What Tala Vera lacks in size, it
makes up for in vibe. Friday night was my first experience hearing a band on
the heavy side at this downtown venue. While the music was perhaps a couple of
clicks over too loud, the space still managed to contain the hard rock of both Rock
‘n’ Roll Social Club (featuring former members of Boneyard) and Minds
Open Wide (ex-Kaged, et al).When the band first
reformed it stuck with old material, but Social Club has penned a bunch of
brilliant tunes that aren’t just new, but seem to be heading in a new
direction. I like it, I like it, yes I do.
Minds Open Wide plays a rather unnerving angular type of
progressive rock — this ain’t background noise for
you to get your serve on; it will not be ignored. Rhythmically it’s hard to pin
down, with its obtuse structures and stop-on-a-dime dynamics. It seems
incredibly precise and undoubtedly hard to play. These cats are good, I’m
telling you.
Despite the down-home, aw-shucks farm imagery its name
conjures, Syracuse’s Turnip Stampede adds a little big-city blues to its
rural ramble and jam (perhaps we’ll call it “jamble”).
The band played late Friday night at the Dinosaur Bar-B-Que. The closest
comparison I can make would be Ten Years After. If you haven’t seen the footage
of the band’s closing set at Woodstock, well then, you just have to in 2013. In
the meantime check out Turnip Stampede as the band breathes new life into the
stock hippie jam by giving it wings and teeth.
As the former bandleader for O.V. Wright
and Little Johnny Taylor, Mississippi-born Johnny Rawls is steeped in
blues tradition. And that’s before you even talk about the man’s own contributions
to the genre. This is blues that skates on the soul/r&b
razor. No matter how lowdown it’s rendered, smiles crack, booties shake.
As I’ve said before, with the blues, I love as it wafts out of a joint like it did at the Dinosaur Saturday
night. I hung on to Rawls’ rhythm and smooth with the nicotine crowd and dug it
until my chattering teeth drowned him out. I’ll try this approach again in the spring
when it’s warmer. Eesh.
This article appears in Dec 26, 2012 – Jan 1, 2013.






