Friday, October 31, 2025
CD Short Take: Hayoung Lyou- The Myth of Katabasis
Thursday, October 30, 2025
On the Town, Checking out the Kyle Sowashes, Juanita & Juan and their friends

Tuesday, October 28, 2025
Dromfest '25 - More Photos and a Few Words
Back over Labor Day weekend, I drove up to Catskill, New York for Dromfest '25, a three-day festival of indie rock music from past and present. A full account of the weekend appears on The Big Takeover's website, which can be found here. The whole event was revelatory for me and I encourage you to check out my dispatch for details.
Rather than retreading that article, I thought it would be cool to post some of the many photos that I took that weekend, excluding ones that already appear on the BT site. So these are some of the folks I saw. Hopefully the photos taken in the Avalon Lounge aren't too dark for details.
Guitarist Chris Brokaw (far right) was one of the busiest people at Dromfest. He played solo on opening night, accompanied Beth Kaplan, sat in with Yo La Tengo and, in this photo above, he played with the group Lupo Cita'.
Note to self, pick up any New Radiant Storm King release you see because they, too, were awesome.
Going a little out of order here. Thalia Zedek has a way of pulling you in with her mid-tempo music, and awesome guitar work. From Sunday afternoon.
Sue Harshe, of Scrawl, looked so happy during her band's set, a feeling that pervaded the whole room.
Wednesday, October 22, 2025
Destroyer Returned to Pittsburgh and Left Me Charmed and a Bit Puzzled
While watching Dan Bejar prowl the stage during Destroyer's Pittsburgh show on October 7, a big part of his appeal finally occurred to me: I like Destroyer because I can't figure out what the hell Bejar is trying to be with the band. Is he a modern day lounge singer? Is he an old-school indie rocker who likes esoteric arrangements where trumpets and synths can comingle with standard rock instruments? Is he some sort of folk singer trying to find the best way to present his lyrical outlook?
No answers really came that night at Mr. Small's, but it was the act of exploring those questions that made the songs even more appealing. This is a guy who opened his most recent album, the hilariously red-herring Dan's Boogie, with the lyrics, "Your entrance was its own Red Scare/ You quote unquote the French au pair/ where did you invent this learned behaviour?" This only surfaces after 65 seconds of synth strings and flanged piano that sound overmodulated and loud. Bejar, on the other hand is a study in restraint.
The last time Bejar came to town in 2016, Destroyer was just him and an acoustic guitar. Two weeks ago, he had a full band with two guitars, keyboards, bass, drums and trumpet/keyboards. His songs often feel both deceptively simple, based on a few chords, and complex at the same time, due to shifts in dynamics and mood. Surprisingly, Bejar relied on a notebook of lyrics during songs like "Hydroplaining Off the Edge of the World," which has at least five detailed "verses" that would be hard for anyone to commit to memory.
The band brought the songs to life with the precision of a machine, even if the tempo often seemed to be settled too comfortably in the mid-level for the first part of the set. Bejar's high, reedy voice constrasted with his shaggy long hair and full salt-and-pepper facial hair. If the characters he portrayed in his songs might be on the roguish side, Bejar the performer seems positively charming.
Jennifer Castle, who opened the show singing her own songs with only her acoustic guitar and occasional harmonica backing her, joined Destroyer for a few songs later in the set, one of which might have been "Bologna," a torch song from Dan's Boogie sung by Simone Schmidt.
A week after the show, I ran into a high school friend who I had seen briefly at the Destroyer show. He said Bejar's music reminded him of the first two Roxy Music albums, a comparison I can see.
As I was preparing to write this post, I pulled up a preview I had written on Bejar nine years ago to preview that show (which I recall was pretty packed). Roxy was mentioned in that article, in connection to Destroyer's Kaputt album, which hinted at the former band's Avalan. The article began with Bejar aligning himself with the late singer-songwriter Scott Walker too. “I’ll spend my life trying to get around [his] records," he said. "Even when I’m not listening to it, I’ll find myself just thinking about it, being in the middle of a conversation with someone about groceries and I’ll be like, ‘What about that song?’”
Kind of the same way I feel about Destroyer albums. If you'll excuse me, I might have to pull out Poison Season.
PS About a year before the previous Destroyer show, Bejar's mug was plastered across two pages of JazzTimes magazine in an article about rock musicians drawing from jazz in their own work. The article opened with a quote from our hero on jazz influencing Kaputt, cited from a different article. During our interview, I asked if he knew about his inclusion in the article. "Nooo.... was it a mistake?" he asked. At the 2016 show, I gave him my copy of that JazzTimes issue.
Tuesday, October 21, 2025
Artifacts, Live at the Manchester Craftsmen's Guild
