by MLB.MB.PJ » Tue Aug 26, 2014 11:56 pm
The three shows that changed my life, in order:
Nov 28 1988
Paramount Theater, Seattle
KISW Rising Stars Concert; Janes Addiction. Soundgarden. Mother Love Bone.
Jane’s Addiction’s seminal recording “Nothings Shocking” had been out a few months and I loved it. I heard it played on KISW because they were promoting this show. I bought the CD earlier that day at Tower Records. I also bought the cassette EP of Mother Love Bone’s “Shine”. I had never heard of Mother Love Bone before. I signed up on the MLB mailing list that night. That would one day be my ten club membership. For what became my favorite band. That would someday have them send me tickets to fan club shows and singles at Christmas and invites to listening parties. I fell in love with Mother Love Bone that night. I had bought “Shine” earlier that day but hadn’t listened to it yet and then it was all I would listen to. Thru Fade Away. Mindshaker Meltdown. Half Ass Monkey Boy. Chloe Dancer/Crown of Thorns. That’s all we had until Apple came out.
My experience with Soundgarden was “Flower” and “Big Dumb Sex”. That’s all I knew about Soundgarden. They too were awesome. And Janes Addiction? As I walked away from the venue that night I saw two girls weeping, the show had moved them so much. This show changed my life. But it was Love Bone that I latched onto.
May 26 1989 Lindbloom Student Center, Green River Community College, Auburn
KGRG Benefit show, Nirvana
I loved “Love Buzz” which is the only song I knew. But it by no means prepared me for the show I would see that night. They played all of Bleach. Kurt stood there defiantly at his mic all night, spitting into it, cursing it, all night. Grohl was not their drummer. They were the first “real” rock band I saw THIS close. I bought Bleach, SubPop 200, anything that had Nirvana on it. Every recording I could find. Negative Creep quickly became my favorite song.
Oct 22 1990 Off Ramp, Seattle
Mookie Blaylock/Inspector Luv and the Ride Me Babies/Bathtub Gin
Two things happened. The first not so significant one, I got a postcard in the mail informing me of the show. I have that card in a box around here somewhere. I think. But more importantly it was the second thing that happened.
I was working at a pizza place and went with a co-worker to smoke some pot after our shift. I know, Its not recommended, its just how I did it. But I met his roommate Brian. Brian was in a band that was playing the next week and he told me I should come. It was the Mookie Blaylock show.
Meeting Brian is one of the pivotal moments in my life. Within 6 months of meeting him, we would be renting the 5 bedroom house in Kent. That’s where I met my wife of 20 years. Ex wife. We had two kids. This alone is worthy enough for it to be pivotal. But there is so much more. There are very few moments in our lives that we can point to of when our lives took a massive change, this is one of mine.
So I go see Brians band play. Thank god Bathtub Gin was good. They were really good. Jeff Hiatt was one of the cities premier guitar players. No doubt.
This is what I remember of Inspector Luv, Ty bending over so far, the weight of his body bending his mic stand out so far I was sure he would bust it.
Mookie Blaylock. I loved Mother Love Bone as stated above. I wanted so badly to like it. After the first couple songs I didn’t. Not because it wasn’t good but because of my own expectations. So I go to the bar at the left of the stage and get a beer and I stand about 6 feet in front of the singer. I want so badly to like them. I don’t know if it was the 3rd song in the set or the 5th song. But I’m looking at the singer and his eyes are bobbing in the back of his head. And I thought “theres something to this guy”. The melody of that song stuck with me for months. That song. The next time I saw them play I waiting for THAT song. They gave out these 3 song promotional cassettes and CD’s and it wasn’t on that. Had to wait until TEN came out to finally learn the name of THAT song. It was Black. Black. A song that would go on to be one of my favorite songs ever. Black. The song that made “Unplugged” relevant long before Kurt did “Pennyroyal Tea”. Black. That song. And I spoke to me so powerfully the first time I heard it that I couldn't stop hearing its melody in my head after hearing it once. Black. THAT song.
I want to add that I did not know that this was their first show as mookie blaylock until this very moment. I'm stunned. I looked on two feet thick to get the date. There was no other show at the Off Ramp with Inspector Luv and Bathtub Gin. I am just now realizing that it was their first ever show. I'm stunned and elated.