All The Way Live with Jones Street Station

Events, Interviews, Published Material

My latest All The Way Live feature for Charged.FM is with Jones Street Station, a very talented and cool folk rock band out of Brooklyn. I had the pleasure of interviewing them backstage before their show on August 4th at Bowery Ballroom, and the write up includes my sit down discussion with them about their past and present performance experiences, a review of their set, and pictures and video from the show. Check out the link below, and also a video clip from Bowery Ballroom of their wonderful cover of country singer John Hartford’s “Tall Buildings,” which was their closing number….

All The Way Live with Jones Street Station

For more on Jones Street Station, including a free download of a new song from their upcoming album, click HERE. Peace out.

Two Kings

Uncategorized

This video is so fucking dope. Watch The Throne is right. These guys are the best, and they know it. Look how much fun they’re having. Seriously, all praises due to these two. And I’m not the biggest fan of the album, but it does have some serious gems on it (see below). I love “Otis,” and the video just made it that much better. Props to Spike Jonze, who’s produced some other classic hip hop videos in his day, like Beastie Boys “Sabatoge,” and The Pharcyde “Drop”. And shout out to comedian/actor Aziz Ansari for making a nice cameo in this too, that’s what’s up. Watch The Throne is in stores today, and I look forward to purchasing my physical copy.

Ip’s Watch The Throne Picks:

“No Church In The Wild”- They both murder their verses, and Frank Ocean slays the hook. Love the dark, minimalist production on this too. Q-Tip said on Twitter he “laced the loop” for the beat too.

“Niggas In Paris”- This beat is on some crazy dub step shit, which I normally wouldn’t feel, but Hov goes in so hard on this it is undeniable. His flow is ridiculous. Very fun song.

“Otis”- I love the format of this track, how they just go back and forth trading blocks of bars. Lots of quotables, and they both come off on every mini-verse. And it’s nice to hear some real organic sounding hip hop shit be the lead single off a huge release like this. It doesn’t get much more monumental for me than hearing the two hottest rappers in the world go back and forth over a perfectly chopped up soul sample.

“That’s My Bitch”- This song leaked a while back, and I thought it was cool, but now after hearing it on the album, I like it even more. Q-Tip did some fresh shit with this beat. They both spit dope rhymes on it too (Kanye does a nice little homage to Slick Rick), and the singing on the hook and the bridge are really fly. This might be the most progressive sounding song on the album.

“The Joy”- Another song that came out a while back as part of the G.O.O.D. Fridays series. I had the pleasure of talking about this song during my interview with its producer Pete Rock, and it holds up as a incredibly solid bonus cut. I admit, I was hoping more of WTT would feel like this, but I can’t be mad at Kanye and Jay for pushing the envelope and trying out some new sounds, even if some of them don’t appease my palette.

Those are just my personal favorites, and the songs I actually will be listening to for years to come. There’s other hot cuts on this album, so go check it out for yourself. Have a great weekend Westcheddar.

Entourage Ending

Uncategorized

Entourage is responsible for putting me on to some cool songs over the years, and at the end of last week’s episode, when that coked up dude shot himself in his bathroom and Vinnie and Turtle busted down the door to find him, they dropped some ill shit as they cut to the credits. Perfect ending. Check the video above for the song, James Blake “The Wilhelm Scream”. Props to Entourage for incorporating music discovery into their episodes. Ch.

How Come

Uncategorized

I’m really into this new song “How Come” by Avi Buffalo (real name Avi Isenberg). Still pissed I missed him a couple weeks ago at The Rock Shop in Brooklyn, but I was happy to discover some new music from him and his band last night, and I’m looking forward to their sophomore album. When I listen to Avi Buffalo, I immediately feel in tune with my California roots (he’s from Long Beach), which is a good thing. He’s a young man with an old hippie soul, and some serious guitar skills. If you can get past the weirdness of his voice, you will see his genius. And if you dig the track, watch him perform it live in Barcelona HERE. Enjoy.

