Wednesday, August 27, 2008

California tomato farmer serves up St. Louis pop

It was a really vivid picture of a bunghole snapped at a brewery in Belgium that led me back to Cuba Street.

Cuba Street is a record by the St. Louis power pop band The Love Experts. Their e.p. was recommended to me the other day by a tomato farmer in Bishop, California. I looked her up to tell her, "Look! I used your picture! Your picture of that grungy keg bunghole from that brewery in Belgium!"

I directed her, whom I thought was a him, to my little story about smuggling encrypted secret messages in kegs of beer, as a method of treasonous entrapment in Renaissance England.

She wrote back, via MySpace:

"The messages in the bungholes. Brilliant. I thought Mary Queen of Scots was in Carlisle Castle, maybe she was only caught there. Okay, here's a stranger question still. Any chance you know Steve Carosello, who sings for the St. Louis band The Love Experts? He is a dear penfriend of mine. We are mutual fans of the New Zealand bands, the Mutton Birds and the Phoenix Foundation. All the best from the hot, hot desert. .... Tricia - Matt is having a beer."

I thanked her for writing back charitably and told her I was in possession of The Love Experts' debut e.p. However, though her penfriend Steve and I know many of the same people and know of one another, she knows him much better than I do, all the way out there in the deserts of Bishop, California.

Rene Saller (one person who knows both Steve and me) had promoted Cuba Street to me for Undertow Music. Rene knows her music, especially her adventurous rock music, and I didn't take her glowing praise of The Love Experts lightly. At any rate, I was prepared to like anything with Steve Scariano on the bass guitar. I remember walking into some club some night Steve was on electric bass and thinking I was in the presence of the warmest bass tone and most confident electric bass playing I had ever heard in my life. (Mike Prokopf's acoustic bass work has the same impact on me.)

Now I can't figure out why Cuba Street didn't overpower me on first listen, when it came out back in 2005. I can't figure out why it didn't immediately wipe me out. I can't figure out why it didn't immediately enter that elite rank of regular-rotation records, along with Soda and The Wu-Tang Clan and Meat Puppets and Astor Piazolla.

As of this morning, after one thrilling drive-time spin, it's in that upper echelon. This is bright, smart, throbbing pop music, with wicked hooks, urgent vocals, and an unexpected guitar departure on the sixth and final track that is worthy - I don't drop the R.T. bomb lightly, not at all! - of Richard Thompson.

Really, I'd go on, but the liner notes on the Undertow site (penned, no doubt, by Rene) say it so well. And there are always those $0.99 downloads on the MySpace page.

Really, I just wrote this bit to give a belated thanks to Rene (who lends a leg to the cover image on the great Michael Friedman CD Cool of the Coming Dark) and to Tricia in the California desert, with her yen for beer, tomatoes, and New Zealand rock music. (Cuba Street, I now know, is the name of a centrally located shopping area in Wellington, New Zealand, which must have something to do with the Mutton Birds and the Phoenix Foundation and all that.)

To bring it back to beer, I wanted to know from Tricia what kind of beer Matt (her man, I presume) was enjoying?

She wrote back, "Matt was drinking Firestone Pale 31. The Firestone Union Jack IPA keg just blew. :( Rumors of a keg of Cantillon wending its way across the States to our house have been flying from the local grocer who gets us our kegs."

It was the bunghole of a Cantillon keg, snapped by a tomato farmer from California, that instigated my reinvestigation of this important rock record, Cuba Street, made in my own damn town, St. Louis, by people I almost know, The Love Experts. That sounds like Confluence City to me!

*

Picture of Tricia lifted from the same picture page where I got the bunghole.

4 comments:

Tomatohead said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Tomatohead said...

(once more, but with feeling)
This small world never ceases to amaze.

I index and abstract articles for a nonprofit library, but tomato farmer suits me fine.

Isn't it funny? Steve Carosello saw that I mentioned Richard Thompson just the other day and introduced me to the English singer Norma Waterson? She works with RT and apparently is a fan of Al Bowlly, too.

Thanks for such a lovely review for Cuba Street. I've got my copy out and will have a listen with a new set of ears.

Pleased to meet you! Tonight, we will mostly be drinking Sierra Pale, as Rogue Brutal Bitter has been unavailable for eons.

Tricia

Poetry Scores said...

Hi Tricia! I hope you check back to see me talking to you, so I don't come across as an ingrate. I return all fellow feelings and have propped you up on my blogroll to keep an eye on you. I am having an Ofallon 5 Day IPA (which you and your manfriend would LOVE) at The Royale (which you and, etc.). I did Cuba Street again on the way here. It held up!

Unknown said...

Please write more about your keg of Cantillon . . . I don't know much about that beer, but I hope it's a sour unfruited lambic--nobody seems to like them, but I love them.

The first time I tasted one I was in Amsterdam, half-drunk, and had no idea what I was ordering. My first sip of Boon Geuze was shocking--a sharp blade drawn across a soft tongue. That beer got me up off my ass and out into the night for air . . . I walked for hours, completely lost. What a great night.

My wife compares drinking the sour lambics to drinking salad dressing. I guess it's an acquired taste.