Popopolis: The Stapletons!!!

Oct 8, 2010 by

One of my all time favorite Cincinnati bands is rocking Fountain Square tonight.  These 4 freakishly handsome men are veterans of the Cincinnati music scene and have two fantastic records out; Spirit of 76 and Low Dealers…and Hangers On Hopefully they will have copies of Spirit as I cannot locate it on the web. 

This is a review I wrote in August of 2002 after catching them at ye olde Barrelhouse:

“Picture a sunny day in an outdoor venue facility with cheap lawn seats, a soft blanket, cold beer, and a nice breeze with the warmth of the sun on your barefeet whilst good American southern rock lofts above your head from the nearest faraway stage.

Who would be playing?   The Stapletons.

These guys make you wanna turn up the radio, roll down the windows, and fly down the highway singing at the top of your lungs while you go nowhere in particular. They are quickly evolving into a classic rock band which would be adored in any decade circa 1965. Just good, solid playing with fantastic use of harmonies, well placed root chords, and singable lyrics. That being stated – I want the next record to contain further experimentation both in songwriting and instrumentation. If the new tune Dallas is any indication, that may well be where they are headed. This and Chasing Rainclouds (I am guessing on this track title) were definite highlights. Raincloud nearly made me cry. Again, watch that the harmonies are not lost in the mix.”

This is a free show as always and the guys go on at 9:00 PM.  Full line up is posted below.  If you do not see this band, your experience of the independent Cincinnati music scene will be bankrupt. 

Friday, October 8

7:00 pm Slow Claw
8:00 pm Tonefarmer
9:00 pm The Stapletons
10:00 pm Turnbull AC’s

Saturday, October 9

7:00 pm Bri Love Band
8:00 pm The Dukes
9:00 pm No No Knots
10:00 pm The Minor Leagues

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Introducing: ArtsWave (Formerly the Fine Arts Fund)

Sep 22, 2010 by

Taking a break from the music madness this week to post this email I just recieved in my inbox from Mary McCullough-Hudson.

You can join them for a brown bag lunch on one of the dates below.  Please visit ArtsWave to RSVP.

  • Thursday, September 30
  • Wednesday, October 6
  • Wednesday, October 13
  • Friday, October 22
  • Wednesday, October 27
  • Thursday, November 11

I am excited to be writing you, to tell you about the launch of ArtsWave, an organization dedicated to advancing the vibrancy of our community through the arts, and to connecting people with the arts — and each other.  Formerly known as the Fine Arts Fund, our board of trustees has voted today to relaunch the organization with a new and more broadly defined mission, along with a new name.

As a supporter of the Fine Arts Fund, you may already know that our organization has undertaken a multi-year research and planning process.  Our goal has been to better understand the arts and cultural needs of the people in our community, as well as explore the many ways in which the arts act as a catalyst for a more vital city and region.

Our transformation into ArtsWave is an outgrowth of this planning process, based in large part on interviews with hundreds of people in the region who told us that the arts are important because of how they connect people within and across communities, and make neighborhoods more energetic and appealing.  As ArtsWave, we will be working to sustain a revitalized Cincinnati, with the knowledge that participation in the arts and culture has positive ripples on the community as a whole, across a wide spectrum of interests, lifestyles, and locations.

What will this mean in practical terms?  ArtsWave will look for the broadest range of organizations and initiatives to support, where it can have the greatest impact on bringing together people from across the region to experience the arts and connect with each other.  We will also expand our investment in events such as Splash Dance (2009) Paint the Street (September 26th), and the Annual Sampler Weekend which bring us together for creative fun.

I firmly believe that the arts create lively places where we like to spend time, visit, live, and work.  With ArtsWave, we will be able to build on the many decades of success of the Fine Arts Fund — made possible by generous people like you — while expanding our vision to better serve the entire community. I hope we can count on your continued support and active participation in the many cultural events greater Cincinnati is fortunate to enjoy.

