[Live MP3s] James Kochalka Superstar in Cambridge – August 2006
Posted on September 27, 2006 at 1:19 pm | No Comments
September’s been a banner month for the two sides of James Kochalka, both the cartoonist and the musical Superstar: His band’s long-delayed Rykodisc album, “Spread Your Evil Wings and Fly“, was finally released on September 12th, just a few days after he was honored with his first-ever comics industry Harvey Award. During the September 9th ceremony at the Baltimore Comic-Con, James was granted the 2006 “Best Online Comics Work” title for his daily diary strip, American Elf.
But as good as AE and his printed comics work is, this here post is about his music, which I’ve been all-too familiar with since his days in the casio/saxophone/JK combo Jazzin’ Hell back in his (and my former) hometown of Burlington, Vermont. (trivia: Jazzin’ Hell included Philistines Jr./Zambonis member and ace Interpol/The National recording engineer Peter Katis, as well as Thicker Magazine main-man Eric Bradford). After a few years fronting Jazzin’ Hell, James eventually started releasing songs under the prescient name of James Kochalka Superstar, an umbrella under which James has invited a long list of friends to record and perform. (more trivia/disclaimer: I was fortunate enough to have been one of these random members, in a short-lived live lineup that included Colin Clary, Gogol Bordello’s Eugene Hutz, and Pistol Stamen of the Pants. We were not, some would say, ‘the tightest’ incarnation of JKS, but we sure put on a show).
JKS’ songs actually have a fair amount in common with his comics work: deceptively simple and insidiously catchy, childlike wonder combined with the subtle (and not-at-all subtle) hints of naughtiness. It’s kids music for grown-up kids: kinda goofy at times, insightful at others, and occasionally all at once. There’s no middle ground with James’ stuff… you either dig it or you don’t, much like other bands that get name dropped in his reviews (TMBG, King Missle, Ween, etc.).
After several albums on a variety of small labels (including the 1995 Dot Dot Dash debut, “The True Story of James Kochalka Superstar”, 2000’s “Carrot Boy the Beautiful” on Sudden Shame, and the self-released “Don’t Trust Whitey” in 2001), James inked a deal with Rykodisc that started with the release of a best-of compilation, last year’s “Our Most Beloved”. While Ryko initially seemed reluctant to nail down a release date for a follow-up of all new material, that changed quickly once his song “Hockey Monkey” (co-written with the Zambonis) was chosen as the theme song for the Fox sitcom “The Loop“. The amped up exposure not only put “Spread Your Evil Wings and Fly” on their fall release schedule, but resulted in the four-song iTunes-only “Hockey Monkey” EP.
To mark the unveiling of “Spread Your Evil Wings and Fly”, James played a few stripped-down shows with his bandmate (and frequent American Elf cameo canine, and Icebox Records co-guy) Jason ‘x-12’ Cooley on guitar. They ended in New York after stopping in Philly, but the first show was here in Cambridge, MA on Friday night, August 25th with comedians Neil Hamburger & Morgan Murphy, and the World’s Greatest Sinners. Despite the fact that JKS was on first, the placed was packed from the get-go. Here’s their entire set…
Live at The Middle East Upstairs
Cambridge, MA
Friday, August 25th, 2006
01. Ringo Starr
02. Magic Finger
03. Fascist Bikes
04. Even The Clouds Get High
05. Why Is The Sky Blue?
06. Wash Your Ass
07. Rainbow Love
08. Mummy Song
09. Bad Astronaut
10. Don’t Confiscate the Beat
11. Britney’s Silver Can
12. Cocaine
13. Hot Penis story
14. Hockey Monkey
15. Old North End
16. Monkey vs. Robot
Some Kochalka-quality links…
the fine print… If anyone has an issue with this live set being made available, just say the word (email link on left). Recorded with a Sony ECM-719 mic and a Sony MZ-RH10 minidisc, converted to .wav and then edited to 192kbps mp3s. Mp3s are made available for a limited time, and are not reposted once removed.
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