this week in music

JOEY RAMONE BIRTHDAY BASH 2011

Fillmore New York at Irving Plaza
17 Irving Pl. at East 15th St.
Thursday, May 19, $35.25 (with fees), 7:00
www.joeyramone.com
www.livenation.com

Musician, legend, icon . . . New York native Joey Ramone would have been celebrating his sixtieth birthday on May 19, and, as has become a grand local tradition, the eleventh Joey Ramone Birthday Bash will be held that evening at the Fillmore New York at Irving Plaza. Joey (born Jeffery Hyman) died of lymphoma in 2001, and the annual affair is, as always, a fundraiser benefiting the Joey Ramone Foundation for Lymphoma Research. The festivities, put together each year by Joey’s brother, Mickey Leigh, and a dedicated cast of friends and supporters, are, inevitably, a celebration of everything Ramones, who were honored earlier this year with a lifetime achievement Grammy. Fans from all over the planet have been known to come celebrate Joey’s enduring legacy (as well of that of his now-fallen bandmates Johnny and Dee Dee) and enjoy film clips, interviews, art displays, and plenty of live music. This year’s lineup includes Joey favorite Black 47, Television’s Richard Lloyd, the Rattlers, Holly Beth Vincent, Sunday Masquerade, Bebe Buell, the Incident, and a band led by ex-Strangler Hugh Cornwell with Steven Fishman and Blondie’s Clem Burke, aka Elvis Ramone. The night always concludes with a marathon medley of beloved Ramones songs, from the obscure to the popular, performed by a virtual who’s who of fellow travelers, from an ex-Ramone or two to those who simply share an era, an ethos, or an influence with Forest Hills’ finest. Leigh is also expected to play songs from his brother’s long-rumored solo album. As tradition holds, Sean O’Sullivan’s Punk Pipers ring out the night on bagpipes sometime in the wee hours. “I want to keep it uplifting, so I’m not going to start talking any timelines,” Leigh writes on Joey’s official website. “I think all of us here are well aware of what this year marks. I always want this to be a special occasion, and something for us to be happy about.” And what’s happier than Ramones songs?

A GREAT NIGHT IN HARLEM: TENTH ANNIVERSARY

The Apollo Theater will host the tenth annual “Great Night in Harlem” benefit on May 19

Apollo Theater
253 West 125th St. between Seventh & Eighth Aves.
Thursday, May 19, $55-$1500, 7:00
212-245-3999 ext. 10
www.jazzfoundation.org

Dedicated to helping elder jazz and blues musicians facing medical, financial, legal, and housing crises, the Jazz Foundation of America has been hosting the annual benefit “A Great Night in Harlem” since 2002. Founded in 1989 by Herb Storfer, Ann Ruckert, Cy Blank, Phoebe Jacobs, and Dr. Billy Taylor, the organization handles some five thousand cases a year on its mission of “saving jazz and blues, one musician at a time.” This year’s benefit takes place May 19 at the legendary Apollo Theater in Harlem, featuring live performances from across the musical spectrum, including Macy Gray, Dr. John, Lou Reed, Ronnie Spector, Donald Fagen, Christian McBride, Terry Adams, the Hot 8 Brass Band, and surprise guests, produced by Hal Willner. In addition, there will be special appearances by Danny Glover and Michael Imperioli and other Sopranos cast members. The 2011 Dr. Billy Taylor Humanitarian Award will honor financial wizard Michael Novogratz, founder of the nonprofit Beat the Streets, which helps New York City public school students through the sport of amateur wrestling. Tickets for the event begin at $55 for the concert alone and go as high as $1,500 for a preconcert reception and gala dinner and after-party.

TWI-NY TENTH ANNIVERSARY TALK: MEGAN REILLY AND JAMES MASTRO

Megan Reilly will team up with Jim Mastro at twi-ny’s tenth anniversary party on May 18 at Fontana’s (photo by Godlis)

Fontana’s
105 Eldridge St. between Grand & Broome Sts.
Wednesday, May 18, free, 7:00 – 9:30
212-334-6740
www.fontanasnyc.com
www.meganreilly.com
www.guitarbar.com