Sincerely,
Mary McCullough-Hudson
President
ArtsWave

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MPMF – Make It A 5 Way

Sep 21, 2010 by

Yesterday I posted my top do not miss out of towners:

  1. Brent Reed
  2. Shoreline Dream
  3. Filligar
  4. Surfer Blood
  5. Scotland Yard Gospel Choir
  6. Confuctive Alliance
  7. Aficionado

This time it’s the do not miss list of in-towners:  In order:

Messerly & Ewing – Thursday, Arnolds 9:00 PM

The cornerstone of the indie original music scene in Cincinnati.  They consist of Mark Messerly, Brian Ewing, Sean Rhiney and Bill Donabian.  Mark and Brian have been wrtiting and playing together for nearly 15 years and the depth of their songwriting shows it – they are simply the best songwriters in the city.  The Last 12 Hours is a killer record if you can find it.  Mark Messerly played in Clabbergirl with Sean and also plays in Wussy.  Bill D. played with Clabbergirl (keyboard) and Rockets to Mars (drums). Everyone knows the story of Sean and Bill starting MPMF 9 years ago; they helped turn this town from a cover into an original.  It doesn’t hurt that they are the absolute salt of the earth.  Starting MPMF without M & E is akin to starting an engine without gas – not possible. 

Can someone PLEASE get them to finish their new record?

Chocolate Horse – Saturday, Below Zero 10:00 PM

Part of the fabulous All Night Party showcase, these guys hail from the ashes of one of the top Cincinnati bands of all time – Readymaid.  Eclectic and superb musicianship is the Horse in a nutshell. 

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KgaXwsCAJ1o 

You, You’re Awesome – Thursday, Cincinnati Club 10:30 PM

Yusef and Kevin met on the Woxy.com message boards and have been causing mayhem and mischief ever since.  Beyond talented, this duo makes for an electronic experiment which should probably be featured in video games rather than on a stage.  Lucky for us, it is on a stage.

 httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-X2tgei1nHM

 The Harlequins – Friday, Blue Wisp 9:30 PM

I first heard the Harlequins open for Blood Sugar at Northside Tavern.  They were raw but exhibited strong songwriting.  I thought if they could hold it together and practiced they would make for a very decent garage rock band.  They did and they have…

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8jqQqfSkA_0

Daughters and Sons – Friday, Mr. Pitiful’s 12:00 AM

The most danceable band in Cincinnati?  Maybe or maybe not but the musicianship is outstanding and the instrumentation is hard not to like-no videos yet but you can check out their music via facebook: Daughters and Sons

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Writer’s Friday: Who Is Cincinnati?

Sep 17, 2010 by

Trying something new on CincyVoices on Fridays – Writer’s Friday is the experiment and the idea is to feature Cincinnati writers and their writitng, regardless of the genre. 

Want to have something posted here? Do you live and write in Cincinnati?  Send it to [email protected]

Every other Thursday, the Writing Salon at Ink Tank meets and last night we discussed place in storytelling.  These paragraphs were written last night by our various members.  This was our charge:

You have the power to make Cincinnati who it is.  You might begin by considering the ways in which Cincinnati has made you who you are.  Begin with a specific location.  Describe it.  What details make that place who it is?  Write a paragraph in which your sense of who Cincinnati is, is evoked.

Westwood – Marie Stelle O’Nan

My first apartment was with my friend Melissa off Queen City. I worked second shift and spent parts of my morning walking up and down the hills around my apartment complex. If I walked north on Queen City, I’d see houses from the 40′s and 50′s– brick two and three bedroom houses that made me think of soldiers coming home. Sometimes there’d be a plastic deer or cement goose in the tidy yards. Once an old woman in a thin cotton house coat ran out her front door and pulled me in because she was scared by a buzzing from the kitchen. It was the timer on her oven.

If I went south on Queen City, I walked past thickets of honey suckle until I hit side walk and then further south it was like a city. There was a church for Italian Catholics and a UDF and steep old buildings that housed or used to house businesses. There’d be a couple of men looking for money. One sold browning carnations out of a bucket of dirty water and another man wore a will work for food sign. I smoked then so I’d give him a cigarette and pretend the gesture made me a city girl rather than a suburb girl.

