Josh DuffeeJosh 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.

"Usually, by Monday, I'm feeling it a little bit, but ... it's kind of like Christmas for me," he said in a phone interview last week. "I'm going to take advantage of every single second I can get, and if I can sleep on Tuesday, August 7, then I'll go ahead and do that."

The Bix fest opens on Thursday, August 2, with a full slate of concerts the three days after that and an event on Monday, August 6: a show at one of Bix's old haunts - Jim's Knoxville Tap, formerly known as the Bluebird Inn - on the 81st anniversary of his death at age 28. Most concerts will be held in the RiverCenter, the Adler Theatre, and LeClaire Park. (For a full schedule of events, visit BixSociety.org/festival.html.)

Sofia Talvik, photo by Kirk StaufferIf 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.)

Triple Play

Over the course of a week, from July 21 to July 27, RIBCO will offer an impressive array of acts: half of The Sea & Cake on Saturday, the national-pastime-themed supergroup The Baseball Project on Thursday, and the up-and-coming garage-rock duo JEFF the Brotherhood on Friday.

An interview with The Sea & Cake's Sam Prekop can be found here, and an interview with JEFF the Brotherhood's Jake Orrall is below.

The Baseball Project. Photo by Michael E. Anderson.We interviewed The Baseball Project's Scott McCaughey last year, and that article can be found at RCReader.com/y/baseballproject. In addition to McCaughey - known for the Young Fresh Fellows and the Minus 5 - the band includes Steve Wynn (of Dream Syndicate and Gutterball), Peter Buck (of R.E.M.), and Linda Pitmon (who has regularly worked with Wynn).

As we wrote last year, songwriters McCaughey and Wynn help the band transcend gimmickry: "The songs don't settle for easy recitations of historical highlights. Some are pure celebrations - such as the punky 'Ichiro Goes to the Moon' - that exude a love of the game through their understanding of it. But most of the songs are more complicated."

More information and tickets for all these concerts are available at RIBCO.com.


JEFF the Brotherhood. Photo by Jo McCaughey.

Jake Orrall said that major labels these days wouldn't put out something like Hypnotic Nights, the just-released album from JEFF the Brotherhood.

They might have in 1994, he said in a phone interview last week, in advance of his band's July 27 show at RIBCO. And if that seems an odd date to choose, consider that was the year DGC released Weezer's self-titled debut, popularly known as the Blue Album.

You'll have no difficulty making the stylistic link between the two records, both packed with candied rock hooks, punkish drive, infectious melodies, and gleefully arrested development. As Stereogum casually put it: "Whenever people say to me, 'Man, I miss Blue Album-era Weezer,' I reply, 'Then why the hell aren't you listening to JEFF The Brotherhood already?'" To which the A.V. Club added (discussing JEFF's 2011 album): "They've sidestepped Rivers Cuomo and created the album he's no longer interested in making."

The irony is that Hypnotic Nights was released by Warner Bros.

Archer Prewitt and Sam PrekopThe 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.

"I haven't actually listened to it," he said in a phone interview last week, promoting his July 21 RIBCO show with The Sea & Cake bandmate Archer Prewitt. "It's like a really fond memory already. I'm like: Why listen to it and attempt to take it apart?"

Prekop said he's in the "recovery period" for the album - the time between when it's finished and when he and the band need to learn the songs for live presentation and to prepare a new show. He said that at first he dreads reworking the songs for concerts, comparing the process to how most people feel about (and procrastinate with) taxes and homework.

But something with deeper roots could be contributing to his ambivalence about The Sea & Cake. The long-running outfit - which the All Music Guide called "the elder statesmen of impressionistic indie rock" - might just be inherently frustrating to Prekop's admittedly "restless" nature.

The Statistix

The sound on the Statistix's American Dream EP is rough, with echoing, thin, buried drums, and vocals that are often blown out and as a result sometimes have an unpleasant, visceral piercing quality. The bass on the 37-second-long "Punk as F---" is bloated and warped. The volume varies from track to track.

It is, in other words, pure punk, assaulting ears for less than 13 minutes over its eight songs.

None of this is a complaint exactly. The Quad Cities trio is simply conforming to the movement's shabby-DIY template: full-throttle and full volume, with little patience for nuance - with little patience, period.

(Editor's note: This concert was canceled on June 13.)

