Oct 312007
 

Head shot

January 20, 2004, a day that will be forever burned in the minds of a handful of listeners of WFMU’s The Best Show on WFMU. It was here (first introduced about 1:12 into the episode and picked after a few choice Big Dipper songs at 1:49) that host Tom Scharpling first summoned the members of the long-disbanded Boston band to see if he could spark a dramatic reunion. If you’ll recall, reunion was in the air, following the stunning and emotional Berlin and A Flock of Seagulls reunions that had recently been shepherded through VH-1. Through his persistence, Scharpling would set off a montage of awkward hugs, slow-motion instrument polishing, drum-head changing, finger-building exercises, and stage clothes shopping excursions that. Nearly 4 years later comes the news that Big Dipper is indeed reuniting for a handful of shows in April 2008 and the release of a 3-CD set. The release will include a 12-page booklet with liner notes by Scharpling and, most importantly, songs from the band’s first 3 long-out-of-print albums along with the requisit rarities, unreleased tracks, and even the original video for “Faith Healer”. I’ve been waiting a long time for this day, and I’ve been waiting a long time to have more than this grainy, 12th-generation clip that’s been floating around YouTube for some time as a visual record of the band.

We will have more news on the CD and the shows as details are finalized. For now, we welcome Gary Waleik, Big Dipper guitarist and go-to guy on the low harmony parts, to the Halls of Rock. In my days of attending Big Dipper shows, Gary was always a great guy to chat with, and he’s no different today. Following this scratchy vinyl-burned track from the band’s Heavens lp, let’s get it on!

Big Dipper, “Mr. Woods”

RTH: So it’s true that Big Dipper going to reunite for some shows in April 2008! Do you know where you’ll be playing?

GW: Yes. We plan on playing two shows in Boston and two in the New York area starting 4/23/08. They will include shows at Maxwell’s in Hoboken and The Middle East in Cambridge.

RTH: Will it be just a few shows, or are you ditching your well-established adult lives for one more shot at conquering The Road?

GW: My guess is that those 4 shows will probably be all we do. If it goes well, I may pitch for a quick Midwest tour (Chicago, Lawrence, Wichita, Columbus, something like that), but we’re too busy as family men and gainfully employed individuals to risk it all on another full-blown rock and roll fling. Though the sirens do call from time to time…
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Oct 312007
 

Last night, I listened to that Robert Plant/Allison Kraus thing. I actually happen to think it sounds really great. They’re streaming it on their website. For a long time, I’ve wondered if I’m going to let Zeppelin back into my life. Does the fact that this may be the album that does it make me part of the problem, an effete, middlebrow urban hipster? Maybe. Maybe not. See Mark Wahlberg in the YouTube clip above for the rest of my response.

Let’s get down to it: Who is/are your favorite lyricists and why?

And while I understand Mr. Mod’s Byrds antipathy to some degree, I loaded a bunch of their stuff on my iTunes last night. Far as I’m concerned, “Feel a Whole Lot Better” is a perfect song. Agree? Disagree?

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Oct 312007
 


Townsman, please explain to me why, based on the random samplings I’ve heard of Judas Priest’s music since their late-70s prime, they have always struck me as the best of the second-generation, barely blues-based Heavy Metal bands. Last night I was watching a VH-1 documentary on the making of their breakthrough album, British Steel, I think it’s called. I remembered a lot of those songs, and the album tracks had their merits too, even while I sniggered through the more Spinal Tap elements. This morning, while eating breakfast and catching some pre-work tube, VH-1 broadcast some cheesy response to Billy Idol called “Turbo Lover”. Even that song was better than the second-generation heavy metal (and Hair Metal) competition. You know more about this band than I do. Please explain what I’m feeling. Thanks.

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Oct 312007
 


What rock flick do you most wish you’d seen while it was in the theaters?

A simple enough question, no? I never got around to catching Rust Never Sleeps while it was on the big screen. I bought the album upon its release and dig it to this day, but I never made that extra effort to see the film. Likewise, I wanted to see that Neil Young concert film from a couple of years ago, the one with him being an old guy and contemplating death alongside his Harvest bandmates. That sounded real touching, but I never even made the effort to rent it.

The thing is, I don’t know if I care to rent these films. I like watching rock films on the big screen, with the occasional whiff of some dude’s joint wafting up from the back row. How about you? Is there a rock flick you regret missing while it was in theaters? A rock flick that played in theaters long before you’d come of age?

While you’re hard at work on your answer, for those of you who’ve seen Rust Never Sleeps on the big screen, did I miss anything?

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