Hudson Wisconsin Nightlife

July, 2015Archive for

Friday, July 31st, 2015

Good things in store this weekend, both big and small:
– The Big Canadian is heading to, we hope, even bigger and better places. Bartender Kelsey, a stalwart at the Agave Kitchen and prior to that Dick’s Bar and Grill, is the guest of honor at a farewell party in his honor at Agave on Sunday night, Aug. 2. Is this the event of the day, if not the season? As the Agave marquee put it, #Canaduh.
– It’s now way past knee-high, which means it’s ready for the picking, and we’re not talking just fiddle music, although there might be that, too. The annual corn and chicken feed at the Willow River Saloon in Burkhardt is also Sunday, starting earlier and running from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m., or whenever they run out, which might be sooner rather than later when it’s this tasty. Proceeds go to the town of St. Joseph Fire Department. As far as that other kind of picking, there is music by Drop Tailgate on Friday evening and Strangers on Saturday evening.
– There are a lot of groups with whiskey in their name, but try this one on. “Whiskey Stone” is not only a band that plays the Smilin’ Moose on Friday night, but also small soapstones that are added to bourbon in place of ice, to keep the spirit chilled without diluting it. As the members say about both, they’re never watered down, which is why Whiskey Stone calls itself the region’s most exciting new country and rock variety band. One thing to get excited about is that there set list includes about 40 different bands, with very little duplication.
– There are about eight different bands from each of Wisconsin and Minnesota during the Border Battle Weekend at the Somerset Amphitheater, on you guessed it, two different stages, as well as many craft brews and of course, camping. The festival goes July 31-Aug. 2, and get tickets as soon as possible via their web site. One band Hudson concert-goers may recogize from playing locally is Sans Souci, even though they hail from the Minnesota side. The fest bills itself as, “This is all out war … if your definition is a hell of a party.”

Skies and dance floors blackened, so bring on drinks by candlelight

Monday, July 27th, 2015

For the third time since year 2000, Hudson nightclubs have successfully met the challenges that go with doing business when the power goes out during the peak time on a weekend.
Sometimes, one thing ebbs while another stays on, depending on just where there’s something like a lightning strike and what area on the electric grid is effected. For instance, in the latest occurrence, the dance floor darkened at Dick’s Bar and Grill, but somehow the disco ball kept spinning and flashing. I guess that truly is “Dancing in the Dark.” Sort of.
Likewise at Pudge’s, where only one of the two main rooms went black, but a few signs touting specific drink brands remained functioning. Hence the rumors of a lightning strike nearby — and just where and how far away — kept flowing just like the tap beer.
Up the street, city crews responded quickly and put up stop signs where traffic signals had failed. After last call came and went, but rains still threatened, a motorcycle remained parked largely alone on the main drag. Wouldn’t want to be that guy (or gal). As for my car, there was a big branch tucked under the trunk, which promptly blew away after I nudged it into the street. This same wind earlier had effected a daytime concert outdoors in North Hudson, where much of the sheet music suddenly blew away. As it was, just after bar time, a friend from Hastings, Minn. said that he watched the “fireworks,” read lightning flashes, for a while from Lakefront Park near the dike road sign until the storm passed, so he would not have to drive home in it.
On one of the earlier instances, the ways bars kept the drinks flowing had even included making flaming rum drinks, all the better to see you by.
One women even came back into Pudge’s, after having left minutes earlier, and jokingly asked if anyone had “seen” the jacket she’d left behind. Staffers were able to find it, thanks in part to some candlelight that was well placed, as their just weren’t enough wicks to go around. Accurately tipping and paying for drinks proved a little more challenging, except when it involved the aformentioned rum drinks. Think of Captain Morgan, God forbid, as the guardian of your treasure.
Alas, the electricity came on right before closing time, and since clocks had been off for roughly two hours, but not on the head, patrons were in a somewhat of a quandry about just how long they had to finish that last drink.

Friday, July 24th, 2015

When one front door closes, another opens, to a brand new place.

