KXLU 88.9 Presents
Mike Watt + the missingmen
Chotto Ghetto
Stab City, Opus Dai, Raushi
Sat, September 22, 2012
Doors: 8:00 pm / Show: 9:00 pm
Bootleg Bar
$10.00
Tickets
This event is 21 and over
http://www.foldsilverlake.com/event/154181/Mike Watt + the missingmen - (Set time: 9:50 PM)

hyphenated-man is the name of mike watt’s third opera, contemplating the engine room (1997) being the first one and the secondman's middle stand (2004) being the second. He expressly put together the missingmen (on guitar: tom watson and on drums: raul morales) for this project a couple of years ago and now (with the mastering by john golden), it has now been realized, recorded at tony maimone’s Studio G in Brooklyn Spring of 2009. It's the first release on watt’s clenchedwrench label.
“whereas ...engine room dealt w/my pop's life in the navy as a metaphor for the story of the minutemen,” watt explains, “and ...middle stand was a parallel to dante's "comedia" dealing w/an illness that almost killed me in 2000, this third opera is quite different in that it has no standard narrative (libretto!) meaning no regular beginning-middle-end and is as it were "simultaneous" in the way a mirror from just inside my head - right in this middle-age moment of mine - was then shattered into thirty pieces and then each piece stuffed in the head to show a piece of my state of mind (or out-of-mind) as of now. ‘thirty tunes?’ yes, they're little ones... actually they're ‘thirty parts’ of one big tune. back in 2005, too heavy to really hear minutemen stuff for many years, I had to face myself and get the nerve up to hear it again when I agreed to let keith scheiron and tim irwin make the we jam econo documentary (many thanks to them and all who helped out on that). I even did a few gigs w/george hurley w/us as a duet doing some of the old tunes and it was trippy for me, like I was digging on how ‘econo’ those tiny tunes were - no filler, right to point and distilled down to the bare nada.”
From his earliest years performing with d. boon and the minutemen while helping to establish the American indie rock scene through the then-fledgling SST scene, mike watt has had a deep sense of purpose although, as he admits, "it's hard to describe the mission, what makes me put almost everything else secondary. when I tour, I conk at people's pads. I play every day. I'm not using it as a means to a lifestyle. I don't really know what the mission is exactly except to do this as intense as I can. it's like being a sailor or something. Sometimes, it does feel as if I've been given orders, a bizarre spin on the minstrel or troubadour scenario, the town crier, the guy that goes between the towns to let the other towns know about each other."
An inveterate road dog, mike has spent an incalculable percentage of the past quarter century touring in numerous ensembles and configurations. Beginning with the minutemen in the early 1980s, watt helped define the "econo-tour," a road warrior-style approach to touring that involved performing the most gigs possible in the fewest days with the lowest possible overhead. Sharing a van with SST labelmates Black Flag, the minutemen unknowingly created the roadmap of national club routes that the budding Punk Rock Nation would later adopt as its own. Finally, after four years of watching the tour van odometer flip over to zeros, the minutemen came to an end on December 23, 1985 when a tragic van accident took d. boon's life.
watt retreated from music after the loss, though not for long. An avid Ohio-based minutemen fan named Ed "fROMOHIO" Crawford found watt's number in the phone book and announced that he was moving to San Pedro to start a new band with watt and drummer george hurley. The trio launched fIREHOSE in June 1986 going on to create five studio albums and a live EP, indulging in seven-and-a-half years of non-stop econo-touring (without ever taking label tour support).
In the spring of 1995, he released his first solo album, ball-hog or tugboat? The album enlisted no less than 48 different participants including members of Nirvana, Pearl Jam, the Beastie Boys, Soul Asylum, the Lemonheads, and the Screaming Trees. In fact, the tour line-up for Watt's first solo outing included Pearl Jam's Eddie Vedder on vocals, the Germ's Pat Smear on guitar, and Nirvana's David Grohl on drums, with Grohl's then-new group, the Foo Fighters, delivering their very first live performances in the support slot. After this tour, he did two more with Nels Cline and two drummers as the “crew of the flying saucer.” He then toured for a year as a sideman on bass for Perry Farrell's Porno for Pyros and recorded two songs for their second album.
Then watt trimmed his caravan back to a three-man team and recorded his 1997 follow-up, the punk opera contemplating the engine room. The thematic effort revolved around three seamen in the engine room of a naval vessel, in sum creating a powerful metaphor for the minutemen and their road lives in "the boat" (watt's name for the van he tours in). He brought this around the towns for fourteen months with the black gang, a trio that had the album's nels cline and stephen hodges at different times along with bob lee and joe baiza.
the secondman's middle stand was watt's third solo album and first to be recorded with a bass, organ (pete mazich), and drums (jerry trebotic) line-up. This project was his response to a critical illness in 2000 with a fever lasting 38 days, its climax an abscess bursting in his perineum. watt used his recovery period to re-read, among a dizzyingly wide range of other books, Dante Alighieri's "Divine Comedy," (he first read it as a teenager) which is divided into three sections: "Inferno," "Purgatorio," and "Paradiso." Both "Purgatorio" and "Paradiso" are divided into 33 cantos ("Inferno" has 34) with each section divided into groups of 3 lines called tercets -- a direct influence on the album.