Born in Memphis and based in New Jersey, alt country folk rocker Megan Reilly has spent much of her career surrounded by some of the tristate area’s finest musicians, including bassist Tony Maimone, drummer Steve Goulding, keyboardist Eric Morrison, and guitarists Tim Foljahn and Jim Mastro. Melding Loretta Lynn with Thin Lizzy on her two fine albums, Arc of Tessa and Let Your Ghost Go, Reilly creates atmospheric moods on such haunting ballads as “With You” and “Nighttime,” gets bluesy on “Tropic on Cancer,” and plays infectious pop hooks on “Girl” and “Let Your Ghost Go.” Hoboken fixture Mastro, who owns the popular Guitar Bar on First St., is the consummate sideman, producer, guitarist, and bandleader whose endless array of gigs have ranged from the Bongos and the Health & Happiness Show to Ian Hunter’s Rant Band and various collaborations and live performances with Syd Straw, Amy Speace, Richard Lloyd, Robert Plant, and many others. Reilly and Mastro have been playing together for much of this decade, and they’ll be teaming up May 18 at twi-ny’s tenth anniversary celebration at Fontana’s, which also includes live performances from Paula Carino and the Sliding Scale and Evan Shinners and readings by Andrew Giangola, Nova Ren Suma, Dean Haspiel, and Kyle Thomas Smith.

twi-ny: You each have collaborated with many different musicians who play very different styles. What’s it like working with each other?

Megan Reilly: Jim’s playing is very lyrical and deep and atmospheric. Playing with him makes me a better singer and player. He tastefully compliments everything I’m doing, which I’m really grateful for.

James Mastro: To me, Megan’s songs are all about emotional landscaping — these stark, bare songs that always have little things flowering in spots. She writes like no one else I know — starting in one direction but then taking a turn in a maze that I wouldn’t have thought of, but still ending up in the right place. Her voice and melodies directly affect the way I play, and are what I play off of; she makes my job easy.

twi-ny: Megan, at the anniversary party you will be playing songs from your next album, which will be recorded this summer. Can you share the titles of some of the new songs? How will the record compare to the sound on your earlier discs?

James Mastro, seen here playing the Hoboken Music & Art Festival with Ian Hunter and R.E.M’s Peter Buck and Scott McCaughey of the Baseball Project, will team up with Megan Reilly at twi-ny’s tenth anniversary bash (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

MR: I’m a mother now. My sister thinks my voice has become more earthy. And I’m singing a lot about floating in water or being swept under it. Part of that is from floating in a pond in Vermont several summers ago with all this sky above me, giving me such comfort at a difficult time when no words could. And part of the theme of water also comes from carrying a child. And there’s the subject of my great aunt who emigrated from Ireland and drowned herself in the East River in the mid-1950s. That one is called “The Lady of Leitrim.” It’s something I’ve wanted to write about for a long time. But despite the nature of that song, I think this is a hopeful and self-assured record. It’s got a lot of strength in the sound of it. Jim is a really confident player.

twi-ny: Everyone talks about the changing indie music scene in Brooklyn, but both of you live in New Jersey. What’s going on these days musically in the Garden State?

JM: Hoboken’s still a thriving scene full of great players, songwriters, and bands. Maxwell’s is still going strong, and there have been more and more DIY guerrilla-style concerts being put on that’s always good for shaking things up and keeping people excited about music.

MR: There are some wonderful places to play here, Outpost in the Burbs and Maxwell’s. Those venues have hosted some of my best recent shows. And the people here really seem to appreciate what we’re doing. I’m really happy here.

TWI-NY TENTH ANNIVERSARY TALK: NOVA REN SUMA

Nova Ren Suma will read from her highly anticipated YA debut, IMAGINARY GIRLS, at twi-ny’s tenth anniversary bash Wednesday night at Fontana’s

Fontana’s
105 Eldridge St. between Grand & Broome Sts.
Wednesday, May 18, free, 7:00 – 9:30
212-334-6740
www.fontanasnyc.com
www.novaren.com