 

 

Pearl Jam In Yonkers ’91

Events

This is pretty fucking incredible. In 1991, Pearl Jam played an in-store acoustic set at the old Tower Records in Yonkers on Central Avenue during their promotional tour of Ten. I never knew about this until last week, when my boy Tommy Dee (PJ fanatic) told me about it, and said the video was on YouTube. Turns out there’s actually some decent footage of their whole set. This is as Westcheddar as it gets people. Enjoy these vintage 914 clips from one of the greatest bands of all time…

“Alive”

“Black”

“Wash”

I still have never seen PJ live. Definitely near the top of my bucket list. Later dudes.

 

Daddy Dice

Interviews

I was about ten years old when Andrew Dice Clay blew up, and I vividly remember reciting his jokes and filthy renditions of classic poems with my friends as we walked home from school. With no internet, I’m not exactly sure how we knew all his material. I guess one of us had his stand up tape or something, or we saw him doing his routines on TV. Lots of us had older brothers and cousins or neighbors who would put us on to all the shit we probably shouldn’t have known about at that age. But Dice was the man, and we’d imitate the way he smoked bogies with our straws at lunch and stuff like that, and we’d crack each other up trying to do impressions of him. It was basically Dice and Eddie Murphy. Those were the two biggest stand up guys out, and we thought they were hilarious. Check this clip of Andrew Dice Clay from 1987, introduced by Rodney Dangerfield…

Now, after about two decades of basically being off the map, Dice is back in the mix, making a guest appearance as himself on this season of Entourage (see pic below right with Johnny Drama). And lucky for comedy podcast nerds like myself, Dice was this week’s guest on WTF with Marc Maron, a show I’ve featured on Westcheddar before that is easily the best in the comedy podcast genre. It’s a great interview, especially if you don’t know much about the Dice Man’s history. He tells old stories about coming up in Brooklyn, how he became a household name, his family life as a Dad and husband (he’s been married three times and has two sons), and what he’s up to now. And his oldest son Max Silverstein (he uses their real Jewish last name), who is 20 and also a stand up comic, makes an appearance at the end of the show too, and talks about what it’s like to open up for his father and lots of other stuff about having Dice as a Dad. This is a must listen…

Download/Stream WTF with Marc Maron: ANDREW DICE CLAY

Owwww!

Craving and Aversion

My Dudes

My boy Timmy P, one of my oldest and closest friends in the world that I grew up with in White Plains, just sent me a copy of his first short story. It is with great pleasure that I debut it here on Westcheddar. Enjoy…

CRAVING AND AVERSION”

by Timothy Daniel Pellegrin

From somewhere up above, we must have looked like one of our little gods with mad arms and legs, destruction-dancing. boom-Boom boom-Boom 3 hearts like pounding battle drums. I was the red and white heaving furious virgin belly….the never-been-in-a-fistfight bleeding white-boy swinging mad in that center which sits between compassion and ass.

My father had been working at the local shelter for homeless men for 5 years. My father, once a young man sitting at seminary school graduation feeling his swirling fear of women fall like old skin, his new skin soft and hungry for all things God. This was a blooming of his soul nurtured by a kiss from the Holy Spirit Itself, because his deepest joy and meaning were to be Dad and Love. He became an ecstatic husband, and a father of six, and a lawyer (to assure life included changes of scenery for us). His desire to serve the Lord through the Church was like a little candlelight he protected for thousands of outside days, so as we kids grew up and out, he enrolled in Deaconate School. Four years later he became the Deacon of the family parish. A natural man of grace and humility, he delighted in the fact that Deacons were “waiters” at the very beginning, serving Jesus and His disciples at the Last Supper.

The last person to yell spit into his face was probably a grade-school nun. As I stepped in to the shelter that night, the guy they call Frog was ending that, head tilting left to right like an inquisitive dog, my father’s face firm and straight ahead. I can picture him in that moment, and I like to; his eyes and shut mouth were saying “you’re a sad clown right now, and in a way I hope you do.” Our contradictory natures are colorful.

I am not opinionated, I usually see the good in you, I laugh easily and love to take walks…and I got hot as hell right here BOOM! I threw the pans of food I was carrying onto the floor and rushed this scene that shook me and shoved Frog from his side, which made him lose his balance but not fall. I did not step between them and square up to Frog, eye to eye, like Deacon’s young strong sperm incarnate; I just wanted to break it and create space as soon as I could. There were men approaching the scene as I did, so hands caught Frog just before he hit the wall, and arms and mumbled pleas kept him contained as he slowly walked towards me.

