The Deadstring Brothers never really went away. But in early 2011, singer/songwriter/guitarist Kurt Marschke retired the outfit as a band and instead performed alone under its name - singing and accompanying himself on drums, guitar, and harmonica.
There were several reasons for the change: the frustrations of keeping a band together and maintaining reliable transportation. In 2010, he said in a phone interview this week, he had three different lineups on the road with him and three separate vehicle breakdowns.
"I felt like an administrator," Marschke said. "I didn't feel like a musician. ... 'Is there an easier way to present music to people, where I can focus on the craft as opposed to focus on filling a drum seat or a steel or an organ player? ... Can I be a musician and feel like I am?'"
And going a little further back, the decision of singer Masha Marjieh in 2008 to stop touring meant that the group lacked the harmonies Marschke loved so much. "2009 and 2010 were just strange, because she wasn't around," he said. "I'd sung with her for so many years, and not having another singer with me felt strange."
So when the Deadstring Brothers perform at RIBCO on Saturday, August 25, it's a bit surprising that Marschke will be leading a five-piece band. It's a bit surprising to him, too.


The Facebook biography of the Chicago-based trio Cains & Abels is four words: "honest rock and roll."
When I interviewed Better Than Ezra singer/songwriter/guitarist Kevin Griffin earlier this month, I asked him whether the group's next album - originally conceived as a late-2012 release - had been pushed to next year to mark the band's quarter-century milestone.
Josh Duffee admits that his Bix Beiderbecke Memorial Jazz Festival schedule is intense. The 32-year-old percussionist will be playing with three groups and performing more than a dozen times over five days, but he said it's not exhausting.
If you're a fellow fan of Twin Peaks - David Lynch's 1990-91 cult favorite in which Special Agent Dale Cooper investigated the murder of high-schooler Laura Palmer - you can listen to folk singer/songwriter Sofia Talvik's latest CD thinking that the Swedish musician sounds, sometimes uncannily, like that TV series' resident chanteuse, Julee Cruise. With her light, airy soprano and haunting, faraway melancholy, it's easy to imagine Talvik herself hypnotizing crowds in a small-town biker bar, right before vanishing into the ether and being replaced by a cryptic bald giant. (It was that kind of show, bless its demented heart.)
We interviewed The Baseball Project's Scott McCaughey last year, and that article can be found at 
The venerable Chicago band The Sea & Cake will release its 10th album in September. Singer/guitarist/songwriter Sam Prekop told me it will be called Runner. And ... well, that's about all he offered initially.







