Alejandro Escovedo, a woman who might be Penny Buckner (but might be Ms. Escovedo?), Ford Pier, and myself, Folk Fest 2022, by Erik Iversen
This Sunday, July 28th, a man with a fascinating, under-sung history is playing the Pearl: Alejandro Escovedo. I have failed to interview him, despite a couple of attempts -- he was wiped out at the folk fest when I spoke with him in 2022 (and I was under-prepared, having only recently gotten into his music) and when the time came around to pitch a feature on his new album, Echo Dancing, to Big Takeover, someone else was scheduled to write it! (The current issue, with my Art Bergmann and Meat Puppets features, also has an Escovedo feature, but not by me. Some Indigos stock it -- look around?).
But here are a few reasons why you should play catchup, if you don't know his music:
I have begun to get a shape of his backstory, despite being a relative noob myself. Escovedo's early punk band, the Nuns, played Winterland, opening for the Sex Pistols, alongside the Avengers. He is not on the actual studio album that came out but he's on the "CBS demos 1977" thing and that is much better. Once Escovedo moved on they made changes to the material, nudging it in more "commercial" directions, of course, and... well, some of it's still okay, but I like the demos a ton more.
Not long after that concert, Escovedo was living in New York in the Chelsea Hotel, with neighbours Sid and Nancy. He wrote one hell of a song about Nancy's death and about life in the Chelsea at that time. He tells the story of the song here, before a live performance; studio version here (this is a fantastic Escovedo album, by the way: Real Animal, from 2008, mixed and produced by Tony Visconti. I think it would be a great starting point if you're new to his catalogue, and it's not hard to find used on CD).
The lyrics Google provides for the song are VERY wrong -- "come and help with Sid" becomes "come and help us sit;" is this AI-generated or something? This is the correct version, best as I can tell.
He must have come west soon after that, because a few years later, he was playing in Rank and File with the Kinmans. Some of Bev's photos from a 1983 show in Vancouver are here, in a blogpost I did about a cool 2004 Vancouver comp of Escovedo's songs, with testimony from very notable Vancouver fans, like John Armstrong... Brian "Wimpy Roy" Goble does lead vocals on an Escovedo song on the comp, too, and a host of other notables, including Ray Condo (his last recording?), Herald Nix, Bughouse 5, Graham Brown, and everyone's pal, the Minimalist Jug Band, who was the first person to tell me to check out Escovedo, back when this album was being recorded (we Als gotta stick together):
It figures that John Armstrong contributed a song to that -- a cover of "By Eleven," as interpreted by the New Modernettes, in what I believe is their only studio release to date -- because Escovedo's next band after Rank and File, True Believers, had done an awesome cover of the Modernettes' "The Rebel Kind" on their 1986 debut album (I'll let you find the studio version of that yourself; he's a live clip from a 2013 reunion). "By Eleven" originally appeared on Escovedo's first solo album, Gravity, which Armstrong picks as his favourite. It's a good one, too, also featuring the song Wimpy picked, "Pyramid of Tears." His version, with Solemn Fist, is not on Youtube, but Lucinda Williams' version is, on an American comp that, like the Vancouver one, was designed to help raise some money to help Escovedo through some health issues. That comp also features the likes of Steve Earle. Lots of people love Alejandro Escovedo.
Which reminds me: I have heard an eyewitness story about a True Believers show, maybe at the Cruel Elephant, where a very drunk Armstrong and Zippy Pinhead crashed the stage and were so blitzed they got ejected or something! (That would have been a question I'd have asked Alejandro for sure; John can't have a monopoly on ALL the embarrassing stories from his past). Looks like there was at least one other local True Believers gig, at the Town Pump; there's mention that True Believers had shared the stage with Los Lobos on that poster, and if I recall, Escovedo said something from the folk fest main stage, back in 2022, about doing mushrooms with Los Lobos in Victoria?
That would have been another fun question! He told us a couple times that he really likes it up here, though, and near the end of his set in 2022, told us to tell John he loves him and probably owes him some money...
So Escovedo is a punk turned roots rocker with a long history and great songs, beloved by many. Here's, erm, George W. Bush's favourite, "Castanets" (the story goes that when Escovedo found out that Bush loves that song, Escovedo stopped playing it for a few years). That clip features, you'll note, a couple of Young Fresh Fellows (Kurt Bloch and Scott McCaughey) and Peter Buck -- I think they were kinda the Yep Roc house band, or something, because they also pop up on Robyn Hitchcock records from that time (I think). They're on another favourite Escovedo album of mine, Burn Something Beautiful, too.