Photo by Liina Raud
Last Thursday, the Manchester Craftsmen's Guild presented a performance that swung a bit to the left of the nearly 40-year old musical institution's usual programming. Artifacts, the trio of Nicole Mitchell (flute), Tomeka Reid (cello) and Mike Reed (drums), was on tour and needed a spot to play. Mitchell, who ran Pitt's Jazz Studies program from 2019 to 2022, reached out to MCG Jazz executive producer Marty Ashby, who welcomed the trio to the space. Although all three musicians have played in situations where the music moves in an outward direction, their sound combined a sense of adventure with a hard-swinging mood.
Reid avoided the bow in the early part of the set and plucked her instrument like a bass. It set up a vamp in some of the tunes, like "Pleasure Palace" to which Mitchell added a throaty solo. One of the microphones on the flute ran the instrument through a set of effects which often gave it a theremin-style sound, which Reed and Reid abetted during "Giddy Giddy" with stops that alternated on every two and three beats. Reed got some drones going on his drum heads in "Torps," with his cymbals eventually blending into long tones from his bandmates before things broke into a solid 4/4 backdrop for the flute and cello.
Throughout their set, the rapport between all three players was clearly on display, with an ability to move from jerky stop-start parts to a steady groove in a new, untitled piece. In Mitchell piece "B.K.," the composer's flute and electronics were really lifted by the drums and cello, raising the excitement of the set.
Hopefully these three won't be strangers in the Steel City. When Mitchell gave the city a shout as things were setting up, the response indicated we were glad to see her again.
Monday, October 20, 2025
A Return, and a Report of Roger Clark Miller's Return to Town
Roger Clark Miller, once and forever the guitarist of Mission of Burma, was in town last Saturday (October 18) at Government Center. In a matter of speaking, this is probably the re-scheduled visit for him, since he was slated to play here in early 2020, right as the world was starting to shut down. He and I did a phone interview at that time, but, going back through my folders, I don't know if I even got as far as transcribing it.
One thing I do remember from that conversation is how he mentioned in passing that Mission of Burma was broken up at that point. No one had really come out from the band and said it yet. In fact, I think that an online article appeared a few months later talking about it, and how the band was so much the sum of its parts that no one was going to do an interview just about that topic without the other two (or three) members. Suffice to say, in talking to Roger, it seemed like nothing bad had happened. The group simply felt they had done what they set out to do and everyone was ready to move on.
Last week, Miller, as the photos show, set up onstage with a battery of equipment: a guitar, two lap steel guitars (though his albums credit him with three, this was all I could see), a pedalboard and a few other pedals to boot. This looping-and-playing-along-with-it thing was something that he has been doing since the late 1980s with his Maximum Electric Piano. Twice I saw him generating percussion parts by putting a brick or comb on the piano strings and looping that, before playing a "bass" line that also got looped, topped off by a melody and vocals.
Last week, it was all instrumental, with music inspired by his Dream Interpretation projects. The music ranged from raucous and noisy to steady and controlled, almost reaching a bit of either surf tone or noirish twang in a piece like "Russian Spy Cannisters" which appears on his latest album Curiousity for Solo Electric Guitar Ensemble. (The word "ensemble" refers to the way he can create the swell of a full band with the equipment at hand.)
Back at the end of August, I drove up to Catskill, New York for Dromfest '25. Miller kicked off the event and he was the one act I missed, due to my late arrival. (Goddam that New York State Thruway.) I bought the Curiousity CD that night and was glad that he came to Pittsburgh. He's still creating new, bold music with the same level of commitment he had four decades ago.
The evening began with two local acts adding to the edgy, experimental mood of the night. Satryr/Elfheim was a solid guitar player whose left-hand vibrato made his songs stand out. His technical problems almost derailed the focus of the set at first, but when he got into it, he sounded solid. Full disclosure, Business Jazz features one of my bandmates, guitarist Erik Cirelli, with Chris Cannon, a longtime fixture of the local scene, dating back to his time in bands like the Johnsons (Big Band) and Raw Blow. Their set was a swirling mass of sampled lectures, bossa nova samples and a little bit of skronk.
Monday, August 11, 2025
CD Review: Joe Morris/Elliot Sharp, Wolf Eyes x Anthony Braxton
Two new releases from ESP-Disk' present two different kinds of collaborations. One is a first-time meeting of minds, the second a follow-up on a combination that shows the players from vastly different backgrounds coming together to blend cohesively.






.jpg)
.jpg)





.jpg)


.jpg)







