The F Word. An online column for Frank De Blase to pontificate, ruminate, placate, and salivate. We’ll have reviews and previews, we’ll discuss trends in local and national music scenes, and we’ll try to do it as reverently as possible. Yup. Let’s get started.
For this weekโs F Word, weโre coming up with songs that have numbers in them, kind of like license plate bingo: โ9 to 5,โ โThe Magnificent Seven,โ โEight Days a Week,โ โOne,โ โIt Takes Two,โ โLove Potion No. 9,โ โTen Years Gone,โ โTake Five,โ โ99 Problems,โ and so on.
And of course, you canโt leave out Paul Simonโs โ50 Ways To Leave Your Lover.โ A quick ring on the phone from Steve Gadd brought Simon and the song to a gobsmacked, starstruck audience in Kodak Hall at the Eastman Theatre last night.
Let me back up and explain a little. Last night proved to be a Prime Time, funkified, celebratory affair at the seventh induction ceremony for the Rochester Music Hall of Fame. The show was completely sold out and stayed that way for more than four hours; my butt is still asleep. From the opening segment with Alyssa Coco, Bree Draper, and Danielle Ponder to the cacophonous collision at the nightโs conclusion that included all inductees and guests jamming on Hendrixโs โPurple Haze,โ it was a show to remember.
My only complaint was the showโs flow; it dragged a little. All the nominees are each prolific artists in their own right, but they could have trimmed their sections just a bit. However, the Tony Levin and Steve Gadd portion of the evening could have gone on forever. Gadd positively rocked the vibes while Levin redefined the bass before our very ears โ all before giving us a lesson in how to leave your lover from the leaver himself, Paul Simon.
Simon, a secret surprise guest, approached the mic and asked if the crowd had any requests. Rabid shouting ensued and continued until Simon said in his classic deadpan โI donโt take requests.โ He did however, play โ50 Ways To Leave Your Loverโ โ Gadd wrote and recorded the songโs drums โ and โLate In The Evening,โ which Levin wrote the bassline for.
I would be remiss if I didnโt mention John Beckโs solo piece โ before going over to the drums to regale us with a jumpinโ version of โSing, Sing, Singโ โ and The Campbell Brothers, who over the years have drained my vocabulary of superlatives and hyperbole. Suffice it to say, they move me to tears โฆ Hey, thatโs another one: โ99 Tears.โ
I Scene It
This past Saturday was Record Store Day, where at the Bop Shop they had guest DJs spinning 7-inch nuggets from their personal stash, like Greg Townson, who spun my request of Bill Haleyโs โ40 Cups of Coffeeโ (there are those numbers again).
Over at the Record Archive, Hanna PK played with her group The Blue Hearts and rocked the house. It was the best sheโs ever sounded. She sang pretty and played gritty. She rocked and rolled, bopped and strolled, all over the baby grandโs eighty-eights. Iโd like to hear her do Connie Allenโs โRocket 69โ or Jackie Brenstonโs โRocket 88,โ considered by some to be the first rock โnโ roll record. I just know sheโd do a number on them.
Later that evening at Sticky Lips BBQ City Music Hall, I saw Nobodyโs Marigold in the dark. Itโs not like the lights were down for atmosphere; there were none. They sounded great augmenting themselves around new stuff with a nod to their former Raw Magillys selves. I know it ainโt new, but I like it, like it, yes I do.
Play Along with the F Word
In this weekโs cover story, โParkinsonโs, cannabis, and hope,โ I threw in a Chuck Berry lyric. If you can find the lyric in there, youโll win a new local CD. Name the song itโs from and youโll get two. Email me at the address below.
By the Way
Mary Gauthier plays Tuesday at Lovinโ Cup, for those who dig their happy mixed with some adroit bittersweet. And Friday, April 27, itโs the new and improved Hi-Risers at The Arbor Loft. See you there.
Any questions? Any answers? E-mail me here at frank@rochester-citynews.com. F-out.
This article appears in Apr 18-24, 2018.






