Boise Weekly Vol. 17 Issue 46

Page 40

MUSICGUIDE wednesday 13

6TH STREET COLLECTIVE—9 p.m., FREE, Liquid

2 1/2 WHITE GUYS, SPINDLEBOMB—9 p.m., $3, Tom Grainey’s

BRIAN ERNST, STRANGE FEATHER—9 p.m., $2, Terrapin

BLAZE AND KELLY—6-8 p.m., FREE, Focaccia’s

BLAZE AND KELLY—7 p.m., FREE, Donnie Mac’s

JIM FISHWILD—6-9 p.m., FREE, Highlands Hollow JIMMY BIVENS—7 p.m., FREE, Crusty’s KEN HARRIS—6:30 p.m., FREE, Berryhill KEVIN KIRK—7 p.m.; with Jon Hyneman, Phil Garonzik, 7:30 p.m., FREE, Chandlers

Sunday

Prix Fixe

Includes soup or salad, prime rib of beef, roasted lamb loin, Idaho trout, two way duck, Alaskan King salmon, vegetarian torte or pork tenderoin, plus dessert for 95 $

27.

Open at 4:00 p.m. for dinner on Sundays. Live jazz music. Patio dining. Complimentary valet parking. 9>7D:B;HI I J ; 7 A > E K I ;

981 West Grove Street, Boise

383.4300

ChandlersBoise.com 40

| MAY 13–19, 2009 |

BOISEweekly

COWBOY MOUTH, DUSTY RHODES AND THE RIVER BAND—8 p.m., $12 adv.; $14 door, Neurolux

BUILT TO SPILL, FINN RIGGINS, JUNTURA—8 p.m., SOLD OUT, Visual Arts Collective THE DAMPHOOLS—6:30 p.m., $2, Shorty’s Saloon DANNY MARCHESINI—9 p.m., FREE, Piper Pub DAVID MARR—7-9 p.m., FREE, Cole/Marr Gallery FLOATER, MALACHI, THE FAV—8 p.m., $14, Knitting Factory, (See Listen Here, this page)

MIKE JONES—8 p.m., $20, Knitting Factory

THE FRIM FRAM 4—8:45 p.m., FREE, Pengilly’s

JEREMIAH JAMES GANG—9 p.m., $2, Shorty’s Saloon

NATHAN JAY AND THE QUARTERTONS—9 p.m., FREE, Liquid

HALLIE BAXTER—6 p.m., FREE, Tully’s Coffee

JOHN CAZAN—5-9 p.m., FREE, Lock, Stock & Barrel

POLYPHONIC POMEGRANATE—10 p.m., FREE, Tom Grainey’s

HIGH DESERT BAND—6:30 p.m., FREE, Whitewater Pizza

ROCCI JOHNSON BAND—9:30 p.m., FREE, Humpin’ Hannah’s

JAMES COBERLY SMITH—6-8 p.m., FREE, Liquid

LANDON MAUGHAN—7 p.m., FREE, Woodriver Cellars

SOJA, BRIAN ERNST AKA ONE MAN BAND—9 p.m., show is 18 and older $8 adv.; $10 door, Reef

KEVIN KIRK—7 p.m., FREE, Chandlers

LIFESAVAS, X-KID—8 p.m., $8 adv.; $10 door, Neurolux

SPINDLEBOMB—8 p.m., FREE, Bad Irish

POCONO BILL—6 p.m., FREE, Donnie Mac’s

LOW-FI—9 p.m., $1, Liquid

STRANGE FEATHER—9 p.m., $2, Terrapin Station THOMAS PAUL—7 p.m., FREE, Bungalow

THE QUARTERTONS—10 p.m., FREE, Tom Grainey’s REBECCA SCOTT—8 p.m., FREE, Bad Irish

MICAH TURNER PROJECT—7 p.m., FREE, Library Coffeehouse MOONDANCE—6 p.m., FREE, Kodiak Grill, 12342 E. Highway 21 PATRICIA FOLKNER—7 p.m., FREE, Buzz Cafe

THE SHOEMAKER BROTHERS—7:30 p.m., FREE, Music of the Vine

RANDY RICHARDS BAND—8 p.m., $5, Cowgirls

TWIZTID, BOONDOX, POTLUCK, PROZAK, MOONSHINE BANDITS—7 p.m., $19, Knitting Factory

Please send your live music listings to music@boiseweekly.com or fax to 342-4733. Include venue, band names, start times and cover charge. Photos are great, too. For dancing, symphony, opera or orchestral music, please see our 8 DAYS OUT listings. THE DEADLINE FOR LISTINGS IS THE THURSDAY THE WEEK PRIOR TO PUBLICATION.

