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CL approved shows for the weekend

Thursday, March 5th, 2009

It’s a big weekend for shows in Atlanta. Sadly Morrissey sold out the Variety Playhouse quickly (rightfully so). But if you weren’t one of the lucky ones who got tickets, there are still plenty of other noteworthy things going on.

On Friday night Mi Ami is playing a show over at 529. Personally, I’m not a fan of this CD by any stretch and it has been the subject of much debate between me and about a dozen other people who wholeheartedly disagree with me. I spent about a week and a half trying to figure out what it is that makes people clamor for this group, but each listen only made the singer’s absolutely unbearable vocal screeds that much more maddening. By its very nature the the heavy rhythms and deep bottom end of the music demands a physical response. Perhaps the live show will persuade me to think otherwise.

If you’re looking for something more in the vein of traditional rock and roll, Howlies are playing the CD release party for Trippin With Howlies at the Star Bar.

On Saturday night the Fourth Ward Afro-Klezmer Orchestra plays at Eyedrum. 4WAKO is a nine piece jazz orchestra playing original compositions and arrangements that combine West African influenced rhythms with Eastern European Klezmer melodies. Daniel Clay opens the show.

Selmanaires play a show at 529 on Saturday night. According to vocalist and guitar player Tommy Chung the group will be unveiling an almost entirely new set of songs. (more…)

CL recommended show for Thurs., Oct. 23. William Elliot Whitmore at the Drunken Unicorn

Wednesday, October 22nd, 2008

WILLIAM ELLIOT WHITMORE is a farm boy from rural Iowa with a scratchy voice that bears the scars of a man who has experienced harder times than most folks will ever know. His death-afflicted country hymns channel a broken soul through a broken banjo and his brittle pick and stomp commune with the Grim Reaper under icy and wind-burned harmonies. But rather than dwell on the inevitable, he imbues such bleak fodder with an uplifting, existentialist embrace. Thursday’s show is the first night of Whitmore’s tour in support of his ANTI- debut, Animals in the Dark.

For this appearance at The Drunken Unicorn, he’ll perform alongside Bloomington, Ind.’s barreling country-punk crooners Murder By Death. Baltimore’s J-Roddy Walston & the Business open. $12. 9 p.m. Drunken Unicorn, 736 Ponce de Leon Place.

(Photo courtesy of Epitaph)