In addition to his primary efforts, watt's yearnings for creative output have resulted in numerous collaborations and side projects, both in the studio and on the road: Unknown Instructors with george hurley, guitarist Joe Baiza (Saccharine Trust) and a revolving cast of vocalist/poets; bass guitar duo dos with ex-Black Flag bassist kira roessler; the Fog with J Mascis; Banyan, an experimental alt-jazz project with Pyro/Jane's Addiction member Stephen Perkins; hellride with Perkins and Peter Distefano “whupping up stooges in a john coltrane way”; Li'l Pit; Crimony; Bootstrappers; the original Punk Rock Karaoke with Eric Melvin of NOFX and Greg Hetson of Bad Religion;.
watt also was part of the Wylde Rattz with the Stooges' Ron Asheton, Mudhoney's Mark Arm, Sonic Youth's Thurston Moore and Steve Shelley who covered the Stooges' classic "TV Eye" for the soundtrack to the Todd Haynes film Velvet Goldmine. This led to Iggy Pop inviting mike to join the reformed Stooges along with Ron and Scott Asheton, touring with them as well as playing on their comeback album, The Weirdness. watt continues as a Stooge in the current line-up with James Williamson rejoining the band after the death of Asheton in 2008.
Our man in Pedro also stays busy with a weekly web radio program, “the watt from pedro show” (twfps.com), and his own site, hootpage.com, both of which provide outlets for his many political interests, including the fight against FFC regulations on low power FM stations and web radio channels. He also loves pedaling his bike around his town four days a week while paddling his kayak the other three - all at the crack of dawn.
But there is a thread that connects all of Watt's concerns. "Art and music mirrors nature in a lot of ways," Watt says. "Nature's a lot about resonances and cycles and rhythms. Nature has no ethics or morality. Neither does music. It operates on a level where words aren't. There's always going to be a hankering to get connections on a non-word level. Can we have ideas that don't have words for them? You can't know anything, you can only believe. The way you describe what you believe is a prison. Music is a way to get around that.
“whereas ...engine room dealt w/my pop's life in the navy as a metaphor for the story of the minutemen,” watt explains, “and ...middle stand was a parallel to dante's "comedia" dealing w/an illness that almost killed me in 2000, this third opera is quite different in that it has no standard narrative (libretto!) meaning no regular beginning-middle-end and is as it were "simultaneous" in the way a mirror from just inside my head - right in this middle-age moment of mine - was then shattered into thirty pieces and then each piece stuffed in the head to show a piece of my state of mind (or out-of-mind) as of now. ‘thirty tunes?’ yes, they're little ones... actually they're ‘thirty parts’ of one big tune. back in 2005, too heavy to really hear minutemen stuff for many years, I had to face myself and get the nerve up to hear it again when I agreed to let keith scheiron and tim irwin make the we jam econo documentary (many thanks to them and all who helped out on that). I even did a few gigs w/george hurley w/us as a duet doing some of the old tunes and it was trippy for me, like I was digging on how ‘econo’ those tiny tunes were - no filler, right to point and distilled down to the bare nada.”
From his earliest years performing with d. boon and the minutemen while helping to establish the American indie rock scene through the then-fledgling SST scene, mike watt has had a deep sense of purpose although, as he admits, "it's hard to describe the mission, what makes me put almost everything else secondary. when I tour, I conk at people's pads. I play every day. I'm not using it as a means to a lifestyle. I don't really know what the mission is exactly except to do this as intense as I can. it's like being a sailor or something. Sometimes, it does feel as if I've been given orders, a bizarre spin on the minstrel or troubadour scenario, the town crier, the guy that goes between the towns to let the other towns know about each other."
An inveterate road dog, mike has spent an incalculable percentage of the past quarter century touring in numerous ensembles and configurations. Beginning with the minutemen in the early 1980s, watt helped define the "econo-tour," a road warrior-style approach to touring that involved performing the most gigs possible in the fewest days with the lowest possible overhead. Sharing a van with SST labelmates Black Flag, the minutemen unknowingly created the roadmap of national club routes that the budding Punk Rock Nation would later adopt as its own. Finally, after four years of watching the tour van odometer flip over to zeros, the minutemen came to an end on December 23, 1985 when a tragic van accident took d. boon's life.
watt retreated from music after the loss, though not for long. An avid Ohio-based minutemen fan named Ed "fROMOHIO" Crawford found watt's number in the phone book and announced that he was moving to San Pedro to start a new band with watt and drummer george hurley. The trio launched fIREHOSE in June 1986 going on to create five studio albums and a live EP, indulging in seven-and-a-half years of non-stop econo-touring (without ever taking label tour support).