– Yet another large-scale local remodeling project is taking wing. Buffalo Wild Wings is closing to do this mega-makeover at 11 p.m. Saturday, July 25, and reopen the following Thursday — when they invite you to join them for a brand new experience. These are what the sign on the front door calls, “exciting times.” It adds that for more information, “check with a team member,” because you don’t want to have to go too long without seeing your favorite sports team members in action. As it was, crews with lots of equipment were already on scene at 10:50 p.m. Saturday.
– It’s last call, literally, until fall. In another big change occurring this weekend, Guv’s Place in Houlton is using huge drink specials to celebrate its customer appreciation day, going strong all day on July 26. The previous day, and it just wouldn’t be Guv’s without this, is a beanbag toss tournament. Guv’s then plans to reopen in North Hudson in early October.
– Draft parties for things such as the NFL have been all the rage for the past few years, but now there are even pre-draft parties. At Buffalo Wild Wings, they note that all you have to do is give them a call, meet a couple of qualifications, and they’ll mail you a kit complete with draft boards, B-Dubs paraphernalia and special food offers so you can have your shindig there, (they add that they’ve been doing draft-related parties since they opened quite a few years back). Across the street, Green Mill also is having such parties, and offers a contest where you can win free bonus cards, large pizzas and wing samplers and soda for when you hold your party. There are of course lots of official rules listed, among them that your likeness, etc., can be used by Green Mill for promotional purposes, and if you really draft well, why wouldn’t you want to share that with the world?
– Based in Minneapolis, but having shared the stage with bigtime bands that hail from all over the place, Almost Famous plays the Willow River Saloon in Burkhardt on Friday, July 24. The band consists of past and present musicians from Austin Healy, Wicked Sensation, Rad Company and Thieves Carnival. Just formed, Almost Famous has opened for numerous national recording artists that have many different styles, such as Lynyrd Skynyrd, 38 Special, Jason Aldean, Molly Hatchet, The Outlaws, Georgia Satellites, Marshall Tucker Band, Leon Russell, Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, Little River Band, Black Oak Arkansas, Blackfoot, Foghat, Loverboy and Quiet Riot.

Duplicity in music dished out by Donovan and Garret at Kozy grand opening

Friday, July 17th, 2015

Here’s to doubling your pleasure and more. Kozy Korner in North Hudson is again celebrating its anniversary of opening that took place several years back, and the pizzaria, restaurant and sports bar is offering not one but two music acts. And on the tournament end, there are also bean bags as well as bands.
The sign at Kozy says this about timing of it all, which goes on virtually all day Saturday, July 18: “Beanbags start 1. Garret sings 4. Donovan sings 7.” And beers and other things to your taste until 2:30.
The music acts might be considered the dynamic duo, as they reportedly sing a lot of the same songs, in much the same style. Garret, for example, as a solo act is known for his voice, backed by guitar, that careens widely up, down and around but is never quite out of control; dare I make a comparison to Robert Plant?
Donovan hails from Stillwater, and has forsaken the Logjam mega-fest that is there this weekend to be with, and play for, the Nelson clan at Kozy that he knows well.

It’s summertime, and the Somerset music is easy, but not the ‘mudding’

Thursday, July 16th, 2015

It’s a sweetheart of a deal; two summer Somerset-area festivals, mostly music but also maxing out on muscle, and singer Amanda back at a place close to her, as Huey Lewis would sing, heart and soul:
– I must reference again, three hearts for a sweetheart! Jawsy featuring lead singer Amanda will be back at the nightclub where she formerly bartended and sang, Dick’s Bar and Grill, on Friday evening, July 17, starting around 6. A chalkboard sign at Dick’s announcing the gig had a trio of Valentines-style hearts colored around her name.
– There are two large-scale events in the Somerset area all this weekend. One is the Sonshine festival, which features all forms of Christian music. The Somerset mega-music-marathons follow in the footsteps of OzzFest, which attracted as many as 40,000 fans and you might be surprised to know gave strong credence to secular bands that are unusually spiritual, especially on its main stage. Sonshine’s main headliner, Skillet, follows to a great degree in that metal tradition. Like most previous festivals, Sonshine also will have multiple stages, each devoted to a particular genre largely defined by instrumental style.
The fest starts in earnest on Thursday and runs until late-night all weekend at the Somerset Amphitheater, which is known for its music friendly bowl shape that works well with all those stages on the east side.
– Also expected to draw many thousands of spectators is the nearby Tough Mudder competition, part of a national circuit whose miles of obstacle courses, for an example, are even much more intricate then some of those old school metal concert stages (am I sensing a trend?) These extreme athletes will hit the Game Unlimited Hunting Club just east of Hudson along County E for most of the day Saturday and Sunday, and fans should get there bright and early, since upwards of 15,000 are expected at the 900-acre club. Officials say the event brings in between $2-10 million to the local economy, and this would buy a lot of celebratory victory beers at local establishments. See websites for details on both these events.

