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April 9, 2008 at 8:06am

MUSIC REVIEW: Buddy Guy

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The last claps of Blue Spark and Flame's thunder were fading into the evening cool as I crossed Monroe into The Bug Jar Wednesday night. The double bill's star attraction, Monotonix, was setting up in the middle of the floor. Except for a few stray road cases, and some Blue Spark and Flame shrapnel, the stage was empty. The hype around this band was so immense - just from fans I'd run into days before - that it was beginning to resemble a threat.

Now, I've seen a lot of shows - a lot. I've watched people on and off stage completely lose their minds. And I've seen some pretty heavy duty energy over the years. Hell, The U.S. Bombs just came through town, and The UV Rays live here. Punk is usually a start-off point when describing bands that throw a saddle on the chaos and ride. You see bodies flying through the air, hear a primal scream over primitive drums and crude guitar, and you think punk, right?

Well, Monotonix is not a punk band. Monotonix is intense beyond words. Monotonix is a magnificent tantrum. The current state of affairs in the band's native Tel Aviv is no doubt volatile, restrictive, and scary. And the art that's inspired by that is just so intense, it's useless to try to contain it. The band's rage was only matched by a big troublemaking streak. Stomping about and flailing his arms as if imitating a chicken, the lead singer wailed in a non-stop freak-out. The drummer set his kit on fire, and the guitar player covered all the sonics, top to bottom. Best show I've seen in a long, long time.

Buddy Guy brought the blues to Water Street Music Hall deep-dish Chicago style Monday night. This cat swaggers with so much class, that he even looked elegant in a track suit. Guy played every notch on the volume dial from a whimper to a roar, while singing as if he could barely contain himself. He dug into the dirty blues, some Muddy Waters, some John Lee Hooker, and was working his way into the crowd as I split. I would've stayed longer, but his soulful take on Otis Redding's "Dreams To Remember" put a fire in my girl's pants, and I had to go home and put it out.

Comments for "MUSIC REVIEW: Buddy Guy" (4)

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Cindy said on Apr. 10, 2008 at 10:58am

Sorry to ask this here - but I couldn't find anyplace suitable... Does Rochester have a jazz club? I know it has the Jazz Festival, but I'm looking for a place that plays solid jazz on a regular basis. Thanks for any suggestions.

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Jen said on Apr. 10, 2008 at 11:23am

The Grill at Strathallan (550 East Ave). There's live jazz there regularly, at least every Thursday-Saturday. City lists the acts weekly.

:) Jen

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Greg said on Apr. 11, 2008 at 6:23pm

There are a lot of places to hear jazz in the Rochester area. In addition to looking on City's music calendar, you can check out my site Jazz@Rochester for listings for live jazz every Wednesday night and throughout the week.

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Greg said on Apr. 11, 2008 at 6:26pm

Coming from Chicago, I have missed seeing Buddy Guy live, but couldn't make his gig on Monday. However, nothing will top seeing him while I was in college in the 1980s at the Checkerboard Lounge on the South Side with Pinetop Perkins and Junior Wells. The "Guy" is da bomb. A can of 'Style and a plastic chair 10' from the stage....blues heaven.

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