The men in the shelter respected my father. He worked overnights, so it was his duty to wake the guys at 6am each morning. Where most staff would hit the switch and bark words alarm-like, my father turned on the lights and sang happy birthday to the sun in his choir-trained baritone: “good morning to you, good morning to you, good morning gentle persons, good morning to you”. They knew he knew, these souls deserving of gentle beginnings.

“I hate when you sing that song”, a visitor once complained.

“Why”, my father asked.

“Cause it gets stuck in my head all day”, the guy replied as he walked to the showers whistling it.

Respect isn’t the right word; they appreciated him. And so they weren’t going to let Frog attack, even though Frog was a feared man. Many damaging nights behind bars and a few very visible scars—and eyes that slowly chewed me, spit me out onto my father, and turned away from us.

I used to be hooked on mate`, a tea native to South America that is highly revered and deeply entrenched in the histories and cultures of countries such as Argentina, Paraguay, Uruguay and Brazil. Gauchos have a long tradition of drinking it because it energizes and staves off hunger. “Mate no tiene piernas”—mate has no legs, and so they would share a gourd of this ancient, bitter, life-giving addiction at the end of a long day by passing it around the circle. My supplier was Libia’s groceria, a bodega that sat on the edge of the town’s projects. I walked out of Libia’s with my 6 dollar kilo of Rosamonte Especial this cold winter dusk and just locked eyes with this dude for no reason other than he didn’t look away and neither did I. Like the cold wind blew the bolt down, locked. He was staring and I held him and then I was staring. I know this world of exchanges well because I am someone who looks at eyes, and there is an animal quality about it that is very sensitive to time. A casual glance maintained becomes a look, which quickly morphs into some perceived challenge or act of aggression. If you don’t want problems, you look away.

“What the FUCK you lookin at, white boy?”

There were three of them—all about my size. And I knew right away their veins were full of fire and I was in trouble. As the curious one finished his question he stopped walking, and the others followed suit. My momentum and direction coming out of the store were to the left, which was the same direction they were walking, so when they stopped I was suddenly very close to them. It all happened so fast. They turned and faced me and created a hostile, breathing wall.

“You got a fuckin problem FAGGOT”, the same guy asked me. My heart is now pounding, my mouth got a shot of metal and I could feel the burning red in my face. I was scared; taut wires ready to fall back. I made a decision in that brief moment though…that this was it, the rage adventure that I often daydreamed about and created scenarios around and wanted the way I wanted to try anal sex with my nervous girlfriend. Craving and Aversion in one. And yes, my fetal mind did let it become Fight or Faggot—a poisonous word for all of us.

“No, I don’t have a problem, what’s your FUCKIN problem”, challenged a vibrating mass of mess. A fist came flying from the left and I saw it coming, was able to pull my head back to avoid it, and smashed that dude’s nose with knuckles full of panic. My breath left me, and became cloth that slowly wrapped him as he twisted and fell. For a split second we were all frozen in time, the spinning world brought to a halt like an ancient seamstress who stabs her calloused thumb with a needle and stares at the absurdity of the droplet of blood.

The other side of that split second was the start of the pounding of my head and face. They were both on me and I cocooned my head with my arms as best I could but they were hurting me. Fear and anger—those muddy pillars of this world—served me like gas on a flame and I threw both my arms upward with all my might and caught both of them enough to send them back a little and create space. They came right back, though, and I just got out of my mind swinging wild for the fences trying to keep them off me but murderous mad too. I felt bone on bone a couple times before I took a hit in the ribs that dropped me fast. I was done. On the ground. Bad. I was that hurt human animal you see in movies reduced to instinct, big-eyed and desperate and dragging. They started with the stomps and kicks, rear back kickball kicks, kicked my consciousness into oblivion; episode over. At least it was for me.

Something or someone peripheral flashed into that last frame…this was my first thought when I was able to think back on what happened.

I woke up in an ambulance. I opened my eyes just enough to see an EMT sitting next to me, who told me I was ok and generously reported that the other guys didn’t look much better. Confusing. We reached the local hospital and I was treated for a broken nose, some badly bruised ribs and a couple gashes on my face. Cops said a passerby called 911, and I forced a report through a mangled mouth. I was held overnight and hobbled out of that hospital as quickly as I could the next morning, wanting to be alone in fresh air, but not before I noticed my later-round foes in the room next door looking like final-bell Rocky Balboa only silent and defeated.