A self-described “easily distracted writer,” “daydreamer,” and “big sister,” New York City-based author Nova Ren Suma is making quite a splash with her debut YA novel, Imaginary Girls (Dutton, June 14, $17.99). Suma agonized over every sentence and every word of the stunning book, resulting in a beautifully written story of the deep bond between two sisters living in upstate New York, not far from where Suma was raised. “Ruby said I’d never drown — not in deep ocean, not by shipwreck, not even by falling drunk into someone’s bottomless backyard pool,” the slightly surreal novel begins. Suma’s first book, the 2009 middle-grade hardcover Dani Noir, was an engaging tale of a thirteen-year-old girl obsessed with film noir, Rita Hayworth, and a suspicious relationship. Suma, a charming young woman who loves talking about music, literature, food, and cats, will be appearing May 23 at the NYC Teen Author Carnival at the Mulberry Street Library, but before that she’ll be giving the first public reading from Imaginary Girls at twi-ny’s tenth anniversary celebration May 18 at Fontana’s, along with Dean Haspiel, Andrew Giangola, and Kyle Thomas Smith and live musical performances from Megan Reilly and James Mastro, Paula Carino and the Sliding Scale, and Evan Shinners. In preparation for the event, Suma chatted with twi-ny about her creative process.

twi-ny: After reading an early draft of Imaginary Girls, I told you not to let your agent or editor change a thing because I found it so beautiful. I’m now poring over an advance reader’s copy, and you have indeed made changes, which make the book even better. You were wise not to listen to me. What was the editing/revising experience like for you, especially when you had so many people lavishing you with praise?

Nova Ren Suma: Imaginary Girls is a surreal novel in which unexplainable things happen, and where reality is in question, which pretty much mirrors my entire experience getting the book published. My agent signed me on just two chapters, sent me off to write more, and then when I had a couple more chapters he quickly sold the novel unfinished to my dream publisher, which meant that I got to work with my editor very early on during the writing of the manuscript. It doesn’t sound real. My editor did say some extremely nice things about those early pages that made me blush, but she also worked me harder than I ever expected, seeing the potential in the story and finding ways to dig it out of me through quite a few revision letters, phone calls, and edit meetings. It was a thrilling, humbling experience to have the help of such a brilliant editor. Even now I suspect that she knows Ruby, one of the main characters, as well as I do. At one point I rewrote about two hundred pages in the middle of the book. At another point I cut about twenty thousand words. I was revising long after I thought I’d be finished. I pulled all-nighters like I haven’t done since college. I laughed, I cried, I wore pajamas out in the street. . . . It was intense. It was also the best experience I’ve ever had writing anything in my life. I love what the book became.

So I have to thank you for not just reading my manuscript at such a rough, raw stage but for saying just the right things. I was about to dive headfirst into a summer and fall of deep revision. I think I really needed that praise to make it through to the other side.

twi-ny: You have a strong online presence, on Facebook, your Distraction no. 99 blog, and other sites, connecting not only with readers but with other teen writers. What are some of the benefits you’ve gained from being part of this growing community of YA authors? What are the drawbacks?

NRS: The YA community online inspires me to no end and I am so grateful to be a part of it — everyone was so welcoming. But it’s also true that all the time spent connecting with other writers and readers and booksellers and bloggers and librarians is time not spent writing. It’s easy to get caught up in being online, to think you need to have a presence on every site, doing every shiny new thing in the way of social networking, and I’m easily swept away by that. I find blogging to be a great way to kick-start my writing — warm up my typing fingers, you know — but sometimes I think longingly of the years before Twitter was invented, wishing I could time-travel back there for a week or two, just to finish this manuscript.

Even so, I do think the benefits outweigh the distractions — at least, we authors have to hope they do. We tell ourselves they do. I happen to believe that if you’re writing for teens in this day and age and you’re not connecting with other authors and readers online, you’re doing yourself a great disservice. Then again, you probably wrote a hundred pages more than I did this month, so what do I know?

twi-ny: You have very eclectic musical tastes. Were there any specific songs or albums that got you going while writing Imaginary Girls? You’re now working on your next novel; has the song list changed for that?

NRS: I write to music, so Imaginary Girls is deeply connected to a series of songs I listened to while writing and revising the book. I often find a song that goes with a certain chapter and then I loop it and play it on repeat whenever I’m working on that particular piece of the manuscript. I play it until the words melt away and I can’t hear them anymore. I’ve been known to play one song over and over again for a week. Imaginary Girls is written in the voice of a sixteen-year-old girl, and the great majority of the songs on the novel’s playlist are sung by women. The first song to make an appearance was “Werewolf” by Cat Power. The first chapter of the book was written to “Hanging High” by Lykke Li — a song my little sister introduced me to. Other songs on the playlist include “Family Tree” by Bellafea, “These White Lights Will Bend to Make Blue” by Azure Ray, “Eighties Fan” by Camera Obscura, “Blinding” by Florence + the Machine, and “Never. Always. Good.” by Today the Moon, Tomorrow the Sun—a song you introduced me to while I was writing the book, if you remember. The only song from my own teenage years that made it to the playlist was an old Jane’s Addiction song, for nostalgia’s sake: “Summertime Rolls.”

