
PETER CASE - TAKING IT TO THE STREETS
By ROBERT HILBURN, Times Pop Music Critic
Los Angeles Times. Monday, January 12, 1987
These are revolutionary times in rock.
Imagine a hedliner putting on a half-hour show on the sidewalk for
the hundred or so fans who can't get into the sold-out club.
That's what Peter Case and two buddies did Saturday night at the
Lingerie.
It's easy to suspect in this age of mass-marketed rock that the
whole thing was just a publicity gimmick. But think about it: In
the business-as-usual world of rock, a hotshot manager might come
up with the idea of a sidewald show, but you can bet he would have
alered the media.
Consider the news value: An acclaimed rock singer-songwriter like
Case (his 1986 album "Peter Case" was just named the best pop/rock
record of the year by the New York Times? playing for the folks
on f-a-m-o-u-s Sunset Boulevard! Rolling Stone would throw
out the latest update on Sean and Madonna for that.
But the affair was so low-key that the critics and sole photographer
- already inside the club - n't even learn about Case's sidewalk
show until the second number.
More crucially, the move was in step with the generous, almost communal
spirit of the local rock scene, a scene that has re-introduced individuality
and adventure to the music.
Local musicians, like Case, have become leaders in promoting a radical
alternative to the star-making machinery that stresses sales-conscious
conformity: Sometimes the best way to extend the passionate, independent
spirit of rock is to partially abandon rock itself.
Case and Phil Alvin were leaders of key bands (the Plimsouls and
Blasters, respectively) that contributed greatly to the local rock
renaissance of recent years. Their key rule: Set your own rules.
This led Case and Alvin, among others, to surprising, yet inspiring
careet shifts. Case left the Plimsouls for a bare-bones, song-oriented
folk 'n' roll style. In hes 1986 Geffen album, he explored passionately
such varied issues as the rock machinery ("Steel Strings") and lost
idealism ("I Shook His Hand").
He sang these and other songs Saturday (on a bill with Alvin, the
Cruzados' Tito Larriva and the Wild Cards) with a conviction and
purpose that was as forceful as anything that most bands convey
with their 3 million watts of power at the Forum. At the end, he
felt comfortable enough to set down his acoustic guitar and rock
out with some pals (including R.E.M.'s Peter Buck, ex-Plimsoul Eddie
Muñoz and songwriter Marvin Etzioni) on the Plimsouls' near-hit
"A Million Miles Away."
Alvin, who still leads th Blasters, made even a more radical solo
album last year, applying his own gritty, blues-leaning, roots-conscious
stamp on lod (mostly pre-World War II) songs from pop, country,
jazz and gospel sources.
In an invigorating set Saturday, he underscored the point that good
music, however diverse the style, has much in common - a fact that
has been frequently lost since the '60s as radio programmers increasingly
segregate music by category. It's this mix of influences, he suggests,
that leads to the healthiest musical climate. That his argument
can be called revolutionary illustrates how stalled the big-time
rock machinery has become.
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Steel
Strings / Echo Wars
GEFFEN
RECORDS PRO-A-2678
12" Vinyl
1987
SIDE ONE
STEEL STRINGS*
Case
SIDE TWO
ECHO WARS
Burnett/Case
Produced by J. HENRY BURNETT
and MITCHELL FROOM
From the Geffen album
PETER CASE (GHS 24105)
Promotional Copy. Not For Sale.
A&R Coordination: Carole Childs,
Teresa Ensenat and Tom Zutaut
Photography: Randy Leffingwell/Los Angeles Times
Art Direction: Jeri McManus
© 1987 Geffen Records,
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