If the presence of the Young Fresh Fellows and Peter Buck supporting Escovedo onstage does not move you, here's Bruce Springsteen backing Escovedo on his song (also off "Real Animal"), "Always a Friend." That's another real grabber. I think if you get to know Gravity, Real Animal, and Burn Something Beautiful before Sunday, you will have a firm footing in Escovedo's catalogue, though there are many other albums besides. You may also want to delve into The Crossing, with exists in both an English-language and Spanish-language version. The song you're most likely to hear off that on Sunday is "Teenage Luggage," I suspect -- he did that here in 2022, in, of course, the English version.
But the nice thing is that Escovedo's newest album, Echo Burning, actually has a built-in retrospective quality, with new takes on songs from his long career, my favourite of which is "Last to Know," but he also did "Sensitive Boys" (which I believe he dedicated to the Kinmans) and "The Wave" (which he prefaced with a story about his father's arrival in America) last time he was in Vancouver. The album is a bit more reflective and textured than the roadhouse-ready riffing on Real Animal or Burn Something Beautiful, but I suspect the live show will be much punchier.
That's where *I'm* gonna be, Sunday, anyhow.
4 comments:
escovedo is someone i want to like...feel i should like...have tried to like...but an adjective you used elsewhere sez it best...nonplussed...i really liked rank and file...live and on record...the true believers don't connect to my head or my heart or my ear the way i need a band or artist to do for me to fall in love with their sound...and i am always getting them mixed up in my head with a california band i really like called true west...i was at the cruel elephant true believers show...buck and zippy were fucked up...kicked off the stage and then out on to the street...i also really liked alejandro's brother mario's band the dragons when i saw them live...opening for someone at the commodore...maybe?...i think i'm gonna wait for another 80s punk alumni who is coming to town...kid congo powers...i have seen him in the cramps...the gun club...the bad seeds and with the pink monkey birds a couple of times...kudos to escovedo for recognising the modernettes...rockin' cover of the rebel kind...
Aha, you have outed yourself as the source of my Buck and Zippy story! (I didn't know if you'd want to be credited).
To be honest, the first couple of times I tried Escovedo, it didn't hit the mark for me, either. It's weird how that works. Sometimes it takes awhile for a band to click -- you need the right key to get through the door; sometimes you go back to an artist several times and just can't hear it. Another guy like that for me was Richard Thompson. I'm a fan now, but I actually owned an album or two of his and sold them before I "got" it. I even had an album of his I love now, Shoot Out the Lights, and remember thinking, "Well, 'Wall of Death' is pretty good but the rest of this is just fuckin' love songs and stuff, who cares?"
Warren Zevon is another guy I heard a bunch of before the pathway opened -- "Werewolves of London" is cute and all but I didn't fall in love with him until I heard "My Shit's Fucked Up."
Solo Bob Mould, ditto -- I ignored his entire post-Du career until Patch the Sky.
And the first Escovedo album I bought, I listened to once and gave to Mo Tarmohamed. Within a year, I was in the same audience as Mo watching him, and loving it.
But there's no right or wrong way to do these things -- listen to what you love and maybe the rest will hit you. Maybe someday I'll be going, "shit, I was in the audience for Iris DeMent and barely paid attention."
One thing that MIGHT still interest you is that James Mastro, touring his first full solo record, is opening for Escovedo. THIS I think you will like. And Ian Hunter is in it/ on it! !! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jJJAHjvI_U0
i know what i like and usual dgaf what everyone else likes...but sometimes when a bunch of my peers are really digging stuff i've passed on and tell me to give it another listen i do and like you said...sometimes i get it now...i always kinda liked warren...hanging out and writing songs with hunter thompson...i figured he must be cooler than i'm giving him credit for...then disorder in the house really wowed me...great lyrics...and another he's okay guy...bruce springsteen's guitar is killer on that track...now warren has graduated from i like that guy to i love that guy...his last three albums are his best...imho...hey i saw alex chilton at the town pump...it was awesome...but he had me with the letter...
maybe you can find a fact checker to verify this drowned in booze memory cell that just surfaced...the buck and zippy incident may have been a buick mackane concert at the cruel elephant when it was on granville st...hmmmmm
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