In the spring of 1995, he released his first solo album, ball-hog or tugboat? The album enlisted no less than 48 different participants including members of Nirvana, Pearl Jam, the Beastie Boys, Soul Asylum, the Lemonheads, and the Screaming Trees. In fact, the tour line-up for Watt's first solo outing included Pearl Jam's Eddie Vedder on vocals, the Germ's Pat Smear on guitar, and Nirvana's David Grohl on drums, with Grohl's then-new group, the Foo Fighters, delivering their very first live performances in the support slot. After this tour, he did two more with Nels Cline and two drummers as the “crew of the flying saucer.” He then toured for a year as a sideman on bass for Perry Farrell's Porno for Pyros and recorded two songs for their second album.
Then watt trimmed his caravan back to a three-man team and recorded his 1997 follow-up, the punk opera contemplating the engine room. The thematic effort revolved around three seamen in the engine room of a naval vessel, in sum creating a powerful metaphor for the minutemen and their road lives in "the boat" (watt's name for the van he tours in). He brought this around the towns for fourteen months with the black gang, a trio that had the album's nels cline and stephen hodges at different times along with bob lee and joe baiza.
the secondman's middle stand was watt's third solo album and first to be recorded with a bass, organ (pete mazich), and drums (jerry trebotic) line-up. This project was his response to a critical illness in 2000 with a fever lasting 38 days, its climax an abscess bursting in his perineum. watt used his recovery period to re-read, among a dizzyingly wide range of other books, Dante Alighieri's "Divine Comedy," (he first read it as a teenager) which is divided into three sections: "Inferno," "Purgatorio," and "Paradiso." Both "Purgatorio" and "Paradiso" are divided into 33 cantos ("Inferno" has 34) with each section divided into groups of 3 lines called tercets -- a direct influence on the album.
In addition to his primary efforts, watt's yearnings for creative output have resulted in numerous collaborations and side projects, both in the studio and on the road: Unknown Instructors with george hurley, guitarist Joe Baiza (Saccharine Trust) and a revolving cast of vocalist/poets; bass guitar duo dos with ex-Black Flag bassist kira roessler; the Fog with J Mascis; Banyan, an experimental alt-jazz project with Pyro/Jane's Addiction member Stephen Perkins; hellride with Perkins and Peter Distefano “whupping up stooges in a john coltrane way”; Li'l Pit; Crimony; Bootstrappers; the original Punk Rock Karaoke with Eric Melvin of NOFX and Greg Hetson of Bad Religion;.
watt also was part of the Wylde Rattz with the Stooges' Ron Asheton, Mudhoney's Mark Arm, Sonic Youth's Thurston Moore and Steve Shelley who covered the Stooges' classic "TV Eye" for the soundtrack to the Todd Haynes film Velvet Goldmine. This led to Iggy Pop inviting mike to join the reformed Stooges along with Ron and Scott Asheton, touring with them as well as playing on their comeback album, The Weirdness. watt continues as a Stooge in the current line-up with James Williamson rejoining the band after the death of Asheton in 2008.
Our man in Pedro also stays busy with a weekly web radio program, “the watt from pedro show” (twfps.com), and his own site, hootpage.com, both of which provide outlets for his many political interests, including the fight against FFC regulations on low power FM stations and web radio channels. He also loves pedaling his bike around his town four days a week while paddling his kayak the other three - all at the crack of dawn.
But there is a thread that connects all of Watt's concerns. "Art and music mirrors nature in a lot of ways," Watt says. "Nature's a lot about resonances and cycles and rhythms. Nature has no ethics or morality. Neither does music. It operates on a level where words aren't. There's always going to be a hankering to get connections on a non-word level. Can we have ideas that don't have words for them? You can't know anything, you can only believe. The way you describe what you believe is a prison. Music is a way to get around that.
Chotto Ghetto - (Set time: 10:40 PM)

Chotto Ghetto, assembled in 2005, is a post-hardcore band whose technically precise yet deranged style draws influences from the likes of Faith No More and the Bad Brains. They have released and toured behind three EPs on Quote Unquote Records. On September 11th, 2012 the band will release their first full-length album, SPARKLES, on Asian Man Records.
Opus Dai - (Set time: 11:30 PM)

Opus Däi (pronounced "die") cultivates a rich and varied aural landscape that is as vast and epic as the bands history. The band creates a space where diverse sounds blend into a singular musical force. Driving and aggressive, yet gentle in spirit, there is an epic grace that stokes the fires burning brightly from within Opus Däi. Drawing on influences from Led Zeppelin and Jeff Buckley to Tool and The Mars Volta, Opus Däi weave a broad musical tapestry. Painting a picture with superlative musicianship and beautifully crafted songs. This is the hallmark of the newly formed, yet years in the making, Los Angeles based band.
Raushi - (Set time: 12:30 AM)