I always got lost in Western Hills. I think the streets were built along rivers and streams rather than on a grid. Two streets would run parallel and then intersect and then run parallel again. Looking back I think smoking with an unemployed man in an army jacket and turning off that lady’s stove made me feel less lost. My great grandparents lived in Western Hills before their children spread out with the expanding edge of the city. From Price Hill to College Hill to Madeira. I thought of so many grandfathers that I knew lived in Western Hills–German Catholics who stuffed their children’s stockings on St. Nick’s day. Walking along those old twisty streets made me feel connected to my grandparents and made me feel like an adult.

Untitled – Antonia Glosby

Every place of this city has a part in my maturing in this city.  From the time I was about nine years old until I was fourteen, we lived on Irving Street, at the bottom of Forest Avenue, near one of the Cincinnati Zoo’s entrances.  In the evenings, before dark, we always heard this animal, whose sound I could never identify.  When we were at the zoo, I never could put an animal to the scream.  It certainly sounded like a scream, half human, half animal in distress.  I only recently learned it was the call of a peacock.  Such a beautiful animal making such a horrible sound.

Cincinnati Dialogue Sketch – MaryKate Moran

“Where’s Mt. Adams? That’s around here, right? I saw it was near downtown on a map.”
“Kind of?”
“Can we walk there?”
“Not unless your high heels convert into hiking boots.”
“Do you have a train?”
“Yeah. It runs at two in the morning and goes to D.C.”
“Huh?”
“Nevermind. Let’s get a cab.”
“Okay. Only if you want to. Would you go there? Normally?”
“God no. But you should see it.”

Adaptation – Classicgrrl

“We really should support the new Kroger” I explained arguing again with Sam-we constantly bicker over where to buy and eat food. “They stock all Hispanic items, let’s just go to Delhi.  There is Amol’s on the corner,” Sam countered.

“Cute.  Somehow, I don’t think Amol’s stocks my brand of hair mousse. Wish there was some kind of indie specialty food store over here.”  Sam didn’t miss a beat, “This is the West side sweetie, Catholics don’t do specialty.  Save that hoity toity crap for Oakley.”

We had just bought our Victorian in East Price Hill and I was attempting to embrace my new ‘hood.  The romance of a working class, diverse population filling tree-lined streets with stickball playing, smiling children was one thing; the reality of the mom brigade of screaming toddlers, strip malls, and chain store choices were something else.  We had purchased just outside of the Trifecta; the swath of area between St. Mary’s, St. Williams, and St. Teresa.  The crime was lower in the Trifecta.  We were just down the street from Holy Family where Sam had gone to church and, for a short time, school.  Two atheists stuck in a Catholic, god-oriented neighborhood makes for some comic moments.

I was also struggling to adapt politically. Even our mixed race gay neighbor couple had a ‘Yes on 9′ sign prominently posted in their front yard.  I had learned quickly to keep my politics to myself after wearing my Obama shirt into the very Kroger we were contemplating. “Dumbass–Idiot–Stupid” was what I heard on my very first visit to the newly rehabbed store on Warsaw.  All said with snarls and disgust.  I consoled myself with our view and the fact we were only 6 minutes from Downtown.

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OTR

Sep 15, 2010 by

Some buildings of interest I’ve seen pedaling around OTR this past weekend.

Bike the Streetcar Route

OTR

OTR

OTR

OTR

Bike the Streetcar Route

Bike the Streetcar Route

5chw4r7z

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Telecommunications and Crime

Sep 9, 2010 by

phoneSo, it seems that telecommunications are central to two pieces of crime news that I find interesting.

First is the oncoming ban on texting while driving. I am 100% behind this. (I can hear many of my friends and colleagues howling for my blood as I say that.) As a cyclist I can honestly say that the times I have suffered accidents or near accidents usually involved someone talking on their cell phone or texting. I know, I know, everybody does it. That does not ameliorate the fact that they are behind the wheel guiding two to three tons of metal through a video-game like array of obstacles, both moving and not.

Then there is the new Tip Line effort in Price Hill. I’ve little knowledge of that area of town being a newcomer so I can offer no commentary about the situation in Price Hill. ,I do think it is an interesting use of the technology, showing once again how we can use it to help mobilize community efforts.

Leave us a comment and let us know your thoughts on these two issues, we would love to hear your thoughts!

-Loki, CincyVoices Founder and Publisher

Image by Esther Gibbons, used under its Creative Commons license

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