KINETIC KARMA—9 p.m., FREE, The Bouquet

PILOT ERROR—9:30 p.m., $5, Reef

STEVE EATON—8 p.m., FREE, Chandlers

SOJA

JOHN JONES—7 p.m.; with Mike Seifrit, Jon Hyneman, 8:15 p.m., FREE, Chandlers

REX MILLER—6:30 p.m.; Rex and Beverly, 8:30 p.m., FREE, Berryhill

SNEAKING OUT—9 p.m., $3, Terrapin Station

BRAD LU BIN

Menu

CARTER FREEMAN—9 p.m., $2, Lush

FALLOUT—9 p.m., FREE, Reef

LONNIE CALDWELL—6 p.m., FREE, Gelato Cafe

ights a We

friday 15

BLAZE AND KELLY—7 p.m., FREE, Smoky Mountain Pizza, 114 Idaho St., Meridian JEREMIAH JAMES BAND—8:45 p.m., FREE, Pengilly’s

LIVE Seven N JAZZk e

thursday 14

YAYO, SOURVEIN, BRAKE VEGAS, OLD ONE TWO—8 p.m., $5, Gusto, (see Listen Here, this page) COWBOY MOUTH

POCONO BILL—6 p.m., FREE, SunRay Cafe RANDY STEWARD—7 p.m., FREE, Orphan Annie’s REX AND BEVERLY—8 p.m., FREE, The Gamekeeper Lounge RIFF RAFF—9 p.m., FREE, Mr. Lucky’s ROCCI JOHNSON BAND—9:30 p.m., $5 after 10 p.m., Humpin’ Hannah’s SHOEMAKER BROTHERS—8:45 p.m., FREE, Pengilly’s THE SOUL HONEY—8 p.m., FREE, Bad Irish SHUT THE FUNK UP AND DANCE—8 p.m., KID Sonic MC hosts a DJ spin-off featuring DJ Flave vs. Kreeper; MBM vs. Emerald City Monty; Jack Thomas vs. DJ Wryan; Jeff From Above, and Billy Wonka. $10 adv.; $15 door or $12 door with two cans of food, Mardi Gras Ballroom, 615 S. Ninth St., Boise TERRY JONES, BILL LILES—6:30 p.m., FREE, Berryhill WAYNE WHITE—7:30 p.m., FREE, Music of the Vine ZEN ZERO, TOMMY DIRTWEED—9 p.m., FREE, Terrapin Station

LISTINGS ARE RUN ON A SPACE AVAILABLE BASIS.

LISTENHERE YAYO, MAY 14, GUSTO

MALACHI, MAY 15, KNITTING FACTORY

At age 9, guitarist Yayo Sanchez’s father bought him a KISS CD. Back in the day, a lot of youngsters found KISS in their dads’ vinyl collections. But Sanchez took his love of Paul Stanley’s gift with an axe a step further. Now, at the tender age of 16, the Austin, Texasbased Sanchez fronts his own rock band called Yayo, and along with bandmates 18-year-old Aaron Altounian and 17-year-old Peyton Burns, they have embarked on Wreckless ’09, their debut tour. With a four-song demo in hand, Yayo is working on a full-length they hope to have out by this summer and are in talks with a couple of “big labels.” But as of Friday, they’ve only played five shows on the road and Sanchez said their ages have definitely been an obstacle. Bar/club owners aren’t keen on letting teens in the door. “They usually let Aaron in [because he’s 18]. We say, ‘Let us play one song. Let us show you what we’re about. If you don’t like us, we’ll get off in five minutes. But let us play one song and then you tell [us] if you want us to play a full set.’ So far, the venues have let us play. At the end of the show, we have everybody at the front of the stage rockin’ out.” Sanchez agreed that Austin isn’t exactly known for the kind of music Yayo plays. Alt-country and indie rock rule Austin’s roost, but Yayo is hoping to change that. With influences—and mentors—ranging from ex-KISSer Bruce Kulick and Broken Teeth’s Jason McMasters to Quiet Riot and guitar master Slash, he said he can easily see the Red River District in Austin becoming the next Sunset Strip. And he hopes his band will be a big part of that. “We’re bringing old school back,” he said, laughing.

Opening for Floater is a high point in the career of Malachi’s frontman Jeffro Hoskins III. “We’ve enjoyed opening for other bands,” Hoskins said. “But this is huge for us.” Huge is a good description of how Hoskins sees Malachi, their music and the direction the band is headed. Hoskins might beg to differ—huge may not be big enough. “Our sound is epic, it’s emotional,” Hoskins said. With sweeping hooks and piano-based melodies, he said Malachi’s sound is “epic rock,” adding that they sound like a “modern Queen.” New piano player Milan House and a new bass player, IQEQ’s Kyle Letner, have allowed Hoskins, along with Bear Benson, Ryan Allen and Anthony White, to take the music to a different place. Though their name is Malachi, and they have biblical references in their songs, Hoskins points out they are not a Christian band. The darker, more intense direction they’re heading musically, and the addition of traces of hip-hop and country may help them lose that label. The new sound should be evident in the releases of two follow-ups to their debut full-length, Mourning Days, Vol. 1, not surprisingly titled Vol. 2 and Vol. 3. “We’re revamping our sound,” Hoskins said. “We have a little country, a little hip-hop, a little bit of everything.”

—Amy Atkins

—Amy Atkins

Thursday, May 14, $5, 8 p.m., with Brake Vegas, Sourvein, Old One Two. Gusto, 509 W. Main St.

Friday, May 15, opening for Floater and The Fav, 8 p.m., $14. Knitting Factory, 416 S. Ninth St., boknittingfactory.com.

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