Black Tie Optional,
Federallies, Fredalba,
& Magic Bullet Theory @ DiPiazza's
by
Marlene
January 15, 2005
Long Beach, CA
The American educational system gives most of us the chance to pick up
an
instrument when we're around 10 years old, in about fifth grade. When
my turn
came, my parents asked me what I'd like to try. More than anything
else, I
wanted to play the flute; its sound is beautiful, its players poised,
and its
image sleek and brilliant. No doubt it would be difficult to master,
but it
would be worth the try if I could succeed and become one of the cool
chicks
making wonderful music flow from a dainty object.
My hopes were derailed by my parents' sticker shock at the music store.
The nice
man behind the counter suggested that perhaps a twirling baton, with a
manufacturer's suggested retail price of just $5.99, might fit our
budget
better. Hey, it was shiny, silver, and sleek too. What's the difference,
right?
So, instead of becoming a mediocre flute player, I became a mediocre
majorette,
trying my best to contribute to the marching band's general visual
effect,
leaping about in an effort to forget that I wasn't a musician, and may
never
be.
Having finally come full-circle after many years of baton twirling and
newly
retired from coaching youngsters in the lost art, when 2005 rolled in,
I found
myself with enough free time and available cash flow to fulfill my
flute dream
all by myself. Still skeptical of my own ability, plus aware of my lack
of
patience and therefore huge potential for failure (if I couldn't get
the
embouchure, I would probably chuck the thing through the window within
the
first five minutes), it seemed logical to choose a bargain-basement
starter
model. The less investment up front, the less to be lost in the
impending
crash-and-burn. We all know the best place to find these kinds of deals
is the
NAMM show - and luckily, the big event was coming to Anaheim in just a
few
days.
While enjoying a lovely dinner at DiPiazza's in Long Beach one recent
Saturday,
my good friend Maralyn DiPiazza approached my booth with CD in hand,
breathlessly describing an exciting new band scheduled to play her club
the
following week. "This guy who manages another band told me he's also
working
with an actor who wants to become a rock star. He’s been on Six Feet
Under and The OC and stuff, and he's hot. My daughter
doesn't
think he's hot, but he's hot. My daughter says his chin is too
long, but
I think he's hot. I hooked him up with a showcase - you gotta
come see
him. His name is Eric Balfour and his band is Fredalba."
My reaction was, "Great, an actor who wants to be a rock star. Sounds
fresh.
Yeah, I'll be there, for sure. Marking my calendar now." A couple days
later, I
relinquished and stuffed the CD into the car stereo. Sublime-y!
Although
initially not sounding exactly like what the LBC needs in this day and
age, I
took a closer listen and found that Fredalba do have an element popular
to
Southern California - an eclectic blend of standard guitar/bass/drums
rock with
the addition of DJ turntable and woodwind. Yeah, woodwind! Fredalba
features a
flutist; a female flutist. A young, talented female flutist who
has
successfully parlayed her skills into rock music. I had to see Fredalba
live,
for inspiration.
The DiPiazza roster for January 15 included three other up-and-coming
opening
acts, so upon arrival, I settled in for the long night ahead and
chatted with
Maralyn about other important things she's been doing. She divulged her
plans
for the next morning: a field trip to Knott's Berry Farm with the
exceptional
group of young developmentally disabled students she teaches from the
Long
Beach Unified School District (in addition to running the hippest
nightclub in
the area, Maralyn devotes whatever spare time she has toward
mainstreaming
special kids into functional society, giving them real-world
experiences and
opportunities to work and play just like everyone else). Maralyn raved
about
how much she enjoys working with "her" kids, explaining that besides
the joy
she gets from seeing the students have fun and succeed, it gives her
the chance
to skip around and be goofy, to live life, and observe the world at kid
level.