Two weeks later I am walking into the same hospital, walking into a room where my father lay with a broken jaw. My brothers will be out for blood, and I’ll have to join them, but I’m more sad about the fucking world than anything. It was that guy Frog from the shelter, my father tells me. He was playing a radio after quiet time so my father asked him to turn it off and he popped up, seemed high on something, cracked him across the mouth, and said something like “you gonna talk to me like that when I saved your pussy ass son?”

Frog saved me?

Or was it Mary, my friend and favorite co-worker who showed up to shift each early morning with her huge lips meticulously outlined and painted, tapping the top of her head to secure the wig of the week and bringing smiles to the tired room. Mary’s father was a gambler, and when he was fixin to win somethin he used to put pennies in his shoes and walk out the front door backwards for good luck. Mary’s from North Carolina, and she was always telling me these southern-style gems.

It was around Christmas time and Mary had cooked what amounted to a feast for me to take home for the family, pans of fried chicken and cornbread and mashed potatoes. On top of our Mother’s groaning-good food we hardly put a dent in it, so one late evening I brought it over to the local shelter where my Father worked.

No doubt, Frog stopped the beating. But Frog has a taste for violence. And big ass eyes.

Mary has a taste for grease and butter and can somehow use anything to protect her own.

Who most saved me? My Father, who decided it would be a nice thing to work at the local shelter?

I don’t believe me being out would have necessarily stopped those guys right away. A few more kicks could have meant a different story.

My love, I hope you stay nervous…I don’t think I would really like it anyway.

Dear Amy

Events

Dear Amy,

I first was introduced to your music by my wife around the time Back to Black came out. We just started dating, and she heard “You Know I’m No Good” on Hot 97, the version with Ghostface Killah rapping on it, and asked me to find it for her. From there, we copped the album, and fell in love, literally. My memories of falling in love with my wife coincide with listening to Back to Black, which is ironic because that album is made up mostly of songs that vividly describe the painful experiences you were having with your man. But it truly was a staple in our early times together. We listened to it constantly in the car and the crib. And as I do with all artists I’m into, I went searching for rarities and unreleased songs of yours, and found a couple gems to add to heavy rotation.

Pretty instantly, Back to Black made its way into my desert island Top Five Albums. I mean, the songwriting and production style is just amazing. And your voice, holy cow, it’s one of a kind. I became obsessed with watching these live videos of you performing your songs unplugged (like the one posted below), and I was in awe of your natural ability. You would just kill it to the point where I’d have to rewind certain moments in the song because I was so impressed with how effortlessly you were going in. And the fact that you were Jewish blew my mind! I felt a deep connection to you as a fellow Jew with soul. Pardon the corniness, but it’s true. I used to love to hear you in interviews say how you felt like a little black boy trapped in a white girl’s body.

On New Year’s Eve of 2009, about eight months after our wedding, my pregnant wife and I invited some friends over to celebrate the new decade. After the ball dropped, we all danced along to your live DVD, mimicking your background dancers and singing all your lyrics. It was the perfect way to start 2010. Five months later, our first son was born, and we would play your music around the house all the time, making memories to your songs.

Like many of your fans did, I’d constantly wonder when we were going to hear some new music from you. Eventually, it became more common to see you in the tabloids than to hear you on the radio, and that worried me. But I continued to root for you, because I believed in you and knew there was a beautiful person beneath all the rubbish, and hoped that you would be well enough one day to give us another batch of classic songs. Unfortunately, you passed away before you were able to.

I’m still uncertain about what happens when humans die, but I’d like to think that you are now an angel, free from stress, addiction, and heartache, spending your days singing and laughing and smiling with other angels who care about you. My hope is that somewhere there is a vault filled with songs of yours we have never heard, and that someone will be kind enough to open it up and share them with us one day. But regardless, you are immortalized by the timeless music you already gave us.

