents, I wondered aloud, if for only a moment, if I should void the transaction and get a second potato. The look on the clerk’s face made the Frugal German recoil and think twice about one potato, two.
It’s like guitarist Geno, formerly of Saving Starz used to say, 50 Cent is a band not a tip. I don’t know if he was speaking directly to me, and maybe I was being a bit paranoid, but one night a hospitality industry worker who was at late night happy hour got on my case about this practice and said I should write an op-ed piece about the injustice of it. I told him that the markets for such articles have dried up down to nothing, and I would have to to do such a thing gratis, which he thought was just fine. Now wait a minute, for me to work for free is fine, but you are the one advocating not just for not leaving a tip, but that tip isn’t big enough? Hmm.
– Showing some killer dance moves at the Smilin’ Moose was someone who looked just like a young Nicole Kidman. On this, a yet another very frigid day, her Irish-styled bright green top went well with her flaming red hair and showed a bit of bare midriff; we give her kudos for bravery to face the cold that way.
– Lastly from the resemblance file, I have to again reference my bartender friend Whitney, who had a look-alike with a prominent role on the TV show The Mentalist. Wouldn’t you know it, that actress also played a bartender, who unlike Whitney was making some extra money running guns. I guess there might be something to this whole idea that sometimes tips just don’t cover the rent.

Friday, December 5th, 2014

The kids and their toys will benefit this Christmas season, because of a benefit at the Willow River Saloon in Burkhardt that’s being held because some adults were not naughty but nice at playing some of their games.
The fifth annual dart tournament in memory of Dan Anderson and Tom “Blackie” Bednarek is Saturday, Dec. 6. It is a luck of the draw, casino style event and the children are the ones who really get lucky, with 100 percent of the proceeds going to Toys for Tots. There is an 11 a.m. signup, and dart tossing starts at noon. Entry fee is $10, and it includes meat and prize raffles, and of course the toy drive. People can still donate gift baskets and gift cards to be used for the raffle if they act fast. Call Bryoni Eggenberger at (715) 808-5358, or Chad Bednarek at (651) 208-5079.
While you are there on Saturday, why not stay and check out the band that comes on at about 9:30 p.m. and do some dancing to wear off that post-holiday turkey, with a group that has a name befitting the onset of the deer hunting season. They are Buck Tucker, a longtime favorite here, bringing their variety of country, and mixing in other styles, to the Willow.
– The Smilin’ Moose again hyped up its number of people on stage at once — count ‘em, eight musicians, and I hear that there are sometimes even more — when the Bad Habits Brass took the stage last weekend. Three of them constituted a horn section, and because of the sheer number of players, it was kind of hard to see the drummer in the background, (that’s probably OK, once most drummers I know shun the limelight). While new at the Smilin’ Moose, the band can be seen regularly at various venues in downtown River Falls, especially Shooter’s Pub.
– Jawsy, a band that features singer Amanda, filled the house at the Village Inn in North Hudson last week. They started their second set with a song that’s been done by a few staple artists in the area in recent times, the one about “99 Red Balloons.” The buzzy, long bass chords on that song complimented Amanda’s singing style well, and it was followed by a couple of lesser known songs featuring a different, plucky then jangly guitar style. Although they are not playing as frequently of late, you can still catch Jawsy on occasion at The Village or Dick’s bar and grill. They also play the Beach Bar in Lakeland, Minn., on Saturday, Dec. 13, with a jaw-dropping 8:30 p.m. start.

Crack open a cold one to salute Swanee’s ice road Swan Song

Tuesday, December 2nd, 2014

After about 25 years of plowing a three-lane wide trail dubbed The Ice Road across one of the wider parts of the St. Croix River, Dave “Swanee” Swanson needed a break, as he wanted his truck that is getting rusty to last a few more years. This said, you might need to see him instead with a different kind of vehicle — at the classic car shows held every other Saturday throughout the summer in North Hudson across from Kozy Korner, although he’s scaled back some of that activity, as well.
It’s not exactly a clean break for him, however. He still plowed the icy route once last year, after being hampered by rough conditions, and twice the previous year, to help people who among other things want to get places where they can crack open a cold one in their ice shanty, and also listen to some cool tunes. The locals say that much of the work may be taken over by Andersen Windows, across the river in Bayport.
The road serves lots of winter recreation enthusiasts, especially the ice fishermen, but its main purpose has been enabling workers from the Hudson side to get to Andersen for one of its three shifts, some more easily traveled then others. And oh, there is that small racetrack that’s been set-up nearby.
Around this time of year, Swanson determines when the road is safe to be plowed by talking to more than the state Department of Natural Resources, but also people wanting to get on the frozen river — lots of them. A key place to get information is right at the start of the ice at Ferry Landing Park in North Hudson, where some of the fishers put their shanties only 30 feet from shore, at a juncture where the river already is 30 feet deep. He notes that there is a gas pipeline underneath, a spring on the Minnesota side and also the power plant there that keeps some water open when the boilers are at work. Things like Christmas trees are propped up and used as safety markers, to show where it is safe for his plow and truck to go.
“It’s never the same at any place all the way across,” Swanson said.
One person who knows this is one of his friends from Stillwater, who for years has used his own method and picks either the Minnesota side or the Wisconsin side near Hudson, then ventures out and sets up his shanty.

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