As Maralyn switched the topic to her shock at discovering OC
Weekly had
published a rather unflattering preview of Fredalba (the writer printed
something along the lines of, "If you want to have a run-in with a
bunch of
teenybopper autograph seekers, just head over to the Fredalba show...")
without the writer even having seen the band. Black Tie Optional took
the
stage. These thrashy garage rats boasted an excellent drummer,
twinkle-fingers
guitarist, and guit-method bassist (remember Deyo Glines from National
People's
Gang?) joining together to blaze through tuneful melodies. With subtle
inflections of REM, The Who, and Foo Fighters, Black Tie Optional
delivered
appealing syncopation and chops, making their songs anything but
boring. One
member of the impressively-large crowd of Black Tie supporters informed
me that
they normally play DiPiazza on Sundays. This band, refreshingly, is
better than
they think they are. I'll be back to see them again.
The moment Black Tie unplugged, their gigantic fan base bailed out of
the club
so fast, all you could see was a blurry mass exodus of kids moving on
to better
things, leaving the room a stark void for the rest of the night.
Witnessing this
horror, a cocky kid dressed in an army jacket (who I was willing to bet
$100 was
the lead singer of the next band, Federallies) pounded down several
pints of
brew in rapid succession and began to throw all 98 lbs. of himself
around,
posturing in the manner of Johnny Depp in the "Rebel Without a Clue"
video.
Hey, each of us deals with catastrophe in our own special way.
Staggering to
the stage, he confirmed my prediction that he was indeed the singer and
joined
his three-piece to plow into their first song. The bass player was
capable, but
singer boy (if you wonder why I regularly omit names, sometimes I just
have to
protect these guys) was too full of his own self. Obviously having
joined
Singer in pints pre-show, the drummer was simply off tempo,
adding to
the overall pain suffered from the lack of audience, the drummer being
drunk/egotistical/unable to sing, and the band's general lack of
material. I
always try to have something positive to say, and I really wanted this
band to
be good, for their sake. Maybe next time they will be, but this time
there was
too much force working against.
The crowd didn't fill out at all when Magic Bullet Theory began to set
up, but
an interesting thing happened. Eric Balfour of Fredalba slinked into
the venue,
accompanied by his entourage of L.A. types, and nervously paced about,
scoping
out the vacant scene. Adding to the anxiety must have been the fact
that Magic
Bullet Theory delivered a musical style of the Fredalba/Banyan/Delta
Nove
genre. Suddenly, all that would seem unique became frighteningly
commonplace;
but Magic Bullet's funky, jazz-laced jams nevertheless provided the
right
environment for stellar performances from trumpet, guitar, bass,
soprano sax,
and - flute!
Yes, Magic Bullet also has a flutist, and although their jams were
exceedingly
long that evening, the whole set grooved. Beginning to feel sorry for
Eric
Balfour and his manager (fretfully searching for Fredalba CD and
t-shirt
customers with none to be found) I got up to take a walk around and ran
into
Balfour's girlfriend, a bella fashionista with attitude. She was
questioning random patrons as to which band they were there to see,
evidently
taking a head count to determine whether there was a turnout. When one
girl
answered, "I'm here to see Fredalba," Fashionista corrected her. "It's
not
Fredalba, it's Freeeeeeeeeee-dahl-bahhhh." In that moment, I
knew we
were in trouble. Fredalba not only had a tough act to follow in Magic
bullet
Theory, they also had no audience to speak of (except for a few more
trickling
L.A. migrants) and the singer's girlfriend-slash-PR agent was making
the rounds
to ensure everyone in attendance pronounced the band's name with a faux-French
accent.
Launching their set, Freeeeeeeeee-dahl-bahhhh (with Balfour on
lead
vocals; Rooster Roley, guitar; Paul Trutner, bass; Blair Shotts, drums;
DJ Grady
Reinagle, and Charmain Callon on the best instrument of all, flute)
managed to
pick things up a bit, coming off more rocky than their predecessors
and
proving that they have something special to offer after all. If
Fredalba can
cast off the weight of their promotional worries and just get out there
and
play, they should certainly feel affinity from youth in seach of some
energetic-yet-esoteric listening material. Relax just a little,
Fredalba, and
your efforts will come to fruition.
Click here to find out how
Marlene
gets a flute of her own!
Photos by Marlene
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