Richard Lloyd. Photo by Brian Jenkins.What's essential to know about the Redstone Room's June 14 headliner can be summed up succinctly: Richard Lloyd was one of the guitarists of Television, the seminal band whose 1977 Marquee Moon is widely considered a great debut, an unmistakable influence on post-punk and alternative rock, and a classic, period.

The All Music Guide calls it "a revolutionary album, but it's a subtle, understated revolution. Without question, it is a guitar-rock album - it's astonishing to hear the interplay between [singer/songwriter/guitarist] Tom Verlaine and Richard Lloyd - but it is a guitar-rock album unlike any other," composed entirely of "tense garage rockers that spiral into heady intellectual territory, which is achieved through the group's long, interweaving instrumental sections ... ."

But to reduce Lloyd to a member of Television - whose initial incarnation disbanded in 1978 after two sterling studio albums - is to diminish a more-than-respectable career as a performer and songwriter outside of that band, and to rob the world of a fascinating person.

Scott H. Biram. Photo by John Pesina.

RIBCO's June 6 show features two Bloodshot Records artists, and there the surface similarities end. Scott H. Biram is a 38-year-old one-man-band road dog from Texas whose music draws from the blues and hard rock, and Lydia Loveless is a 21-year-old singer/songwriter from Ohio pulling from country and punk.

"We're quite a bit different in our musical styles," Biram said in a phone interview earlier this month, "but as far as our attitudes go, it's pretty close."

They both write and record quickly, yet their songs match an inherent urgency with unpretentious and unforced maturity and grace - nestled among lots of rough edges. And they share a boldness of musical personality.

SpindriftThe Los Angeles-based quintet Spindrift has developed a reputation for its cinematic sound - something that started with a score for a film that was then only an idea in the head of bandleader Kirpatrick Thomas: The Legend of God's Gun, which later became a 2007 feature written and directed by Mike Bruce. One track for that film was used in 2008's Hell Ride - executive-produced by Quentin Tarantino - and Thomas now has three additional film-score-composer credits with Spindrift.

But this tack for the band - playing at Rozz-Tox on May 19 - is a relatively recent development. Spindrift was formed in the early 1990s in Delaware, and was at that point an experimental psychedelic-rock band. It was only in 2001, when Thomas heard Ennio Morricone's music for the Sergio Leone classic Once Upon a Time in the West, that his band changed course.

Jeffrey Konrad

Jeffrey Konrad's Shadow Boxing, his second "official" release under the name Konrad, is all over a pop map written mostly in crayon, with keyboard cheese and drum machines aplenty. If the album weren't so layered and carefully constructed, it would be an easy mistake to dismiss many songs as amateurish outsider art produced largely on a synthesizer.

The wrongheadedness of that should be evident solely from "Hang-Ups," which foregoes electronics entirely for a poignant, country-tinged ballad that recalls Neil Young in its instrumentation and sleepy vibe. The two-line chorus is plainspoken but clear, with understated vocals that capture a character both self-aware and lost: "Getting over you has been difficult / 'Cause I'm faking it through my future." The verses are loaded with phrases both cryptic and evocative - "Open season on the polygraph," "Shadow-boxing with the angel of death."

Koffin KatsThe Detroit trio Koffin Kats - headlining an all-ages show at the River Music Experience on May 5 - performs in the musical subgenre known as psychobilly, and the fusion of punk and rockabilly isn't particularly well-known or popular in the States.

So it's a bit strange that bassist and singer Vic Victor, in a phone interview last week, called psychobilly a "music genre for everybody." The style's biggest name is probably the Reverend Horton Heat, whose top-selling albums have managed to reach only the lower quarter of Billboard's top 200.

Yet Victor said that when the uninitiated but curious - those who don't realize that the upright bass has a place in rock music - show up to a Koffin Kats gig, they're usually converted. "Everyone's invited," he said. "That's kind of the idea with this new record. We didn't write it for the psychobilly crowd. We wrote it for anybody who likes rock and roll and driving music."

That album is Our Way & the Highway, and while Victor probably overstates its appeal as universal, there's no denying that the Kats' brand of psychobilly deserves a wider audience; the band's music is relentless but also loaded with hooks, strong melodies, and alluring harmonies on top of the aggressive rockabilly groove. If Green Day deserves some of its superstar status, then the Koffin Kats are worthy of at least a piece of that pie.

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