The Fourth’s party finery includes flags and much else, among the fireworks

Saturday, July 11th, 2015

Fire up the Fourth, and give it a boost with the colorful tapestry of sight and sound of a local festival:
– On the Fourth of July itself, all kinds of people came out dressed stylishly in red, white and blue, dozens of them women sporting much more-so than other colors, the stripes of red and white. In fact, I only saw one such person dressed without these kinds of stripes.
– During fireworks on The Fourth, being viewed from the parking area of Guv’s Place in Houlton, there was a host of patriotic music being played from a single boom box, crossing all different genres. Later, about a flagstaff distance away, a man attracted attention for twirling Old Glory around at about the height of his midsection. As a side note, Guv’s has not been able to renew its lease, (a big boo to the owner of the property), and will close its doors later in July, workers said.
– A patriotic biker was like many vehicle drivers over the Fourth, propping up even bigger flags that waved in the back of their ride. Only this guy was just going about 23 mph, in spurts, through the Hudson to North Hudson crawl. He had slogans posted just below the flag, along the lines of Live and Ride Free. It’s just that at that speed, the breeze isn’t exactly going to blow through your hair.
– A Hudson Booster Days welcome sign was erected on the sidewalk in front of a Second Street boutique. The placard was so wide, about three feet, did it leave room for possibly tipsy people to make their way past?
– Near the band area, one guy was insistent on hitching a ride with the beer delivery cart, both on its front and back hoods. It’s unclear whether he had success in his quest for a lift. (After this web item was published, it came to light that there had been an altercation between a Booster official and others about allegedly unauthorized use of such a cart, called a Gator, near the end of a late-night concert. Ouch! I guess that puts some teeth it it, concerning the Gator.)
– A Booster beer tent bartender had stars sprouting from the antenni on her forehead, and had star-shaped lens on her glasses, to boot. Does this “starry eyed” look mean she might not quite see well enough to gauge whether people are over 21?
– The band Arch Allies was being talked up all over town on Friday night after the beer tents closed. Most thought they were great, with a qualification or two about the relatively new lead singer, and some patrons recalled the days of the band playing (many times) at the former Dibbo’s. At least one listener added the same accolades (mostly) about Uncle Chunk, Saturday’s headliner, and its new lead singer.
– Just a block-or-so up the street, the Dogg Haus eatery had on its sign announcing hours of operation that it would be open until 3 a.m. on Friday and Saturday. After Booster Days, the closing time listed reverted to 10 p.m. I guess that the Booster Days change was not registered in Dog Years.
– On the Thursday of Booster Days, more than a dozen costumed people from the St. Paul Winter Carnival, from the likely local Klondike Kate to guys dressed up like Mexicans and Cowboys, descended on Buffalo Wild Wings, just to spice it up even a bit more.
– Ryan Nelson of Kozy Korner in North Hudson and some of his comrades attended a World Cup soccer game, sitting in wouldn’t you know it, the front row, and were pictured on TV several times. Ryan said that they couldn’t see the main action as well as if they’d had similar seating up front and center in the upper deck, but they were up close and personal with athletes stretching out on the sidelines, for example. He added that it was a hoot when the USA team was on their side of the field for one half of the game, but then not the other half, and that it was the most interesting time they’ve had at any sporting event, and some of them have been prominent. Kozy held a viewing party for the Women’s World Cup final, and patrons were in for a treat, as USA raced to a 4-0 lead and went on to beat Japan, Ryan noted later while still sporting a string of beads.
In related news, a sign across the street from Kozy at the Village Inn said earlier in the week, prior to Booster Days kicking it up, “Hey Ryan Nelson, where’s UR bracelet? #BFFS.” Is there some inside joke that I’m not getting?
– News just in regarding American Sky Brewery in Hudson is that it has been bought by a brew company from Minnesota, and some facets, mostly in production, may be relocating. However, Sky employees assure us that the changes locally as far as entertainment will be minimal. The Hangar Taproom and bar will continue to operate and live music will continue on weekends, as the new management has scant experience with this part of the business, and band bookings are full through September and they also are always looking for new acts, workers said.
– Patrons going from such places, and others on the eastern end of The Hill, may find themselves negotiating the new 70 mph speed limit on Interstate 94. Just a word to the wise: Better drink about 5 ounces less alcohol than you formerly did in being under the legal limit, to compensate for what that extra 5 mph does to your reaction time.

