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Live Music
Yo Au, Joe Coffee, Vic Chesnutt, Andrew Bird, Marianne Dissard, Magic
Christian 

Vic Chesnutt Sun., Jan. 25, 8pm. $12. With Elf Power + Folklore. North Star, 27th and Poplar sts.
215.787.0488. www.northstarrocks.com
Vic Chesnutt’s last album was called North Star Deserter. This
week he plays the North Star Bar. So is he a liar? A hypocrite? Maybe both, but the
fact that he’s also a mad songwriting genius more than makes up for it. Playing with
Elf Power (who will also be playing their own set), Chesnutt imagines figures
layered, complex and often tragic to inhabit his looping story-songs. Don’t let his
wheelchair fool you; these characters will jump out of the songs and walk all over
you. (Jeffrey Barg)
Marianne Dissard
Sun., Jan. 25, 9:30pm. $5. With Benyaro. Tritone, 1508 South St. 215.545.0475.
www.tritonebar.com
French-born, Tuscany-based fille fragile Marianne Dissard has teamed
up with Calexico’s frontman Joey Burns for L’Entredeux, her
heart-melting debut that beautifully melds Southwestern noir with the husky, unequivocal
whisper of chanson. It’s an intimate and amorous album that should
appeal to anyone infatuated with Carla Bruni and with infatuation itself. What sets
Dissard apart from the rest of the chanteuses riding the Francophile wave is her
delivery—subtle, slightly spitty and the most effective aphrodisiac since Benjamin
Biolay’s Trash Yéyé. (Caralyn Green)
Au Tues., Jan. 27, 9pm. With Circles + Oh! Pears. $10. Johnny Brenda’s, 1201 Frankford
Ave. 215.739.9684. www.johnnybrendas.com
Multi-instrumentalist Luke Wyland prepped his experimental pop collective for the
current economic crisis the way anyone does—by diversifying. At times dreamy, others
jubilant, Wyland and his rotating cast love a groove, but how it’s expressed varies
widely. Minimalist chanted choir elegies, shimmering pop, shambling freak-folk and
puffy-shirted baroque swells all coexist in the atmospheric environs like menu items
united by Wyland’s supple melodic predilections. Restraint is his favored hue, as even
the most soaring passages feel constrained, and reigned back into the wintery
arrangements. (Chris Parker)
Joe Coffee Sat., Jan. 24, 9pm. $8. With Measure in Grey + Dramacidals. Khyber, 56 S. Second St.
215.238.5888. www.thekhyber.com
Hearing Paul Bearer express the virtues of good ol’ R&B and soul right through
the very same gullet that brought you the misanthropic musings of seminal New York
hardcore band Sheer Terror is a thing of beauty. Anyone familiar with Bearer’s writing
and stage banter is well aware of his scathing intelligence, but you might be forgiven
for being surprised to hear him actually sing (and well, at that). In part reminiscent
of the Jesus Lizard’s angular might, there’s also plenty of horns and swagger to add a
fair amount of roll. Beg them for Yazoo’s “Only You.” (John Cramer)
Magic Christian Sat., Jan. 24, 8pm. $8. With the Blessed Muthas, Parallax Project + the Midnight Beat.
M Room, 15 W. Girard Ave. 215.739.5577. www.themanhattanroom.com
Maybe you’ve seen The Magic Christian, that 1969 film where
billionaire Peter Sellers adopts Ringo Starr and encites all kinds of havoc? The band,
Magic Christian, is the same sort of deal. Cyril Jordan, who once shook some action with
the Flamin’ Groovies, has adopted a couple of power-pop all-stars—Eddie Muñoz from the
Plimsouls and the dBs and Clem Burke from Blondie—plus singer Paul Kopf. They’re ready
to wreak some 1960s-style, garage-psyche damage, possibly covering the Who’s “I Can See
for Miles” or the Beatles’ “Things We Said Today”—but probably not “Carry on Tomorrow,”
the Badfinger song from the movie. (Jennifer Kelly)
Andrew Bird Sun., Jan. 25, 8pm. $23-$26. Theater of the Living Arts, 334 South St. 215.922.1011
When Fat Possum record’s told the New York Times Magazine they expect
Andrew Bird’s upcoming album Noble Beast “to transform him from cult
phenomenon to pop star,” they weren’t lying. Why? Because Beast
showcases the Chicago native’s talent for violin looping and the long-lost art of the
whistle solo. (Think PB&J’s “Young Folk.” But better!) His
intellectual-folk rock has been carrying him through the obscure ever since
Pitchfork got a hot nut for his 2005 opus The Mysterious
Production of Eggs. Expect bespectacled graduate students working to find
the deeper meaning in his nonsensical song titles. “Anonanimal” anyone? (Andy
Hines)
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