My life and adventures, travels, thoughts and random (or not so random) celebrity encounters. And music.

Saturday, December 31, 2005

HAPPY NEW YEAR!

Deep Ellum, pt. 2

Below is an excellent response about the state of affairs in Deep Ellum, which I wrote about in a recent post. It's from my bud Frank, posted here with his permission. Love ya, Frank.

"Yeah Dada may be closed and it is no suprise! But they may suprise us all and reopen! Trees is gone and that's been dragging on for too long as well. I hate to see it go but the spirit and energy are no longer there so why bother? What gets me is everyone saying Deep Ellum is dead. They've been harping on the negative for years now, like their bad experiences are a trendy social thing to discuss. This seems to be perpetuated even more so by the press and of course the ongoing coverage of the David Cunniff civil suit against the EC. The dude got in a bar fight for not minding his own business and got his ass whooped. It could've happened to anyone. Lyles story in the Observer is pretty much lifted from his blog and I expect will be included in his book somewhere on down the road. But his closing line of Deep Ellum as a creative force is history, is just more tired old man BS. You know, jaded folks who feel they have seen it all? There seem to be a lot of those weighing in on the subject. I guess it makes them feel important or superior. I've heard this kind of talk since 1989 about Deep Ellum not being as cool as it was from goofy fucks who can't accept evolution... Clubs which are doing well include Red Blood and The Darkside... Pepe & Mito's, All Good, Crustaceans and Tarantinos seem to be doing fine restaurant wise! There are other new ventures opening as well, such as two other new restaurants and another gallery, next door to Barry Whistler! Ironically (Frank's daughter) Amber and I, believe it or not, are going to see the Old 97's tonite at Gypsy! Overall I see it as evolution and the parking situation and the homeless are still the biggest drawback the area has in my opinion. The gallery is doing great, except I don't have the energy to keep 'normal' business hours. We had an opening a couple of weeks ago and we sold 15 out of 75 pieces! Broose played and sold two! So I don't know... I'm fighting one hell of a battle and I am not alone but sometimes it seems like I am. The DEA seems worthless and apathy is contagious! What more can I say? When the tunnel comes down in May, I'll host a tunnelvisions art show w/ every artist I can wrangle. I also plan to do another Walk on Walls probably in March to get people talking. It's the January / February dulldrums that I fear!Whatever eh? Everything will always be allright coz I've lived through worse!"

Frank

Thursday, December 29, 2005

Comic Relief

After the previous depressing post, it's time for some comic relief. Who better than Will Ferrell as our Commander in Chief of the World?

Sad News in Big D

The last several years that I lived in Dallas, the area on the east side of downtown called Deep Ellum was my second home. I was Marketing Director for the area for a while, then took a job doing club promotions which meant more time there. And after that, I hung out there all the time, because by then I'd made so many friends and it was a great place to go. The area has a great history, from the early 1900's, then it was abandoned for a long time until a group of artists and musicians - including a few friends of mine - started living there, booking bands, opening clubs, etc. In the 1980's it was still an edgy, dangerous place to go, but it was the beginning of a beautiful thing - THE place in North Texas to go see the best local bands, and where many touring 'baby bands' would play before going on to great success. In the 90's it really thrived, with a bunch of live music venues, art galleries, tattoo parlors, boutique shops, and restaurants, all in about an 8-square block area. Park and walk, day and night. Mark Cuban, now owner of the Dallas Mavericks, started Broadcast.com there, which he later sold to Yahoo for about a squillion dollars. (I knew several people who were cursing themselves for not investing with him in the early days when Cuban approached them.) I had too many great times to count, and made so many friends, most of whom I still keep in touch with. I was just there in November over the Thanksgiving holiday, and it was great to go back and say hi.

So you can say Deep Ellum has a special place in my heart.

In recent years, Deep Ellum has been going through a rough patch - businesses closing, some crime, but from what I'm told by locals, no worse than any other part of town. But it got bad press locally because it's a high-profile area, and that hurt business, drove people away, and attracted some unsavory characters.

Today I read that two of the longest-in-operation live music venues - clubs that were the anchor for the scene - are closing. Club Dada closed a couple of weeks ago, and Trees will close on Jan. 2. Both had been open 15+ years, which is nothing short of a small miracle in the club world. Their importance to the area, and the impact they have had, cannot be understated. So it's with a heavy heart that I learned this shocking news today. I knew D.E. was having a bad time, but this is disastrous, for the area in general and most especially for the music scene. I have often said that "Austin gets the juice, but Dallas is the shit" when it comes to local music. So much talent. So many great acts I saw there. As a matter of fact, I just finished creating a couple of mix CDs for New Year's Eve, which include several Dallas bands - Burden Brothers, Jibe, Old 97s, pop poppins.

I once had optimism that things would bounce back eventually, but now....

I hope the remaining key venues there - Gypsy Tea Room, Curtain Club, and Club Clearview, can keep things rolling and that new venues open and things take a turn for the better. I hope my friends at Dada and Trees find new gigs soon. I hope my friends at the other remaining venues, friends who have other businesses in the area, and my bud Frank who just opened an art gallery there (and part of the aforementioned 1980's era contingent), keep up the good fight and hang in there.

Fingers crossed.

Sunday, December 11, 2005

Check 'em out

The Ike Reilly Assassination played the closing night party of the Santa Fe Film Festival tonight, and they were fantastic. Last year, it was the Arcade Fire, which was one of THE best bands I've seen in a long time - great musicians and a killer live show, and they've since gone on to much acclaim and attention. The IRA is one to watch in the coming year.

R.I.P. Richard Pryor

We lost a genius.

Thursday, December 01, 2005

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