Dead Rock West is hitting the road this Fall and here are the dates!
September 1, 2009 Annies Social Club San Francisco, CA
September 2, 2009 The Palms w/ Dave Alvin and the Guilty Women Winters, CA
September 4, 2009 Slim's Last Chance Seattle, WA
September 5, 2009 Aladdin Theater w/ Dave Alvin & the Guilty Women Portland, OR
September 6, 2009 Kenton Club Portland, OR
September 7, 2009 Tractor Tavern w/ Mari Maries Seattle, WA
September 19, 2009 TBA Austin, TX
September 20, 2009 McCabes w/ Pieta Brown Santa Monica, CA
September 26, 2009 TBA New York City, NY
October 24, 2009 TBA Tempe, AZ
Attention Dead Rock West fans, Yeah we mean YOU! We have received many of your photos sent to us from shows and we want to tell you that we LOVE 'EM! Keep them coming and make sure to include name, location and date taken, along with the photo so we can feature you in our next newsletter! Send photos to drw.losangels@gmail.com
Make sure to catch us on the road and don't forget to send us your best snapshots!
-Team Dead Rock West
Dead Rock West distills hooks and harmony in Pittsburgh
May 20, 2009, at Thunderbird Cafe
By Melanie Cox McCluskey
Published: May 23rd, 2009 | 11:55am
L.A.’s Dead Rock West distilled its timeless hook-and-harmony spirit into a quick 35-minute set at Thunderbird Cafe in Pittsburgh this week. With its airbrushed honky-tonk street scene as a stage backdrop, the intimate multi-level club provided the perfect setting for the band’s saloon-blues ballyhoo. The quintet’s dusty, roots-inspired rock sounds polished and fresh on stage, transformed by an ebullient, jovial presence and good-time sensibility. Though its X-meets-Wilco influences are aged to a fine vintage, Dead Rock West keeps its spin relevant with punk-spirited pop.
The group opened the show with the punchy anthem “Rocket From The Crypt” from its 2007 debut Honey and Salt (Populuxe). The vocal harmonies of guitarist Frank Drennen and Cindy Wasserman take a page straight from X, and it’s no surprise that Wasserman has lent her honeyed soprano on recent solo releases from both John Doe and Exene Cervenka. Dead Rock West whipped through the archived Americana from Honey and Salt with premium-blend standouts like “Desert Rose,” a mash of Californian country-rock folklore, and “Telephone,” a rollicking, jangly foot-stomper.
As she switching off between tambourine and starbourine, Wasserman took the boy-girl harmony to a different level with guitarist Phil Parlapiano, who shared vocals on “I Hope You Miss Me.” But she was back to breaking the bottle with Drennen on “Ain’t No Grave,” a new song from their as-yet-untitled album in the works. With rhythm like a roaring train through a tunnel, this boozy bruiser slammed right into a wailing blues bridge before accelerating into a collision of uncompromising rock hooks.
And then, like last call arriving far too soon, the five-piece ended its set with a cover of Velvet Underground’s “What Goes On.” Dead Rock West’s signature harder, faster punk edge and Wasserman’s searing vocals gave the classic track a postmodern lilt that promises more rip-roaring performances to come.
For more photos from this show visit Venus Zine’s Flickr page