Tavern porches are added left and right to the tried and true, and that’s not trivia

Saturday, July 11th, 2015

 

The deck at Dick’s leads the way as far as finishing projects, and you could do worse than to bet on “Duh” and “Dodo” when dealing with trivia answers.
– The three major renovation projects at downtown bars, (more or less centered on porches), at Pudges and Dick’s — which finished first well before The Fourth — and also the Moose, continued forward as summer has started to beckon.
Pudge’s has its huge and I must say stellar streetside patio of tables, firepots and flora reduced in size but not in style, in part because of city regulations, as a large-scale, multi-faceted and multi-floored remodeling project continues. The new Dick’s patio room on the east end is done, keeping the best of the old as far as design, but shoring things up a bit in Room Four and making it more roomy, at least as far as appearance seems, and adding to the brick look. And at The Moose, the much-talked-about — including at length at city government meetings — and large deck that is on a second level and faces the St. Croix River now has more than half its flooring laid down.
(In related happenings, the latter venue around Memorial Day weekend had its patio windows that link to the inside open for the first time of the season. Is it fair to say that with the often cold temps around that time of year, it got a somewhat cool reception? Even if it did, that amenity still contributed to the place being hopping at times earlier in June, depending on the weather, and especially at many later hours when Hudson Booster Days bands let out).
And sometimes you need to let it out with a mind game, even if it requires a moniker. Success at TV trivia at Buffalo Wild Wings also can be foreshadowed by the code names chosen by the participants. A case in point most recently is the winning ways of “shark,” who just might also be a successful contestant on the reality show Shark Tank.
A man who goes by the simple moniker, “Duh,” gained mention on the leader board for having a temporary score of well, you guessed it, zero, although he redeemed himself later. (Well duh, he better). However, one of the more successful players, ranking as many as nine times in the top 10 at one point, goes by the name of “Dodo,” which perhaps goes to show that the flightless bird is not extinct after all. A bit later, there was “Bobo,” not Dodo, who got a question right about the number of ridges on the diameter of a dime. Apparently he has time to count such things when not playing BuzzTime.
And of course their is the player named “Badazz,” which is possibly intentionally misspelled because after all, this is a family establishment.

RF Days has the best music this side of Vegas, in ‘Viva La Kinni’

Thursday, July 9th, 2015

They’ll roll out the rock and country at River Falls Days, taking the name “Viva La Kinni,” from July 10-12.

