Saturday, May 18

Blues Explosion blazes into hearts of fans


Wednesday, November 27, 1996

CONCERT:

Jon Spencer’s group combines music genres for a new soundBy
Michael Nazarinia

Daily Bruin Contributor

More often than not a band comes to a modest level of success in
its mostly short-lived existence and is dealt a swift blow by a
hypercritical public.

But that won’t happen to Jon Spencer, because his band, the
Blues Explosion, will be commanding masses of fans.

After a heartfelt and audience-endearing performance by R.L.
Burnside, the opening blues band from Tennessee, the Jon Spencer
Blues Explosion took to the Palace stage on Friday with the kind of
energy that goes along with the name.

Touring in support of their new album, "Now I Got Worry,"
Spencer and fellow bandmates Judah Bauer and Russel Simmins found
an eager and supportive audience waiting for the shot-in-the-arm
performance that has made this band one of the hottest acts on the
road in quite a while.

The Blues Explosion plays every note as if it were its last.
Spencer has the charm and stage presence of Elvis Presley and
Marlon Brando combined, and he lets the music transform itself
naturally.

The Blues Explosion combines the best elements of blues, punk
and a little funk. With radical changes in tempos, rhythms and
riffs, the Blues Explosion even brings psychedelia into the mix.
The distorted screeching guitars grab your attention and constantly
challenge your hearing limits.

After the first three songs off the new album, Spencer and
company broke into "Bell-Bottoms," a song off their 1994 release,
"Orange." The chorus caught the eager audience somewhat off-guard,
but after a few chants the crowd really got into it by singing
along.

Some of the lyrics seem other-worldly when Spencer sings some of
the new songs, like "Wail," "2kindsa Love," or "Can’t Stop." Even
Bauer got into it with probably the best song on "Now I Got Worry,"
"Fuck Shit Up." In this anti-anthem song Bauer proclaims, "Spray
paint the walls/Trash the halls/Fuck shit up/Do it for fun," with
the earnest appeal of a man who truly believes in the
rebelliousness of what rock should be.

When the set was near its conclusion, Spencer showed the lack of
musical constraints that are the trademark of his New York band.
During the encore, a spectacled "Weird" Al Yankovic came up to play
a few numbers with an accordion in hand.

The Blues Explosion never lets up, but continually challenges
its listeners to heighten their musical standards and not just
follow the herd of 20-something alternative music buyers.

SHAWN LAKSMI

The Blues Explosion energetically played in concert at The
Palace on Friday.

The Blues Explosion combines the best elements of blues, punk
and a little funk.


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