As for my next novel — another dark, surreal story . . . but not a sequel — as I write, I build its playlist. Certain sections must be written to certain songs: “Zebra” by Beach House, “Lilac Wine” by Nina Simone, “The Spine Song” by Cake Bake Betty, “Stars” by the Xx. I’m always looking for new music because I never know what piece of the novel a new song might inspire.

twi-ny: As a full-time writer, you now have the freedom to decide when and where you write. So, when and where are your favorite places and times to write? Is it easier or harder to remain disciplined with fewer obligations outside of writing?

NRS: One of my favorite places to write is a particular café downtown. I only like to go in the mornings, before it gets too packed with NYU students. If you’re curious about what the café is, you’ll find it thanked in my book’s acknowledgments. I pick a table against the back wall, near an outlet, order a mocha — they have delicious mochas — and then dive in. The full-time writing life is still very new to me, so I have to treat going to write like I did going to my job. Even though I have a writing desk at home, I only let myself use it at night. I force myself to get up early, put on clothes and not pajamas, leave my apartment, get caffeine, and go to my “office.” That’s the Writers Room in Manhattan, where many other writers work. I like to visit my favorite café before going to the Writers Room because that is the very same routine I had while working my last full-time day job. I used to write in the café every morning before going in to work, so I go there to remind myself. The truth is that it’s harder to stay disciplined when time is so boundless, so if I can trick myself into thinking I don’t have very much time left in the day, I tend to write more.

There are some mornings now when I forget that I’m not supposed to be stopping at a certain point and rushing to the subway to get to work . . . and then reality washes over me: I have all day.

I have all day, I think excitedly. Then comes the weight of it, the responsibility, recalling how much I’ve always wanted this, and that washes over me too: I have ALL day. So I damn well better make good use of it.

TWI-NY TENTH ANNIVERSARY TALK: PAULA CARINO

Paula Carino will be rocking out with the Sliding Scale as part of twi-ny’s free tenth anniversary celebration May 18 at Fontana’s

Fontana’s
105 Eldridge St. between Grand & Broome Sts.
Wednesday, May 18, free, 7:00 – 9:30
212-334-6740
www.paulacarino.com
www.fontanasnyc.com

“I am lucky in love / I don’t need your comfort or care / I am so lucky in love / even when life is unfair / Yeah, don’t tell me life is unfair,” Paula Carino sings on “Lucky in Love,” from her excellent 2010 album, Open on Sunday, which she financed through Facebook fan donations and released on her own label, Intellectual House o’ Pancakes Records. We’re not about to tell the singer-songwriter, yoga teacher, blogger, and pop-culture columnist that life is unfair, but we don’t mind saying that if life were indeed fair, Carino would be a star. The multitalented musician has been a fixture on the New York City music scene for the better part of a decade, whether playing acoustic shows at the Parkside Lounge on the Lower East Side or at Freddy’s Backroom in Brooklyn with her backing band, which she has given such names as the Better Mind Your Own Business Bureau, the Virtually Spotless, and the Scurvy Merchants. For twi-ny’s free tenth anniversary celebration on May 18 at Fontana’s, Carino will be playing with the Sliding Scale on a bill that also includes readings from Dean Haspiel, Nova Ren Suma, Kyle Thomas Smith, and Andrew Giangola and live performances from James Mastro and Megan Reilly and Evan Shinners. While taking a break from doing preproduction on a new record with the curious working title Chimp Haven, Carino chatted with twi-ny about her very busy life.

twi-ny: You recently wrote on your blog, “I want to tell you everything I’ve thought, read, listened to, experienced, and watched.” With all of the writing you do — music reviews and interviews, lifestyle pieces, and a personal blog — do you find that impacts at all on your own songwriting?

Paula Carino: Well, it’s funny — I started my blog as a promotional thing for my music after I released my first solo album, but the blog ended up just being me blathering on about other people’s music and other pop-culture stuff. There was a time when I was posting every day, and the downside is that afterward, my frontal-lobe reward system would be like “OK, you’ve been creative today, now go run along and play!” So the motivation to actually create something lasting, like a song, was diminished. I had to consciously scale back on blogging in order to devote more time and mental energy to songwriting.

twi-ny: If you could bring back one defunct New York City music venue to play at, which one would it be?

