Haunted House 'Guess Who's Not Coming To Dinner' Album Release Shows

With “Guess Who’s Not Coming to Dinner,” Haunted House prove they aren’t just another Minneapolis All-Star jam band. They are a formidable rock and roll unit lead fearlessly by Mike Watton. Band members and collaborators include, yet are not limited to Jon Davis (Ghostband), Adam Patterson (whitesand/badlands), Cole Claerhout (Dante & The Lobster), Martin Dosh (Andrew Bird), and Freddy Votel. (Skoal Kodiak)

They are an unrivaled, rhythm-heavy rock orchestra. A piano-heavy Pixies or maximal Modest Mouse draw comparisons but don’t nearly describe the freak fluency they share..

Here are some details about the release shows from Mike..

Capgun Coup from Omaha has been added to the October 30th Hexagon bill. Knife World was so stunned by the invite they were rendered speechless. So the line-up is, in no particular order since I’m not sure how that’s going to shake out, but this is my best guess:

Vampire Hands
Haunted House
Capgun Coup
Mute Era

FREE – 21+

Full line-up for the Halloween, and I have no idea the order:

An Ali Farka tribute band
Tender Meat
Ratt Poison
Awesome Snakes
Japanther
Haunted House

$5 – ALL AGES

Walker Art Center Summer Music & Movies In Loring Park 2009 Lineup

Summer Music & Movies

Blue Nights: The Early Films of Paul Newman

Mondays, July 20–August 18 in Loring Park   Free

Music begins at 7 pm; films begin at dusk (approximately 8:45 pm)

Join us for what has become a classic (and literally priceless) summer night out. The series’ films delve into Paul Newman’s early career, which was marked by a series of electric, now-iconic performances as anti-heroes. The complexity and shades of vulnerability he brought to these characters ensured that he transcended his film-idol status as the man with the bright blue eyes. This selection of four of Newman’s triumphs is just one point of focus on a prolific, 52-year career that included acting for the stage and screen, directing, and a devotion to philanthropy and humanitarian causes. His death last September marked the passing of a rare figure: not just a multi-talented legend, but a Hollywood star heralded for his authenticity and down-to-earth characters.

In case of rain, events will move to the Walker Cinema. Seating is first-come, first-served. Visit walkerart.org for details and updates.

Copresented by the Walker Art Center and the Minneapolis Park & Recreation Board. Summer Music & Movies is sponsored by Lunds. Additional support is generously provided by Elizabeth Redleaf.

Monday, July 20

Music: Halloween, Alaska

“. . . moody guitar and keyboards bric-a-brac atop subtly quaking beats . . . glassy drones, worried groove glitch, a shy come-on cribbed from an old Prince song.” Blender

Drink in the summer sun and crafty pop, pure and now, by members of such esteemed local outfits as Love-cars, 12RODS, and Happy Apple. Mining the breaks between electronic and organic Halloween, Alaska ignites a gorgeously layered atmosphere of heady lyricism, indie hooks, and articulate beats. Featuring James Diers (voice, keys, guitar), Matthew Friesen (bass, sampler), Jacob Hanson (guitar), and David King (drums).

Movie: Cat on a Hot Tin Roof

Directed by Richard Brooks

In his first of ten Academy Award–nominated performances, Newman plays injured ex-football star Brick: a sardonic, alcoholic, and impotent husband to the ambitious and conniving Maggie—“the cat”(Elizabeth Taylor at her sultry best). Despite the dysfunction, Southern charm oozes in this lush adaptation of Tennessee Williams’ play about an established Mississippi family plagued by secrets and financial ambitions. 1959, 16mm, 108 minutes.

Monday, July 27

Music: Roma di Luna

“Evoking an old-timey Americana vibe riddled with scary hints of neo-Gothic mayhem, Roma di Luna play sparse tunes that squirm and fret under thriving uncertainty.” —City Pages

Compelling and stark, lovely and dark, Roma di Luna cooks a lush hash of early folk, bluegrass, and old-time country shot through with an ethereal edge. From busking on the street to basking in the glow of critical acclaim Roma di Luna is the wife-husband duo Channy Moon Casselle (vocals, violin) and Alexei Moon Casselle (guitar, vocals) with Ben Durrant (electric guitar), James Everest (bass guitar), Ryan Lovan (percussion), Jessi Prusha (backing vocals), and Michael Rossetto (banjo).

