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How much can one fan of OKOM (Our Kind Of Music) accomplish in just a couple of years? Plenty, if it's Rockzilla, aka photographer Michael Johnson. From 2003 to 2005, rockzilla.net was a chronicle of the alt.country scene from a uniquely Texan perspective. But all good things must end, and Rockzilla has retired from the online 'zine scene.

This mirror site was copied from the rockzilla.net site with the express permission of Rockzilla hisself. If you don't believe me, go to the KHYI-Fans email list and ask him! Buddy will back me up, too.



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Jesse Dayton
Live in Las Vegas
Stag Records
By William Michael Smith

Of all the bands under the umbrella of the alt.Texas genre, Jesse Dayton seems like the perfect Texas band for Las Vegas, the perfect combination of musicianship and, just as importantly, showmanship. Dayton and his band are not only some of the best pickers on the scene, they've got the flash and eye-grabbing showmanship to go with it.

It doesn't hurt that Dayton bears a striking resemblance to the former King ­ if you don't look too closely. Vegas loves the King and Vegas loves a show. It doesn't take too much imagination or shrewd observation to see that Dayton has cultivated some of the crucial Presley performing traits -- not the glitzy, absurdly costumed schtick of the Vegas Presley that spawned an industry of cheesy imitators but the stripped down, hubba-hubba rockabilly electricity that propelled that Tupelo, Mississippi boy to mega-stardom in the '50s.

Recorded during a weeklong engagement at the Venetian Room on the Vegas Strip, the seven song EP Live In Las Vegas documents one of the blazingest, hell-for-leather, show-blow-get-the-dough musical outfits Texas has unleashed on an unsuspecting world in ages. What is truly impressive is that this is a sound board recording completely devoid of production tweaks and mastering wizardry. It's as raw as a cut from a straight razor. While the drums come across a bit tinny in the mix, the overall effect is a dagger through the honky tonk heart of the impression that alt.Texas bands are loose and undisciplined and musically limited. These tracks catch a moment of such musical precision that, if the crowd screams were filtered out and the mix was retouched, they could be mistaken for carefully sculpted studio takes. After a while, one can't help but think, "Don't these guys ever miss a lick, muff a pick up, slide slightly out of harmony, or get upside down? And how many Gawd-damn fingers do Dayton and that steel player have, for Christ sake?" The speed of light picking on the album is simply awe-inspiring and a further testament to why Dayton was a favorite of Waylon's and the lead guitarist in Ray Price's orchestra, and why Eddie Spaghetti of the Supersuckers can be heard telling the crowd as the final track of his Must've Been Live album fades out, "That's Brian Thomas, y'all, and he's a motherfucker on anything with strings on it!" Dayton and Thomas play with an intensity and authenticity that instantly distinguishes them from the technically proficient but canned-sounding licks of Nashville's studio giants.

While five of the tracks are simply live versions of songs from Dayton's Raisin' Cain and Tall Texas Tales albums, his core fans will recognize two longtime crowd favorites, Greg Wood's "Tall Texas Trash" and Trent Summar's "Let's Go Get Stoned (And Listen to George Jones"). The old rockabilly Road King Dayton is one of the heppest cats on the alt.Texas scene and he masterfully handles these tongue-in-cheek anthems with the sense of aplomb and hyperbole his lineage demands.

No Depression editor Grant Alden wrote in his review of Dayton's previous release, Hey Nashvegas, that Dayton had yet to fulfill the promise of his live shows with his studio recordings. Though only a seven track EP recorded on the fly, Live In Las Vegas should go far towards removing that criticism. These guys don't need any pyrotechnics.

*www.jessedayton.com and www.stagrecords.com Catch Dayton at the Continental Club in Houston March 21, and in April at the Houston International Festival.

Contact William Michael Smith at wms-at-rockzilla.net

 

 
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