Sushi Roll plays on Friday from 9:30 p.m. to 1 a.m. Formed in 2012, the band quickly perfected their own blend of high-energy dance music and rock nā€™ roll swagger, their bio says. They seamlessly transition between revved-up versions of pop and rock hits by artists like Maroon 5, Katy Perry, Lady Gaga, AC/DC, P!nk, Madonna and the Jackson 5, connecting them into a non-stop musical journey.
Country bands Rural Route 5 and Lost Highway perform on Saturday, from 7:30-9:30 p.m. and 10 p.m. to 1:30 a.m., respectively.
Rural Route 5 is known for the clarity of their country sound, even though its loud like rock n’ roll, and for doing two-part harmonies to songs where you normally don’t hear it. This band is up-and-coming even though made up almost entirely of youngsters. They hail from New Richmond and will have you stomping your boots and singing along to Reba, Jason Aldean and everything in-between.
Since their inception in 2009, Lost Highway has proven to be one of the Upper Midwest’s top country bands. Their commitment to the genre and to electrifying crowds is evident every time they hit the stage, their bio says.
Opening the show on Saturday, at Veteran’s Park from 3-5 p.m., are the rockers that get a lot of local gigs, Trouble Maker, and feature “extreme variety music” across various genres and a regularly changing set list.
The first three bands are at the Heritage Park lot, in the main stage tent, and cost is $5 for adults and $3 for children under 12, with gate fees starting at 6:30 p.m.
Also musically on Friday is a supervised deejay teen dance, from 9-11 p.m. at the City Hall plaza, hosted by Showtime Entertainment, which includes contests and a variety of DJ flair.
Rounding out the weekend’s bill, the Martell All Stars, consisting of a slate of guitarists and singers, takes the main stage from 1-4 p.m. Sunday at Heritage Park.
There is other music at downtown bars, and the most original is at Bo’s n’ Mine on Saturday night, the seven-piece band License to Thrill, which is described as a performance dance band that is “witty and cleancut” and has more Green Day on its play list than any other cover. On Friday night at Bo’s, it’s the country sounds of Farmer’s Daughter.
Johnnie’s Bar has three popular bands, Chimney Fish on Thursday, Old School on Friday and the Rhythm Roosters on Saturday. At Maverick’s on Friday is Mitch Gordon and the Unleaded Band, and on Saturday is DJ Tyco. Shooter’s on Friday features a return engagement of the Bad Habits Brass. All are evening performances.
Rural Route 5 also can be seen under the tent by West Wind Supper Club on Friday, and Still Runnin’ on Saturday. Both shows start at 8:30 p.m.
There also is a variety of other entertainment all weekend long at River Falls Days. For information, see their Facebook page.

Thursday, July 2nd, 2015

Just in case you needed another Booster Days band primer, and you might need a reminder to keep things straight, considering there are, count ‘em, nine bands at the annual festival playing from July 2-4 at Lakefront Park. Here goes:
– On Thursday, it’s the internationally prominent guitar wizardry of one-man-band Jeff Loven from 5:30-8:15 p.m.; and a late-teen country phenom from Minneapolis, Devon Worley, from 9 p.m.-12:30 a.m.
– Friday brings more of the rock sound with Alive, a complete-list Pearl Jam tribute band, playing from 3:30-6 p.m.; the heavy strains from the ’80s and other periods of Rock Brigade from 6:30-8:30 p.m.; and the locally-popular Arch Allies as a tribute band to Styx, Journey and REO Speedwagon from 9 p.m.-12:30 a.m. Opening on Friday is 23rd Hour, a female duo that says they like to go beyond the constraints of a full band, from 1-3 p.m.
– On Saturday, it’s a bit more diverse, with the cranked up, Texas blues of Armadillo Jump from 1:30-4:30 p.m.; the horn-section driven Ponzi Scheme from 5:15-8:15 p.m.; and the popular rock, pop and country of top cover band Uncle Chunk from 9 p.m.-12:30 a.m.
Sponsors include the Hudson Boosters (two bands), Uncle Mike’s Em Pour E-Yum, Luther Hudson Chevrolet GMC (one of the headliner bands), Chad Carlson as a financial representative, Hudson Ford (a headliner), Pita Pit, Family Fresh Market, and Croix Gear and Machining (a headliner). There is no cover charge for any of the bands, including headliners.

– As an added accoutrement, there is all-out acoustic music starting with “August” at Mallard’s in Bayport this Fourth of July weekend.Things started with a well-attended contemporary acoustic show by August Blues on Friday, followed by a band doing a similar style, Joel Katchel, on Saturday and the interactive acoustic performance by Riverside, Dave Burkhart on Sunday. The shows typically start at 7 p.m.

Recent Comments

Archives