Thank you for everything you contributed to our world. You will never be forgotten. RIP.

ip

Vintage Videos

Uncategorized

Do you ever just get in the mood to watch old rap videos? Yeah, me too. I’m blacking out right now on this amazing YouTube channel for vintage rap videos from the 80’s and 90’s. I suggest you do the same asap. They have a sick selection, and they’re all high quality. I’m gonna serve up a few classics to get you started. Walk with me…

Channel Live f/ KRS-One “Mad Izm”

Redman “Tonight’s Da Night”

Gangstarr f/ Nice & Smooth “DWYCK”

To surf through them all, CLICK HERE! Shout to UpNorthTrips for the Jigga photo, shit is ridiculous. Uno.

Best Of Westchester Top 5 Tables 2011

Events, My Dudes

Westcheddar correspondent Billy Henderson was back on the scene last night at Westchester Magazine’s Best of Westchester 2011 party to scope out the restaurants with tables serving the tastiest free food. Check the resume…

It’s that time of the year again all. Thanks to Uncle Ralph for another great night. A little hot this year but that’s always better than rain. I stepped into this year’s party with a right hand that had a second degree burn and within an hour I had another issue. Upstairs I came across a French restaurant that was serving a little cup with shrimp and a pretentious coconut foam. As I got close to see what what was in the cup besides shrimp, some Frenchman attempted to “foam” my cup. A second or two into this “foaming”, the foam gun exploded into my left eye. After an emergency trip to the bathroom to clean my eye, I convinced myself that strangling some French guy is probably a bad idea. I returned to the same table to many apologies and I stood a few feet away as they “foamed” me a second time. Apparently coconut foam is more important than salt. Maybe next year Frenchie. So now I have one hand, one eye and a Bronx palate. Let’s get into it.

1. Crabtree Kittle House
11 Kittle Road
Chappaqua, NY 10514-1800
www.kittlehouse.com
914.666.8044

This place shows up with one chef, an attractive young lady to serve, and some suit to serve and bullshit. There is one dish. One great dish as opposed to three embarrassing ones. A slice of cherry wood smoked Duck breast, over a toasted fennel/cabbage slaw paired with a pickled cherry. Lights out. Amateur hour is now over. Put away your foam blasters and step your duck game up.

2. Mt. Kisco Seafood
477 Lexington Avenue
Mt. Kisco, NY 10549
www.mtkiscoseafood.com
914.241.3113

Not a restaurant but they do cater. The setup was a simple one; a table full of shaved ice that was covered with Connecticut Clams and Oysters from Virginia. Both were shucked in front of you and were described as “candy from Virginia and Connecticut.” Couldn’t have said it better.

3. F.A.B.
222 EAST MAIN STREET
MT KISCO, NY 10549
www.fabbistro.com
914.864.1661

These guys are in the running for me every year. The first dish was fresh Tuna salad on a homemade bun that was a size of a quarter. The second was a perfectly cooked scallop over a fresh corn relish with a roasted shallot aioli. Two strong dishes from a French place. No french foam or chefs involved at this table. Go figure.

4. Sushi Mike’s
146 Main Street.
Dobbs Ferry, NY 10522
www.sushimikes.com
914.591.0054

Sushi Mike’s is always great. I overheard Sushi Mike telling another chef that he made 5,000 pieces of Sushi this year. Apparently 5,000 pieces of Sushi is just enough to let you run around the place, get drunk and flirt with rich white women. We’re gonna need a few thousand more pieces next year playboy. Just sayin’.

5. X2O
71 Water Grant Street
Yonkers, NY 10701
www.xaviars.com
914.965.1111

Chef Peter Kelly was on hand to personally serve his tuna seviche in a plastic cone. Fresh Tuna, watermelon, pineapple, dicon, poblano pepper and some source of acid. Tasty, clean and refreshing. Had to use the handle of my plastic fork to loosen the pieces jammed at the bottom of my cone. A much smaller pain in the ass than digging coconut foam out of your eye.

Shout to Westcheddar for being the best blog in Westchester. You gotta year to get a babysitter Stanley. See ya next year. Get there early. That’s my list. If you don’t agree, I really don’t care. Gracias.

Nice work Billy! Always an entertaining breakdown, and I love to see Mt. Kisco taking home three of the top five tables, you know your boy is well rooted in that community. I’ll def try to make it out next year. Stay cool Westcheddar!