Movie: Hud

Directed by Martin Ritt

Newman upends the cowboy myth as Hud Bannon, an unprincipled, ruthless lothario in Texas’ windswept cattle country. Hud’s callous ways are intriguing to his impressionable nephew and a source of irritation to his law-and-order father, but when a disease threatens to wipe out the herd, he’s forced to be a man. “The black-and-white cinematography turns his famous baby blues into an eerie shade of gray…. He finds depths in these shallows”—Manohla Dargis, New York Times. Based on a book by Larry McMurtry, the film received seven Oscar nominations, including a nod to Newman and the statue to Patricia Neal as Alma, the family’s tough housekeeper. 1963, 16mm, 112 minutes.

Monday, August 3

Music: Gospel Gossip

“It’s fuzzy, pretty, and uberrhythmic—that midtempo, incredibly danceable pop that Fugazi and Nation of Ulysses popularized in Washington, D.C., in the early ’90s.” —Bitch Magazine

Northfield’s Gospel Gossip crafts beautifully sprawling, buzzed-out power pop with cathartic melodies, necessary noise, and playful bounce all fully realized through Sarah Nienaber’s inimitable vocals. Take in 60 minutes of fun and fierce songs that “harken to the finer, headier days when brainiacs like the Velvet Underground and New Order were called party music.” —City Pages

Movie: Cool Hand Luke

Directed by Stuart Rosenberg

In portraying spirited inmate Luke Jackson, Newman created an anti-hero for the ages. Jackson’s rejection of authority and his repeated escapes from a Florida prison camp hit home amid the rebellious late-‘60s zeitgeist. With memorable lines such as “What we got here is … failure to communicate,” and the classic scene that sparked egg-eating contests among young Americans everywhere, Cool Hand Luke remains Newman’s most unforgettable characterization of youthful defiance. Dubbed at the time a “picture of chilling dramatic power” (Time), it still packs a punch. 1967, 16mm, 126 minutes.

Monday, August 10

Music: Hanggai

“Distills everything powerful about Mongolian folk music and makes something new from the ingredients . . . transcendently powerful music that anyone from anywhere can understand.” —Pitchfork

Frenetic and foreign, ancient and avant-garde—it’s called “Chinagrass,” and we think you’ll like it. This Beijing-based sextet with members from China’s Inner Mongolia province has a decidedly eclectic take on East meets West roots and rock with an inspired blend of disparate sonic elements. Horse-hair fiddles, surf guitar, traditional throat-singing, two-stringed lutes, electronics, and an ex-punk rock singer take on centuries-old song forms.

Movie: The Hustler

Directed by Robert Rossen

Newman made an indelible impression as Fast Eddie Felson, an up-and-comer pool shark striving to beat the legendary Minnesota Fats (Jackie Gleason) in a battle of skill vs. character. Awash in drink, the humbled Felson takes up with pretty alcoholic Sarah (Piper Laurie) before falling under the thumb of gambler Bert Gordon (George C. Scott). With riveting pool scenes, The Hustler’s beautiful black-and-white cinemascope photography underscores the smoky aura of the underworld. “There are only a handful of movie characters so real that the audience refers to them as touchstones. Fast Eddie Felson is one of them.”—Roger Ebert. 1961, 16mm, 134 minutes.

Pert Near Sandstone @ Fitzgerald Theater

Friday, October 31st at 7:30 p.m.
A Prairie Home Companion
American Public Media presents Friday Preview performances of A Prairie Home Companion at the Fitzgerald Theater on Friday, October 31st at 7:30 p.m. Join Garrison Keillor, Sue Scott, Tim Russell, Tom Keith, and the Guy’s All-Star Shoe Band for a preview of Saturday’s live broadcast.All tickets for the Friday preview performances are $21.00. All ticket prices include a $2.50 facility fee. Minnesota Public Radio members receive a $2.00 discount. Special $10.00 student tickets for the Friday preview performances will be available the week of the show.
UP AND DOWN THE RIVER

THIS WEEK'S SHOW

Street Dance
Pert’ Near Sandstone

November 1, 2008

This week on A Prairie Home Companion we’re back in St. Paul at the Fitzgerald Theater, with hard-driving string band Pert’ Near Sandstone, Rich Dworsky and The Guy’s All-Star Shoe Band, and The Royal Academy of Radio Acting; Tim Russell, Sue Scott, and Tom Keith. Join us this week, before the snow flies. Tickets are available for the Friday and Saturday Shows.