Paula Carino: I was just the other day reminiscing about Fez. It was comfortable and relaxing and had that swanky banquette seating that made you feel like Ricky Ricardo was gonna swing by your table singing “Babalu.” I would have loved to play to swellegant, seated people. . . .

twi-ny: You’re also a certified yoga teacher. What is the musical setlist like for your classes?

Paula Carino: Surprisingly, I don’t play music in my classes, or during my own practice. I think it distracts people from their immediate experience. But I do emphasize chanting. My students get to chant their hearts out at the beginning of class, because, aside from, like, karaoke, I think people do not get enough opportunities to sing together. Singing together is such a basic joy. It’s really gratifying to hear people let go and really get into it — it’s like a revival meeting.

NINTH AVE. INTERNATIONAL FOOD FESTIVAL

The Ninth Ave. International Food Festival is on this weekend, rain or shine

Ninth Ave. between 42nd & 57th Sts.
Saturday, May 14, and Sunday, May 15, free, 12 noon – 5:00
212-581-7217
www.ninthavenuefoodfestival.com

One of the best street fairs of the season, the thirty-eighth annual Ninth Ave. International Food Festival takes place today and tomorrow, featuring booths selling local ethnic food, jewelry, clothing, arts and crafts, and more, along with children’s activities and live performances. Among the three dozen participating restaurants and bars are Talent Thai II, Southern Hospitality, Rudy’s, Poseidon Bakery, the Delta Grill, Kyotofu, Hallo Berlin Express, Chimichurri Grill, Rachel’s, City Sandwich, Breeze, Bali Nusa Indah, Uncle Nick’s, McCoy’s, Empanada Mama, Vintage, Stecchino, and others, offering delights from England, Brazil, Italy, Poland, Greece, Argentina, Germany, Japan, Mexico, Southeast Asia, and other parts of the world. Live music and entertainment will include belly dancers, high steppers, Celtic dancers, the music of Scotland, and local bands.

THE TOPP TWINS: UNTOUCHABLE GIRLS

The untouchable Topp Twins seem destined to take over the world

THE TOPP TWINS: UNTOUCHABLE GIRLS (Leanne Pooley, 2009)
Cinema Village
22 East 12th St. between Fifth Ave. & University Pl.
Opens Friday, May 13
212-924-3363
www.topptwins.com
www.cinemavillage.com

The Topp Twins: Untouchable Girls is a stirring look at a pair of comic yodeling lesbian activist anarchist Kiwi twins who have been entertaining, enlightening, and educating New Zealand audiences for thirty years. Starting out in 1981 as buskers, Lynda and Jools Topp quickly became stars in their native homeland, hosting their own television variety series and touring the country, playing music and telling jokes that continue to examine the social, cultural, and political landscape of New Zealand and the world. In their songs and through such characters as the Two Kens, Camp Mother and Camp Leader, the Posh Socialites, the Ginghams, the Bowling Ladies, and Brenda and Raelene — as well as themselves, just a couple of good-hearted down-home country farm girls — the Topps fight against discrimination of all kinds, performing to a remarkably mixed fan base. In the documentary, director Leanne Pooley gets the Topps to open up on camera for the first time in their career, discussing their personal lives, talking about their significant others, and revealing the pain they shared when one of them got cancer. Pooley builds the documentary around an intimate concert in which the Topps give special introductions to their songs and invite many of their friends and colleagues onstage to sing with them; these same friends and colleagues share their own thoughts and stories about the Topps with Pooley. Also giving their opinions on the Topps are their proud parents as well as the Topps themselves, but as the beloved characters mentioned above. Produced by Diva Films, The Topp Twins: Untouchable Girls shows Lynda and Jools Topp to be anything but divas; in the title song, they sing, “We’re untouchable, untouchable, untouchable girls / We’re stroppy, we’re aggressive, we’ll take over the world,” and indeed, a world run by a a pair of comic yodeling lesbian activist anarchist Kiwi twins might not be such a bad thing. (Jools and Lynda will appear in person at Cinema Village for the 7:00 and 9:15 shows on Friday and Saturday night of opening weekend, including a Q&A moderated by Melissa Silverstein following the 7:00 screening on May 13.)